ACC Champs Amy Verhoeven was won the first Duke v ship since

THMONDAY, NOVEMBEER 25. CHRONICL1991 DURHAM. NORTEH CAROLIN A CIRCULATION: 15,000 VOL. 87, NO, 80 Law School admissions Visitor falls victim to director, dean appointed armed thieves From staff reports tant dean and adjunct professor The Law School appointed at Emory University School of From staff reports Susan Sockwell as associate dean Law in Atlanta since 1986. She A visitor to the University was of student affairs and Elizabeth was also Emory's director of stu­ robbed by two men, one of whom Gustafsonasdirectorofadmissions dent affairs from 1984 to 1986 was armed. after conducting national searches and director of the Council on The visitor was walking on for the positions. Legal Education Opportunity Research Drive at 11:30 p.m. Fri­ Both appointments become ef­ Summer Institutes for the south­ day when two men approached fective Jan. 1. east region in 1986 and 1987. him, said Chief Robert Dean of Sockwell replaces Gwynn Gustafson received both her Duke Public Safety. Swinson, who is taking a leave undergraduate and legal train­ One of the men opened his of absence from the University ing at Duke. She was a law clerk jacket, showed what appeared to to spend a year in Japan, ac­ for Judge John McAuliffe of the be the grip of a gun and said, "You cording to Duke News Service. Maryland Court of Appeals and know what I mean," Dean said. The associate dean of student has practiced intellectual prop­ The visitor handed over his affairsmanages admissions, finan­ erty law at Dow, Lohnes & wallet and watch valued at $30. cial aid, (»unseling, student con­ Albertson in Washington, D.C, The men then told the visitor to duct and student organizations. since 1987. continue walking, Dean said. "Dean Sockwell possesses ex­ Thirty seconds later, the visi­ tensive experience in dealing "We are delighted that Eliza­ tor turned around and saw the with student affairs at other law beth Gustafson has agreed to ac­ men running in the direction of schools," said Pamela Gann, cept . . . for she understands the Douglas Street, Dean said. The dean of the Law School, in a Duke University and law school visitor walked back to the scene press release. Sockwell "will experiences, and should therefore ofthe incident and found his wal­ bring .. .excellent administra­ be a superb recruiter," Gann said. let with $15 stolen. tive talent and leadership for The Law School enrolls 630 stu­ The visitor described the sus­ handling student issues at Duke dents and each year about 185 stu­ MARK WASMER/THE CHRONICLE pects as black males in their 20s at a time when student issues dents enter its first year class. In with thin builds, dark complex­ are taking up more and more 1990-91, the school received more All wet ions and wearing light-colored time of academic administra­ than4,200studentapplicationsfrom Kathryn Leonard takes a break during the swim meet against clothing. One was 6 feet 2 inches tors." every state and several foreign coun­ UNC-Wilmington this weekend. See the story in SPORTSWRAP. tall and the other was 5 feet 8 Sockwell has served as assis­ tries. inches. Public Safety has no leads. Victims share experiences at Rape Awareness Week speak-out

By GEOFFREY GREEN chair ofthe Interaction Commit­ speak out"—a statement which invited victims and people who tive effect, that the community The anger and fear felt by rape tee ofthe Duke University Union, other speakers echoed. know rape victims to tie a ribbon would hear women's voices say­ victims was brought to life by co-sponsor ofthe event. One of victims discussed her on the chain around the quad on ing "This is not acceptable." victims and other speakers at an feelings towards her assailant. West Campus and tell their story The events are a "warning to open mike on Friday in the "People who are sexually as­ She was a victim of date rape, but on a special bulletin board in the mean that [rape] won't be toler­ .Alumni Lounge. saulted tend to feel alone," said her attacker was exonerated by Alumni Lounge. ated," Falco said. The second annual Speak-Out Rebecca Falco, coordinator of the Undergraduate Judicial The two events served similar on Sexual Violence was held to Sexual Assault Support Services Board because there were no wit­ purposes. "The main underlying The speak-out and ribbon pro­ help rape victims deal with their in the Women's Center. "This pro­ nesses, she said. He remains on message is just telling people about grams were held as part of last emotions and to "attempt to pro­ gram makes them feel like there's campus, she said, and whenever how hard [rape] hits and how many week's Rape Awareness Week, a vide a forum for expression and a community to help them." she sees him she either wants to people it hits," Allen said. series of events aiming to remem­ discussion" of rape, said Cal Allen, Ten stories were told at the run from him crying or punch Falco said she hopes that the ber and help rape victims and forum, six by him in the face. accounts would have a preventa­ prevent rape in the future. the victims A male victim addressed the themselves. conception that being raped is a Most of the sign of weakness and homosexu­ victims ality for males. Rape is a crime of Public Safety charges spoke about violence, not sex, and males their emo­ should not feel compromised in tions during their sexuality because their Trinity junior with DWI the long heal­ rights and dignity were violated, ing process he said. after the at­ Most ofthe victims spoke about From staff reports Babcock allegedly drove in a tack. They the practical ways their lives have Duke Public Safety arrested a reckless manner and refused to also stressed been altered. They have to be Trinity junior Saturday and stop for Public Safety while driv­ the difficulty careful what books they read and charged him with driving while ing at 1:35 a.m. from West Quad they had ex- what movies they see, lest they impaired, reckless and careless to the corner of Alexander Street pressing be forced to vividly remember the driving and failure to stop for and Campus Drive, said Chief their feelings attack. They also said they must police light and siren. Robert Dean of Public Safety. to other also be careful where and when Luke McDaniel Babcock regis­ Babcock damaged a traffic sign people. they walk alone. tered a .20 blood alcohol content before he stopped, but no one was "I think it when arrested and registered a injured, Dean said. can be a very Women have possibly become .15 alcohol level when formerly "I didn't realize the cops were liberating "oversensitized" to things they charged at the Durham County behind me," Babcock said. "I didn't feeling to tell can and cannot do, Falco said. Magistrates Office. know they were there." your story," Along with the safety measures In , revocation Babcock said his wheels made said Falco, women should take, men should of a driver's license is possible if some screeching noises because herself a take responsibility for avoiding the blood alcohol level is .10 or the ground was wet, but Public rape victim. questionable situations which higher, according to the magis­ Safety was angry because of the MARK WASMER/THE CHRONICLE Falco also could lead to date rape, she said. trates office. chase. Babcock was driving a dark Martha Simmons, director of the Women's Cen­ said that "not Babcock told The Chronicle he blue '90 Chevrolet. ter, read anonymous statements from rape vic­ everyone has The speak-out was similar to had been drinking. "I was not Babcock was released on a $500 tims at the speak-out Friday. the same the Tie-a-Ribbon program, which that drunk," he said. "I was to­ secured bond and his first court ap­ ability to lasted all week. That program tally in control." pearance is scheduled for Dec. 9. PAGE 2 THE CHRONICLE MONDAY. NOVEMBER 25, 1991 World and National

Newsfile Israelis accuse U.S. of humiliating Shamir By CLYDE HABERMAN Associated Press for a response by Monday, it was not clear session somewhere closer to the Middle N.Y. Times News Service if this was a carved-in-stone deadline and East. Cyprus has been mentioned as a Crime bill proposed: Houseand JERUSALEM — As Prime Minister if there would be unpleasant consequences favorite Israeli choice in recent days. Senate conferees agreed Sunday to a Yitzhak Shamir returned home on Sunday for missing it. In Washington, an adminis­ For his part, Shamir returned on Sun­ sweeping crime bill that would apply from an American journey, Israelis at­ tration official said on Sunday that the day evening from his 10-day trip to the the death penalty to some 50 federal tacked the United States for his reception United States had not set a firm deadline United States saying that he remained offenses and require a five-daywaitin g there, accusing Washington of having hu­ for responses but added that the adminis­ committed to the peace process but that he period for handgun purchases. miliated him — and by extension, their tration hoped to get responses soon. had also asked President Bush to recon­ country — in the way it fixed the next Thus far, only Jordan has said yes to the sider Washington as a site and to keep Cease-fire ignored: Fighting round of Middle East peace talks. Americans. Israel, Syria, Lebanon, and talking with Israel until an agreement continued in Croatia Sunday even Angry Cabinet members charged that the Palestinian delegation have all said acceptable to everyone was reached. though a new cease-fire was to take the Americans had deliberately insulted they need more time to think about it. In Washington, administration officials effect in the secessionist republic and Israel, demonstrating basic bad faith in "We're not working according to an said Israel had suggested holding the next pave the way for the deployment of the peace process. Phrases like "bullying American stopwatch," a highly placed Is­ round of peace talks in the Middle Eas£ U.N. peacekeepers. tactics" and "double cross" were invoked raeli official said on Sunday night. A deci­ and had recommended several sites. The by several officials to characterize Bush sion, he said, was not likely until the Cabi­ American officials said that they would Mercury dies: Rock musician administration actions. net meets in special session, probably on consider Israel's suggestions, but that the Freddie Mercury, whose dramatic On the political far right, ministers op­ Wednesday. Even then, he added, the Is­ Arab countries had not accepted the sites vocals helped make Queen one ofthe posed to the peace process urged Shamir to raelis would probably attach reservations recommended by Israel. top pop music groups of the 1970s, reject the invitation the United States like a request that the talks be moved as The prime minister's journey had been died Sunday night of pneumonia issued on Friday for resumed negotiations quickly as possible after a Washington See MIDEAST on page 11 • brought on by AIDS, his publicist with the Palestinians and Arab states be­ said. ginning on Dec. 4 in Washington. Senior government officials generally Shuttle lifts Off: Atlantis pierced agreed, however, that there was almost no Japan plans to start importing the night sky and roared into orbit way Israel could turn the Americans down, Sunday with six astronauts and a certainly not when the issue is a proce­ military satellite that will scout for dural question of where the talks should missile launches from a perch thou­ be held. Although Shamir said he had plutonium for breeder reactors sands of miles high. asked Washington to reconsider the site, government officials said that no matter By DAVID SANGER tonium, fabricated in Europe from Japan's how much they object to Washington and N.Y. Times News Service spent nuclear wastes, will fuel conven­ prefer a site closer to home, their options TOKYO —Amid great secrecy, the Japa­ tional nuclear power plants and a small Weather are limited. nese government will start to import ship­ group of fast-breeder reactors, which "breed" more plutonium for re-use. Tuesday But it seemed virtually certain on Sun­ ments of plutonium sometime next year day night that the Israelis would not an­ in lightly defended convoys, each contain­ High:40's • Sunny swer the United States invitation by Mon­ ing enough material to make 100 to 150 But even before the first shipment ar­ Low: 25 day, as the Israelis said the Americans had atomic bombs. rives, the prospect of transporting and So what if its cold, there's only three asked in the invitation, and that when The purpose is not to make nuclear weap­ then storing upwards of 100 tons of pluto­ more days left until some real home they do say yes, there will be conditions ons —a step Tokyo has foresworn since the nium, roughly the amount in the entire cooking. attached. end of World War II — but to take a major American nuclear arsenal, over the next While the Israelis said Washington asked step toward energy independence. The plu­ See JAPAN on page 11 •

Summer 1992 July 6 -August 15

INFORMATION MEETING Monday, November 25 5:00 pm 312 Languages Building Meet Professor Alice Kaplan, Director of the Program. COURSES: FR 143: Texts and Representations FR 137: Aspects of Contemporary French Culture. or, for more information, contact: Professor Alice Kaplan Department of Romance Languages 205 Languages Building • 684-3706 SUMMER SESSION

m MONDAY, NOVEMBER 25, 1991 THE CHRONICLE PAGE 3 Durham residents charged with larceny, breaking and entering

From staff reports totaled $450. loss in stolen property totaled $600. Duke Public Safety arrested two Durham Crime briefs The passenger's window of a white Honda Several fingerprints were lifted, but residents and charged them with breaking owned by a sophomore was shattered and Public Safety could not determine if this and entering motor vehicles and larceny stolen fromothe r cars, Dean said. a cassette player was stolen. The damage incident is related to last week's theft of Thursday morning. The men then showed Harris which cars to the car and the value of the player trophies and other parapher­ Willie Albert Miller of 1203 Seaton Road they broke into, he said. totaled $300. nalia from . and Louis Edgear Williams of 1413 The driver's window of a car owned by a The driver's window of a red '88 Ford Public Safety has no leads. Pineland Road were placed on $10,000 freshman was shattered and several items was shattered and the loss in damages totaled secured bonds and incarcerated in Durham were stolen: speakers, a radio, a cassette $100. No reported items were stolen. PrOWler Stopped: Astudent reported Jail. Miller was released as of Sunday player and a wallet with $130 and credit The passenger's window of an brown '84 seeing a man try to enter the commons evening. cards. Toyota owned by a junior was shattered room on the first floor of Brown dormitory Officer Sheila Harris of Public Safety The damage to the car and the value of and a cassette player was stolen. The dam­ through a window. stopped Miller and Williams as they were the stolen items totaled $1,600. The report age to the car and the value ofthe player The student saw the man climbing leaving Edens parking lot on West Cam­ did not list the make ofthe car, Dean said. totaled $300. through the window at 4:20 a.m Sunday pus, said Chief Robert Dean of Public The driver's window of a black '86 Mer­ and yelled. The man backed away and ran Safety. cury owned by a senior was shattered and Jacket and watches stolen: An toward the rear of East Union, Dean said. The men gave her permission to search the a cassette player was stolen. The damage NCAA national championship jacket and The student described the man as a car and she found several items believed to be to the car and the value of the player two championship watches were stolen black male, about 16 years old, medium from a display cabinet on the top floor of build and dark complexion. His height was the Bryan Center. between 5 feet 5 inches and 5 feet 8 inches The items were stolen sometime between and he was wearing a brown shirt and Traffic at RDU expected to 11 p.m. Tuesday and 8:30 Wednesday. The See CRIME on page 4 • peak due to Thanksgiving

From staff reports Arrive early. That's the advice Raleigh- NC briefs Durham Airport officials are giving pas­ sengers scheduled to fly out ofthe airport On November 6,1990, voters gave their for Thanksgiving. approval for issuing up to $200 million in Passenger traffic at RDU is expected to bonds to pay for prison construction. State peak for the year on Wednesday Nov. 27, legislators have already approved $121.5 the day before Thanksgiving. Airport offi­ million for prison-related projects. cials estimate that 21,000 people will board When the Emergency Prison Population flights out of RDU, 70 percent more than Stabilization Act was passed in March the airport's average daily traffic. 1987, the prison population was capped at Officials suggest passengers arrive 90 min­ 18,000 inmates. The cap is raised as more utes before their scheduled flights to deal with space is built for prisoners. As the space heavy traffic, locate parking, check luggage increases, the cap increases. and get or confirm seat assignments. Conference held: North Carolin­ RDU flights on time: RDUhadthe ian politicians, Gorbachev's former press third highest number of on-time flight secretary and a Nobel Prize winner in litera­ departures in the country in October ac­ ture all participated in a three day conference cording to the U.S. Department of Trans­ "The Idea of a Society" in Research Triangle portation. Park over the weekend. Statistics released by the U.S. Depart­ "This conference brings together some ment of Transportation show that 94.5 of the most thoughtful and thought-pro­ percent of RDU's flights left within 15 voking people from around the world to minutes of their scheduled departures explore the idea of a civil society and its during October. implications for the future," according to a RDU also ranked fourth in arrivals with press release by the National Humanities 91.7 percent of its flights on-time in Octo­ Center, the conference's sponsor. ber. The average number of on-time arriv­ The event ran between Nov. 21 and Nov. als is 86.8 for the 31 largest airports in the 23. The speaker list included Senator Terry United States. Sanford; Representative David Price; Bronislaw Geremek, speaker ofthe Polish Prisons overcrowded: One year Parliament; Serge Grigoriev, former press after North Carolina voters gave their officerto Soviet PresidentMikhail Gorbachev; approval to a prison construction program, Eduardo Rabossi, an jArentine human rights the state prison system is beginning to activist; and Gyorgy Varga, editor of The Ob­ plan for expansion by opening two prisons server, a Budapest newspaper. MELISSA BERMUDEZ/THE CHRONICLE and adding dormitory space to five others. Lawmakers approved $75 million last The group discussed topics such as reli­ Looking in all the wrong places year for the prisons and prison expansion gion, Eastern Europe, cultural, social and Trinity junior Christine Gauld seems to have found the ideal hiding place from space and nine million dollars for improve­ political change and the role ofthe United her classmate Jordan Hansell. ments in youth facilities. States as a world leader.

