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Clarkston returns Football All-American Clarkston Hines is catching balls in theTriangle again, this time THE CHRONICLE for the WLAF Skyhawks. WEDNESDAY. APRIL 17. 1991 DUKE UNIVERSITY DURHAM. NORTH CAROLINA CIRCULATION: 15.000 VOL. 86. NO. 136 ATO fraternity suspended through fall for fight, hazing

By MICHAEL SAUL now." Another, "Later tonight you brothers tried to enter the SAE fraternity will have to grab whoever chick's section, but SAE representatives will be suspended socially through tits I tell you," was marked "Sig said the dorm was closed for a the fall semester for hazing, as­ pending." private function. sault and battery, disorderly con­ During the hearing, members The SAE's decision to deny en­ duct and alcohol policy violations. of ATO claimed the entries in the trance to the ATO's sparked a In two separate hearings on pledge book were atypical of most physical altercation which Duke March 27 and April 12, the Un­ pledge books, and that the pledge Public Safety finally quelled. dergraduate Judicial Board found tasks were entirely optional. The Board determined the ATO the fraternity and its members ATO representatives explained who disturbed the SAE keg party guilty of each of these charges. the purpose of the book is to and the SAE who verbally as­ The Board sanctioned ATO strengthen the pledge's sense of saulted the ATO were both guilty with social suspension, which brotherhood and to create a sense of disorderly conduct. prohibits all social functions of community within the frater­ The Board also ruled that the through the 1991 fall semester, nity. ATO fraternity initiated the con­ and forbade pledge un­ The Board decided the entries frontation and consequently held til the 1992 spring semester. in the book both encouraged and the fraternity responsible. The fraternity will remain on suggested a violation ofthe judi­ "The fraternity needs to exer­ disciplinary probation through cial code, and therefore consti­ cise more control in situations the spring of 1992. The Board tuted hazing. which can implicate the frater­ recommended that and any addi­ The second hearing on April 12 nity as a whole, and, in particu­ tional violations involving insen­ involved incidents between mem­ lar, there needs to be a great deal sitivity to pledges or rushees re­ bers of ATO and Sigma Alpha more monitoring of the sult in a minimum sanction which Epsilon fraternity at a keg party fraternity's pledge process," ac­ would suspend the fraternity's on Jan. 31 and a subsequent fight MART PADGETT/_ NICLE cording to the Board's decision. charter for one academic year. on Feb. 2. Cameron Duffy, president of The fraternity is appealing the On Jan. 31, a Thursday ATO will appeal sanctions that suspend the fraternity for the fall. the inter-fraternity council, said decisions issued at each hearing, evening, an ATO pledge and an After several attempts to get who was behind the bar. The stu­ the incident involving the ATOs said Paul Bumbalough, assistant unknown companion became in­ beer, the ATO allegedly grabbed dents were quickly ushered out of and the SAEs was isolated and dean of student life. volved in an incident in the SAE a beer from the bar and proceeded the SAE section. does not reflect a broader prob­ The hazing charges stemmed common's room. to chug it. Finishing the beer, the Thursday's incident was the lem within University fraterni­ from the discovery of a freshman's The ATO freshman was denied ATO crushed the cup, and an SAE precursor for the Feb. 2 incident, ties. pledge book which detailed pledge beer by the SAE bartender be­ behind the bar reportedly said which occurred on the following ATO president Sean Park de­ tasks in violation of the cause he had no stamp and his "You're so fucking cool." After the Saturday. clined to comment. University's judicial code. pledge pin indicated he was un­ verbal exchange, the ATO pledge's A group of 15-20 males identi­ Will Yancy, SAE president, also One entry read "Drink your beer derage. unknown companion hit the SAE fied as both ATO pledges and refused to comment. Endowment income increases University defies downward national trend

By MARNI ALLEN Press Service statement. This for other universities was only The University earned signifi­ revenue can then be either spent 9.6 percent, the National Asso­ cant income from the investment or reinvested. However, the uni­ ciation of College and University of its endowment despite a na­ versities camiot spend the endow­ Business Officers reported. tional downward trend among ment money itself. "We beat the pants off that one," universities. The statement said universi­ said Donald Etheridge, legal coun­ Universities invest money that ties earned less income from their sel for the Duke Management people donate to their respective investments in 1990 than in 1989. Company, the University affili­ endowment funds in order to earn The twelve-month rate of return ated group responsible for invest­ income which they can use to erect for the Duke's endowment in the ing the University endowment. buildings, pay faculty members 19.90 fiscal year, which ended on He attributed the University's and offset the cost of educating June 30,1990, was 11.8 percent. success to its diversified and ac- students, according to a College The average national return rate See MONEY on page 6 • Duke still profiting from victory

By MATT STEFFORA Basketball season is over, but the University Store is nowhere near finished selling its national championship merchandise. "We're still doing four times our regular business" selling T- shirts, pennants and other memo­ rabilia commemorating the University's national basketball championship, said Tom Craig, manager of West Campus Stores. Craig does not have exact sales figures but estimated that the store has sold well over 50,000 T- shirts alone since the champion­ PAULORSUUVK/THE CHRONICLE ship game. Hats, bumper stick­ ers and the "Young Guns" team Have fun Storming the Castle poster have also sold particularly London Bridge isn't falling down anymore, but maybe Soc. well. PAUL ORSULAK/THE CHRONICLE Psych, is. Merchandise continues to ar- The T-shirt feeding frenzy continues at University stores. See STORES on page 6 • PAGE 2 THE CHRONICLE WEDNESDAY; APRIL 17, 1991 World and National Newsfile Bush says troops will set up camps for Kurds By ELAINE SCIOLINO had been prompted by three considerations: Associated Press N.Y. Times News Service the intense pressure on the president to Rail talks Stall: Last-ditch con­ WASHINGTON — President Bush said aid the Kurds after urging the Iraqi people tract talks between freight railroads Tuesday that American, French and Brit­ to rise up against President Saddam and their unions broke up, clearing ish troops would set up secure camps in Hussein, the difficulty of getting relief to the way for a coast-to-coast strike northern Iraq that could shelter more than Kurds in remote mountains where they after midnight that could strand rail half a million Kurdish refugees until they have fled to escape reprisals by Iraqi troops, passengers and stop the flow of one- could be coaxed back to their homes. and concern that the United Nations was third of the nation's goods. Outlining what he described as "a greatly slow to respond to the refugee problem. expanded and more ambitious relief ef­ "All along I have said that the United Baker turns to Jordan: Secre­ fort," Bush said five or six encampments States is not going to intervene militarily tary of State James A. Baker III is would be built as "temporary" relief sta­ in Iraq's internal affairs and risk being turning to Jordan for help in resolv­ tions to encourage Iraqi Kurds to move to drawn into a Vietnam-style quagmire. This ing the Arab-Israeli conflict. This areas where they could be provided with remains the case," he said. attempt marks a shift in U.S. policy food, clothing and medicine. Bush offered no details on how the camps toward giving Jordan a major role in Last week, the United States announced would be set up, how many troops would be Mideast diplomacy. that American troops would go back and involved, how the troops would guarantee forth into northern Iraq by helicopter in security in the camps or how long the Activists Settle: Jewish activ­ small numbers to try to feed the refugees troops would stay. But he said it might be ists in Revava on the occupied West congregating near the Iraqi-Turkish bor­ difficult to turn the camps over to United Nations administration and protection, Bank planted a new settlement on der. Tuesday's announcement goes beyond UPI PHOTO because such a move might require a new occupied Arab land in a show of defi­ that and seems to envisage the construc­ vote by the Security Council that might ance toward Washington that out­ tion of camps able to handle tens of thou­ President George Bush draw opposition from U.S. allies. raged Israeli moderates and leftists. sands of people each. At a hastily called news conference after Bush said he did not think Iraq would "I have directed the U.S. military to Gorby goes East: Soviet presi­ a day of consultations with his major allies attack the camps or the Western troops begin immediately to establish several dent Mikhail S. Gorbachev devoted and top advisers, Bush called the effort a deployed around them. He said the troops encampments in northern Iraq, where re­ his first day in Japan Tuesday to "purely humanitarian" operation by a rela­ would provide "adequate security" for the lief supplies for these refugees will be chipping away at the the mutual tively small number of American troops. Kurds, and he warned Iraq that his ban on made available in large quantities and animosity between the two countries. He insisted that his decision was not the all air activity in northern Iraq was still in distributed in an orderly way," Bush said. first step toward a large-scale occupation effect. A French Foreign Ministry official said of Iraqi territory. "They should not respond militarily," each camp would shelter up to 100,000 But the president's action will be an Bush said. "They've underestimated the refugees. Weather expansion of American military involve­ United States once before on that, and ment in Iraq at a time when Bush has been they shouldn't do it again, and I don't think For the first time, Bush said that he was Thursday eager to fulfill his declaration to the Ameri­ they will." so eager to see Saddam out of power that High: mid 80s • Sunny can people that American troops would Although Bush repeatedly denied hav­ he might consider allowing him to seek Enough said come home quickly. ing any desire to become involved in Iraq's political asylum in a third country. As he Very few actually come to Duke for Tuesday's decision also opens up the internal affairs, his decision to send troops, has in the past, Bush accused the Iraqi the academics, or even the basket­ possibility of military clashes between Iraqi however few, into Iraq risks doing just president of war crimes and did not rule ball. You know why you're here. military forces and American units oper­ that. out the possibility of trying him in an ating the camps inside northern Iraq. Administration officials said the shift international court.

• ROUND BRILLIANT • OVAL • EMERALD CUT • RADIANT • ROUND BRILLIANT TB ut m UJ > U 30 THE DUKE UNIVERSITY Z tf) cc X Q. > • m DEPARTMENT OF BOTANY UJ < I 30 tf) z 21st Annual ae O m < tf) LU by tf)LU o OF LOOSE 30 5 Dr. Martyn Caldwell < Z o Professor • z z DIAMONDS • o z Department of Range Science > Utah State University ac 2 O < WEDNESDAY, APRIL 17 c D tf) O through m • • z SATURDAY, APRIL 20 09 0 ft ___ at C -J m s • •v tf) m tf) LU > 4:00 PM u 30 Z tf> I Thursday, April 18, 1991 > LsU TJ Room 107, Gross Chemistry aCL. FIRST UNION PLAZA m < AT ERWIN SQUARE • Duke University I

By DAN BRADY received recognition from the Graduate The alliance's long-term and long- The Graduate and Professional Gay and and Professional Student Council that sought-after goal is having an office or Lesbian Alliance is determined to let gradu­ same year. officer of gay and lesbian concerns within ate student homosexuals know that there Like the University's undergraduate gay the University. "We don't really have an is a community for them here at the Uni­ and lesbian association, the DGLA, the official spokesman in the administration," versity. alliance wants to build community and said Hartman. Gays and lesbians often do not know broaden awareness. This issue is particularly important since how large the community is, said Keith "We [graduate students] have a few more graduate students are so much more at the Hartman and Kim Fisher, co-chairs ofthe life experiences [than the undergraduates]. mercy of their department — one alliance. "A lot of what we're doing is More of us are comfortable with ourselves, homophobic professor could seriously af­ helping the grad school students find each are out and can do more visible things." fect a student's studies, Hartman said. other. They need to know that there are The group also places more emphasis on The group also believes this office would be MARTY PADGETT/THE CHRONICLE other [homosexuals] out there," Hartman being gay as it pertains to the workplace. an effective structure for bringing griev­ Keith Hartman said. Part ofthe awareness campaign is put­ ances against the University. Hartman and Fisher were elected co- ting out an informational brochure that "We need to let other lesbians know that chairs of the alliance at its last meeting. lets everyone know that the gay and les­ "We want to create some awareness of we are out there," she said. "We need to Billy Velhagen, the founder ofthe alliance, bian alliance on campus does exist. "I feel the fact that there is lesbian and gay cul­ create a safe space for women so that we was elected secretary/treasurer. that if I had come in contact with people ture out there," Hartman said. The Duke won't be obliterated by male activities. The alliance is a social and political who were gay and lesbian and had some Women's Center is helping the alliance And the Women's Center is helping us group for the University's graduate and role models, I probably would have come achieve this goal. accomplish this." professional schools. It also encourages out years and years ago," Fisher said. Along with the Women's Center and the The group currently has about 50 stu­ informal participation by University fac­ DGLA, the alliance is currently producing dent members. Voting members pay dues ulty and staff. The alliance plans to sponsor panels a lesbian film festival. The Women's Cen­ of five dollars. The alliance applies for The alliance is just over two years old. It that concentrate on highlighting the gay ter is supporting the efforts of lesbians in funding from GPSC when they sponsor was founded in the spring of 1989 and and lesbian community and its concerns. the community, Fisher said. specific programs. Men's basketball team to meet Bush at White House

