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Friday

February 15, 1985 Vol. SOB, No. 99, 20 pages Duke University Durham, North Carolina Free Circulation: 15,000 THE CHRONICLE Newsfile Yearbook gets new guidelines AMA denounces SUits: Actions to curb By DOUG MAYS malpractice suits were urged by the American Medical The Undergraduate Publications Board adopted new Association. The association made scores of proposals, guidelines Wednesday regarding its expectations of the including tougher defense strategies, financial penalties Chanticleer and its editor. for "nuisance suits" and limits on some types of damage The board, while "recognizing the importance of editorial awards and plaintiffs' legal fees. See page 2. judgement and creative freedom," according to the guidelines, acted "largely in response to [David] Graveen," Journalist escapes: An American gained his editor of the 1984 Chanticleer, said board chairman Abby freedom in Lebanon. The American, Jeremy Levin, a Marsh. The yearbook has come under criticism from journalist, is one of five Americans kidnapped there in students since its distribution this week. the last year. See page 2. "A majority of the yearbook should directly reflect a broad spectrum of the academics, activities, sports, events Drug Crops bOOm: Drug crops were larger in and personalities at Duke," the guidelines stated. "Each 1984 than in the year before in most of the major coun­ yearbook will undertake to contain individual portraits tries producing marijuana, coca, and opium-poppy crops, of senior students on the pages of the bound volume," .;:•• • according to the State Department's annual report on The 1984 Chanticleer was criticized for its lack of worldwide narcotics production. The report takes on coverage of certain aspects of the University and for the added significance this year because of a new law that pull-out poster containing the senior portraits. Graveen requires the president to cut off foreign aid to countries could not be reached for comment. TV;;::. . • ^ that, in his view, have made inadequate efforts to reduce SAM WANGfTHE CHRONICLE "I think [Graveen's] yearbook falls short of some basic Editor David Graveen hands out yearbooks narcotic crops. expectations by omitting the senior pictures and missing some rather key elements of Duke," said Marsh. She said, Although the board did not previously oversee produc­ Reagan Skips V-E Day: President Reagan however, that she thought the book to be "very creative, tion of the yearbook, Marsh said she had worked closely canceled plans to participate in ceremonies in West Ger­ very artistic and of value to Duke." with Jay Rathert, 1985 Chanticleer editor. "There has been many on May 8 marking the Allied triumph over the The board moved that "consideration should be given to significant interaction," she said. "I feel certain there will Nazis 40 years ago. In bypassing West Germany on V- including the greatest coverage of the year without not be this kind of dissatisfaction" with Rathert's yearbook. E Day, administration officials said Reagan would avoid sacrifice of quality or aesthetics." Marsh said she did not know what would happen if an a situation that could upset several groups - the West The excessive use of one photograph per page or large editor failed to abide by the guidelines. She reiterated that Germans, other European allies, American veterans, quantities of blank space is discouraged, according to the the board's main power lies in its selection of the editor, and Jews. new guidelines and "the photographs, text, and although it could freeze the publication's accounts and, she miscellanea in the yearbook should reflect the work of the believed, remove the editor. Corporate charity not enough: Corporate staff as a whole." Graveen took 132 of the 170 photographs William Griffith, vice president for student affairs, said gifts to charity, although growing steadily, come in the 1984 book, as well as handling all layout and print­ "I was disappointed (with the 1984 Chanticleer], in that nowhere near filling the gaps left by the Reagan ad­ ing arrangements. my criterion for a good yearbook is what is positively ministration's cuts in federal financing of social pro­ The board asks student editors to attend its monthly responsive to the student body. My perception, from the grams, according to monitors of corporate giving. meetings and report on their progress. Marsh said, but "the students I've talked to, is that it does not reflect that biggest decision of the Publications Board is in choosing interest. JackSOn appeals tO Dems: Jesse Jackson the editors." Marsh was not a board member at the time "I think the Undergraduate Publications Board — par­ wants to mend his strained ties with Democratic Par­ of Graveen's selection. ticularly with one-shot kinds of publications like the Chan­ ty leaders, he said in a conciliatory interview. But in "I do not think choosing Graveen was a mistake," said ticleer and the Teacher Course Evaluation Book - needs an interview several days ago, Jackson accused party Marsh, "but the board should have made clear what the to have a continuous relationship with the editor," Grif­ leaders of trying to attract white male voters by "prov­ fundamental expectations were." fith said. ing they can be tough on blacks." Weather Friedl: no 'disarray' at Duke Here's the Story: Today will be sunny and cold By ROBERTSON BARRETT with highs in the low 40s and lows tonight in the teens. Dean of Trinity College Ernestine Friedl denied in an Saturday will have highs in the 40s and winds about interview Thursday that recent charges by the Associa­ 10 mph. Well, you missed it, and I hope your conscience tion of American Colleges that curricula around the coun­ doesn't bother you toooooooo much. Yesterday was try have slipped into "disarray" were applicable to Duke. Florence Henderson's birthday. You remember Florence, the lovely lady who brought up three very lovely girls According to Friedl, Duke was not included in the siudy - all of them had hair of gold. Did you write? Of course by the Association of American Colleges that deemed the not. Greg wrote. Even little Cindy did. curricula of many colleges "incoherent" and questioned the quality of undergraduate education. Secretary of Education William Bennett followed release of the report Monday with accusations that students are Inside being "ripped off' by colleges. Wednesday he announced his support for the Reagan administration's proposed The new Scientists: Nationally renowned ex­ budget cuts in student aid. perts come here to examine the roles and influence of Friedl said that although Duke's curriculum was general­ women in science in a three-day seminar beginning ly strong, "there are some things missing." She said several Sunday. See page 3. courses currently offered are "too specialized" and thus con­ tributing to overall curricular incoherence Laugh it Up: Three nationally known comics bring Students are partially responsible, she said, in determin­ BETH 8RANCH/T HE CHRONICLE ing the nature of their own course curriculum. "Students their humor to Duke Friday night in Jabberwocky's ex­ Trinity College Dean Ernestine Friedl said 'there are some ought to have a coherent understanding of the course of travaganza. See page 7. things missing' in Duke's curriculum. study they're going to take," she said, "rather than choose courses for the hour, day or similar irrelevancies." Present­ Friedl said the University feels a sense of "alarm" at the Fighting the Irish: The Blue Devils head to the ly, she said, many students select their courses "semester proposed $2 billion student aid cut advocated by Bennett. Meadowlands Saturday for a 1 p.m. showdown against by semester" and by "haphazard choice". "It's going to make it harder for middle income families Notre Dame on national television. For a preview see The pre-major advising system is partly to blame, she to pay the tuition for high and even middle priced schools," page 15. said. Friedl has been reviewing the advising procedure she said. "If you are going to maintain private colleges and with hopes of revamping the program by next fall. not limit them to the very rich, then government support In response to the AAC's denunciation of faculty [for students] is essential." members who are more interested in scholarly research Duke is not a participant in the AAC, which requested than in teaching, she said, "We ask that they do both. I'm a meeting with Bennett Wednesday to register its opposi­ Announcement convinced that it's possible, but it takes a lot of energy and tion to the cut proposal, As of midnight Sunday, postal rates for first-class mail organization. Bennett, former chairman of the National Endowment will rise to 22 cents and postcards to 14 cents. Hope "If a person is really a first rate teacher and researcher," for the Humanities, authored a report in November 1984 charging American colleges with failure to provide an "ade­ valentines were sent in time. she said she had no problem with a faculty member do­ ing both. quate education" for students. AMA attacks malpractice suits By ANDREW H. MALCOLM did 10 years ago, 16 claims for each 100 doctors annually, World & NY Times News Service and were winning record settlements. CHICAGO - The American Medical Association called Dr. James Sammons, the association's executive vice Thursday for "immediate definitive action" to combat what president, said medical malpractice was a paradox in the it called a national medical malpractice problem of "crisis United States, which he said had the best medical care National proportions." in the world as well as the highest liability claim rate. The Page 2 February 15, 1985 In the third and final report by its Special Task Force average claim, he said, is settled for $330,000. on Professional Liability and Insurance, the organization The score of proposals, which the association called its proposed legislative and policy actions for itself, for in­ "action plan," include sweeping public education programs, dividual doctors and their insurance companies and for tougher legal defense strategies, financial penalties for THE CHRONICLE the state and federal governments. "nuisance suits," limits on some types of damage awards "It makes no sense for a renowned surgeon in New York and plaintiffs' legal fees, and greater peer review by doc­ to have to pay an $80,000 a year insurance premium to tors to weed out those guilty of real malpractice, who the practice medicine," the report said, "It makes no sense for association contends are few in number. Charley Scher insurance companies to pay more money to lawyers than Under the education plan, the report said, the public John Turnbull to injured persons." would be warned that the cost of the doctors' premiums The previous reports noted that Americans were filing was being passed directly to them as higher fees, "Every Ann Hardison three times as many medical malpractice claims as they man, woman and child is paying this bill," Sammons said. Doug Mays

Ann Hardison Paul Gaffney CNN journalist reaches freedom and would be turned over to the ambassador Friday morn­ Jennifer McHugh ing at the Foreign Ministry in Damascus. BEIRUT, Lebanon - An American journalist, one of five According to reports, from a variety of sources, Levin Americans kidnapped in Lebanon in the last year, gained turned up in the middle of Wednesday night at a Syrian Watchdogs Shannon Mullen his freedom Thursday, but it was unclear whether he had military police post on the edge of the city of Baalbeck, Carol Madren been freed or had escaped. a stronghold of Shiite Moslem fundamentalists. He was Miriam Arichea The journalist, Jeremy Levin, the Beirut bureau chief said to have been seen by a local Lebanese correspondent of the Cable News Network, was reported late Thursday of Agence France-Presse. Pat Zollicoffer Account representatives afternoon to have arrived at a Syrian Army base in the The Islamic Holy War called Western news agencies in Bekaa region. He had been held for 11 months. His cap­ Beirut Thursday afternoon to say it had freed Levin and Judy Mack tors were believed to be Islamic extremists possibly belong­ hinting of international mediation efforts. Elizabeth Majors ing to the shadowy organization known as Islamic Holy "The truth of the matter is that we released Levin after War. many approaches by some brotherly and effective sides for The official Syrian press agency reported that the U.S. which we have all respect and appreciation" the caller said, The Chronicle is published Monday through Friday of the ambassador to Syria had been told by Foreign Minister adding: academic year, and weekly through ten (10) weeks of summer Farouk al-Sharaa that Levin had managed to escape. "After investigation, we had established that the sessions by the Duke University Chronicle Board. Price of Earlier in the day Syria said it won Levins release through American correspondent was not involved in any espionage subscriptions: $40 for third class mail; $100 for first class mail. negotiations. But Levin was quoted as saying he fled from Offices at third floor Rowers Building, Duke University, Durham, or subversion against Islamic forces." North Carolina 27706. his captors and walked for two hours. However, earlier reports on private Christian radio sta­ The American envoy, William Eagleton Jr., was told that tions and the account Levin reportedly gave to Agence Levin had managed to escape from his captors in Lebanon France-Presse suggested he had e DANCING Students Must' CHINA GARDEN VALIDATE Your Favorite Music Every Thursday. Friday, and Saturday 10 p.m.-l a.m. For Thel DUKE-UNC Basketball Game Gourmet Chinese Restaurant Due to spring break, Duke students are required NEW AFFORDABLE PRICED MENU to validate for the Mard^2nd Duke-North THE TRIANGLE AREA'S BEST SUNDAY BUFFET, Carolina basketball game in Cameron Indoor ALL YOU CAN EAT! Stadium. Students planning to attend the game Family Style Dinner and Banquet Facilities Available should bring their IDs and semester enrollment Cocktail Lounge with HAPPY HOUR from 4:30-7:00 p.m. DAILY