SUMMER SCIENCE RESEARCH Computer Sale 486-33MHZ Opportunities for 10-week laboratory and 4 MB RAM 3- and 4- week field research for 128K Cache sophomores and juniors through the 1.2MB Floppy Drive Carolinas-Ohio Science Education Network (COSEN). 40 MB Hard Drive p Project information and applications (due January 24} 14" Color VGA .£*XJ<.', • \\ are available in 303 Union West, 04 Allen Building, and 225 Academic (Premajor) Advising Center. $ 386-33MHZ 1996 $1496 COSEN is committed to encouraging and One Year Warranty • FREE Set-Up «Si Delivery! supporting African-American and women CONSULTUS 467-9509 students in the study of science. INCORPORATED 901 Kildaire Farm Rd., Cary Mon-Sat 10-6 PAGE 4 THE CHRONICLE MONDAY. NOVEMBER 25,1991 SMU students concerned dormitory search was illegal

By PEGGY KRENDL may also be handled by criminal justice and ROBIN ROSENFELD Ivory Towers Fraternity investigated: The Vir­ authorities," IFC President Matt Erskine Members of the Southern Methodist ginia police have seized judicial tapes from told the paper. University senate have shown concern over with housing violations discovered during the Inter-Fraternity Council for evidence Some of the university's officials claim the legality of a search of 35 dormitory the searches, which took place Nov. 5. against the Phi Kappa Sigma fraternity. the seizure was legal. But there is dis­ rooms by the Office of Housing and Resi­ Vice President for Student Affairs Jim The Inter-Fraternity Council was in the agreement. dential Life. Caswell said the four students will be held process of reviewing charges against the The University of Virginia is suffering The Residential Life representatives accountable for the violations found dur­ fraternity of sodomy, crimes against na­ from "a crisis of confidence in student self- were looking for a pellet gun which had ing the search. ture and aiding prostitution, according to governance," said University President been fired at a freshman in a dormitory The Cavalier Daily, the student newspa­ John Casteen. study room, according to The Daily Cam­ Law school senator Bryan Pope told the per at the University of Virginia. pus, the student newspaper. paper that the Residential Life represen­ The fraternity is under investigation for Fountain damaged: Two unidenti­ tative should have merely informed the the alleged homoerotic acts that took place fied people at Southern Methodist Univer­ Some senators are discussing the op­ students that they were in violation ofthe at an Oct. 3 rush party. The fraternity sity created a flaming fountain on campus tion of requiring the Residential Life office code and asked them to remove items in allegedly hired two female strippers to earlier this month. to get a warrant before searching a resi­ violation from their rooms. He said Resi­ perform at the party. The suspects poured gasoline into a foun­ dence hall. Currently, the Student Code of dential Life should not have handed viola­ Both the police and campus officials tain at SMU and then lit the gasoline at Conduct at SMU allows the Residential tions out to the students. carried out a warrant to seize a cassette 12:40 a.m. on Nov. 12, according to the Life office staff to enter a resident's room if Representatives were right to charge recording ofthe Inter-Fraternity Council's Daily Campus, the SMU student newspa­ they believe a violation of university policy the four students with violations, said judiciary trial of Phi Kappa Sigma for the per. has occurred. Karen Wood-Middleton, Judicial Coordi­ charges. The fire was extinguished 20 minutes Senator Brett Robinson told the paper nator, to the college paper. later by the fire department. that the "senate needs to focus on proce­ The IFC "produced [the tape] and gave it The fire did not cause any structural dure. Does | the university! follow due pro­ When representatives are called to in­ to the officer without any problem," said damage to the fountain, said Mike Perez, cess? Is a warrant required? If contraband vestigate noise violations, they are able to University Police Lt. William Morris, ac­ assistant director of campus planning and is found that is not on the warrant is it charge the students with alcohol viola­ cording to the Cavalier Daily. plant operation. admissible evidence?" tions. The four students were charged un­ "The seizure of material from the trial The representatives did not find the der the same guidelines, Wood-Middleton raises inherent questions about how stu­ "It's an aesthetic issue. [The fountain] gun, but did charge four other students said. dent judiciary bodies handle cases that has been discolored/' Perez said. Various items stolen around campus, decorations set on fire

• CRIME from page 3 pole at 7:25 p.m. Friday, and discovered it Gray Building on West Campus. the whole entire dorm," Dean said. black pants. missing when he returned 40 minutes later. The student left the bag in the room at 8 Anyone who has information about the Public Safety has no leads. a.m. Friday and when he returned at 3:15 incident is asked to call Dean or Detective Money Stolen: A student reported p.m., it was missing. Charles Nordan at 684-2444. $40 stolen from his unsecured room on the Book bags Stolen: A freshman re­ The bag contained credit cards, $12 in third floor of Wayne Manor. ported his book bag stolen from the storage cash and keys. The loss in stolen property Journalist's bag Stolen: A visit­ The student left his room at 8 p.m. on shelves outside the book store in the Bryan totaled $100. ing journalist reported a pouch stolen from Thursday and when he returned at 3 p.m. Center on West Campus. Public Safety has no leads. the women's locker room of the aquatic Friday, he discovered the money missing. center in Card Gym on West Campus Nov. Public Safety has no leads. The student put his bag on the shelf at Decorations ignited: students in 14. 10:10 p.m. Friday and discovered it miss­ Wannamaker reported that someone ig­ She reported stolen an address book, Bicycle Stolen: A freshman reported ing when he returned 15 minutes later. nited paper decorations hanging on their $30 in cash, identification, hair brush and his blue Roadmaster bicycle stolen from The bag contained books and a calcula­ doors Saturday. keys. the rear ofthe East Duke building on East tor. The loss in stolen property totaled $50. The doors were damaged, but no one was She left the pouch unattended ona bench Campus. In another incident, a senior reported injured, Dean said. for five minutes. The student left his bicycle secured to a his book bag stolen from a room in the "Whoever is doing that is jeopardizing Public Safety has no leads.

ATTENTION GRAD STUDENTS &/* Italia* Making Women's GAipN RESTAURANT rTALIAN AMERICAN CUISINE Lives Visible CIJAPEL CASUAL FRIENDLY ATMOSPHERE a presentation by • DUKE STUDENT SPECIAL: TOWER 10% OFF ENTREES $6.95 OR MORE Jacquelyn Dowd Hall WITH THIS AD • TAKE OUT PIZZA SPECIAL: 1 TOPPING PIZZA, $5.49 hsliTi 383-6677 • PASTA • PIZZA • VEAL • CHICKEN • ITALIAN SEAFOOD • One & Two bedroom •STEAKS Lee Smith luxury garden plans • LOBSTER & APPETIZERS • Carpeting & air conditioning Monday • Dishwasher, disposal • Swimming pool, laundry Cocktail Lounge Take-Out Orders November 25 • Cable television and rental Banquet & Party Facilities furniture available Up to 70 People 7:30 PM • Access to free health dub equipped Breedlove Room with fitness center, sauna, hot tub, Perkins Library aerobics, tennis courts and ^. 382-3292 unsurpassed social activities. tfj 3211 Hillsborough Road • Durham Duke University FREE Bus Service to and from campus

ThE ChROixiclE wishes ITS REAdERS A SAfE ANd hAppy ThAiMksqiviiNiq MONDAY. NOVEMBER 25. 1991 THE CHRONICLE PAGE 5 Russia to start economic reforms without other republics

By SERGE SCHMEMANN pay the army and meet its payroll. Yeltsin has proposed N.Y. Times News Service to set prices loose, collect new taxes and work toward the MOSCOW—In a series of recent actions, Boris Yeltsin's convertibility ofthe ruble. huge Russian republic has signaled that it intends to The decrees marked the debut of a new economic czar, enter on the risky path of economic reform with or without Yegor Gaidar, who was appointed deputy prime minister other republics, taking many former central institutions for economic policy in a streamlined new government with it. Yeltsin named with himself as prime minister. At age 35, A packet of economic reforms decreed by Yeltsin last Gaidar became the youngest in a series of new-wave weekend and an agreement over Soviet debt with major economists who have taken a stab at beginning the long- industrial powers on Thursday demonstrated a new readi­ delayed transition to a market economy. ness by the Russian republic to take an active role as The Russian republic's new profile was demonstrated locomotive for the critically needed reforms now trapped last week in negotiations with the Group of 7, the seven in the centrifugal forces loosened by the collapse of central major industrial nations that hold most of the Soviet authority after the August coup. Union's debt, which is estimated to run about $65 billion Three months after the hardliners' coup attempt in Moscow, to $70 billion. While the central government and most an economic agreement among some ofthe republics is mired republics repeatedly tried to postpone a decision until they could reach a consensus, Gaidar declared that the in haggling, while political talks — which the second largest UPI PHOTO republic, the Ukraine, has ignored — have achieved only a Russian republic was prepared to assume the entire debt tentative agreement to work toward a loosely confederated if necessary. Boris Yeltsin "Union of Sovereign States." The center, moreover, is bankrupt, carrying on largely by printing ever more rubles or on doles from the Russian ADVERTISED ITEM POLICY • Each ol these advertised items is required to be readily available lor sale1 republic's government. By year's end, all but a handful of in each Kroger Store, except as specifically noted in this ad. II we do run out ol an advertised Hem, we will offer you your choice of a comparable item, when available, reflecting the same savings ministries are to be closed or taken over by Yeltsin's or a raincheck which will entitle you to purchase the advertised item at the advertised price within Russian government. 30 days. Only one vendor coupon will be accepted per item purchased "I know this is difficult to understand legally," said a COPYRIGHT 1991 - THE KROGER CO. ITEMS AND PRICES GOOO SUNDAY. NOV 24 THROUGH SATURDAY, NOV. 30, 1991 IN DURHAM. WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES. spokesman for the Russian government, Aleksei NONE SOLD TO DEALERS. Ulyukayev. "But de facto there is no Union anymore. There is only what we agree with other republics to leave in the center — foreign affairs, defense, interior, rail transport —and for the most part that is funded by Russia. On everything else it's each republic for its' own." Low Prices. To be sure, the Russian republic would be assured of a central role in any future scenario by dint of its size and history. But in an interview at the new Russian government And More. offices in the baronial former headquarters ofthe national Communist Party's Central Committee, Ulyukayev ar­ gued that Russia's moves were not a new "Russian impe­ rialism" but a recognition that neither Russia nor any other republic could afford to waste any more time in starting long-overdue reforms. "The central government has proven incapable of tak­ ing action," Ulyukayev said. "Every time it needs to act, it has to reach agreement with all the republics. We simply cannot wait five months to stabilize the ruble. It all has to begin here, because only here can it be done quickly." The crux of Yeltsin's new program is an attempt to impose some financial stability by sharply cutting down on the huge volume of rubles — swollen by the fact that printing money is now almost the only way the state can U.S. Grade A Kroger dOlbs. And Up) Each 176 Size Tangerines or 125 Size DUKE UNIVERSITY DEPARTMENT OF MUSIC Fresh Young Turkeys Tangelos AND THE DUKE JAZZ PROGRAM PRESENT MIKE STERN, GUITAR BOB BERC, TENOR SAXOPHONE BOB BERC / MIKE STERN QUARTET (FORMERLY WITH MILES DAVIS) ANDTHE PUKE JAZZ ENSEMBLE PAUL JEFFREY, DIRECTOR $119 6.5-OZ. 6-oz. m Hawaiian Kettle BBQ or Twist Assorted varieties z Eagle Potato Chips Stove Top stuffing lil 1 Ul Ul Enjoy co O ea war THURSDAY, PE CE MBER5,1991 CLASSIC 8:00 P.M. PAiC E AUDITORIUM GENERAL AD M ISSION - $12 STUDENTS & SEN 10R CITIZENS - $8

