monday th0 e chronicle

16
Monday January 28, 1985 Vol. SOB, No. 85, 16 pages Duke University Durham, North Carolina Free Circulation: 15,000 THE CHRONICLE Newsfile Gas leak scrutinized: A New York Times investigation revealed that December's Union Carbide chemical leak in Bhopal, India, which killed more than 2,000 people, resulted from pro- blems with plant operation, design and maintenance and personnel training. The investigation produced evidence of at least 10 violations of the standard procedures of both the parent corpora- tion and its Indian-run subsidiary. See page 2. Secret shuttle lands: After circl- ing the earth 47 times, the secret military mission of the space shuttle Discovery concluded Sunday at 4:23 p.m., when the shuttle landed at the Kennedy Space Shuttle in Cape Canaveral, Fla. Defense Department of- ficials would not comment on the intended duration of the mission, but said the shuttle had experienced "no per- formance problems." See page 2. Fire victims buried: More than 1,000 people gathered at the National Guard Armory Sunday to pay their last respects to seven children killed in a Henderson, N.C. housefire. The children, who ranged in age from 3 to 17, died while planning a birthday party for one of the victims. Fire officials said a wood stove on the home's first floor was the ap- parent source of the fire. Klan march in D.C.: About 150 North Carolina members of the Ku Klux Klan marched Sunday on the Capitol to honor Confederate General Robert E. Lee and to protest a federal holiday recognizing slain civil rights leader Mar- tin Luther King, Jr. The march came in the wake of a Jan. 18 ruling issued by U.S. District Court Judge W. Earl Britt of t h e Eastern District of North Carolina, which barred the Klan group from certain activities. Weather Heat wave pending: Thetropicai heat and balmy nights are on their way to Durham, but meanwhile it's another disgusting day outside, with-a 50 percent chance of rain. If we're really lucky we'll get freezing rain mixed with a little snow this afternoon. Highs in the upper 30s. Winds northwest at 10 to 15 mph. Tonight, cloudy with lows in the mid 20s. Tune in tomorrow for the same old story. Inside Springsteen explained: Chrom cle columnist BCG gives a lesson in Southern living to all interested "Boss- loving Yankees. See page 5. Taking the pUlpit: This year's stu- dent minister, Harold Layton, spoke Sunday at the Chapel about the force of God in times of uncertainty. See page 3. Slowing it down: Duke's basket- ball team had a little trouble in the first half with Clemson's run-and-gun style, hut regrouped for a 100-83 victory Satur- day in Tigertown. See Sportswrap, inside section. Venturi firm selected for East dorm By LARRY KAPLOW The firm of world-famous architect Robert Venturi will research preliminary designs for the proposed East Campus dormitory. The Architect Selection Committee, com- prising nine students, faculty and ad- ministrators, and headed by University Ar- chitect Larry Nelson, chose the firm Ven- turi, Rauch and Scott-Brown Thursday. University President Terry Sanford, Chancellor Keith Brodie, and Vice Presi- dent Eugene McDonald met Friday to discuss and approve the selection. "It's an exceptionally well-qualified design firm," said Nelson. "Robert Venturi has been thought of very highly for many years. We thought he would at least be able to under- stand what we wanted to get at." "He was clearly a very artistic and creative man," said Brodie, who met with Venturi when he visited Duke. "He had a sense of what students wanted." Venturi's firm designed three residential colleges at Princeton University, where he graduated summa cum laude in 1947. He also designed a student center at Swar- thmore College. Venturi, 59, could not be reached for com- ment Sunday. The firm is based in Philadelphia. According to Nelson, Venturi and people with his firm will tour East Campus in ear- ly February to collect site data and receive any University reports concerning the new dormitory. The firm will prepare design op- tions for the trustees. "Hopefully, by May we'll have a good feel- ing for what it will involve," Nelson said, ad- ding that the designs will probably be presented at the May trustees meeting. At 'It's an exceptionally well-qualified design firm. Robert Venturi has been thought of very highly for many years. We thought he would at least be able to understand what we wanted to get at: — Larry Nelson, University architect that time, the trustees will decide whether to proceed with the work and authorize the administration to hire an architect of record, who will make blueprints and oversee construction. Nelson would not disclose the financial terms of the agreement except that a ver- bal agreement had been made on a fee he considered "reasonable." "Venturi is one of the leading - if not the leading - post-modern theorists and prac- titioners," said Ann Epstein, assistant pro- fessor of art and teacher of Art 179, "Modern Architecture." "He's very concerned not only about the building, but also about the setting," Eps- tein said. "It's an interesting choice because he is certain to take into account the con- text, but he's also extraordinarily witty," she said. "It won't be a banal interpretation of the surroundings." Four other firms were interviewed through Jan. 21, including R.M. Kli- ment & Francis Halsbad, Robert A.M. Stern, Rowlett and Scott, and Michael Graves. "Each had merit but I felt that these [Ven- turi] people were the most competent," Brodie said. "I thought they were very sympathetic with the design of East Campus," said Tim Walsh, a member of the committee. "That's what we were most concerned ..about. Preserving the atmosphere of East Campus and at the same time making 400 beds is a difficult task." Thomas Spragens, professor of political science and member of the committee, said the decision was made by the committee after each member discussed their opinions of the firms. "They [Venturi's firm] seemed to have a nice blend of initiative and responsiveness," Spragens said. Venturi's noted works include the Guild House in Philadelphia, the Humanities building at the State University of New York and an addition to the Allen Memorial Art Building at Oberlin College, the last of which Epstein said involved similar "formal integration" concerns as the East Campus project. The administration formed the selection committee in December when the trustees empowered the University to begin work on a 400-bed residential college on East Campus, Trustees approve lithotripter purchase By LARRY KAPLOW The executive committee of the Board of Trustees Friday approved the medical center's efforts to buy a machine that crushes kidney stones with shock waves. The Extracorporeal Shock Wave Lithotripter eliminates surgery in kidney stone cases and will cost approximately $1.8 million to purchase and $300,000 to in- stall. Only the West German company Dor- nier makes the machine, six of which exist in the United States. "The lithotripter is probably the hottest item on the health care technology market," said Duncan Yaggy, director and chief plan- ning officer for the hospital. He told the trustees "approval in princi- ple" was needed immediately - instead of at the full board meeting in March — because Dornier will only distribute 35-40 machines in the United States this year and competition is stiff. Duke is on a waiting list for the machine and, while no terms for sale are yet ar- ranged, Dornier may contact Duke in two weeks. "At that time, we should move quick- ly,'", said Yaggy. The lithotripter received wide media publicity since trial cases were pronounced successful two weeks ago. North Carolina has the most cases of kidney stones per capita, and the hospital treats more than 4,000 kidney stone patients, each year. In other business, Charles Huestis, University senior vice president, said the University ran $518,000 favorable to the planned budget in the first six months of the fiscal year. He said there were unforeseen expenses, however, including $55,000 for repairs when the water pressure dropped, causing the loss of water on West Campus on November 9-11. Huestis also said $53,000 was added in December for the repairs to Flowers Drive, which continue. The dining halls ran a $100,000 deficit from July to December, but the loss was covered by the other branches of auxiliary , services - through the Duke stores and dor- mitory rents, he said. The University also had to finance a $222,000 debt in the School of Forestry, which continues to have difficulty recruiting enough students to cover its budget, Huestis said. In another financial report, Dr. Andrew Wallace, vice chancellor for health affairs, said the medical center had a $6.7 million surplus for the first half of the fiscal year. ASDU to pick new trustee By ANDREW BAGLEY The ASDU legislature will select today the 1985 young trustee from a pool of five student leaders. The one chosen will become a full member of the University." Board of Trustees for three years. The candidates are: Peter Block, Trini- ty senior and president of the Universi- ty Union; Greg Bosch, Trinity senior and member of the President*s Honor Coun- cil; Jennifer Lazewski, Trinity sophomore and ASDU legislator; Joe McHugh, Trinity senior and editor-in- chief of The Chronicle; and David Nahmias, Trinity junior and former ASDU vice president at large. "Of my four years in the legislature, this is the most outstanding field of can- didates the legislature has seen," said Paul Harner, ASDU speaker of the legislature and member of the selection committee. "Any of the five would make a fine student trustee." The committee, composed of 14 students, selected the final five students from 19 applicants, Harner said. The committee members first cut the pool down to 11 early this semester from writ- ten applications. Harner said the committee inter- viewed the remaining candidates on Jan. 16 and 17 and, from "the quality of the interview" rather than specific criteria, selected the finalists. The candidates will give a five-minute presentation to the legislature and answer three one-minute questions, selected from a prepared list of 15, Harner said. The meeting of the legislature, at 6 p.m. in 139 Social Sciences, is open to the public

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Page 1: Monday TH0 E CHRONICLE

Monday January 28, 1985 Vol. SOB, No. 85, 16 pages Duke University Durham, North Carolina Free Circulation: 15,000 THE CHRONICLE Newsfile Gas leak scrutinized: A New York Times investigation revealed that December's Union Carbide chemical leak in Bhopal, India, which killed more than 2,000 people, resulted from pro­blems with plant operation, design and maintenance and personnel training. The investigation produced evidence of at least 10 violations of the standard procedures of both the parent corpora­tion and its Indian-run subsidiary. See page 2.

S e c r e t s h u t t l e l a n d s : After circl­ing the earth 47 times, the secret military mission of the space shuttle Discovery concluded Sunday at 4:23 p.m., when the shuttle landed at the Kennedy Space S h u t t l e in Cape Canaveral, Fla. Defense Department of­ficials would not comment on the intended duration of the mission, but said the shuttle had experienced "no per­formance problems." See page 2.

Fire victims buried: More than 1,000 people gathered at the National Guard Armory Sunday to pay their last respects to seven children killed in a Henderson, N.C. housefire. The children, who ranged in age from 3 to 17, died while planning a birthday party for one of the victims. Fire officials said a wood stove on the home's first floor was the ap­parent source of the fire.

Klan march in D.C.: About 150 North Carolina members of the Ku Klux Klan marched Sunday on the Capitol to honor Confederate General Robert E. Lee and to protest a federal holiday recognizing slain civil rights leader Mar­tin Luther King, Jr. The march came in the wake of a Jan. 18 ruling issued by U.S. District Court Judge W. Earl Britt of t h e E a s t e r n Dis t r ic t of Nor th Carolina, which barred the Klan group from certain activities.

Weather Heat wave pending: Thetropicai heat and balmy nights are on their way to Durham, but meanwhile it's another disgusting day outside, with-a 50 percent chance of rain. If we're really lucky we'll get freezing rain mixed with a little snow this afternoon. Highs in the upper 30s. Winds northwest at 10 to 15 mph. Tonight, cloudy with lows in the mid 20s. Tune in tomorrow for the same old story.

Inside Springsteen explained: Chrom cle columnist BCG gives a lesson in Southern living to all interested "Boss-loving Yankees. See page 5.

T a k i n g t h e p U l p i t : This year's stu­dent minister, Harold Layton, spoke Sunday at the Chapel about the force of God in times of uncertainty. See page 3.

S l o w i n g i t d o w n : Duke's basket­ball team had a little trouble in the first half with Clemson's run-and-gun style, hut regrouped for a 100-83 victory Satur­day in Tigertown. See Sportswrap, inside section.

Venturi firm selected for East dorm By LARRY KAPLOW

The firm of world-famous architect Robert Venturi will research preliminary designs for the proposed East Campus dormitory.