ALL ABC PERMITS OPEN 7 DAYS cards to the Duke Ticket Office in Cameron

Lunch: 11:30-2:30 Mon.-Sat. Dinner: 5:00-10:00 p.m. Mon.-Thurs. February 11-15, between the hours of 8:30 a.m. SUNDAY BUFFET: 12:00-2:30 p.m. DINNER: 5:00-9:00 p.m. and 5:00 p.m. 4421 CHAPEL HILL BLVD., DURHAM (formerly Crazy Zacks. Location) Validation: February 11-15, 8:30 a.m.-5:00 p.m. For Reservations: 493-8470 or 493-8479 VISA/MASTERCARD/AMERICAN EXPRESS WELCOME! Seats will be allotted on an "at random" basis Forum studies women scientists Campus By LARRY KAPLOW Copernicus changed our view of the universe. Darwin our Page 3 February 15, 1985 view of man's origins and Freud our view of our minds. A symposium beginning Sunday focuses on what might be the Friday next movement in science - the impact of women scientists Four leaders in science and the study of science will speak Freewater film, "J'Accuse," Bryan Center film theater, here in "The Next Discontinuity? A Symposium on Gender 7 p.m. and Science, Technology and Medicine." "We want to look at what kind of impact women have on Freewater film, "Un Grand Amour de Beethoven," science. Not just what research is done, but how it is done and how that research is viewed," said Renee Frankel, a Bryan Center film theater, 9:30 p.m. Trinity senior who helped organize the symposium. Speakers include: Ruth Hubbard, biology professor at Music Department, Fletcher residents present "A Harvard University and author and editor of several books Classic Sampler," Sheafer laboratory theater, 8:15 about women in science; Melvin Kranzberg, history pro­ p.m. fessor at the Georgia Institute of Technology; Elizabeth Fee, BETH BRANCH/THE CHRONICl professor of Health Policy at Johns Hopkins University; and Renee Frankel and Stuart Saslow, co-chairmen of the Jabberwocky Comedy Night, with comedians Jeff Ruth Bleier, professor of Neurophysiology at the Universi­ University Symposium Committee Altman, Arsenio Hall and Charles Fleischer, Page ty of . Auditorium, 8:30 p.m. Frankel said the symposium was conceived in spring of doctors and women as carers or nurses, at 8 p.m. in Page 1984 when she met with Stuart Saslow, the other co- Auditorium. Weekend chairman of the University's Symposium Committee; Jean Bleier, who teaches many controversial theories about the O'Barr, director of women's studies; and Alex Roland, direc­ study of primate social behavior, will discuss "The Feminist tor of the Science Technology and Human Values program. Critique of Science: Points of Rupture and Regeneration" at Quadrangle Pictures, Three Perspectives, discus­ "We asked 'What is something controversial, something 3:30 p.m. in the Bryan Center Film Theater. sion of "Napoleon," with Fabienne Worth, visiting that will affect a lot of people,'" Frankel said. "It's not only "I'm sure there will be plenty of socio-biologists who will lecturer, Romance Languages; Jane Gaines, scientists this will affect. It's how to ask questions, and I attack Ruth Bleier, which should be exciting. I hope they do, English; Godfrey Cheshire, Film Reviewer for Spec­ think you have to learn to question authority." so we can see what kinds of arguments we get," Frankel said. tator Magazine, Page Auditorium, 5:15 p.m., Hubbard, who will speak Sunday at 8 p.m. in the Bryan According to Frankel, the symposium costs approximately Saturday Center Film Theater, will discuss "Science as a Social Ac­ $13,000. Each speaker is given a $2,000 honorarium in ad­ tivity," and the biases of scientists. dition to free hotel accommodations and transportation. Kranzberg, an internationally known historian, will Major donor groups to the symposium include: $2,000 speak on "Technology: Liberator or Oppressor of Women," from ASDU (plus technical services expenses). $1,500 from on Monday at 3:30 p;m. in the Engineering School the Bassett Fund, $1,000 from the School of Engineering, auditorium. $1,000 from the Science, Technology and Human Values Corrections Fee will speak on "To Cure, To Care or to Heal," in which program. Trinity College will also donate a large, though she will discuss the traditional roles of men as healers or now undetermined, amount of money. A front page article in last Friday's edition of The Chronicle incorrectly reported the admissions target and number of applications received for the Class of 1989. The target is 1,400, with 1,300 for fall and 100 PPS internship director resigns for January admission. Applications for the class were about 11,750, up from last year's 10,800. The article also By ANDREW BAGLEY misidentified the February Notification admissions not been very well directed. . . . Opportunities were lost program. The sudden resignation of Bonnie Bain, internship direc­ because of her disorganization." tor in the public policy department, will not adversely af­ In a page 4 story Tuesday on the Duke University The student added that many graduate students "had fect the nearly 100 students seeking summer internships Equestrian Team, the club's president was misiden­ problems" [with Bain] because they felt slighted by her through her office, according to the director of the Institute tified. Julie Beamish, Trinity junior, is president. The disorganization. of Policy Sciences and Public Affairs. article also incorrectly stated that team tryouts have Bain was responsible for finding internships for public been held, when in fact they will not be held until Bain resigned Tuesday with no prior notice and could policy students, which are necessary for their degree. Monday. not be reached for comment. Robert Behn, the director, Trinity senior Pat Haman said tensions had been refused to comment on her reasons for resignation. Thurday's edition incorrectly reported the deadline building up between Bain and the administration of the for registering for summer session. Students have un­ Bain's resignation drew mixed emotions. Some students institute and that her resignation was "unavoidable." Other til May 1 for the first summer term and June 17 for said she was ineffective and disorganized, but according students also said that tensions had been brewing, but the second. Late registration, which carries a fine, is to a graduate student who asked not to be identified, she Behn again refused comment. accepted to the third day of each summer term. was well liked. Tensions appeared between Bain and the institute direc- "She seems to be very good with undergraduate The Chronicle regrets the errors. students," the student said. "But in the past her efforts have See BAIN on page 13

IQWJ CENTER STAGE co-sponsorally flpteu__i_jm presents VIDEO NAPOLEON Rent A VCR & 2 MOVIES Saturday February 16 at 1:00 p.m. and 7:00 p.m. Overnight for only Sunday February 17 at 2:00 p.m. (d. Abel Gance, 1927. 240m)

Freewater is proud to present in conjunction with QUAD FLICKS and the SPECTATOR this silent epic masterpiece by Abel Gance in a recently restored tinted ond toned print. $1Q00 NAPOLEON pushed the silent film to tremendous new heights that have yet to be achieved by any other film. NAPOLEON was to be part of a trilogy of films on the life of Nopoleon. yet the other films were never realized. This film traces Napoleon from his boyhood to the Sunday, February 17, thru Sicilian Campaign. This will be the fastest four hours of your life Thursday, February 21, 1985 PAGE AUDITORIUM Offer good Sunday, February 24, thru Everyone has to pay for this one, $2.00 Thursday, February 28, 1985 — AND BEFORE — 3421 Hillsborough Rd. Mon.-Sat. 10-9 Hechinger Plaza Sun __6 THE LEGEND OF THE LONE RANGER 10=30 Next to Piece Goods 383-8017 See how this hero of the old west got his start before you see how a hero of old France CLIP THIS COUPON " got his. With Cloyton Moore ond Joy Siiverheels. Hi Ho Silver! 3421 Hillsborough Rd. Mon.-Sat. 10-9 BRYAN CENTER FILM THEATER FREE TO ALL Hechinger Plaza Sun. 1-6 Next to Piece Goods 383-8017 Page 4 THE CHRONICLE Friday, February 15, 1985 Defunct tuition plan lacked student appeal Deferred tuition payments were tied to post-graduation income By JOHN ARUNDEL i ford. "It failed because the logistics were not right for its If some members of the Class of 1976 become success." millionaires, University officials undoubtedly will wish Officials had hoped the plan would allow many students they had taken advantage of a long-defunct tuition option to attend Duke who might not otherwise be able to afford that would have taxed their income. the tuition, according to University Treasurer Steve The Deferred Tuition Loan Program, tried as an experi­ Harward, who helped administer the program from ment 12 years ago and discontinued after two years, let 1971-73. students attend Duke tuition-free, but required them to "The idea behind it was to make loans to students using give the University a percentage of their post-graduation future earnings as collateral," said Harward, "so if they income. made a lot down the road they paid more tuition. Unfor­ Only 250 students used the plan, generating less than tunately there wasn't much interest [on the part of $30,000 in profit for the University, according to Henry students]." Williams, director of the student loan office. He added that Graduates were required to pay back the principal of the $58,000 in loans is currently outstanding. loan within 10, 20, or 30-year periods, Harward said. Yearly The plan was expected to work like a similar loan pro­ income, as reported on tax forms, determined amount ow­ gram at Yale, but it encountered several problems, ac­ ed and interest rates, with a minimum of $36 per $1,000 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ [ARIM EL-FISHAWY/THE CHRONI_LE cording to University officials. earned paid to Duke. Based on the reported earnings, University Treasurer Steve Harward helped administer the "We-had to phase it out because the University couldn't Deferred Tuition Plan. afford it anymore," said University President Terry San­ See LOANS on page 6 Few students purchase beer for points option By ANDY WEISINGER ready." tended to be part of a new retail account I Only five students have bought a special Lack of advertising hurt sales of the op­ that will let students buy books and sup­ meal card account that allows students to tion, which started Oct. 1, said Joseph plies, among other things. buy alcohol on points, which University of­ Pietrantoni, assistant University business Pietrantoni said an expanded non-food ac­ ficials say resulted from the school's stand manager. count could be in place by September. against promoting alcohol on campus. Scerbo said publicity for the plan would The new account, tentatively called the be "directed toward next year" because they "It [the alcohol account] is an experiment "B-Account" atlows students to buy beer and only expect the convenience store to be open to prove to the Duke community that a wine using their meal cards, but is intended for 6 weeks this year, starting on March 12. multi-account can work " said Mike Scharf, primarily for the Central Campus Conveni­ He said advertising would be "hot and one student who purchased the new account ence Store, said Bary Scerbo. Duke Univer­ heavy" next year. and who was also involved in planning the mm sity Food Services director. "We weren't "The University is basically not in favor option. He also said popularity does not ^ expecting a great deal of interest in [the B- of promoting alcohol on campus," said Scer­ measure success, adding, "For those five in- *r . • .u..—. •>.. , mm CHR,S DUPREE/THE CHR0NICLE Account] until th, convenience store was bo. The alcohol account, he added, is in­ dividuals it's a great success." joseph Pietra ntoni

Jerry Falwell — You've Met Your Match! TARTUFFE Has Come!!

UNDERGRADUATE FINANCIAL AID THE DUKE UNIVERSITY for the first time M DRAMA PROGRAM presents Available The Duke Players production of for the Moliere's classic comedy Summer on the same TARTUFFI basis as during the academic year! Reynolds Theater - Bryan Center Wednesday through Saturday, February 20-23 at 8:15 Inquire in the $5 (Students $3.50) Office of Special Low Priced Performances, Tuesday, February 19 Undergraduate at 8:15 and Sunday, February 24 at 2:30 Financial Aid All Seats $3.50 2106 Campus Drive mn H* j! Tickets at Page Box Office (684-4059) and at the doot Friday, February 15, 1985 THE CHRONICLE Page 5

SHARON — Happy 20th Birth­ CLASSIES from page 14 An alternative to drinking in the WELCOME TO DUKE. MOM! It is Hideaway for all you undergrads day! Good luck in your new THETA PLEDGESI Our meeting Barefoot, pregnant ar so great to have you here. Love and in. . . (who knows where??} decade. Have FUN. Love — Chrys will be in 108 Carr (on East), Sun. chen? or trained, t ANONYMOUS A DORABLE for all you grads? Try SCIENCE AS Get your tickets now for the sex at 4:00. Don't forget pledge fee in the lab? Where should w FEMALE: Whys nonymous? Next A SOCIAL ACTIVITY?? Attend comedy TARTUFFE at the andgrubbies to paint ml' See vail Greg Payne: You're AWESOME, ;imt knock. 1 was ir the room Ruth Hubbard's lecture Sun. Feo. Reynolds Theatre Feb. 19-24 and you're 21. so Get Psyched! DISCONTINUITY? reading when you left your 17. 8 pm Bryan Center Film See the play that was banned in Beware of failing shelves, and Paris but made it to Durham. bring checkbooks. Love. Jill message Wed. night The; See CLASSIES on page 19

Micro" 3411 University Drive Durham, NC 277D7 Glyphics Open M-F 11-S (01DID Durham -.93-B44-. Raleigh 84B-B2S7 1$ FRI-tMTLl. getting the scoop IBB on Quod Flix, IRE Microglyphics Announces m presents: ire Training Classes M m IffB .'ACCUSE 7:00 only (1937 — d. Abel Gance — 125 min.) MICROGLYPHICS announces a series of workshops ITB intended to provide users of personal computers with m In conjunction with this weekend's showing of Abel Gonce's great silent- hands-on training in the use of a variety of programs. These screen masterpiece Napoleon this weekend in Page, Freewater is presenting two lesser-known works by the great French director. First on workshops will be taught by people from the triangle area m the agenda is Gance's remake of a silent film he made during the First who use personal computers in their daily work. Beginning World War as a comment on that conflict. James Welsh and Stephen r_G and advanced courses are offered; class size will be small, ITB Kramer called this poweful attack on the absurdity and horror of the m_ coming war a work of "technical virtuosity and poetic genius." UPCOMING CLASSES m UN GRAND AMOUR DE BEETHOVEN Feb. R1 6:30 p.m.-_;30 p.m. Intro, to Word Processing 9:30 only Feb. 23 10:00 a,m.-1 :D0 p.m. Intro, to Word Processing (1906 — d. Abel Gonce — 117 min.) m Feb. 27 S SB 5 Total Hours Advanced Symphony Man. 2 9:00 am-1:00 p.m. AutoCAD Training Gance brings to the screen through sound, image and cutting the oct m m of creative genius as experienced through the senses of the deaf Feb. 7 £. 9 5 Total Hours WordStar 2000 Beethoven. The film is a symphony of Images and music. Gance m visualizes the artist's emotional crisis caused by his increasing deafness in a montage sequence of unparalleled brilliance. M FEES: Beginning classes $55/person m Advanced classes SB175/person "The outeur theory thrives yet." —Gorth Green Call 493-8444 for details. m

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can respond TO yo T"" Page 6 THE CHRONICLE Friday, February 15, 1985 Federal loans foiled deferred tuition program LOANS from page 4 named lack of participants and lower income expectations as problems. higher interest rates were paid by those with higher "It wasn't a very pleasant program to work with," said salaries. Williams. "It became quite confusing for the borrowers. Harward said this was a source of concern, since some There were a lot of provisions and confusing expectations." successful graduates paid up to 16 percent interest on the He said the inconsistent interest rates were a source of some loans while others paid as little as 5 percent. Students, '[The tuition program] was just a of the confusion. however, could buy out of their commitment by paying back terrible strain on their finances/ The program was designed so that University lawyers the remainder of the loan and 8 percent accrued interest. could sue graduates who fell behind in their payments, but Since the program can be a tax write-off, Harward said said Harward, 'especially when a Harward said he was unsure whether anv suits have been this option had been more attractive to borrowers in the student is busy finding a job, starting filed. middle income range than those in higher income brackets Since federal government student loan programs were The program was funded initially with $500,000 in seed a family and trying to make it in in abundance in 1973-74, the program failed to attract a money from the Ford Foundation, with additional money the job market.' "broader base" of students, according to University coming from the LaW School and the Fuqua School of Registrar Clark Cahow,. "It looked like an attractive program at the time," said Students who chose to accept the tuition pay-back plan "It was just a terrible strain on their finances," said Har­ Cahow, "but when you could borrow money from the federal were required to begin payments to the University nine ward, "especially when a student is busy finding a job, star­ government at a lower interest rate, it didn't look that months after graduation and had to repay the University ting a family and trying to make it in the job market." attractive, in full within a specified time period, Harward said. Williams of the loan office said the program was difficult "The potential for profit [for Duke] was enormous," he The burden of tuition payments less than nin_ months to administer because at the time the University billing added, but "there were not enough takers." after graduating was one of many roadblocks to the pro­ system was not computerized, making it difficult to keep A financial aid official at Yale said it also experienced gram's success. up with varied interest rates for different incomes. He complications with a similar tuition payment plan. Skip Routh, director of Yale's financial aid office, said that Yale had experimented with a similiar tuition aid package, called the Tuition Postponement Option. Routh said the plan, which operated between 1973-1978, deferred over $50 million during the five-year period. According to Routh, the easy availability of government loans as well as the high cost of loaning money to students MARTHA WASHINGTON'S over such an extended period were two factors that led to the program's cancellation. "We could no longer afford to maintain it," Routh said. But he added that President Reagan's proposal to deny BIRTHDAY SALE federally guaranteed loans to students with family in­ comes above $32,500 might cause Yale to reexamine old methods of collecting tuition, including its Tuition Postponement Option. "We've talked a lot in recent years about reinstituting old programs," said Routh, "I wouldn't be surprised if this became a viable option." New methods to finance higher education will be con­ sidered by Duke representatives and representatives of After two hundred years, we think it's time to give the lady "Washington" nickel specials on little things that some credit. To celebrate, we'll be marking down hun­ everyone needs. But hurry, some quantities are limitedl other major universities at a planning conference March dreds of items in each of our four stores. Plus we're offering Sale ends Friday, Feb. 22nd. 5 in .

