IFC elects president, other officers - Duke Digital Collections

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THE CHRONICLE FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 17, 1989 DUKE UNIVERSITY DURHAM, NORTH CAROLINA CIRCULATION: 15,000 VOL. 85, NO. 59 Brodie agrees to examine CIA presence By ANN HEIMBERGER President Keith Brodie agreed to three resolutions Thursday in a meeting with students protest- ing CIA recruitment on campus. Approximately 30 students protested the presence of CIA recruiters Nov. 7 on Chapel Quad while 28 students were in- terviewed by the CIA. Seven student protesters pres- ented Brodie with a petition in- cluding about 250 signatures, ac- cording to Shawn Thompson, a Trinity junior. The petition made three requests: that Brodie file a Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) request with the CIA; that the administration require members of the University to reveal any ties to the CIA; and that the University not allow the CIA to recruit at the University. The FOIA allows an individual to obtain public information from any federal executive agency. According to the first resolu- tion, David Adcock, University counsel, will file a request under the FOIA with the CIA for docu- ments concerning CIA activity at the University. Alex Charns, a Durham attorney who has had Runoff for top ASDU post today From staff reports Trinity juniors Jon Feibel and Connie Pearcy will square off for the ASDU presidency in today's runoff election. ASDU plans to open polling stations from 9 a.m. until 5 p.m. outside the Boyd-Pishko Cafeteria, outside the Cam- bridge Inn, in the lobby of Trent Drive Hall and in the East Campus Union. In Wednesday's general election, Pearcy received 908 votes, or 35.4 percent, short of the 50 percent required by AS- DU's bylaws for an outright victory, according to official ASDU results. Feibel garnered 765 votes, or 29.8 percent. Trinity juniors Dimitri Korahais and Rob Clough received 573 votes (22.3 per- cent) and 321 votes (12.5 per- cent), respectively. Only the top two candidates face each other in a runoff, ac- cording to ASDU rules. Weather Beat those Heels: Wear a coat while you're watching the Blue Devils demolish Carolina Saturday — temps will be in the 30s. BOB KAPLAN/THE CHRONICLE 7, Students, shown here protesting CIA recruitment Nov. reached agreement with Brodie on three points Thursday. with the FOIA, tiohal file] is nebulous. It can be experience predicted that the only informa- tion the CIA will release is an- nouncements of recruiting and correspondence regarding inter- view dates and times. The FOIA includes nine ex- emptions, such as classified files or operational files, Charns said. The contents of these files do not have to be released under the act. "The definition [of opera- changed depending on whose reading [the act]," he said. According to the second resolu- tion, Brodie will post a listing of grants received by faculty, in- cluding CIA funding. Brodie could not be reached for comment Thursday. In addition to possible CIA funding of research, the See CIA on page 7 Academic Council blasts plans for science facility By CHRIS O'BRIEN Faculty representatives ex- pressed concern over several aspects of an interim report on the Science Resource Ini- tiative (SRI) presented to the Academic Council Thursday. SRI is a massive $70 million proposed science facility designed to alleviate over- crowding in present science facilities and to encourage in- terdisciplinary research. Among the faculty mem- ber's concerns about SRI were its funding, the aesthetics of the building, parking for the facility and the allocation of space within the building. "What people are still wor- ried about are the particular-' s," said Ron Corley, associate professor of microbiology and immunology and a member of the basic science faculty steer- ing committee from the Medi- cal Center, in an interview af- ter the meeting. "It's very nat- ural to have these kinds of concerns." Presenting the report was Charles Putman, vice presi- dent for research administra- tion and policy, and Melvyn Lieberman, director of graduate studies in cell biology. Their reports focused on the progress made in recent weeks on SRI and the location of the preferred site. "This is a big project and not without risk," Putman said. "We've made sure it wouldn't compromise current faculty needs." "We have a way to go," he added. "We don't have all the answers, but we hope to soon." Putman and Lieberman touched on such areas as funding of the project, gover- nance and location. SRI will await final approval before the full Board of Trustees in December, they said. Follow- ing their reports, Lieberman excused himself to attend a prior committment, leaving Putnam to field a series of See SRI on page 7 Closed decisions about computing bring criticism By REVA BHATIA This article is the second in a se- ries on Project Nexus and the University's computing systems. Although the Computing at Duke Committee (CDC) will dis- band next month, it has not com- pleted an overall plan for funding computing on campus and has been accused of disregarding the needs of student computer users. Furthermore, the CDC has yet to consider problems with under- graduate computer clusters, financing for the clusters and un- dergraduate access to computers, said Pat Skarulis, vice president for information systems and vice- chair of the CDC. "Given the time frame and the number of tasks it faces, I don't see how the CDC is going to ad- dress all these issues," Skarulis said. There are now 116 under- graduates per public Macintosh CLIFF BURNS/THE CHRONICLE Students and administrators alike say students like Trinity ju- nior Lorraine Cornwell don't have enough computing facilities. computer, 40 students per MS- DOS IBM-compatible computer and 1140 students per LaserWriter printer in Univer- sity clusters. This rate is well below Project Nexus's stated goal of one machine for every 20 un- dergraduates. "What we're trying to do at Duke is have people graduate with some sort of computer liter- acy, [but] there's not enough computer facilities and education on campus to make students computer-literate," said Ric Wil- son, ASDU vice president for aca- demic affairs. However, members of the Aca- demic Computing department said that while they recognize their work in the area of student computing has not been ade- quate, further improvements will be extremely expensive. Aca- demic Computing has recently upgraded clusters in the Engi- neering Building, Carr Building and Perkins Library. "The top-of-the-line Macintosh 512KE computers we bought in the fall of 1986 . . . have gone out of date in three years," said Dr. Alton Brantley, director of aca- demic computing. "If we wanted See NEXUS on page 5 IFC elects president, other officers From staff reports The Interfraternity Council (IFC) elected its Executive Coun- cil for 1990 at a meeting Thursday night. Chris Nolan, a Trinity junior and member of Delta Tau Delta (Delts) fraternity, was elected president of the IFC. His term will begin spring semester after a transition period lasting until the end of this term. Nolan was formerly recording secretary for the IFC. As president, Nolan said he hopes to encourage "interfraternity cohesiveness" and to "enhance the image of fraternities" on campus. He said he hopes to achieve this, in part, by sponsoring events of interest to non-greeks. Since approximately 25 per- cent of the student body belong to fraternities, Nolan said he sees •greek life as playing a very im- portant role at the University. "It is imperative to blend both social [functions]and service," he said. Other Executive Council of- ficers elected are as follows: Executive vice president — Ted Wang, a Trinity junior and member of Sigma Phi Epsilon (SPE) Rush vice presidents Trinity juniors Don Flannigan, a CLIFF BURNS/THE CHRONICLE See IFC on page 12 • Chris Nolan

Transcript of IFC elects president, other officers - Duke Digital Collections

THE CHRONICLE FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 17, 1989 DUKE UNIVERSITY DURHAM, NORTH CAROLINA CIRCULATION: 15,000 VOL. 85, NO. 59

Brodie agrees to examine CIA presence By ANN HEIMBERGER

President Keith Brodie agreed to three resolutions Thursday in a meeting with students protest­ing CIA recruitment on campus.

Approximately 30 students protested the presence of CIA recruiters Nov. 7 on Chapel Quad while 28 students were in­terviewed by the CIA.

Seven student protesters pres­ented Brodie with a petition in­cluding about 250 signatures, ac­cording to Shawn Thompson, a Trinity junior. The petition made three requests: that Brodie file a Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) request with the CIA; that the administration require members of the University to reveal any ties to the CIA; and that the University not allow the CIA to recruit at the University.

The FOIA allows an individual to obtain public information from any federal executive agency.

According to the first resolu­tion, David Adcock, University counsel, will file a request under the FOIA with the CIA for docu­ments concerning CIA activity at the University. Alex Charns, a Durham attorney who has had

Runoff for top ASDU post today From staff reports

Trinity juniors Jon Feibel and Connie Pearcy will square off for the ASDU presidency in today's runoff election.

ASDU plans to open polling stations from 9 a.m. until 5 p.m. outside the Boyd-Pishko Cafeteria, outside the Cam­bridge Inn, in the lobby of Trent Drive Hall and in the East Campus Union.

In Wednesday's general election, Pearcy received 908 votes, or 35.4 percent, short of the 50 percent required by AS­DU's bylaws for an outright victory, according to official ASDU results.

Feibel garnered 765 votes, or 29.8 percent.

Trinity juniors Dimitri Korahais and Rob Clough received 573 votes (22.3 per­cent) and 321 votes (12.5 per­cent), respectively.

Only the top two candidates face each other in a runoff, ac­cording to ASDU rules.

Weather Beat those Heels: Wear a coat while you're watching the Blue Devils demolish Carolina Saturday — temps will be in the 30s.

BOB KAPLAN/THE CHRONICLE

7, Students, shown here protesting CIA recruitment Nov. reached agreement with Brodie on three points Thursday.

with the FOIA, tiohal file] is nebulous. It can be experience predicted that the only informa­tion the CIA will release is an­nouncements of recruiting and correspondence regarding inter­view dates and times.

The FOIA includes nine ex­emptions, such as classified files or operational files, Charns said. The contents of these files do not have to be released under the act. "The definition [of opera-

changed depending on whose reading [the act]," he said.

According to the second resolu­tion, Brodie will post a listing of grants received by faculty, in­cluding CIA funding. Brodie could not be reached for comment Thursday.

In addition to possible CIA funding of research, the

See CIA on page 7 •

Academic Council blasts plans for science facility By CHRIS O'BRIEN

Faculty representatives ex­pressed concern over several aspects of an interim report on the Science Resource Ini­tiative (SRI) presented to the Academic Council Thursday.

SRI is a massive $70 million proposed science facility designed to alleviate over­crowding in present science facilities and to encourage in­terdisciplinary research.

Among the faculty mem­ber's concerns about SRI were its funding, the aesthetics of the building, parking for the facility and the allocation of space within the building.

"What people are still wor­ried about are the particular-' s," said Ron Corley, associate professor of microbiology and immunology and a member of the basic science faculty steer­ing committee from the Medi­cal Center, in an interview af­ter the meeting. "It's very nat­ural to have these kinds of concerns."

Presenting the report was Charles Putman, vice presi­dent for research administra­tion and policy, and Melvyn Lieberman, director of graduate studies in cell biology. Their reports focused on the progress made in recent weeks on SRI and the location of the preferred site. "This is a big project and not without risk," Putman said. "We've made sure it wouldn't compromise current faculty needs."

"We have a way to go," he added. "We don't have all the answers, but we hope to soon."

Putman and Lieberman touched on such areas as funding of the project, gover­nance and location. SRI will await final approval before the full Board of Trustees in December, they said. Follow­ing their reports, Lieberman excused himself to attend a prior committment, leaving Putnam to field a series of

See SRI on page 7 •

Closed decisions about computing bring criticism By REVA BHATIA This article is the second in a se­ries on Project Nexus and the University's computing systems.

Although the Computing at Duke Committee (CDC) will dis­band next month, it has not com­pleted an overall plan for funding computing on campus and has been accused of disregarding the needs of student computer users.

Furthermore, the CDC has yet to consider problems with under­graduate computer clusters, financing for the clusters and un­dergraduate access to computers, said Pat Skarulis, vice president for information systems and vice-chair of the CDC.

"Given the time frame and the number of tasks it faces, I don't see how the CDC is going to ad­dress all these issues," Skarulis said.

There are now 116 under­graduates per public Macintosh

CLIFF BURNS/THE CHRONICLE

Students and administrators alike say students like Trinity ju­nior Lorraine Cornwell don't have enough computing facilities.

computer, 40 students per MS-DOS IBM-compatible computer and 1140 students per LaserWriter printer in Univer­sity clusters. This rate is well

below Project Nexus's stated goal of one machine for every 20 un­dergraduates.

"What we're trying to do at Duke is have people graduate

with some sort of computer liter­acy, [but] there's not enough computer facilities and education on campus to make students computer-literate," said Ric Wil­son, ASDU vice president for aca­demic affairs.

However, members of the Aca­demic Computing department said that while they recognize their work in the area of student computing has not been ade­quate, further improvements will be extremely expensive. Aca­demic Computing has recently upgraded clusters in the Engi­neering Building, Carr Building and Perkins Library.

