INSIDE: ACC BASKETBALL PREVIEW THE CHRONICLE MONDAY, NOVEMBER 20, 1989 DUKE UNIVERSITY DURHAM, NORTH CAROLINA CIRCULATION: 15,000 VOL. 85, NO. 60 Pearcy defeats Feibel 58-42 percent for ASDU presidency By ANN HEIMBERGER percent), according to Trinity serve as ASDU president for one tee meetings. he would keep his involvement in Trinity junior Connie Pearcy freshman Joan Tao, ASDU attor­ year. "I really appreciate the support ASDU to a minimum, possibly comfortably defeated opponent ney general. The president bears responsi­ everyone has given me, and I will serving in the legislature. Jon Feibel in Friday's runoff. Pearcy is only the second bility for the administration of try to live up to the expectations More voters turned out for the Pearcy will assume the position woman be elected to the position. ASDU. He or she has veto power everyone has in me," Pearcy said runoff between Pearcy and of president of the student body Jan Nolting became the first over the legislature, but the veto Friday evening after the results Feibel than for the original this January. when she was elected in 1986. can be overridden by a two-thirds were announced. ASDU executive election held In Friday's runoff election Pearcy will take on the office majority vote in the legislature. Feibel wished his opponent last Tuesday, Tao said. In the Pearcy received 1,538 votes (58 now held by Trinity senior The president nominates stu­ well in her term as president, but original election, 2,567 students percent). Her opponent Jon Tommy Semans at the beginning dents for various committees and said he will not serve on Connie's voted, 44 percent of the student Feibel received 1,118 votes (42 of the spring semester and will presides over executive commit­ executive committee. He added See PEARCY on page 11 • Devils crush Carolina for ACC title 41-0 victory sends Duke to All-American Bowl By RODNEY PEELE touchdowns on his way to his linebacker Eric Gash gave him a CHAPEL HILL — Records third straight 1,000-yard year. shove when Hines was getting were set and goals were reached Duke quarterback Dave Brown up. Hines turned and shoved the in Duke's 41-0 annihilation of found Hines running toward the ball against Gash's helmet. North Carolina Saturday in right side of the end zone on "I thought I had already gone Kenan Stadium. The Blue Devils Duke's opening drive for the first down," said Hines. "So I got a lit­ raised their record to 8-3, 6-1 in score of the day. tle hit [in]." the Atlantic Coast Conference. "The first one was a corner Two players later, a scuffle en­ "It was a good win for us," said route, I got close to the guy who sued on the North Carolina side­ Duke head coach Steve Spurrier. was backpedaling, gave him a lit­ line. Duke's Darryl Clements "We were a little better team tle fake to the post and went to was upended trying to catch a than North Carolina. This team the corner and was able to scoop high ball, and teammate Dave set a bunch of very high goals at up the pass," said Hines, who Colonna saw someone give Clem­ BOB KAPLAN/ I H_ OHKONIOLt the end of spring practice last grew up in Chapel Hill. ents a kick. Tailback Randy Cuthbert rushed for 116 yards on 20 carries. year and we hit every one of "When Clarkston gets open, Colonna shoved the culprit and them." his eyes get real big," said soon was surrounded by UNC The victory gives Duke its first Brown. "When his eyes light up, I players near their bench, where eight-win season and Atlantic know I have to get him the ball." he received a variety of greet­ Students worry about Coast Conference title since An earlier completion to Hines ings. Referees quickly broke up 1962, and its first bowl game on third-and-one kept the drive the party, and North Carolina since 1961 — all were team goals alive. Extracurricular activities defensive lineman Willie Joe this season. Individually, set the tone for the rest of the Walker was ejected. control of computing Clarkston Hines caught eight day. After Hines was tackled on Wasting no more time, Blue passes for 162 yards and three the third-down catch, UNC See p. 1 SPORTSWRAP • By REVA BHATIA would leave centralized those This is the final story in a things that need to be central­ series. ized, like purchasing and the In a plan to create a distrib­ mainframe." Several fraternities ban little sisters uted computing system, the Three external consultants Computing at Duke Commit­ will arrive next week to help tee (CDC) recommended to Brodie evaluate this proposal, By JESSICA FARNHAM nity and also serve as hostesses President Keith Brodie last and Brodie will make his final Several national fraternities for parties and meet rushees. month that much of the re­ decision on whether or not to have recently disbanded their lit­ At the University, little sisters sponsibility for the Universi­ implement it by the end of the tle sister programs, but about do not rush the fraternity, they ty's computing