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51 o o _• instant _r_ _:t __ Raleigh |y 90 Days Some as Cash 7105 Slenwood Avenue CHAPEL I ' S"' 7__-_?1."C,tyl Greensboro Winston-Salem 2705 High Point Bo ad M_i Robin hood Rd (Next lo McDonald . (Across Irom Pino nut) TOWEI) I 292 7JOO J___E__e__B_Taking Carolina by sight and sound i AFARTMENTS ' Friday, February 15, 1985 THE CHRONICLE Page 7 Jabberwocky hosts Student assaulted at gunpoint humor extravaganza Durham public safety officers are looking for the man who assaulted a female Duke student Wednesday night News briefs By CLAUDIA on Lancaster Street. BALDASSANO The student was reaching in the passenger-seat window smoke, Treat said. Although it is not certain whether there of her car parked in the block adjacent to East Campus actually was a fire, Treat speculated that the smoke could The Jabberwocky Com­ when a man approached her and put a gun to her head, edy Club will feature have come from a malfunction in the building's wiring. according to Durham detective Steve Hall. "No one seemed to be in danger at any time," Treat said. three rising young come­ Hall said the man was black, with a medium build, 5 dians in its third annual Safety Manager Larry Blake said that the incident is still feet 10 inches tall wearing a green or black knit ski hat under investigation and declined comment. humor extravaganza to­ and a down jacket. night at 8:30 in Page Hall said the man told the woman to "come on" and spun Auditorium. her around pointing a long-barrelled blue steel pistol in CBS'S Wallace tO Speak: Jane Wallace, CBS Jabberwocky editor her face The woman grabbed the pistol and pushed it down Bruce Falbaum said he is Morning News co-anchor, will speak at noon Saturday for by his side. He then bit her forearm, and she screamed the Women In Communications annual luncheon at the confident this year's show causing him to run away. will surpass last year's JEFF ALTMAN Raleigh Marriott Hotel. According to Hall, the woman was not seriously hurt, Women in Communications, Inc. is a national profes­ because the comedians are professionals, unlike the although the pistol hit her forehead after the man bit her. regional amateurs of previous years. sional organization of over 10,000 women. The local chapter will recognize an outstanding female com­ All three comedians have previously appeared on Perkins evacuated: Perkins Library was evacuated municator in the Triangle area at the luncheon. television. Charles Fleischer was a regular on the televi­ shortly after noon Thursday when smoke set off an alarm. Proceeds from the $20 luncheon will fund the Maxine sion series "Welcome Back Kotter." Arsenio Hall hosted William Treat, assistant University librarian for ad­ "One-half Hour Comedy Hour" in 1983 and is presently Elam Scholarship designated for an outstanding third year ministrative services, said, "The smoke originated in the college student majoring in communication from the a regular on Alan Thicke's late night comedy-talk show, staff lounge in the basement of the library. Public Safety "Thicke of the Night." Triangle. Scholarship chairman Rita Berman will be was called in, but the smoke seemed to be dissipating." receiving applications for the Elam scholarship until Jeff Altman appeared a few weeks ago on "Late Night Public Safety and Physical Plant Department in­ March 1. with David Letterman" during which he mentioned his vestigators are attempting to determine the cause of the See MARTIN on page 13 future appearance at Duke. A similar show hosting these comedians was sold out last week at N.C. State, said Falbaum. Unlike previous shows, there will be no student come­ dian acts this year. Falbaum said that this is to avoid the paper-throwing by the audience that occurred last year. He added that similar disturbances occurring tonight will jeopardize Jabberwocky's chances of using Page in the future. Falbaum said another reason no student comedians will appear is lack of talent. "Last year we did not have enough good student comedians; they just were not fun­ SERAPHIM ny enough, and this was evidenced by the responses they elicited from the audience," he said. Budweisers promotional program, Comedy Shop Com­ edy Tour, and Harris Inc., a local beer distributor, are sponsoring the show with contributions of $6,000 and $2,000 respectively. Last year's show cost Jabberwocky $5,500, while this year the production, estimated at $11,500, will cost the group $3,500. "Putting on a show of this kind serves two purposes," said Falbaum. "It's fun as well as educational in that it CLASSICS exposes the student body to one more kind of live enter­ $ 98 tainment. I think this will be the best show we've put on yet." Buy 3 and Get;v_ One Free or 3 each SERAPHIM SERAPHIM SERAPHI_** M SERAPHIM

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year's freshmen All These Featured Titles and More.. FAC Record Bar Interviews Classical Cassette Sale Lasts Through March 13th! sign-up February 11-15 at the Northgate Mall & South Square Mall Bryan Center Infomation Desk Page 8 THE CHRONICLE Friday, February 15, 1985 Troops summoned after panty raid in New Delhi

Compiled by MIRIAM ARICHEA Such methods have drawn harsh criticism especially Male students at St. Stephens College in New Delhi, In­ from Humane Societies. But plant administrators cannot dia staged a panty raid which caused so much anger Ivory towers ignore the birds. especially among feminists that police and paramilitary "They'll be blamed when students get sick or a faculty troops were called to guard the college against potential water and they'll slowly freeze to death." member is bombed and his clothes are ruined," said Paul violence. OSU's bird problem is so bad "people either have to leave Knapp, head of the Association of Physical Plant Ad­ United Press International reported that it all started campus by 4 p.m. or wait until after dark because of the ministrators of Universities and Colleges. when unidentified male students conducted a panty raid number of birds roosting overhead," said Lavere. The birds are also health hazards. at St. Stephen's, one of the country's most highly regarded Arizona tried to scare its pigeons away with metal owls. Officials say bird droppings can transmit dangerous schools. Maryland used "electronic clickers" to discomfort them. diseases like cryptomococcosis, which is similar to cerebral The students pried open lockers in a ladies room, took Yale installed $15,000 worth of screens. Kentucky put up meningitis Another disease which can be transmitted underwear and suspended it from the crucifix on the col­ "mesh hardware cloth" to keep them off certain huildi.igs. leaves "spots like cancer on the lungs," according to a health lege tower. Others have fed the pigeons drugs, left plastic snakes official. A note was found later that said, "Jack the Robber in their roosts, soaked them with hoses, and trapped them "Students don't accept that [pigeons] are nuisance Strikes," and vulgar slogans were scrawled on the walls in cages and dropped them off in rural areas. animals," said Knapp. "Birds have a license no other of the tower. nuisance can have. They are as dirty as cockroaches." Female students arriving the next morning boycotted Mail Order education: Students at Washington classes and complained they were fed up with pranks by State University have an alternative to endless drop-add their male counterparts that have gone on for the past six lines, closed courses and schedule conflicts. years. The Office of Continuing Education offers cor­ Principal John Hala, fearing an invasion of reporters and respondence classes that are never full and always conve­ angry feminists from outside the campus, called for police '[The pigeons] will be blamed when niently scheduled. protection. students get sick or a faculty member There are no entrance requirements and students may take up to 25 percent of their courses through the cor­ Pigeon problem: Ohio State University has joined is bombed and his clothes are ruined.' respondence program. The program charges $42 per credit the national campus war against pigeons. — Paul Knapp hour, which is separate from tuition. Dozens of colleges plagued with an overabundance of The program offers 76 courses, with subjects ranging pigeons and their droppings, have been trying over the last from English to horticulture. Assignments for the course ten years to stampede, kill and otherwise remove the birds They almost always return to campus. are mailed to the student and when completed, are for­ from campus, using tactics that would make some war Because of the failure of efforts to convince the pigeons warded to the professor teaching the course. criminals blush. to move voluntarily, many schools have tried to kill them. According to an administrator, the professors watch for At Ohio State University, a cropdusting plane drenches While OSU's spraying method is likely to draw criticism, anything that would indicate cheating. selected areas with a detergent-laced water solution. The it should be less controversial than the tactic the school "We do keep our eyes open for anything unusual like dif­ birds are frozen to death because their natural water- has used in the past. ferent handwriting. You can't have a foolproof system - resistant coating is wrecked by the detergent solution. Until this year, OSU officials would select one Sunday cheating happens in courses on campus too," said program University workers then dispose of the frozen carcasses every January to round up the local bird population and coordinator Ellen Krieger. of hundreds, perhaps thousands, of dead pigeons and systematically blast them with shotguns. Many of the classes base more than 50 percent of the starlings. University of Illinois used a "relocation program," which course grade on examinations, and students must find "It's the simplest, most humane method we've been able consisted of stuffing campus pigeons into burlap sacks and to come up with," said OSU Director of environmental having them put to sleep. See MAJORS on page 9 health and safety, Ed Lavere. 'As the birds are nesting in the trees at night, we'll spray them with the detergent and

TO MEG ALLRED: _ DUKE UNIVERSITY . . . just when you thought you'd never get a personal, HMlAL EXM_«I©_I SCHEDULE 15,000 PEOPLE SARE READING THIS SPRING SEMESTER, 1985 HAPPY VALENTINE'S DAY I LOVE YOU Undergraduate Reading Days April 20-22, 1985

Tilt CAROLINA THEATER Tuesday 9:00-12:00 noon MWF 3 BflW DOWNTOWH Mtrmn u__ai 2:00- 5:00 p.m. MWF 8 April 23 7:00-10:00 p.m. MTH 10,19,31,32,32X,34,53; MWF 9 STARTS TODAY! BEFORE "GREGORY _ GIRL," AND "LOCAL HERO." 9:00-12:00 noon TT 5 THERE WAS BILL FORSYTH'S FIRST COMEDY. Wednesday 2:00- 5:00 p.m. MWF 4 April 24 7:00-10:00 p.m. MWF 7 BILL FORSYTH'S Thursday 9:00-12:00 noon MWF 2 2:00- 5:00 p.m. CHM 12; TT 6, 7 THAT April 25 7:00-10:00 p.m. TT 4 Friday 9:00-12:00 noon TT 3 2:00- 5:00 p.m. MWF 6 sinKinc April 26 7:00-10:00 p.m. MWF 5

Saturday 9:00-12:00 noon MWF 1 2:00- 5:00 p.m. TT 2 3:30, 5:15, 7:00, 9:00 April 27 7:00-10:00 p.m. TT 1 CHILDREN'S STORYBOOK MATINEE Sat. 1:00 p.m Part 3 of the 3 part series . . -GREEN GRASS OF WYOMING" SEE OFFICIAL EXAMINATION SCHEDULE IN 103 ALLEN BUILDING FOR PETITION LATE SHOW Fri. S Sat. 11:00 p.m. "REPO MAN" DEADLINE AND OTHER PERTINENT INFORMATION. Friday, February 15, 1985 THE CHRONICLE Page 9 Liberal arts majors, take heart

MAJORS from page 8 proctors approved by the program to administer the examinations. But this is a minor inconvenience for students who value 'Assignments for the course are the scheduling freedom that correspondence courses offer. "Students initially like that they don't have to go to class. mailed to the student and when It can fit easily into their personal time schedule," Krieger completed, are forwarded to the added. professor teaching the course.' Good news for gradS Have no fear Trinity College students, college placement officials across the country report that firms are looking to hire liberal arts graduates The College Placement Council's annual survey of ma­ more and more, jor corporations indicates business executive plans to hire "Even major corporations are giving an increasingly eight percent more graduates this year than last. sincere look at liberal arts graduates," said Victor Lund- Liberal arts majors from Stanford began doing better in I ___^__H_ill. • _\__\ \ quist, who directs Northwestern University's career place­ the job market in 1980. One hundred and sixteen firms STEVEN FELDMAN/THE CHRONICLE ment center and is the author of an annual report track­ interviewed liberal arts majors that year compared to on­ Students at the University of Washington can easily ing job offers nationwide. ly 11 four years earlier. avoid the long drop/add lines like this one here, Liberal arts graduates "tend to have marketable com­ Similar increases were reported at other schools because of a new correspondence course program. munication skills, both written and oral, analytical tools The proliferation of practical courses in liberal arts cir- and tend to be more trainable," he said. ricula, and an increasing realization that the technical If the trend in favor of liberal arts grads is reaching new skills required in business can be taught on the job helped highs, it could mean the end of what some administrators liberal arts graduates, according to career placement have dubbed the "taxi-driver syndrome:" the spectre of officials. LATE SHOWS 11 PM FRI 8 SAT bright, overqualified humanities graduates who drive taxis A Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching BUCKAROO BANZAI while waiting for meaningful jobs that never materialize. study reported that big business would like to see higher & STRANGER Gary McGrath, the career development director" for education get back to basics and leave the specialization liberal arts graduates at the University of Minnesota, to the corporate classroom. believes that an improved economy is the reason more "[Higher education] is attempting to imitate and rival employers are interested in liberal arts graduates. corporate education when liberal learning is the core of "When the economy improves, employers are willing to what it should be all about," said Carnegie Foundations look at a more diverse group of applicants," he said. communications director Bob Hochstein.