"The top-of-the-line Macintosh 512KE computers we bought in the fall of 1986 . . . have gone out of date in three years," said Dr. Alton Brantley, director of aca­demic computing. "If we wanted

See NEXUS on page 5 •

IFC elects president, other officers From staff reports

The Interfraternity Council (IFC) elected i ts Executive Coun­cil for 1990 at a meeting Thursday night.

Chris Nolan, a Trinity junior and member of Delta Tau Delta (Delts) fraternity, was elected president of the IFC. His term will begin spring semester after a transition period lasting until the end of this term.

Nolan was formerly recording

secretary for the IFC. As president, Nolan said he

hopes to encourage "interfraternity cohesiveness" and to "enhance the image of fraternities" on campus. He said he hopes to achieve this, in part, by sponsoring events of interest to non-greeks.

Since approximately 25 per­cent of the student body belong to fraternities, Nolan said he sees •greek life as playing a very im­

portant role at the University. "It is imperative to blend both

social [functions]and service," he said.

Other Executive Council of­ficers elected are as follows:

• Executive vice president — Ted Wang, a Trinity junior and member of Sigma Phi Epsilon (SPE)

Rush vice presidents — Trinity juniors Don Flannigan, a CLIFF BURNS/THE CHRONICLE

See IFC on page 12 • Chris Nolan

PAGE 2 THE CHRONICLE FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 17, 1989

World & National Newsfile Associated Press

Reagan to produce papers: A federal judge Thursday approved a subpoena that would compel former President Reagan to produce personal records by next Wednesday for the criminal trial of John Poindexter.

Walesa stresses support: Soli­darity leader Lech Walesa declared Thursday "the Iron Curtain is no more" but also said the West will be to blame if Poland's experiment in democracy fails for lack of economic support.

Israeli heart transplanted: The heart of an Israeli soldier ambushed and killed by Arab guerrillas was transplanted into a Palestinian on Thursday, a gift of life that family members said transcends the bitter war between Arab and Jew.

Vaccine may be developed:A vaccine developed using genetic engi­neering techniques produces long-term contraception in female mice, but use of a similar vaccine to provide birth control for women is probably at least a decade away, researchers reported.

Trade deficit fa l ls : The nations merchandise trade deficit in Septem­ber tumbled to $7.9 billion, its smallest imbalance in nearly five years, the gov­ernment said Thursday in a report that analysts viewed as evidence of strong overseas economies but weak­ness at home.

Jesuit priests killed, mutilated in El Salvador By DOUGLAS MINE Associated Press

SAN SALVADOR, El Salvador — Armed men killed and mutilated six Je­suit priests, their housekeeper and her daughter Thursday after bursting into their house at a leading university. A priest quoted witnesses as saying govern­ment forces were involved.

The government denied responsibility, condemned the slayings as "savage and ir­rational" and said an investigation was under way.

The U.S. National Council of Churches also denounced the slayings, and the U.S. ambassador said the slayings would have a "negative impact" on President Alfredo Cristiani's rightist government.

Two witnesses said about 30 uniformed police or army soldiers entered the cam­pus before dawn and killed the eight "with lavish barbarity," said the Rev. Jose Maria Tojeira, the Jesuit order leader for Central America. "For example, they (the troops) took out their brains."

Roman Catholic Archbishop Arturo Rivera Damas compared the killings to the slaying of his predecessor, Oscar Ar-nulfo Romero. That 1980 assassination marked the beginning of years of killings and kidnappings by right-wing death squads.

"If this spiral of violence continues, death and destruction will sweep away many, especially those who are of most use to our people," said Rivera Damas af­ter leading a prayer over the mutilated bodies.

The slayings came on the sixth day of fierce combat around this capital follow­

ing an attack by leftist Farabundo Marti National Liberation Front (FMLN) guer­rillas.

The dead included Ignacio Ellacuria, rector of Jose Simeon Canas Central American University, and vice-rector Ig­nacio Martin-Baro, the country's leading expert on polls and polling procedures. The other dead priests, all educators,

were Segundo Montes, Amado Lopez, Juan Ramon Moreno and Joaquin Lopez Lopez.

A servant, Julia Elba Ramos, and her 15-year-old daughter Celina, also were killed, said Tojeira.

"They did not want to leave witnesses," said Eduardo Valdez, director of Jesuit studies at the university.

German Parliament to reform By CAROL WILLIAMS Associated Press

WEST BERLIN — The East German leadership agreed Thursday to give more than one-third of the seats in the new Cabinet to non-Communists, who now have only four, sources involved in the negotiations reported.

Sources in the Liberal Democrats, one of four small parties that have been allied with the Communists, said Premier Hans Modrow would reduce the Cabinet from 44 members to 26 or 27 and assign at least 11 ministries to non-Communists. A West German newspaper reported a Lutheran Church leader and a prominent lawyer would be among those named.

Chancellor Helmut Kohl of West Germany said people of East Germany must decide on German reunification, but the top Kremlin adviser on Ger­

man affairs ruled it out. Nikolai Portugalov said in an inter­

view with the Soviet news agency Novosti there will be two German states "for the foreseeable future and also in the long term."

Mass emigration and pro-democracy protest have created great pressure for reform in East Germany. The Liberal Democrats have said they will ask Par­liament on Friday to eliminate the con­stitutional provision of a "leading role" that guarantees supremacy to the Communist Party.

The Communist Party ousted 27 of its representatives from Parliament, including former hard-line leader Erich Honecker and his wife, Margot, who previously was fired as education minister. The others were mainly hard-line officials associated with Honecker's rule.

DUKE DRAMA |9

MEDAL> OF HQNO-Po

by TOM COLE

starring FRANK LENTRICCHIA CHARLES ST. CLAIR , RICHARD A. WHITE

Benefiting Durham Veterans Administration Hospital Threshold Club House African Art History resources at Duke Univ.

Nov 2 8 - D e c 3, 8:00 pm

S H E A F E R THEATER, Bryan Center

Donation / Admission - $10.00 For tickets call Page Box Office 684-4444

There will be no late seating

TELEVISION Film and Video Program

Student Organization Meeting

Friday, November 17,

4:00 pm

Video Screening room Bryan Center L^vel 2 and

Pre-Broadcast Preview:

TED KOPPLE COVERS TIANAMEN SQUARE

(a Paper Tiger Television production)

All Students interested in our Paper Tiger Television production project are welcome.

FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 17 ,1989 THE CHRONICLE PAGE 3

Students, Durhamites hold vigil to publicize plight of homeless

By BRYAN GARNER

Not Jus t Numbers, a hunger and home­lessness awareness week was highlighted by an all-night vigil Thursday night in front of the Chapel. In spite of the cold weather, a small but spirited group of stu­dents and homeless people from the Dur­ham community joined together in an ef­fort to raise awareness about the home­less.

The group of about 30 people gathered at 9 p.m. at the Bryan Center walkway, singing songs by candlelight and telling stories about coping with hunger and homelessness. More people joined in as the group proceded to the Chapel, where they camped out for the night.

Trinity junior Adam Spilker, co-presi­dent of the University chapter of Habitat for Humanity, said the vigil is intended "to make everyone aware of the issues of hunger and homelessness . . . so if you go by us tonight you are going to question how you are helping or hurting the home­less problem."

This is the third annual vigil held dur­ing hunger and homelessness awareness

week. According to Spilker, this is the sec­ond time the vigil has taken place in the midst of a cold front. "It's fortuitous in some ways, to make us really feel uncom­fortable and feel what its like to be with­out shelter."

A group of about 60 people gathered for last year's vigil, Spilker said.

Trinity senior Ted Smith, fundraising director for Habitat for Humanity, said to the group on the walkway, "Tonight we're remembering our brothers and sisters who are going to bed hungry, and we're reminding our brothers and sisters who are sleeping in the dorms and going to bed full."

He stressed that "we'll always be a fam­ily . . . part of a larger whole . . . it's us who's out there on the street." To unite the group, Smith asked everyone par­ticipating to greet the person next to them with a hug.

Many homeless from the community shelter spoke before the group. "I was very depressed . . . I had suicidal tendencies," said Harry Miller, a man from the shelter. "I tell you what has

CLIFF BURNS/THE CHRONICLE

Willie Tigs of Durham made posters by the Chapel along with other students and Durham residents during an all-night vigil for the homeless. saved me — the volunteers. If you haven't volunteered before, please come because you can save a life."

Rick Speares, a Durham homeless man, said, "It's been pretty cold out today. Some of us have been outside all day . . . huddled together wherever we can. We care and want to do something about it."

David Johnson, a resident of the shel­ter, shared some of his poetry with the group and songs were led by Rob Trawick,

a Trinity senior, with his guitar playing. Terry Allebaugh, director of the com­

munity shelter, asked the group, "What are we doing?" By bringing homeless from the shelter to speak before the group, he said he wanted to show that "We all have names . . . sometimes we feel that they're not part of us. I hope [the vigil is] a start­ing point to reach out to those other parts of the community and let them know your name."

Committee considering modifications to alcohol policy By MARTHA CARSON

While the University campus may not go "dry" in the future, illegal alcohol use will be more closely regulated if a commit­tee on alcohol policy formed in February has any say.

The primary goal of the committee is not to make the University campus dry, stressed Maureen Cullins, assistant to the vice president of student affairs and chair of the Committee to Review Alco­holic Beverage Regulations.

Instead, the committee will modify the current policy and possibly create new rules concerning student alcohol con­sumption.

The exclusion of freshman from all open parties during the first two weeks of the fall semester was a recommendation made at the end of spring semester by the Committee to Review Alcoholic Beverage

Regulations, said Cathy Karr, president of the Panhellenic Council.

The current alcohol policy was imple­mented in the fall of 1986 and basically duplicates the North Carolina state law, said Suzanne Wasiolek, dean of student life.

Groups that distribute alcohol are re­sponsible for monitoring those served and ensuring underage individuals are not served. Non-alcoholic beverages must also be available at campus social events, Wasiolek said.

Each Sept. 1, about 25 percent of the undergraduate population is 21 or older, she said.

In addition, parties on campus must be registered if the event is in a non-residen­tial facility, if there is more than one guest per member of the group sponsoring the event, if there is sound amplification

placed or directed outside or if there are more than 200 in attendance, Wasiolek said.

Special permission is required for alco­hol to be served at such gatherings, she said. Parties need not be registered and alcohol may be served if the sponsoring group cards guests and none of the four

guidelines are met, she said. Eliminating problem areas such as un­

registered parties and factors that promote alcohol abuse is a concern of the committee, Cullins said. The committee wants to stem abuse, property damage and alcohol-related incidents such as

See ALCOHOL on page 12 •

Correction A Nov. 15 Page 1 article incorrectly identified the process by which an ASDU

presidential candidate can be elected. To avoid a runoff, the top candidate must receive more than 50 percent of all the ballots cast. The incorrect information was obtained from outdated ASDU bylaws, not Attorney General Joan Tao.

Also a Nov. 16 Page 4 article incorrectly stated that a dance faculty member has been named to replace the late Julia Wray as coordinator of the Duke Dance program. No one has been named to this position.

The Chronicle regrets the errors.

Graduate and Professional Students Fellowship

sponsors a

BIBLE STUDY on the book of

ISAIAH Led by Dr. Lloyd Bailey,

Professor of Old Testament Duke Divinity School

Sunday, November 12: Introduction to Isaiah

Sunday, November 19: Matthew's Use of Isaiah

Sunday^ December 3: Lectlonary Study on Isaiah Seven

Sunday, December 10: Lectionary Study on

Isaiah Eleven

6:00 p.m. Duke Chapel Basement

DUKE UNIVERSITY MUSEUM OF ART

presents a series of lectures in conjunction with the exhibit

-$Q Wmi

Tfie 4rf Museums of tow's /. KaA/i Sunday, November 19, at 2:30 p.m.:

Annabel Wharton, Associate Professor of Art History, Duke University, "Robert Venturi and Louis I. Kahn - Beyond Modem-ism. "

Richard Pommer, Sheldon H. Solow Professor in the History of Architecture, Institute of Fine Arts, New York U., "Kahn, Mies, and the New Museum of Art."

Sunday, December 3, at 2:30 p.m.:

Helen Searing, Alice Pratt Brown Professor of Art, Smith College, "The Contemporary Museum and the Legacy of Louis I. Kahn."