TICKETS WILL BE AVAILABLE TF ^< DUCH PACE BOX OFFICE AND AVAILABLE AT THE POOR ON Th E EVENINC OF THE CONCERT. CALL PACE BOX 0 FFI CI AT 684-4444, 2-Ltr. 5f!f MONDAY THROUGH FRIC >A1r FROM 9 A.M. TO 4 P.M. Nonreturnable Bottles Sprite, Diet coke, 12-OZ.l VISA AND MASTERCAR D / \RE ACCEPTED THROUCH Caffeine Free Diet Coke or Kelloggs PACE BOX 0 FFICE ONLY. ADDITIONAL SPONSOR HI p BY DURHAM HILTON Coca Cola Classic Corn Flakes AND SOUTH SQIM RE MITSUBISHI, INC. Letters EDITORIALS Remember Hamlet kids when shopping PAGE 6 NOVEMBER 25. 1991 To the editor: us to demonstrate our support and con­ We are certain that many of you here at cern by sponsoring a toy drive for the Duke are aware of the devastating fire children affected by this tragedy. that occurred in the-town of Hamlet at the Please, the citizens of Hamlet need sup­ Imperial Food Products plant on Sept. 3. port, your support to insure that these Overstepping bounds But, unfortunately, the tragedy did not children will still have a Christmas this simply end at the fire. Not only were 25 year. As you begin your shopping for the ASDU legislators will vote next week Where else can an organization reach lives taken and 55 injured but also all holidays, please remember the children— on a recommendation that attempts to the entire community with informa­ workers ofthe plant were laid off. Amidst buy a toy and donate it to the toy drive. all this pain and suffering, the citizens of Drop off sites will be located in the Bryan censor The Chronicle and enact prior tion about times and places for meet­ Hamlet must still provide for the day to Center and East Campus Union, as well as restraint on its content. ings and events? Each organization day needs of themselves and their fami­ a table on the Bryan Center walkway after The motion would forbid all student should be able to choose whether or lies. the Thanksgiving break. Moreover, if you organizations from using money from not to sacrifice the benefits of adver­ would like to contribute your time to this the student activities fee to pay for tising in the paper in order to protest As the holiday season approaches, their effort, pleas call the Rural Health Coali­ advertising in The Chronicle, prob­ the paper's contents. economic hardships intensify. The chil­ tion at 684-5880. Your assistance in any ably until the paper complies with the The Chronicle, unlike other campus dren are especially victims because they capacity is greatly needed and very appre­ resolution passed by the ASDU legis­ organizations and publications, is an not only have to endure the emotional ciated. Thank you. lature last week. independent organization and does not turmoil brought on by this catastrophe, The resolution denounces The receive any money from the student but they also face a bleak Christmas. We, Ali Parekh Chronicle's decision to print an ad activities fee. All other organizations the members ofthe North Carolina Rural Trinity '93 from the Committee for Open Debate must apply for funds through the SOC. Health Coalition, have asked the citizens of Hamlet how we could be of service. In Charlene Kirby on the Holocaust, calls on the paper to The only money The Chronicle receives response to our inquiry, they have asked Trinity '93 acknowledge that it made a mistake in through ASDU is the money organiza­ printing the ad and encourages the tions use to advertise in the paper. So paper's managers to refrain from print­ ASDU wants to use that small amount Religious leaders not speaking for all ing "racist or ethnically slurring" ads of leverage to influence what is printed in the future. The ad disputed com­ in the paper. Two years ago, legisla­ To the editor: redemption, community and compassion. monly held facts about the Holocaust. tors declined to recommend that On Nov. 20, the religious life staff of However, I find solace and comfort inknow- Duke denounced The Chronicle for print­ ing that these same individuals are not the At last week's meeting, legislators Jabberwocky, the student humor ing the Holocaust revisionist advertise­ defenders nor legal scholars of our consti­ asked the SOC to consider the issue magazine, be defunded for printing ment. As a Christian I am compelled to tution. Religious leaders are shepherds of more thoroughly and make a recom­ articles it deemed racist. "Such ac­ respond. morality, not interpreters of legality. And mendation to the legislature. The SOC tions would constitute censorship, vio­ I am grateful to these individuals, as for this we can rejoice. is the body responsible for allocating lating the spirit of Tree press,' " ac­ religious leaders, for helping shape and money from the student activities fee cording to an ASDU resolution. strengthen the moral fiber of society. They Brent Fewell to organizations and governing those The legislators realized that the are called on to proclaim the good news of Graduate student in forestry organizations for ASDU. It has not yet authority to take action against decided whether to recommend the Jabberwocky lay with the student Columnist describes his own attributes statute to the legislators. Publications Board, which acts as the ASDU often issues resolutions ex­ publisher for all campus publications To the editor: you, Mr. Blinderman, and for that matter, pressing an opinion on an event or except The Chronicle, and not with I am writing in response to Jonathan neither does the world. recommending a course of action, and the student government. The legisla­ Blinderman's Nov. 20 column. The column Stupid—Speeding and driving with a the controversy over the Holocaust tors today should likewise realize that states that Durham drivers are bad. I type A attitude, as Mr. Blinderman seems revisionism ad should be no different. the same authority over The Chronicle agree that Durham has some bad drivers to condone, is rather stupid. because bad drivers exist everywhere. But in attempting to withhold funds lies with The Chronicle Board, an in­ Selfish—Risking the lives of others so Durham is no exception. However, in his you, Mr. Blinderman, can get somewhere from The Chronicle through advertis­ dependent board acting as publisher column Mr. Blinderman states that "driv­ a few minutes faster is far more selfish ing, ASDU oversteps its bounds. for the paper. ers in Durham are a combination of arro­ than what you cite as an example of "self­ Furthermore, the proposal would do It is not the student government's gant, stupid, selfish, immature and ish" Durham drivers (e.g, not always using far more harm to the student organi­ place to control the contents of the uneducated." The basis for these harsh a turn signal). zations than it would to The Chronicle. student press. words, according to Mr. Blinderman, is the Immature—Whining and cryingbecause fact that Durham drivers exercise caution everyone does not do things the way you when making a right turn on red and the want them is quite immature Mr. On the record fact that Durham drivers obey the speed Blinderman. limit (sometimes even going a few miles Uneducated—There is more to an edu­ per hour slower than the limit!!!). I feel the cation than just reading law books Mr. / think it can be a very liberating feeling to tell your story. adjectives Mr. Blinderman has blindly Blinderman. Open your eyes to the differ­ Rebecca Falco, coordinator of Sexual Assault Support Services and a rape victim, assigned the people of Durham better de­ ences among people and cultures. Fortu­ during the speak-out on sexual violence held Friday. scribe him. For example: nately for all of us, we are not all just like Arrogant—Mr. Blinderman, do you ex­ you. pect an entire community to change their driving habits for you? Is this not a bit John Adcock arrogant? Durham does not revolve around Trinity '92 THE CHRONICLE established 1905 Victimizing not answer to crime problem Ann Heimberger, Editor Jason Greenwald, Managing Editor To the editor: a look at what he had in his hand and Barry Eriksen, General Manager Fear, real or perceived, is fear nonethe­ walked away. Given the same circum­ Jonathan Blum, Editorial Page Editor less. Matt Cubstead and company may not stances, I can't say I would have been as have done "anything at all to make him forgiving. Fear, regardless of origin, is Hannah Kerby, News Editor Matt Steffora, Assoc. News Editor feel threatened" but Cubstead and com­ very real for me also. Kris Olson, Editor Michael Saul, Assoc. News Editor pany were not the objects of the Gotcha! I agree with Deborah Pilkington. There Leya Tseng, Arts Editor Jennifer Greeson, Arts Editor game. are enough victims out there already. Per­ Peggy Krendl, City & State Editor Leigh Dyer, Investigations Editor haps it's time to stop playing Gotcha! and Eric Larson, Features Editor Robin Rosenfeld, Health & Research Editor Certainly, the student erred in judg­ explore other avenues of reducing campus Mark Wasmer, Photography Editor Cliff Burns, Photography Editor ment by violating the University's weap­ crime. The ride and escort programs are a Steven Heist, Graphics Editor Reva Bhatia, Design Editor ons policy. However, had he been the char­ great start but victimization in order to Matt Sclafani, Senior Editor Karl Wiley, Senior Editor acter of person at which this policy is raise one's consciousness is a program Adrian Dollard, Senior Editor Ronnie Gonzalez, Creative Services Mgr. directed, Cubstead and company could very doomed for failure. David Morris, Business Manager Sue Newsome, Advertising Manager well have been the victims of some rather Elizabeth Wyatt, Student Advertising Manager serious consequences. Ken Tyson Instead, the student suggested they take Divinity School '93 The opinions expressed in this newspaper are not necessarily those of Duke University, its students, workers, administration or trustees. Unsigned editorials represent the majority view of 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 Announcement Office: 684-6106; Advertising Office: 684-3811; Classifieds: 684-6106; FAX: 684-8295. Editorial Office (Newsroom): Third Floor Rowers Building; Business Office: 103 West Union Anyone interested in writing Monday, Monday next semester needs to drop off a Building; Advertising Office: 101 West Union Building. sample column at the offices of The Chronicle on the third floor ofthe Flowers ©1991The Chronicle. Box 4696, Duke Station, Durham, N.C. 27706. All rights reserved. No part Building. Leave samples in Jon Blum's mailbox. Also, all current columnists need of this publication may be reproduced in any form without the prior, written permission of the to get in touch with Jon before classes end to talk about next semester. Business Office. THE CHRONICLE WEEKLY PULL-OUT CDftDTCUfDAD SPORTS SUPPLEMENT MONDAY, NOVEMBER 25, 1991 NCAA BOUND! Volleyball sweeeps through the ACC tournament en route to the championship

By LEWIS KRAUSKOPF break the team out of a first- we were not going to overrate or Once again, Duke is going to round lull, the only time their underrate any of them. We were the NCAA tournament. This time, play dropped the entire tourna­ just going to play them one at a it's the volleyball team that is ment. Greiner added 148 assists time and get them out ofthe way making the trip. on the weekend and Wacholder and win our championship." After the team rolled through totaled 57 kills and 34 digs. "Their" championship was the regular season undefeated, While only Verhoeven, Greiner locked up with a commanding vic­ the Blue Devils captured the At­ and Wacholder were recognized tory in the finals against Virginia. lantic Coast Conference champi­ for their play, the victories were a Despite squandering a 9-1 lead in onship this weekend. It was the team effort. Fellow starters jun­ game one and letting the Cava­ first ACC title for Duke since ior Linda Bianchi, Sophomore Jen liers come within two points of 1986. By virtue of the triumph, Rohrig and freshman Adrian tying the score, Duke put the first Duke garnered an automatic bid Nicol all were instrumental in set away and did not look back to the NCAA tournament, start­ the team's drive for the champi­ from there. ing in two weeks. Overall, the onship. Statistically, the Blue Devils 20th-ranked Blue Devils im­ "It was a total team effort," dominated the match both offen­ proved their record to 25-6 on the Wilson said. "Everybody contrib­ sively and defensively, recording season. uted." a .432 team kill percentage, 56 In the tournament, Duke de­ In the tournament final, Duke digs and nine blocks. Wacholder stroyed the rest ofthe ACC field, defeated Virginia handily 15-12, and Verhoeven led the team, reg­ losing only one set in its three 15-5,15-5. While the Blue Devils istering 20 and 19 kills respec­ matches against Clemson, Geor­ were in all likelihood going to tively. Nicol and Bianchi also con­ gia Tech and Virginia. play second-seeded Maryland in tributed, recording .500 and .455 "It was just the case of a good the finals, the seventh-seeded percentages while Bianchi added team playing really well under Cavaliers snuck though the tour­ 13 digs and five blocks. In addi­ pressure and dominating the tour­ nament, upsetting the Terrapins tion, Rohrig's presence was the nament," said head coach Jon in the first round and then beat­ key in stopping Virginia's star Wilson. ing Florida State in the semifi­ player Greta Jansen. Junior Amy Verhoeven was nals. While Duke could have re­ Duke was also impressive in named tournament Most Valu­ laxed in facing a lower-seeded the semifinals, defeating Georgia able Player, while senior Karen team than expected, it had no Tech 15-9, 15-6, 15-1. The Blue effect on the team's brilliant per­ Devils blew the Yellow Jackets Greiner and freshman Ashley STAFF PHOTO/THE CHRONICLE Wacholder were named to the all- formance. away, allowing only 16 points. tournament team. Verhoeven to­ "We had to beat three [teams], The only real scare which the Emotions (among other things) are sky high now for the volleyball taled 54 kills, 28 digs and helped and whatever three they were, See CHAMPS on page 2 • team after winning its first ACC title in the last five years. Means' 189 yards carry UNC over football, 47-14 By CHRIS HURTGEN the Tar Heels crushed Duke, 47- UNC wanted to win big — so we had actually done a pretty line. Quarterback Dave Brown CHAPEL HILL — It was 14, before 50,500 at Kenan Sta­ big as to erase the pain of Duke's good job with him." then found John Farquhar on the payback time for the North Caro­ dium on Saturday. Despite ev­ humiliating 41-0 win in 1989 on Carolina's third goal, to earn a right sideline and the sophomore lina football team and Natrone erything Carolina head coach the Kenan Stadium grass, a day post-season bowl berth, was the tight end rambled into the end Means signed the check. Mack Brown stated before the when Duke head coach Steve squad's only shortcoming of the zone. Randy Gardner's extra point The 5-11, 240-pound tailback game, a simple victory was never Spurrier showed no mercy on the day. UNC, which finished 7-4, 3- made the score 20-7 and suddenly, tallied 189 yards on 30 carries as in the Tar Heel game plan. hapless Tar Heels. On Saturday, 4 in the ACC, needed a pair of the Blue Devils were back in the Carolina incurred three upsets to extend its season — game. unsportsmanlike conduct penal­ Purdue over Indiana or Rice over The key play ofthe contest came ties in the first two minutes of the Arkansas — but both favored on the ensuing kickoff when fourth quarter. teams picked up wins. Mean­ UNC's William Henderson fielded "They did a lot of talking, a lot while, Duke dropped its fourth- the ball and fumbled on the Caro­ of celebrating and a lot of danc­ consecutive game and is currently lina 35-yard line. The referee's ing," head coach Barry Wilson 4-5-1, 1-5 in the ACC. The Blue initial signal gave.Duke the ball, said. "But, you know, I wasn't Devils' season ends next Satur­ but after conferring with other running the show on the other day in Tokyo, Japan, against officials, he reversed the call. side so that's their business. They ACC-champion and Citrus Bowl- "I was told he just forgot and obviously were celebrating a big bound Clemson. signaled the wrong way — that win and they had a big win, so The Tar Heels struck early Sat­ he just, for some reason, signaled that's for their coaches to work on urday when Eric Blount took the the opposite way that he normally and worry about." game's opening kickoff 70 yards would — whatever that means," Helping Means have a big day to the Duke 28-yard fine. It took Wilson said. "I thought it was a was the second UNC objective of Carolina eight plays and four very significant situation where the afternoon. The sophomore minutes to take a 7-0 lead, which [the fumble recoveryj could have needed 151 yards against the Blue it held for the remainder of the given us a lot of momentum, if we Devil defense to become the Tar first quarter. had that ball. I don't know what Heels' 20th 1,000-yard rusher. He Clint Gwaltney kicked a 19- happened in the pile but the guy eclipsed the mark early in the yard field goal at the start of the obviously made a convincing sig­ fourth quarter with a 68-yard second quarter to increase the nal to give us the football at mid- touchdown run. Means, who fin­ UNC lead to 10-0. field." ishes the year as the Atlantic With 9:18 left in the half, the Everything was down hill after Coast Conference's rushing cham­ Tar Heels took over on downs and that for Duke. After trading pos­ pion, is the 11th different Tar drove 68 yards in six plays to sessions with the Blue Devils, Heel running back to reach the push their lead to 17-0. With five UNC drove 54 yards on six plays 1,000-yard plateau. seconds showing on the clock, and Henderson converted the "He's just a heck of a back," another Gwaltney field goal gave three-yard touchdown run to put Wilson said. "They just kept giv­ UNC its 20-0 shutout at the break. Carolina up, 26-7. The Tar Heels' ing it to him and he had a lot of two-point conversion failed but MARK WASMER/THE CHRONICLE Duke wasn't ready to quit just nickel-and-dime stuff but I yet, however. The Blue Devils took just over one minute later, Mike Walter Jones' 27-yard touchdown grab came after a successful thought that, up until that one the second-half kickoff and drove Faulkerson's three-yard TD run Randy Gardner 17-yard pass play off of a fake field goal. that he broke for long yardage, to the North Carolina 31-yard See FOOTBALL on page $• PAGE 2/THE CHRONICLE SPORTSWRAP MONDAY, NOVEMBER 25, 1991 Parks and G. Hill spark basketball to win over Soviets

By BRIAN DOSTER Devils up 20-19 at 11:27. Duke led for the While the Soviet Union has been strug­ rest ofthe game and stretched its margin gling to cope with the collapse of commu­ to 47-29 at the 4:49 mark when Parks hit nism, a squad from the country's Men's a turnaround jump shot. National Basketball Team had to contend The Soviets closed to 51-39 before the with a new type of cold war Saturday halftime break. afternoon in Cameron Indoor Stadium. The USSR would not get any closer than The Soviets battled the Duke men's bas­ 11 in the second half. Parks' dunking and ketball team in a physical exhibition game blocking combos led off the second stanza. which the Blue Devils won 90-70. At the 15:10 mark, Hill took a Hurley Duke's Bobby Hurley and Grant Hill led alley-oop pass from below the rim and all scorers in the contest with 22 points slammed it home to put Duke up 61-47. apiece, while the USSR's leading scorer Hill's foul-line jam came at the 12:10 Sergei Grezin had 21. mark and made the score 70-54. "I thought Bobby was outstanding," Duke With just under seven minutes remain­ head coach Mike Krzyzewski said. "He ing and the score 76-64, the Blue Devils was really the key to the whole ball game. began a 12-2 run that put them up 90-66 at He handled things so well." 1:56. Parks capped the run With a two- Spectacular highlights in the game for handed reverse dunk. Duke came from newcomer Cherokee Parks Earlier injuries to Thomas Hill and Tony and the high-flying Hill. Parks garnered Lang and Christian Laettner's first-half 19 points, eight rebounds, and four blocked ankle injury gave Krzyzewski an opportu­ shots in his first game as a starter. In a nity to play various lineups with younger two-minute span in the second half, Parks players against the USSR. twice slammed home rebounds and imme­ "I thought we played fairly well with the diately followed each play with a rejection different lineups we had in," Krzyzewski at the opposite end ofthe floor. Hill ignited said. "A lot of young guys with the old guys. the frenzied Cameron crowd by finishing It was a nice baptism for our bench." several alley-oop passes from Hurley and Laettner returned in the second half launching from near the foul line on a and finished with 12 points. dunk. Although Duke took a 4-0 lead at the The Soviets brought their second team outset, the game remained close for the to Cameron, and their coach Vladimir first ten minutes of action. Tsinman talked of the effects of the tur­ Three minutes into the game, Igor moil in his country on his young team. Grachev, Grezin, and Vladimir Kondatov "I think you will know which problems nailed consecutive three-pointers to put we are currently facing in the country and, the USSR up 15-11, but that would be the of course, those problems couldn't bypass largest lead for the visitors: sports," Tsinman said through an inter­ It was a two-point game for the next five preter. "... Many young players now first minutes until the Blue Devils exploded for think about how to feed their families and CHAD STURGILL/THE CHRONICLE an 11-0 run. Kenny Blakeney hit the sec­ to buy their clothes and then how to play Grant Hill knows dunking. On this one, he started at the top of the key, blew by ond of two free throws to put the Blue basketball." the Soviets, took off from the foul line and dunked for two of his 22 points. ATHLETE OF THE WEEK Volleyball players given ACC awards