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_\.___ftK\* _7_,™ RR^SSAGEKlNDIf. XHILTON Mon. thru Thurs 7:00 Only The Hilton Inn,2424 Erwin Road, Durham,North Carolina 27705 (919) 286-7761 ______Letters Opinion Duke aiding apartheid Page 10 February 15, 1985

To the editorial board: porate offices of U.S. subsidiaries have been How does Duke aid and abet apartheid? desegregated. Obviously, if there is to be This is a pertinent question, and one which any meaningful progress toward racial Washburn's sentence should be pondered by all of us who con­ equality, it's time for a change. After the trial and subsequent sentenc­ Although Washburn's record is far from tribute to its coffers. It is a situation over One way Duke can help is by divesting ing of N.C. State basketball player Chris spotless, it would only harm him further to which we, as students, should have some from corporations that act as pillars of apar­ Washburn to three days in jail and 350 ban him permanently from the team. say. theid. It is important that Duke put hours of community service, his future as Knowing he will never play at State again, Investments by corporations that have pressure on these corporations to pull out a Wolfpack team member is still in doubt. coupled with the negative publicity sur­ strategic interests in South Africa oil, loan of South Africa. In the past, intense lobby­ The University's board of trustees has left rounding his case, Washburn would feel a capital and computers, equip the white ing caused Polaroid to withdraw, so it can the decision to coach Jim Valvano, who has sense of helplessness that will have no minority with potent weapons of suppres­ work. yet to announce whether Washburn will be positive results. sion and surveillance, and therefore, help Many argue that U.S. divestment will on­ allowed to return to the team. Although he should not be completely ex­ to keep them entrenched in power. ly hurt black workers. However, black Washburn, a freshman, was charged on onerated for his wrongdoings, keeping him Major American oil companies (Exxon, workers employed by U.S. multi-nationals Dec. 21 with stealing a stereo from another off the team permanently would serve no Mobil and Texaco) are supplying oil to make up less than one percent of the total student in Washburn's athletic dormitory. constructive purpose, as playing basketball South Africa in defiance of an OPEC black work force. Therefore, even if all At that time, Valvano announced that is clearly what he does well. Prohibiting embargo. American companies move out of South Washburn would dropped from the team him from playing would be robbing him of Control Data has sold equipment to the Africa tomorrow, total black employment pending further investigations, Washburn his one chance to contribute and prove his apartheid government in violation of US. would not be dramatically affected. pleaded guilty to three misdemeanor worth to himself and others. Commerce Department regulations. Other Many also feel that divestiture will hurt charges in a plea bargain arrangement on corporations, such as IBM and Xerox, sell the University, since many of the stocks are Feb. 4 and received a six-year sentence, five Valvano has said that Washburn must computers used to guide missiles and en­ proven and substantial. However, complete of which were suspended. learn a lesson from this episode; Washburn force pass laws, a system by which the move­ divestiture on even larger scales (almost Washburn claimed he took the stereo as has undoubtedly learned that as a sports ment of all black South Africans is $60 million versus $24 million at Duke) has a prank and was planning to give it back. figure in the public eye, he must conduct restricted. been successful at the Universities of Earlier last fall, he was convicted of a himself with discretion. After being the Finally, American banks like NCNB have Wisconsin, Massachusetts and Oregon. misdemeanor charge for assaulting a subject of enormous publicity, Washburn loaned billions of dollars to help South The South Africa Minister for Commerce, female student and received a 30-day has seen what harm negative publicity can Africa achieve economic self-sufficiency. Dr. DeVilliers, once said that "if the opposi­ suspended sentence. do. Once completed, the white minority would tion has any doubts about the future of Washburn drew additional fire when The The best solution to the problem of be completely insulated from any form of South Africa, I can only say our confidence Raleigh Times published his low SAT and whether to let Washburn play is to suspend international economic pressure. is born out by the number of foreign in- 1Q scores. Dispute has arisen over whether him for a year, which would allow him to Since 1980, President Reagan has lifted vesters." Divestment, if substantial, will State should have admitted him, but blame serve his jail sentence, set for late many trade restrictions framed during the shake that confidence, and hopefully con­ for his admission has wrongly been December, and then return to the team. In Carter era. Rather than acting as a means vince the South African government that centered on Washburn himself, rather than the meantime, psychological counseling of constructive change, this policy gives it cannot continue to withhold the natural on the administrators who admitted him. should be made available to him to help white South Africans the green light to rights of 24 million people indefinitely. The question of whether Washburn was him cope with the situation in which he has crush growing black opposition. In the dealt with more severely by the courts put himself. meantime, a few washrooms in the cor­ Richard Supple because he is a collegiate athlete will never Playing on a collegiate basketball team Trinity '85 be answered. But one thing is obvious: is a privilege. Thus, Valvano should not Washburn, the most hotly pursued recruit allow Washburn to play before serving his in recent years, has had everything handed jail term. But Washburn should not be kept to him on a silver platter, and his actions off the team permanently. After doing his Oklahoma like Jersey show this was too much for a 19-year-old to time, he deserves a chance at parole by be­ To the editorial board handle. ing allowed to rejoin his team. ing compared to the hybrid race known as Nothing ends a conversation quicker than "Okies." Go ahead. But remember, people when I'm forced to answer the question, wince at your accents too. "Where are you from?" Now and then my Oh yeah, I almost forgot. Let's talk license answer evokes and "oh, wow" or a faked plates. I catch a lot of grief over the "real-ly?" Not many Duke students are from Oklahoma license plate which monumen­ Oklahoma. tally reads "Oklahoma is OK." I didn't make Perhaps the reason Oklahoma isn't the it up. But come on, "The Garden State?" hottest of states on campus is that few ac­ Yeah, right. If New Jersey is "The Garden tually know where it is. Oklahoma is im­ State" I suppose Oklahoma is "The Preppy mediately south of Kansas, west of Arkan­ State" sas, east of New Mexico and finally, north (or rather, above) the state of Texas Allan Broce The relationship between my present Trinity '86 home state and Texas has curiously led me to feel a certain affinity with the citizens of New Jersey. First and foremost, both Food fight apologies Oklahoma and New Jersey are the subjects of ridicule from two cities that consider To the editorial board: themselves the center of the universe. I've I am writing this letter with a sense of never lived in "the City," but I have lived outrage and deep disappointment over the in Dallas. Dallas people seem to be in con­ Feb. 5 incident in the Pits. The throwing tinual quest of what is for them an unat- and intentional wasting of food reflects a tainable goal - to be "old money." Aside profound disrespect and insensitivity on the from that, you could slap a pair of Tony part of those who do so. Such actions sym- Lamas on any Park Avenue honey and she'd bolically spit in the faces of our world's be singing "The Eyes of Texas" before you hungry people, and literally send others to THE CHRONICLE could say "Bergdorf-Goodman." their knees to clean up the slop that was Joe McHugh, Editor-in-chief But back to New Jersey and Oklahoma, once the meal of children too spoiled to ap- Larry Kaplow, Associate Editor You say the two aren't similar? Nonsense, predate it. They have the Nets and the Generals, and To the workers in the Pits who had to Al Bernstein, Kathy Burkett, Managing Editors witness the meal they helped to prepare be Paul Gaffney, Editorial Page Editor we have the Sooners. They have Springs­ teen; we have Merle Haggard. They have thrown across the room, an apology is ow­ Elisa Davidson, News Editor Townsend Davis, News Editor Newark and we have El Reno. They have ed. To those who had to clean up afterwards, Carrie Teegardin, University Editor Andrew Bagley, State & National Editor the Mafia, we have rednecks. an apology is owed. To Chuck Meyers, Den­ Wendy Lane, Sports Editor Jenny Wright, Production Editor To the Oklahoman, you must accept that nis Bullock and Mae Eaton who were Peter Ha, Photography Editor Will Hicks, Photography Editor you live in a state that produces mostly oil managing the Pits that night, a sincere Peter Tarasewich, Sports Production Editor Flora Garcia, Entertainment Editor and Oral Roberts. You must embrace the apology is also in order. Abbie Baynes, Features Editor Debbie Blum, Features Editor fact that the major tourist attractions in We should all reflect on the contempt and Barry Eriksen, Business Manager Gina Columna, Advertising Manager your state are the Softball Hall of Fame and irreverence for the good gifts which sur­ the renowned Firefighter's Museum. You round us, to which the food fight incident The opinions expressed in this newspaper are not necessarily those of Duke University, its have to live with the fact that 12 of 14 FM points. In doing so, we might recognize the students, workers, administration or trustees. Unsigned editorials represent the majority view radio stations are "progressive country." real connections between people which tru- of the editorial board. Signed editorials, columns and cartoons represent the views of their authors. There are maybe 15 Oklahomans reading ly characterize the related and communal Phone numbers: editor: 684-5469, news/features: 684-2663. spoils: 684-6115. business office: The Chronicle today. There may be 1,000 state of our being, 684-3811, advertising office: 684-6106, classifieds: 684-3476. people reading it who are from the New g,, Hedley The Chronicle. Box 4696, Duke Station, Durham, N.C. 27706. Jersey area (yeah, Duke's a Southern school). Those 1,000 people may scoff at be- Trinity '85 Friday, February 15, 1985 THE CHRONICLE Page 11 Star Wars plan ^^HB^arfirfc^gB encourages war President Reagan makes us feel good. He is constant­ ly optimistic,and his bubbly |V|i_.__ A__lll_ personality is contagious. ______However, his pleasing style shouldn't be confused with substance. That is, when Reagan speaks of the "improving" economy, spouting rosy statistics on unemployment and inflation, don't forget about the deficit or the millions of homeless and hungry who are dying in our streets- When he speaks of the "triumph" in Grenada, don't forget about the disaster in Lebanon or the irrationality in Central America. Likewise, when Reagan praises the Strategic Defense Initiative (Star Wars) as world peace incarnate, don't ignore the facts. One fact that almost all reputable scientists agree on is that Star Wars is at present nothing more than a dream (or nightmare). An article by McGeorge Bundy, George Kennan, Robert McNamara and Gerard Smith - four men who know something about Soviet-American relations - states: "There is no prospect whatsoever that science and technology can, at any time in the next several decades, make nuclear weapons impotent and obsolete." In fact, the Defense Department has estimated that deployment of such a system would cost $400 billion and take 30 years to complete. AH that aside, let's assume that it's 2015 and the govern­ was a foolproof weapon. Then came the shield, and next, each side has equal power. Inequality breeds instability; ment has spent $400 billion of our money on Star Wars. to combat this, man invented the gun. To counteract the if one side feels inferior (or superior . nuclear war becomes The system obviously cannot be tested in advance, and gun we made tanks, and the progression goes on. Now we possible. therefore would have to work perfectly the first time. Even have weapons powerful enough to destroy the world several Instead of adding to the arms race we should be subtrac- if the system is 95 percent effective, which is doubtful, times over. When we invent a defense against them, what ting from it. Neither the United States nor the Soviet many of us who are not lucky enough to be dead will be is the next step? We'd probably be better off never finding Union can afford to continue building weapons. There are blind, hungry, sick and without medical care in a world out. starving and needy people in both countries, so it is to our that can only be described as a living hell. The proposed Star Wars system would not just accelerate mutual advantage to stop spending money on unnecessary Even if it were 100 percent effective, the Star Wars the arms race; it is dangerous in and of itself. Any Poly weapons. Stability is assured through our invulnerable system doesn't limit bomber aircraft or cruise missiles. Sci 93 student knows that Mutual Assured Destruction nuclear submarines, which can retaliate regardless of the Therefore, according to Richard Delauer, the senior (MAD) protects us from nuclear attack. This means that other side's first strike capabilities. technical official at the Defense Department, no defense stability between the superpowers is dependent on the Reagan has silenced many critics of his Star Wars pro­ system can make our offensive systems unnecessary, as knowledge that one side can inflict unacceptable damage posal by saying that he would give it to the Russians This Reagan irrationally claims. on the other. When leaders know that their people cannot would supposedly create permanent stability and forever Even if the proposed system could defend against all survive a nuclear attack, we are safe. However, when protect us from World War III. But what will protect us nuclear weapons, something it can't even come close to do­ weapons become vulnerable leaders become nervous. If the from cruise missiles and bombers? What happens when ing, it would still be a foolish idea. Technology is always other side has some type of defense, destruction is not a new weapon is invented? Both sides will have to start improving, and it would be ignorant to assume that the assured, and MAD cannot protect us. building again, then defending, spending money to destroy Soviets won't eventually invent a weapon that can pierce Developing a Star Wars system can only encourage, not people rather than help them. We are even with the Soviets even the Star Wars system. discourage, war. If the Soviets know that they will soon now; why waste time, effort and $400 billion just to stay When man lived in caves he fought with his hands Even­ be at a disadvantage, they will have incentive to start a that way? tually, someone invented the sword, which at that time conflict to protect their equal status. MAD works because Mike Adlin is a Trinity junior. Cambodians need aid in fight for real democracy' In the aftermath of the Vietnam War, American eyes as the Khmer People's National Liberation Front (KPNLF). have tended to overlook Indochina and its problems. Our Led by Son Sann, a former Cambodian statesman, this foreign policy has to a large extent ignored that region of group is by far the fastest growing member of the the world which so strongly represents the past failures Jim Schnabel resistance coalition. What makes the KPNLF popular, of American confidence. within Cambodia and internationally, is its complete re­ The recent campus showing of "The Killing Fields" governments have either believed this or simply not cared, jection of Marxism - they are striving for a return to highlighted Cambodia's decade-long torment. Beginning hundreds of thousands of Cambodians have shown their democracy. "This is what we want for Cambodia, an in 1975, Cambodians have suffered under two Marxist- opinion by fleeing to refugee camps on the Thai border. economy like Singapore's, like America's" says Gen. Dien Leninist regimes, one supported by China, the other by The fact that 80,000 Vietnamese troops have been occu­ Del, the KPNLF founder. the Soviet Union. pying Laos for 10 years after that country's "liberation" Although they have received some outside support, the Pol Pot's genocidal Khmer Rouge seized power after the has cast doubts upon Vietnamese claims of altruism. KPNLF army under Col. Kim Meng can arm only 12,000 U.S. withdrawal in April 1975, and their "peasant revolu­ Nevertheless, Vietnam's grasp on Cambodia is begin­ out of the 20,000 that are trained. tion" left over a million dead after four years. Vietnam's ning to slip. Heng Samrin's government is still not recog­ "We have stopped recruiting because we cannot arm and Soviet-backed government, spotting an opportunity to ex­ nized by anyone outside the Soviet bloc, the Vietnamese are feed new men," said Col. Meng. pand its considerable holdings, invaded Cambodia (now becoming less eager to finance their occupying army and With more aid, he indicates, they could train and equip Kampuchea) in January of 1979 and forced Pol Pot's army the guerrilla resistance that operates from the border with over 50,000 men within nine months So far, however, into the hills. Thailand has been growing. Several factions there have China has given 90 percent of its support to the Khmer While the slaughter has abated, the Cambodians never­ formed a coalition government that is recognized by the Rouge, although reports indicate that many Khmer Rouge theless despise their Vietnamese-installed government (led United Nations and supported materially by China, would defect to the KPNLF if the latter could equip them. by Heng Samrin, a former Khmer Rouge commander). Thailand and Singapore. Meeting President Reagan in 1983, Son Sann pleaded Ministries in the Cambodian capital of Phnom Penh are In terms of military strength, the largest faction is still for U.S. help. It was to no avail, however, and American directly controlled by Vietnamese officials, while over the Khmer Rouge, who have an army of 30,000. Yet they foreign policy continues to ignore Cambodia. 150,000 occupying troops ensure that everything stays in enjoy no political support inside Cambodia, and their Last month, Vietnamese tanks rolled through the border line with Hanoi's interests. numbers have not been increasing. China has been giv­ camps in their annual dry-season attack, while the guer­ While Western historians have been glibly denouncing ing them the vast majority of the military aid, but rather rillas' only weapons were rifles Hundreds of thriving com­ "The Domino Theory" as an antiquated fallacy, Vietnam than posing a real threat to Phnom Penh's puppet govern­ munities that had developed there were destroyed in a mat­ has been busy building a Southeast Asian empire. Billions ment, the Khmer Rouge serve to strengthen Heng Samrin's ter of days, as the Vietnamese assault concentrated mainly of Soviet rubles are spent each year to maintain Hanoi's argument for Vietnamese occupation. After all, the Khmer on the KPNLF (and not the Khmer Rouge). military might. Rouge did murder a large percentage of the Cambodian The KPNLF representative to the U.N., Sichan Siv, said Although an economic basket case, Vietnam has the population before 1979. recently: "We are fighting to bring a real democracy, a real third largest army in the world (after Russia and China). Two other factions also exist to harass the Vietnamese. freedom to our country that has suffered so much. We What was once French Indochina has now become a Soviet- The smallest one is led by Prince Norodom Sihanouk, who desperately need America's material support. We think we aligned Vietnamese Indochina. has been involved in Cambodian politics since World War deserve it." Hanoi's public excuse for its continued occupation of II and has allied himself with nearly everyone along the It is time that the diverted eyes of American policy took Cambodia is this: The Vietnamese troops are needed to way, including Pol Pot. His support is also limited. notice, especially when we can make such a difference. protect people from the Khmer Rouge. While Western The most important resistance group, however, is known Jim Schnabel is an Engineering senior Page 12 THE CHRONICLE Friday, February 15, 1985 Photo opinion 'Is Duke's curriculum too pre-professional?'