Rosemarie Bletter, Architectural Historian, Professor City Uni­versity of New York. "The Museum in International Context: Mirror or Producer of Culture?"

Hey Mon, We Be Jammin

PAGE 4 THE CHRONICLE FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 17 ,1989

Savoyards present two Gilbert and Sullivans for price of one By JENNIFER JACKSON

The Durham Savoyards, a local musical theater ensemble, will offer a Gilbert and Sullivan potpourri tonight and Saturday with their 1989 special presentation of "Trial by Jury" and "Places Please! A Savoyard Symphony."

This year, the Savoyards decided to combine the two separate musicals for one special fall showing because "each show is only half an evening long, so com­bined, they make a whole show," said Pepper Fluke, the program's producer.

The group, which performs only Gilbert and Sullivan, usually presents only one production a year, during the spring, Fluke said.

"Trial by Jury," a one-act operetta, is the shortest piece ever written by Gilbert

and Sullivan. Even though "Trial by Jury" is a relatively short musical, it still con­tains the traditional characteristics of a love struggle ended by a grand finale, a structure that has become the Gilbert and Sullivan trademark. The operetta is a "typical Gilbert and Sullivan and it's com­pletely ridiculous,'-' Fluke noted.

"Places Please! A Savoyard Symphony" was commissioned by the Savoyards last year in commemoration of their 25th an­niversary. The symphony combines duets, love songs and comical bantering per­formed by means of chorus, orchestra and soloists. Fluke said "Places Please!" can best be described as a "collage of Gilbert and Sullivan which contains little bits of all their works."

Outstanding songs and words were

taken from each musical by the composer of the tribute, Benjamin Keaton, a mem­ber of the ensemble, Fluke wrote in a description of the work. Keaton then in­tertwined the jumbled music into a con­cert of Gilbert and Sullivan's best work, Fluke said.

The Durham Savoyards is a non-profit organization formed in 1963 and is af­filiated with the Durham Arts Council. During the 26 years of their existence, the Savoyards have performed all 13 Gilbert and Sullivan operas. This will be their fourth production of "Trial by Jury," while "Places Please!" had its premier last fall.

Over the years, the membership of the Savoyards has expanded from Durham to other towns in the Triangle area, Fluke said. Many members of the University

community are involved. The Gilbert and Sullivan potpourri will

be shown at Page Auditorium b«th to­night and Saturday, at 8 pm. Saturday's showing is for reserved seating only while Friday night is open for general admis­sion. General tickets can be purchased at Page Box Office for $9, while children un­der 12 and seniors 65 and over must pay $5. University students with identifica­tion can obtain tickets for $5 at the Office of Residential Life in Flowers Building. These tickets must be obtained in ad­vance and they are for Friday night's per­formance only.

This spring, The Savoyards will present the Gilbert and Sullivan operetta "Ruddigore.

Drama students direct, act on their own By BEAU DURE

Duke Drama is offering a journey through time and space this weekend with a workshop production of "On The Verge."

The production will run in East Duke Theater tonight through Saturday, with performances at 7:30 p.m. and 9 p.m. on those nights and a noon show on Sunday.

The production is a workshop featuring students in the drama program's acting and directing classes. Trinity senior Stephanie Niznik and Trinity sophomores Heather Raikes and Claire Lautier play the lead charac­ters, while Trinity senior Stan Kirsch plays four differ­ent characters encountered by the leads.

Trinity sophomore Andrew Utter, who makes his di­rectorial debut in the production, said the play has a "Mary Poppins kind of ambience." The play begins in 1889, when the three lead characters venture to a jungle called Terra Incognita, then find that they have begun to travel in time as well as space, Utter said.

The play's humor derives from the changes in the

characters' vocabularies as they pick up changes in lan­guage during their time travel. "[It is] a play about what has happened to language in our century," Utter said.

The production will include only the first act of the play, Utter said. The set is relatively sparse in accor­dance with the wishes of the playwright, he said.

"On The Verge," subtitled "Or The Geography Of Learning," was written by American playwright Eric Overmyer, whom Utter described as "one of the most im­portant playwrights in America today." The play was first performed professionally in 1985.

The play's complicated plot poses a challenge to the di­rector, Utter said. "Everybody warned me how difficult it was," he said.

Kirsch noted that a major source of difficulty in the play is the need to strike a balance between a "straight" reading and runaway improvisation. Although the play­wright allows much space for invention, "if you overdo it, you're playing for the purpose of playing," Kirsch said.

CUFF BURNS/THE CHRONICLE

Drama students rehearsing for "On The Verge."

for

Spring 1990 Season

THE TROJAN WOMEN Of Euripides

Mainstage Production Directed by Susan Chapek November 27 and 28

OLD COOTS READ GENESIS 1 THROUGH 8

(KING JAMES VERSION) Conceived and Directed by Johnny Simons

November 29

An Earful of Lickings An American farce by Yussef El Guindi

Directed by Jody McAuliffe December 2 and 3

John CCum Worfefiop (Project December 5

All auditions will be held in East Campus Union Ballroom for _, information/appointments call 684-2306

Scripts and sign-up sheets available in Bivins 206

Lecture Series on China's Future (Section 2)

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Topic: Two dilemmas: democratilization and new Authoritarianism in China, (also about the Paris conference on Chinese Democracy movement at the end of Sept.)

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FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 17 ,1989 THE CHRONICLE PAGE 5

CDC's closed decisions cause administrative, student ire • NEXUS from page 1 to replace 200 computers, at $2,500 each, every three years, you're talking fairly large amounts of money."

To replace outdated equipment, Brantley said the Ac­ademic Computing center began setting aside deprecia­tion money with every purchase of hardware this year.

Prior to this, University policy would not allow Aca­demic Computing to set aside money for depreciation be­cause it was considered an academic department.

In addition, the University has developed a four-year financing plan to help students purchase computers from tae computer store. Since the plan began this se­mester, 89 students have used it to buy a computer.

Administrators and computer users said they have been disappointed with the CDC's plans to fund comput­ing in the near future. "There needs to be more funding for computing; it's got to be recognized as an essential part of the academic environment," Brantley said.

But Provost Phillip Griffiths, chair of the CDC, said, "the funding mechanism is in place."

Griffiths said the CDC plans to fund the new com­puter network, DukeNet, with a 15 percent increase in University telephone rates, beginning July 1, 1990. This increase will apply to all University telephones, includ­ing dormitory, office and hospital patient phones.

The cost of the new IBM mainframe will be covered by a debt-financed bond, reserves created by a 10 percent surcharge on computer sales in the University store and the $300,000 per year that was previously budgeted for the Triangle Universities Computation Center (TUCC).

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However Wilson said he is frustrated that though the University has planned to increase phone bills, it has not actually increased its computing budget.

Furthermore, students and computer users on campus have called on the CDC to take users' views into account during committee meetings.

The CDC currently has no student representatives. It is made up of three faculty representatives, two Medical Center representatives and two representatives from administrative services, in addition to Griffiths and Skarulis.

The CDC maintains a policy of closed meetings, but it has met with interested parties outside the committee on two occasions, said Jim Mitchell, a graduate student in the School of Forestry and Environmental Studies and a frequent TUCC user. Mitchell has been a strong critic of the CDC.

"Nobody who is a user has much contact with the CDC," Mitchell said. "They don't seem to be very inter­ested in user issues. . . . The CDC offers no representa­tion for our point of view."

The closed meeting policy and the lack of student rep­

resentation on the committee have contributed to an at­mosphere of "uncertainty" and "frustration" among Uni­versity computer users and support staff members, said Academic Computing's Brantley.

Griffiths said he does not plan to add a student repre­sentative to any successor committee to the CDC. "I think certainly within each school there needs to be some student input, while at this level we don't need un­dergraduate students worrying about [details of computing]," he said.

However, ASDU's Wilson said there are a number of students who are extremely familiar with the Universi­ty's computer systems and problems.

"Students here know what they need. A lot of students here would give very valid input to the CDC," he said.

Brantley also expressed frustration that the Academic Computing department is not represented on the CDC.

"We're trying to provide the best darn facilities that can be made, but there's the sense that our thoughts and ideas have not had an open forum," he said. "We have a lot of real, tangible experience and information that we haven't been able to share with the CDC."

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FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 17 ,1989 THE CHRONICLE PAGE 7

Academic Council not at all happy with SRI funding, parking • SRI from page 1 critical questions from the floor.

Among those offering criticism on the report was Corley, who said he was wor­ried that the proposed method for financ­ing the building would drain individual Medical Center departments of much needed resources, especially ones for faculty development.

"I'm very much in favor of SRI," Corley said. "It's an extremely important goal. My concern's really come down to the financing of the building."

Putman said some funding doubts may have resulted from a lack of a clear under­standing as to how the funding would work.

Parking and transportation also raised a series of questions from faculty mem­bers. Robert Hochmuth, chair of the me­chanical engineering and materials sci­ence department, said his "faculty is uni­formly opposed to the site" because of parking.

Citing the already cramped parking situation along Science Drive and the in­creasingly heavy traffic, Hochmuth said adding a building the size of SRI without adequate parking would "decrease the

quality of life at Duke." "There is no doubt the parking situa­

tion needs to be addressed," Putman said. Edward Shaughnessy, professor of me­

chanical engineering and materials sci­ence, blasted the aesthetic quality of the SRI building. "I don't know how many people have walked down to that site," he said. "You're going to get this ugly, mon­strous building stuck in this hole."

Several faculty members said they were

worried about the allocation of the open space in SRI. "Many of my colleagues fear that this will become a Medical Center building," Hochmuth said.

The council asked Putman to clarify how non-departmental space would be al­located in the building. Putman replied by saying such a policy has yet to be fully de­veloped.

The question and answer period ended with Kenneth Knoerr, professor of for­

estry and environmental studies, explain­ing that the facilities and environmental committee, of which he is a member, has not yet approved the site being discussed for SRI. That question will be put to vote in a committee meeting Monday, he said.

Knoerr requested that members of the engineering department attend the meet­ing so the committee could make a well-informed decision regarding the site.

Brodie agrees to examine CIA campus presence • CIA from page 1 protesters are interested in learning of any other ties the University may have with the CIA. They want to know if any professors are acting as spotters for the CIA, said Joe Cole, a graduate student and one of the protesters.

Spotters evaluate students and send in recommendations to the CIA, which does a background check on the student with­out his or her lnowledge, he added.

The protesters also hope to learn if any individual or group on campus is under CIA surveillance or investigation. The

CIA will put a group under surveillance if the group openly opposes the U.S. govern­ment or the CIA, Cole said.

According to the third resolution, Wil­liam Griffith, vice president for student affairs, will chair a committee to set guidelines for recruitment within the University placement services. Griffith said he hopes to have the committee orga­nized before winter break so a policy can be in effect by fall 1990.

The committee will probably include representatives from ASDU, the

Graduate and Professional Student Coun­cil, the Academic Council and possibly an attorney to advise on legal matters.

Griffith did not give an example of guidelines or criteria that would be em­ployed in advising placement services. "There are no absolutes on these questions," he said.

The protesters hope one of the criteria used to judge potential recruiters on cam­pus will be employment discrimination.

Jamie O'Brien contributed to this arti­cle.

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EDITORIALS PAGE 8 NOVEMBER 17 ,1989

Letters

Vision alone won't get things accomplished

A post-Wall world It is self-evident that recent events

in Europe will go down as the most significant historical changes since World War II. The opening of the Ber­lin Wall and East Germany's rejec­tion of orthodox communism are more than evolutionary changes; they are shattering events, marking the final admission that a political order which once dominated half the planet is morally and economically bankrupt.

This realization has come much more readily to Europeans than it has to Americans. Only a few years ago, a second generation of Americans were prepared to enter a world shaped by grim Cold War realities. Back then, our hopes for change were measured in decades, not years; for many of us, it is now still too soon to accept the fact that our lives have been changed forever over the course of a few months.

Consider a few of the implications of the opening of Eastern Europe:

• The European Economic Commu­nity (EEC), which will mold Western Europe into the world's largest eco­nomic entity by 1992, is now consider­ing a future confederation that could unify Europe from the Atlantic to the Urals. While such grandiose plans are still largely theoretical, Hungary, Poland and East Germany have al­ready expressed interest in closer ties with the EEC, and the Soviets will soon follow.