From staff reports ing memorial to their neighbor, Jacobo cine at University of North Carolina at The University's national champion­ News briefs Romero, a man who, if they gave Nobel Chapel Hill. ship basketball team has accepted Presi­ Prizes in the categories of story-telling and Formerly a private internist in dent George Bush's invitation to visit the From staff reports irrigation technique, would have won both," Fayetteville, Godwin works with Univer­ White House on Monday, April 22. Mexico Press, featured photographs by said author Patricia Limerick. "When it sity faculty to enhance medical services in Bush will meet privately with all 13 Harris, a founding member ofthe Univer­ comes to cross-cultural encounters, 'River that region. The University sends faculty, members of the championship team and sity Center for Documentary Studies, and of Traps' is one of the finest records ever residents and medical students to clinics the entire coaching staff at 9 a.m. in the narrative by deBuys, who lives in Santa published." in the area and operates an educational White House before holding a public recep­ Fe, New Mexico. Harris, who began the Center for Docu­ program for local physicians. According to tion at the Rose Garden at 9:45 a.m. Harris said that "River of Traps" mentary Photography and was instrumen­ Medical Center officials, the symbiotic ar­ The Blue Devils will visit the White chronicles the relationship that developed tal in forming the current Center for Docu­ rangement avoids the repetition of ser­ House with the NCAA Division I women's between Harris and deBuys as two young mentary Studies, has also collaborated vices, which can be costly. basketball champions from the University men in college in New Mexico and their with Robert Coles on 'The Old Ones of Before becoming the medical director at of Tennessee. older neighbor, farmer Jacobo Romero. Mexico." Fayetteville in 1976, Godwin had prac­ The Devils will also be honored at the "The book tells the story of how all our ticed internal medicine in Fayetteville since North Carolina General Assembly on lives were changed," Harris said, adding Dean appointed: The University 1953. Thursday, April 18. that Romero died in 1985, without knowing Medical Center has appointed Dr. Harold the young men he mentored would concep­ Godwin of Fayetteville assistant dean of A 1944 graduate of UNC-CH, Godwin Professor's book acclaimed: A tualize (in 1989) a book focusing on their the University School of Medicine. received his medical degree from Harvard book by University professor Alex Harris friendship. Godwin is medical director of the Medical School in 1947. He served three and his long-time friend and associate Already selected by Fayetteville Area Health Education Cen­ years in a medical residency, one at Bow­ William deBuys was one of two non-win­ as one of their Best Books of the Year for ter, an affiliate of the Medical Center in man Gray School of Medicine and two at ning finalists for the Pulitzer Prize for 1990, "River of Traps" has received na­ association with UNC-Area Health Edu­ the Medical College of Virginia, followed Non-fiction announced last week. tional acclaim from authors and critics. cation Center. He is also an associate con­ by a year of cardiology at Rhode Island "River of Traps: A Village Life," pub­ "The photos and words work together to sulting professor of medicine at the Medi­ Hospital. He also was a fellow at the Na­ lished in 1990 by the University of New create an unforgettable and deeply mov­ cal Center and clinical professor of medi­ tional Institutes of Health National Heart Institute.

1991 NCAA BASKETBALL CHAMPIONSHIP VIDEO DUKE IS KING

NEVER BEFORE SEEN ON TELEVISION... Available at all North EXCLUSIVE FOOTAGE OF THE UNLV UPSET. American EXCLUSIVE FOOTAGE OF CHAMPIONSHIP GAME WITH KANSAS. EXCLUSIVE INTERVIEW WITH COACH K. BAR & DANCE CLUB Video Stores April 25™ EXCLUSIVE FOOTAGE OF THE DUKE HOMECOMING. Rent This Fabulous Club suggested list price $19.98 For Your Sorority, Fraternity or Private Parties special to: l-UK VIDEO '" 'The Best Party Place in Durham" Duke Students, Faculty/Staff & Iron Dukes SPORTS Call 682-5411, Gladys Bram $16.99 (with W) The Call 493-1025 for information about drawing for tickets to Amu vim I the Premier screening ofthe "Duke is King" video Live DJ and/or Band North American Video closest to Duke University - 738 Ninth Street All ABC Permits 605 W. Chapel Hill St. NORTH AMERICAN VIDEO Corner of Gregson St., Durham VIDEOTAPES ^£j# COMPACT DISCS EJ Free, easy access, on site parking RALblGH DURHAM CHAPtL HILL CARRBORO •_____• PAGE 4 THE CHRONICLE WEDNESDAY, APRIL 17, 1991 Supreme Court curtails number of death row appeals

By LINDA GREENHOUSE all habeas corpus petitions after a sonal campaign to persuade Congress to judicial action rather than deferring to the N.Y. Times News Service prisoner's initial one. amend the habeas corpus statute. His leg­ apparent will ofthe legislature. WASHINGTON — A Supreme Court Observing that "perpetual disrespect for islative effort failed after meeting resis­ Under the new definition of " of decision Tuesday sharply curtailed the the finality of convictions disparages the tance both from senior federal judges and the writ," a second or subsequent petition ability of death row inmates and other entire criminal justice system," Kennedy from Democratic leaders in Congress. raising a new argument will be dismissed state prisoners to bring multiple federal predicted the court's new standard "should Referring pointedly to this recent his­ as abusive unless the inmate can show court challenges to the constitutionality of curtail the abusive petitions that in recent tory, Marshall said Tuesday that "the there was "cause" for not raising it earlier their convictions or sentences. years have threatened to undermine the majority exercises legislative power not and that he suffered "actual prejudice" Ruling 6-3 in a Georgia death penalty integrity ofthe habeas corpus process." properly belonging to this court." from the constitutional error he was en­ case, the court set a standard for lower The majority opinion was joined by Chief "It is axiomatic that this court does not deavoring to prove. federal courts under which a prisoner's Justice William Rehnquist and by Jus­ function as a backup legislature for the Kennedy said the fact that the inmate's second or subsequent habeas corpus peti­ tices Byron White, Sandra Day O'Connor, reconsideration of failed attempts to amend lawyer failed, through legal error or bad tion must be dismissed except in unusual Antonin Scalia and David Souter. existing statutes," he said. judgment, to raise the issue earlier would circumstances. Justice Thurgood Marshall dissented in Marshall's highlighted a kind of not constitute "cause" and would not save The ruling is likely to enable states to an opinion that Justices Harry Blackmun role reversal that the habeas corpus issue the new petition from dismissal unless the carry out death sentences more quickly. and John Paul Stevens joined. appears to have worked on the court. For lawyer's behavior was so deficient as to Death row inmates now often file several The decision, McCleskey vs. Zant, No. years, it was the court's conservative block, amount to "constitutionally ineffective as­ successive habeas corpus petitions, and 89-7024, accomplished much of what now a majority, that accused Marshall and sistance of counsel," a difficult standard to the average time from the imposition of a Rehnquist tried to do last year in a per­ other liberal justices of legislating through meet. death sentence until execution is more than eight years. Some-40 percent of all death sentences Iraq asks for easing of U.N. trade embargo are overturned as a result of a federal judge's finding of constitutional error in the conviction or sentence. It is not known By PAUL LEWIS ceeds the resources available to the Iraqi imposed on Iraq earlier this month allows how many of these rulings come in second N.Y. Times News Service government and to international humani­ its sanctions committee to let Iraq sell or subsequent habeas corpus petitions. UNITED NATIONS — Iraq asked the tarian organizations." some oil to pay for essential imports before Habeas corpus is the means by which Security Council on Tuesday to ease the Iraq's United Nations representative, Baghdad has met all the conditions set for state inmates may bring their con­ United Nations trade embargo by giving Abdul Amir al-Anbari, said in the letter lifting the export ban entirely. But the stitutional claims before federal judges. In Baghdad permission to sell almost $1 bil­ that his country needs to buy 1.24 million sanctions committee's decision must be the federal statute governing habeas cor­ lion worth of oil on world markets over the tons of wheat over the next four months as unanimous. pus, there is no limit on the number of next four months to pay for emergency well as 240,000 tons of rice, 80,000 tons of As a result, diplomats say that Western petitions that inmates can file. imports of food and other essential hu­ cooking oil and 40,000 tons of meat, in members ofthe Security Council are likely But a judicial doctrine known as "abuse manitarian items. addition to coffee, soap, razor blades and to wait to see what kind of a reception Iraq of the writ" has provided a practical limit The Iraqi request was contained in a spare parts for flour mills and bakeries. gives the two high United Nations officials of several petitions, because petitions letter to Austria's United Nations repre­ American diplomats and those from sev­ currently in Baghdad to discuss plans for making repetitive arguments or raising sentative, Peter Hohenfellner, who heads eral other Western Council members said a United Nations-protected security zone new issues that could easily have been the Security Council committee monitor­ their reaction to the request is likely to be for Kurdish refugees in the North of the introduced at an earlier point have been ing the economic blockade of Iraq. It said influenced by how well Baghdad cooper­ country. dismissed. Baghdad wants to raise $942.5 million ates with the international efforts now After first denouncing the security zone What the court did Tuesday, in an opin­ through such oil sales to finance a list of under way to help the Kurdish refugees in proposal as an unacceptable infringement ion by Justice Anthony Kennedy, was to essential goods it needs. the north ofthe country as well as with the of its sovereignty, Iraq has changed tone in redefine the "abuse ofthe writ" doctrine to 'The situation with regard to food and Security Council's plan for destroying Iraq's the last few days and has begun taking a make it substantially easier for state pros­ basic humanitarian needs in Iraq is ex­ weapons of mass destruction. more cooperative approach, apparently ecutors to attack as an "abuse ofthe writ" tremely critical," said the letter, "and ex­ The peace plan the Security Council because it hopes the council will start

The Program in Science, Technology and Human Values TT__f:i_t» TTTVT FN I V •% rf presents \JJL\mM2j \J Dr. Frank Sulloway Visiting Scholar Science, Technology and Society Program Massachusetts Institute of Technology Instructor's Name 1"4 CmPrliC/K> .

to speak on Subject fo&m&«&!_ . IftH&Datetyrt 13,IM! Reassessing Freud's Case Histories: _.•_» April »6,i99f -Adv»^ingDfti4linfc. The Social Construction of Psychoanalysis Examination Grade

Thursday, April 18, 1991 7:30 p.m. Room 203 Teer Engineering Bldg. Duke University 2 *?T*r

For further information, stop by the Advertising 101 W. Union Bldg., or call 684-3811.