'No. You have a whole array 'A student who comes here 'I think there's a wide 'There's no pre-law major or 'Duke's courseload is too 'I don't think the curriculum of courses to choose from. not knowing what they want assortment of courses pre-med major. Students easy which promotes peo­ is pre-professional, but I I was pre-med but I've taken to do is lost in the besides pre-professional. can make the curriculum ple to not have an intellec­ think the students are. They courses in all the background. The pre- You don't have to base your pre-professional and I think tual attitude because they don't take advantage of all disciplines that Duke offers. professional student is post-academic career on often they do. 8ut that's not have too much free time. the opportunities and pro­ Coming in I didn't have as pressured to follow their being a professional . . . Duke's doing, that's the do­ Duke should increase the fessors that are available. liberal an attitude as I'll particular route.' You don't have to take ing of the student body.' load to five courses a They stick to a very limited have walking out.' Engineering 51 or Calculus semester: perspective.' 32.'

Craig Hecht Cyndi Yag Dewayne Terry Polly Shaffer Mike Renaud Carrie Pinkerton Trinity '85 Trinity '86 Trinity '88 Trinity '85 Engineering '85 Trinity '86 Doonesbury/Garry Trudeau

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The Far Side/Gary Larson Bloom County/Berke Breathed

THE Daily Crossword by__m_SR.__mS

ACROSS 1 Forbidden 5 Comedian Bean 10 P.quod's skipper 14 Actor Richard 15 Relative of beano 16 Hidden spy 17 Affectations 18 Hearing aid of old 20 Desolate 22 Attitudes 23 Corrode 24 Denominations 27 Waco university 30 Article 31 Send oft 35 Mischievous child 36 —Antilles 38 Musical ending 39 Food 41 Is ambitious 43 Soybean product 44 More caustic 46 Writer Hentotf 47 Greatly impressed 48 Turk, title 49 "—inArms" Yesterday's Puzzle Solved: (Roberts) 4 Break open 51 FandG 5 Oil prefix sin M • G 0 A DTHTT K 1 53 Sesame 6 Ranges freely MH flH (1 1 hi IJ L E__U h 1) 54 Coffee or stew 7 Roads 1 ill N 1 1 i.Ms V F 58 Hiking tyro's 8 Baseball Mel s« r r •I t' P fl1 EB T 1 9 Correlative 1 A L N 62 Tattoo and 10 Shot and shell Hili r s A 1 II 1 r-1 s" •1 MV hi 11 Social dances | N1A 1 65 Offshoot 12 Away from wind T R N (1 t U in i 66 - of Man 13 Stakes 1 1\ r- All A H II R f 67 Open spaces 19 Raises u u A C (1 >J V S A 68 Makeover 21 Crept quietly N All Hi li H m E 69 Wall support 25 Defraud n 1 "I Aili H 70 Iraqi port 26 More concise S UIN Q F_|_ y flIt 71 Smelters' 27 Blessed woman materials 28 Grant as true Ur.UU HI'llID IIWJl.llj 29 Kind of car uo_u uauci uuuaij 31 School subj. IIJIJGU aanu uounn 32 Forester 2/15/85 mariner 45 Gentleman 56 Ice house; var. DOWN 33 Model burglar 57 Polar vehicle 1 Fresh'Water 34 Fake jewelry 50 Small tavern 59 Mythical Gr. duck 37 Produce 51 Guevara mountain 2 Exchange 40 Kids'pie 52 Kind ot energy 60 Lift premium ingredient 54 Sacred bird 61 Selves 3 Sheriff Andy 42 Brooklyn of Egypt 63 Hackney Taylor's deputy institute 55 Reddish-brown Friday, February 15, 1985 THE CHRONICLE Page 13 Martin appoints No plans yet to replace Bain BAIN from page 3 tacts are ready to be put to more effective use." Duke grad judge "The institute has always been committed to students to find them internships." he said. "That commitment has MARTIN from page 7 tor because of "territorialism" of Bain's job, according to a source in the institute. "Job opportunities come from dif­ not changed at all." Alumnus appointed to bench: Gov. Jim Mar ferent sources. But if the job did not come from one of Bain's resignation seemed to have been a sudden deci­ tin appointed Richard Chaney, a 1972 Duke graduate, [Bain's contacts], she would not work hard to keep a con­ sion. "I had spoken to her the day before and there was district court judge in the 14th judicial district. Chaney, tact at the new place," the source said. no warning," said the graduate student. "She usually was who attended law school at the University of North Department director Behn said no plans have yet been pretty open, though." Carolina, is a partner with the Maggiolo and Chaney made for Bain's replacement, but that he would take over The student agreed with Behn that the resignation law firm in Durham. for graduate student placement. would not cause students to lose internship opportunities. "With Richard Chaney's experience in the private The resignation, Behn said, would "re-energize" the in­ "The process is pretty far along," so a transition would not practice and as an assistant district attorney," Martin stitute, because all members will want to "make sure they be difficult. said, "I am confident that he will do a fine job as district can keep up." Loss of Bain's contacts would not hurt the Haman said Bain's resignation will be a loss to the in­ court judge in Durham. He comes highly institute, said Behn, adding, "There are a lot of [contacts] stitute. "She had a lot of connections . . . and had recommended." out there that haven't been tapped and the [current] con­ developed a real network by working here 13 years. It's a shame to lose that."

•/: '.:•. 7 DUKE UNIVERSITY MARINE LABORATORY SUMMER AND FALL PRO S AT BEAUFORT Providing new educational opportunities for both undergraduate 8c graduate students in •HUMANITIES ^QGIAfS

SUMMER PROGRAM 1985 TERM I; May 6-June 7 TERM II: June 10-July 12 TERM III: July 15-Aug. 16 . '%>.

In addition to the traditional CURRICULUM IN THE MARINE SCIENCES (Biochemistry, Botany, Environmental Studies, Zoology), the following courses will also be offered:

SUMMER TERMS I & III BIOLOGY ML, MARINE BIOLOGY, majoring in d natural .scieno

SUMMER TERM 111 PUBLIC POLICY STUDIES 195S. MARINE POLICY. (This coprse may bg of special interest to Public Policy Studies majors c_id School of Forestry and Environmental Studies students.] Dancing Brazilian Seafood7- PROGRAM 1985 A full semester PROGRAM IN THE MARINE SCIENCES for undergraduate students.