This past weekend, the volleyball team captured the • CHAMPS from page 1 This weekend the conference awards were given out, ACC championship, by dominating the tournament up Blue Devils endured in the tournament came from which Duke also dominated. In her final season, Greiner in Charlottesville, Va. In addition, Duke grabbed an Clemson in the first round. The Tigers, who finished last was named ACC Player of the Year and took first team automatic bid into the upcoming NCAA tournament. in the ACC duringthe regular season, were the only team All-ACC honors, leading the conference and the nation in This couldn't have been accomplished without Amy to even steal a game from the dominating Duke team all assists. tournament. For her impressive play in her opening campaign at Duke, Wacholder was named ACC Rookie ofthe Year and After the Blue Devils won the first two sets 15-10 and first team All-ACC. Verhoeven and Nicol were also hon­ of 15-7, the team looked as if it was on its way to a straight- ored, making first and second team All-ACC respectively. Is. set triumph. Clemson quickly erased those thoughts by Duke now has two weeks off before opening play in the ra capitalizing on Duke mistakes to take game three 15-9. NCAA tournament, while other schools finish off their The Blue Devils fell behind 9-5 and 11-7 in game four and regular seasons. As it stands now, the Blue Devils will the Tigers threatened to pull even in the match. But face Texas in the first round. The Blue Devils are the sixth ed Duke rebounded behind the play of Verhoeven, taking seed in the region, while Texas is the third in the eight- ler the next eight points and advanced to the next round. team region. However, these seedings are subject to The Blue Devils knew that they would have to play change. la- poorly to lose this tournament. They did not. ias "We were the best team and we knew the only team The next two weeks will consist of short, concise prac­ that could beat us was Duke," Wilson said. "So we tice, rest and a much needed Thanksgiving vacation. stopped thinking about that and looked at it from the "We're going to eat a little turkey," Wilson said. J standpoint of let's just go out and play and win it." Gorge yourselves Blue Devils, you deserve it. mciriciHciHis Restaurant & Bakery Sunday Brunch at Crook's Our Market offers •The Triangle's largest selection of olive oil. •A variety of brands and size containers of Feta Cheese) •Hard-to-find Mediterranean groceries- Tahini, phyllo dough, hummus, hah/ah, bulgar, grape leaves, fava beans and countless items more! Our restaurant features Greek and Italian cuisine as well as deli foods. ' 77:7 VS ::;:;:: ..7.7 7 15-501 Bypass (next to Eastgate Shopping Center) Chapei Hill Ipen at 6:00 pm for Dinner (919) 968-8610 or 942-1453 Sunday Brunch 11:00 am - 2:00 pm Major credit cards accepted 610 W.Franklin St. Chapel Hill, NC MONDAY, NOVEMBER 25, 1991 SPORTSWRAP THE CHRONICLE / PAGE 3 East Carolina under new coaches in basketball opener

By CASEY ZIMMER day, he was in uniform and could have The most dangerous Pirate is sopho­ Richardson's imminent arrival in Cameron. The men's basketball team begins its played, but was rested just to be safe. more point guard Lester Lyons. Lyons, the "He's always shot pretty well here." quest for a second consecutive national Laettner will not play due to his bruised CAA's Rookie ofthe Year last season, aver­ In last year's 125-82 Blue Devil drub­ championship Monday night, officially foot. The game will be the first he has aged 17.6 points and dished out 3.1 assists bing of the Pirates, Richardson had 16 opening the season against East Carolina. missed in his collegiate career and it breaks per game. points, 15 of them on three pointers. The Blue Devils have beaten East Caro­ a string of 86 consecutive starts. Joining Lyons in the backcourt will ei­ Down low, the Pirates 6-6 junior lina every year since the 1981-82 season Tony Lang will definitely sit out Mon­ ther be 6-4 sophomore Curly Young or 6-4 James Lewis and 6-9 junior Ike Copeland. and have never lost in the series. This day night's game, and it is uncertain when junior Steve Richardson. Young, probably Averaging over eight rebounds a game last streak should not be in jeopardy tonight as he will return. the best athlete on the team, is a transfer season, Copeland provides the biggest bulk the top-rated team in the country is chal­ East Carolina brings a new look into from Maryland who saw ACC action two on an ECU team which is the smallest in lenged by a squad which was 12-16 last Cameron Indoor Stadium. First-year head years ago as a Terrapin. Richardson, mean­ the CAA. year and could muster only four wins in coach Eddie Payne and his three new as­ while, had a rocky sophomore year be­ Krzyzewski liked the planning of the the Colonial Athletic Association. sistants inherit a program that finished a cause of two team suspensions. When he opener two days after a tough exhibition Still, Duke head coach Mike Krzyzewski solid seventh in the eight-member Colo­ was in uniform he averaged 13.5 points a game. hasn't written them off. nial Athletic Association. game. In his third year, he is already the "One thing we liked about this scenario "With a new coach, his first game, we "Playing the defending national cham­ ECU career leader in three pointers made playing Saturday and Monday," said need to be ready," he said. pion and number-one-ranked team in the and attempted. Krzyzewski, "is that we need to learn how The Blue Devils looked quite ready on opener gives you an opportunity to evalu­ "Richardson can either start or come off to play two games in a three-game period Saturday when they thrashed the Soviet ate your own program against the best," the bench and he's an excellent three- because we're going to be doing that a lot Union. Despite winningby 20, Duke played said Payne. "However, what I'm looking at point shooter," Krzyzewski said of throughout the year." shorthanded, as junior Thomas Hill and more is our attitude and improvement. sophomore Tony Lang sat out the game to We've got to play the best we can and let rest injuries. Moreover, All-America Chris­ everything else take its course." tian Laettner twisted his ankle late in the Even though the Pirates return three first half. Though Laettner continued to starters and eight lettermen, the situation play after halftime, he was favoring his looks bleak again. Tonight is the first con­ ankle and scored only three points in the test for the Pirates under Payne, and it second half. remains to be seen how smoothly the tran­ Hill, recovering from an ankle injury, is sition to the flood of new coaches was expected to play Monday night. On Satur­ made.

•r Wfmfci • %i^B tmtw^L'%m WfTlilm^r Bail I^^TL

GAME FACTS: When: 7:30 p.m., Monday Where: Cameron Indoor Stadium Radio: WDNC-620 AM, WXDU, 88.7 FM Television: Cable 13 Series record: Duke leads, 19-0 Last meeting: Duke won, 125-82 (0-0) Head coach: Eddie Payne (Wake Forest, 73) Career college coaching record: 103-51, 5 seasons Record at East Carolina: first season Probable starters: Guard—Ronnell Peterson, 6-2, 212 Jr. Guard—Lester Lyons, 6-4,160. So. Guard—Curly Young, 6-4,199, So. Forward—James Lewis, 6-6, 225, Jr. Center—Ike Copeland, 6-9, 215, Jr.

Strengths The perimeter. Though Peterson and Young are both transfers and have yet to be tested, they let the Pirates go five deep at guard. Young already has ACC experience two years ago with Maryland. With Peterson now probably playing the point, Lyons will find more scoring opportunities than last year, when he ran the team and scored 17.6 points a game en route to becoming the CAA Rookie of the Year. Steve Richardson, Paul Childress and Robin House will all see playing time. Richardson can sink the three regularly, and if he shows up with a proper attitude could have a big game. House provides what senior leadership he can.

Weaknesses The frontcourt is the first of many. With no player taller than 6-9 ike Copeland, the Pirates can go legitimately a total of three deep at forward. This problem alone would keep the Pirates in the second echelon of the CAA. Moreover, no coach from last season remains. The program must adjust to first-year coach Eddie Payne and his three new assistants, who are employing a new, more aggressive offense. Senior leadership is minimal. House and guard Jeff Whitaker, who will miss the beginning of the season, will find it difficult to lead if they find themselves on the bench. With CHAD STURGILL/THE CHRONICLE the talent ahead of them, that is probably where they will be spending most of their time. Cherokee Parks knows dunking too. Here, he grabbed the rebound with hrs back to the basket and then dunked it backwards in amazing fashion behind his head. Appraisal Be impressed if the margin is less than 30. The Pirates will try and run with their guards, and find out that even in that department they are heavily outclassed by Hurley. T.Hill and Blakeney. Parks and Grant Hill will have a field day toying with an opposing front line that would have a hard enough time controlling just one ofthe three Duke future All-Americas. With Laettner to spending time on the'bench to heal his ankle injury, look for "Chief Parks to scalp 64 ounces of beer the Pirates for his first double-double of his Blue Devil career. Cherokee will pour in 21 points while pulling down 11 rebounds, as Duke draws and quarters the Pirates, 109-64. only $3 FREE PAIR OF CONTACT LENSES EVERY MONDAY CALL FOR AN APPOINTMENT TODAY

Free Trial Pair of contact lenses for Duke Students and Employees with this ad.

Now available at: Complete Eye Care Services Restaurant and Bar Dr. J.C. Bazemore Eye Examinations • Contact Lens Examination All Types Contact Lenses • Colored Contact Lenses Optometrist Emergency Eye Treatment • Eyeglass Prescriptions Filled Free Pizza Delivery - Points or Cash 918 Broad St. Optical Boutique • Fast Service Durham • 286-2225 Shoppes at Lakewood, Durham • 493-7797 1 block from East Campus •' ^ti.^i^£^&

From staff reports Bryon Magill by an 11-4 decision. In the The wrestling team finished third (77.5 167-pound division, junior Craig Girvin points) out of seven teams at the pinned Bloomsburg wrestler Eric Moser at Bloomsburg Invitational on Saturday, de­ the 2:15 mark. spite competing without a wrestler in the "The individual performances were real Summer 1992 heavyweight division. With Jeremy good this weekend," said head coach Bill Godwin injured last weekend, Duke did Harvey."... Our place winners did really not have time to push another wrestler up well." May 11-June 27 to the heavyweight class. Duke placed werestlers in five of the The Blue Devils finished just three and weight classes. Junior Len LoCastro placed one-half points behind second place Penn­ fourth in the 134-pound division, falling by sylvania^! points). Duke edged out fourth a close 7-5 decision to Brandon McNaught REMINDER place Millersville, who finished with 75.5 of Millersville. Sophomore Dan Goffredo points. Host Bloomsburg, a top 20 team, placed third in the 158-pound class. Early Deadline: won the tournament by a wide margin, Sophomroe Rusty Wilson placed fourth in racking up 171 total points. the 167-pound class, falling by a 10-4 deci­ Two of the Blue Devil wrestlers won sion to Millersville's Mark Lawton, Pete JANUARY 20 individual championships this weekend. Ackerman finished third in the 190-pound In the 126-pound weight class, senior Mike division, defeating Bloomsburg's Matt Darlington defeated Franklin & Marshall's Fisher. Program Information Meeting Monday, November 25 Happy 5:15 p.m. in 109 Languages Building Come meet with Professor Edna Andrews to find out more about this program based in St. Petersburg, Thanksgiving Russia. from For further information, contact her in the Department of Slavic Languages and Literatures, 314 Languages Building £ Sanders florist 684-3975 1100 Broad Street 286-1288 FTD/Teleflora Specials/Plants/Balloons SUMMER SESSION MONDAY, NOVEMBER 25. 1991 SPORTSWRAP THt- CHRONICLE / PAGE 5 Football won't DUKE VS. NORTH CAROLINA

0 14 forget pasting 1 31 North Carolina 7 13 13 14—14 62 Rushing attempts 21 Jones 2 1 27 Duke 0 0 7 7—47 362 Yards gained rushing 81 Wright 2 0 5 • FOOTBALL from page 1 11 Yards lost rushing 45 Mays 1 0 32 rst Quarter 351 Net yards rushing 36 Breedlove 1 0 5 capped a seven play, 44-yard drive that rone Means. 6-yard run 178 Net yards passing 185 Ellis 1 0 17 gave UNC a 33-7 lead as the third quarter 0 9 ended. TO lg UNC then stopped Duke on three 0 29 straight plays and Gardner dropped back 0 12 to punt — but instead, he threw a 17-yard NC —R 0 26 78 yards 0 13 pass to Jamal Ellis for a first down. Two of 0 10 Carolina's foul penalties set up a 27-yard NC — TI 0 12 Brown-to-Walter Jones strike that closed {Gwaltne 0 9 the gap to 33-14. elapsed: Carolina added two more touchdowns, NC — K Gwaltney. 26 yards. Dnve: 42.0 Average yards/punt 38.3 Duke No Yd Av Lg Means' run and a nine-yard William 13 yards ie tiapsea. i.\z. 4-36 punt returns—yards 1-7 Gardner 5. Henderson romp, to close the scoring. 188 37.6 48 ±u Kickon returns yards 8-179 D. 8rown 1 42 42 42 fra Quarter ^' .' I?ssessiontime 22:53 North Carolina No Yd Av lg D — TD. Duke didn't stick around to congratu­ 84 42 49 late the Tar Heels — it left town just D. Browr minutes after the game had ended. Time ela "This loss, especially, was pretty dis­ NC —TC At Md Lg heartening," Jones said. "Carolina's our (pass fai 2 26 rival, we see these guys pretty often, when­ elapsed: ever we go out. Even back a couple of years NC —TC Yd LP ago, when we beat them 41-0, they still had (Gwaltne that feeling of arrogance as though they 56 34 76 33 were better than us. 7 7 "I guess they went out and proved it 40 40 today — its just something we'll have to D — TD. No Yd LP deal with," Jones said. D. Brown 70 70 Time elai 7 7 The end result? Even more fuel, if that is NC —TC possible, was added to the traditional ri­ (Gwaltne valry. After stolen basketball memorabilia elapsed: Yd LP and defaced old wells, however, the foot­ 7 7 NC —TC Yd LP ball team will remember Saturday's game. (Pignetti 33 23 Duke has Clemson left to play this season, efapsed: but Barry Wilson will find it hard to forget the taunting his team endured. No Yd LP "We might keep it in mind," Wilson said. 14 14 For the Blue Devils, it's going to be a North Ci 1 10 10 long 361 days. 25 No Yd LP 18 6 6

THE CHRONICLE'S Academic Nightmare Contest Forget your assignment? Miss your midterm? Dog eat your project? If you've got a hair-raising academic nightmare in your past, this contest is for you. We want to publish your story in our December 16 Exam Break Issue and give away valuable prizes to the top three Ultimate Academic Nightmares!