The Architect Selection Committee, com­prising nine students, faculty and ad­ministrators, and headed by University Ar­chitect Larry Nelson, chose the firm Ven­turi , Rauch and Scott-Brown Thursday.

University President Terry Sanford, Chancellor Keith Brodie, and Vice Presi­dent Eugene McDonald met Friday to discuss and approve the selection.

"It's an exceptionally well-qualified design firm," said Nelson. "Robert Venturi has been thought of very highly for many years. We thought he would at least be able to under­stand what we wanted to get at."

"He was clearly a very artistic and creative man," said Brodie, who met with Venturi when he visited Duke. "He had a sense of what students wanted."

Venturi's firm designed three residential colleges at Princeton University, where he graduated summa cum laude in 1947. He also designed a student center at Swar-thmore College.

Venturi, 59, could not be reached for com­ment Sunday. The firm is based in Philadelphia.

According to Nelson, Venturi and people with his firm will tour East Campus in ear­ly February to collect site data and receive any University reports concerning the new dormitory. The firm will prepare design op­tions for the trustees.

"Hopefully, by May we'll have a good feel­ing for what it will involve," Nelson said, ad­ding that the designs will probably be presented at the May trustees meeting. At

'It's an exceptionally well-qualified design firm. Robert Venturi has been thought of very highly for many years. We thought he would at least be able to understand what we wanted to get at:

— Larry Nelson, University architect

tha t time, the trustees will decide whether to proceed with the work and authorize the administration to hire an architect of record, who will make blueprints and oversee construction.

Nelson would not disclose the financial terms of the agreement except that a ver­bal agreement had been made on a fee he considered "reasonable."

"Venturi is one of the leading - if not the leading - post-modern theorists and prac­titioners," said Ann Epstein, assistant pro­fessor of ar t and teacher of Art 179, "Modern Architecture."

"He's very concerned not only about the building, but also about the setting," Eps­tein said. "It's an interesting choice because

he is certain to take into account the con­text, but he's also extraordinarily witty," she said. "It won't be a banal interpretation of the surroundings."

Four other firms were interviewed through Jan. 21, including R.M. Kli-ment & Francis Halsbad, Robert A.M. Stern, Rowlett and Scott, and Michael Graves.

"Each had merit but I felt that these [Ven­turi] people were the most competent," Brodie said.

"I thought they were very sympathetic with the design of East Campus," said Tim Walsh, a member of the committee. "That's what we were most concerned ..about. Preserving the atmosphere of East Campus and at the same time making 400 beds is a difficult task."

Thomas Spragens, professor of political science and member of the committee, said the decision was made by the committee after each member discussed their opinions of the firms.

"They [Venturi's firm] seemed to have a nice blend of initiative and responsiveness," Spragens said.

Venturi's noted works include the Guild House in Philadelphia, the Humanities building at the State University of New York and an addition to the Allen Memorial Art Building at Oberlin College, the last of which Epstein said involved similar "formal integration" concerns as the East Campus project.

The administration formed the selection committee in December when the trustees empowered the University to begin work on a 400-bed residential college on East Campus,

Trustees approve lithotripter purchase By LARRY KAPLOW

The executive committee of the Board of Trustees Friday approved the medical center's efforts to buy a machine that crushes kidney stones with shock waves.

The Ex t r aco rpo rea l Shock Wave Lithotripter eliminates surgery in kidney stone cases and will cost approximately $1.8 million to purchase and $300,000 to in­stall. Only the West German company Dor-nier makes the machine, six of which exist in the United States.

"The lithotripter is probably the hottest item on the health care technology market," said Duncan Yaggy, director and chief plan­ning officer for the hospital.

He told the trustees "approval in princi­ple" was needed immediately - instead of at the full board meeting in March — because Dornier will only distribute 35-40 machines in the United States this year and competition is stiff.

Duke is on a waiting list for the machine and, while no terms for sale are yet ar­ranged, Dornier may contact Duke in two weeks. "At that time, we should move quick­ly,'", said Yaggy.

The lithotripter received wide media publicity since trial cases were pronounced successful two weeks ago. North Carolina has the most cases of kidney stones per capita, and the hospital t reats more than 4,000 kidney stone patients, each year.

In other business, Charles Huestis, University senior vice president, said the University ran $518,000 favorable to the planned budget in the first six months of the fiscal year.

He said there were unforeseen expenses, however, including $55,000 for repairs when the water pressure dropped, causing the loss of water on West Campus on November 9-11.

Huestis also said $53,000 was added in December for the repairs to Flowers Drive, which continue.

The dining halls ran a $100,000 deficit from July to December, but the loss was covered by the other branches of auxiliary

, services - through the Duke stores and dor­mitory rents, he said.

The University also had to finance a $222,000 debt in the School of Forestry, which con t inues to have difficulty recruiting enough students to cover its budget, Huestis said.

In another financial report, Dr. Andrew Wallace, vice chancellor for health affairs, said the medical center had a $6.7 million surplus for the first half of the fiscal year.

ASDU to pick new trustee By ANDREW BAGLEY

The ASDU legislature will select today the 1985 young trustee from a pool of five student leaders. The one chosen will become a full member of the University." Board of Trustees for three years.

The candidates are: Peter Block, Trini­ty senior and president of the Universi­ty Union; Greg Bosch, Trinity senior and member of the President*s Honor Coun­cil; J enn i f e r Lazewski , T r in i ty sophomore and ASDU legislator; Joe McHugh, Trinity senior and editor-in-chief of The Chronicle; and David Nahmias, Trinity junior and former ASDU vice president at large.

"Of my four years in the legislature, this is the most outstanding field of can­didates the legislature has seen," said Paul Harner, ASDU speaker of the legislature and member of the selection

committee. "Any of the five would make a fine student trustee."

The commit tee, composed of 14 students, selected the final five students from 19 applicants, Harner said. The committee members first cut the pool down to 11 early this semester from writ­ten applications.

Harner said the committee inter­viewed the remaining candidates on Jan. 16 and 17 and, from "the quality of the interview" rather than specific criteria, selected the finalists.

The candidates will give a five-minute presentation to the legislature and answer three one-minute questions, selected from a prepared list of 15, Harner said.

The meeting of the legislature, at 6 p.m. in 139 Social Sciences, is open to the public

Page 2: Monday TH0 E CHRONICLE

World & National Page 2 January 28, 1985

THE CHRONICLE

Associate news editor Ann Hardison Doug Mays

Jerry Slotki-n Associate sports editors .J im Arges

Charley Scher John Turnbull

Associate photo editor Alice Adams Sportswrap editor John Turnbull Copy editors Doug Mays

Jerry Slotkin Copy desk. . . Stephanie Epstein Night editor Jenny Wright Sports production Peter Tarasewich Day photographer Tammi Henkin Watchdog Cynthia Weiner

Account representatives Judy Bartlett Advertising production Judith Cook Composit ion Delia Adkins

Judy Mack Elizabeth Majors

The Chronicle is published Monday through Friday of the academic year, and weekly through ten (10) weeks of summer sessions by the Duke University Chronicle Board. Price of subscriptions: $ 4 0 for third class mail; $100 for first class mail. Offices at third floor Flowers Building, Duke University, Durham, North Carolina 27706.

Shuttle concludes secret mission By JOHN NOBLE WILFORD N.Y. Times News Service

CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. - The brief and secret military mission of the space shuttle Discovery came to a safe conclusion Sunday afternoon with a smooth landing here at the Kennedy Space Center.

Their undisclosed satellite-launching mission apparently accomplished, the five astronauts returned to earth as they left it Thursday, in absolute silence. All communications between the winged spaceship and the ground were blacked out to the public

Air Force officials declined to comment on whether the three-day mission was shorter than planned, or exactly as planned. Nei ther would officials of the Nat ional Aeronautics andjSpace Administration. But they did say tha t the shutt le had experienced "no performance pro­blems" in flight.

After circling the ear th 47 times, the astronauts steered the Discovery to a touchdown on the lagoon-fringed run­

way here at 4:23 p.m. Eastern Standard Time. The mis­sion duration was 3 days, 1 hour and 33 minutes, the briefest flight since the initial shuttle tests in 1981.

The crewmen looked spry and healthy when they step­ped out of the shuttle and gave its landing gear and heat-shielding tiles a quick inspection. But, unlike past mis­sions, the astronauts had no public welcoming ceremonies before they were whisked away to their homes in Houston. Nor were there any post-landing news conferences.

The Discovery's crew members were Capt. Thomas Mat-tingly of the Navy, Lt. Col. Loren Shriver of the Air Force, Lt. Col. James Buchli of the Marine Corps and Maj. Ellison Onizuka and Maj. Gary Payton, both of the Air Force.

The space agency did not announce the Discovery's im­minent re turn until shortly after midnight. This was in keeping with NASA's ar rangement with the Defense Department to withhold all information on the mission duration until 16 hours before the planned landing.

Errors may have caused gas leak By STUART D IAMOND N.Y. Times News Service

NEW DELHI, India - The gas leak at a chemical plant in central India on Dec. 3 tha t killed at least 2,000 people was the result of operat ing errors, design flaws, maintenance failures and training deficiencies, according to present and former employees, company technical documents and the Indian government's chief scientist.

Those are among the findings of a seven-week inquiry begun by reporters of The New York Times after the leak of toxic methyl isocyanate gas at a Union Carbide plant in Bhopal, India, produced history's worst industrial disaster, s tunning India and the world. Among the ques­tions the tragedy raised were how it could have happened and who was responsible.

The inquiry involved more than 100 interviews in Bhopal, New Delhi, Bombay, New York, Washington, Dan-bury, Conn., and Institute, W Va. It unear thed informa­

tion not available even to the Union Carbide Corp., the majority owner of the plant where the leak occurred, because the Indian authorit ies have denied corporate representatives access to some documents, equipment and personnel.

The Times investigation produced evidence of a t least 10 violations of the standard procedures of both the parent corporation and its Indian-run subsidiary.

Executives of Union Carbide India Ltd., which operated the plant, are reluctant to address the question of respon­sibility for the tragedy, in which about 200,000 people were injured. The plant's manager has declined to discuss the irregulari t iea The managing director of the Indian com­pany refused to talk about details of the accident or the conditions tha t produced it, al though he did say tha t the enforcement of safety regulations was the responsibility of executives at the Bhopal plant.

.Extra! Late Shows 11:45 Friday & Saturday STRANGER THAN PARADISE

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The Travel Center 905 W. Main Street

BRIGHTLEAF SQUARE M-F 9-5 Sat 12-4

682-9378 683-1512

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Specializing in

• American Cars • Dasher » Datsun » Volvo

• Rabbits » Scirocco » Toyota » Honda

Auto Repairing and Service • Motor Tune-up General Repairs • Wrecker Service

286-2207 1900 W. Markham Ave.

located behind Duke Campus

Work Study Students:

Graphic Artist

Wanted. Training provided for graphic artist/paste-up position. Help make the display ads that appear in The Chronicle. Part-time. Minimum 2 hours per day, 5 days per week. Deadlines must be met. Comfort­able atmosphere. Must be meticulous and reliable. Minority work-study students are encouraged to apply.

Call 684-3811 stop by 101 West Union Bldg.

Ask for Judith Cook

Enter the Conference on Career Choices

¥R£E RAF?L£/ Learn more about an event you can't afford to miss.

Page 3: Monday TH0 E CHRONICLE

Campus Page 3 January 28, 1985

Today

Department of Health Administration, "Harold and Maude," Bryan Center f i lm theater, 5, 7, 9, and 11 p.m.