APPLICATIONS AND INFORMATION ARE AVAILABLE FROM DR. VIRGINIA S. BRYAN, ASSISTANT DEAN FOR THE Some. NATURAL SCIENCES (113 ALLEN BUILDING) AND DR. MARTINA J. BRYANT, ASSISTANT DEAN FOR THE SOCIAL SCIENCES 1110 ALLEN BUILDING); OR FROM ADMISSIONS, DUKE UNIVERSITY MARINE LABORATORY, BEAUFORT, Qv.y.fflsrestaurani ;fe- t§p NORTH CAROLINA 28516 (PHONE 728-2111). x :" : CONTROL SUBJECTS NEEDED: Services Offered Lost And Found Men and women over 40 years old to serve as normal control subjects in electromyography ABORTION TO 20 WEEKS. FOUND: German Shepard puppy research studies. EMG Lab, Private and confidential gyn with collar and license Feb. 9, DUMC. One to two hours at facility with Saturday and week­ Saturday night in Down Under Classifieds $20.00/hour on Friday afteroon. day appointments available. parking lot. Cal 684-0995 or Call 684-5422 for further FREE PREGNANCY TEST Collect, 682-2723. Page 14 February 15, 1985 information. 942-0824. FOUND: Black female cat with WORD PROCESSING — Just Your PROFS AND STAFF: is your green eyes. Call Cindy, 684-6313. Type Word Processing Service Free to good home _ teenager looking for regular will type your dissertations, form FOR THOSE OF YOU GOING TO AOPi's — remember, junior class Child-minding work? Son (8) and Were you at SPE's on Sat., Feb. Announcements letters, papers, etc., quickly and FORMALS FRIDAY NIGHT. . . caucus is on Sun., 2:30 p.m.. in daughter (3) need sitter weekend 9? Did you pick up my red professionally. Emergency typing . 'Dinner 6:30-8 p.m. 'COMEDY House H Commons! afternoons, one block from East Mackintosh peacoat? If so, MEN'S TENNIS CLUB: First prac- welcome. 489-5470 (24 hours). SHOP SHOW 8:30-10:00 p.m. KAPPA DELTA sisters and Campus. Call Jan or Vic at please call 684-1186. tice, FRIDAY, Feb. 15. 3:00 p.m. TYPINGMORD PROCESSING. (starring Jeff Altman, Charles 286-1779 or 684-3455. on East Campus. Must have pledges: Don't forget the rainbow $1.25 per page. Free correction Fleischer, and Arsenio Hall) For­ Hope Valley Country Club shall in­ Wanted to Buy membership cards to practice. brunch on Saturday! Meet in Von of typos. Other services, mal 10:30 pm.-l a.m. terview for summer jobs Wed., Questions'' Call Tony 286-0349. Canon at 11:00. AOT reasonably priced: pick- Feb. 26 and Thurs, Feb. 27 - Portable Dishwasher, in working BE AN FAC! Sign up for interviews COLOR PRINTING: Mon. 6-8, Feb. APO — MOVIES — 9:00, Sat. up/delivery on campus, over­ from 1 p.m. til 4 p.m. Lifeguards, at the Bryan Center Jnfo. Desk. 28 • April 8 Color negative prin­ nite. York Commons — BYOB, night, rough drafts, proofing. condition. Will pay reasonable Swim Team Coach. Pool Mon.-Fri. Interviews are the ting using Ektacolor process and i provided. Be there E _ Form letters, resumes, theses, price. Call 682-0008 after 9 p.m. Manager, and snack bar person­ an introduction to Ektaflex prin­ dissertations all welcome. Call Help! Make my parents year. I following week. nel. Must be mature, responsible. ting. $31 includes chemistry. You Burns Enterprises at 439-6896 need 2 tickets to the Georgia FRESHMAN AND SOPHOMORES: AOPi's: Pledges come to House & have WSI — apply at must pre-register at the Craft 10 a.m.-4 p.m., Mon.-Fri. Tech game. Michal 684-0842. If Army ROTC isn't for people like G Common room today (Fri. 15) clubhouse. 3803 Dover Road. Center (Bryan) 684-2532. For a 21-24 page natal WANTED: 2 tickets for Duke-N. you, why ate people like you in it? to order sportswear between 489-6565. WORK STUDY STUDENT in­ Horoscope, include birthdate, bir- Carolina game of March 2. Call Some of your best friends are Ar­ 3:30-5:30. Sisters are welcome terested in performing thtime, birthplace, and send $12 Collect: 1-215-377-3128 after 4 my ROTC cadets. Ask one of also. Bring checkbooks! secretarial work in the intertrater- to: Ailen Austin PO. Box 373 them about it — today, or visit 06 ZETAS and Pledges: Don't forget nity council office 5-10 hours per Creedmoor. NC 27522. West Duke <684-5__5_ composite photos Sun. in Von 1 week — apply in Dean Wasioiek's GUITAR LESSONS — Reasonable WIN A COLOR TV, autographed Canon from 3-8. If you need to office Feb. 15-21. price, enthusiastic teacher. Lear­ basketball, gift certificates and make an appointment come at 3. ning will be fun. or else. Call Jon more at the AEPhi TRUE BLUE Please be on time! Ride needed to KEY WEST, Florida (or Miami). I will share SHOOT-OUT. Just donate $.50 THETAS: Chapel Hill Luncheon «_*• 383-6865. cost. Please call 684-0495 .1 foul Sat. morning, 10:45 West Bust ROTC HAIRCUTS $4.50 JIM'S (SOON!). shot shooter. All proceeds to APPLICATIONS Stop, and Sell Your Office Sun. BARBER SHOP, near Duke _ VA benefit Multiple Sclerosis. night. 10:00 House D Commons. SAVE A BUNDLE — Specialty ARE DUE SUNDAY at 614 Trent Drive. Closed Sat., Bikes — Touring or Racing. ARTISTS, POETS, WRITERS: Sub­ This is mandatory for all present Sun., & Mon. 286-9556. Ridiculously low prices at Bull Ci- mit your work to Duke's Literary FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 15th officers. Typing at reasonable rates. Call ty Bicycles. 286-0535. _ Magazine, THE ARCHIVE. FOR THE FOLLOWING VALENTINE'S DAY PARTY — Dawn Lewis day 383-5529 and Va. Techn Ride needed to and Deadline Feb. 15th. Submit to: TRUSTEE COMMITTEE Come and join us celebrate 11:00 PM nights 596-1173. 209 House P 684-7551. Valentine's Day this Saturday, from Blacksburg, Va. (or as close INTERVIEWS: WOODWORKING II: Feb. 19-.Mar. 8:30 p.m. at the International Haircuts $5 (Male and Female). a possible) weekend of Feb. 22. 12. 7-10 p.m. Covers orientation House. ALL Welcome!! Spon­ Licensed cosmetologist in home Please call Debbie at 684-1091. shop adjacent to campus. Duke to power tools, jointing, doweling, Business and sored by INTERNATIONAL SPORTS and mortise and tenon. $34 ASSOC. _____ Student special — $5 Thursdays Entertainment covers all materials. You must Finance 2/17 and Fridays. Call 286-2691 for PHI MU's — Formal mtg. Sun. at WORLD appointments. p re-register qt the Craft Center 6, 229 Soc-Sci. Were pinning OF COURSE IT'S GOING TO BE (Bryan). 684:2532. FUNNY! THE COMEDY SHOP Institutional our new Phis so WEAR WHITE. For Sale Be in the BAHAMAS with Duke Phi's — see you at 6:15. We love TOUR SPONSORED BY JABBER­ Sailing Club. A few spots left on Advancement... 2/17 WOCKY. Jeff Altman, Charles our sixth boat. Call Peter SAVE A BUNDLE — Specialty Fleischer, Arsenio Hall. Page 684-7694 or Kyle 684-7574. Bikes — Touring or Racing. Auditorium. Fri. at 8:30 p.m. $2. LEARN MORE EFFECTIVE STUDY Buildings and Ridiculously low prices at Bull Ci­ WE WILL MAKE YOU LAUGH! Help Wanted ty Bicycles. 286-0535. METHODS: Workshop in TIME Grounds 2/18 MANAGEMENT. Feb. 20 or 22 1982 Kawasaki CSR305. 5000 Study Abroad Soccer Enthusiasts! We need Next: Listening & Note-taking, miles, new battery, tires, with Spring Season Soccer Coaches. Reading Efficiency. Research Student helmets. Great bike! Best offer. MacAnderson Summer Call Charles Medlin (Durham YM­ Papers. Test Taking. Academic 489-2861.S Language Study SCHOLARSHIP Affairs 2/19 CA) 493-4502. Skills Center, West Duke Bldg. Beautiful hand-woven cotton deadline is Feb. 18 — contact Call 684-5917. Fre>__ _ WORK STUDY STUDENT clothing. Lobby of the Bryan Study Abroad Office for in­ Sigma Chi Monday night kegs Medical Center NEEDED — 19 hours/week — Center. Feb. 11-15. Make a nice fo & application. end monotonous Mondays. weekday afternoons only. No ex­ Valentine's gift. Baptist Student Union: Join us Affairs 2/21 perience necessary to assist Personals , HOT Prices — all COLD weather every Friday for fun. food and with dog research. $4i hour. Con­ Excellent summer counseling tact Beth Gunn or Adrienne Lea cycling clothes — Big savings at fellowship in the Chapel Base­ opportunities for men and Dog free to good home with yard. Academic at 684-5197 or 684-6089. Bull City Bicycles. 286j-0__35. ment at 5:30. women who are interested in ser­ One-and-a-half-year-old brown North Carolina United Methodist ving boys and girls ages 7-16, 1977 Datsun 810: four door, sun Affairs 2/12 and white Brittany Spaniel, Camps Burlington: New Bern; guiding them in their physical, roof, good condition, am/fm neutered female. Good for hun­ BLACK DEATH: The feverish Par­ Applications are available in Fayetteville Summer job oppor- mental and spiritual develop­ stereo, AC. A.T. new brakes. ment. Only those persons who $1875, call Manohar 688-5329. ting or good for nothing. Judith ty, Saturday at Sigma Chi. ASDU Office. Sign up for will dedicate their wholehearted 684-3811 (wk). The GALLERIES COMMITTEE lifeguards, sailing, canoeing, 1983 Datsun 200SX — Fox interview when you pick up efforts to help each individual ZTA Pledges — You AWESOME presents the GALLERIES COM­ horseback riding, crafts, nurses. Silver, sunroof, fully equipped, MITTEE. Reception: 5-7 p.m., Fri. application. Questions? Call child develop his or her potential low mileage, Exc. Condition. girls! Get psyched for Ski Lodge Salary, room, board and health should apply. One must have Feb 15 in Flowers Gallery. 684-6303 or 684-1655. $8500 Call 682-0084 p.m. tonight — it's gonna be a BLAST!! benefits. Interviews Friday. Feb. ability to teach in one or more of Love ya — Cathy (The Pledge "TRIUMPH and TRAGEDY: Ten 19, 10 a.m.-2 p.m., 214 Flowers. our specialized activities. College '74 Oldsmobile Omega — Fan­ Mom) ______Women Climb Annapurna One" Please sign up for interviews in students, teachers, and coaches tastically Reliable — Many new Don't miss this exciting slide INTERESTED IN INTERNATIONAL advance. should apply. CAMP THUNDER- parts. Very well maintained. Must show and speech given by Chris­ CAREERS'' Come hear Dick Loth, DO YOU WANT TO CELEBRATE? BIRD, located 17 miles southeast sell 684-7319. Best offer. See CLASSIES on page 5 ty Tews, one of the fem3le international banker, speak on: Celebration is coming to Durham of Charlotte, NC, is an ACA ac­ climbers and author of a book International Careers: Options. and we're looking for aggressive, credited camp member, special­ about their Himalayan ascent. Trends, and Training. TUESDAY, fun-loving people to help us izing in water sports (sailing, Tues. Feb. 19 at 8:00 p.m. in Feb. 19, 7 p.m., 116 Old Chem. create a party like this town's water skiing, swimming and canoeing), yet an added em­ Southgate Commons. Sponsored by AIESEC. Full and part time phasis is placed on land sports WOMEN'S SOFTBALL CLUB: for DUKE JUGGLERS! First Club (general athletics, tennis, golf, ar­ meeting Tues. — Trent I Com­ Practice starts Mon.. Feb. 18 at bartenders, barbacks, cocktails 3:30 on East Campus Ques­ chery, riflery and backpacking) WATERBED: Super single with mons — 4:00 — INTERESTED? hostesses and door personnel Horseback riding, white-water tions' Call Jenny 682-8348. _ heater, frame, two sets of sheets. — We will TEACH. . . apply in person 9 a.m.-6 p.m. canoeing and tripping are extras AEPhi Pledges — meeting Mon. Durham Inn Central 600 Willard Brand new this semester. Psychology Department Collo­ in our excellent program. For fur­ 5:30 House A Commons. St. Formerly the Ramada Inn ther information write or call G. $130.00. 684-0751. quium: Dr. Asa Hilhard, Fuller E. Welcome Debbi and Ellie! Don't Downtown. Calloway Professor of Urban William Climer. Jr., Director, Camp Double bed; single bed: sofa; liv­ Education "Placing the African- forget elections. A SUPERIOR POCONO CO-ED Thunderbird, Rouie 7, Box 50, ing room chairs; lamps; coffee CAMP is accepting applications Clover. S.C. 29710 table; end tables; desk; American Child in Historical and ZETAS: Don't forget MANDATORY for counselor/specialists in all (803-831-2121). bookcase; dresser; cot; kitchen Cultural Perspective: A Research chapter meeting and pledge- sports including gymnastics and table; kitchen chairs; yard sale Agenda." Wed., Feb. 20. 1985. pinning ceremony. Mon. 10 p.m. hockey (varsity exper. pref.). A_C, Items. 514 South Duke St. 3:30 p.m. Zener Auditorium (Rm. in 139 Soc-Sci. Remember to wopdshop, photography, water­ 688-0461. ______130), Soc-Psych. Bldg. front (WSI or boating exper.), windsurfing. 600 acres of rolling |)er^l_g.rt#Q_._S Houses for Rent hills on a 100 acre put. lake — it's beautiful. .215) 732-3505 Elegant 4-bedroom, 2_ bath Fine Japanese European home in excellent neighborhood collect. - Auto Repair — 6 minutes to Duke, 3 to OWN YOUR OWN PHOTO 2704 Chapel Hill Blvd. Southsquare. Features: Sunken BUSINESS™ No large investment. Classified Info. den with wet bar, dark wood No studio required. Minimum Durham-489-5800 paneling, and fireplace, police- equipment. We train. Send ad­ Rates (per day): $2 for first 15 words connected burglar alarm, huge dress and phone number to: P.O. Someone to keep my 4-year-old kitchen, wooded lot, great yard, 10. each additional word Box 43 Lawrence, KS 66044. Call nights in my home starting May washer/dryer, much more. Must 913/841-1178. Discounts: 5% off for 3 consecutive days 6 Must have own transportation. see to appreciate. Suggested oc­ short blocks just arrived- Wake Forest, NC 27587. (919) during interview. If interested, from East Campus. Pets Other ???: CallJacquie(after 1 p.m.). 684-3476 556-2__3__ __ please call 286-0302 between negotiable. Available March 1. safari hats Full time person to run used 1:30 p.m.-4 p.m. or 684-3455 $325/month plus security between 6 p.m.-2 a.m. — ask for Deadline: 1 p.m., one day prior to elate of insertion. book and comic shop in North deposit includes water. Call Judy Mack. Duke Mall. 477-9288. 688-7571 between 5 _ 8 p.m. No. 7 Duke fights Irish on NBC Sports By JOHN TURNBULL Even the seventh-ranked Duke basketball team had a Page 15 February 15, 1985 soft place in its heart for Valentine's Day. After a two-hour practice Thursday afternoon - the last Today in Durham before playing Notre Dame in the Meadow- lands Saturday (1 p.m,, WPTF-TV 28) - a special treat awaited the Blue Devils as they came into the locker room. Women's basketball vs. Virginia Commonwealth, Lollipops Cameron Indoor Stadium, 7:30 p.m. Forward Mark Alarie unwrapped his immediately, a blue one in the shape of a basketball player, marked with his Women's swimming, ACC Championships, Clem­ jersey number, and began sucking. Seven-footer Martin Nessley reclined in a chair and worked on his lollipop. son, S.C. Others had the patience to wait. "I'm saving mine," said 6-8 center Jay Bilas, Men's golf in Hilton Head Invitational, Hilton Head, But there will be more at stake than an all-day sucker S.C. when Duke (18-4) takes on Notre Dame (14-6) before the NBC cameras. "It'll be a fun game to play in," Bilas said, "As a kid play­ Saturday ing in your backyard, you're always imagining you're play­ ing in a big game against Notre Dame. There's a lot of tradition. 'Win one for the Gipper,' and all that." "The coach told us what the practice there would be like Men's basketball vs. Notre Dame, East Rutherford, [Friday]" Alarie said. "We get about 45 minutes on the floor N.J., 1 p.m. and then the coach told us it's a three-ring circus as far as the media is concerned. The NBC people come out and Men's fencing vs. The Citadel and Wofford, get their pre-game interviews. We really won't be able to Cameron Indoor Stadium, 9 a.m. practice." Alarie, from relatively small Scottsdale, Ariz., said he Women's fencing vs. Lynchburg, Hollins and Wof­ had "never really been in New York City before." ford, Cameron Indoor Stadium, 9 a.m. "I've never been in New Jersey, either," he added. "I'm not sure if I want to go there." It is the first time Notre Dame and Duke have met in Wrestling vs. Clemson, Cameron Indoor Stadium, the regular season since 1974. Their last meeting was in 7 p.m. the NCAA semifinals in 1978, which Duke won. Notre Dame basketball still exudes tradition, although Women's swimming, ACC championsips, Clemson, the Irish have not made an NCAA Tournament appearance S.C. since 1981. Before that they had made eight straight ap­ pearances under Digger Phelps, their coach since 1971 and Indoor Track in the George Mason Invitational, Fair­ the producer of such NBA players as John Paxson, Kelly fax, Va. Tripucka, Orlando Woolridge and Adrian Dantley. Notre Dame boasts the longest and most complete press Men's golf in Hilton Head Invitational, Hilton Head, guide in Division I (164 pages!. Duke's has 56. The Irish are consistently one of the nation's top in- S.C. DON MULLEN/THE CHRONICLE See BASKETBALL on page 18 Mark Alarie (32), averaging 17 points per game, tries a difficult left-hander against Stetson. He made it. ACC Statistics Aiming for bid, women host VCU By STEVE SIEGEL The following are the Atlantic Coast Conference basketball After three straight Atlantic Coast Conference road statistics through games played on February 12, 1985. games, the Duke women's basketball team returns to Scoring Cameron Indoor Stadium for a non-conference confronta­ tion with Virginia Commonwealth tonight at 7:30 p.m. Player, School FG FT Pts. Avg. Duke dropped two out of three games on its recent trip, Len Bias, Md 202 116 529 20.0 losing to Virginia and North Carolina while beating Johnny Dawkins, Duke 152 89 393 18.7 Maryland, and stands at 7-6 in the ACC, 16-6 overall. VCU Adrian Branch, Md 192 98 482 18.5 is 1-4 in the Sun Belt conference and 7-12 overall. Lorenzo Charles, NCS 153 83 387 18.4 Duke coach Debbie Leonard said her team has only an Kenny Green, WF 155 55 365 17.4 outside chance of making the NCAA tournament, unless Mark Alarie, Duke 148 60 356 17.0 the Blue Devils win the ACC tournament and receive an Brad Daugherty. UNC 145 98 388 16,9 automatic bid. But hopes are much higher for the NIT, Delaney Rudd, WF 157 37 351 16.7 whose committee has already contacted Duke. An invita­ Mark Price. GaT • 140 79 359 16.3 tion to the tourney would be Duke's first post-season ap­ John Salley, GaT 141 55 337 15.3 pearance ever. "Right now we need every win we can get in order to get Rebounding a post-season bid" said Leonard. "[VCU] is definitely a non- conference opponent we should beat." Player, School Games Rebs. Avg, The Rams lost their first five games of the year playing Brad Daugherty, UNC 23 209 9.1 without 5-7 sophomore guard Robin Jones, but have hit Kenny Green.WF 21 187 8.9 the .500 mark (7-7) since her return. Jones missed the first John Salley, GaT 22 173 7.9 semester for academic reasons. She has scored in double Cozell McQueen, NCS 158 7.5 21 figures in all 14 of the games she has played and leads Olden Polynice, Va 22 156 7.1 the team with an average of 18.4 points per game. Yvon Joseph, GaT 145 6.9 21 "Robin contributes much more than just scoring," said Len Bias, Md 26 175 6.7 Virginia Commonwealth coach Mike Dunavant. "She's an Derrick Lewis, Md 170 6.5 26 excellent defensive player and an excellent passer - she Vince Hamilton, Clem 134 6.4 21 has helped us put it all together." Horace Grant. Clem 21 130 6.2 Dunavant realizes that he will need a few more recruits like Jones to turn his program around and reach the ACCs Assists level of competition. In its only game with an ACC school this year, VCU lost to Virginia 81-46 in Charlottesville. Player, School Games No. Avg. "We realize that we're going to be out-talented," said Kenny Smith, UNC 23 179 7.8 Dunavant of the Duke matchup. "We know we're going to Tyrone Bogues, WF 21 154 7.3 be out of our league." Grayson Marshall, Clem 21 137 6.5 Tommy Amaker, Duke 21 131 6.2 Despite Dunavant's worries, the Blue Devils have ex­ Keith Gatlin, Md 26 155 6.0 perienced problems finding intensity in games against Nate McMillan, NCS 21 122 5.8 weaker opponents - two of their losses have come against johnny Dawkins, Duke 21 109 5.2 Wake Forest, one of the weaker teams in the ACC. But Steve Hale. UNC 23 114 5.0 Leonard said the possibilty of post-season play should be Mark Price. GaT 22 111 5.0 Pf TER HA/THE CHHONlfJLE enough to get her team up for the game. Spud Webb, NCS 21 102 4.9 Joanne Boyle and her Blue Devil teammates try to remove VCU from their path tonight at Cameron Indoor Stadium. See VCU on page 16 Page 16 THE CHRONICLE Friday, February 15, 1985 Trials may damage Pack recruiting Hertzog injures rib, school's admission policies. 'This might force the NCAA to bring sanctions ..." RALEIGH - Some N.C. State students say that the he added. but expects to play school's reputation has been tarnished by recent negative Denise Quick of Durham agreed with Lay's assertion publicity they say may keep parents from sending their that parents might shy away from Raleigh. VCU from page 15 sons and daughters to the university. "Parents . . . would wonder whether their kids were get­ Last week, Wolfpack basketball player Chris Washburn ting the proper supervision," Ms. Quick said, adding that pleaded guilty under a plea bargain to three misdemeanors Washburn should have to pay for his wrongdoing but In the VCU game, Leonard said she will try to fine in connection with the alleged theft of a stereo system from should not be made an example of. tune for the final conference game of the year against a dormitory room. His sentence includes 350 hours of com­ "He shouldn't get off just because he's an athlete, but still, N.C, State on Tuesday and for the upcoming ACC tour­ munity service and a 46-hour jail term. they shouldn't take advantage of the fact that he is in the nament. She said her team will work on precision in Meanwhile, quarterback Percy Moorman, an 18-year-old public eye." its triple post offense, a new press break and on its mat­ freshman from Danville, Va., is on trial on charges of Mark Yalch pointed a finger at Raleigh newspapers, chup defenses against VCU's perimeter shooters. second-degree rape, second-degree sexual offense and first- which have been reporting on the Washburn and Moor­ degree burglary, in the incident at N.C. State's Sullivan man cases. He said some of the reports have sensational­ The Rams whose male counterparts are perennial Dormitory. ized the issue. contenders for the NCAA tournament, have won six of Casting a larger cloud over the school are recent pub­ T think [Washburn] has suffered enough. He's not an their last eight games. In the stretch VCU beat city lished reports about academic achievement among isolated case as far as SAT scores go," Yalch said. "We've rival Richmond twice and defeated South Florida for athletes Washburn's SAT score and IQ were published in just had a few isolated cases and a lot of it has been sen­ its only conference win. a Raleigh newspaper. sationalizing. Hopefully, people will recognize it as such." VCU senior forward Lisa Kipple has been on a tear Eric Beamish of Newport said he thinks the school's Yalch isn't convinced, however, that parents and their of her own lately, averaging 27 points in four games reputation has been hurt but adds, "I think we'll get over kids will shy away. last week to win Sun Belt conference player-of-the-week it." T can't see where it would have all that negative publici­ honors Kipple averages 16.1 points and 6.7 rebounds "Next year, there'll probably be something different ty," he added. "We are a good school as far as athletics and per game. someplace else," he said. academics go." Steve Lay of Elkin said he's already heard rumors about Jeff Smith of Norwood said the negative publicity hasn't NOTES - X-rays on senior point guard Maura Hert­ problems with recruiting in the football program. He said affected his idea of the school "and I don't think a lot of zog revealed a hairline fracture of the fourth rib on the the school will not suffer as much academically as it will other people are letting it affect them, either." left side. Hertzog was injured in Thursday night's game athletically. But, he added, "I think it's definitely hurting the school against North Carolina. Hertzog can play according to "Athletes will tend to shy away from a school that has a little bit. I'm sure the same thing would happen if it were pain and will start tonight, but Leonard hopes to use a reputation, especially two things that happened this at another school, Washburn being the player he is, that her only sparingly. i close in time," Lay said. "Parents might not want their makes a big difference." athletes coming here if the environment fosters this type of behavior." Lay also nlentioned that the publicity surrounding Washburn's grades might start an investigation into the I Undergraduate Financial Aid Application ARCHIVE FOR 1985-1986