* WEDNESDAY, APRIL 17, 1991 THE CHRONICLE PAGE 5

American Express Announces A Great New Travel Program. 48 contiguous states. And you can flyalmos t anytime—because Now students can get the Card there are no blackout dates. But you must make your reservations within 14 days ofthe day you leave. And the maximum stay is and get 3 roundtrips on Continental 7 days/6 nights and must include a Saturday night. In addition to this great travel program, you'll also enjoy all Airlines, for only $129 or H89 each. the benefits of Cardmembership as well as other exclusive student privileges. They include a quarterly magazine filledwit h informa­ There's only one way to cover a lot of territory without spending tive articles on summer jobs, careers, campus life. Plus valuable a lot of money And that's by getting the American Express® Card. discounts from leading retailers. It's the only card that offers an exciting new travel program But remember, there's only one way to get all this—and that's exclusively for students—including three roundtrip certificates on by getting the American Express Card. Just call us (have your bank Continental Airlines. address and account number on hand). What's more, Just look at the map and pick the place you'd like with our special student offer; it's easier to get the to visit. If it's on your side of the Mississippi River, you I Card now while you're still in school than it may can use a certificate to fly for only $129 roundtrip. Or, ever be again. you can cross the Mississippi for $189 roundtrip. So get the Card. And get ready to cover new You have your pick of more than 150 cities in the ••'StSt//fi&

TRAVEL RELATED SERVICES CALL 1-800-942-AMEX CONTINENTAL An American Express company //you're already a Cardmember there's no need to call Information about your certificates will be arriving soon. PAGE 6 THE CHRONICLE WEDNESDAY, APRIL 17, 1991 University still raking in Endowment income rises basketball victory profits despite national drop-off • STORES from page 1 too Carolina blue" is now being sold at a • MONEY from page 1 ting any money back into the endow­ rive at the store daily. Some items which discount, but Craig does not plan to put tively managed portfolio. ment. This causes their budget to vary, take time to design, such as golf shirts and any ofthe other shirts on sale, he said. The 1990 national rate of return was Etheridge said. special glasses, have yet to arrive. The "If we ever mark them down, it'll be next 35 percent lower than it was during the Duke's investments are targeted store will also sell a new team champion­ Christmas." 1989 fiscal year when the average col­ based on their ability to produce the ship poster, he said. Craig and other University store em­ lege earned 14.1 percent on its endow­ greatest long-term returns. Stocks are Current daily demand pales in compari­ ployees have been besieged with requests ment. Duke earned 13.1 percent during particularly useful because they are son to the rush of visitors the store re­ for the red UNLV championship shirt now that year, Etheridge said. very sensitive to global economic and ceived two weeks ago, Craig said. "We're displayed in front ofthe store, he said. The Most colleges adopt an investment political events, Kuhn said. not ordering 1,000 [shirts] at a time, we're shirt on display came from Indianapolis formula which calculates returns over During the 1989 and '90 fiscal years, ordering 400 at a time." and was never for sale in the store. three to five years. In 1985, the the University remained consistent with The University hopes to continue its Even though the store was well-pre­ University's Board of Trustees adopted its investment strategies, and the strong sales by mailing brochures to Uni­ pared for the rush of customers after the the financial equilibrium policy, a plan University's Pooled Endowment Port­ versity alumni and to incoming freshmen win, sales have been "better than I ex­ which established a budget based on a folio was fully invested in all asset over the summer. pected," Craig said. percentage ofthe predicted investment classes, Kuhn said. The two most popular T-shirts have been Before the April 1 championship victory income. This ensures that if the actual the "Duke takes a bite out ofTark' s Sharks" over Kansas, Craig talked to store manag­ percentage is higher than the predicted Duke's endowment, approximately and "I Was On The Quad" designs, Craig ers at other universities whose basketball percentage, there will be some income $475 million, is about one third as large said. The store has sold about 5,000 and teams had won championships. Store em­ left over to put back into the endow­ as the endowments of its peer institu­ 4,500 ofthe shirts, respectively. ployees had also learned how to prepare ment, said Mark Kuhn, director of pub­ tions, such as Princeton, Stanford and One shirt which was "printed too close from previous Final Four years. lic securities at the Duke Management Yale, Etheridge said. Duke officials "feel Company, the company which manages that we have an obligation to get the Duke's endowment. best returns we can on our investments" Many other universities have had to catch up to these other institutions, problems because they have spent all of Etheridge said. BE A PART OF OUR their investment income without put­ THREE-QUARTER MILLION DOLLAR BUSINESS! In 1991-1992, The Chronicle will operate on a budget of more than $800,000. We are searching for hard-working ^Sulfui^e in (Z-risis students to work in The Chronicle Business Office. featuring... Bouthina Shaaban, Fulbright Scholar from Syria Responsibilities include: Bruce Lawrence, Islamic Studies, Duke University Miriam Cooke, Arabic Literature, Duke University • Accounting (receivables, payables, ledger) • Classified Advertising • Customer Relations 7:00 p.m. • Marketing • Operations (billing, subscriptions, Wednesday, April 17 and computer applications) House P Commons • Special Projects Free Refreshments! All are Welcome! Sponsored by House P and the Office of Residential Life Work-study students who are seeking valuable business experience should contact Armando Gomez, 684-3811 PROGRAM IN EDUCATION or stop by the dnd Advertising Office, MASTER OF ARTS IN TEACHING PROGRAM 101 W.Union invite you to the fourth session in the series of for more information. Spring 1991 Education Seminars -EL 'V SESSION IV" WORKING WITH AT-RISK STUDENTS Wednesday, April 17 7:00- 830 p_m. Calling all Chronicle staffers, West Duke Building, Room 202