N.C. Symphony Orchestra with pianist Norman Krieger, Page Auditorium, 8:15 p.m.

Tuesday

D.U. Wind Symphony, "Kidz Konzert," Baldwin Auditorium, 10:15 a.m.

Newspaper head discusses trends By MICHAEL MILLENDER

American papers have undergone a "marketing revolu­tion" in the past 10 years to better meet the needs of readers and advertisers, James Batten, president of Knight-Ridder Newspapers Inc., said Friday.

Batten spoke before a group of 50 on current trends in the newspaper industry as a part of the Sloan Colloquia in Communications and Telecommunications Policy.

One of the most important new developments in the in­dustry has been the creation of tabloid sections focusing on individual neighborhoods and specializing in what Bat­ten termed "chicken-dinner news."

Knight-Ridder's "Miami Herald" pioneered these sections in the late 1970s when it introduced "Neighbors," a semi-weekly insert featuring school news, local club updates and wedding and anniversary" announcements for all of Miami's neighborhoods and communities, he said.

James Batten

"They offer news and advertising that might be ir­relevant to a reader living 10 miles away, but that might be very, very impor­tant to somebody in my household," said Batten. He recalled one Sunday morn­ing several years ago when 'the first thing he searched for in that day's "Herald" was a "Neighbors" article listing new teachers at his son's junior high school.

Another example Batten cited of newspapers' efforts to better please their readers is the improvement of business See PAPERS on page 6

Mathemetician delivers annual student sermon By SHANNON MULLEN

Harold Layton, a Ph.D. student in mathematical physiology, stood at the pulpit of Duke Chapel Sunday and delivered to about 1,200 people the sermon he had been practicing for months.

Layton, a Methodist, was selected as this year's student preacher by the worship com­mittee, a subcommittee of Duke Campus Ministry.

According to Mary Beth Bishop, commit­tee chairman, Layton was chosen from among four students on the basis of a for­mal application, an interview and an audi­tion. She said the tradition of selecting stu­dent preachers went back "at least seven years."

In his sermon, entitled "In the Middle Of

Things," Layton recounted the despair he experienced after his marriage to a medical student was canceled.'

"I was in the middle of things," he said. "My carefully laid plans for the future lay-in ashes. My Sunday school platitudes had been shattered like glass."

Layton said one humid summer evening he was "brooding" in his room when "the remarkable happened." He said he sudden­ly experienced a "glowing, cooling" sensation.

"Just for an instant, God let me feel his presence and his love for me," said Layton.

Layton said his life was not dramatically changed. "I still had no social life, 1 was still confused and it was still seething in Durham," he said. Layton said his con­fidence in God was renewed, however, and

that he has experienced great personal growth since that moment.

Layton said he was not alone in this feel­ing. "Life is not clear cut for any of us," he said. "The proper paths are rarely marked"

"In the middle of things, God comes to us to sustain us in times of doubt and uncer­tainty," said Layton. "He stands with us and gives us courage for our feet, peace for our minds and rest for our souls."

Layton concluded his sermon by stressing that because God is always with us, "being in the middle of things becomes a good thing."

Before coming to Duke in 1981, Layton. 28. gradtiated summa cum laude from Asbury College in Wilmore, Ky. He also earned a master of science degree from the University of Kentucky.

Duke Union Major Attract ions Com

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Summer

June I7-July 26

1985

DUKE IN SPAIN INTRODUCTORY PROGRAM

I N F O R M A T I O N M E E T I N G

Wednesday, January 30 4:30 p.m.

109 Language Building

Fulfill your language requirement OR add an additional language AND spend six weeks in Spain on the Mediterranean coast.

Ms. Isabel Camara-Freiburger will be at the meeting to give more details on this new introductory program.

If you are interested but unable to attend, contact the Summer Session Office, 121 Allen Building, 684-2621.

Page 4: Monday TH0 E CHRONICLE

Opinion Page 4 January 28, 1985

Suggestions to UFCAS At its monthly meeting Thursday the

Undergraduate Faculty Council of Arts and Sciences charged a newly formed ad hoc curriculum committee with a one-year study of the undergraduate curriculum.

Deja vu, you say? Indeed, UFCAS has tried to study the curriculum in the past, but proposed changes have rarely been ac­cepted. The recent change in the freshman writing requirement was the first major curriculum change passed by UFCAS in five years, according to Ernestine Friedl, dean of Trinity College.

Friedl said that consensus-building will occur throughout the review process. If it doesn't, UFCAS will once again find itself with a committee that cannot accomplish its stated purpose. The curriculum commit­tee's members should continually consult with other UFCAS members, other faculty members and students. Communication will ensure that everyone is working toward similar goals and that proposals are not thrown out during a final vote because they did not fit someone's vision of the direction the committee should take.

Friedl has also said that she would like the committee to study the number of credits required for graduation, the foreign language requirement and technological "smarts" of students, specifically if they have a good conception of what science and technology are all about.

As far as these changes are concerned, the 32-credit requirement for graduation is suf-ficent and should not be increased. In ad­dition, changing this requirement will lessen the amount of time students have for extracurricular activities.

The two-semester foreign Ian

quirement is also sufficent. Most students come to Duke with some foreign language knowledge. For those whose knowledge does not meet Duke standards, the one-year re­quirement is an insufficient introduction to the language; another semester should not be required.

However, a student who has already com­pleted his foreign language requirement should not be denied credit for taking only one semester of an introductory language course, as is now the case. The current system disadvantages the student who has already fulfilled his requirement and who may just be trying a language for fun.

Finally, since computer technology per­vades our society, there should be some kind of technology requirement related to com­puters. Jus t as engineers take freshman composition because writ ing is essential, liberal arts majors should become versed in computers. However, students should not be required to take the current introductory computer science course, CPS 51, as its em­phasis is on programming. A new course, sort of a "Computers and Society" should be established, and other departments should be encouraged to develop computer-related courses. In addition, a student who has sufficient computer knowledge should be able to place out of this requirement.

Finally, since UFCAS is considering fid­dling with the requirement structure, it should encourage departments to cross-list their courses, so students can take more of the courses they are interested in and less that are required.

UFCAS should consider all these sugges­tions and continue its efforts to make this curriculum review a meaningful one.

VP0 I I M ^ I N c IT, OR IS THE MHMBSSSWP QUIETER THAN USUAL ToDrVfT'

THE CHRONICLE

Joe McHugh, Editor-in-chief Larry Kaplow, Associate Editor Al Bernstein, Kathy Burkett , Managing Editors Paul Gaffney, Editorial Page Editor

Elisa Davidson, News Editor Townsend Davis, News Editor Carrie Teegardin, University Editor Andrew Bagley, State & National Editor Wendy Lane, Sports Editor Jenny Wright, Production Editor Peter Ha, Photography Editor Will Hicks, Photography Editor jpeter Tarasewich, Sports Production Editor Flora Garcia, Entertainment Editor Abbie Baynes, Features Editor Debbie Blum, Features Editor Barry Eriksen, Business Manager Gina Columna, Advertising Manager

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. Signed editorials, columns and cartoons represent the views of their authors.

Phone numbers: editor: 684-5469, news/features: 684-2663, sports: 684-6115, business office: 684-3811, advertising office: 684-6106, classifieds: 684-3476.

The Chronicle, Box 4696, Duke Station, Durham, N.C. 27706.

Letter

Don't follow 'vigilante' To the editorial board:

In Scott Royster's Jan . 24 letter "Tired of being scared," Royster called Bernhard Goetz, the man who confessed to shooting four teenagers on a New York city subway train, a "hero." Also, he suggested that others should follow the example set by Goetz and the "vigilante" in Chicago. I take exception to both of these points.

Goetz was approached on a subway train by youths who asked him for $5. Goetz then drew a gun and shot each of these youths, hit t ing two of them in the back. He then fled from the train into the subway tunnels.

Was Goetz defending himself? The evidence says no. At no time was he verbally threatened; at no t ime was he physically mistreated. Perhaps the four youths were intimidating Goetz as a prelude to a rob­bery, but their intimidation of Goetz did not warrant his attempted murder. The situa­t ion p re sen t ed Goetz w i th severa l alternatives.

Goetz could have chosen to give the youths his money. While an unpopular alternative, this was the safest course of ac­tion for him to take. Afterwards, he could have left the t ra in at the next station and notified the t ransi t police. No one would have been hurt , a condition which would have more than compensated for Goetz's loss of money.

Second, Goetz could have drawn his gun to warn the youths away. The teenagers would have run from the subway car, and

again, no one would have been hurt . Also, Goetz would have kept his money.

The third choice available to Goetz was to shoot the youths, and unfortunately, this is the course he took. Is Goetz a hero for tak­ing an alternative that resulted in the shooting of four teenage boys, while other, less violent options were open to him? I think not.

When a citizen walks the streets carry­ing a gun, he is expecting, maybe on an un­conscious level, tha t he will need to use it. Consider this scenario: You are a tall, muscular male walking along a subway platform at night. Perhaps you are a member of a minority group. The only other person on the platform is a second man, short, slight of build, perhaps carrying a briefcase. The shorter man is obviously not a mugger, and you do not feel threatened by him.

Perhaps you need a light for your cigarette or information about train routes; maybe you just feel like walking down to that end of the platform. As you walk, the eyes of the second man follow you nervous­ly. He suspects that you are an attacker. But you keep on walking in his direction; after all, you know that he has nothing to worry about. However, you don't know tha t the man is carrying a gun.

If you decide to walk up to tha t man and ask h im for a light, which will he pull out of his pocket: a match or a revolver?

Robert Moore Trinity '87

Time innocent yet guilty In law, Time Inc. won. In professional

credibility, it suffered a defeat that does in­jury to all the press. And there is no sign, that the people at Time understand that -no sign of genuine regret.

To understand, it is necessary to go back to the beginning. In February 1983, an Israeli commission found that Ariel Sharon and other Israeli officials bore "indirect responsibility" for the massacre of Palesti­nian refugees in Beirut. It criticized Sharon's "disregard of the danger of a massacre" when he sent Phalangists into the refugee camps. It called for his resigna­tion as defense minister.

Time was not satisfied to report tha t severe indictment. "Time has learned," it said in one paragraph of a cover story, that a secret Appendix B to the commission report described a meeting of Sharon with the family of the assassinated Phalangist leader, Bashir Gemayel. Sharon, it said, "discussed . . . the need for the Phalangists to take revenge." The massacre started the next day.

Sharon, when he sued for libel, said the paragraph in effect charged him with en­couraging the massacre. Time denied that it meant any such thing. Its lawyers said the paragraph was "merely one more bit of evidence supporting the finding of the com­mission that Sharon should have realized the danger of acts of revenge."

The jury rejected tha t innocent inter­pretation, in my view rightly. If the paragraph meant no more than the report's public conclusion, why did it have tha t portentous phrase, "Time has learned'? Why was it played up in a Time press release? The jury read it as highly defamatory, meaning tha t Sharon "con­sciously intended" the massacre to take place.

When Israel allowed a guarded look at Appendix B, there was nothing in it about such a Sha ron discussion wi th t h e Gemayels. Time said t h a t was "a relatively

Anthony Lewis minor inaccuracy." Fbppycock. The reference to Appendix B gave the tale verisimilitude. It told the readers that this was official stuff.

