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Check Your Head The Beastie Boys' latest re THE CHRONICLE & R brings you the defmit THURSDAY, APRIL 23, 1992 DUKE UNIVERSITY DURHAM, NORTH CAROLINA CIRCULATION: 15,000 VOL. 87, NO. 137 Pat Buchanan to make campaign stop on East By MATT STEFFORA ers Committee. ing at 10 a.m. on the Bryan Cen­ The speech, whichisscheduled The road to the White House Campaign officials told Brady ter walkway. Students, faculty to last about 45 minutes, will be this year will go through East that rather than giving a "typical and employees can obtain two simulcast by the C-SPAN cable Campus. campaign speech," Buchanan will tickets for free with valid Univer­ TV network. Republican presidential candi­ focus on his views on sity identification. Buchanan, former host of the date Pat Buchanan will speak on multiculturalism, he said. CNN show "Crossfire," entered campus this coming Tuesday, While rumors had previously The 900 tickets available should the Republican presidential race April 28. The speech will take leaked out about the event, the go quickly, in light ofthe sellouts in late 1991 as a challenger to place in Baldwin Auditorium at 7 Union was unable to confirm for the Union's previous speakers incumbent George Bush. p.m. Buchnan's avaibility until this year, Brady said. In the event Buchanan is visitng the Uni­ Wednesday, Brady said. that tickets do not sell out by He raised eyebrows earlier this versity because "he thinks [Duke] noon Monday, distribution will year when he gathered more than would be a relatively hospitable The North Carolina state pri­ continue the next day from 10 30 percent ofthe vote in first the environment and a high-profile mary will be held a week after a.m. to noon. After that time, any New Hampshire primary and institution," said Trinity sopho­ Buchanan's speech, on May 5. remaining tickets will be avail­ then other early ones as well. In SPECIAL TO THE CHRONICLE more Dan Brady, chair of the Tickets to the speech will be able to the public at the Page more recent primaries, Buchanan Pat Buchanan University Union's Major Speak­ available starting Monday morn­ Auditorium Box Office. has not done as well. Once-defeated activities fee to be voted on again today By MICHAEL ARLEIN percent. sophomore. "That's deplorable." Trinity sophomore Valerie Steer, tion, Hillel, PISCES and the Duke ASDU is holding a second ref­ Included in these organizations Smarr thinks the 13.5 percent acting chair ofthe SOC. India Association, all of which erendum today on whether to in­ whose budgets will be automati­ automatic budget cut would The second referendum is legal are funded through the club fund. crease the student activities fee. cally cut are the Community Ser­ merely trim the fat from What he according to the SOC bylaws and Student organizations can apply Last Thursday's referendum, vice Center, C.H.A.N.C.E., the considers bloated organizations. the SOC Act of 1988, she said. for a portion of the club fund's which would have increased the Undergraduate Publications The referendum would pass "There are provisions for mul­ $15,500 which is doled out on a fee from $58.38 to $69.85, was Board, the Black Student Alli­ with a simple majority with the tiple referendums because there first come, first serve basis. If the rejected by 55 percent ofthe vot­ ance, the FAC Board, WXDU and stipulation that at least 25 per­ have been similar problems in fee increase is not approved, there ing members ofthe student body. all sports clubs. cent of the student body votes the past. I don't see any reason is a good chance that the club The student activities fee was Any increase in the fee would affirmatively. If not enough stu­ why not to give them another fund will dry up before all clubs last raised three years ago in 1989 be included on students' payments dents vote, the referendum would chance." receive funding, Steer said. when students voted to bump it to the Bursar's office. fail even with a majority voting in The 1989 fee increase referen­ Since last Friday, organizations up $8.10. If students do not vote Some students oppose the in­ its favor. dum was rejected two times be­ that will be affected by the cuts for the proposed $11.48 raise this crease and ASDU's decision to The decision to hold a second fore finally being approved that have been publicizing the need to year, many ofthe 30-plus student hold a second referendum. "You referendum was made at spring, for example. approve the second referendum. organizations receiving money don't invalidate a referendum Tuesday's ASDU meeting in re­ Other student organizations "We've been doing