• German reunification, a rallying

cry for two generations of cold war­riors, is now a tangible option. There remain doubters who suggest that Germany must and will remain divided. But the sight of thousands of Germans celebrating on both sides of the Brandenberg Gate suggests otherwise.

• After 40 years of oppression, the nations of Eastern Europe are begin­ning to reassert themselves as seperate, unique cultures. As Europe works to achieve Gorbachev's "common home," it will also have to work to accomodate people who are rediscovering their pasts after decades of forced amnesia.

Taking full advantage of these changes will require a willingness to take adventurous, even risky steps when the situation requires it. This will be the true test of George Bush's skill as a leader: can a Cold War vet­eran known for deliberacy and con­servatism handle a situation that re­quires truly revolutionary thinking?

The entire world, and Mikhail Gor­bachev in particular, will be waiting for the answer to this question when the superpower leaders meet next month. If Bush can rise to the chal­lenge, the United States will retain a voice in shaping Europe's new politi­cal order. If he cannot, we will almost certainly be passed up by those who are more willing to embrace Europe's future.

To the editor:

We were encouraged by the election results of last Tuesday. Clearly the two best candidates have emerged from the pack. It is also quite clear who should be ASDU president. Jon Feibel represents the best qualities for leadership at Duke and in ASDU. Feibel seems to grasp colle­giate politics better than his opponent; we believe this is essential to success in AS­DU. Feibel knows how to achieve goals within the system, while Connie Pearcy has always worked on the outside. Al­

though one might say that this gives her a better perspective, we know from the ide­alistic Semans administration that, with­out knowledge, vision rarely means sig­nificant change. We believe the prudent student should vote for the leader who represents their interests, and who can see those interests become a reality.

Christopher Colwell Engineering '91

Jeffrey Beard Engineering '90

Pearcy has the right qualities for a tough job

On the record / think certainly within each school there needs to be some student input, while at this level we don't need undergraduate students worrying about [computing plans]. Provost Phillip Griffiths, explaining why there are no students on the CDC.

EDITORIAL BOARD

The editorial board meets on Sundays at 1 p.m. to determine the unsigned edito­rials that appear daily on the upper left of the editorial page. The board is composed of Chronicle staff members and various at-large members, chosen at the beginning of each semester. Each board member holds one vote. Meetings, which are held in the offices on the third floor of the Flowers building, are open to the public.

T H E C H R O N I C L E established 1905

Craig Whitlock, Editor Matt Sclafani, Managing Editor Barry Eriksen, General Manager Matt McKenzie, Editorial Page Editor

Chris O'Brien, News Editor Rodney Peele, Sports Editor Beau Dure, Arts Editor Jim Flowers, Photography Editor Eric Harnish, Business Manager Linda Nettles, Production Manager

Jamie O'Brien, News Editor Keith Lublin, Features Editor

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Charles Carson, Production Supervisor Carolyn Poteet, Creative Svcs. Coord.

The opinions expressed in this newspaper are not necessarily those of Duke University, its students, workers, administration or trustees. Unsigned editorials represent the majority view of the editorial board. Columns, letters and cartoons represent the views of their authors.

Phone numbers: Editor: 684-5469; News/Features: 684-2663; Sports: 684-6115; Business Office: 684-6106; Advertising Office: 684-3811; Classifieds: 684-6106.

Editorial Office (Newsroom): Third Floor Flowers Building; Business Office: 103 West Union Building; Advertising Office: 101 West Union Building.

©1989 The Chronicle, Box 4696, Duke Station, Durham, N.C. 27706. All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced in any form without the prior, written permission of the Business Office.

To the editor:

I'm compelled to write this letter out of love for an amazing community. With so much untapped potential and so many difficult choices ahead, Duke needs the very best leadership available. For under­graduates, Connie Pearcy will provide just that.

I've worked closely with both candi­dates and find that Connie offers us the ideas and personal qualities best suited to serve as an effective president. Believe me — after this long year I know what it takes.

Connie is a tireless worker who applies a wealth of creativity and intuition to her

efforts with great common sense. And she's fair-minded; greeks, don't allow any­one to deceive you into thinking she's out to get the frats. In fact, whatever ideas she puts forward will surely help to im­prove and preserve a system we all know is under fire.

More than anything, ASDU needs to be revitalized by a variety of outside experi­ence, which only she can offer. New blood, new vision and renewed vigor to deal with a confusing range of problems — these are the things we've got to look for. Please vote for Connie on Friday.

Tommy Semans Trinity '90

Leadership is more important than experience

To the editor:

In claiming that I've "compromised" my supporters by endorsing Connie Pearcy, Jon Feibel beings up a valid question: Why would an ASDU presidential candi­date who ran a campaign based largely on ASDU experience endorse someone with limited ASDU experience?

Feibel spouted nonsense to the effect that I endorsed Connie "out of spite." Spite has nothing to do with it, as Feibel is well aware. I made my endorsement by evaluating who I believe can best lead ASDU and Duke's 5,700 undergraduates.

Although ASDU experience is an asset, we must look at all of the elements that make a good leader. I've worked with both candidates; I've spoken with many others who've worked with them. I join many of

my supporters in the belief that Connie Pearcy would be the best leader.

Connie has demonstrated outstanding leadership and initiative on a variety of issues and projects. One such project was the ASDU Blue Devil Scavanger Hunt earlier this year — the planning for which was marked by Feibel's convenient disap­pearance.

She has shown the potential for out­standing leadership. Leadership that will restore students' faith in their govern­ment. Leadership that will take ASDU in new directions.

I urge all voters — especially those who supported my candidacy — to vote for Connie Pearcy.

Dimitri Korahais Trinity'91

Pick a candidate who knows the bureaucracy

To the editor: Each year, the student body chooses a

president to lead and represent them in dealing with the faculty, the administra­tion and the Durham community. This year, Jon Feibel is that person. His expe­rience in ASDU and his concern with the day-to-day affairs of the University make him the perfect candidate for the position. Although his opponent, Connie Pearcy, has done an effective job in the positions she has held, her knowledge of the in­tricacies of the ASDU bureaucracy are minimal, at best.

Jon's campaign platform is a perfect representation of what students ask for out of ASDU. His first concern is listening to the views of each and every student at this University, not just a select group. What this school needs is a drastic im­provement in computer facilities on cam­pus, and Jon will push for this. A major concern of everyone is establishing a free,

anonymous AIDS testing program; Jon is already working for this. Pushing for East Campus improvements is another concern which Jon has addressed. His opponent has not satisfactorily addressed any of these issues.

For those of you who supported Dimitri Korahais in the first half of the election, the reason was his platform, which was very similar to Jon's. To switch your alli­ances to Connie Pearcy would be a disser­vice to both yourself and to the student body. Jon has what it takes to fight for what you want. For those of you voted for Jon, show him your support once again. For those of you who voted for Dimitri, vote Jon today.

Stefanie Porcelli Trinity '90

Arthur Spencer Trinity '89

FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 17,1989 THE CHRONICLE PAGE 9

More Letters

Feibel has the experience to lead ASDU effectively To the editor:

While publicity on Jon Feibel's campaign has focused on experience, it has left out the importance of one issue: in order to run an organization, it is best to have experi­ence in that organization. It is also important to under­stand the limitations of that organization.

Feibel has experience, from dorm representatve to ASDU vice president. He also understands what can be accomplished by ASDU. Feibel has seen what ASDU has done in the past, has worked with it in the present and comprehends the possibilities for the future. Jon Feibel is the best candidate to lead ASDU into the year to come.

Mark Schill Trinity '90

Women's sports get a cold shoulder from The Chronicle To the editor:

I am writing in response to the abominable coverage women's varsity sports receive at Duke. How frustrating it is to put in as much blood, sweat, and time as the foot­ball and basketball teams but to receive less than one tenth the press coverage.

As a member of the women's volleyball team I am most sensitive to the lack of coverage we get but I have heard many women from different varsity teams express their legitimate gripes with the unfairness of The Chronicle's coverage.

This past weekend marks a prime example. We played three matches. Two of them were conference games which we won and one was against nationally ranked Penn State who we lost to (15-13,15-12,15-12). I opened The Chronicle Monday morning (from the back because articles on our teams are typically on the last page of Sportswrap) looking for the article and found — to my continued dismay — a skimpy, boring, extremely short (five inch) article covering all three games.

The article was unaccompanied by a photo. Only half the time do we get a photo and when we do it is either a photo from last year, a photo already printed this season or a photo from an earlier match in the season.

Never has a volleyball player been named athlete of the week, although Bev Stross was ACC player of the week and Trisha Hopkins was third in the country in service aces.

What's going on? We are better this year than we have been in the past two years yet we received remarkably better press last year.

I find no excuse for this pathetic coverage. The Chron­icle's lack of concern for volleyball branches out into a general unequal representation of women's sports at Duke. I've been here nearly four years, I've heard people complain, but I have seen no improvements.

Sylvia Thomson 1990 women's volleyball team captain

Don't let Feibel dodge the truth about his performance To the editor:

The Chronicle reported that the controversy over Jon Feibel's role in the mismanagement of the SOC club fund was the highlight of the ASDU presidential debate. I raised this issue, from the audience, because I was ap­palled with the facts which I found to clearly implicate Feibel.

After the debate, Feibel approached me and said, "I think you are bringing up issues that should not be brought up." A candidate who cannot deal with tough questions, and does not believe his past performance should be an issue, should not be the next president of the student body.

If anyone questions Feibel's performance, she or he should feel free to go the ASDU office and look over the contitutional duties of the Business Manager. I think the facts will speak for themselves; Mister Feibel just ain't reliable.

Michael Payne Trinity '91 M JlOT KEPT PECKING AT IT.'

Fear and loathing on the ASDU presidential campaign trail When a journalist turns into a politics junkie he will

start babbling about things only a person who has been there can possibly understand.

Hunter S. Thompson Zsa Zsa Gabor was doing terrible things to my nostrils

when my dream was interrupted by a knock on the door so deafening it could only have been an ASSDU candi­date. By the time I got up he had moved down the hall and was shrieking at a neighbor, arms overflowing with propoganda a la Goebbels, touting his boredom thresh-hold and other qualities essential for ASDU service.

Coming out of the shower, I took a deep breath; the room smelled suspiciously of politics; the combined fra­grance of last night's stale beer, this morning's fresh vomit and the year's various body odors reminded me what today is: ASDU Election Runoff Day.

Entering the C.I., I was accosted by a screaming, semi-prostrate, pre-pubescent academic technocrat who demanded my Duke card. What, I wondered, did they want it for this time? Project Guild? The Oxford English Dictionary fast? The Med Center Defense Fund? No, he said. Vote for Jon Feibel or Connie Pearcy in the Runoff. I volleyed with a torrent of questions: Does Jon cost more than a calzone? Can I get double portions of Con­nie, or is that just with twist bread? Why can't you offer both for $5.50 like the Pits?

Then I snapped out of it; this wasn't lunch, this was supposed to be student democracy. Specifically, the ASDU campaign that I'd been covering for the past few weeks, an experience akin to a partial frontal lobotomy. And, though the campaign has lasted less than two weeks, I felt it had been more traumatic than the thou­sand hours of childbirth Jeff Taliaferro's mother un­doubtedly had to go through.

You know what I'm talking about; you've seen the campaign fliers: Dimitri "Dim" Korahais with his phallic "t," Connie Pearcy's No Boundriesresque, ovum-against-

• My word Daniel Manatt the-sunrise masterpiece and Jon Feibel's minimalist "reliable" poster, a wise semi-rhyme that avoided atten­tion to the similarity between his surname and the word "feeble." Korahais ran another winner of a poster, with a simple message: "Real presidents don't need slogans." True enough, but candidates do, hence Korahais' specta­tor status today. Perhaps the greatest flier debacle was suffered by Colin Moran, who pulled his last name only poster after vowel-changing voters wondered what can­didate admitted to being a moron.

Then there was Rob Clough, who entered the race as the official Epworth/Anti-establishment/Anti-ASDU/ Anti-Anti candidate, but when things got serious he sold out like Rick Roderick in front of a tenure board. He traded his mysterious "Flig" tattoo for a navy blazer and his nihilistic, slapstick gags for a reasonable, logical spiel on why ASDU sucks. As Rob Clough moderates, Mason Brown weeps.