The jury found that the paragraph's basic charge was false - tha t Sharon had not discussed with the Gemayels the need for revenge. Even after the verdict Time in­sisted tha t the story was "substantially true," and t h a t it would have proved as much if its reporter's anonymous sources could have been identified. Time's chief lawyer, Thomas Barr, said "the jury would not have been out 10 minutes" if the sources had testified.

For me tha t raises a critical question of press ethics: Is it right to publish a highly de fama to ry c h a r g e b a s e d only on anonymous sources? I remember the McCarthy period, when lives were ruined by tales at t r ibuted to anonymous infor­mants, and I have the gravest doubts about such behavior by the press.

Sometimes the use of unnamed sources is necessary even when reputation may be in­jured, but that should be reserved for urgent occasions - Watergate, for example. There was no urgent public interest justifying Time's disputed paragraph. It was a gratuitous piece of self-puffing - an at­tempt to show tha t Time knew even more than the horrors fully explored by the commission.

Journal is ts are human, and we make mistakes. The Constitution protects a degree of error in criticism of public officials - which is why the jury decided against Sharon in the end. But the press has a reciprocal obligation, I think, to admit when it has been mistaken.

Anthony Lewis' column is syndicated by The New York Times.

Page 5: Monday TH0 E CHRONICLE

Monday, January 28, 1985 THE CHRONICLE Page 5

Sharon's plan good for Israel

After b a t t l i n g T ime magazine to an expensive standoff of the stiffnecked, W M I i c H T I S d f i r 6 Ariel Sharon re turns to Israel with a plan in mind to help lift his country out of its economic morass.

It's about time; while Industry Minister Sharon has been spending months in New York removing a blot on his per­sonal reputation, the coalition government of which he is a member has been frittering away the same months do­ing the wrong thing: flinching from the austerity that would bring unemployment, preferring to deal with the symptom rather than the cause of inflation by imposing wage and price controls. ' That's my view, not his: the burly general (who grouses that a piece of mine about Time's absence of malice in its mistake about him might have influenced the jurors) is careful to note that the Peres-Shamir "package deal" free­zing prices and wages provided a psychological blow to in­flation expectations, and has moved toward getting rid of what he terms "the mother of all economic sins, indexation."

His measured praise is understandable. He wants to stay on the team, and he cannot criticize from overseas because he has. not been on the job. But now he intends to press for an approach to increase productivity that should shake up a few of his colleagues in both Labor and the Likud.

1. Recast the work week. Israelis go home early Friday afternoon and take their Sabbath on Saturday. Friday in most cases is a wasted work day, like Christmas Eve in the U.S.; the Sharon idea is to give workers Friday off but to call for 10-hour work days in a two-year trial period.

2. Increase incentive by reducing taxes. Make foreign in­vestment tax-free for some years, as Ireland does, and of­fer free, government-owned land. On interna! tax rates he talks like a Reagan supply-sider.

3. Offer amnesty for the underground economy. The in­cidence of "side jobs," bartered services and savings hid­den in mattresses in Israel or taken abroad is almost dou­ble tha t of the U.S, which is considerable enough. Sharon would offer a t ime of grace to legitimize this money and

"WHYISEVEWONE ALWAYS TRYING TO RUSH U5?.. ."

,'D SAY WE'RE MOVING AtONIi AT A NICE

RACE!"

put it to work investing in new industry, in a new private bank paying a low interest rate, with that rate of return tax-free.

Those proposals, a turn to free enterprise rather than more government control, will be pushed by Arik Sharon in Israel. By and large, they will make sense to capitalist-roaders in Washington who want to aid an Israel prepared for belt-tightening.

Sharon shies from talk of inducing recession as a systemic purge because he identifies with the Sephardic Jews brought into the mainstream during Begin era, who would probably be the first to suffer.

However, he says this: "People will endure hardship if they see real hope ahead of them, if the leaders say exact­ly what they must do.

"I was a platoon commander in the War for In­dependence" he likes to recall, "and one time we were sur­rounded by the Jordanians. I was wounded in the belly and the leg, and one of my men said, Arik, how will you get

us out?' "I told him, 'I always got you out before, so trust me.' And

I heard him say to the others, 'Yes, but now is now, and exactly how will he get out of here this time?'

"I was offended. But that taught me something: In good times, slogans are enough, ' trust me' is enough. In hard times, people want to know from their leaders, what will it take, for how long? They will survive working harder, they will survive even unemployment, if you explain ex­actly what is needed and give them reason to hope."

Arik Sharon, the only foreign leader certified by an American jury to be a non-murderer, does not run Israel; Shimon Rsres does. But alternating Prime Minister Peres must appeal to Sharon's sizable constituency, as well as to free-market allies in the U.S., and would do well to con­sider the Sharon plan or lucidly explain his own.

William Safire's column is syndicated through The New York Times.

Hot damn! BCG gives a lesson in Southern life Hey, it's Monday, Jan. 28, 1985, and just in case you're

interested, I now know how to make 80 percent of the Duke student population angry. I did it. I admit it. I said something negative about Bruce Springsteen. Yankee blasphemy. I was threatened with everything from deatft* by slow torture to a weekend at the Holiday Inn North in Newark. It really got nasty.

In the words of Ricky Ricardo, "lemme 'splain." First of all, I was merely expressing my own opinion of the dude - if I am alone in this opinion, that's okay. Y'all enjoy yourselves however you want to. More importantly, though, I am from the South, and Springsteen is the quintessen­tial Yankee. Things are different here. Those of you not familiar with real Southern life (not Duke, the South) owe it to yourselves to check it out. Jus t consider it an an­thropological exercise. Give it a shot, and I promise 111 try to learn to tolerate Springsteen.

First, my Southern credentials: My mother is from the mountains of South Carolina; my father is from Richmond. I was born and reared in Virginia. I went to Robert E. Lee High School. I like Lynyrd Skynyrd.

Many people seem to think that Southerners are people like the Dukes of Hazzard or Buford T. Justice or Billy Carter, running around drinking white lightnin' (that's moonshine for you city folks), shooting things with a 12-gauge (that's a shotgun for you city folks) and scream­ing things like "hot damn!!" This is because the people who control the media live in places like New York and Los Angeles and wouldn't know a possum if it bit them on the fanny. __

More than anything, the problem with the media image of the South is tha t "good of boy" is assumed to equal "stupid." Yes, there are a lot of stupid people in the South, just like there are a lot of stupid people in the North and the Midwest and the West. If you ask me, living in Newark is more stupid than chewing tobacco. The point here is that saying "y'all" isn't any more stupid than saying "youse guys." Get past the accent, and you will find some pretty bright and interesting people in the South. Of course, if

Monday, Monday y'all talked right in the first place, there'd be no problem.

So do me a favor: one Saturday night when you're free, shed your leather pants and neck chain, put on some Levi's and a flannel shirt and go out with someone from the South. You'll find tha t "raisin' hell," listening to Flat t and Scruggs and yelling stuff like "hot damn!!" can be a lot of fun. Leave the 12-gauge at home, though.

OK, now it's t ime for a Southern joke: What do you call a guy who gets drunk six times a week, is on his third wife and has four girlfriends, s tar ts fights for fun and wouldn't think twice about shooting someone? A good of boy. Now that may be funny; I'm not sure It's not complete­ly accurate. It's not completely inaccurate. But the good of boy concept is nothing to sneeze at.

The South is one huge, intertwined network of good of boys. I think there must be a corresponding good ol' girl network, but I don't know. If you can call any one person in the network your friend and handle yourself right from there, then everyone is at your disposal. It's just a matter of organized, laid back, folksy name dropping.

For instance, say you're out somewhere in the South and you want to buy some Night Crawlers. First let me show you how a Yankee would go about it:

Guy in general store: "What can I do for ya"?" Yankee: "I'd like some good Night Crawlers. How much

are they?" Guy: "A dollar a dozen." Yankee: "I'll take a dozen." Now here's how it should be done: Guy in general store: "What can I do for ya1?" Good ol' boy: "Jim Bob McAlister said you got the best

Night Crawlers he's ever seen" Guy: "Well, I ain't one ta toot my own horn, but let's just

say ol' J im Bob knows his Crawlers. How's that ol' boy doin?"

Good of boy: "Aw, you know of J im Bob. He's still com-plainin' how his farm's losin' money on his way to the Cadillac dealer."

Guy: "He's somethin', ain't he? Say, how many of them Crawlers you need, buddy?"

Good o!' boy: "Dozen oughtta do ma" Guy: "Here, take two, and tell of J im Bob I said hey." Good of boy: "What do I owe you?" Guy: "A dollar's fine." Good ol' boy: "By the way, my name's Billy Ray Johnson.

We live out towards Greer on 617. Y'all stop by some time, y'hear?"

Guy: "Sure will, bud, sure will. You come back and see us now."

Not only did the good of boy get twice the Crawlers for his dollar, he made a new good of boy buddy and he shot the breeze for a few minutes. Try that in Utica.

Dating in the South is also different (and, I think, bet­ter), something which makes some adjustment necessary when coming to Duke. In the South men ask ladies out, and men pay. Every time. No question.

This may sound like a bummer, and it is, except that it brings a benefit. Since ladies don't think twice about be­ing treated, they don't get paranoid or at tach ridiculous meanings to male gestures of courtship. These are simply accepted with a ladylike thank you and a nice smile. Economically, this doesn't make much sense for the guy: no guaranteed re tu rn on his investment. But that 's OK, 'cause ladies aren't a commodity, they're a resource If a woman can be bought with flowers and dinner, you know what tha t makes her. And a cheap one, too.

There's one more thing I'd like to tell you about Southerners, and I think this covers a lot of our collective consciousness: Southerners, as a group, don't think much of guys tha t do shampoo commercials.

See y'all later. And by the way, I'm not from Hoboken.

BCG swallowed his plug of Bed Man while writing this column.

Page 6: Monday TH0 E CHRONICLE

Page 6 THE CHRONICLE Monday, January 28, 1985

CLASSIES from page 7

DUKE SKI DEVILS present VAIL for S549. Trip dates: March 4-11, To insure flight from RDU, reser­vations must be made NOW! Call Amy 684-7843 or Tom 6847033. TAHTUFFE TARTUFFE TARTUFFE TARTUFFE TARTUFFE TARTUFFE TARTUFFE TARTUFFE TARTUFFE TARTUFFE TARTUFFE TARTUFFE TARTUFFE TARTUFFE TARTUFEE

WANTED: 19-year-old New Yorker with unknown first name Must be very tolerant of my many faults and have few of your own. Fluency in Spanish, but no knowledge of French required. If your birthday is today, call your selfish and vulneraoie friend. 1 think 1 have an opening triat you would fill perfectly. Love. Mr. S.A. WOMEN'S CREW - 1 hope you had a blast Saturday night!! 1 wish 1 could've been there. Remember dinner at the Rat Wednesday after practice — 1 can't wait to catch up with you "old" guys and meet you new members — you'll be seeing a lot more of me very soon. — Suzannah.

New York Times Subscription available at 20 percent off newsstand rate Delivered to Perkins. Call Lisa Schneider. 684-1135. THIS IS NOT YOUR ORDWARTY "BIRTHDAY PERSONAL." No, this is for GARRETT RICE - A real

Ttieta Chi and he's now appear­ing at Duke. He turned 20 today — wish him a Happy Birthday, better yet. get him a cheap bot­tle of Champagne! WLJ.