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Letters EDITORIALS Stop the barrage-the letter was sarcasm PAGE 8 APRIL 17, 1991 To the editor: As a participant in last week's anti- A letter I wrote to the Chronicle (Uni­ ROTC rally, I can assure you that I strongly versity, not ROTC, should change, April support the rights of all minority groups. I 15) led to a number of reactions which I did wish the sarcasm of my letter had been not anticipate and which I deeply regret. more apparent or at least as apparent as I No sections on Central The letter was written entirely tongue-in- intended, but sarcasm is one area in which cheek. Although I told an assistant editor I never did well in UWC. I am glad, how­ , or any fraternity community" and most ofthe upperclass of the Chronicle that the letter was in­ ever, that my letter managed to arouse or sorority for that matter, should not black students live on Central Cam­ tended to be sarcastic, it is unfortunate many of my fellow students from their have housing on Central Campus. pus. Alpha Phi Alpha is a predomi­ that the Chronicle chose to print a serious sleepy daze of apathy and enabled them to Central Campus was originally built nantly black fraternity. headtitle, thereby compounding the prob­ briefly consider the degree of hatred and for graduate students; last year some He also said, however, that estab­ lem. bitterness in our community against those graduate students did not have hous­ lishing a fraternity house on Central On the first day of its publication, I who behave or appear differently from ourselves. ing on Central because the University would improve undergraduate racial received more than 40 phone calls. Many people thought I was being sarcastic but It is time to utilize the energy and emo­ could not meet the undergraduate relations by giving the fraternity a weren't sure. To my regret, several others tion which has spread through the campus housing needs. Fraternities, taking definite place to hold events; "a house read the letter as a straightforward state­ as a result of my letter to correct injustice up entire blocks of Central Campus would help to pull whites to black ment of my views. I am glad that those of and stand up for the rights of all people. apartments including an apartment functions," he said. you who failed to see its sarcasm responded Perhaps we can use this experience to for a commons room, would only make But if predominantly black fraterni­ angrily, although I think the believability make a real difference. the shortage worse. ties have permanent housing on Cen­ of such absurd assertions is testimony to There are also students, indepen­ tral, and predominantly white frater­ the fact that such racist and homophobic Jerry Meek dent and Greek, who choose each year nities stay on East and West cam­ ideas still pervade our national thinking. Trinity '93 to live on Central Campus to get away puses, the separation does not pro­ from the fraternity-oriented life of East mote better race relations. Central and West campuses. These students Campus will continue to be predomi­ A serious reply to a most serious letter would find their only option for on- nantly black, and future generations To the editor: time. The professor would tell us exactly campus housing apart from the Greek of Duke students will not know any Thank God for people like me and Jerry what the white-as-God-intended-him-to- life taken away by the presence of differently. Having predominantly Meek. I'm a white heterosexual male, and be man thought about history and science fraternities on Central. Independents black fraternities housed on East or I've noticed too that them people who is and religion. "Other" people could take would again be forced out of prime West campus would make integration defferent from us sure is strange. They they own classes like they want. The dook housing on campus. even more possible. definitely ain't capable of doing the things school could offer cotton pickin and that we can do, like read, and write, and watermellon chewin for coloreds and his­ This is not to say that Alpha Phi doin things with our hands. How could a torical perspective of the male anus for Alpha should not have housing. As a This does not mean that racial inte­ black, a Jew, and oriental, or a homo­ them homos. Ooo-wee! fraternity recognized by the Univer­ gration must be defined by the present sexual possibly pull a trigger on the battle­ Yes Jerry is right! God bless our mili­ sity, it should be afforded the same Greek system. Alpha Phi Alpha and field? They ain't half as coordinated as us. tary. But too bad they had such a hard time opportunities as any other fraternity the other predominantly black frater­ And to actually lead? I certainly wouldn't destroying I-raq. I'm sure we could have requesting housing on campus. The nities do not have to conform to the listen to someone who was different from sent them back to the stone age in a lesser Alphas applied to live together, but social life ofthe fraternities already on me, cuz I might get cooties or syphlus or amount of time if we didn't have them their housing should be on East or East and West campuses by living something. blacks cuz certainly they don't love our West campus, not on the independent there. Jerry is absolutely right. This liberal country and is lazy and shiftless like they Central Campus. Central Campus was built for the university should change its ways. We is over here. And the same if we didn't have need to follow the example ofthe good ole purpose of housing graduate students them women who all they want to do is Ted Edwards, president of Alpha days, like Uncle Hitler and cousin grab our soldiers butts like the homos and Phi Alpha, said the fraternity wants and those undergraduates who do not McCarthy would have liked. We could have never do any work. housing on Central Campus because want to be near or a part of Greek life separate bathrooms and water fountains, Thankyou Jerry. And God bless America, their goal is to "be a part of the black at all. It should stay that way. too, with one for us and one for "others" home ofthe free where all white hetero­ like coons and dikes and chinks. The same sexual U.S. of A* lovin men is equal! thing for eating places. And dorms. And Announcement libraries and bank machines and don't Jake Socha forget about the back ofthe bus. Trinity '94 The Chronicle will cease publication for this academic year on Wednesday, April 24. Our classes would be pure for the first The Chronicle will resume publication with weekly issues during the first summer term. Date rape discourse needs real thought To the editor: sical. Several months ago we heard the Date rape is a major problem in our "trying" tale of a woman's first realization On the record society and as such it deserves serious that men draw degrading pictures of discussion. Over the entire academic year women on napkins (and then of course the Later tonight, you will have to grab whoever chick's tits I tell you. the Duke community has debated the is­ conclusion that "this is why date rape An entry in an Alpha Tau Omega fratenity pledge's pledge book. sue prudently through the letters column occurs"). Most recently, we read of a in The Chronicle. We have read letters woman's disgust at being "grabbed up the from men and women condemning the butt" at the National Championship cel­ Duke social scene and the residential struc­ ebration. In this letter, the important mes­ ture which supports it. We have been sage the author was trying to evoke was so THE CHRONICLE established 1905 shocked by stories of brutal rapes and tangled in cliches, analogies and mere non­ disgusted by the glaring indifference ofthe sense that it failed to reach those who Matt Sclafani, Editor perpetrators. We have also heard from needed to hear it. For the benefit of the Adrian Dollard, Ben Pratt, Acting Editors confused Duke males who are still trying cause, I will translate Ms. Womble's quar­ Beau Dure, Managing Editor to reconcile the rules of the "new" social ter page of gibberish: women must not act Barry Eriksen, General Manager order with the teachings of their child­ like victims! hood. The result of such discourse has Before The Chronicle decides to waive Ann Heimberger, News Editor Erin Sullivan, News Editor been a heightened awareness among the its length limit again, I would hope it Mark JafFe, Sports Editor Karl Wiley, Features Editor entire Duke community. Even fraternities would consider the quality of the letter Elena Broder, Arts Editor Halle Shilling, Arts Editor (the alleged cauldrons of date rape) have before it prints it—for in issues as sensi­ Leigh Dyer, City & State Editor Chris O'Brien, Senior Editor become more sensitive to the feelings of tive and challenging as date rape, the level Jon Blum, Assoc. Editorial Page Editor Richard Senzel, Graphics Editor women. Many have abandoned sexually of discussion is as important as the author's Cliff Burns, Photography Editor Bob Kaplan, Photography Editor degrading traditions and have sponsored message. I would hate to see the issue of Armando Gomez, Business Manager Sue Newsome, Advertising Manager workshops to educate themselves and other date rape dragged back to its infantile Linda Nettles, Production Manager Anna Lee, Student Advertising Manager students about the issue. stage. Charles Carson, Production Supervisor Joy Bacher, Creative Services Manager However, there have been a few letters The opinions expressed in this newspaper are not necessarily those of Duke University, its (and commentaries) which have dragged Jeremy Simon students, workers, administration or trustees. Unsigned editorials represent the majority view of the level of discourse down to the nonsen­ Trinity '91 the editorial board. Columns, letters and cartoons represent the views of their authors. Phone numbers: Editor: 684-5469; News/Features: 684-2663; Sports: 684-6115; Business Office: 684-6106; Advertising Office: 684-3811; Classifieds: 684-6106; FAX: 684-8295. Correction Editorial Office (Newsroom): Third Floor Flowers Building; Business Office: 103 West Union Building; Advertising Office: 101 West Union Building. ©1991 The Chronicle, Box 4696, Duke Station, Durham, N.C. 27706. All rights reserved. No A letter on the editorial pages of Monday's Chronicle attributed to Simon Pharr was part of this publication may be reproduced in any form without the prior, written permission ofthe not written by Pharr. The Chronicle regrets the error. Business Office. WEDNESDAY, APRIL 17, 1991 THE CHRONICLE PAGE 9 The growing ranks of senior citizens need our help now Over this last weekend I visited my godparents and got ety, they gamble what they have left to gamble with. my first look at a modern "retirement community." • An unexamined life At the community's spring choral concert, these decent, The development where they have been living for the hard-working people sang 50-year-old "classics" not too past year was genuinely peaceful. It was a new, large, Edward Benson . well, but wisely, filling the room with honest emotions. I carefully-planned park of well-appointed double-wide couldn't help but wonder why this gambling must be. mobile homes. The tiny lawns and hedges were carefully These, after all, were the relatively lucky retirees. trimmed, and a few ofthe 500-or-so inexpensively rented If we cannot bring ourselves to Many others are not so fortunate, lacking family or funds lots even featured little, close-trimmed flower gardens. to protect them, or worse yet, being victims of The carports were clean-swept and the cars, although care for the elderly for their or financial exploitation. some of them were old, all sparkled in the warm Florida own sake, we must care for Yet even these lucky few are out of our thoughts, our sunlight. The overall cleanliness and detailed organiza­ lives and our "daily hassles." tion was just what you might expect of people with them for our futures. In 50 years, will we be "lucky" enough to gamble our life somewhat limited mobility but a great deal of time. savings on a shot at temporary gentility? All these modest homes, built of aluminum and plastic As I heard one older man solo on the old tune "Un­ (and on hard-won dreams of leisure) resembled, in short, ther, "Used to be only 60 days. So they changed the law. chained Melody," his eyes closed with emotion and his a minimalist suburbia: pleasant but not ornate, neat as a Still, we're not staying much beyond this year. We'll sell wife beaming with pride, I wondered how we, as a society, pin but hardly sterile. After all, hundreds of relaxed while the price is still good. can so effectively ignore the growing problems of senior grandparents all living within a square mile or two are "Everyone who stays," he concluded, matter-of-factly, citizens. bound to produce a high degree of coziness. "is betting they'll die before the whole thing goes down the If we cannot bring ourselves to care for them for their The community as a whole also had a spacious club­ drain." sake, at the very least, we must care about our own house, a modest pool, a hot tub and even a small golf So even these fairly well-off senior citizens were spend­ futures. We will be among them all too soon. course (on which my godfather, father and I played a ing what was left of their lives and their life savings in an And while I look forward to seeing a 70-year-old peer quick and highly unsuccessful round). The monthly calen­ attempt to grab a piece ofthe "good life" before it was too sing a by-then 50-year-old classic by Paula Abdul or M.C. dar on my godparents' refrigerator was crammed full of late. Hammer, I do not know if by then our larger society will all sorts of events, from water aerobics to zoo trips. Like college students, they came there from diverse have learned to care about the elderly. Which, by then, It was all quite pleasant, really, as were the people who backgrounds, from lives already rich with experiences. will be us. lived there. Not just my godparents, but all the residents And, self- and culturally-segregated from our larger soci­ Edward Benson is a University employee. I met were friendly, outgoing and at ease. Clearly, the "no dwellers under 18" rule was being followed: Everyone who knew where anything was had seen at least 60 years, and nearly every inhabitant there was either gray haired or bald (although a few clung, Reagan-like, to suspiciously tinted hair). Their faces were uniformly lined, but few seemed overly worried about the daily hassles that concern most of us. ED>DV BEAR LOST /\T IV/V/Tf They had no jobs to rush off to and no overwhelming % HOUSE. DURING CLANDESTINE workload; they simply faced the inevitable approach of LUNCHES WITH JACK AMD BOB the reaper, which puts everything in perspective. Waving KENHEDY BY MARILYN MONROE gently or chatting amiably to each other, they all seemed WHO HAD SEEN SPANkfcP WITH quite literally at ease. A HAIRBRUSH BY ALFRED It was not, however, a flawless idyll. My own parents, BL00MIN6DAIE AS" A CHlO> thinking ahead to their retirement, questioned my god­ FOR REVEALING OK. A CASING parents about the finances of it all, and the response was COUCH CWHERE RONAIDREAGAKI quick. WAS NAPPING) FGAMkS.NA1*A'S "It's not that expensive per month," my godmother MOB AND RR6T UW CONNECTIONS began, "But it's a question of how long you can hold out." AT THE PALM BEACH kENNEPy "Oh," I said, thinking I grasped the point, "In other COMPOUMP WHERE IT WAS words, how long your savings will last." RECV^LED AND SENT TO NANCy "In part," my godfather answered. "But in 15 or 20 REAGAN'S ASTROLOGER, ALONG years—or sooner—these new houses will be falling apart. WITH A MARIJUANA OOIKT AS A - Remember, they're just mobile homes. The buildings are BAR MlTTVAH G\PT PROM THE decreasing in value, while the land they're on just gets REAGAN'S RRST GRANDCHILD, more valuable every year. And since everyone only rents, PETER LAWFORD/ the landowners will sell out to a condo developer or some such, giving all the residents here one year either to buy all the land or move or sell their homes. The homes they'll own, broken down as they'll be." "A year to move on?" I said, 'To try to. sell or move a worn-down trailer when they're living, like it or not, on Social Security?" "Used to be rougher than that," continued my godfa- The transition from college to real life is filled with angst

Not to gloat, but I got a summer job last week. Now to on-one baseball from sunup to sundown. It's a field party gloat—I got a really cool internship working in New York • Now's the time where no state policeman is ever gonna find you. It's my for a multinational public relations firm that will pay me childhood and my home, and now it's just about over. loads of money to show corporations that being honest and Pete Lieberman And so leaving the. countryside means cutting the cord responsible is the easiest way to get people to like them. for good. My move to New York will be as much about Well actually, they won't pay me loads. Actually, they ending a childhood as it is about learning to fivei n a city. won't pay me much at all. My move to New York will be The crux ofthe problem is that confronting the end of one's And now that I've got this job, there are a few daunting childhood is just so damn hard. One can hang out at kegs tasks ahead of me. I need to buy at least three new sweet as much about ending a three days a week and watch lots of people, myself work suits. I need to find a place to live that I can afford on childhood as it is about included, try to delay that confrontation for as long as $275 a week. And I need to discover within myself the possible. Some people spend their whole lives avoiding courage and street smarts to move from Western Pennsyl­ learning to live in a city. Con­ that confrontation. But unless you're a Kennedy, you vania farmland to the hungry asphalt of New York. For fronting the end of one's child­ have to do it someday. some reason, I think finding the suits is going to be a little For me that confrontation will take place in New York, easier. hood is just so hard. dealing with a world where my biggest problem isn't the See, I've never lived in a city and I know absolutely wind blowing the scent of a neighbor's freshly layed nothing about New York City. In fact, I've never lived in manure into my living room. But that's okay—even with the suburbs, never lived within half an hour of a major weight. all this suffocating angst floating around, it still feels metropolis, and never used mass transit beyond Duke I don't think I'm going to need that tractor in New York. pretty good to have a job. But underneath the polished buses. I have never even had a paved driveway. And this fact bothers me. It will really stink not to have veneer of my new sweet suits and their matching polka Instead, I've spent my entire formative years (except six acres to mow and stretch out on. In New York one is dot ties is the realization that suits and ties and subways those at Duke) on a quasi-farm. Two of our neighbors are not able to go outside and hit full 9-irons, or shoot ball in and apartments are my future, and more importantly, the farmers, one of whom uses about a third of our land to grow the driveway at three in the morning, or play a Miles realization that tractors and alfalfa are my past. Some­ alfalfa or corn. This, in the eyes of the Pennsylvania Davis album really loud while reading Rabbit, Run on the where in New York, or Durham, or Washington, or Department of Agriculture, makes my dad a farmer as back porch, all without bugging the neighbors. Greensburg, Penn., is the real world of adulthood, the one well. And whether or not you buy that definition of a farm, 111 have to live in shortly, ai\d the one where we're all we've still got a really cute red barn, a really old red farm Yeah, that's part of it. But living in the country means going to have to find a home. \ tractor, and we used to have a really fat pony that eventu­ a lot more than open space and no antsy neighbors. It ally grew too old and too weak to support her tremendous means living at a pace that is slow and relaxing. It's one- Pete Lieberman is a Trinity junior. PAGE 10 THE CHRONICLE WEDNESDAY,APRIL 17, 1991

Bent & Straight/Daniel Saurborn and Sandy Chase THE Daily Crossword by Norma Steinberg