Feibel, by contrast, stuck to his experience-qualifies, delegation-vindicates guns so hard and fast that his neck became harder and harder to discern as the cam­paign wore on. A reasonable and affable guy, Jon be­came paranoid and cutthroat at times, making a desper­ate pitch to the IFC warning that his opponents planned to castrate fraternity members and give their entrails to DUFS. Meanwhile, his hordes of Sigma Chi fraternity brothers assaulted frat boys with promises of IFC soli­darity, even as their mouths watered at the thought of West Campus housing made possible by their favorite son.

Korahais, though Greek, is not greek, hence his short­lived effort. Indeed, his name and coloring are not the

only parallels one can make with another recent Greek presidential candidate. Mr. Competence just didn't sell this year, nationally or locally, despite his undeniable qualifications and support of nearly all ASDU members. Perhaps Korahais needed a John Sasso, though Lee At­water look-alike and think-alike Ronnie Temple served him well, his short leash notwithstanding.

Finally, there was Woman's Coalition wunderkind/ Chronicle poster child Connie Pearcy. Connie, undoubt­edly one of the most shrewd and savvy politicians in the campaign, proved she has keen instincts and good con­nections when it comes to P.R. In the past two weeks she has appeared in no fewer than six Chronicle articles, only a handful related to the race; suddenly "Take Back the Night" became a good springboard for "Get Out the Vote". Not tha t her involvement in any way was engi­neered to directly boost her campaign, but Pearcy's ac­tivism, the foundation of her candidacy, has yielded helpful windfalls. But Connie's strategy has not been flawless; when IFC president Larry Glazer brought up Pearcy's noise complaints against the Delta Sigs last year, Pearcy took Glazer's words as advice to step up her anti-noise pollution platform.

Other races were more clear cut. Jeff Taliaferro, a man so qualified for ASDU office that his memoirs should be ghost written by Ben Jacewicz, literally buried Bernie Cullen, a candidate arrogant enough to promise editorial and cartoon control over this fine publication.

So as I hobble out of the pre-dusk B.P. funk, my mind is awash in ASDU-doo. Condom machines? Propped doors? Bus schedules? Ad hoc excrement? Human sacri­fice on the Bryan Center Walkway? Nude freshmen ped­ants inebriated with psuedo-bureaucracy salivating venom over Jan Nolting's photograph?

Let them wallow in ASDU. Daniel Manatt is a Trinity junior.

PAGE 10 THE CHRONICLE FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 17, 1989

Comics Palm City / Carie Fletcher THE Dally Crossword .y Virginia Yates

The Far Side / Gary Larson Calvin and Hobbes /Bill Watterson

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© 1983 Chronicle Features Distributed by Universal Press Syndicate I/-I7 '^i/votrj

A l l "MS WIDE OPEN CEILING SPACE.' I WISH I COULD GET MN ROLLER SKATES.

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"Wouldn't you know i t ! . . . And always just before a big date!"

Doonesbury / Garry Trudeau

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riding habit? 57 Zilch to Graf 58 Diva's song 59 In a boring

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abbr. 62 Eccentric

wheels 63 Mug 64 Gobs 65 Declines 66 Punta del —

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mouth

11/17/89

Yesterday's Puzzle Solved:

41 Orient 42 Foreward 43 Regular beats 45 John — 46 Brilliancy 47 — to Z 48 Frenzy 4_ Customers

11117189 50 Telescope 52 Graceful horse 53 Out on a — 55 Touched

ground 56 Baseball 's

Sandberg 60 Indian

THE CHRONICLE

Assistant sports editor: Josh Dill Copy editors: Chris Graham, Jamie O'Brien

PatTangney, Craig Whitlock Wire editor: Leigh Dyer Associate photography editor: . .CIiff Burns Layout artist: Craig Whitlock Production assistant: Rol Iy M i I ler Account representatives: Judy Bartlett, Betty Hawkins Advertising sales staff: Trey Huffman,

Anna Lee, Jennifer Phillips Laura Tawney, Serina Vash

Creative services staff: Wendy Arundel, Joy Bacher, Loren Faye, Jessica Johnston,

Kevin Mahler, Ann-Marie Parsons Subscriptions manager:.. Dan Perlman Classified managers: ....Candice Polsky, Darren Weirnick Payables manager: Greg Wright Receivables staff: Judy Chambers, Kevin Csemecky,

Linda Markovitz, Susan Stevenson Secretaries: Pam Packtor, Jennifer Springer Calendar coordinator: Melissa Newman

Today Not Just Numbers: The Human Faces of Hunger and Homelessness. Mike on the Quad. Open michrophone on Bryan Center Walkway to discuss hunger and home­lessness, 12:30 - 1 : 3 0 pm.

Not Just Numbers: The Human Faces of Hunger and Homelessness. Tour of Edge­mont Community in Durham. Meet at West Campus Bus Stop, 3 - 5 pm.

"The Hidden Legacy of the Nation's Nu­clear Weapons Facilities," by Bob Alvarez, Staff, Government Affairs, US Senate. 202 Bio Sci, 12:30 - 1 : 3 0 pm.

Law School Information Day, open to any­one thinking about attending taw school. UNC School of Law, Chapel Hill, 8:45 am.

"Does Christianity Differ from Other Reli­gions?" open discussion led by David, Bowen Ph.D. 136 Soc Sci, 3:30 pm.

Community Calendar "Race, Gender and Unions in Hospitals and Health Care Occupations," lecture by Leon Fink, UNC and Dartene Clark Hine, Mich. State Univ. Center for International Studies, 2122 Campus Dr. 3:30 pm.

"Women Musicians in the 19th Century: the Question of Class," lecture by Nancy B. Reich. 104 Biddle Music Bldg. 4 pm.

Durham Savoyards - "A Savoyard Sympho­ny" and 'Trial by Jury." Page Auditorium, 8 pm.

"Versions of Atonement," lecture by Dr. John Milbank, University of Lancaster, England. York Chapel, 10 am.

Duke Dance Club Student Concert. Infor­mal and free of charge. The Ark on East Campus, 8 - 9 pm.

Baptist Student Union Thanksgiving Din­ner Meeting: meet at the Chapel at 5:30 for rides to dinner.

Saturday,, November 18 The Carolina Collection author series presents author Jill McCorkle. Mclntyre's Fine Books, Chapel Hill, 1 1 am - noon.

Durham Savoyards - "A Savoyard Sympho­ny" and "Trial by Jury." Page Auditorium, 8 pm.

International House, PreThanksgiving Dinner and talk. Blacknall Church, 6:30 pm.

PUB Committee and the Coffeehouse: BluesFest. The Coffeehouse, 8 pm.

Ciompi Quartet, Nelson Music Room, 8 pm.

International Association: games night of talent competition, free pizza and soft drinks, international House, 7:30 pm.

Sunday, November 19 Lutheran Fellowship Supper. Duke Chapel Kitchen area, 5:30 pm.

Dr. Who Fan Club meeting. Epworth, 1 pm.

Lectures on the work of Louis I. Kahn. Duke University Museum of Art, North Gal­lery, 2 :30pm.

American Film Institute: "Lawrence of Arabia." Page Auditorium, 1:30 pm.

St. Stephen's Chamber Orchestra per­forms works by Rossinni, Haydn, and Ward. St. Stephen's Church, 8 pm.

FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 1 7 , 1 9 8 9 THE CHRONICLE PAGE 1 1

Classifieds Announcements

ABORTION Private & Confidential Care. New Modern Facility. Free Pregnancy Test. Sat & Weekday Appoint­ments. Chapel Hill, 800-433-2930.

STEREO — ALL YOUR NEEDS. The Stereo Works sells & services home & car stereo systems. The best service in town at reasonable prices. 2606 Hillsborough Rd (near Anderson St.) 286-3891.

FRATERNITIES, SORORITIES, SER­VICE ORG'S: Your organization can earn significant profits im­mediately (40% of sales) plus 10% profit on reorders for three yrs by offering Premier Checks' exclusive line of personal checks to your classmates, friends and family. Limited number of groups on your campus can take part, so call today on our toll free line, 1-800-525-2201 for free info. Bonus if you start your fund raiser by Nov 10. Premier Checks, Inc. Winston-Salem, NC.

CAMPUS REPS NEEDED — Earn big commissions and free trips by sell­ing Nassau/Paradise Island, Can-cun, Mexico, Jamaica & Ski trips to Vermont & Colorado. For more in­formation call toll free 1-800-344-8360 or in CT 203-967-3330.

BIBLE STUDY ~ of Isaiah with Dr. Lloyd Bailey this Sun evening at 6 p.m. in the Chapel Basement (Sponsored by the Grad and Professional Stu­dents Fellowship).

RUSH SIGNUPS ABSOLUTE DEADLINE for sorority rush signups is Nov 2 1 , 1989. Come by Panhel Office (105B West Union).

Skydevils! Mandatory meeting on Fri Nov. 17 at 6 p.m. in Rm 136 SocSci. Business and elections.

SOCIAL SCIENCE OR HISTORY MAJORS — If you are interested in conducting research for your senior honors thesis in the Federal Re­public of Germany, you'll want to apply for the German Marshall Scholarship. For more information and applications, contact the Study Abroad Office, 2022 Campus Dr. Application deadline: Dec 1, 1989.

FRESHMEN It's coming! Dec 1. Freshmen Semi-Formal featuring Noun Ra­tionale. Tickets on sale Fri on Bryan Ctr walkway. Cash or Flex, $10 per couple, $5 per person.

TRIAL BY JURY; PLACES PLEASE! Durham Savoyards Evening of Gilbert and Sullivan; Nov 17; Page Aud; 8 p.m. Tickets $5, Duke Students with ID; Office of Residential Life.

*DIWALI* Indian festival of lights sponsored by Duke India Association. Great food and entertainment! Sat, Nov 18, 7 p.m., Multipurpose Ctr on Central Campus (Oregon St).

ATTENTION ~ ALL STUDENTS: Are you proud to go to Duke? Do you want to tel fathers what a great school Duke is? Do you remember how much fun you had when you visited Duke as a prospective freshmen? The Stu­dent Hosting Office needs you!!! Sign up to host a prospective freshmen next semester. Fill out a card at the Bryan Ctr Info Desk or in the main lobby of Perkins on Nov 15, 16, or 17, or call the Admis­sions Office at 684-3214.

WM CLUB TENNIS There is a mtg on Sun Nov 19 at 6:30 in House G commons. Elec­tions will be held. All members must attend.

ATTN U'GRAD WOMEN! Announcing two $2500 national awards for outstanding accom­plishments in or out of the class­room. Sponsored by INVIEW maga-zine/Maybelline and GLAMOUR magazine. 20 awards total. Infor­mation/applications: Women's Ctr (101-5) Bryan Ctr or 107 Flowers.

BEACHES Once in a lifetime you make a friendship that lasts forever. See Beaches Nov 19 7 & 9:30, Bryan Ctr Film Thtr. $3 presented by Quad Flix.

The News and Observer will be in­terviewing juniors, seniors, and grad students for summer intern­ships on Mon Nov 27. Internships will be in News and Features, Sports, Photography, and Copy Editing. A resume and clips will be required. Sign up for interviews outside the Internship Office, 213 Old Chem.

islam? Hinduism? Judaism? Bud­dhism? Does Christianity differ from other religions? Open discus­sion led by David Bowen Fri 3:30 136 SocSci.

DG RUSH SCHOOL -Sat (tomorrow) from 9-1 in Wan-namker I commons. Brenda prom­ises it will be fun!

ADPi-Beta mixer Relax. It's Friday! Get dressed up for our semi-formal mixer! 9 in the section.

SENIORS You can vote again. Vote today in the run-off election for ASDU Presi­dent.

RUN-OFF RUN-OFF Please remember to vote in the run-off election for ASDU Presi­dent. Vote today.

THE CHRONICLE

CLASSIFIEDS INFORMATION BASIC RATES

$3.00 (per day) for the first 15 words or less. 100 (per day) for each additional word.

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$1.00 extra per day for All Bold Words. $1.50 extra per day for a Bold Heading

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.A.HOtJR DROP-OFF LOCATION 3rd floor Flowers Building (near Duke Chapel)

where classifieds forms are available.

OR MAIL TO: Chronicle Classifieds

BOX 4696 Duke Station, Durham, NC 27706.

CALL 6 8 4 - 6 1 0 6 IF YOU HAVE QUESTIONS ABOUT CLASSIFIEDS.