Forget Princeton! Tom Cruise comes to Duke! -'RISKY BUSINESS" Bryan Center, Wednesday. Jan 30. 7.9.11 p.m Sponsored Dy Central Campus Programming Committee. My favorite Pooh Bear — one year later and 1 still love yqy more and more each day. (Yes very

wonderful memories together: m and m's, long letters, stickers. lollipops, roses. Quantas. Teddy Bear slippers. Villa Capri, The Reading Room. Asti, roses, omelettes, Ohio State. Sunday comics, cuddling . . . Here's to MANY more! All my love. Clusters.

Papers in 'marketing revolution' PAPERS from page 3 reporting. Before the 1973 oil embargo, "most newspapers had done a very mediocre job of reporting business news,' he said.

Yet the upsurge of economic woes such as inflation and high unemployment forced newspapers to better give their readers financial news affecting their daily lives, he added.

Batten said the "Herald" responded to increased interest in business by instituting a weekly business section edited by an economic journalist. Similar to "Neighbors," the new section "produced intense readership, which in turn created a magnificent advertising vehicle," he said.

"Anybody who has any misgivings about the viability of the newspaper business can get a dose of reassurance from these developments," he added. While Batten is op­timistic about the future of the industry, he said this was not the case 10 years ago.

"In the 1970s we woke up to the fact that daily reader­ship was slipping," he said,. "Our credibility was being directly challenged, and on top of that we thought we saw a whole host of electronic competitors coming at us over the horizon."

Batten said the threat from home electronic news ser­vices never materialized. After investing $40 million in its own electronic news service in Miami, Knight-Ridder has only signed up 3,400 subscribers. "Rsople just can't get used to the idea of turning to their TV for a restaurant review or stock listing," he said.

Batten dismissed charges that large, oligopolistic newspaper groups like Knight-Ridder - which owns over 30 papers and has the largest Sunday readership of any national chain - threaten a paper's ability to present fair and unbiased news. "A marginally profitable newspaper, like a destitute maiden, may be more open to an immoral proposition," he said. "Newspapers that want to do their tough job well have to be financially strong."

Batten graduated from Davidson College in 1957 and began his newspaper career as a reporter for "The Charlotte Observer." From 1965-70 he covered Southern politics and civil rights for Knight-Ridder; Batten became president of the chain in 1982.

The Sloan Colloquia is a series of speeches sponsored by the Institute of Policy Sciences and Public Affairs which considers important media issues, such as the credibility of the press, political bias and First Amendment questions.

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com position 16 Omnium-

17 Canine 20 Bohea 21 Lend moral

support 22 Lasso

, 23 —decombat 24 Tarn 26 Monody 29 Frog: Lat. 30 Capture 33 Playing hooky 34 Evita 35 - Vigoda

40 Also, old style

42 Farewell: Lat. 43 Legal thing 44 Have a — to

45 Egg dish 47 Cause of woe 4B -Chaco,S.A. 49 Afterwards 52 Canasta card

. 53 Wrathful 56 Canine 60 A few 61 Legal papers 62 Part ol a

molecule 63 Let il stand 64 Recipient 65 Strange:

DOWN 1 Versifier 2 Caen's river 3 Epic tale 4 Building

extension 5 Vacation spot 6 Musketeer

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10 Aspired 11 Robert or Alan 12 Uproar 13 Forum robe 18 Mashie 19 Verdi opera 23 Retained 24 Social event 25 —about

(approximately)

27 Got up 29 Breakwaters 29 Dodger of old 30 Pertaining

to ships 31 White poplar 32 Vlsorless

34 Trim trees 37 Board 38 Zenith 39 Tied 45 Ultimatum

46 Yucatan native 53 Silent 47 Harass 48 Mark 49 Colleen 50 Large quantity 51 Docile 52 Feds

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55 People prefix 57 Append 58 Modern: prel. 59 Artist Ernst

Page 7: Monday TH0 E CHRONICLE

Classifieds Page 7 January 2 8 , 1 9 8 5

Announcements

PSYCH. CLUB BOOKLET COM­MITTEE: Meeting Mon., 017 Soc-Psych 6 pm IMPORTANT!! SKI NEARBY or refresh your spirits by the fireside. No inter­ruptions except those you want it MOUNTAIN BROOK COTTAGES n the Great Smokies. $110 — weekend for two; $130 —

.ekend for four. (704)-586-4329. New York Times Subscription

ailable at 20 percent off newsstand rate. Delivered to Perkins. Call Lisa Schneider. 684-1135. Come practice Portuguese Mon­days in the U-Room, Fridays in the East Union at 5:30 p.m. — Os esperamos!

GALLERY SPACE AVAILABLE: Pro­posals for shows in Flowers Galfery are due January 30 in the Union Office. Contact Elizabeth at 684-2911 for further information.

BEREAVEMENT AND GRIEF SUP­PORT GROUP: Have you had so­meone who was important to you die, perhaps a parent, grand­parent, or friend? Learn more about the grief process and talk with and get support from others who know what it's like. Meet Mondays 3:30-5:00. Come by CAPS — 214 Old Chem. or call 684-5100 to discuss plans for the group with Elinor Roy by

Wed., Jan. 30.

HELP FOR BULIMIA: CAPS offers a 10-session confidential sup­port group for women who use vomiting, laxatives, or diuretics to control weight. The group is designed to provide support and understanding and help par­ticipants move in the direction of change and control. Come by CAPS — 214 Old Chem. or call 684-5100 to discuss plans for the group with Elinor Roy by Wed.. Jan. 30

THE CREATIVE WRITING GROUP will meet at 9:00 pm in Schlitz

Jan. 28.

CIRCLE K will host Laney Funder-burk on Monday, January 28, 7 p.m. 231 Soc. Sci ALUMNI con­cerns, CAREERS in a University setting. All are welcome! (Exec 6:30 p-m.)

The DUU Galleries Committee presents Washington D.C.: Street Cops Award-Winning writer and photographer LINDA WHEELER of the Washington Post will be displaying her photographs in Flowers Gallery Jan. 25 through Feb. 7.

team runs Monday-Wednesday at 3:30 p.m. in front of Cameron. Everyone expected.

ZETAS: Remember chapter meeting Monday 9 p.m. in 139 Soc. Sci.

ECUMENICAL FORUM: Religious Issues in Contemporary Life. "The Russians and US; Enemies or Neighbors?'' Dr. Thomas Naylor. Tuesday, Jan. 29, 4 p.m. Lounge, Chapel Basement.

SOPHOMORE AND JUNIOR ENGINEERS looking for a sum­mer job — Dr. O'Connor, Director of Placement Services, will con­duct an information session on resume-writing and job-hunting on Monday at 7 p.m. in 207 Engineering.

President's Honor Council: meeting in the Bryan Center Board Room at 1 p.m. Sunday. Sorryaboutjast Sunday evening. The Lionel Stevenson Essay Con­test, sponsored by The Friends of the Library, is offering two cash prizes — a first prize of $250 & a second of $150 for the best in­formal essay. The competition is open to all Duke undergraduates. The essay, not to exceed 3,000 words, must be typewritten with the name, address, and class of the candidate on a separate sheet. All entries are to be received before 5 p.m. on March 18. 1985, in the Rare Book Room

of Perkins Library.

IS DUKE SUPERIOR TO THE IVY's? Find out when Duke debates Princeton on the issue. Jan. 30. 8 p.m., 139 Social Science. Audience involvement encouraged!

LEARN FRENCH IN FRANCE the intensive or semi-intensive way in the most picturesque regions of France (Normandy and French Riviera). For details, meet the Program's director: phone 929-5504. evenings. EXOTIC TRAVEL IMPORT CO. in the Bryan Center Mon., Jan. 28th

— Wed., Jan 30th, 1-4 p.m. Handmade Batik, Jackets, Bags, and Sweaters from Thailand, In­donesia, and Nepal; Slide presentation; World Travel Exper­tise. For more information and orders call 286-1306. DUKE'S PRE-LAW SOCIETY — Important meeting. Tuesday, January 29th, 7 p.m., House D commons. Election of Officers — everybody welcome! Questions

— call Maria 684-0656.

MAJORS SPEAKERS COMMIT­

TEE: Meeting tonight at 8 p.m.

Conference on Careeer Choices

moderator training scheduled for Tues., Jan. 29th at 7 p.m. in the

OPERA FANS! Come enjoy Offen­bach's "Tales of Hoffman' with the DUKE OPERA. SOCIETY. Tomorrow, 1:30 p.m. Few Fed lounge. Bring food and something to sit on. We have libretti!

VOLUNTEERS FOR YOUTH: Dance Black Workshop this Saturday 11 a.m-12:30 p.m. in the Basement of the Ark on East Campus. For Girls and Boys. Don't miss it1

SCHOLARSHIPS, based on your demonstrated academic and ex­tracurricular performances and your potential, are available from Army ROTC — NOW! Army ROTC has the most flexible service scholarship program. Open to freshmen and sophomores in

Classified Info.: R a t e s (per day): $2 for first 15 words

100 each additional word

D i s c o u n t s : 5% off for 3 consecutive days 10% off for 5 or more consecutive days

W h e r e : Bring to 308 Flowers Bldg. Deposit Box. - O R - Mail to: Box 4696 D.S.; Durham, NC 27706.

O t h e r ? ? ? : Call Jacquie (after 1 p.m.). 684-3476

D e a d l i n e : 1 p.m., one day prior to date of insertion.

Important JAZZ SOCIETY mtg. Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. near Grand Piano in the Bryan Center. We are looking for new members and will discussing upcoming officer elections. If you are :ito JAZZ, now is the time to show it! ATTENTION " SORORITY

PRESIDENTS: Please remember the Presidents' meeting/vote count Monday, Jan. 28 in the Panhel Office at 6 p.m. It's vital that you show — it's my last one! Thanks! Ellen.

Help Wanted

OVERSEAS JOBS. Summer, yr-round. Europe, S Amer., Australia, Asia. AM fields. $900-2000 mo. Sightseeing. Free info. Write UC, RO. Box 52-NC2 Corort3 Del Mar, CA 92625. Pizza Palace now accepting ap-plicatons for employment — delivery, waitresses, cooks. App­ly in person — between 3-5 p.m. Hours flexible — 2002 Hillsborough Rd.

CORPORATE SALES REPRESEN­TATIVE. Full or part-time posi­tions available. Exciting career opportunity in the art field. Unlimited potential for self-starter. For further information call: Gallery Director, Judge Gallery. Brightleaf Square, Durham. Tues.-Sat., 12-6 p.m. 688-8893. DYNAMIC WORK OPPORTUNITY open as the Assistant to the Advertising Manager of The Chronicle. Must work well with people and have work-study status. 10-15 hrs/wk. See Gina at 101 West Union. No calls please. Healthy males can earn $100 in studies of the effects of com­monly used prescription drugs on physical response to stress Time required — 10-11 hours. If interested, call 684-2941 and ask for Nan McCOwn, R.N. Healthy males, 18-25, can earn $40 in studies of the effects of prescription drugs on the car­diovascular system. Time re­quired — 3-4 hours. If interested, call 684-2941 and ask for the "Infusion Study". The Coalition for Battered Women is seeking volunteers for our advocacy program. A 30-hour training course for in­terested men and women starts on Feb. 16. Call the Durham

. YWCA at 68-4396 or 967-866/ in Chapel Hill.

Flower delivery persons needed for Valentine week. Must have at least two years driving ex­perience and no points against your license. Apply at Spencer-Colclough Florist, 3429 Roxboro Road, Durham, North Carolina 27704.