Writers, Poets, Artists: The following students should pick up renewal applications in the Financial Aid Office, 2106 Campus Drive: Friday, February 15, is The Deadlii • Students on "Need-Based" Aid for Submissions for the 1985 • Students receiving PELL Grants (formerly BEOG) Spring Issue of The Archive. • Students receiving Honorary Awards • Foreign Students receiving aid Please Submit All Work To:' • Students not currently receiving aid but wishing to apply 203 East Campus Center APPLICATIONS WILL NOT BE MAILED OUT Box 28029 College Statioi Students applying for the Guaranteed/Federally Insured Student Loan should submit loan applications by April 1, 1985. 209 House D, 684-7551

THE DUKE SOUTH AFRICA COALITION <__. THE MARY LOU WILLIAMS CENTER Lucky Number 15 The No. 13 Big Tex Hamburger Try our Big Tex 6 oz. present freshly ground chopped sirlojn served with lettuce, tomatoes, pickles and onions. Wimbledon and U.S. Open Champion Only s *39 ARTHUR ASHE PRESIDENT OF ARTISTS AND ATHLETES AGAINST APARTHEID

BRYAN CENTER FILM THEATER 1714 East Holloway St. 342 W; Rosemary St. MONDAY FEBRUARY 1B 5:QO PM [Near Wellons Village Durham Ph. i. 688-6647 DURHAM 688-55 ? 5 CHAPEL HILL.. Friday, February 15, 1985 THE CHRONICLE Page 17 Notre Dame outlook Golfers swing into action

Game facts: By TOM LISTER every fall tournament, will complete his After spending the first weeks of this year squad with juniors Tom Lape and Bill battling icy conditions and cold weather, Black. Time: 1 p.m. Saturday. two factors that have limited practice time, Lape, who played in eight consecutive Place: The Meadowlands, East Rutherford, NJ, (capacity: 19,000). the Duke golf team will face a tough tournaments as a sophomore, did not play Television: WPTF-28 and NBC affiliates nationwide. 18-team field including all seven other on the "A" team during the fall. In his only Radio: WDNC-AM 620. Atlantic Coast Conference teams at the two tournaments, Lape compiled a 75.67 Series record: Duke leads, 6-1. 54-hole Hilton Head Invitational hosted by scoring average but hit only 53 percent of Last meeting: Duke 90, Notre Dame 86, NCAA semifinals, April 1978 in St. Louis, Mo. Clemson beginning today. the greens in regulation, the lowest percen­ Leading the Blue Devils is fifth-year tage on the team. senior Chuck Taylor, who in the fall com­ "Last fall was one of those times when Notre Dame Fighting Irish (14-6): piled a 72.3 scoring average and had six nothing goes right on the golf course," said top-10 finishes. Lape. "I never had both parts of my game Joining Taylor are seniors David Ingram working at the same time and after awhile Head coach: Richard "Digger" Phelps (Rider '63). and Todd Anderson, who both played well I started to give up." Record at Notre Dame: 296-132 (14th season). in the fall. Each had his best outing in Career record: 270-129 Since returning from Christmas vacation, Duke's John Ryan Invitational. Ingram Record vs. Duke: 1-2 Lape has posted more qualifying scores carded 212 to tie for third, while Anderson Probable starters: toward his average than any other player. shot 214. Under Myers' new qualifying system, only Forward — Ken Barlow, 6-10 junior, 15.5 points per game, 7.1 rebounds. To escape the cold conditions in North those rounds below 75 count toward a scor­ Forward — Donald Royal, 6-7 sophomore, 7.8, 5.1. Carolina, Taylor, Anderson and Ingram ing average. Center — Jim Dolan, 6-8 junior, 4.5, 4.9. travelled south to play in the Dixie "The new qualifying system has really Guard — David Rivers, 6-0 freshman, 14.3, 2.4, Amateur in Miami, Jan. 17-20. helped me," said Lape. "I know Coach thinks Guard — Joseph Price, 6-5 junior, 5.9, 2.2. only scores below 75 help in tournaments, Top reserves: Taylor, who was within two shots of the lead going into the final round, fired a 75 so that is what counts in the qualifier. I Center — Tim Kempton, 6-9 junior, 7.3, 5.1. for a 290 total, 2-over-par. He finished third, have a goal in the back of my mind to make Guard — Scott Hicks, 6-3 sophomore, 9.4, 3.5. five shots behind Georgia's Louis Brown. the round count." Both Ingram and Anderson struggled at Lape's low rqund was a 70 at Mid-Pines Strengths the Dixie, finishing well back of the Golf Club in Pinehurst, N.C. In that round, Rivers has proven to be one of the country's most exciting freshman. Quick on the winners. he hit 16 greens in regulation and has up- dribble and a slick passer, he will provide an excellent test for Duke's Tommy Amaker. ped his average to 68 percent for the season. Barlow has really come on as a junior after two mediocre seasons, and leads the Irish Ingram's 313 total was a result of both in scoring and rebounding. Phelps platoons Dolan and Kempton at center, and Price putting and ball-striking problems. "I really "That round showed me that I have and Hicks at guard, Notre Dame is battle-tested, having already played heavyweights struggled down there," he said. "What was started hitting the ball better," said Lape. DePaul, Maryland, Syracuse and Indiana. . most upsetting was shooting in the 80s two "I hit my irons close all day long." rounds in a row. The only redeeming thing Black's position was similar to Lape's dur­ about the week was finishing the last four ing the fall. After shooting 217 in the seond Weaknesses holes of the tournament at 3-under, I bat­ qualifying tournament of the season, Black Flu has been making the rounds in South Bend. Hicks missed the 79-54 win over tled over those holes just to see if I had it in struggled for much of the year. He played New Orleans Wednesday while in the infirmary, as did reserve point guard Dan Duff. me." in the team's first outing in Wisconsin but Rugged Kempton had previously been out with flu and strep throat. Phelps-has a pen­ did not play in the first lineup again. chant for tacky coats with patches on the sleeves and often wears a silly looking hand­ Myers, who* changed his lineup for kerchief in his coat pocket.