N O REFUNDS OR CANCELLATIONS AFTER FIRST INSERTION DEADLINE.

All ADPis! Get psyched to catch up with your sisters this Sun! RUSH RETREAT — 9-5 in the multipurpose bldg. MAN­DATORY for everyone — including RAs, counselors, and those study­ing abroad next semester. Break­fast is provided, but bring your own lunch. Fines start at 10, so be there on time!

DONALD TRUMP tried to buy us out, but Music To You Discjockey Service is not for sale! We are for rent, however. Call Adam Sheridan 684-1139.

DUKEDEPARTMENTS who haven't planned holiday par­ties: Call Music To You Discjockey Service TODAY! Adam Sheridan 684-1139.

AEPhis We've got a full weekend ahead. Spirit Retreat Sat. Meeting Sun 8 p.m. I l l BioSci.

Would love to learn and practice conversation in French with fluent speaker 2 hrs/wk. Please call 490-2009 after 7 p.m.

THETA JUNIORS Take a study break Sun. Meet in the Rat at 6 p.m. to eat, then see "Beaches" at 7 p.m.

VOTE FOR FEIBEL He's Reliable! Vote Today, Don't forget. 2-1/2 years ASDU Experi­ence.

ZETAS! Get ready for the overnight rush retreat! It begins at 6:30 p.m. at the Durham Friends School. Please be on time and bring pictures. Lisa and Annemarie will be waiting!

~~ GO TO HELL... or to Heaven! Zetas, it's Sat night in Chapel Hili. Details at overnight retreat.

AEPhis Rise and shine for the Spirit Retreat guys! Sat 9:45 WCBS. LML, YRC.

HILLEL SERVICES Come to Reform or Conservative Services Fri at 7 p.m. in the Chapel Basement. Shalom y'all!

Project Outreach Beginning the week of Nov 12, up­perclass students received copies of "Duke's Vision" in their mail­boxes. This pamphlet is designed to encourage discussion of Duke's human diversity and the obstacles many of our community face be­cause of this diversity. Project Out­reach is a group of students who will set up discussions on this topic in your house. To set up a program for your house, please call one of the Project Outreach Contact Persons: Katie Courtland 684-7044, Mike Guido 660-4067, John Rubenstein 684-7935, Nathaniel Silverthorne, Jr. (JR) 684-6041.

BIBLE STUDY The Duke Evangelical Bible Fellow­ship will have its first meeting on Nov 26, 1989 at 3 p.m. at the home of Dr. David Whiteomb. Call 688-4257 for details. All are wel­come.

Tor those who care about their clothes..,

White Star Cleaners 900 9th Street

286-2271

• FULL SERVICE LAUNDRY • DRY CLEANERS • ALTERATIOH SERVICE ...with Complete Box

Storage

WHITE STAR JR. Corner Cole Mill

6. Hillsborough Rd. 383-3256

The Laundry featured by Maytag in a national

Advertising Campaign

E.C. Smart. Pres ident

THETAS & PIPHiS Mixer with 2 UNC fraternities to­night! Bus leaves WCBS at 10 p.m. Get ready for fun!

SICKOVERTHXGVNG Pickens Student Health Ctr will be closed on Thanksgiving Day but the Infirmary will remain open 24 hours. Pickens will be open on Fri Nov 24 from 8-4:30. Questions? Call Pickens (684-6721) or the In­firmary (684-3367).

Help Wanted ATTENTION — HIRING! Government jobs — your area. $17,840-$69,485. Call 1-602-838-8885 ext. R5277.

Healthy males, 18-35, needed for EPA Air Pollution Studies. Must be free of allergies, hayfever, and on no medication. Earn $7+/hr. Call 929-9993 (collect).

Teacher for Hebrew and/or Sunday School 1989-90. Good wage. Call 489-7062,933-2182.

Benetton assistant manager and part-time positions available. Please apply in person at Northgate Mall.

EARN XTRA MONEY — Medical Ctr Conference facility needs students (workstudy or non-workstudy) to move tables and chairs. Call Todd at 684-2150.

OVERSEAS JOBS. $900-2000 mo. Summer, Yr round, all countries, all fields. Free info. Write IJC, PO Bx 52-NC02 Corona Del Mar CA 92625.

Registered pharmacist for Mar 1990 one-two year contract. Albert Schweitzer Hospital Haiti. Details AC Malmon MD MPH, Box 61524, Durham, NC 27715.

STUDENT HELP Needed in Medical Psychology, Flexible Hours. 684-5884.

Work-study student for clerical duties; 75/25 support, approxi­mately 10 hrs/wk, $5/hr. Call Mrs. Robinson (u 684-6303.

PART TIME EVENINGS and WEEK­ENDS. Chocolate Smiles 8 1 1 Broad St. 286-5680.

Child Care Babysitter needed for 3 yr-old on occassional evening. Call 683-2495 day/evening.

Wanted for 3 & 6 yr-old boys in our home. Noon to 4 every weekday. Some housekeeping. Must have car. 493-4806 after 4:30.

Services Offered ProType does: resumes, cover let­ters, papers, theses, reports, newsletters, brochures. Call 682-4628 or come by Brightleaf Sq., upstairs near Morgan Imports, 9-5, M-F.

Typing at reasonable rates. Call Dawn nights and weekends at 596-1773.

Why settle for a "C?" Retired professor edits and types term papers. Tel: 493-8564.

TYPING and typesetting: business, academic, personal. Reports, newsletters, brochures, resumes. Graphics, charting, editing. Laser output. Close to Duke. RapidWord 471-6671.

JUST YOUR TYPE Word Processing Service will type your papers, dis­sertations, letters, etc. quickly and professionally. Emergency typing welcome. 489-8700 (24 hours).

PAPERS TYPED — Let me worry about making your paper look good. Call Nick at 684-7620.

Roommate Wanted Working professional female look­ing for mature grad or professional to share 3 BR house near Woodcroft after Dec 1. Dogs wel­comed. Call Lane 596-9184_ or 493-2735.

Rooms for Rent Large, sunny room in fine Trinity Park home. Private entrance and bath. Walk to campus. Only rental in house. $250/mo. 688-2152.

Houses for Rent Convenient to East Campus, 2 BR duplex, central AC/heat, extra stor­age. Available immediately. Call 544-6490.

Wanted to Rent Visiting Post-Doc Research Fellow seeks 3 + BR House from Jan 1 , 1990 to end May (up to +/-$700) 683-1742.

Autos for Sale Can you buy Jeeps, Cars, 4 x 4's Seized in drug raids for under $100? Call for facts today. 805-644-9533. Dept. 364.

GOVERNMENT SEIZED vehicles from $100. Corvettes, Chevys, Porsches, and other confiscated properties. For Buyers Guide 1-800-448-2562 ext 4245. Also open evenings & weekends.

1987 Chevy Camaro V-6, white, AT, AC, AM/FM Cassette, 38kmi. Excel­lent $5,700. Leaving U.S. Call 382-0020.

ITS PRACTICAL 1980 Datsun 310GX for sale. It won't help you pick up babes, but it will get you home for Thanksgiving. $ 1,295 or best offer. Call 684-0869 or 684-1844.

FOR SALE — 1989 Ford Ranger Su-percab XLT, 6 cyl., 5 spd., AC PS, PB, stereo and in EC. $11,100 or take up payments. Call Steve at 489-4789/286-7523.

Mazda GLS Wagon, 1981 excellent condition, AC, AM/FM cassette, $1500 or best offer. Call 383-2958.

For Sale — Misc. X-MAS IN LA? 2 one-way tickets to California for Dec 20. Call 688-8582.

All Great Floor Seats ROLLING STONES Clemson Nov 26. Call now 703-538-4044.

AIR FROM BOSTON Air Ticket Boston to Raleigh-Dur­ham 1-way Tue Nov 28, $110 obo. Marvin 489-1481.

PRINTER FORSALE Apple Imagewriter II printer for sale. Only $300. Excellent Condi­tion. Call 490-1574 and leave message.

Airline ticket oneway Albany, NY to RDU — Thanksgiving Sun 11/26 5 p.m. Nonstop $109. B.O. 490-0488.

Round Trip Ticket to Chicago for Thanksgiving Break. Departs 1 1 / 2 1 , returns 11/26. $199/neg. 383-4925.

PLANE TICKET 1 way ticket RDU to Orlando on Nov 22 —$40 ,684-0777 .

Ride Offered Don't deny yourself. Go home for Thanksgiving. Riders needed, des­tination: Palm Beach (1-95 South, in general). 684-1141.

Lost and Found LOST: 1 Stats notebook, black cover, last seen Gross Chem Mon afternoon. If you picked it up please call Yvette 684-0535. If it's notes you need we can share!

Personals BOX OF TISSUES

Grab one, (and your best friend!) and see "BEACHES" Sun Nov 19, 7 & 9:30 Bryan Ctr Film Thtr, $3. Presented by Quad Flix.

fllBXICO

The News and Observer will be in­terviewing juniors, seniors, and grad students for summer intern­ships on Mon Nov 27. InternshiDS will be in News and Features, Sports, Photography, and Copy Editing. A resume and clips will be required. Sign up for interviews outside the Internship Office, 213 Old Chem.

MAGDA The Polish mono-woman becomes a citizen. Congratulations! Love, your short, whining, squeaking best friend.

PI PHIs — Don't forget the (man­datory) Rush Workshop this Sun from 4-8, dinner included.

DO IT AGAIN Vote in the run-off election for ASDU President. Vote at the CI, BP, East Union or Trent Lobby.

JON FEIBEL Experience is what counts and YOU have it. Good luck in the ASDU Presidential Run-off — Serina.

Red Rocks This is really from me. It has been a great year. Love D.

MICHAEL MICHAEL Thanks for long talks, marathons, understanding, flowers, saying so, tempting fate, opening up, letters, cabins and m + m's. They're nine of my happiest memories ever. ILY mophead.

DEBBERS One last chance to live it up before we're chained to our desks! We'll boogie oogie oogie...! Beware of MJB's! IMY, Cath.

Dave Rusinko, Please go to the AC­C's with us. Think Bikini. Forget the papers! Mich.

GERRI Have a Birthday Party of death, from hell, like the wind, in a bottle — Holy Horror! Sorry to miss it. Mich.

LIZZY SIEGLE Here's to boys, ballet rehearsals, backseats, blueberry beerwagon, being there, bashes, bevo, breakups, beginnings and best friendship. Happy birthday!

BEACH V-BALL? No, just another ACC championship for Duke. Jam those Jackets, Can the Cavaliers, and you know what to do to Carolina.

BEV ALBA-STROSS Hey, chic! Get psyched to CRUSH those ACC Volleyball teams in Hil­ton Head! I know you'll do great! Love, B2.

GUYS AND DOLLS The Show will be aired on Cable 13 on Sun at 1 p.m. Wouldn't it be more convenient if they just put i t in our pockets?

7th grade mutant grows up! Happy Birthday Meg! Have fun, you wild woman! Love — Kathi.

SPRING BREAK ADVENTURE: MARCH 10-16, 1990 Mexico City, ancient ruins, Indian markets,

colonial towns, volcanic mountain hike 7 Days/6 nights, $795

Kl Tours (800) 767-8252 (919) 682-8252 P.O. Box 15666, Durham, NC 27704

HEY ZETA LADIES Get ready to travel to Chapel Hill Sat night to celebrate with the UNC Teps our victory in football!

STEVE SIEGEL Happy Birthday Cutie! How old are you now anyway? Love, your awe­some FAC!

E-clair (codename?) — I needed to tell you how much you mean to me, and how I miss you (and the fuzzy feelings we get) when we're apart. I'd even shave for you. Head over heels in like, the Duke man with a spine.

Happy BDay Mir 5, 4, 3, 2, 1 — you finally made it. 18 means more time to hit the stacks. Yea for you! Love — SPCNLB.

Sonya: Good luck on Orgo!! Hope you've had a good week. Oak Room before Thanksgiving?? Greg.

TOM and LOU, Thanks for the late-night "double-team" at the EC bus stop. I saw stars. KA Love, Liz.

AEPhi — Midnight Bowling! 11:45 FRI WCBS. Bring $. RSVP to Liz!

Kim J: Why do you take your phone off the hook to go to the bathroom?

LAURA and DADE! You're almost there. You're the best roomies ever so keep smiling! Suz.