NEED CASH? Earn $500-pluS each school year, part-time (flex­ible] hours each week placing and filling posters on campus. Serious workers only; we give r e c o m m e n d a t i o n s . 1-800-243-6679.

Counselors, over 19. who like to have fun and make fun at unique overnight boys' summer camp in Penna. Able to instruct either one of following: Watersafety, waterskiing. boating, soccer, basketball, arts and crafts, rockclimblng. riflery, ham radio, rocketry, science, archery, track, tennis, golf, photography, pioneering or general athletics. Write camp director, 138 Red Rambler Drive, Lafayette Hill, Pa. 19444. GOVERNMENT JOBS. $15000$50000/yr. possible. All occupations. How to find; call 805-687-6000 Ext. R-9999 for information.

A SUPERIOR POCONO CO-ED CAMP is accepting applications for counselor/specialists in all sports including gymnastics and hockey (varsity exper. pref.], A & C, woodshop, photography, waterfront (WSI or boating ex­per), windsurfing. 600 acres of rolling hills on a 100-acre pvt. lake - it's beautiful. (215)-732-3505 collect.

i light o Wanted: persons 1 door work 10-15 hrs per week. $4.50/$5 per hour, weekends in­cluded. Must have car! Call 828-9098 for interview date. Work is in Durham & Chapel Hill area; we can work to your schedule.

Excellent summer counseling oppoi litie for

i who are interested in ser­ving boys and girls ages 7-16, guiding them in their physical, mental and spiritual develop­ment. Only those persons who will dedicate their wholehearted efforts to help each individual child develop his or her potential should apply. One must have ability to teach in one or more of our specialized activities. College students, teachers, and coaches should apply. CAMP THUNDER-BIRD, located 17 miles southeast of Charlotte, NC, is an ACA ac­credited camp member, special­izing in water sports (sailing, water skiing, swimming and canoeing), yet an added em­phasis is placed on the land sports (general athletics, tennis, golf, archery, riflery and backpacking). Horseback riding, white-water canoeing and trips are extras in our excellent pro­gram. For further information, write or call G. William Climer, Jr., Director, Camp Thunderbird. Route 7, Box 50, Clover, SC. 29710. (803) 831-2121.

Services Offered

If you are pregnant and need help, call BIRTHCHOICE at 683-1133. Wej^ire.

ABORTION TO 20 WEEKS. Private and confidential gyn facility with Saturday and week­day appointments available. FREE PREGNANCY TEST Collect, 942-0824.

WORD PROCESSING — Just Your Type Word Processing Service will type your dissertations, form letters, papers, etc. quickly and professionally. Emergency typing weicome. 489-5470 (24 hours).

S O O 5 0 w fc and filter, domestic

cars only.

Transmission Tune Up.

Now you can slop transmission trouble before it starts with Coftman's low cost iransmis-sicrn tune up which includes:

• Road tesi • Remove trie par • Visual insoection • Clean the sump and screen' • Adjust the bands and linkage" •Replace the oati gasket and fluid.

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Shopping Center

D u r h a m

4 7 1 - 2 5 0 6

Expires 3/31/85

I \vw_m repair

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ROTC HAIRCUTS $4.50. Jim's Barber Shop, near Duke and VA at 614 Trent Drive. Closed Mon­days. 286-9558.

TYPING/WORD PROCESSING. $1.25 per page. Other services, reasonably priced: pick­up/delivery on campus, rough draft, overnight and emergency typing, proofing. Form letters, resumes, theses, dissertations all welcome; no job too big or , small. Excellent new letter quali­ty printer. Call Burns Enterprises at 489-6896 10 a.m.- 4 p.m. Monday throught Friday.

per iUlogcn^ovi

2704 Chapel Hill Blvd. Durham-489 -5800

SPRING BREAK in Daytona Beach from $89, South Padre from $78, Mustang Island/Port Aransas $119, Steamboat Springs skiing from $79. HURRY — "Break From The Books." Call Sunchase Tours toll free for more information 1-800-321-5911 or contact a Sunchase Campus Representative or your local Trave I Agency TO DAY! Lose Weight "NOW," ask me "HOW." Joy 477-1486. "NO DIET." Typing at reasonable rates. Call Dawn Lewis days 383-5529 and

nights 596-1773.

JOB APPLICATION * GRADUATE SCHOOL * PASSPORT PHOTOS 2/$4.95. 10 or MORE $2 ea. Laminated Personal ID'S EVERYTHING WHILE YOU WAIT. 688-3105.

Entertainment

THE DUKE JAZZ ENSEMBLE and HATS OFF! present A WINTER CONCERT SPECIAL, on Thursday, January 31St at 7:15 p.m. in Reynolds Theater, the Bryan Center. Tickets only $2.50. JOIN US for the ENSEMBLE'S jazz ex­pertise and the lively song and dance of Duke's new performing group HATS OFP

Apartment For Rent

Bedroom efficency, available Feb. 1. Kitchen, bathroom, etc. 2 blocks from EAST CAMPUS. Call 688-0119.

Wanted to Rent

Two physicians require housing in T'iangle area February 1985. No smoking, no pets. Leave message 596-3016. For Sale

1978 Datsun B210 yellow sport coupe: 4-speed, reg. gas, 30-35 MPG: AM/FM stereo cassette: radials. Excellent condition. $1,900. 383-6003. COUCH $20. 2 dining room chairs — S10. 4-level yellow bookshelf (metal) — $10. Call Debbie K. at 684-3859 (wk| or 383-8266 (home). 1981 Renault Le Car, deluxe, super sunroof, AM/FM cassette, 45.000-mile factory warranty $2250. 1-542-5589. Double bed: single bed: sofa; liv­ing room chair; lamps: coffee table; end tables; desk: bookcase; dresser; cot: kitchen table: kitchen chairs: yard sale items; 514 South Duke St. 688-0461.

1978 Olds Custom Cruiser Wagon. A l Excellent Condition, One Owner. V8 All power. Cruise Stereo. $3195 489-4025

Lost And Found

Lost Mens Benrus Watch in Card Gym Locker Room. Please Help!! 684-7474 _ _

LOST: one silver rhinestone bracelet on Thurs. (1/24) on Main West If found, please call Pat at 684-1395. _ _ ^ Whoever took my wallet from the couch area of the Bryan Center Fri., Jan. 25 (tan leather! could you please return my ID'S — no questions asked. I need them desperately! Apt. 2-E Chape! Towers. 383-7643.

LOST — $50 reward for Black Fischer Coup Tennis Racquet. Black cover with three orange triangles and white tape with my name. Please call Nadine, i584-0816. if found. Lost in North Bldg computer lab room 130A last Wed. around 3 p.m.

Roommate Wanted

Roommate (non-smoker) needed to share 3-BR apartment with 2 female med. students. Near West Campus. $133/month +Vi-utilities. 383-3264.

Study Abroad

WORK STUDY POSITION AVAILABLE IN STUDY ABROAD OFFICE, daily 1-3 p.m. Call 684-2174. _ Learn about all the possibilities for STUDY IN FRANCE at informa­tion meeting, Mon., Jan. 28, 4 p.m., 139 Social Sciences. Study in CHINA AND JAPAN INFO MEETINGS TOMORROW, 4 & 4:30 p.m., 109 Languages & 211 Languages.

ATTENTION SORORITY PRESIDENTS: Please remember the Presidents' meeting/vote count Monday, Jan. 28 in the Panhel Office at 6 p.m. It's vital that you show — it's my last one! Thanks! Ellen.

The Conference on Career Choices. DONT LEAVE SCHOOL WITHOUT IT! February 2. SHANNON HARRIS is a GOD­DESS — for selecting THIS as her BIRTHDAY! Congratulations on being "21!" You have taste in numbers — and women friends! Here's to celebrating — a partner in birthday crime . . . RS. AN­NETTE, you're on 364 days older than us — don't wait until tomor-row to be decadent! CATH. Feb 2 Feb 2 Feb 2 Feb 2 Feb 2 THE CONFERENCE ON CAREER CHOICES Feb 2 Feb 2 Feb 2 Feb 2 THE CONFERENCE ON CAREER CHOICES. HINTERACT" Bring Duke Students closer together Come to the IN­TERACTIONS COMMITTEE MEETING every Tues. at 7:30 p.m. in the Union Offices behind the student info, desk in the

Bryan Center. _ _

Famous Duke Alumni: Elizabeth Dole. Sonny Jurgenson, David Hartman. They won't be at the Conference on Career Choices, but many other distinguished alumni will be Come meet and talk to them Feb 2. Free and open to al! undergraduates To the ANITA*"KASSOF I met at Danceteria last fall — HAPPY BIRTHDAY Baby! Why don't you call me sometime?! Love, Duane. RS. Chucr-. -

Dearest Sybil — one more year and one more MWA MWA MWA MWA MWA MWA MWA MWA MWA MWA MWA MWA MWA MWA MWA MWA MWA MWA MWA MWA MWA MWA MWA MWA MWA Hap­py 21st Birthday! Love always, Sybil.

Jenni Bancroft — Happy Birth­day! You're such a great friend

. .cheap wine. . .hysterical conversations, the Men of Duke, crying moving out . basket­ball enthusiasts . . . ! Reagan on TV at the C.I. click. . . . I LOVE YOU R RS. You live where? Molly Crawford: Roses Roses Roses Roses Roses Roses Roses Roses Roses Roses Roses Roses. One dozen, A Theodore

Bear. _ _ _ JENNY LAZEWSK1 — Good luck in tonight's elections. You're definitely the best candidate for student trustee! Best wishes from a FELLOW SOPHOMORE.

Don't let Feb. 22 creep up on you. Nominate your most memorable professor for the Alumni Distinguished Undergraduate Teaching Award.

See CLASSIES on page 6

Page 8: Monday TH0 E CHRONICLE

Page 8 THE CHRONICLE Monday, January 28, 1985

The Controllers Department

of

MORGAN STANLEY invites Bachelor's & Master's candidates of all majors, with

superior academic records, to a presentation of our Controllers Department Management Training Program

Wednesday, January 30,1985 Von Canon B, Bryan Center

7:00-8:00 PM

We are actively seeking JUNE GRADUATES and RECENT ALUMNI for Summer start dates.

OUR PROGRAM OFFERS:

• A means of establishing high growth careers at one of Wall Street's leading investment banking firms.

• The opportunity to work with exceptionally talented securities professionals.

• Guaranteed and rapid career progression in a challenging, fast-paced environment.

• An outstanding compensation program.

MORGAN STANLEY & CO. Incorporated

Controllers College Recruiting 1633 Broadway

New York, New York 10019

Contact the Career Placement Office for additional information.

Morgan Stanley is an Equal Opportunity Employer.

Refreshments will be served.

Page 9: Monday TH0 E CHRONICLE

THE CHRONICLE

WEEKLY PULL-OUT

SPORTS SUPPLEMENT

MONDAY, JANUARY 2 1 , 1985 SPORTSWRAP ACG BASKETBALL

SUNDAYS GAMES

Georgia Tech 66, North Carolina 62

Maryland 77, Villanova 74

Virginia 54, Arkansas 52

SATURDAY'S GAMES

Duke 100, Clemson 83

Maryland 77, Notre Dame 65

Louisvjlle 84, N.C. State 78

Virginia 58, Wake Forest 56

WOMEN'S BASKETBALL

FRIDAYS GAME

Duke 75, Georgia Tech 67

TUESOAY

Women's basketball vs. Richmond, Cameron Indoor Stadium, 7:30 p.m.