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boratory Sciences June 3 - August 9 ' Summer Language Institute June 17 - August 9 Beginning January 1, 1°85 and endin. midnighl February 15. you and a Humanities and Social Sciences friend can .-.' ., /...„. tor the price i _ a single Student Membership. That's Mathematics and Statistics S150 for both of you! Studio Art and Photography _'oreign Languages Work out together in our e .tiling new hilly staffed co-ed Nautilus Center English as a Second Language or challenge one another to a deep, tropical 'all over!) tan in our private Tanning Beds. Ot course, we still have our uniquely heated competition-size The Five-Week Semester pool, Htness classes, racquetball courts and beautifully designed saunas, July 8 - August 9 steamrooms and whirlpools. And, coming this fall, the area's only INDOOR , including courses in Drama, Dance, TENNIS COURTS! Coming in January r Creative Writing, Computer Science, Film, Humanities and Social Sciences, "Body Exhibition 1985: The Shape of Things To Come" 1 English as a Second Language. A bodv-buildingexpo featuring nationally known title holders Qualified pre-college students, age 16 or as well as local contenders. Open to the public - - S2.50 at the door. over, are also encouraged to apply to any f the programs listed above. For information and applications, please THERACQUETCLUB ontact: Durham - Moti Pn^tigious Club 1 YALE SUMMER PROGRAMS 53 Wall Street-Dept. JJ PO Box 2145, New Haven, CT06520 Telephone (203) 436-4217 501 Douglas Street. Durham. N.C. 27705 28.-752° Page 18 THE CHRONICLE Friday, February 15, 1985 The nation gets a gander at Duke BASKETBALL from page 15 per game. In the last six games, he has hovered consistent­ dependents, and consistently play one of the toughest ly around 20 points. schedules This season, they have played perennial powers "This year I'm more consistent from the outside than 1 DePaul, Maryland and UCLA on the road. They have lost was this year," said Alarie, a junior, who has developed in­ to Creighton, Rice, DePaul (twice), Syracuse and the to an excellent outside shooter after playing as a center Terrapins. in high school. "It's just another development individual­ "We're tired of losing to teams in the top 10," said Phelps ly. Last year I got better from the outside, but I was of the Duke game, a remark made after Notre Dame's most sporadic, especially at the start. recent tilt, a 79-54 victory over New Orleans Wednesday. "Now, very rarely do I put up a shot that I'm not sure "We need to be aggressive on the boards to win. They is going to go in." don't have any shot blockers, but they have some physical NOTES: Bilas' left knee was covered in ice following players." practice Thursday. Bilas, who did not play basketball last "It's a game between two highly recognized, similar summer due to severe atrophy in the left leg, said the knee schools," Alarie said. "There are a lot of influential alum­ began to hurt a week ago. He said he works out daily in ni from both places. Right off the bat there's a lot of in­ his room, lifting his leg 30 times with 30-lb. ankle weights terest in this game." in several positions He also is using a portable ultra-sound The rest of the nation will get a gander at Alarie, who machine daily on the knee.. . . Nessley played for the first has made 65.4 percent of his shots - most from outside time in three weeks against Stetson. He had reinjured his range - in Duke's last four games. He is making 62.6 per­ right knee in practice Jan. 22. "I was a little nervous," said cent of his shots on the season. Nessley, 7-2, who played nine minutes and made one Coming into Wednesday's Stetson game, Alarie ranked basket. "We'll be playing against some really big inside SPECIAL TO THE CHRONICLE second in the Atlantic Coast Conference in field-goal people. I'm looking to come in and play a few, good, quali­ Notre Dame coach Digger Phelps, right: "We're tired of percentage, 14th in the nation. He is averaging 17 points ty minutes. I'll try to bang and shut them down." losing to teams in the top 10."

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WOODWORKING II Tuesday, 7:00-10:00 February 19-March 12 GERHART RICHTER-teacher This class will cover orientation to the power tools as well as jointing, doweling and mortise and tenon. $34.00 includes all materials. You must pre^register at the Craft Center (Bryan Center). 684-2532. Friday, February 15, 1985 THE CHRONICLE Page 19

CLASSIES from page 5 SHARON GRIMM, Happy Birth­ Cassie (the girl) Happy 20th! WYMAN FRASER, Welcome to day. I hope TODAY is wonderful Remember how it all started. . . Belated Valentines Have a great weekend. Love you. Kappa's. Get psyched for K3ppa To my favorite Kentucky rating guys at the BOG party! — Pi Phi! Love, your secret sis. To the only true OINKER: we Gentleman and #1 Beau — Sue. . .PS. Hi Jack then pina coladas. Xmas in Oc­ thought a personal would be DOUG S.: I hope you had a fan­ Welcome back and thanks again INTERESTED IN INTERNATIONAL "Cagny" barks at ants, cuddles tober, racing home Thanksgiving, easier than five flights of stairs to tastic Valentine's Day. You're for the besf 13 months of my life. CAREERS? Come hear Dick Loth, up to prowlers. Bad dog who is GREAT! Thank you for everything. the Suffern. "do you know say HAPPY BIRTHDAY. Who would . . crossword puzzles in PPS. . international banker, speak on: anything about hockey?" the getting better every day needs a • .the "Pits" talk. . .dancing to good home with room to romp. ever care enough about an International Careers: Options, Ritz, the weekend away, and Happy Valenfines D. Michael in KE commons.. .dinner She is trainable. Already the AUSTRALOPITHECUS Trends, and Training. TUESDAY. always our "Top Four" Coming up and JULIE — My Pest friends in in Cameron. . .breakfast in bed. house is broken, oops, I mean, ROBUST BUST to do this? HINTS: Feb. 19, 7 p.m. 116 Old Chem. more road trips, quad parties, the world. I can't wait till next . champagne and orange juice. already housebroken. She really Chem grades and Double Stuffs Sponsored by AlESEC. and Myrtle. Later chica! Lisa year! I love WLL. KAT . changing priorities. . .5 a.m. is an alright dog. Our studio apt. at 3 a.m. .. .my zipcode? C-O-R- Spring Break 85 T-Shirt. See ad (owner of Casey, the dog). PS. — MZ Freak, Happy Belated Valen­ wake ups. . .stammers. . is a zoo — dogs, cats, rabbits, O-N-A-T-l-O-N . . Quinnnnn. in today's Chronicle. Order by Peeper, SGNN, LipSync. doing tine's Day! I just wanted to .Beaufort(s).. .Greystoke.. .honey seahorses, so we can't give her .Catherine is 6 moho old. . .wan­ Feb. 20, receive by Feb. 28. "lines", Bruce!!, Lock-out, analyz­ remember the good or days. (bunches). . .phone bills. . .ice the attention or space she na share Pi .ie?. . Thynthia, oh cream and chocolate sauce. . ready to un­ ing BC, presents. Ciao! Best kisser in N.C. . .no sleep needs. She responds to TLC. Thynthia. . .borrow MY shirt, it's "you're so perceptive".. .military wind. Its TO THE GREAT KAPPA DELTA before tests. . Whose shirt is Judith 684-6106 {wk). . too tight for me.. .brunettes have discounts. . .and last but not PLEDGE CLASS! You did Minnie that?. . .What's that hanging TAKE A MOUNTAIN BROOK more fun! Yes. you figured it out, least.. ."What an ass!" . Thanks Mae proud. Beware Mis Tobacco down? Will you be my friend after BREAK IN THE SMOKIES! Hike in the AFRICANUS and AFARENSIS for the memories — looking for­ our girls are hot. AOT HAPPY BIRTHDAY! Gamma Love. all this? You'd better because the woods, soak in the spa, fish. ward to more from this weekend. suave, and cultured character, CLB and MAS. IKYWFB! I LOVE YOU. Don't hurt then . relax by the fireside. See you in Sacrao. . love from will entertain the seniors at his ZETAS, PLEDGES, BIG BROS: Get nobody!! Roxanne YOU deserve it! Mountain Brook Hey LANDON SLANE — Have'a penthouse (301 Oregon, Apt. H) psyched to celebrate the end of C.H.S. Happy Valentine's anrj Six your Lucky Star. a FANTASTIC rush tonight at SKI 704-586-4329. great time tonight but remember from 6-9 p.m. BYOB. AND — Your Secret Buddy is watching month anniversary! I love you! LISA BYER and CHRISTINE REMEMBER, THIS IS OUR YEAR! LODGE! Buses leave at 8:30 and Ushers needed for the Duke S.M.S. HUGHES — Welcome to Kappa If you have ever responded to a 9:30 from West. Players production of TARTUFFE. Alpha Theta!! Love, "MOM" classified advertisement asking Performances are Feb. 19-23 at LOOKING FOR A LOVING for research subjects and have 8:15 and Feb. 24 at 2:00. Ushers CHALLENGE? BAD DOG NEEDS participated in an experiment. (or the Alum must arrive 45 minutes before curtain. GOOD HOME WITH YARD. Eats The Chronicle is doing an article Distinguished Undergraduate couches. Diet may change with on human experimentation and Teaching Award and mail to Bar­ PSI U CINEMA RETURN5I Satur­ compassion. NEUTERED would like to interview you. bara Pattishall, Alumni House, day Feb. 16. PSI U Section 9 p.m. FEMALE BRITTANY SPANIEL. Please call Miriam at 684-1366 614 Chapel Drive. Your Professor — Life of Brian, 11 p.m. — Celebrate JUDITH 684-3811 (wk). or leave a message at 684-2663. will be glad you did! Trading Places the weekend PATTISHALL. GARAGE & RADIATOR SERVICE, INC. Specializing in • American Cars -^ _ *v " Rabbits • Dasher _—^_"?~ ^ TiT. * Scirocco Happy Hour • Datsun J^E _W_-* * T°y°ta Special Selection of Wines • Volvo ^^^^^^^^^^_w • Honda Fri. and Sat. Buy One — Get One Free Auto Repairing and Service • Motor Tune-up 4-6 p.m. General Repairs • Wrecker Service All ABC Permits 286-2207 Miller Kegs $45 1900 W. Markham Ave. 493-7797 • 493-7790 1.-12 mid • Fri-Sat 10 a located behind Duke Campus Lakewood Shopping Center. Durha~.

DUKE MANOR ANNOUNCES ACADEMIC YEAR LEASE AND IS NOW SERVED BY DUKE UNIVERSITY TRANSIT Bus service to and from campus is now available free. Avoid the lottery blues and the housing crisis. Apply now for guaranteed fall occupancy.

THE ADVANTAGES OF MOVING 17 Laundry 1c TO DUKE MANOR IB Kadio-dispatched 24-hi 19 Within walking distance of Duke Manor and shopping centers 2 Flee returning Duke esci 20 Adjacent to the new Racquet Cub. undei 1000 pm 10 midnight, s n days a week. construction with 10 indoor-racquet ball courts and Nautilus equipment 3 You a :t your own apartment 21 Only two blocks irom Duke Medical nber ol bedrooms siie lloor level, carpet color) 22 Adults only Separate sections lor 4 You can live with the friend of your undergraduate students unmarried choice Select your own loommaie(s)- no graduate students, and married students involuntary doubling-up 23 All buildings and neighors are coed 5 Stretch out and enjoy your own ofl- In order to help relieve (he tight housing campus private bedroom or your own 24 Not subieel to University rules regulations situation Duke Manor Apartments located apartment1 Eliminate doubling-upi 25 Nine or twelve-month lease available (A campus is being served by the twelve-month lease enables you to leave Duke University Transit d(nc your belongings there over the summer) The bus service is available tree of charge s available o Subletting permitted Up to tour students to all of the Duke University tamily. including permitted per apartment keeps your undergraduates graduate students faculty monthly rent per person reasonable in :SHMONGER^^l tact even lower than many campus need transportation between accommodations SEAFOOD MARKET>£*£f^p^ )\ Duke Manor. West Campus East Campus and The Duke Medical Center and lockets 27 Moving oil campus no longer invalidates The new service will also provide some 8 Sut tennis courts npus parking problems Duke Universitys Housing Guarantee •^_M_MMW_W_M_i during the academic year 9 Two swimming pools c:de :: ith the class change schedule 10 Sand volleyball court onto campus but at le 11 Basketball goals 28 All of this and Duke Manor is also within We bring you fresh seafood according to > 30 p m Monday through Friday 0 12 YouJ own complete _i walking distance ol campus in (act as 930a v "_ p close as Central Campus Apartments and availability from around the world! and Sunday closer than East Campus Duke University escort & 13 Plenty ot parking space— nghl at your transportation back tc e :._:ii from DO p m to midnight trom c THIS WEEK WE HAVE The route of the bus is Bom Duke Manor across Erwin Road to Research Drive south on MEDIUM SHRIMP $5.49 lb. Research Dnve to Duke Hospital Entry 11. 14 Individually-controlled heat and an This offer Is limited... south on Science Drive to Towerview Dnve Towe-view Drive to West Campus West 15 Cable television HBO and Cinemax PHONE 383-6683 TODAY! LOBSTER S7.95 lb. Campus to East Campus East Campus to West Campus West Campus via Science Dnve to Come see the model SELECT OYSTERS $5.49 pt. Duke Hospital Entry 11 via Science Dnve and il lumiture available Towemew to Chapel Tower and on to Duke apartment! Manor The Most Complete Seafood Market In The Triangle 806 W. Main Durham (Across from Brightleaf Square)

Tues.-Fri. 10-6:30 Sat. 10-5 682-0128 Page 20 THE CHRONICLE Friday, February 15, 1985

THE NEXT DISCONTINUITY? A SYMPOSIUM ON GENDER AND SCIENCE, TECHNOLOGY AND MEDICINE

RUTH HUBBARD Professor of Biology, Harvard University "SCIENCE AS A SOCIAL ACTIVITY" Sunday, February 17, 8 p.m.,Bryan Center Film Theatre MELVIN KRANZBERG Callaway Professor of the History of Technology, Georgia Institute of Technology "TECHNOLOGY: LIBERATOR OR OPPRESSOR OF WOMEN?" Monday, February 18, 3:30 p.m.. Engineering Auditorium ELIZABETH FEE Professor of Health Policy, Johns Hopkins University "TO CURE, TO CARE, OR TO HEAL: TOWARDS A GENDER-FREE CONCEPTION OF MEDICAL CARE" Monday, February 18, 8 p.m„ Page Auditorium RUTH BLEIER Professor of Neurophysiology and Director of Women's Studies, University of Wisconsin "THE FEMINIST CRITIQUE OF SCIENCE: POINTS OF RUPTURE AND REGENERATION" Tuesday, February 19. 3:30 p.m„ Bryan Center Film Theatre Sponsored by the Symposium Committee, the Program of Science, Technology and Human Values, and the Women's Studies Program of Duke University.