WENDY! Hope you have a glorious day and no one gives you a hard time! (Give me some credit for basic intelligence!) S.

See page 12 •

PAGE 1 2 THE CHRONICLE FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 17, 1989

Committee may modify alcohol policy • ALCOHOL from page 3 driving while intoxicated, she said. "We want [an alcohol policy that isl workable and enforceable," Cullins said.

The committee is made up of about 15 University members, with representatives from administration, faculty, employees and students, she said. Student rep­resentatives include Larry Glazer, president of the In­terfraternity Council (IFC), Karr, resident adviser Chris Horvath and two ASDU representatives. Committee members were appointed by William Griffith, vice presi­dent for student affairs.

The IFC is "investigating where changes need to be made," Glazer said. "We are trying to look at the long term and what the implications [of an alcohol policy] might be."

The University fraternities are contacting the na­

tional fraternities for suggestions in formulating a revamped campus alcohol policy, but "we have our own issues to deal with," Glazer said.

"We are trying to take into account Duke's situation," he said. "We do not want to drive students off campus and have them involved in drinking and driving."

"Once there's a policy formulated, [the Panhellenic Council! will be a part of getting the information out to the social chairpersons" of University living groups, Karr said. Because much of what the committee is work­ing on tends to focus on the living groups, "the role that Panhel is playing is not as great because [University sororitiesl are not residentially based," Karr said.

Any committee recommendations will be presented to Griffith, Cullins said, who will decide whther or not to implement them.

IFC fills Executive Committee positions • IFC from page 1 member of SPE, and Jack Conway, a member of Sigma Alpha Epsilon (SAE);

• Public relations chair — Curt Brockelman, a Trinity junior and member of Delts;

• Treasurer — Stephen Kurad, a Trinity junior and member of SAE;

• Recording secretary — Matt Strauss, an Engi­neering sophomore and member of SAE;

• Publications secretary — Cam Duffy, an Engi-

frrRtwR €m The Friday Line-up

Babette's Feast (1987, 102 min., d. Gabriel Axel)

Based on a tale from Isak Dinesen's collection "Anec­dotes of Destiny," Babette's Feast is the tale of a young widow who comes to live and work as a housekeeper] in a remote village on Denmark's coast. Babette per­forms her humble duties without losing her aloof atti- j tude. The cinematic feast comes at the end of the film I which reveals the secret of Babette's sustaining nature. Babette's Feast feeds the soul as well as the eye, especially in the spectacular feast sequence. SHOWS I AT 7 AND 9:30. FREE TO ALL STUDENTS WITH ID I EXCEPT LAW AND DIVINITY. ALL OTHERS $2.

AND AT MID-NITE THE CLASSIC HORROR\ CONTINUES WITH THE ORIGINAL

Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde (1932,82 m., d. Rouben Mamoulian with Frederic March,

Miriam Hopkins, Rose Hobart, and Homes Herbert.)

The classic Robert Louis Stevenson story comes to life J in this horrifying adaptation. The benevolent Dr. Jekyll | is transformed into the malevolent and psychotic Mr. Hyde, and he doesn't know how to control himself. I Don't miss this chilling thriller of a man's degeneration! I Free to all.

neering sophomore and member of Theta Chi; • Greek Week and special events coordinator — Chris

Wilson, a Trinity sophomore and member of SPE.

Fraternity members running for the Executive Coun­cil of the IFC were first required to obtain the signatures of at least 15 of the 20 fraternity presidents to be nominated, Nolan said.

HEY, STUDENTS! AFFORDABLE HOUSING

NEAR CAMPUS...

THE NEW TRIANGLE 400 MOTOR INN

• Convenient Parking • Cable and HBO • Laundry Facilities • Swimming Pool • Touch-Tone Phones • Dining Room (with meal plans available) • 24-Hour Security • Courtesy Van to Hospitals, Airport,

Shopping Centers • 2 Double Beds • Heated and Air Conditioned

ALL THIS FOR JUST: $100.00 PER WEEK (plus tax)

(Limit 2 per room)

CALL TODAY: 919-682-5411 605 W. Chapel Hill Street 'Durham, NC

• From page 1 1

TONE LOK Happy Birthday to our Squill friend. Let's celebrate — Jay, John, Dan­ny, Jay, Marty.

To my (almost) roommate: Here's to mutual notching, "Southern Comfort," Renaissance? missions, boots with fringe, zoikes, yum, ab­solutely, and of course, Bear. Next semester will be, in the words of someone we know, multi-choice! One last thing: we ARE going to have fun and we ARE going to be nice!!

AIRPORT SHUTTLE Duke Transit is offering free airport shuttle service between West, East, and North campuses and RDU airport. Departure times are 5 Tue Nov 2 1 and 12, 1:30, 3,.& 5 on Wed Nov 22. Buses will be returning at 5:30, 7, & 10 on Sun Nov 26. For information or to make a reservation, call 684-6403 or come by the ASDU office by 4 on 11/20/89. This free service offered by Duke Transit.

Reporters Please attend our o so important meeting Sunday at 4:00 pm.

HELP YOURSELF! The Duke Student Adult Children of Alcoholics support group meets ev­ery Tue 7-8 p.m., 012 New Divinity (next to Chapel and across from Page). We have a special ACOA guest speaker for 11/21 meeting.

JAI Feliz cumpleanos a mi hermana menor! Te amo muchisima! Llamame pronto! Abrazos y besos, AW.

JASON Thanks for the best 2 years of my life. 1 love you very much — Missy.

AMY — Happy birthday, pal! I'm really excited for Sat's SEMI-for-mal. It's going to be great! — Oliver.

JIMMY SCHAFFER — You light up my life! Happy "Get None Apprecia­tion Week!" Love, GET SOME.

GREG COUNCIL We got you a birthday present, but in his excitement Bax spit his gum on it. Sorry Hoss. Love, OO.

Reporters Please attend our o so important meeting Sunday at 4:00 pm.

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FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 17,1989 THE CHRONICLE PAGE 13

Sports

Streaking Blue Devils face reeling Tar Heels in finale By MARK JAFFE

The 25th-ranked Duke football team traverses Route 15-501 Saturday to face North Carolina at Kenan Sta­dium in Chapel Hill with at least a share of the Atlantic Coast Conference championship on the line.

Duke, 7-3, has already locked up a berth in the All American Bowl in Birmingham, Ala., but a Blue Devil victory combined with a Maryland upset of Virginia would land Duke in the Florida Citrus Bowl in Orlando on New Year's Day.

The Tar Heels will play for pride and the chance to take away Duke's dreams of a weekend with Mickey Mouse.

The game marks the last of the regular season for both teams. For the Blue Devils it has been a season of fulfill­ment and achievement.

However, the season could not end sooner for North Carolina, 1-9. Head coach Mack Brown's Tar Heels have endured their second straight one-win season. Their only victory came against Division I-AA also-ran Vir­ginia Military Institute. Mercifully North Carolina will be through with 1989 on Saturday.

The game will feature the ACC's best passing offense versus its most inexperienced secondary. The contest also pits the league's worst quarterback versus its most effective blitzing defense.

The Tar Heels will start a defensive backfield of three true freshmen against Duke's vaunted aerial assault. Brown has give the nod to safeties Rondell Jones and Cookie Massey and cornerback Cliff Baskerville. Talk about throwing rookies into the fire. Duke has already shredded the best secondaries in the ACC this season in N.C. State and Georgia Tech.

And then there's Chuckie Burnette. The freshman quarterback was the most highly touted high school player in North Carolina last year, but his inaugural season in the collegiate ranks has been disastrous. He has completed just 35 percent of his passes for two touchdowns against eight interceptions.

Burnette will face a Duke defense which has been blitzing over half of the time. Brown realizes the prob­lems his team faces and does not downplay them.

"You know you have to outscore Duke and beat them in the passing game to win," Brown said. "We have not been able to [beat anyone with the passing game]. We will have to play our best to keep from being

.MATT CANDLER/THE CHRONICLE

embarrassed." See HEELS on page 14 ^ Duke is looking toward a number one finish in the ACC with a victory over Carolina but needs Maryland to upset Virginia as well.

Volleyball heads to ACC tournament By MICHAEL KRACHON

The Duke women's volleyball team wraps up play this coming weekend in the Atlantic Coast Conference tour­nament in Hilton Head, South Carolina. The Blue Devils finished tied for second with Virginia and Clemson in the ACC regular season standings.

North Carolina (19-8,6-0 in the ACC) is the top seed having lost just four games to ACC competition all year.

The Tar Heels are led by senior hitte r Sharon Ger­man. German, last year's tournament MVP, leads the conference in hitting percentage, .378 and with 5.22 kills per game. Getting the ball to German has not been a problem for the Tar Heels, as freshman setter Amy Peistrup is third in the ACC in assists with 9.57 a game.

Carolina has been playing great ball recently, posting a 6-2 record over its last eight games. The Tar Heels, however, are not unbeatable, as Duke defeated them earlier this year in a non-conference match.

As the top seed, Carolina receives a bye into the sec­ond round where it will face the winner of the Clemson-Maryland match.

Duke (19-13,4-2) enters the tournament with high hopes, having recorded a winning record for the first time in three years. The Blue Devils are led by junior Tricia Hopkins, who is third in the ACC with 4.19 kills per game, and freshman Amy Verhoeven.

"We are very excited about the upcoming tournament," Duke head coach Jon Wilson said. "We have a good seed. Right now we are focusing on Georgia Tech, if we get by them we will look to the next game."

Without senior hitter Sylvia Thomson, who is listed as questionable due to an ankle sprain, the Blue Devils will look to senior setter Lauren Libeu for leadership. Libeu finished second in the conference with a 10.67 assist per game average.

Third seeded Virginia (28-9,4-2) is the hottest team entering the tournament, having won its last eight matches including victories over N.C. State, Maryland and Duke.

The Cavaliers are led by sophmore hitter Greta Jansson, who ranks third in the conference in hitting percentage and fifth with 3.32 kills per game.

Clemson (29-6,4-2) posted the best overall record of any ACC school this year, yet is only the fourth seed. The Tigers are coming off a three match winning streak.

Leading the Tigers this year has been junior setter Jenny Yurkanin and senior hitter Wendy Anderson. Yurkanin provides experiance and leadership at the net, averaging 9.21 assists per game.

Saturaday's game against fifth-seeded Maryland (22-14,2-4) will be a re-match of the season finale, which the Tigers won in five games.

Maryland hopes for better games from senior hitter Kelli Myers and sophmore Colleen Hurley. Hurley, sec­ond in the ACC with a .359 hitting percentage and Myers, fifth at .327, give Maryland one of the best com­binations in the ACC.

N.C. State (8-22,1-5) started the season hot, posting a 6-4 record, before falling into a prolonged slump. For the Wolfpack to be successful this weekend seniors Pam Ve-hling and Kim Ayer must have big tournaments.

Georgia Tech (17-18,0-6) has never won a match in the ACC tournament, and probably will not win one this year as they won only one league game all year.

"This is the most balanced tournament we have ever had," Wilson said. "The top four teams are even. Num­bers five and six can play with anybody in the tourna­ment . . . each team must win two tough matches — there will be no cakewalks this year.

"We are playing our highest level of volleyball all sea­son," Wilson said. "We are peaking at the right time. Our attitudes are good, and we are hungrey for a win."

The second round will be played on Sunday with North Carolina facing the Clemson-Maryland victor in game one. While winner of Duke-Georgia Tech and State-Virginia square off in the other semi-final. The Finals will be played on Monday.

Clippers trade Ferry By The Associated Press

CLEVELAND — The Los Angeles Clippers traded the rights to Danny Ferry to the Cleveland Cavaliers on Thursday along with Reggie Williams for Ron Harper and three draft picks.

Ferry, the second pick in last summer's NBA draft out of Duke, decided to not to play for the Clippers and is with II Messaggero Roma of the Italian Profes­sional League under a one-year contract.

Harper, a 6-foot-6 guard in his fourth NBA season, is averaging 22 points in Cleveland's first seven games. He has averaged 6.9 rebounds and seven as­sists per game.

Along with Harper, Cleveland sent Los Angeles its first-round draft picks in 1990 and 1992 and its sec­ond-round pick in 1992.

"I can't wait 'til he gets here," Cleveland coach Lenny Wilkens said of Ferry. "In college, he was a very good player who made people around him very effective. And he took the big shots and made them."