WARNING: we BOTH TOOK ACROSS 1 2 3 s 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 CHE/Tu + ia. we A*£ wms 1 Medicinal plant ' PROFESSIONALS. DO WT 5 Perch 14 5 16 ATTEMPT THIS AT H0/i£l!' _ 10 Whack ' 14 Sties 17 ,. |19 15 Fisher or Rabbit 20 121 •22 16 Muscle condition 23 • 24 25 17 Campus military • 127 B23 29 30 31 org. 26 18 Comic strip boxer 32 • 33 34 20 Cocktail — 37 22 Record of a 35 36 single event 38 39 •40 41 23 Narrative poems 24 "Clan of the— 42 43 •44 Bear" I 26 Obvious H4S H46 28 Name •51 32 Consent 47 48 49 •50 33 Sir Francis — 52 53 54 156 34 Bachelor's last I * two words 57 58 The Far Side / Gary Larson Doonesbury / Garry Trudeau 35 Aunt: Sp. 36 Time of work 60 61 „ 37 Conceit • HAVIN6 TV FEHP FOR MY5BLF 38 151 ©1991 Tribune Media Services. Inc I 04/17/91 YOU KNOW, YOU'RB TH&B FP5T SWFN MONTHS 39 Dragged behind All Rights Reserved autre RIGHT, SIP<- HAS MAW MZ MUCH MORB 40 Caftans Yesterday's Puzzle Solved: 42 Impetuously 10 Gems I HAVtm CHAN6&P... s&F-suFFiaetrr. ANPI I HBO CIEH3HEI E E E STICKUPFORMYSdlfA determined 11 Diving bird 1 44 School subject 12 He wrote "My H A 1 R 0 R A LE WO 0 L A LOTMOR&! 45 Profit and — Way" A B E T A T T IC 1 N N 46 Discrimination 13 Diner offering L A T H S S E R 0 L E S A : 47 "Crocodile 19Cest—! F L A U NITHSIT E L 1 fct_(-? *__i Dundee" 21 Cows old style 1 El 0 SlABH A R 1 C 0 T 50 Non-specific 24 Beet variety i D E S T T H 1 S A 0 N E 52 Fundamental 25 Clumsy boats L 1 E U S T A R E M A C S I__r * °j/ 55 Related 26 Darn E A R L P i T S • A G L E T 57 Taj Mahal site 27 Spry IX m WJjVsm^ S M 0 L D E R ITIAIL 58 Kind of surgeon 28 Vinegar bottle nL L W y&Z-Z ^-Y^jmmmmmm^mm 59 Hackman 29 Overtime score 1 N L E TMSIA 0 60 Sheep 30 Boundaries I NAVA n R 0 T B A R E =ar ^f^ "JS^fP ^w" 61 Author Glasgow 31. Rope loop 0 M A 1 IM AG E E V E L 62 Art deco name 33 Epsom — FIE V E N N A D E R R I A L 1-17 36 Garden DOWN tools innn Hmianci DEE i 1 Mo. 39 Meat choice 04/17/91 FOR INSTANCE. SEVEN MONTHS HBYC'MCN! FROMN0UJ0N 2 July babies 40 Went up A60,1 PROBABLY NEVERUMJU? MATPOYOU *££gg& 3 — of (following) 41 Indignant fury HAVE /rlENTtONEPHOWINCKBPlBWTH/NKIPR/VE '5%XtY 4 Runaway 43 Andean pack OFFENSIVE 1FINPIT THAT 5 Turn down animals OUTHEREFORm %£?£, 44 The Grand — YOU'RE CHECKINGOUT 6 Smells THE Vim? - MONE! 7 Poems 46 — Haute 49 Microbe 53 Comp. pt. MY BOP R16KT NOW! ^ 8 Drink slowly 47 Learn 50 Ancient land 54 — Aviv \ I - 9 Hot drink 48 Russ. saint 51 Fuzz 56 Born THE CHRONICLE

Assistant sports editor: Kris - Round Mound- Olson Copy editors: AD, Matt Ruben, Crazy Buxton Wire editors: Jason and Blair Greenwald "C'mon, c'mon! You two quit circling the table and Marvelous Marni Allen just sit down!" Associate photography editor: ....Sideshow Bob Kaplan Day photographer: Paul Orsulak Layout artist: King ADrock Calvin and Hobbes/ Bill Watterson Production assistant: Roily Miller Account representatives: Judy Bartlett WE BEEN Dorothy Gianturco Advertising sales staff: Cindy Adelman, Kelli Daniels, Stacy Glass, Trey Huffman, H0USE& Roy Jurgens, Miky Kurihara, Laura Tawney Creative services staff: Wendy Arundel, Reva Bhatia, Loren Faye, Dan Foy, Ronnie Gonzalez, Steven Heist, Jessica Johnston, Kevin Mahler, Minh-Ha Nguyen, Carolyn Poteet Classified managers: ..Roma Lai, David Morris Credit manager: Judy Chambers Business staff: Jennifer Dominguez, Michelle Kisloff, Linda Markovitz, Liz Stalnaker Office manager: Jennifer Springer

Today Fellowship of Christian Athletes Community Calendar meeting. Hall of Fame Room, Cameron. The House of Bernarda Alba. Haunting drama. 209 East Duke, 8 pm. Raising America's Children: Coping With "Race, Sex and Standardized Testing in Duke Symphony Orchestra featuring Stress with Nancy Murray. AV Room 211, America," lecture by Dr. Howard F. Taylor. Mozart's Sinfonia Concertante for Perkins, 12-1 pm. NCSU's Student Center Annex Theatre, winds. Baldwin Auditorium, 8 pm. 7:30 pm. Duke String School Recital. North Lutheran Campus Ministry worship with Cafeteria, 7 pm. Black Student Alliance General Body Holy Communion. Chapel Basement, meeting. Last meeting of the semester. 9:30 pm. Major Attractions meeting. 208 Lan­ guages, 6 pm. 229 Social Sciences, 7:30 pm. Spanish Table. Mary Lou Williams "Stress Management," lecture by Lynn Center, 6-7 pm. Duke Democrats general meeting. 326 Alien, 7 pm. Mitchell, Live for Life. 2002 Duke North, Start of "Introduction to Feminist 9 am. Theology," class offered by Duke "Organic Reactions & Interactions in Contrnuin Education. Bishop's House, Solution," seminar by Dr. William "The Role ofthe MT in the Foreign 6:30 pm-8:30 pm. Jorgensen. 103 Gross Chemical Lab., Mission Field," Ray Dean gives a visual 3:30 pm. tour of his medical mission work in Amnesty International meeting. 219 Soc Belize. 2001 Duke North, 10:30 am. Sci, 8:30 pm. "The Black Elite Network in America: New Findings from a National Study," lecture Vegetarian Dinner for Meat-Out Day. East "Music of Israel." AALL, 2101 Campus by Dr. Howard F. Taylor. NCSU's Student Campus Center (Behind Giles Dorm), Dr., 12 noon. Bring your lunch. Center Annex Theatre, 1:30 pm. 6 pm. .—____—i— ___. — I «-— —_—. i