a phone-a-thon from the fee will have their bud­ because you don't like the results," sponse to a request by several of that will be affected include the and members have been speak- gets automatically cut by 13.5 said Jamie Smarr, a Trinity the fine item organizations, said Duke Gay and Lesbian Associa­ See FEE on page 13 • Scenes from the road to history For Davis, the last time proved to be the best This is the first of five articles kee Parks and Erik Meek. He thing," he told his players. "No providing an inside account of talked about living arrangements one can take the national cham­ senior forward Brian Davis'per­ and school work and all the basic pionship away from you. That's sonal experiences during the things he always talks about on done. So let's not worry about men's basketball team's champi­ the first day of practice. being number one, and let's not onship season. Subsequent in­ Then, he turned to more criti­ overdo things. Let's just work stallments can be found in the cal matters. It would only be a hard and go after it. sports section. matter of days until it became "And let's have fun." official that Duke would begin Sitting in front of his locker, By SETH DAVIS the new season exactly where it senior forward Brian Davis For college basketball fans, had ended the old one—ranked soaked it all in. "From that first New Year's Day falls on October number one. meeting," Davis would say later, 15. Krzyzewski knew that his team "we understood that if he saw That date marks the first time had an excellent chance to win a something different about you, teams are allowed to begin orga­ second consecutive national title. then it's going to be definitely nized practices under NCAA But he also knew that in doing so, worse this year, as far as his get­ rules—coaches, managers, uni­ his players would be operating ting angry at you. He was almost forms and all. At some schools, under a media spotlight no other expecting that to happen." the day's arrival is so anticipated team in history had ever been Or in Davis'case, anticipating that practice begins at the stroke subject to; that every team Duke it. Davis is a mature, soft-spoken, of midnight, complete with a full played would be at an emotional extremely articulate young man, house party of fans and bands peak in an effort to be the one who not only handles intense and cheerleaders. that knocked off the defending media attention skillfully, but But at Duke University, the champs; that every time his play­ actually enjoys it. He has spent first basketball practice is closed ers picked up a newspaper or saw summers on Wall Street and Capi­ to the public and begins at its themselves on TV, they would be tol Hill, and talks politics and regular time, around 3:30 p.m. hearing about how good they music as adeptly as he talks bas­ And so it was without any cer­ were, how they were expected to ketball. He is a frequent speaker emony or fanfare that head coach win, how so much pressure was at schools and camps, and tries to Mike Krzyzewski walked into the bearing down upon them. stay active in the University and Duke locker room on October 15, So on that quiet, simple after­ Durham community. 1991 to address his newest team noon of October 15, Krzyzewski "I don't go into [sports informa­ for the first time. immediately set the tone that tion] and say, 'Give me an inter­ Krzyzewski greeted his play­ would dominate his approach to view,' " Davis said. "But if some­ MARK WASMER/THE CHRONICLE ers, with an extra nod to his lat­ what would be an historic cam­ body asks me to do something, I'll est additions, freshmen Chero­ paign. "We're not defending any­ See DAVIS on page 15 • Senior co-captain Brian Davis tells it like he saw it. PAGE 2 THE CHRONICLE THURSDAY, APRIL 23, 1992 World and National Newsfile Supreme Court hears abortion arguments Associated Press By LINDA GREENHOUSE Philadelphia struck down the husband- years ago in the Webster case, which up­ Serbs prolong battle: Serbs shelled N.Y. Times News Service notification provision last fall. But the held a Missouri law prohibiting abortions Muslim sections of Sarajevo for the sec­ WASHINGTON—If there is a middle abortion-rights side found that ruling un­ in public hospitals. ond day, trying to carve out a piece of ground on abortion, it was not much in satisfactory because the appellate judges, Solicitor General Kenneth Starr, appear­ the city to serve as a capital for their evidence in the arguments presented to at the same time, found that abortion was ing with Pennsylvania's attorney general, own Bosnian Serb state.
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