Wilkens expects Ferry to honor his Italian contract and stay there through the end of the season in May. But already, the Cavs are excited.

"Boston waited a year for Larry Bird. San Antonio waited two years for David Robinson," Cleveland gen­eral manager Wayne Emby said. "You will see. Danny Ferry will be well worth the wait."

Harper, the eighth player selected in the 1986 draft, averaged 18.6 points last season with the Cava­liers and played in all 82 games. He averaged 19.6 points in the playoffs.

Williams, a 6-7 guard-forward who played at Geor­getown, was the fourth pick in 1987 but has been a disappointment. He averaged 10.3 points in his first two seasons while making 40.4 percent of his shots from the field. He has averaged 12 points and three rebounds in five games this season.

PAGE 14 THE CHRONICLE FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 1 7 , 1 9 8 9

Carolina looks to spoil Duke's chances for a Citrus Bowl bid • HEELS from page 13

Even if the Tar Heels play their best, Duke still might embarrass them. Duke averages 31.5 point a game, whereas Carolina has tallied 13.8 points on aver­age. If the VMI game, a 49-7 Tar Heel win, is not figured into the average, then Carolina has managed a feeble 9.9 points a game.

Despite all of the Tar Heels' shortcom­ings, Duke head coach Steve Spurrier will not bad-mouth his overmatched oppo­nent.

"We're going to do everything we can to win this game," Spurrier said. "[We must] play as hard as we can to win this game."

North Carolina's offense has been so in­ept that Brown was forced to play sopho­more quarterback Todd Burnett in the eighth game of the season after originally deciding to redshirt Burnett. Last week, in a 27-20 loss to South Carolina, Burnett tore his kidney and liver after leading the Tar Heels on a 15-play, 87-yard touch­down drive.

Burnett 's injury forces Burnette, who has started three previous games, onto the first team again. Senior Jonathan Hall started five games before injuring his shoulder a month ago.

No matter who has played quarterback freshman flanker Randall Felton, who hails from Durham, has been the target of choice. He has caught 34 passes for 455 yards, more than any other freshman Tar Heel in history. No other receiver aver­

ages more than two catches a game. Senior tailback Aaron Staples paces the

anemic Tar Heel rushing attack. Staples has rushed for 430 yards on 100 carries. Carolina averages 3.5 yards per carry.

For Duke the game could serve as a means to pad the statistics of offensive players and to further those players to­ward NCAA, ACC and school records.

All-America flanker Clarkston Hines has equalled the NCAA record for career touchdown receptions with New Mexico's Terance Mathis, who also plays his last game on Saturday. Hines can also clinch the ACC career reception mark with a good game against the Tar Heels. Hines needs just 13 yards receiving to become the second player in NCAA Division I-A history to have three consecutive 1,000 yard seasons.

With 93 yards rushing sophomore Randy Cuthbert could become the second Duke player in history to accumulate 1,000 yards on the ground. If Cuthbert reaches the 100-yard plateau in the game, he would extend his Blue Devil record to six straight 100-yard games.

The Tar Heels could act as the spoiler in the game. If Duke loses, then Virginia goes to the Citrus Bowl. Although the Blue Devils would still play in the All American Bowl.

"I'm sure some of our people would like to spoil Duke's year," Brown said. "But I worry more about my team than the other teams."

Advertise in The Chronicle

DUKE vs. NORTH CAROLINA GAME FACTS: Time: 12:00 p.m. Radio: WDNC-620 AM, WXDU-88.7 FM Television: WRAL-TV Ch. 5

Duke Results (7-3, 5-1) L 21-27 at South Carolina W 41-31 vs. Northwestern L 6-28 at Tennessee L 28-49 at Virginia W 21-17 vs. Clemson W 35-29 vs. Army W 46-25 at Maryland W 30-19 vs. Georgia Tech W 52-35 at Wake Forest W 35-26 vs. N.C. State

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FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 1 7 , 1 9 8 9 THE CHRONICLE PAGE 1 5

Revitalized football program makes mockery of past years When Tom Butters went looking for a football coach in

the fall of 1978, he had, pardon the expression, two strikes against him.

Six months after Duke's basketball team soared to the Final Four, the football team limped home with a 4-7 re­cord. And Wallace Wade Stadium was decrepit, its walk­ways crumbling, its wooden bleachers bristling with splinters.

Needless to say, Ara Parseghian did not return phone calls.

Butters, the Blue Devils' athletic director then and now, went out on a limb to fire Mike McGee, who had been marginally successful by Duke standards (in eight years as head coach, he went 6-5 twice).

Surely, Butters thought, SOMEONE would be willing to fill this unattractive job. Surely, he didn't expect to hire someone named Shirley.

Shirley "Red" Wilson, to be exact. Wilson's record as a small-college coach was as impressive as his ability to mangle the English language. Duke mounted a public relations blitz for the 1979 season, based around the slo­gan "Red Means Go." A record number of season tickets were sold, which proves Duke fans must not be as clever as everyone thinks they are.

The result: 2-8-1. Oh, and a 37-16 loss to Dick Cram's mighty North Carolina Tar Heels.

Then Ben Bennett and I came to Durham. He drove a Corvette and collected beautiful women. I drove a beat-up Mustang and lived in House CC. He passed for 9,614 yards over the next four years. I watched and nodded my head a lot.

Ben and I got off to a rocky start. The first game of our careers, it was about 110 degrees in refurbished Wallace Wade Stadium. The new aluminum bleachers combined with the blazing sun to create a very special afternoon for those of us lucky enough to attend. East Carolina won, 35-10.1 immediately asked for the soccer beat.

Duke finished 2-9 in 1980: The season ended with a 44-21 loss to the powerful Tar Heels. Red was unable to figure out a way to stop the man he called "Kerwin Bryan." No big deal — Duke last beat UNC in 1973.

Wilson, a nice man, had been smart enough to turn over the day-to-day operation of the offense to an as­sistant coach named Steve Spurrier. And Wilson's down-home charm helped entice some first-rate players to

Jon Scher Duke. He also inherited some pretty decent leftovers from the McGee era — not just stellar receivers Chris Castor and Cedric Jones, but also a couple of offensive linemen named Bum and Ox (Tim Bumgarner and Robert Oxendine). How can you go wrong with offensive linemen named Bum and Ox?

In '81, Duke was able to outscore six of its opponents en route to its first winning season since 1974. Then Carolina came to town. Boom! 31-10 loss.

But there were signs the rivalry was heating up. A vendor outside the stadium that day was hawking bumper stickers that read "I'd Rather Have Jock Itch Than Dick Crum," and "Unlike Linda Lovelace, Dean Al­ways Chokes On The Big Ones."

The breakthrough came in '82. The Ben Bennett Show began the year with wins over Tennessee and South Carolina on the road. But then the traditional Swiss cheese defense began to take its toll. Duke carried a dis­appointing (!) 5-5 record into the Carolina game.

It was a spectacular day. Ben completed 25 of 34 pas­ses for 273 yards. I ate fried chicken and gaped from the Duke pressbox, stumbling downstairs to stare in disbe­lief as the final.seconds ticked away. It was a wild scene. The Carolina team sprinted for the buses, as hundreds of students poured from the stands. The fans removed one goalpost and set it on the Chapel steps.

It had been so long since Duke possessed the Victory Bell, no one knew exactly what to do with it. Finally, somebody came up with a can of dark blue paint, to cover up the offending color. That done, everyone had a chance to ring Carolina's bell.

Wilson's contract was up, and he pressed Butters to let him know his fate. That night, Butters told Wilson the news, and we later trumpeted the headline in 64-point type: "Red means gone: Wilson fired."

Butters' next choice was a higher-profile name. But af­ter experiencing success early in his career, Steve Sloan had become a sort of football-coaching Sad Sack, con­stantly dogged by misfortune. Bennett and I bowed out after Sloan's first year, a 3-8 debacle. Bennett was known for ignoring Sloan's game plan and substituting his own, to no avail. I jumped the sports staff and joined

the news side that year, so I was proud of my timing. Until basketball season, that is.

Under Sloan, another nice man, Duke stumbled to a 13-31 record in four seasons, managing to beat Carolina only in 1985. That year, the Tar Heels practically handed Duke the game with a series of costly blunders.

Sloan did Duke a favor after a 4-7 season in '86 (42-35 loss to Carolina), and made another ill-fated career move: He became athletic director at Alabama. Butters reached into his bag of tricks and came up with a new-old head coach: Spurrier, who spent three years coach­ing the Tampa Bay Bandits and was thrown out of work when the USFL rolled over and finally died.

Spurrier was the same offensive genius he was during his first stint at Duke. But during his absence, the face of Duke football changed. The budget was increased, and the plush new football office /weight room complex was completed. Duke suddenly became an attractive destina­tion for a high-school football star.

Spurrier's second career at Duke got off to a slow start, but the 1987 season was salvaged by a 25-10 win at UNC. That was the death blow for the CrUm regime at Carolina. Somehow, hiss utter lack of personality and the abrasiveness of the Carolina boosters had combined to bring their program down to the level Duke was es­caping. The game ended with boos cascading from the nearly empty stands at Kenan Stadium. Incredible.

Carolina compounded its problems by hiring Mack Brown, a squeaky-voiced public-relations specialist who exudes insincerity. Duke greeted him with a too-close win a year ago. This year, bowl bid in hand, the Blue Devils are a 16-point favorite to send Carolina to its sec­ond consecutive 1-10 season.

Wallace Wade Stadium was once called the prettiest place in the country to watch bad football. Now, that dis­tinction belongs to Kenan, a gorgeous place to spend a fall afternoon. Unless you're Mack Brown, of course.

Maybe Ara Parseghian will be assigned to color com­mentary for whatever bowl game winds up with the Blue Devils.

How sweet it is. Jon Scher is a former sports editor and editor-in-chief

of the Chronicle. He graduated in 1984 and is the managing editor of Baseball America in Durham.

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PAGE 16 THE CHRONICLE FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 1 7 , 1 9 8 9

Grid Picks The Scrap: Caeser's Palace •— "Ladies and

gentlemen, let me welcome you to tonight's tag-team brawl, a battle of Sports Information Departments," boomed Jon Tepper.

"On my right is Rick 'Milwaukee' Brewer, head of the UNC SID. His partners are Scott 'Anders' Jared and Dave 'Highs and' Lohse," Tepper con­tinued.

"On my left is John 'David Lee' Roth with part­ners Mtke'crophone Fiend' Cragg and Mike Tur­bo' Sobb."

The Grid pickers were there in force, ready to see blood spilled.

That.is, except for Josh "Kosher" Dill, who has an impressive six-game lead.

"Jeez guys, isn't this out of hand?" Kosher Dill asked. "I mean, this is all so violent, couldn't we settle it another way?"

"Shut up!" several jealous pickers responded. The Rother better known in some parts as

"Cue Ball," talked smack to UNC as belt rang. "Have you guys been to the Final Four

recently?" he asked. "As a matter of fact, I have," responded

Brewer, who worked out in Seattle despite the Tar Heels' absence from the event.

With that, both men, closet street fighters, moved about the ring tactfully. They circled and circled, wary of the knock-out capability of the other, until the crowd gotentsy.

"Throw a punch, you wimps!" cried Brent "Sugarbear" Belvin. "Stop dancin' out there."

Spurred by the fans. Brewer and Roth lunged at each other, unfortunately arriving at the cen­ter of the ring at the same time. Punches were thrown, illegal objects were used, and both men were sent reeling back to their corners.

In came Sobb and Lohse, two old rivals from the Midwest, swinging bolos.

"We picked Illinois to beat your boys at In­diana, Sobb, what do you think about that?" taunted Lohse.

Sobb has no printable response, but at­tempted to answer with his fists. In a flurry remi-niscient of the Heams-Hagler brawl, Sobb and Lohse went at each other with a vengeance.

"That's right, f— him up!" yelled the immature Mark "Jester" Jaffe. "Knock htm out the box!"

Neither man could sustain the pace, and both went back to their corners to tag up. Jared was

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Guest Picker: Duke SID 62-14 Maryland Georgia Tech Clemson N.C. State Notre Dame Nebraska Miami Southern Cal Auburn Pittsburgh Indiana Washington Tennessee Kentucky Texas Louisville Georgia Southern Yale Oklahoma State

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