To enter your nightmare, complete the entry form below and submit it along with a typewritten account of your experience by 12 noon Friday, December 6. The winner will be selected by a panel of expert judges including Dean Sue Wasiolek, Dean Martina Bryant, Dean Richard White and senior newspaper staff. The Rules Entries must be received by 12 noon on Friday, December 6 in the r ~1 Classified Depository located at the 3rd Floor of Flowers Building. Attach this completed form Entries may be a maximum of 250 words, must be typewritten, and Ultimate Academic Nightmare Contest Entry Form tyou r typed submission. must be accompanied by a completed official entry form including signature certifying compliance with and acceptance of contest rules. Name: Phone: Entries must not identify by name any individual other than the entrant and must reflect a true, personal experience of the entrant. Entrants Mailing Address: bear full responsibility for the content of submissions, which become the property of the newspaper and will not be returned. The newspa­ per reserves, the right to publish selected entries, edit for length and School/program enrolled in: clarity and to reject submissions determined to be inappropriate for publication. Only currently enrolled Duke undergraduate, graduate and I certify my compliance with and acceptance of the contest rules: professional students are eligible. Employees of or volunteers for the newspaper are ineligible. Prizes are subject to restrictions as pre­ Signed: determined by their respective sources. Winning entries agree to L J cooperate with contest publicity, including photographs. PAGE 6/THF. CHRONICLE SPORTSWRAP MONDAY. NOVEMBER 25. 1991 Carolina's determination to avenge loss fuels win

CHAPEL HILL — The tolls ofthe coveted Victory Bell was not going to be thwarted in his run for the record rang through Kenan Stadium Saturday, signaling the David Royster books by rival Duke. The fact that Duke was keying on conclusion of the 78th annual clash between Duke and Means opened up opportunities for fullback Randy Jor­ North Carolina on the football field. The result was a 47- UNC student section got into the action by chanting, dan (108 yards rushing) and quarterback Jason Stanicek 14 pasting ofthe Blue Devils by UNC. "Onsides kick, we want another score!" after UNC had who passed for 178 yards. Natrone's determination cer­ But this game was over long before the final ticks ran off gone up by the final margin of 47-14. tainly played a large part in sealing Duke's ill fate. the scoreboard clock, the very scoreboard where two years In addition, towards the end ofthe game Duke's Dave So with all of these non-football factors entering into ago the Atlantic Coast Conference champion Blue Devil Brown was thrown to the turf in the end zone after Saturday's outcome, was Duke doomed from the begin­ football team posed for a photograph following a 41-0 win releasing one of many incomplete passes on the day, and ning? Had the Blue Devils no chance? over the Tar Heels. And that particular game played no three Carolina linemen stood over him for several sec­ Certainly the Blue Devils could have won the game, but small part in what happened Saturday. onds, no doubt taunting Brown and his teammates. they would have had to muster a superlative effort to overcome Carolina's intangible advantages. But after Blount opened the game with the 70-yard return, the To put it mildly, UNC wanted this one badly, and not necessarily crowd was into it, as were the UNC players, the avalanche had begun and there was little Duke could do to stop it. just for another ACC win. Duke had inflicted some hurting two Wideout Marc Mays dropped a sure touchdown pass years ago, and it was payback time. early in the first quarter with Duke trailing 7-0, a catch that could have reversed the game's eventual course. Tight end John Farquhar dropped a fourth-down pass The Tar Heels, favored by a touchdown going into the To put it mildly, UNC wanted this one badly, and not that would have given Duke the ball inside the UNC 30 contest, had all the intangibles on their side, and when necessarily just for another ACC win. Duke had inflicted with Duke trailing just 10-0. Strike two. And linebacker return specialist Eric Blount ran Randy Gardner's open­ some hurting two years ago, and it was payback time. Mark Allen fumbled the ball after making an interception ing kickoff back 70 yards to the Duke 28, the game was Secondly, the Tar Heels needed to beat Duke in order to that would have given Duke the ball at midfield. Strike effectively over although neither team had even posted a register their sixth win over a Division I team to qualify three. point yet. That runback set up the first of six Carolina for a bowl game. Going into the game, UNC was still Carolina led 20-0 at halftime and the game was over, touchdowns, a six-yard run by Blount, that initiated a entertaining hopes of going to either the Copper Bowl or despite an early second-half revival by Duke to pull rout that was almost inevitable before the Blue Devils had the Independence Bowl. Duke, on the other hand, was within 20-7. Any further rallying became impossible after even boarded the bus for Chapel Hill. playing for pride just one week after suffering a terrible officials overturned a Duke fumble recovery on a kickoff First and most obvious among the reasons for the loss to N.C. State, a game in which the Blue Devils led by to return the ball to Carolina. preconceived demolition was that game, if you can call it 10 points with two minutes to play. No, it definitely was not Duke's day, and it was not a game, two years ago on the very same Kenan grass. In other words, Duke had to use pride as its motiva­ meant to be. Duke humiliated UNC 41-0 and coach Steve Spurrier tional factor just one week after collapsing on Senior Day heard charges of running up the score when he attempted in Wallace Wade, while Carolina was playing for a pos­ Grid Picks Final Standings a fake field goal when the outcome was no longer in sible bowl bid on the same field where it was embarrassed question. That game was also UNC's third consecutive two years before. Duke also had a trip to Tokyo for a date loss to Duke in Chapel Hill and capped off the second with ACC champion Clemson looming large, yet another 1. Matt "The Weasel" Sclafani 170-66-4 straight 1-10 season under Mack Brown. distraction. The motivational ball was most certainly in 2. Marc "Orel" Sacks 169-67-4 This year's UNC seniors, who have been a major part of Carolina's court. 3. Mike "Rockin" Robbins 166-70-4 the Carolina rebuilding process under Brown, had to And finally, since Saturday marked the final game of 4. David "Bionic Man" Royster 165-71-4 endure that defeat and watch as victorious Duke posed the season for the Tar Heels (they did not receive a bowl 5. Brian "Waverunner" Doster 161-75^ under the shameful score for a picture. invitation), it was sophomore tailback Natrone Means' 6. Brian "The Fish" Kaufman 160-76-4 Saturday, the triumphant Tar Heels posed for a retal­ final opportunity to become the 20th running back in 7. Ann "Sheepdog" Heimberger 159-77*4 iatory photo and taunted the Blue Devils as they made UNC history to rush for 1,000 yards in one season, a 8. Mark "The Ghost" Jaffe 157-794 their way to the locker room following the game. Even the monumental achievement. Means needed 151 yards and 9. Seth "Siient Sam" Davis 154-82-4 ran for 189, going over the top on a 68-yard touchdown run 10. Kris "Big Daddy" Olson 153-834 early in the fourth quarter. Last year Means ran for 256 yards and led UNC to a 24-22 defeat of Duke in Durham. AP FOOTBALL POLL Saturday, Means again shredded the Blue Devil defense Rank Team Record L ast week and was just one reason why UNC amassed a gaudy 529 Congratulations, 1 net offensive yards. 1. Miami (37.5) 10-0-0 1 Means, the key to the UNC offensive attack, certainly 2. Washington (22. 5) 11-0-0 2 3. Florida St. 10-1-0 3 4. 10-1-0 K AETHER Q: WHO'S EVERYONE'S FRIEND? i TH A: THE ONE WHO BRINGS THE DONUTS! i i 10. BUSINESS i 11. THyME LUNCHEON 5T0F 3Y AND WELL FIX UF AN ASSORTMENT I Sotvp or Salad FOR YOU THAT WILL 3E SURE TO SATISFY I One-Half Pasta EVERYONE'S TASTE duos. BRING IN THIS AD \ Scmdwick Specialties AND I'LL GIVE YOU A FREECUF OF COFFEE | Coffee or Tea JUST FOR ST0rFING3Y! | THE BOTTOM LINE $495 $595 Mon • Twe • Wed NOT JUST DONUTS! 109 N. GREGSON ST. DURHAM, NC • (919) 682-5225^ 3531 HILLSBOROUGH RD. ACROSS FROM POJANGLES I «££sM^£. — — _ —

PAH) JOMAMfflMfflPS proa Complete Volvo & Saab Service

Early Deadlines Great Chinese Food that s SCANDIA MOTORCAR TIME MAGAZINE Delicious. Inexpensive. And Fast. MAINTENANCE—- Juniors only Lunch Mon-Fri. 11:30-2:30 (closed Sat. & Sun) Deadline December 2 Dinner nightly 5-9:30 27 Combined Years Experience AMERICAN SOCIETY Sat. & Sun. Closed for Lunch Please call for an appointment OF MAGAZINE EDITORS Planning a party? Juniors only ABC Store | Hillsborough Rd Deadline December 9 Let us deliver the food! B.P. 286-3442 Service O NEWSWEEK Free Delivery to Duke and Surrounding Area SCANDIA* §• Juniors, Seniors, Grad Students 5:30-9:30 p.m. ($10 minimum) (Behind £> (Located iunside the courtyard of Dutch Village Inn, B.P. Service) sj- Cfi Deadline December 15 3 2306 Elder St., intersection of Elder & Fulton next to 2711 Hillsborough Rd. Political Science Internship Office Duke North & VA Hospitals) Durham, NC 339 Perkins Library 286-2255* 286-1133 Main St MONDAY, NOVEMBER 25. 1991 SPORTSWRAP THE CHRONICLE / PAGE 7 Swimming teams split dual meet Today Men's Basketball vs. East Carolina, Cameron Indoor From staff reports Roy claimed the 200-meter breaststroke for the Blue Stadium, 7:30 p.m. The men's and women's swimming teams split dual Devils with a mark of 2:13.83. meets with North Carolina-Wilmington on Saturday. Diver Jack Williams placed second in the three-meter Swimming vs. North Carolina, Chapel Hill, 7:00 p.m. The men's team seized first-place finishes in every board competition. individual swimming event en route to a 149-94 victory, Sue Higgs paced the women's team. Higgs blasted to a Wednesday while the women's team fell 147-96. victory by nearly five seconds in the 200-meter breast- Kevin Strong and Jeff Anton each won a pair of indi­ stroke, finishing in 2:27.23. Higgs also garnered a first- vidual events for the Blue Devils. Strong placed first in place finish in the 200-meter individual medley in 2:12.61. Women's Basketball vs. UNC-Wilmington, Cameron the 200-meter backstroke with a time of 1:55.22 and in the In the 50-meter freestyle, a pair of Blue Devil team­ Indoor Stadium, 7:00 p.m. 200-meter individual medley (1:59.36). mates matched each other stroke for stroke with Jennifer Anton paced the 100-meter and 200-meter freestyle Sullivan touching the wall a mere two-hundreths of a Saturday ever,' with times of 47:56 and 1:43.93, respectively. second before Melinda Mische. Along with Kim Robertson Geoif Gaggero dusted the field in the 50-meter freestyle and Louisa Liss, Sullivan and Mische were also both part in 21.82 seconds. Gaggero, Strong, Anton and teammate of a 400-meter freestyle relay team which placed second. Women's Basketball at Harvard Invitational, Cam­ Neal Hauschild combined to win the 400-meter free relay Diver Kerri Lindland took a very tight one-meter diving bridge, Mass. easily with a time of 3:11.06. competition. Lindland finished with 212.175 points. UNC- Chris Kirby took the 1000-meter freestyle (9:55.54) and Wilmington's Kelli Sutton finished second at 210.9, fol­ Men's Basketball vs. Harvard, Cameron indoor Sta­ finished close behind teammate Scott Kammer in the 200- lowed by Duke's Abi Wisniewski at 209.85. dium, 7:30 p.m. meter butterfly. Aaron Kitlowski gave the Blue Devils a The Blue Devils' Ali Hosmer registered a pair of second- strong one-two punch in the 1000-meter free, finishing place finishes. She swam the 100-meter freestyle in 56:31 less than two seconds behind Kirby in second place. Chris and the 200-meter freestyle in 1:59.21. Sunday Women's Basketball at Harvard invitational, Cam­ bridge, Mass. FISH! Happy 21st Birthday to Brian Kaufman. You can quit whining now, Fish (although we wouldn't recognize you if you did). Throw away that lame Texas ID and kick back with some Jaegermeister. Just don't drink and drive. Better yet, don't even drive sober, Mr. Decisive. The Godzilla feet are on back order. In the meantime, you'll have to trip over things with your own feet. Just don't hurt yourself, the IM team needs your three-point MARK WASMER/THE CHRONICLE archery. The men's swimming team finished first in every individual event, including the butterfly, en route to its win. Right Macintosh. Right price.Right now

Macintosh Classic9 System. Macintosh LC System Macintosh Ilsi System. Now's the right time to buy an Apple® Macintosh® computer system. What's more, you may even qualify for the new Apple Computer Loan, Because right now you can save big on Apple's most popular computers and which makes buying a Macintosh now even easier. qualifying printers. And Macintosh is the right computer to help you achieve So come in rightno w and check out the big saving? on Macintosh. But your best, throughout college and beyond. hurry-these special savings last only through January 5,1992. Duke University Computer Store Bryan Center West Campus •684-8956 or 684-8957 . © 1991 Apple Computer, Inc. Apple, the Apple logo and Macintosh are registered trademark of Appte&mputer.In^ PAGE 8/THE CHRONICLE SPORTSWRAP MONDAY, NOVEMBER 25, 1991

How American Express helps you cover more territory For less money leave. And the maximum stay is 7 days/6 nights and must include Become a Student Cardmember today and a Saturday night. By becoming a Student Cardmember, you'll also enjoy other get 3 roundtrips on Continental Airlines, benefits from the American Express9 Student Privileges" Program. for only $129 or $189 each. Such as up to 30 minutes** of MCI long-distance calling every month for an entire year—absolutely free. And that's just one example of Only the American Express® Card offers an exciting travel program how the Card can help you save. exclusively for students—including three roundtrip certificates on For just $55 a year, the Card gives you all these savings. And Continental Airlines. And much, much more. it's easy to apply Just call us (have your bank address and account Just look at the map and pick the place you'd like to visit. If number on hand). What's more, with our special student offer, it's it's on your side ofthe Mississippi River, you can use a certificate easier to get the Card now while you're still in school than it may to flyfo r only $129* roundtrip. Or you can cross the ever be again. Mississippi for $189 roundtrip. So get the Card. And get readyto cover new terri­ You have your pick of more than 150 cities in the tory on either side of our Great Continental Divide. 48 contiguous states. And you can fly almost anytime— •Minneapolis St Paul. Si. Louis and New Orleans are considered cities east of (he Mississippi River "A credit of up to f}~K) for calls will appear on each billing statement for 12 months after enroll because there are no blackout dates. But you must ment $3 ""0 is equal to the charges for a domestic 30 minute night weekend MCI Card Compati make vour reservations within k daws ofthe dav YOU bility call and appropriate surcharges You must enroll for this service by December 31,1991 Membership Has Its Privileges

TRAVEL ' RELATED SERVICES CALL 1-800-942-AMEX An American Express company Continental MCI If you re already a Cardmember, there's no need to call. Information about your certificates will be arriving soon. Complete terms and conditions of this travel offer will arrive with vour certificates Continental Airlines alone is responsible for fulfillment of this offer American Express assumes no liability for Continental Airlines' performance. © 1991 American Express Travel Related Services Company, Inc. •I MBP