WEDNESDAY

Men's basketball vs. Wake Forest, Greensboro Coliseum, 8 p.m.

SATDBDAY

Women's basketball at Virginia, 4 p.m.

Wrestling at the Citadel.

Swimming at East Carolina.

NBA BASKETBALL

Detroit 115, Washington 105

Boston 128, Portland 127

Milwaukee 106, San Antonio 93

NHL HOCKEY

Winnipeg 6, Philadelphia 2

Buffalo 3, Quebec 2

N.Y. Rangers 3, Minnesota 2

Toronto 6, Chicago 2

COLLEGE BASKETBALL

Michigan 96, Kansas 77

Tennessee 81 , Kentucky 65

-mmrn^M ...

ALICE ADAMS/SPORTSWRAP Staring him down: Johnny Dawkins (24) and Clemson's Vince Hamilton square off during Duke's 100-83 victory Saturday.

No. 5 Duke slows down Clemson By PAUL SMITH

CLEMSON, S.C. - Five Duke players scored in double figures to defeat Clemson, weakened by illness and one no-show, 100-83, in a fast-paced Atlantic Coast Con­ference matchup Saturday.

The fifth-ranked Blue Devils were led by junior Mark Alarie, who had 21 points and. nine rebounds. Sophomore Tommy Amaker scored 18 points and had seven assists. With the victory, the Blue Devils regrouped from an 89-71 drubbing from N.C. State Wednes­day and now are 4-3 in the ACC, 14-3 overall.

Duke utilized three different defenses in the first half to combat Clemson's run-and-gun style, and led at halftime - narrowly - 49^47.

"It didn't matter what defense we were in in the first half," said Duke coach Mike Krzyzewski. "We pressured with our regular half-court defense, played some zone and we picked up man-to-man at the top of the key. It didn't matter - they just hit."

Guard Chris Michael and center Ray­mond Jones led Clemson's attack. Michael scored 22 points, mainly from the outside, and Jones had 18.

At the beginning of'the second half, Duke came back revitalized. The Blue Devils jumped to a nine-point lead with an 11-2 spurt.

"The thing that we thought we had to do was to block out better," Amaker said of the team's halftime meeting. "They did an ex­cellent job of getting not only second but

also third shots off of us. And we thought that if we could keep them off of the boards a little better, we'd be okay."

But Clemson was able to narrow the lead to one, as the Tigers regained control of the boards and got easy shots. Then, Duke got into foul trouble with Jay Bilas picking up his fifth foul at the 10:58 mark in the game.

The Blue Devils broke the game open for good with about 10 minutes remaining when Duke outscored Clemson 15-4.

"I think we had some big rebounds," said guard Johnny Dawkins, when asked about the spurt. "Danny Meagher, Mark Alarie and David Henderson really fought on the boards toward the middle part of the second half and we captitalized on those rebounds." See BASKETBALL on page 5

Women win as Goins takes control By TOM LISTER

The Duke women's basketball team defeated Georgia Tech 75-67 in Cameron In­door Stadium Friday night, and ended a two-game Atlantic Coast Conference losing streak.

The Blue Devils, 14-4 and 6-4 in the ACC, had a tough time shaking the Yellow Jackets (6-10, 0-9). Georgia Tech led 50-49 with 10:13 to play in the second half before Duke's junior guard Connie Goins took control.

Goins, who has struggled offensively of late, contributed 18 points and converted 10 of 11 free throws to secure the "victory.

"•Connie contributes in more ways than . just scoring," said Duke coach Debbie

Leonard. "She has scoring games and floor games. Connie is the smartest player we have out there. If she were a step quicker, she would be unstoppable on the drive."

"I was never worried about the outcome," Goins said. "We got nervous tonight but we were never tight late in the game. We kept running our offense the way we wanted."

After having led 34-30 in the first half, the Blue Devils never were able to open up a commanding lead. The Yellow Jackets stayed in the game by making four of five outside shots to open the second half.

Leonard said she never considered coming out of the team's 2-3 defense to stop Georgia Tech's shooting. The Blue Devils had started

the game in i m:' i-mai- but had to go to the zone when freshman forward Chris Moreland collected two early fouls.

T h a t is the best I have seen Georgia Tech shoot since I have played against them," Leonard said. "Everything seemed to be falling. The zone has been good to us all year in terms of getting turnovers at crucial moments, so we decided to stay with it."

Sophomore center Sarah Sullivan's eight-footer with 9:13 to play put the Blue Devils in front to stay. In the next three minutes the Blue Devils forced three Georgia Tech turnovers and converted them into baskets. See WOMEN on page 2 Related story on page 6

Page 10: Monday TH0 E CHRONICLE

SPORTSWRAP MONDAY, JANUARY 28 , 1985

Boyle, Goins lead women past Georgia Tech WOMEN from page 1

During that stretch Moreland, who had been contained by Georgia Tech, scored six points. "I know it didn't seem that she scored that many points tonight" said Leonard. "But Chris has a way of scoring quietly. Even though she only had 14 points the baskets came at important times."

Georgia Tech's tight zone defense was as responsible for Moreland's sub-par scoring performance as anything else. "Tech packed their zone in very well tonight," said Goins. "In those situations the guards have to look to score, and we did a good job on reversing the ball against their defense. Our post-to-post and perimeter passing made the

difference." The Yellow Jackets were without 6-7

freshman center Delores Bootz, who is.out indefinitely with a knee injury. In her absence, Duke held a 34-26 rebounding ad­vantage. Sullivan and Moreland led the Blue Devils'with 13 apiece.

Moreland's 14 points and 13 rebounds marked the fourth consecutive game where she has been in double figures in scoring and rebounding. She is now averaging 16.8 points and 10.2 rebounds per game.

"I thought Sarah and Chris Moreland did an excellent job on the boards," said Leonard. "That has been one thing that has plagued us all year. It has been tough the

last week to force the girls to go to the boards hard. Tonight things paid off."

The Yellow Jackets played harder Friday night than they did in the two teams' previous meeting, a 64-59 Duke victory in Atlanta, according to Leonard.

"Sometimes when you lose an important player — Bootz is certainly crucial to Tech — it becomes a rallying point," said Leonard. "All the players know that they're at a disadvantage and play a little tougher."

In the first half, Duke led by as many as nine points but could never build on that lead. Twice the Yellow Jackets erased nine-point margins with strong outside shooting,

"Things didn't feel real good out there,"

said Goins. "Coach Leonard has told us that we're a Jekyll-and-Hyde team. Tonight we played differently in each five-minute stretch. If we could only solve that problem, we would be a much more stable team."

Leonard attributed the Blue Devils' defen­sive lapse to substitution patterns. "In the first half, I was trying to rest our players and keep Chris out of foul trouble. When Tech came back, we were in the process of switching our lineup," she said.

NOTES - Sullivan continued to improve offensively Friday, contributing 12 points on 5-of-7 shooting . , . The Blue Devils shot 88.5 percent from the free-throw line and made nine of their last 10.

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Roundtrip Airfares From RDU / Certain Restrictions Apply / Discount Airfares To Al; Destinations

AIRFARES FROM RDU AND VACATION PACKAGES '••''• (All packages 3, 4 and 7 night hotel packages and transfers)

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Rising high school seniors attend Term II of Duke Summer Session

and live as a group on West Campus. RA applications due February 20.

Information and Applications Available

Now Ol West Duke Building

684-3847

m m. %

Page 11: Monday TH0 E CHRONICLE

• MONDAY. JANUARY 28. 1985 SPORTSWRAP

Duke wrestlers take third place on D.C. trip From staff reports

The Duke wrestling team defeated Coppin State but lost to American and George Washington Saturday in Washington.

The Blue Devils split matches with host American, but lost 22-18, Winners for Duke included Eftim Velahos at 134, Guy McKhann at 142, Fred Johnson at 150, Ted Sliwinski at 167 and Matt Bacchetta at 177.

George Washington slipped by the Blue Devils 23-22.' Velahos and Sliwinski won their matches, while Johnson wrestled to a draw. Seann Henry (190) and Al Stovall

SPORTS BRIEFS (118) won by forfeit.

Duke handily defeated Coppin State 48-9. Bill Perri (126), Chuck Egerton (134), Velahos, Arie Hausknecht (150) and Sliwinski all won their classes. Henry, Bacchet­ta and Tom Goltry (heavyweight) won by forfeit.

Women's golf: Former Duke All-America Mary

Anne Widman will begin play on the Asian professional tour with a tournament in Hong Kong this week. Widman failed to qualify for the LPGA tour this fall. She had been one of eight players in a sudden-death playoff for the last spot.

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Page 12: Monday TH0 E CHRONICLE

SPORTSWRAP MONDAY, JANUARY 28, 1985

Clemson's run-and-gun style new for Duke

S a t u r d a y Clemson showed Duke something that the Blue Devils had not seen this season: a run-and-gun transition game.

"Clemson plays a different style," said Duke coach Mike Krzyzewski. "They're just so quick. We were very concerned about them. I thought their style - their ag­gressive and positive style - of bringing the ball down the court each t ime really put them in good position until about the mid­dle of the second half."

For most of the game, a 100-83 Duke win in the Tigers' Littlejohn Coliseum, Clem­son's offensive strategy consisted of quick­ly bringing the ball upcourt, making one pass and then taking the outside jump shot - usually not a good offensive strategy. But for the Tigers, it worked because they con­sistently made their shots — at least dur­ing the first half.

"You really have to concentrate for the en­tire time you're in the game," forward Mark Alarie said of Clemson's game plan. "With [Clemson guard Chris] Michael running down the court hit t ing the jump shot, you really have to keep your head in the game.

"It's a totally different team from us. I en­joy running up and down the court, but it's more suitable to our game to slow it down a little."

Once Clemson began to miss shots and Duke became more aggressive on defense, the Tigers' offensive strategy began to hurt them. Twice in the second half, Duke ran up big leads simply because Clemson was not hi t t ing its jump shots and, unlike the first half when the Blue Devils were outre-

PAUL SMITH bounded 22-18, Duke controlled the boards during these runs.

A KEY to the victory was the strong of­fensive play of Tommy Amaker, who finish­ed the game with 18 points. "I usually just take what the defense will give me," Amaker said. "I took a few shots, more shots than I usually take. That was because of the type defense they were playing. I take my shot when I have it."

According to first-year Clemson coach Cliff Ellis, the Tigers went into the game intending to let Amaker shoot. "We had to try and stop [guard Johnny] Dawkins and Alarie so we sloughed off on Amaker hop­ing that he would take the shot," he said. "Any time you play a team the caliber of Duke you have to do things like that."

Krzyzewski was pleased that Amaker took the shots when he had the opportuni­ty. "That's been a point of emphasis all year for Tommy to be aggressive - to t ake the shot," Krzyzewski said. "Even if he misses, it does give you .some good board opportunities."

Amaker shot 67 percent from the field, and broke the Tigers' defense and opened up the offense for Alarie, Dawkins and David Henderson. In fact, the entire team shot 60 percent for the game, and a blister­ing 68 percent in the second half.

And that 's the best way to stop a transi­tion team like Clemson: to outscore them.

ALICE ADAM5/SP0RTSWKAP Tommy Amaker leans into Grayson Marshall while trying to find the open man.