______• WEDNESDAY, APRIL 17, 1991 THE CHRONICLE PAGE 11 Classifieds

Announcements SOUP ON POINTS SEX POLICE WANTED: Men or women to participate LIFEGUARDS (4) ROOMMATE WANTED Donate extra points on the walkway to will have its funk in place on Wed. in an exotic South Pacific adventure - a Summer lifeguards wanted. (1) Fulltime Furnsihed 2 BR with A/C, fire­ benefit soup kitchen, Rape Crisis Cen­ night in The Coffee House. $4, bit dangerous and expensive, but unfor­ supervisor, (3) part time. ARC qualified place, patio w/grill, W/D, full HEADING FOR EUROPE THIS SUM­ ter, Habitat, and more. 10 p.m. gettable. Cali 1-800457-2632. only. Call 489-2447, leave message. kitchen, plus home. entertain­ MER? Jet there anytime with ment center, pool/tennis, stor­ AIRHITCH for $160 from the East SUMMER TRIPS! Students and faculty. HIGH TUITIION CRUISE LINE Entry level onboard and age, etc. Pinnacle Ridge Apts. Coast. (As reported in NY Times & HEY DG PLEDGES! Europe, US Cross-countrytours out West, and its scandalous uses. Hear author landside positions available. Seasonal REALLY NICE! $380/mo. Avail­ Let's Go!) AIRHITCH 212-864-2000. Remember to meet to paint the bridge the best ofthe Caribbean! Lowest prices today at 4 p.m. Charles Sykes, 139 Social Sciences, and year-round. 1-8004734480. able June 1. 489-1135. on great trips! Call now for FREE bro­ 7pm tonight! HEALTHY VOLUNTEERS NEEDED! Non­ chures! FOURSEASONS-1-800-331-3136. Magnolia Grill needs a part-time cash­ Share beautiful 2 BR apartment with smoking males, 18-26 years old, are FREE YOGA CLASS If you picked up the wrong jacket at the ier and busperson. Apply in person male grad student. Wood floors, high needed to participate in a study on Mon., Apr. 22, Thurs., Apr. 25,7-8 p.m., Theta formal, 1 have yours. CALL George Mon.-Sat., 9-5, at 1002 Ninth St. ceilings, big windows, very near East • physiological responses to daily ac­ GRAD STUDENTS Wellness Institute, Durham. Callforother at 684-1606. Campus. Gas heat & A/C. $200/mo. tivities. Participants will be reimbursed You're a part of the DUKE UNIVER­ class times and locations. Anna Cassilly, SITY UNION and you should have a 383-6135. Dependable coordinated upperclassman +1/2 utilities. Non-smoker preferred. for their time and effort. If interested, Move in in May or during summer. please call Betsy Harlan at 684-8667. say in its programming and policy­ Entertainment to wash glassware for research lab. making. APPLY FOR VICE PRESIDENT COME SEE Start now or mid-May. Approx. 10 hrs/ 687-4537. SENIORS! FOR ADMINISTRATION TODAY! As EDWARD SCISSORHANDS tonight. 7,9, wk, flexible. $4.25/hr. 684-2816. VPA you will attend Union and Uni­ Roommate needed to share Durham URGENT! Please submit Extracur­ 11 p.m. Bryan Center Film Theater. $3 NO KEGS TONITE versity meetings; and head the Union apartment with Fuqua student, start­ ricular Activities forms to Renee in benefit Interns in Conscience. So come see Sex Police at The Coffee Land a job in Policy Committee in its creation of ing in August. Call Jon, 489-7292. Student Activities, 101-3 Bryan Cen­ House on Wed. at 10 p.m., $4. Europe! Discover how in 50 comprehen­ the Policy Manual; and best of all ter IMMEDIATELY! Extra forms are U KNOW U WANT 2 sive pages. Send $19.95 plus $2 S/H HAVE FUN! Applications are avail­ available through Renee-684-2163. send your crush a crush. Make some­ to: Alan McLouth, Abt.DU, Postfach Apts. for Rent able at the BC Info Desk. Interviews one smile before finals. BC Walkway 1146, D7039 Weil in Schoenbuch, Ger­ will be held on Monday, Apr 22 start­ Help Wanted now! Sponsors: AOII. many. THE CIVIL WAR ing at 6 p.m. For more information Senior & Grad Week. 1,2,3 Bedroom Cottages. Pool, Cable, Zack's & Gal­ Don't miss The Final Installment of call 684-2911. ALASKA SUMMER EMPLOYMENT- fish­ Easy Work! ExcellentPay! Assemble prod­ leon walkingdistance. (803) 280-3015 Residential Life's Civil War Series. SPEAK OF THE... eries. Earn $5,000+/mo. Free transpor­ DEVIL! Audition forthe new male singing ucts at home. Call for information. 504- or (803) 249-6966. On Thurs., Apr. 18, at 8 p.m., in tation! Room and Board! Over 8,000 BE A LEADER group. Sign up at the BC Info. desk. openings. No experience necessary. 641-8003. Ext. 5921. Windsor Commons. Phil Shiman The DUKE UNIVERSITY UNION is looking Male or Female. Call Student Employ­ Summer Sublet — 1 BR, A/C, porch, presents, "Sherman's March and for a Vice President for Administration. ment Services. 1-206-298-3691 ext. 36. EXTRA SUMMER $$ fenced yard, furnished, microwave, 1 The Persian Gulf War". Refresh­ The position is open to UNDERGRADS, DREAMS SURREAL? Sell patent-pending beach accessory to mile from East. 687-0518. ments served. GRADS, FACULTY, & STAFF of Duke. As Boogie with DREAMS SO REAL and FOL­ Family helper needed for housekeep- your local beach stores on your own VPA you will attend staff meetings of the LOW FOR NOW — FREE concert Satur­ BeADancingDevil day night on Clocktower Quad for Not ing/childcare of one. Mon.-Fri., 7 a.m.-3 hours. Commission on all sales from 2 BEDROOM APARTMENT IN DUKE DUU, including EXEC; act as presiding yourstores for entire summer. Enquiries All undergrad women! Duke Danc­ Quite Springfest! p.m. Call collect, 404-738-0450, after 5 MANOR AVAILABLE - CALL 254-5799 officer ofthe Board in the absence ofthe to Jonathan S. Blank, Esq., 157 East ing Devil Tryouts, Apr. 16,17, and p.m. for details. OR 383-0934 (starting May 1). President and succeed that office should 57th St., New York, NY 10022. 19, in the IM Bldg. from 7-9 p.m. the President be unable to fulfill his/her DAN QUAYLE Questions? Call Cathy, 684-1462. does less before 9 a.m. than the Execu­ Research Assistant Summer sublet two bedroom duplex term; head the Policy Committee; create $9.90 TO START DANCE! a Policy Manual; serve as liaison with tive Committee of DUKE DEMOCRATS This individual will carry out research in American Village. $300/month. Call SUMMER WORK. International firm fill­ the Administration and Faculty; and serve does all day (or something like that). Be assignments covering a broad range of Jay at 382-2840. ing full and part-time openings. Contact Need Summer Health Care? AH on various other Union and Universtiy all you can be — come to a general issues for the Senior Vice President of the Personnel Office nearest to your students enrolled in Duke's sum­ committees. With the above responsi­ meeting of Duke Dems on Wednesday, the University/ Professor of Law and Summer sublet 1 BR Forest Apt. A/C, summer residence. SOUTHWEST ZONE mer courses are required to pay bilities you will be an INTEGRAL part of April 17, 7 p.m., in 326 Allen Building. Public Policy Studies. In progress are DW. June 1-July OR August. $300 PERSONNEL OFFICES: Austin-512-458- the Summer Health Fee ($47.00 the programming and policy-making of New members welcome — J-Rock will writing projects on ethics, leadership, negotiable. 382-0596 Dane. 9675, Dallas - 214-991-8920, Ft. Worth per session) included on the the Union. Applications are available at not be there. philanthropy, and communications - 817-377-2533, Houston - 713-977- Bursar's account. The Duke stu­ the BC Info Desk. Interviews will be held policy. In addition, general office tasks 1535, Longview - 903-759-5533, Lub­ BEAUTIFUL 1 BDRM dent who is not enrolled in sum­ on Apr 22, starting at 6 p.m. For more LLOYD IS WIGGIN will be assigned. This is a full-time posi­ bock - 806-795-9490, Midland - 915- Apartment in 1915 vintage home. mer courses but remains in Durham information, call 684-2911. That's Lloyd Bentsen (not Lloyd Dobler), tion. For application information, please 694-3188, N. Houston-713-440-8000, Clean, sunny with large fenced yard. may elect to pay the student health as he and other Dems ponder the '92 call 684-5614. Duke University is an Oklahoma City - 405-848-8721, Piano - 5.5 rooms. NearDuke! Grad students/ fee directly to the Bursar's office. LOW ON POINTS? election. Come to a general meeting of Equal Opportunity/ Affirmative Action professionals. $375/month plus se­ If you pay your health fee before Employer. 214422-0016, San Antonio - 512-366- Add Dining Points at the Check-Point DUKE DEMOCRATS and hear our plans curity. Minimum one year lease. Call the next session begins, you will 1885, Tulsa - 918-6644118, Waco - Station nearthe BP in the Bryan Center, for next year. 326 Allen Building, April (212)581-3630 for information. be covered from the day of pay­ 817-776-3307. at the East Union, or visit the Duke Card 17 (today), at 7 p.m. Remember— an Student to work in academic office after­ ment through the end of the ses­ Office. Dining Points can be charged to apathetic Democrat is a College Repub­ noons 10 hours/week. Attention to de­ Summer Sublet sion. Pay your health early for tail important. Computer/word process­ Great summer jobs! Truckin' Movers your Bursar Account. lican waiting to happen. Alternate bever­ Studio Apartment May-Sept. Quiet, continued coverage! Health Fee ing experience required. Prefer student needs part-time/full-time drivers and ages will be served. wood floors, large windows, air-condi­ deadlines are May 3-8 for Summer who can continue to work-study through movers. Experience preferred but will Phi FLING tioner. $320/mo. Call 490-2012. Session I and June 24-28 for Sum­ BUSH'S APPROVAL academic year. $6.50/hour. 684-3222. train. Excelent pay, tips, bonuses. Call mer Session II. Fees cannot be March Madness has moved to April! 682-2300. rating is still over 80% but in the words paid retroactively. Students who Wed., Apr 17 at TJ Hoops. Buses leave 9TH STREET of Revolutionary War hero (and Led Zep­ Work and Workout do not pay a Summer Health Fee WCBS at 8:45 and 9:15 p.m. Roommate needed to share 3BR apart­ pelin bassist) John Paul Jones, "We Responsible and organized person SUMMER JOB may receive health care through May - August, 10-20 hours per week, ment. AC. 684-1882, leave message. have not yet begun to fight." Come to a needed to manage desk at aerobics the Pickens Family Practice; how­ 3-2 PROGRAM flexible. Typing, data entry, some word Available May through August. general meeting of DUKE DEMOCRATS studio on 9th Street. 1-2 days/wk mini­ ever, all services will be rendered Information meeting for students inter­ processing. Accuracy and organizational on Wednesday, April 17, at 7 p.m. in mum (4-8 hrs). Free membership in­ on a fee-for-service basis. Note: ested in the 3-2 PROGRAM. Meeting will skills required. Low stress. Call 660- 326 Allen Building, and hear our secret cluded. Call 383-2836 for more informa­ SUBLEASE AT THE the Student Health Fee is sepa­ be on Thursday, April 18 at 3pm at the 5626 (work-study student preferred). strategy for assuringa Democratic White tion. SUMMIT. 1 or 2 male roommate(s), rate from Duke Student Insurance. Fuqua School of Business in R.J. grad student or professional, wanted Reynolds Auditorium. (This is a combi­ House. (Hint: It involves John Sununu and the inordinate amount of time he WE NEED SUMMER to sublease great luxury apartment nation program with Trinity College of Child Care near Duke Univ./South Square mall. BUSINESS INCLINED? has been spending with Presidential TOURGUIDES! Will you be in Durham Arts and Sciences and the Fuqua School 2BR/2BA, large sunken living room, Then come work for the Chronicle's dog Millie). New members welcome! overthe summer? Are you excited about of Business). Child Care for 10-yr. old boy. After school W/D connections, pool, tennis courts, Business Department. Applications Duke and interested in earning a little in May, 2:30-5:30 p.m., M-F. Pickup at grills, basketball court, volleyball pit, are available in 101 W. Union Build­ money while telling p-frosh about Duke? PUBLICITY DEVILIRIUM Durham Academy. Selected weeks in Jacuzzi, weight room. Non-smoker. ing. Work-study students preferred but Ifso, cometo an information meeting.n Interested in an advertising career, If you were at Cameron Indoor summer, 8-5:30 p.m., M-F. Next fall Please call 490-0725 evenings, after not necessary. Applications due April Thurs., Apr 18, at 6 p.m., at the Admis­ •ike graphics, or just like to doodle? Stadium to welcome home the Blue after school, 2:30-5:30. M-F. Will con­ 7:30pm. 17. sions Office. Summer tourguides gener­ Then come to The Union Office (be­ Devils, then you must have this sider two students sharing responsibil­ ally give 3 or so tours a week (tourtimes hind BC Info. Desk) for a publicity videotape. All the excitement, all ity. Must have own car. $5/hr. Durham WE NEED SUMMER are 11:30 a.m. and 2 p.m. M-F and meeting on Wed., Apr. 17, at 6:30 the emotion to remember forever. near South Square. Call Steve Lehrman, Houses for Rent TOURGUIDES! Will you be in Durham 11:30 on Sat.) and they earn $4.50/ p.m. Questions or problems? Call To order send $14.99 check or 4934781, eves. over the summer? Are you excited tour. Lee at 684-2911. moneyorderto CLOSE-UP PRODUC­ about Duke and interested in earning TIONS, 312 N. Buchanan Blvd., Apt. Summer Sublet a little money while telling p-frosh Furnished 4BR, 2 story, newly reno­ 308, Durham, NC 27701. Summermothershelperwantedforbusy Services Offered about Duke? If so, come to an infor­ PPS SUMMER INTERNS vated house on 2 acres. AC, Washer/ family with 2 girls ages 1 and 2 and 1/ mation meeting on Thurs., Apr 18, at There will be a mandatory meeting of all dryer, 1-3/4 miles from West. $500/ 2. Own car, non-smoker, references re­ TYPING- NEED YOUR PAPER OR RESUME 6 pm, atthe Admissions Office. Sum­ PPS Summer interns- both independent ADPIsADPIsADPis mo. Call 489-7450. Black Diamond Ceremony. 6:30pm in quired. Good pay, set your own hours. TYPED NOW? Accurate and fast. Guar­ mer tourguides generally give 3 or so and sequence-on Wed., Apr. 17, at 5:15 anteed six-hourtumaround between 8:30 Garden Gazebo. Sister in Black and Room & board optional. Call 489-4545. tours a week (tourtimes are 11:30 am p.m., in 139 Soc-Sci. TheGuide to Wash­ a.m. and 11 p.m. Mon.-Sun. CALL 24 Perfect Sublet pledges in white, please. and 2 pm M-F and 11:30 on Sat.) and ington will be available for distribution. HOURS. 942-0030. Huge 6 BR house, 3-1/2 Baths. Across they earn $4.50/tour. In addition, a representative from the SUMMER JOB street from East, corner of Buchanan Career Center will give an overview of IMMERSE Live on Long Island forthe summer and THE MAIL ROOM at Brightleaf and Urban. Large yard, porch. Avail­ some of the activities and workshops yourself! Slideaway to the Hideaway! be a mother's helper. Must drive, reli­ SHORT ON CASH? Square (683-9518) provides boxes, able May 15, price negotiable. Con­ that will be available to you when you This Saturday, April 20. From 1PM to able, non-smoker, experienced, May-Aug. Don't worry. Donations on food points. packaging, UPS shipping, Federal tact Erick 956-8293. return to campus in the fall. 1AM. Tridelts party to raise money for For more information call Cristina BC Walkway. Your parents heave never Express, free labels and fast, cour­ cancer research. Bands and drawings! 684-0728. been so charitable. teous service.. SUMMER SUBLET MAJ ATTRACTIONS Live in a spacious house only one Dreams So Real! Maj Attractions! Tridelt Pledges SUMMER WORKSTUDY CHI-Os CHI-Os TYPING & LAYOUT- Quick professional block from East Campus. 6 BR, full Dreams So Real! Maj Attractions! Con­ Meeting at 7:30 in 126 Social-Psych. Student needed. Office Assistant for Sisters and Pledges—don't forget to service for papers/resumes. Mail Boxes kitchen, W/D, and great porch. Will cert this Sat. on the quad. We need help! Then pledge study hall. Summer Sessions I and II. Must be meet TONIGHT 6 p.m. Bryan Center Etc. 382-3030 (in Loehmann's Plaza). rentto small or large groups. Call now: Come to meeting on Wed.- 208 Lan­ enrolled to be eligible for work study Circle for rides to the banquet! Dress 684-1046. guages, 6 p.m. Don't forget golashes! funds. You may apply for either Session for pin! IFC/PH/HARMONY GRAD STUDENTS Sponsor an informal forum called I or II, or both. Hours flexible, call 684- Research/Dissertation problems? Large 5 BR house one block off East SENIORS "Bashing Stereotypes" at 7PM to­ 2163 and ask for Fannie. Use the summer for finding solu­ for rent for summer. Air conditioned, 2 If you had your portrait taken some­ night in Von Canon. Are you tired of tions! Professional award-winning full bathrooms, W/D. Call 684-0173. where else, it must be in the Chanticleer being judged by preconceived and INFECTION CONTROL researcher offers Intensive Indi­ office by this Wed., Apr. 17! Drop them unfounded notions? Come help dis­ PHOTO Part-time job available with the Infection vidual Guidance in planning research off at 012A Flowers! pel false myths. Control Division of Duke Hospital this RENT OUR HOUSE IDENTIFICATION strategy, overcoming obstacles, re­ Summer sublet available 3 May -16 summer with option to extend the posi­ ducing overwork, organizing find­ tion into next academic year. Job entails Aug. One block from East. A/C, W/D, CARDS ings, writing a manuscript. L. UCKO, 2br. Must see. Call Rick, 683-6690. Environmental sampling, computerdata Ph.D. 489-7711. We manufacture Security Photo entry, and communications. Good intro LO. cards for Schools, Business to the hospital environment for biology Close to East Campus. 1117 Iredell & Industry. Sales of Photo I .D. MEDICAL STUDENTS! or science majors with an interest in WHY STAY UP TYPING? FAST, ACCU­ St. 4BR, 2BA. Stove ano refrigerator Equipment & Supplies. The United States Navy is looking for applicants for two, medicine. Flexible hours. Work study RATE, ONLY $1.25/PAGE. RUSH JOBS included. $900/mo. 286-5611. JOAN. Instant Passport Photos three, and four year medical scholarships. These scholarships student preferred. Contact Dr.Debra WELCOME. 383-8462. 9-9. in Color 2/$6.00 cover the full school-related expenses of your medical Hunt, 684-5457. 4BR and 5BR houses near E. Cam­ education, as well as providing a personal allowance of $732 AUTOEAST SNOWBIRD CARS. Move your pus. Washer/dryer, dean, safe, nice. over 10, $2.50 each car on our trucks. Free estimates by per month while you are in school. Part time job available next academic Completely renovated. $300/bed- phone. 1-800-736-6437. Insured col­ yearto assist in computer programming room. 489-1989. To qualify you must: lege moves. VISA-MASTERCARD-AMEX. LAMINATED forthe Infection Control Division of Duke • Be a U.S. citizen. Airy 3BR house. Large front and back • Be enrolled in an AMA approved medical school, or AOA Hospital. A prior programming course PHOTO ID'S with commercial database systems re­ Roommate Wanted porch. Furnished. Protected by Elvis' 900 West Main Street approved school of Osteopathy. quired, D-Base preferred. Flexible hours. spirit. 1-1/2 blocks off east. $495/ (term* fromBright* . Sq.) • Meet academic qualifications. Need 2 semester commitment. Work 2 bedroom apartment Chapel Towers mo. Call 286-5420. Durham, NC 27705 • Be physically qualified. Study preferred. Contact Dr. Debra Hunt, $199 per month. Call Dov at 3830047 For more information, call Chief Norm Rogers toll-free at 684-5457. Roommate wanted. 683-2118 1-800-662-7568. See page 12 • imH