MONDAY, NOVEMBER 25. 1991 THE CHRONICLE PAGE 7 Who to trust: a rape victim learns and moves on with life

This is the story of a friend of mine. You may have read happen, I wouldn't have to feel this way... I wouldn't have about her in an article in the last issue of Duke Blue. Since • So what to lock the doors when I'm alone, or cringe when somebody last week was Rape Awareness Week, it is appropriate that looks at me funny, or lose sleep to flashbacks and night­ her story is told completely. Kelli is obviously not her real Pete Lieberman mares. I would be able to trust my friends, and drink name, and in some way it might be good to see her real without fear of losing control ofthe situation. If I could name. But as it stands, she could be anybody—the woman friends warned me that the UJB wouldn't find a student deny that I was raped, maybe then I could be happy again. sitting beside you in class, the next person you hit on at guilty of a crime against another student. And although But I was raped. I'm back at the University as a kegs or even your next door neighbor. And so could he. I didn't think I could win, I thought I could at least scare sophomore now, readjusting to my shattered image ofthe I would have preferred not to have my name attached to him enough to make him think about what happened and "Gothic Wonderland" and to the new person I have be­ this column, because it is her story and not mine. But the why it shouldn't happen again. come. I endure glares from people I don't even know, and rules of The Chronicle don't allow a column other than The hearing was as traumatic as the rape itself. For rumors that I am mentally unstable. I hear about the new Monday Monday to appear under a pseudonym, so it has nine hours (instead ofthe one and a half hours they told women he is dating; they find out about the rape, but to go under my byline. I've said too much already. She can me it would last) I sat across a table from him. At the believe him and his friends when they insist that I am speak for herself. PJL hearing I was treated like some sort of alien they wanted crazy. I hesitate to tell anyone my last name, because they Last spring, I was raped by someone I trusted. We had to test for legitimacy. Most ofthe hearing revolved around might know I'm "the one who . ..." I cringe when I see been dating for several weeks when we left a party and past incidents between him and myself. They weren't someone wearing his fraternity letters. When I see this returned to his room together. He gave me all the lines: "It judging what happened that night, they were judging my guy around campus, half of me wants to cry and run will bring us closer together," "don't I turn you on?" "I need character. If I had a question, I would have to raise it away—the other half wants to hit him really hard. memories to hold onto over the summer." He had started before the UJB, and they would decide whether or not to Although I still feel the pain, I now recognize that a by asking me, then trying to persuade me and finally ask it. He could question me directly. Some of his friends traumatic experience can develop a person. I'm more commanding me, with lines like "Let me do this to you." testified about how they thought I was his girlfriend—as assertive, more sensitive and I believe in myself more He became frustrated and angry. Then he stopped listen­ if that mattered. One board member actually asked me than I have ever before. I've become very strong; I had no ing and forced himself on me. "so how exactly is a man supposed to know when to stop?" choice. I feel like I know something that so many people At the time I didn't understand what was happening. I The official opinion said "all members agreed that on this campus don't. Sometimes it feels like I'm 40 or 50, was terrified and extremely confused; it had never before something less than natural, and possibly quite ugly, instead of 19. occurred to me that he would do anything to hurt me. We occurred on the evening in question." But he was still I learned this fall that even after all that pain, my point were alone, it was late and the door was locked. In the last found not guilty. The message from the UJB was essen­ was still not made to him. A friend called me late one night moments, I thought of his temper, of his violence toward tially, "we believe you, but nothing was proven because to tell me that he had assaulted another woman. She others in the past. Those thoughts made me afraid to there is no concrete evidence." Maybe, if I had not been too chose to keep quiet. provoke him, since he was already angry. At first, I scared to scream and fight, if I would have had some He said one thing to me, at the beginning of that thought that if only I could get through it now, it would be bruises and injuries to show the UJB, then, maybe, they evening that I will never forget. He said, "I don't under­ over and everything would be OK again. Then I stopped would have been able to admit that what happened that stand why you never trust me. Have I ever given you a thinking. The image of his ceiling is still imbedded in my night was rape. reason not to trust me? You should always trust people mind. For the past eight months, I've been asking myself the until they do something to prove that they are not trust­ The next few weeks were a blur. I saw a lot of deans, same questions—how could this have really happened to worthy." At the time I thought he was just being difficult, Public Safety and rape crisis counselors. I dropped a class me, why did I let this happen—until I finally realized that but now I realize just how wrong and backwards and and stopped going out. I cried a lot. Finally, I decided to the "debate I'm having with myself stems from my desire ironic his statement was. utilize the Undergraduate Judicial Board. Upperclass to justify what happened. After all, if it didn't really Kelli is a Trinity sophomore. Exposing life in the fast lane in the computer clusters

Generally, I like computers. After all, the silicon sol­ I call Time and Temperature (683-9696) every morning diers run our lives, so we might as well try to have a good • Monday, Monday to find out what the temperature will be that day, at least working relationship with them. But I swear they have a until the next five minute-20 degree temperature shift mean streak. You work on your term paper for 27 hours Dr. NO occurs, necessitating a quick run home to put on the fifth with a Mountain Dew in your arm, manage to save it and set of clothes for the day. I called the other morning, and settle in for a 10-minute nap before it's due. You turn your dirt thing is fooling anyone besides a few low flying they had an advertisement for a "Durham Visitors Info computer back on whenyou wake up, and the words nifnal aircraft. I'm just afraid I know what the next step is: the Line" to call and find out about the delightful and electri­ zoltaqz appear on the screen, while an alarm watch beep landscapegate (as opposed to the landscapegoat: not only fying activities occurring in the Durham community. The version of Ozzy Osbourne's "Children ofthe Grave" plays a beast that can naturally prune and maintain our illus­ phone number is 688-BULL. Now, would you trust an from the computer speaker. Paper..... see ya. Your Duke trious foliage, but a creature to place the blame on when information line with the word "Bull" in its phone num­ Card never opens the door to your dorm just after you've it looks bad) ofthe future. Chains around the quad didn't ber? Maybe they should just call it "The Bull Line." I'd insulted the sexual prowess and questioned the parent­ work, reams of toxic fertilizer didn't help and spray expect to call up and hear something like. "Drive on down hood of 10 or 20 members ofthe football team. The bank painting is too much of a problem with that darn Paint to bustling downtown Durham where the hubbub of a card machine decides that it just as well better keep your Shop closing. It's inevitable—landscaping will resort to cosmopolitan city is evident and the flavor of Paris is in bank card and transfer all $23.17 you have in your using—artificial turf. You'll come back after Winter Break the air. If you are lacking transportation, Durham's own account to a David Duke presidential campaign fund. The and those nasty grass-treading prevention chains will all subway system can transport you from one art deco registrar's computer decides to selectively forget the grades be gone because we'll have Plastiquad! Complete with subway station to another. Be sure to stop at Durham's you made only in the courses that you did well in, so you hash marks for those impromptu football follies on the own Little Broadway where first run shows form just one have to take all those courses again. With all of these quad. It will be the solution the University has been small aspect of downtown Durham's scintillating nightlife. screw-ups going on left and right and any other direction looking for to curb that mudsliding problem. No mud, no Wander from nightclub to nightclub or stop in one ofthe that might irritate you, I'm convinced these computers worries. Of course, those flowers that you've so enjoyed in coffeehouses before heading to the Durham Opera House." have viruses. The darned things just don't practice good the Gardens will now be available year round—it's amaz­ Well, downtown Durham does have da Bullsss, but they're hygiene. I came home the other night, and my IBM was ing what they can do with petroleum products these days. leaving. Maybe we could just paint all of downtown green exchanging disks with my roommate's Mac by candle­ As the Duke Groundstyrants grow immensely in power and pretend it's part of Duke Forest. light. And my IBM wasn't even wearing a dust cover. they'll replace all the administrators with life-size plastic Dr. NO's IBM wants him to set it up with the big Duke What do you think goes in the clusters at night after the replicas. Not that it would be much of a change. Maybe Card computer, but Dr. NO thinks the Duke Card com­ library is closed? There must be dozens of those comput­ they'd be more empathetic. puter gets around too much. ers in there. Those computers with modems are calling 1* 900-HOT-DATA and downloading pinups (pinouts?) of mainframes. The worst part is that nobody around here takes precautions when they use their computers. Bet you don't even wash your hands after typing a paper. Every­ one should wear those rubber surgical gloves—every time. But to really be safe, we're going to have to go back to handwriting everything. It's the only way to be sure. Uh huh—and you wonder where this flu epidemic started.

OK, landscaping has taken things too far now in their insatiable quest for green. I know that they spray paint the grass on East every time somebody with money happens to visit the campus. But now the Gardening Gurus are getting desperate. If you've walked by the Bryan Center next to the "Greenhouse" lately, you might have noticed. They've started dyeing the ground green. I'm not sure how: maybe they painted it, or sprayed it with some food coloring. Perhaps you can buy green dirt now for those extra tough landscaping situations. All I know is that the ground behind the Bryan Center is the color of green Chloraseptic now. I like a pleasant surrounding of chlorophyll-engorged fauna as much as the next person, but hey, the normal variety of brown dirt will do just fine. Besides the fact that I don't really think the whole green PAGE 8 THE CHRONICLE MONDAY, NOVEMBER 25. 1991 Comics

Market Wise / Rocco Femia THE Daily Crossword byDonJohnson

2- H^fcf iHott "Toudf. ACROSS 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 10 11 12 13 tiroes QfTne FUTURE! 3. MALLS TT£ASZI<>-T° 1 Writer Uris ' ' GlLAS A S^AC4C Oro To -b/i£fi - FOIL"- bA*S Sortie fiJeu) GEA>A£ 5 Dogie 14 15 OP Co*4.t-O*s. 9 Gown material „ A 6xr Mo/ie MATJAGEAftte 17 16 1 14 Adjutant 19 TobAH 15 Gen. Bradley 20 21 22 23 fJtH-A^te-A*'* 16 "Goodnight" girl fVoJ 'flour 17 Attracted 24 25 26 27 HArb M6-. persons 28 29 30 31 / 20 Louisville I favorite 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 22 Adjust 40 41 23 Shaver 39 42 24 A Kennedy 43 44 45 46 J 26 Brays 4cTt*Aw.t 7^E-J 28 Wis. city 47 48 49 50 1 ( 31 Card game WAS A tsOA/(r£ie.£d/i 32 As snug as a 51 52 53 54 I! bug in — 8^r. (Aim T 33 School on the 55 56 57 58 59^ 60 61 Thames 62 63 64 35 Expensive 65 39 Netting 66 68 40 North and South " The Far Side / Gary Larson Doonesbury / Garry/Trudeau 42 — Alto, Cal. 69 71 43 Florence " favorite €1991 Tribune Media Services1. Inc 11/25/91 RICK,MAT »%***£*, tWAT?QUAYl3 mtsJPIPNT 45 Queen of All Rights Reserved ACTUALLY 5XACTLYSAY Carthage Friday's Puzzle Solved YOU BB M*" THE wc£ A6RB&7D THAT THAT 46 Fjord city 6 "That's —" nnnn nnnn nnnn urn TO- PR&I&NT. TALK TO YOU WAS WHAT 47 Killer whales (Dean Martin nnnn nnnnn nnnra NI6HT* A30UTKJM- THZINmiiVIW 49 Difficulty hit) B&HIN? MARABOUT. 51 Erie — Gardner 7 Put on freight RAPS I INIGIE n SIR AT E \ 54 — Hari 8 Revivified nnnnnn rann nnnn 55 Always to 9 Welds together nnnnn nnn poets 10 Jackie's second Imnnn unci nnnnnci 56 Lamb piece 11 Seed coating 58 Character of a 12 Being hauled people 13 Hotbeds nnn nnnnn nnnnn 62 Gardening 19 Hollow stem nnnnnn nnn nnnn knack 21 Over there 65 Eject 25 Ooze nnn nnnnra 66 — Oakley 27 Unpleasant •nnn nnn rannnnn 67 Verbal issues 68 Otherwise 28 Highway 69 Inclines exit nnnnm nnn n 70 Lack 29 Vicinity 71 Hit hard 30 Perverse one 11/25/91 31 Ancient Gr. city- 44 Dahl et al. 57 Distinctive air DOWN state 48 — la vie 59 Ship's OH, YEAH? H5JU5TWANB 1 "Shane" star 34 Garroway 50 Had a meal frame WHATPIP TO TALK ABOUT IPUNNO. 2 Land of hosted it 51 Actor George 60 Greek peak YOU SAY IT 60LF,SIZ. MATIF shamrocks 36 Bridge seat 52 Alloy 61 Plant part WASABOUT? / 3 Czech river 37 She: Fr. 53 Oval 63 One: Ger. IFR55ZB? 4 Penna. town 38 Needy 54 "— Godfrey" 64 Sandwich ITCOULP 5 Jointly: pref. 41 Physical entity (Powell film) letters Be RISKY!

THE CHRONICLE

SPORTSWRAP editors: Kris Olson, Mike Robbins Copy editors: ....Ann Heimberger, Peggy Krendl, Matt Ruben, Michael Saul, Karl Wiley Wire editor: Nishan Fernando Associate photography editor: Mark Wasmer Calvin and Hobbes/ Bill Watterson Production assistant: .Roily Milter Account representatives: Dorothy Gianturco, Peg Palmer TOMOR&M WE'RE GOING EACH Of US HAS TO FIND WWW" ARTICLE -D\D "SPACE MIEN ACWAUN, Advertising sales staff:Kellie Daniels, Stacie Glass, Roy TO D\SOJSS "CURRENT EVENTS' A NEWSPAPER APTKLE, VOU CHOOSE? WEDS TVIO-UEMJED TUERES Jurgens, Alan Mothner, Jen Soininen, Katie Spencer, ^_ IN SCWOOL. REM) IT TO TWE CLAS^, ELM\S CLONE; NOT MUQt Jon Wyman AND EXPLAIN n. LEFT TO Creative services staff:....Michael Alcorta, Reva Bhatia, EXPLAIN. Loren Faye, Dan Foy, Steven Heist, Kathy McCue, T Kevin Mahler, Merri Rolfe, Susan Somers-Willett Accounts payable manager: Michelle Kisloff Credit manager: Judy Chambers Classified managers: . GregCeithaml, Bob Gilbreath, Linda Markovitz Business staff: Jessica Balis, Amina Hightower, Janet Johnson, Tim Rich Calendar coordinator: Cindy Cohen