DUKE IN PARIS SUMMER, 1985

May 18-June 28 Important Information Meeting

\J •_if •_••_• _* _• «>A» •s i ' «A-" -_L*""A* *"A* *Jc* *JrT ""i*" "-A* *-l* <Lr -J*- -sL» »A»^A* VX» *X» '^Lr -vL* -X»/ 7v *T* *T* *T* •T,> "T* *T* ^r* ^r* ^p *r* *T* *T* *T* •"i'* *T* ^r* •^* *T* * ^ 'f' *T* -T* •'T* -"P" 'T* *TK

Monday, January 28 5:00 PM

139 Social Sciences

COURSES: Choose 2 of 3 courses

offered: Advanced French Trans­

lation (FR 118), Contemporary

French Cinema (FR 137), French

Painting (ART 172)!

Meet Professors Alexander Hull,

Fabienne Worth and Jeffrey

Thompson, Instructors in the

program.

Contact the Summer Session

Office, 121 Allen Building

(684-2621) if you are interested

but unable to attend.

% # # # * # * * * * * * # # * # * # # # # # # * * # *

Page 13: Monday TH0 E CHRONICLE

MONDAY, JANUARY 28 , 1 9 8 5 SPORTSWRAP

Krzyzewski on Tigers: 'Like back in Indiana' BASKETBALL from page 1

"They missed some shots that they had been making in thef i rs t half," Alarie said. "It wasn't any type of strategy on our part. It was just the fact that they missed some shots and maybe lost some of their confidence,"

After Duke took the lead, the Blue Devils spread the game out using their 2-3 motion offense. With this scheme, Duke ran the clock out while getting some easy shots and converting important free throws. Clemson, 10-7 and 2-5 in the ACC, finished with five players fouling out.

Krzyzewski described the transition between first and second halves. "It was like back in high-school basketball in Indiana, you know, run and shoot," Krzyzewski said, "But in the second half I thought our eleven defense, which is the top of the key pick up, was the best one for us and we started playing passing lanes a lot better;"

Clemson, meanwhile, was hampered by illness and an absence. Starting center Glen McCants spent gameday at the funeral of his six-year-old niece, leaving the start ing center duties to reserve Jones.

Clemson's leading scorer Vincent Hamilton was recover­ing from a virus and could not start. He only scored 10 points off the bench, almost five below his averaga Reserve forward Horace Grant was also hampered by the same virus.

But the Tigers' problems were not obvious early in the game as Clemson opened a quick lead. Using its run-and-gun style, in which Clemson would often shoot before eight seconds had ticked'off of the clock, and a trapping defense, Clemson gave Duke all kinds of problems.

The Tigers hit their shots from outside and when the Blue Devils pressured the shooter, Clemson passed inside for an easy lay-up.

On offense, Duke faced a half-court t rap that Duke's guards usually handled with ease. Dawkins and Amaker passed the ball across half-court to each other until the trap was broken and Clemson dropped into its normal

DUKE 100 CLEMSON Corbit Har. Grant Jones Michael Marshall Hamilton Hor. Grant Graham Blackman Bynum Totals

DUKE Alarie Meagher Bilas Amaker Dawkins Henderson Strickland Williams King Anderson Bryan Totals

Clemson Duke

Turnovers Wooldridge,

, CLEMSON 83 MP 23 21 30 28 40 27 26

2 2 1

200

MP 37 23 19 37 39 23

8 3 9 1 1

200

FG 3-10 1 8

1C 5 5 4 C 0 0

6 12 17 12 11 8 1 1 0

36-78

FG 5- 9 6 C 8 8 6 0 1 C c 0

7 2

1? 12 10 2 1 0 0 1

34-57

— Duke 12, Pavia Lembo

FT 1- 3 1 2 2 C 0 5 C C 0

2 4 2 0 0 7 0 0 2

11-20

FT 11-12 C 3 2 2 7 2 1 4 0 C

0 4 2 3

12 2 1 5 0 0

32-41

Clemsc

R 4 5 9 4 6 3 9 0 0 1

46

R 9 3 4 3 3 6 2 1 1 0 0

33

A 4 1 1 1

11 3 2 0 0 0

23

A 2 4 0 7 5 1 1 0 0 0 0

20

t7 36 »9 51

F 5 5 5 5 ? 5 2 1 3 0

33

F 1 5 5 1 2 0 1 0 3 1 1

21

_ -

Pt. 7 3

18 22 10 10 13 0 0 0

83

Pt. 21 12 3

18 18 19 2 3 4 0 0

100

83 100

n 15. Officials — A — 8,500.

Another key to the Duke victory was David Henderson's return to consistency. Henderson, Duke's "sixth starter," scored 19 points and shot 60 percent from the field. He scored eight points during Duke's 15-4 spurt. He had six rebounds.

First-year Clemson coach Cliff Ellis gave several reasons for his team's loss "The combination of Duke's excellent shooting and getting us in foul trouble were the real keys," Ellis said. "After we got in foul trouble, we began to get a little tentative and tha t really hurt."

ALICE ADAMS/SPORTSWRAP David Henderson drives past the outstretched arm of Chris Michael. Henderson had 19 points in 23 minutes.

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Page 14: Monday TH0 E CHRONICLE

SPORTSWRAP MONDAY, JANUARY 28. 1985

Duke women come to Boyle in 2nd half By STEVE SIEGEL

Joanne Boyle is the lesser known of Duke basketballs two "sixth starters," behind the men's David Henderson, but Friday she certainly was just as important.

Boyle came off the bench to score 19 points and make five steals, and sparked Duke into key spurts during both halves of the Blue Devils' 75-67 win over Georgia Tech.

A defensive specialist in past years, this season Boyle has assumed responsibility on offense as well. Boyle's scor­ing ability was evident against Tech when Duke coach Debbie Leonard instructed her team to run and push the ball downcourt.

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"It works out best this way for the team," said Boyle of her role as 'sixth starter.' Boyle had 19 points and five steals Saturday. "When I go in we change defenses, try to speed it up and change the pace of the game."

Boyle's quickness became valuable not only in pressure defense but also in the transition game. Boyle's 19 points were well above her 12.4-point average.

In the first half, Boyle sparked a 13-point Blue Devil surge that turned a 10-6 Georgia Tech advantage into a 19-10 Duke lead. Boyle had four points, two steals and one assist during the streak.

In the final four minutes of the game, Boyle scored nine points to secure the victory. She hit a turnaround jumper at 3:52 to give the Blue Devils a six-point cushion at 66-60. Boyle then hit two free throws after drawing a foul on a drive to the basket and followed with a jumper to make the score 70-61 with 2:25 to play.

"Joanne had a good game from the outside," Leonard said. "If there's one thing we lack, it's perimeter shooting."

Duke kept control down the stretch, and Boyle put the final points on the board for the Blue Devils. She found herself open off a break and hit-one of two shots from the line with 49 seconds to play. Seconds later, Boyle forced a turnover, drew another foul, and hit both shots to put the finishing touches on the Jackets.

Aggressive defensive play also characterized Boyle's game Friday. Along with her five steals, she deflected the ball on numerous occasions, which often led to turnovers.

Leonard inserts Boyle into the lineup at the 15- or 16-minute mark of each half to change the tempo and mix up the opposing team.

Although she would like to be a starter, Boyle says she has become accustomed to her role. "It works out best this way for the team," said the 5-11 senior co-captain.

"When I go in we change defenses, try to speed it up and change the pace of the game," Boyle said.

Despite fuUcourt pressure that forced the \ellow Jackets into 16 turnovers, Duke had trouble defensively. Georgia Tech, last in the Atlantic Coast Conference with an 0-9 record, was playing the contest without 6-6 Dolores Bootz, who leads the team in scoring and rebounding.

"We have a lot of trouble getting up for the game and staying intense against the weaker teams," said Boyle. Two of Duke's four conference losses have come against Wake Forest (3-5 in the ACC).

"We know that we are lacking consistency. We know that we have real stale periods in a basketball game," Leonard said. "But we can't find an answer."

Leonard said a change in the lineup or defense could be the solution to the problem. When Duke is able to main­tain concentration for a full 40 minutes, Leonard said, "we are going to peak, and hopefully that will be around tour­nament time."

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Page 15: Monday TH0 E CHRONICLE

MONDAY, JANUARY 28, 1985 SPORTSWRAP

SPORTSWRAP. YOUR SOURCE FOR COMPLETE DUKE BASKETBALL COVERAGE. ALL THE QUOTES. ALL THE AGATE. EVERY MONDAY.

ODID PRESIDENT

9 PETER HA/SPORTSWRAP

Joanne Boyle, Duke's other "sixth starter," came off the bench to score 19 points and make five steals.

The Duke University Union is searching for a new leader You can become that leader if you have the will and initiative.

Anyone within the Duke

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Pick up an application at

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Interviews will be held Monday, February 11. This is your chance to make a difference in Duke's extracurricular environment —

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Summer Session 1985 Term 1

May 9-June 22 Term II

June 25-August 8

R.A. Positions The Summer Resident Advisor Program offers a unique opportunity to initiate and implement cultural, educational, athletic, and recreational programs. Summer RAs gain practical experience in human and public relations while encouraging a meaningful academic and social group living experience for all resident students.

The award for the resident advisor includes free housing and a J650 stipend for each term which will be ctedited to the bursar account of the advisor. Undetgraduate juniors, seniors and graduate students who will be registered in the summer session are invited to apply. There will be an information

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Office of the Summer Session 121 Allen Building 684-2621

Page 16: Monday TH0 E CHRONICLE

SPORTSWRAP MONDAY, JANUARY 28, 1985

Len Bias: They know when I want the ball' By TOM FOREMAN, JR. The Associated Press

Maryland became the newest occupant of first place in the Atlantic Coast Conference Sunday after No. 16 Georgia Tech knocked off eighth-ranked North Carolina 66-62.

The Terrapins are 3-1 in the league, and raised their overal! record to 16-5 with a pair of non-conference triumphs this weekend. Coach Lefty Driesell's team knock­ed off Notre Dame 77-65 on Saturday, then beat 14th-rated Villanova 77-74 on Sunday.

AROUND THE ACC

ACC STANDINGS

Maryland Georgia Tech North Carolina Wake Forest Duke N.C. State Clemson Virginia

Conference

w 3 4 4 3 4 3 2 1

L 1 2 2 2 3 3 5 6

games Pet. .750 .667 .667 .600 ,571 .500 .286 .143

All games W 16 15 14 12 14 11 10 10

L Pet. 5 .762 3 .833 4 .778 5 .706 3 .824 6 .647 7 .588 9 .526

Both North Carolina and Georgia Tech are 4-2 in league play-

Virginia followed its first conference tr iumph on Satur­day - a 58-56 victory over Wake Forest - with a 54-52 vic­tory over Arkansas.

Also on Saturday, Louisville avoided its fifth straight loss with an 84-78 triumph over N.C. State.

At College Park, Len Bias provided the spark that helped Maryland to its third straight victory. The the 6-8 junior forward scored nine of his career-high 30 points after

Villanova had pulled to within two points. "They know when I want the ball," Bias said. "I get that

expression on my face and slap my hands a couple of times." Guard Keith Gatlin said he knew who would get his

team points in the clutch. "When the game's close and we need a basket, I go to

Lenny," Gatlin said. Ed Pinckney scored a career-high 29 points for Villanova,

which is 13-4 after having a four-game winning streak snapped. Gary McLain scored 12 for the Wildcats, and Dwayne McClain had 13.

John Salley scored 11 points in the second half, including a three-point play to propel the Yellow Jackets into a tie for second place in the conference with the Tar Heels.

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