PAGE 12 THE CHRONICLE WEDNESDAY, APRIL 17, 1991

From page 11 Lost and Found Thought the Madness ended Apr. 1? SUE SAUNDERS STEREOTYPED? CON ARTISTS Think again. MIDNIGHT MADNESS... Happy Birthday! Happy Birthday! Are you tired of being labeled? As Greek? in professors' clothing! "Diversity, coming Apr. 27. Watch for details! Happy Birthday! Happy Birthday! As gay? Come to "Bashing Stereotypes" multicultalisn, and OtherLies," Charles Lost in front of Engineering Bldg: dark Wanted to Rent Happy Birthday! Happy Birthday! tonight at 7 p.m. in Von Canon. Spon­ Sykes, 139 Social Sceicnes, 7 to­ blue London Fogjacket with yellow inner SEX POLICE Happy Birthday! Happy Birthday! sored by IFC, Panhel, and Harmony. night. lining. If found, please call 684-1242. WANTED TO RENT- Visiting Professor The triangle's hottestband plays Wed. Happy Birthday! I'll call you later. and family, need to rent a furnished night in the Coffee House at 10 p.m., Love, Geoff. Ashley Wilkes Warren Chesterfield Beau­ Confused (about courses?) Bored? 4BR house from mid-Aug. until early Personals $4. mont Westchester H. Here's to burglar Come to PPS student-faculty recep­ Jan. County school district (prefer Jor­ HOW DO YOU DUU? alarms, Maurice, and smacks! Happy tion. Thurs., 4:30 p.m. Old Chem lawn. dan area). Non-smokers,- no pets. If SUMMER STORAGE! YORK ROOM PICKS Find out as the new VP for Administra­ Birthday! Amitie, p3 & Benie. owners wish to negotiate the use of Protect your investment! Store your Wed. Apr. 17, Women, 8:30 p.m., Men tion! Become an INTEGRAL part of the PI PHIS their car, this could also be consid­ winter clothes at The Washtub. $9.95 9:30 p.m., in York. Mandatory for next DUKE UNIVERSITY UNION, its policy­ JEN NASH Last chapter meeting is tonight at ered. Contact Cyndy Shumate's office. stores up to 10 garments, comfort­ year's York residents. making and programming by serving as is the best little sis! Get psyched for 6:45. Senior wills afterwards. See Department ofOB/GYN at 684-4008. ers, or blankets. $5 holds one gar­ VPA. You will serve on Union and Univer­ Saturday, Jen. Sorry I've been such a you there! ment. Call 684-3546 for more info. COME SEE sity committees; head the Policy Com­ lame big sister! Autos for Sale EDWARD SCISSORHANDS tonight. 7,9, mittee of the Union in its creation of a GARDEN CONCERT MAKE PLANS SOON 11 p.m. Bryan Center Film Theater. $3 Policy Manual; and serve as a liaison DIPAC Enjoy a sunny afternoon in the gar­ SEIZED CARS, trucks, boats, 4wheel- forsummertravel.CallMcDonaldTravel. benefit Interns in Conscience. with the Administration and Faculty. The Thursday, April 18th, is a big night! dens while listening to the Wind ers, motorhomes, by FBI, IRS, DEA. Lowest airfares guaranteed. USA or In­ position is open to EVERYONE in the Elections for next year's officers at 7:00 Symphony's final concert. Sunday, Available your area now. Call (805) ternational. 286-7456. Medical Resident and Spouse seek Duke community! Applications are avail­ followed by Israeli Independence Day April 21, 3:30PM. Rainsite: Baldwin 682-7555 Ext. C-2771. Housesitting Opportunity, starting May- able at the BC Info Desk. Interviews party at 8:30 in 229 Soc-Sci. Come vote Auditorium. SENIORS! Sept. Very dependable. Call Kim, 383- begin Monday, Apr 22 at 6 p.m. For more and celebrate! MAZDA 626 LX URGENT! Please submit Extracurricu­ 6769. information call 684-2911. PERKINS CLOSES 1986, 66K, Silver. 4Dr. Auto, A/C, lar Activities forms to Renee in Stu­ Brown RoomPicks but the DownUnder is accessible 24 Stereo Cassette, New Battery, Excel­ dent Activities, 101-3 Bryan Center SEX WAR MAGIC ENGINEERS Room picks Brown House, incoming HRS/DAY! Great study place. Mac lent Condition. $4,500, 493-9046. IMMEDIATELY! Extra forms are avail­ You haven't tried it until you've seen Engineering Slideaway this Friday at the people: Thursday 9p.m. Brown commons cluster, too. Enter through loading able through Renee- 684-2163. Pippin. This Thurs., Fri., Sat., 8:30 p.m. HIDEAWAY 4-7 p.m. Sponsored by Se­ room. Conflicts/questions? Call Omid dock. CELICA GT HB and Sun., 2 p.m. nior Class Gift Committee. 684-0932 now! 1987,53k, auto, ac, stereo cassette, ENGINEERS MO new gasket, new battery, well main­ Nominate favorite teacher for faculty SEX BLOOD WE RULE HOMOPHOBIC? Who me? Yes you! You get your freak­ tained, $8500. 493-9046. award presented at Commencement. And Monopoly. Come see Pippin and The Hideaway! Senior Engineers Come to Harmony/IFC/Panhel spon­ ing personal so leave me alone. -Your Get from in 305 Teer. Due Friday. find out how these go together. April 18, Slideaway Friday 4-7 p.m. Sponsored sored forum called "Bashing Stereo­ Lord. PONT GRAND PRIX 19, 20, 8:30 p.m. and 21, 2 p.m. by Senior Class Gift Committee. See types" at 7PM in Von Canon. Eight 1988, Blue, excellant condition. Swing Magazine you there! students informally discuss personal REVA REVA $6500, negotiable. Call 544-3494. Duke's hottest publication is looking for CRISIS? expereicnes — any and all ques­ Bo Beva, Banana Fana Fo Feva, Me My editors for its 1991-1992 season. Get Come see how Pippin deals with his. IFC/PH/HARMONY tions welcome! Mo Meva... REVA! VW RABBIT involved, meet people, learn. Also wanted April 18,19,20, at 8:30 p.m. and 21 at Sponsor an informal forum called Bash­ 1983, 75K, AC. Excellent condition. photographers, layout, writers. Contact 2 p.m. ing Stereotypes today in Von Canon at 7 ElvisElvisElvis BREHM $1200 or best offer. Call Dan, 489- Beth 684-0105, David 684-0147. p.m. Come hear eight students relate RACHEL! Did that grab your attention? Have you transferred or what? I think 7429. Must go! SEX ON STAGE personal experiences and increase dia­ This is FINALLY for you! Good luckwith you know who is leaving town at the end of the week, so give me a call. - MARKETING come see Pippin and see how far we go. logue about the homosexual and hetero­ three weeks of stress! Thanks for my D.M. 1985 BMW 352e. 5 speed, low mile­ Have marketing experience or you want This Thurs., Fri., Sat., at 8:30 p.m. and sexual experience. birthday! Love Jane (fly) and Al (hair). age, red with black leather. $12,500. to gain some? Then come work for the Sun. at 2 p.m. CALL JOAN. 286-5611. Chronicle's Business Department. Pick STEREOTYPED? up an application in 101 W. Union SeniorsDon'tMiss Are you tired of being labeled? As For Sale — Misc. Building. Your chance to see Pippin Graduation Greek? As gay? Come to "Bashing Weekend. Have your parents return or­ Stereotypes" to discuss the ho­ mosexual and heterosexual expe­ NEED TO SELL: One-way plane ticket DREAMS SO REAL? der form ASAP or stop by Page Box rience on Duke campus. to L.l. on Mar. 4. $125 or best offer. with FOLLOW FOR NOW— FREE concert! Office. Call Rima, 286-3459. What a bargain! Saturday night on Clocktower Quad! Don't miss this Not For sale: Mac Imagewriter II printer Quite Springfest climax! (new); Memphis electric guitar (good starter); Kramer Eddie VanHalen FOOD!FOOD!FOOD! acoustic/electric guitar: Frank 383- Meat Out Day is Wednesday. Sign up for 4667. Vegetarian Dinner Monday, Tuesday on BC Walkway. IS YOUR CAR PLANE TIX 4 SALE Cheap! RDU to NY LaGuardia, May 11, SUMMER WORKSTUDY American Airlines, one way. $150- Student needed. Office Assistant for really cheap! NY LGA to Chicago Summer Sessions I and II. Must be enrolled to be eligible for work study FOR SALE? O'Hare, May 22, $80. Call 684-0846. funds. You may apply for either Session 1990 Whirlpool Washer and Dryer for I or II, or both. Hours flexible, call 684- sale- Large capacity, 3 cycles, price 2163 and ask for Fannie. We Will Buy It! negotiable. Call 286-3240. PPS SUMMER INTERNS Pan Am Voucher — round trip for There will be a mandatory meeting of all anywhere in world. Asking $1000 or PPS Summer interns- both independent Cralge Motor Co. best offer. Call Dave 932-3430. and sequence-on Wed., Apr. 17,at5:15 p.m., in 139 Soc-Sci. TheGuide to Wash­ ington will be available for distribution. Wanted to Buy In addition, a representative from the 1102 South Duke St. Career Center will give an overview of WANT TO BUY IBM AT (or compat­ some of the activities and workshops Across from Forest Hills Shopping Center ible) with Hard Drive, Monitor, that will be available to you when you and Printer. 490-3194. return to campus in the fall. 493-2342 490-6148