Life Below the Mean/ J. Jackson

fro*sor

"\N?-W-VX o^5

€K± y^*. MONDAY. NOVEMBER 25. 1991 THE CHRONICLE PAGE 9 Community Calendar

Wesley Fellowship Eucharist (Holy Duke University Medical Center, Today Saturday, November 30 Communion). Wesley office. 5:30 pm. Durham Regional Hospital and VA Duke Gay and Lesbian Assoc, meeting. Duke Jugglers mtg. In froilt of Chapel. Medical Center need blood donations Wesley Singers. Chapel basement Mary Lou Williams Center. Everyone 2-5 pm. to support patient care. All blood lounge. 4:45 pm. is welcome. 9 pm. types are needed, especiallly 0- and International Coffee Break. Sponsored Amnesty International meeting. 201 B+. You must weigh at least 110 lbs. Workshop in Performance Practice. by Duke Campus Ministries and area Flowers. 8:30 pm. and be at least 17 years old. Contact Nelson Music Room. 8 pm. congregations. 12 noon-l:30 pm. the Ameican Red Cross. Chapel Basement. Lutheran Campus Ministry with Holy Roger Manning, Acoustic Guitar, Eucharist. Chapel Basement. 9:30 pm. Join HELP, a confidential support group Coffeehouse. 9 pm. Festival of Trees. Presented by American for people concerned about genital herpes. Red Cross. Durham Omni. 8 am-9 pm. Duke Symphony Orchestra. Baldwin Spectrum meeting. Mary Lou Williams Sponsored by Planned Parenthood. Call Aud. 8 pm. Center. 5:30 pm. Mozart Festival at Duke. Duo Piano 929-5402 for more information. Works on Mozart Opera Themes. Broadway at Duker Mandy Patinkin in Roller Skating with Fellowship of OASIS needs volunteers to carry Baldwin Aud. 8 pm. Dress Casual. Page Aud. 8 pm. Christian Athletes. Meet at Cameron books to shut-in individuals. For more Stadium. 7 pm. Duke Symphony Orchestra Concert. information, call 560-0152. Sunday, December 1 Works by Russian Composers. Organizational meeting for possible Overeaters Anonymous mtg. Coffeehouse. Baldwin Aud. 8 pm. The American Red Cross needs members of the 1992-93 Green 3 pm. For more info, call 286-1860. volunteer drivers to drive needy House. 202 Watts St. 9 pm. Call 682- Stress Management for Finals Week. people to doctors' appointments. Call 0887 for more information. Chapel Services. Duke Chapel. Rev. Presented by Cindy Watson, Physical 489-6541 for more information. Dr. William Willimon. 11 am. Therapist and Linda Carl, Health "The Evolution of Senescence: A Test Education Coordinator. Wannamaker Career Development Services are of the Theories Using Drosophila" by Lutheran Campus Ministry. Fellowship One Commons. 7-7:45 pm. offered by the Office of Continuing Deborah Roach. Ill Bio Sci. 4 pm. Supper. Chapel Basement kitchen. 5:30 Education for those who are seeking a pm. Stress You Can Manage. Kim DeBerry and Workshop, in Performance Practice. career change, self-assessment, Stephen Ahrens from Physical Therapy employment options, and college choices. Works by Antonio Lotti, Mozart, and Mallarme Chamber Players Winterwinds, will tell about massage and stress For more information, call 684-6259. Franz Anton Hoffmeister. Nelson Durham Arts Council. 4 pm. management techniques. House P. 7 pm. Music Room, East Duke Bldg. 5 pm. Red Cross needs volunteer dispatch­ Festival of Trees. Presented by Duke Retiree Association (DURA) ers to take incoming calls. Training Duke India Assoc, mtg. 229 Soc Sci. 7 pm. American Red Cross. Durham Omni. Christmas Part, Multi-Purpose Bldg. 12 noon-6 pm. provided. Call 489-6541. Duke in St. Petersburg meeting. 109 309 Oregon St. 2:30-4:30 pm. Languages. 5:15 pm. "A Study of Louis Ginsburg's Legends of "Women Telegraphers: A Social History The American Red Cross needs the Bible. 211 Old Divinity. 9:45 am. of Women in Technology 1846-1920" volunteer receptionists to staff the Blue Devil Dating Game. 6 pm. Cam­ National Humanities Center. 7:30 pm. front desk at their new location in bridge Inn. Monday, December 2 For more info call 383-3008. Univesity Place beginning in Novem­ ber. This person would direct blood Tuesday, November 26 Duke Gay and Lesbian Assoc, mtg. Mary donors, CPR class participants and Lou Williams Ctr. All are welcome. 9 pm. Thursday, December 5 Carrom Night. Coffeehouse. 9-11 pm. others to their appropriate areas. Vegetarian Club. Free vegetarian Call 489-6541 for more information Holidays with Speak of the Devil. Habitat for Humanity meeting. House dinner. 130 Bio Sci. 5-7 pm. House G Commons. 9 pm. D Commons 9 pm. Northwood Manor Nursing Home needs RCIA. For those interested in learning "Missa L'homme arme" by Antoine volunteers to visit with, read to, and Taize Evening Prayer Service. Memorial about or joining the Catholic Church. Busnoys. Nelson Music Room. East write letters for patients. People Chapel of Duke Chapel. 5:15 pm. Catholic Student Ctr. in Chapel Basement. with musical abilities are encouraged Duke Bldg. 8 pm. 7 pm. Christian Science Organization to volunteer, also. If interested, call Collegium Musicum concert, Nelson meeting, rm 007 Religion Bldg. 8 pm. Choral Vespers. Memorial Chapel of Pam or Robin at 471-4558. Music Rm., 8 pm. Duke Chapel. 5:15 pm. Wesley Fellowship Bible Study. Gospel Support groups for new parents. Call Spectrum meeting. Mary Lou Williams of John. Wesley Office. 7 pm. No Boundaries. Coffeehouse. 9 pm-12 am. 684-3714 to find out about these groups. Center. 5:30 pm. Wesley Fellowship Eucharist (Holy Wesley Fellowship Eucharist (Holy Be a Santa's Helper by donating gifts or Communion). Wesley office, Chapel Tuesday, December 3 Communion). Wesley Office. 5:30 pm. money for gifts for those in need. basement. 4:30 pm. Wesley Fellowship Coordinating Sponsored by the Mental Health Associa­ Carrom Night. Coffeehouse. 9-11 pm. tion in Central Carolina, Inc. For more ASDU legislative body meeting. 139 Council. Wesley office. 9 pm. Habitat for Humanity meeting. House information, call 682-8066. Soc Sci. 6:30 pm. D Commons 9 pm. Duke Jazz Ensemble. Page Aud. 8 pm. Volunteers are needed by the Mental Arabic Language Talbe. Schlitz Room Taize Evening Prayer Service. Memorial "A Raisin in the Sun" Karamu Theater Health Association in Central Carolina to of Bryan Center. 5:30 pm. Chapel of Duke Chapel. 5:15. pm. Group. Sheafer Theater. 8 pm. facilitate support groups for loved ones ACAASW general committee meeting. Graduate/Professional Student Bible of someone who has committed suicide. 126 Soc-Psych. 7 pm. Christian Science Organization For more information, call 682-8066. meeting, rm 007 Religion Bldg. 8 pm. Study. InterVarsity Christian Fellow­ NC Student Rural Health Coalition. Duke ship. Chapel Bassement Kitchen. Depressive and Manic Depressive Wesley Fellowship Bible Study. Gospel Chapter meeting. East Campus Center. 7:30-8:45 pm. Support Group. Meets 2nd and 4th of John. Wesley Office. 7 pm. 6:30 pm. For more info, call 684-5880. Tuesday of month from 7:15-8:45 Wesley Fellowship Eucharist (Holy Friday, December 6 pm. Glendale Height United Methodist Wednesday, November Communion). Wesley office, Chapel InterVarsity Christian Fellowship. Church. 908 Leon Street. Call 682- 27 basement. 4:30 pm. York Chapel. 7-9 pm. 8066 for more information. Live Jazz Ensemble. Coffeehouse. 9- ASDU legislative body meeting. 139 International Coffee Break. Sponsored Lunchtime Support Group for People 11 pm. Soc Sci. 6:30 pm. by Duke Campus Ministries and area with Depression. Tuesdays 12 noon- congregations. 12 noon-l:30 pm. 1:30 pm. 905 W. Main St. Sponsored Wesley Fellowship Eucharist (Holy Arabic Language Table. Schlitz Room Chapel Basement. by Mental Health Associaton in Communion). Wesley office. 5:30 pm. of Bryan Center., 5:30 pm. Central Carolina. Call 682-8066 for more information. Wesley Singers. Chapel basement ASA meeting. 126 Soc Sci. 7 pm. Exhibits lounge. 4:45 pm. Mallarme Chamber Players Winterwinds, Art of the 1980's: Selections from Separation and Divorce Support Amnesty International meeting. 201 Durham Arts Council. 8 pm. the Collection of the Eli Broad Family Group. Thursdays, 5:30-7 pm. 905 Foundation. Duke Museum of Art. Flowers. 8:30 pm. W. Main St. Suite 19-A. Call 682- Holiday Treelighting, In front of 6-9 pm. through Jan. 5. 8066 for more information. Chapel, 5 pm. Thursday, November 28 Release Paintings, Prints, and CPR Instructors needed at the Ameri­ Broadway at Duke: Mandy Patinkin in Vegetarian Club. Free vegetarian Sculptures. Perkins Gallery of can Red Cross. For more information, Dress Casual. Page Aud. 8 pm. dinner. 130 Bio Sci. 5-7 pm. Perkins Library. Opening Reception call 489-6541. Nov. 1. 6-7 pm. thru Nov. 18. Senior class forum on city/county RCIA. For those interested in learning The blood donor site in Duke Hospital about or joining the Catholic Church. school merger. Von Canon. 7 pm. General Pubiic Notices South will be open on Mondays, 11:30 Catholic Student Ctr. in Chapel Base­ Advent Communal Penance Service am-4:30 pm. and Thursdays from 9 ment. 7 pm. (Catholic). 7:30 pm. Foster Child Wish Tree at Northgate am-2 pm. Mall. Near Santa Claus on Center Choral Vespers. Memorial Chapel of Guatamala Festival. Food, music, crafts. Court. Dec. 1-18. 10 am-9 pm. Student Notices Duke Chapel. 5:15 pm. Trinity United Methodist Church. 6 pm. Register for the American Cancer No Boundaries. Coffeehouse. 9 pm-12 am. Call 471-4777 or 856-9468 for info. House Course forms available. 04 Allen Society's Freshstart Stop Smoking Bldg. Deadline Monday, December 2. Wednesday, December 4 Program. Sponsored by Durham and Friday, November 29 Orange County Unit's. To be held Dec. Academic Interaction Program. Take your InterVarsity Christian Fellowship. Live Jazz Ensemble. Coffeehouse. 9- 3,5,10.12 from 7:30-9 pm. Call professor out to a free lunch. Come to the York Chapel. 7-9 pm. 11 pm. 490-1875 for registration. ASDU office or call 684-6403. PAGE 10 THE CHRONICLE MONDAY, NOVEMBER 25,1991 Classifieds