resources be month, Griffiths said. The half of the fraternities at the have a somewhat smaller role divided between the academic final proposal will also be University still maintain them. and are more like friends of the deans and the librarian. presented for discussion at the A number of University frater­ fraternity, said Brian David, The committee's proposal Academic Council's December nities have kept their little sister president of Sigma Nu fraternity. recommends that the deans of meeting. programs after their national or­ The criticisms usually directed the Trinity College of Arts and The committee also recom­ ganizations have stopped the at the programs are that they are Sciences and of the School of mended that the University practice, said Dave Near, public demeaning and degrading to the Engineering take respon­ form a central steering com­ agent secretary of the national women involved, that they sibility for computer clusters mittee with the deans to coor­ Interfraternity Council (IFC). weaken the bond of brotherhood and other computing systems dinate the University's com­ Little sister programs provide between the men in the frater­ that relate directly to under­ puting plans and to negotiate an opportunity for women to be­ nity and they can lead to liability JIM JEFFERS/THE CHRONICLE graduates, while the librarian with computer vendors. This come officially affiliated with a for the national organization by Brian David would take charge of the Uni­ committee would be a succes­ fraternity. At some schools, little enlarging the possibility of sex­ the decision was to keep all greek versity mainframe and other sor to the CDC, which will dis­ sisters must go through a rush ual harassment or assault, said organizations single sex, said centralized computing needs. band next month. process. Once selected, they en­ Suzanne Wasiolek, dean for stu­ Elizabeth Bates, president of the Tel-Com would operate and "The CDC's conclusion was joy social privileges at the frater- dent life. University's chapter of the maintain DukeNet, the that we need a more broad- Although she said she was not sorority. planned University-wide com­ based committee, with the aware whether any of these "Basically, it threatens the sin­ puting network. deans," Griffiths said. "Its Weather criticisms is valid at the Univer­ gle sex status of sororities and "Our object is to decentral­ goal would be to complete the sity, "Formalization of relations fraternities," Bates said. If ize those things that should be evaluation of Nexus and set in that way can lead to prob­ decentralized, like clusters, forth what they want to do in Delightful: A breeze in the fraternities are forced to include lems," Wasiolek said. Sun workstations, graphics academic computing, as well pines, the sun and bright women, sororities might be Kappa Delta national sorority labs and faculty computing as administrative clusters." moonlight, crazy in the sun­ forced to include men, she said. recently barred its members support," said Provost Phillip Griffiths said that although light, yes indeed. Go walking Sigma Phi Epsilon has dis­ from becoming little sisters. One Griffiths, CDC chair. "We See NEXUS on page 5 • in the cool, windy sunshine. banded its national little sister of the main motivations behind See SISTERS on page 11 • PAGE 2 THE CHRONICLE MONDAY, NOVEMBER 20,1989 World & National Newsfile Soviets reprimand U.S. for Senate resolution Associated Press Czechs demonstrate: About By FRANCIS CLINES in an array of ethnic tensions now facing N.Y. Times News Service Nagorno-Karabakh dispute. 30,000 demonstrators Sunday in President Mikhail Gorbachev. The resolution also criticized the failure Prague denounced police brutality and MOSCOW — The Foreign Ministry American diplomats professed puzzle­ of the Soviet government to restore order demanded that the government and summoned the American ambassador ment at why the Soviet protest was issued and urged Moscow to stop an Azerbaijani top Communist officials resign. Au­ Sunday to protest as "brazen and now, only two weeks before the Mediter­ blockade of food and construction mate­ thorities arrested 10 dissidents but left unwarranted" a resolution passed last ranean meeting between President Mik­ rial to earthquake-stricken areas of Ar­ the marchers alone. week by a Senate panel that focuses on hail Gorbachev and President Bush. menia. Armenian-Azerbaijani tensions in the So­ The Soviet complaint was announced The resolution complains of "organized Germans protest: Tens of thou­ viet Union. by Tass, the government news agency. violence against Armenians, Jews, and sands of East German protesters in at The Soviets, who are upset that the res­ The protest referred to a resolution by other ethnic groups," implicitly but not least eight cities braved icy winds Sun­ olution criticizes the Kremlin's handling Sen.
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