SUMMER SESSION STUDY ABROAD PROGRAMS

Cambridge tLvny> HurryJurr>U Crack Flanders M If you act London/Drama quickly, there L\\V« are some spaces ^5 London/Media still available in the programs _\v listed. Paris Zimbabwe/Bostwan. with... THE PRINCETON (919)967-7209 REVIEW (919)878-PREP Contact the Program Director or Don't let great test prep pass you by! 121 Allen Bldg. Courses starting soon. 684-2621 The Princeton Review is not affiliated with the Educational Testing Service or Princeton University. WEDNESDAY, APRIL 17, 1991 THE CHRONICLE PAGE 13 Sports Kotarski K's nine Aggies, baseball survives letdown

By BRAD SNYDER prompting a late throw to second, which Coming off seven victories in its last scored McNally. eight games, including two shockers last The Blue Devils nearly scored in the weekend against Georgia Tech, the base­ second inning. David Norman led off with ball team could not help but overlook North a single up the middle and Eskay singled Carolina A&T yesterday. into rightfield, but Norman was thrown The Blue Devils no-hit the Aggies ear­ out at the plate. lier in the season, but yesterday overcame The Aggies scored the game's first two a 3-1 deficit to garner a 4-3 victory at runs after an error, two singles and a wild historic Jack Coombs Field. pitch in the third inning. They added an­ "We just came out kind of flat," coach other run on a single and a wild pitch in Steve Traylor said. "I don't know if it's a fourth inning. matter of taking an opponent lightly or "We made mental errors, didn't hit the just being tired after the emotional week­ ball well, and made some mistakes defen­ end we had, but boy, it was a struggle." sively," Traylor said. "The good thing is maybe we learned to win." One Duke player not tired out from the And win they have. Since their 11-0 triumphant weekend was junior lefthander home loss to N.C. State March 18, the Blue Mike Kotarski. After pitching two innings Devils have won 13 of their last 17 games. in Friday's 4-2 win over Georgia Tech, Today's come-from-behind victory over Kotarski struck out nine hitters in nine North Carolina A&T is indicative of the innings of three-hit baseball yesterday. team's new-found confidence. Kotarski's stellar pitching performance "On a bad day, where really no phase of still did not guarantee the Blue Devils a our game was very strong today, we're victory. Trailing 3-1 in the seventh inning, down late," Traylor said. "To find a way to the team prophetically donned its rally win and make plays to win is what we've caps for a three-run surge. Mike Olexa been doing the last three weeks, that's a mustered an infield hit, Craig Eskay was good sign." hit by a pitch and Cass Hopkins laid down a perfect bunt to load the bases. NOTES: Cass Hopkins blasted his third After Matt Harrell's fly ball to rightfield homerun ofthe season in the fifth inning, scored Olexa, pinchrunner Robert Baldwin a moonball off Aggie starter Gary Medley was thrown out at the plate trying to score which landed high in the pine trees beyond on Sean McNally's grounder. the left-field fence. Quinton McCracken singled to right to Historic Jack Coombs Field really is BOB KAPLAN/THE CHRONICLE score two runs. Hopkins beat the initial home sweet home for the Blue Devils. The throw home for the first run. McCracken team is 20-6 amidst its friendly foul lines, Junior Mike Kotarski fanned nine North Carolina A&T batters as the Blue Devils then stretched the single into two bases, but 1-13 on the road. won for the eighth time in their last nine games. Hines hopes WLAF performance will attract NFL interest

By MARK MCLAUGHLIN the regular roster if any of the receivers sustained an RALEIGH — Somewhere between Wallace Wade Sta­ injury. His role usually involved mimicking an opponents' dium and the National Football League, Clarkston Hines passing scheme to prepare the Bills' defense for upcoming got lost in the shuffle. Cut by the Buffalo Bills last fall, games. Hines is now trying to find a way back to the NFL on a road But of course, playing on a scout team is not what Hines that goes through the Triangle. had in mind after leaving Duke. He finished his collegiate A first-team All-America wide receiver for the Blue career as the NCAA's all-time leader with 38 touchdown Devils in 1989, Hines presently starts at wideout for the receptions and only the second player in history to record Raleigh-Durham Skyhawks ofthe newly-formed World three straight 1,000-yard receiving seasons. Hines ex­ League of American Football (WLAF). The Chapel Hill pected the big time, a starter's job right away, not a low native is the Skyhawks' most prolific receiver, averaging draft pick. over 20 yards per catch through four games. "After the Super Bowl, an agent told me that I would probably have to play in the World League to get some You always want to go as high better looks [from the NFL]," said Hines. "That's how I got into the league. as you can. "You always want to go as high as you can. Since I didn't have an opportunity to play [in the NFL] last year, I Clarkston Hines needed to play in this league to get a second chance." Although the Skyhawks are winless, Hines is making the most of his opportunity. He has improved with each "I was surprised because I wasn't familiar with how the contest to emerge as Raleigh-Durham's leading receiving NFL worked and the draftjyorked," said Hines. "Like threat. Against the Barcelona Dragons a week ago, Hines many other people, I thought what you did in college was pulled in six balls for 84 yards. In the Skyhawks' 37-15 relevant to what round you were picked. It's not always loss to the San Antonio Riders Monday night, he again led the case. I found that out." the team with three catches, including a 53-yard recep­ He also found out about a process all aspiring profes­ tion that set up the game's final touchdown. sional football players must go through. Hines' learning Hines is glad to be back home in Chapel Hill, but he'd process, marred by criticism and controversy, was espe­ rather be enjoying the NFL offseason than trying to play cially tough. his way back into the league. At 5-11 and a mere 165 pounds, many pro scouts The leading receiver in Duke and Atlantic Coast Con­ claimed Hines was too fragile to survive in the NFL. His ference history, Hines seemed destined for greatness in speed was also questioned. Hines' performance in sprints the pro ranks upon graduation in 1989. Projected as a first and drills at the NFL combines seemed to prove the critics or second-round draft pick, the receiver's stock fell dra­ correct. Whereas Jeff George, a quarterback from Illinois, matically at the NFL combines. He was eventually se­ drastically improved his draft position at the combines, lected in the ninth round by the Buffalo Bills but failed to becoming the number one pick, Hines' stock fell dramati­ make the the team's 45-man roster. cally. "It came down to the last cuts between me and this other Back in Durham, Hines' dealings with an allegedly rookie," said Hines. "The other guy was able to return disreputable sports agent, Harold "Doc" Daniels, landed punts which I didn't do in college, and he was a track his picture on the front cover of The Chronicle. Hines had champion. He was very fast. So that worked out against bypassed standard University policy by contacting an BOB KAPLAN/THE CHRONICLE me." agent not registered or approved by the athletic depart­ Though Hines did not make the Bills' starting roster, he ment. Daniels' dealings with other college athletes were Clarkston Hines is back in the Triangle with the hopes did remain on Buffalo's scout team. Hines practiced with called into question and claims were made targeting him of getting another shot at the NFL. the starters throughout the season, and was available for See HINES on page 14 •

' .*;,:* V *.-.*,_.___- .. -*-•».--*. . '.-,._*. - ,<•>. - 1

PAGE 14 THE CHRONICLE WEDNESDAY, APRIL 17, 1991 Hines tops among Thursday Baseball vs. Shaw, Jack Coombs Field, 3:00 p.m.

Skyhawk receivers Friday AESTHETIC STANDARD Baseball vs. Davidson, Jack Coombs Field, 3:00 A • HINES from page 13 p.m. John Angelo/Adam Lynn in recruiting investigations in two states. Film "That affected me to a certain degree," said Hines. "I Women's Tennis at ACC Tournament, Chapei Hill wasn't prepared for it and it took me by surprise. A lot of Now Showing the things [said] were not necessarily true." Men's Tennis at ACC Tournament, Atlanta A year has passed since the controversy and Hines says Bryan Center Video Screening Room he's put it behind him. Darnels is still his agent and will Women's Track at ACC Outdoor Championships, continue to be in the future. Wednesday: 7:30 & 8:30 Chapel Hill "I've never had any problems whatsoever with my Thursday: 7:30 & 8:30 agent, Mr. Daniels," he said. "That's a very controversial Friday: 7:30 & 8:30 Men's Track at ACC Championships, Charlottesville, job, people are always going at each other." Saturday: 7:30 & 8:30 Hines will be going at opposing cornerbacks and safe­ VA ties for six more weeks in the WLAF with the hope of turning a few scouts' heads. Though returning to the NFL Saturday is his ultimate goal, currently Hines prefers to deal in the short term. He chooses not to view the WLAF as a stepping stone, but simply a chance to play competitive Lacrosse vs. Stony Brook in NCNB Tournament, football. Duke Lacrosse Field, 3:00 p.m. (North Carolina vs. "All I want to do is be consistent through every game Villanova, 1:00 p.m.) and hopefully help the team every opportunity I get," Hines said. Baseball at Winthrop, Rock Hill, SC, 1:00 p.m. "I'm not really thinking that far ahead. Right now I'm just trying to play day by day and week by week. I don't Women's Tennis at ACC Tournament, Chapel Hill really know what's going to happen."

THE CHRONICLE'S 1991 NCAA National Championship Souvenir Edition* Enjoy Flip's Hamburgers, Loyal Blue Devils can relive the campus Homemade French Fries, excitement at Duke's first-ever Boiled Shrimp, Turtle Cheesecake & Lemon Pie National Basketball Championship with a WIDE SCREEN TV souvenir copy of the commemorative edition. Open seven days a week 11am until 1117 Broad Street, Durham • 286-0669 Next to Special Rowers • 2^ blks from East Campus * We're reprinting the All ABC Permits commemorative edition in limited quantities as a specially bound, souvenir edition complete with glossy cover and premium paper to salute our national champions. It's been an incredible year for Duke basketball — a year filled with once-in-a-lifetime thrills — and one you won't want to forget. Now you can relive the campus excitement at the Blue Devil's CIJAPEL championship victory with a special edition of this commemorative issue from the editors of Duke's student newspaper. It's a collector's item no true blue Duke fan should be without! TOWEI) Don't miss out! Supplies are limited, so act now. 383-6677 • One & Two bedroom Yes! I want a souvenir copy of The Chronicle's 1991 NCAA Championship Commemorative Edition!* luxury garden plans Send me copies @ S5 ($4 each for 3 or more) for a total cost of S • Carpeting & air conditioning • Enclosed is my check (made payable to The Chronicle). D Please charge my • MasterCard or D Visa • Dishwasher, disposal Card # Exp. Date • Swimming pool, laundry Cardholder Name • Cable television and rental Mail to_ furniture available Address. .Phone. City State Zip • Access to free health club equipped Mail this form and payment to: with fitness center, sauna, hot tub, The Chronicle NCAA Special, PO Box 4696 Duke Station, Durham, NC 27706 aerobics, tennis courts and ^^ Phone orders accepted with credit card: (919) 684-3811. Allow ten days for delivery! unsurpassed social activities. * Bound with premium paper and glossy cover. FREE Bus Service to and from campus WEDNESDAY, APRIL 17, 1991 THE CHRONICLE PAGE 15 Got those end-of-the-year blues0' Let The Ckoiicle take you out to the ballgame! Chronicle Night with the Durham Bulls Tuesday, April 23, 1991 7:30 pm Durham Athletic Park Durham Bulls vs. Prince Williams Cannons

One night only, Duke students and employees can enjoy an evening of fun, giveaways and Durham Bulls baseball for just $1.00 with Duke I.D. and/or the attached reduced admission coupon. Little Brother/Little Sister Special! If you're a Duke student with a Durham little brother or sister, your little sibling can attend the game for free! Contact The Chronicle at 684-3811 for information on special admission vouchers for little siblings.

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