Announcements RESEARCH GUIDANCE FOR SCHOLARS CROSSROADS DIRTY HOUSE? VW Golf. 1985. air. 5-speed, AM/FM, Happy Holidays! AND RETURNING SCHOLARS. Assis­ Important meeting about next semes­ Honest, dependable lady desires oppor­ cassette. Only 35,000 miles, new tires. Enjoy some holiday music at the Speak tance with dissertations, term papers, ter. Plenty of pizza, Soc/Sci., 8:30 p.m., CASH FOR BOOKS tunity to clean your home. References $3000. 493-7112. of the Devil First Annual Winter Invita­ independent studies, grant proposals, Room 139, Monday. Today! . available upon request. Allow me to help tional with Lady Blue and the Chapel Cash paid for your textbooks. Bring technical review. L.Vcko, Ph.D. 489- you through the holidays. Call Patsy at '85 Honda Civic OX, 60K Auto transmis­ Hill Loreleis. December 7. Baldwin them downstairs to the Textbook 7711. Free Pizza?! 732-2817 for more information. sion, A/C, AM/FM cassette, burgundy, Auditorium. Store. Mon.-Sat.. 8:30-5:00. in excellent shape. Driven by school A CHANCE TO TEACH At the mandatory Crossroads meeting, PPS SUMMER INTERNS Room 139, Soc/Sci., 8:30 p.m., Mon­ teacher. $3495. Please call 286-2241. Want to teach English to high school Roommate Wanted LISA LEWIS PPS Summer 1992 Independent In­ Perfect gift for X-Mas. Ask Mom and students? No previous experience day, Nov. 25. Your senior year and you've never had terns - Sign up outside Room 213 Old Dad. needed and you don't have to be an a personal? Well, here you go. Let's Chem for informal interviews to be DUKE INDIA ASSN. Female graduate-professional to share English major! Get involved with spend a romantic evening together. - held on December 3. 4. & 6. Important general body meeting on 3 BR brick house. Central A/C, ceiling 1975 Volvo 244 Sedan. Needs fly­ CHANCE'S English program. Call wheel!?) and starter. $500 or neg. 990- Your secret admirer. Monday, Nov. 25,7 p.m., 229 Social fans, W/D, dishwasher, big yard and MY STORY BOOKS Susanne at 6840565 for more informa­ deck. $245 plus utilities. 382-3213. 2119 or 544-7609. tion Sciences. Come hear guest speak­ Read and draw with your child. High ers. Ginger, I gazed Into your eyes, and quality herd cover books. Personal­ SNOW SKIERS Rooms for Rent Misc. For Sale quite to my surprise, I quickly became captured, your stare, my aura rap­ ized books and cassette tapes: for Steep slopes, knee-deep powder, in­ Mandy Patinkin tured. I hope you'll call me, 684- information call 477-6115. tense rays, happy hour pitchers when Fan Club, i.e. Performing Arts: he's com­ Share 3 BR historic furnished home with Duke Basketball Tickets—Buy/Sell. Top 1857. Ben. the lifts close, steamy hot tubs under ing the day after break, and we need to dollar paid. Buy/sell all concerts nation­ HEALTHYVOLUNTEERS NEEDED! Non­ 2 Duke students. Large bedroom with 4 cool clear Colorado night skies...Sound be ready! Mtg.. 7:30 tonight. Union of­ wide. 967-9584. smoking females. 18-26 years old. large windows. 2 blocks to East. $265/ Hey Smokeyl good? Join us for spring break in Steam­ fice. This week, something new... sun­ are needed to participate in a study on mo + utilities. 4194421. boat Springs, CO. $719 includes daes! Don't miss out! Tickets For Sale Guess who's coming to dinner again. physiological responses to laboratory roundtrip air, 7 nights condo. lift tickets, And you thought that holidays were tasks. Participants will be reimbursed and more. Call Mark at 682-7592 for Apts. for Rent relaxing. Better hide the pearls. Thanks for their time and effort. If interested, info. (Prices go up Dec. 16!). Help Wanted Ticket for sale. Dates: 11/28 departs again, Robbynette! call 684-8667 and ask forthe women's RDU to Evansvllle, Indiana returning on study. Sunny Spacious one Bedroom Apart­ 11/30 evening. Bargain at $158. Call MAKING WOMEN'S LIVES VISIBLE: a FREE TRAVEL. CASH. AND EXCELLENT DEVILISH DATING ment, walk to both campuses. Mod. Wayne, 286-5664. presentation by historian Jacquelyn BUSINESS EXPERIENCE!! Openings avail­ HEALTHYVOLUNTEERS NEEDED! Non­ kitchen/bath. Available Jan. 1. $317/ Today is the day... have dinner in Dowd Hall and novelist Lee Smith able for individuals or student organiza­ smoking males. 18-26 years old. are month. Call 419-1660. the CI and watch our Blue Devil about the process of Documentary tions to promote the country's most needed to participate in a study on Wanted to Buy Dating Game at 6:00 p.m. It will Studies. Monday, Nov. 25,7:30p.m., successful SPRING BREAK tours. Call physiological responses to everyday 3Br, 2 bath, garage, spacious Ranch, be a worthwhile experience not Breedlove Room, Perkins Library, Inter-Campus Programs 1-800-327- tasks. Participants will be reimbursed excellent condition, fenced yard, safe Need 2 basketball tickets to Wake For­ soon forgotten. Sponsored by Duke University. 6013. for their time and effort. If interested, family neighborhood near Duke/NCSSM. est (Jan. 25) and Notre Dame (Feb. 1). Duke Union Interaction Commit­ please call 684-8667 and ask for the 2503 Woodrow Street. $950/month. Leave message 493-6688. tee. Drama 113S/ English 102S: j DUKE RECYCLES Ambulatory Study. SCREENWRITING, will be offered this Call 489-2806, leave message. spring, taught by John Clum. The course Positions available for next semester. 6- Travel/Vacations Becca will meet Monday and Wednesday from 8 hr/wk. Starts at $5.50/hr. Work-study CHAPEL TOWER Happy 21st birthday from the entire Pi 1:50 to 3:05. place TBA. Students inter­ preferred. Apply by Dec. 3. Call 684- Spacious two bedroom apartment, HOT! HOT! HOT! Fly to Cancun or sail to Kapp gang! We love you! ested in taking the course should write 3362 for more information. carpeting and air conditioning. Call the Bahamas this Spring Break! Party Professor Clum a note and submit a Darla at 383-6678. with us! Call 1-800484-1005 ext. 6708 Elise Silver short writing sample and a statement Child Care Now! Here's to: Pizza, Michael, Solitaire, about why you wish to take the course. One bedroom apartment convenient Basketball. Michael, Telephones, Pop­ This should be done by noon Monday, to Duke/ Lakewood. Stove/refrigera­ NEED BABYSITTER corn, Michael, Drunk-Screws, Michael, Dec. 2. Turn your materials into the tor/water/heat included. $350/ Lost & Found The Little Mermaid, Michael, and Birth­ Drama office (206 Bivins). Two year old faculty kid. Cute little guy. month. 489-2644. Weds, and Thurs. evenings, Sat. morn­ LOST BRACELET days! (Did we forget to mention Michael?) Happy Birthday! From all FREE COOKIES!! ing. One block from EastCampus. Call Of great sentimental value. Gold link Houses for Rent the guys who want you but just don't and hot chocolate and hot cider. The Sallye, 683-3414. (women's) bracelet lost - if found, re­ know it yet. S and P! 20th Annual Treelighting Ceremony, ward offered. Call 383-7840. Tuesday, Dec.3 at 5p.m. Santa will be Help at-home mom care for 3 and lyr-old Houses and/or Rooms for rent. Conve­ therewith prizes forthe kids. Come join and newborn. Approximately l-7p.m., 2 nient to campus and available now. Call LOST BRACELET Heath the fun!! or more days/week. Debbie 682-0077. Bob at 489-1989. gold link with semi precious stones. Happy birthday, dude! Have fun over Lost Nov. 20. Sentimental value. If Thanksgiving and watch out for big BREAKS Students 4 Choice blue cars with Jesey plates! CHILD CARE NEEDED. Couple seek­ 5 bedrooms, 1 block from E.Campus, found, please contact Wendy at 684- RESERVATIONS AVAILABLE NOW! Dues- paying members can pick up ing dependable non-smoker to care remodeled, immaculate condition, 1831. Reward. DAYTONA BEACH Reproductive Rights magazine at the 5 ana 7 NIGHTS for baby in our home. Some house­ sunny rooms, large closets, SPA­ NANCY Bryan Center Information Desk!! keeping, references required. 383- SOUTH PADRE ISLAND CIOUS kitchen, hardwood floors, Happy Anniversary! This past year has S AND 7 NIGHTS END OF AN ERA 4409, after 6p.m. backyard w/deck, store, fridge, w/ Personals STEAMBOAT been the most wonderful year of my Help usher in the new golden age d, dishwasher, central H/Air, SECU­ life. I love you always, Chris. 2. 5 AND 7 NIGHTS RITY SYSTEM. 489-1989. PPS SUMMER INTERNS PANAMA CITY BEACH of dating at Duke today at 6:00 Babysitter needed for two girls aged 1 7 NIGHTS p.m. in the Cambridge Inn. Come and 3. References and own transporta­ PPS Summer 1992 Independent Interns Dude, Dude! FORT LAUDERDALE have dinner and watch one of three tion required. Non-smoker. Good pay, 2/3 bedrooms, 1 block E.Campus, - Sign up outside Room 213 Old Chem 7 NIGHTS Blue Devil Datinggame shows. We flexible hours. Call 489-4545, leave stove, fridge, W/D, Central H/A, for informal interviews to be held on One, two, three, four,...Twenty.Twenty- one! Not bad, Jason! Happy Birthday HILTON HEAD ISLAND promise much fun, laughter, and messages. large backyard, storm windows, December 3, 4, & 6. with love from Jeff. . 5 AND 7 NIGHTS innuendo. Sponsored by Union In­ miniblinds porch, $450/mo. 489- MUSTANG ISLAND I teraction Committee. 1989. Att. Engineers PORT ARANSAS Services Offered Information session on Mechanical En­ Mandy Patinkin 5 AND 7 NIGHTS gineering, Wednesday, Dec. 4 at 7 p.m. 11th Annual DATING GAME Fan Club. I.e. Performing Arts: he's TYPING Autos For Sale in 203 Teer Engineering Building. celebration? Come watch the start of genuine coming the day after break, and we Need your paper, application, or resume need to be ready! Mtg., 7:30 tonight, TOIL FREE INFORMATION S RESERVATIONS dating at Duke... and there'll be no SPRING SKIING beer kegs around!! The first of typed now? Accurate and fast. Guaran­ SEIZED CARS Union office. This week, something Sun and powder! Spring Break trip to three shows begins today, 6 p.m., teed 6-hour turnaround between 8:30 trucks, boats. 4wheelers, motorhomes, new... sundaes! Don't miss out! 1-800-321-5911 Steamboat Springs, Colorado. Excellent in the CI. Sponsored by Union In­ a.m. and 11 p.m.. Monday-Sunday. Call by FBI, IRS. DEA. Available your area package: $719 includes round-trip air, 7 teraction Committee. 24 hours: 942-0030. now. Call (805) 682-7555 Ext. C-2771. ALLENTOWN, PA nights condo, lift tickets, keg parties, and more. (Airl ine vouchers may be used Driving near the Lehigh Valley for to offset price). Call Mark at 682-7592 Thanksgiving break? My ride evapo­ r for info. Prices go up Dec. 20 so call rated and I'm desperate! Please call PATTISHALL'S GARAGE soon. Steve at 684-0841. THE CHRONICLE & RADIATOR SERVICE, INC Specializing in • American Cars r. ^ • Rabbits PHOTO ID CARDS classifieds information • Dasher r^^AJjM^^ • Scirocco basic rates • Oatsun JH PI • Toyota Instant Passport $3.50 (per day) for the first 15 words or less. • Volvo ^•^^^•^•^•^•^U^ # Honda 10$ (per day) for each additional word. Auto Repairing & Service • Motor Tune-up 3 or 4 consecutive insertions-10% off. Photos in Color 5 or more consecutive insertions-20% off. 0 General Repairs • Wrecker Service 286-2207 special features 2/$6.60 1900 W. Markham Ave. (located behind Duke Campus) 11 or more $3.00 ea (Combinations accepted.) $1.00 extra per day for All Bold Words. I arY*ir"*£*tin0 WrlllG $1.50 extra per day for a Bold Heading (maximum 15 spaces.) WALK TO NEW CARS! $2.00 extra per day for a Boxed Ad. > Duke Medical Center INATED > Duke University LOW RATES! deadline > VA Hospital rnOTO ID'S •Economy and Luxury Cars - 900 West Main Street 1 business day prior to publication by 12:00 Noon. Fabulous dubhouM with fimoi •Passenger Vans (AewssfromBri^JteafSqJ ccnttr, 5 jaajz&s including outdoor M^Ham-SpmSatWpm hoc rub, tram bath and extensive •Cargo Vans payment i social program. Two swimming pools, 683-2118 Prepayment is required. 6 tennis courts, volleyball courts. CALL Cash, check or Duke IR accepted. 688-1147 10 minutes to Research Triangle (We cannot make change for cash payments.) on (he new Eort-VVfat jEsftrtssway 24-hour drop off location ^$^ Ni. 3rd floor Flowers Building (near Duke Chapel) ffo ^ where classifieds forms are available. JI SBOWWSTONf For reservations in other cities worldwide call *VtTEWmV \ si m— 1-MO-FOR CARS5" (1-800-367-2277) or mail to: mmm • ^ J^^ ^ DUKf ^k Thrifty features quality products of the Chronicle Classifieds va? Chrysler Corporation and other fine cars BOX 4696 Duke Station, Durham, NC 27706.

Call 684-3476 if you have questions about classifieds. 383-6683 ^ No refunds or cancellations after first insertion deadline. CarReirtal FREE SHUTTLE TO & FROM CAMPUS • MONDAY, NOvtMBEii 25'/1991 TriiE CHRONJCIIE PAGE 11 Japanese plan causing nervousness among Asian neighbors

• JAPAN from page 2 ago, has put the Japanese government in a particularly plans for transporting the plutonium, "but we do not yet two to three decades has raised disturbing questions that uncomfortable diplomatic position. At the same time that have enough to say yes or no." the Japanese government is reluctant to discuss in public. it is demanding stronger nuclear non-proliferation mea­ "There is obviously a big difference between Japan and Some American officials and Japanese experts have sures, including the abandonment of nuclear reprocess­ North Korea," he said. But Tokyo's reprocessingplan, he added, expressed fears that the plutonium may form an irresist­ ing facilities in North Korea that are part of Pyongyang's "is definitely something no one is really happy about." ible target for terrorists. The question of whether the suspected bomb project, it is promoting at home what may To fuel its conventional power reactors, Japan uses shipments can be adequately protected will soon confront be the world's largest reprocessing program. enriched uranium. Plutonium is created as a byproduct; the Bush administration, which has the right to approve The United States has abandoned large-scale repro­ it can be recovered by reprocessing and then used as or disapprove the final security plan because the United cessing, in part because of proliferation fears and in part another kind of reactor fuel. Or it can be transformed into States supplied the original uranium fuel used in the because the plummeting price of uranium has made it weapons-grade material with relative ease. Japanese reactors. uneconomical. Last week in Seoul, South Korea, Secre­ Perhaps sensing the political dangers ofthe program, Japan's efforts to create a "plutonium cycle" has also tary of Defense Dick Cheney, pressing his case against the Japanese government is offering only vague details caused nervousness among many of this country's Asian North Korea, said, "South Korea, the United States, and about its plans. Japanese officials say simply that they neighbors and aroused charges in Tokyo that, despite the many other countries have proven that reprocessing is are taking appropriate measures to protect them. Sensi­ government's repeated denials, it will inevitably result in not a necessary prerequisite to a legitimate civilian nuclear tive to charges that it is seeking to extend Japan's mili­ huge stockpiles of one of the most highly toxic, highly energy program." tary reach, Tokyo has ruled out military escorts. The job radioactive materials on Earth. A Bush administration official said last week that the of protecting the plutonium is being given to the Maritime And in the past few months the plan, conceived decades United States had seen only parts of Japan's security Safety Agency, roughly the equivalent ofthe Coast Guard. Shamir insists no crisis in confidence PH.D. • MIDEAST from page 2 expected to continue for another day or two, and officials here said that he had cut it short because he was upset over the way he had been treated in Washington. But at an airport news conference, Shamir sought to M.D. play down the dispute, insisting that, despite the obvious disagreements with Washington, "there is no crisis of confidence, not personal and not any other kind." As a sign of his reluctance to further heighten tensions, he skirted a question about a remark made earlier in the day by a political ally, Police Minister Roni Milo, who called the American deadline "an impudent ultimatum" and s Id the Cabinet should take its time before making a deck-on. Milo reflected how rankled many Israelis were by the way in which the administration had sent out its invita­ tions several hours before Shamir called on Bush. In fact, M. B. A. the prime minister and his traveling companions woke up in Washington on Friday morning, turned on the televi­ sion news and, to their dismay, listened as Palestinian representatives said that they had already received the call to show up in Washington on Dec. 4. IF You DON'T HAVE THE NUMBERS, Not that they were surprised that the Americans had taken action. The United States had been warning for three weeks that it would set a time and place if the Israelis and the Arabs did not agree on their own how to You WON'T GET THE LETTERS. pick up where they left off on Nov. 3 in Madrid. GRE • GMAT Serving the Duke Community for More than 30 Years FREE MCAT • LSAT • SAT MCAT Justin PREPARATION INFORMATION SEMINAR ^y REALTY COMPANY V* NEWUSUNGS 1409 MARYLAND AVENUE - Good first home - LR w/FP. DR. REGISTER NOW IN TIME FOR TUES., DEC. 3 nice remodeled kitchen, 2 BRs, I bath, practically new furnace, C/A, roof & gutters. $69,900, JANUARY AND FEBRUARY EXAMS! 2743 MARLTN DRIVE- This home is like new - open living area : ju P.M. with vaulted ceiling, 3 BRs, 2 baths, nice corner lot. good neighborhood. Convenient to RTP. RDU. $67,900. • FREE DIAGNOSTIC TESTING 306 W. FRANKLIN ST. OTHER EXCELLENT LISTINGS •• OU\ mi/lATR STREET- Immaculate 3 BR brick cottage. LR w/ • CONTINUING ENROLLMENT CHAPEL HILL FP. DR, den, central air, lovely hardwood floors. Fenced yard and fantastic storage building. $81.950. • ONGOING TUTORIAL CALL TO REGISTER AND FOR 211ft HAVENHTT I. DRIVE- Willowhaven - All formal areas. plus extra-large family room w/masonry FP. 3 BRs, 2 1/2 baths, •EXPERT INSTRUCTION large deck and patio ideal for outdoor living. $121,500. ADDITIONAL INFORMATION. fiffi HTflH RIDfiE DRIVE- Sellers relocating - bring offers on this beautifully decorated 1 year old home in Breckenridge. 3 BRs, 2 baths, garage, many upgrades. REDUCED to $85,200. WE'LL MAKE SURE IfWi SEVIER STREET- Custom built contemporary on large corner lot. 3 BRs, 3 baths. LR w/FP, kitchen, den w/FP. Suite on YOU MAKE IT! lower level w/separate entrance. REDUCED to $185,000. 2003 FAUCFTTK AVENUE-Spacious cottage near Hartman's. LR. DR. 3 BRs, 2 baths, enlcosed back porch, new roof, double garage. Adjoining lot may be purchased. $57,900. 2137 .TEFFF.RSON STREET-Fixer-upper perfect for first time 306 W. FRANKLIN STREET buyers. 2 BR. 1 bath cottage has fenced yard. Convenient to Duke & 1-85. $49,900. EDUCATIONAL GROUP 1204 Broad Street 286-5611 932-9400 PAGE 12 THE CHRONICLE MONDAY. NOVEMBER 25, 1991 Free Airport Shuttle Thanksgiving Break Tuesday, November 26 West Campus North Campus East Campus RDU

5:00 pm 5:10 pm 5:20 pm 6:00 pm

Wednesday, November 27 West Campus North Campus East Campus RDU

12:00 Noon 12:10 pm 12:20 pm 12:45 pm

1:30 pm 1:40 pm 1:50 pm 2:15 pm

3:00 pm 3:10 pm 3:20 pm 4:00 pm

5:00 pm 5:10 pm 5:20 pm 6:00 pm

Sunday, December 1 RDU A--C East Campus North Campus West Campus

5:30 - 5:40 pm 6:10 pm 6:15 pm 6:20 pm

7:00- 7:10 pm 7:40 pm 7:45 pm 7:50 pm

10:00- 10:10 pm 10:40 pm 10:45 pm 10:50 pm To schedule a reservation, call 684-2218 by 11/26/91 4:00 pm. Unscheduled riders will be loaded on East Cam­ pus only on a first come first served basis.

THIS FREE SERVICE OFFERED BY DUKE TRANSIT.