14The Tar HeelThursday; July 6; 1989"" Opinion Chill wind' The signs are evident and very ominous, and a chill wind blows." Those were the words of Su preme Court Justice Harry A. Blackmun, author of the 1973 Roe vs. Wade decision, in his minor ity opinion on Monday's Web ster vs. Reproductive Health Serv ices decision. The "chill wind" of the Web ster decision did not overturn Roe vs. Wade, at least not yet. But the decision may leave a fot of women seeking abortions ut in the cold. The Webster decision upheld Missouri abortion laws prohibit ing public employees from per forming abortions and forbidding the use of public hospitals or other public facilities for abortions. This goes a step beyond denial of government funds for abortions. Under such a directive, a woman cannot have an abortion in a pub lic hospital even if she pays for it herself. Under Missouri law, poor women will have to turn to more costly private institutions. Rural women will have to travel hun dreds of miles to urban clinics and private hospitals. Women with health problems who are too high risk to have abortions in private clinics will have to wait until these clinics raise enough money to finance an upgrade in technology. Essentially, abortion for these women will be made more diffi cult than for most And while abortion rights technically remain Washburn offers lesson Chns Washburn, ex-member of and 20 free because he was fa- Chris Washburn, ex-member of the N.C. State basketball program, was drafted into the National Basketball Association with a $3 million contract. His dreams were dashed recently by his violation of professional basketball's sub stance abuse policy for the third time. Washburn is a man blessed with obvious physical ability. However he, like many athletes, was val ued only for this physical ability and not for his human status. Washburn's ability to excel on the basketball court helped him through school, and his head was filled with dreams of money and fame. Washburn, at a young and impressionable stage, let these dreams fill his life. Ignoring school, he was pushed along the education system, believing that Bfe held only basketball, an ex pensive contract and fame. Wash burn was never taught how to handle that success and fame; he was taught it would be -easy, -and he believed he could do anything for abortion intact, there is no longer anything protecting those rights from fu ture damage. The next victims appear to be teen-age women. The court has agreed to hear three abortion cases in the fall term which, among other things, will probably require pa rental consent for many, if not all, abortions for minors. While the outcry from extrem ist groups is expected and pre cedented, the real test of the court decision will be with the Ameri can people. The court has actually given Americans the opportunity, in effect, to put abortion to a refer endum once and for all. Recent polls indicate that most Americans favor abortion, but feel that some restrictions should be implemented. Just what restric tions should be placed on abor tion is not clear. Abortion is going to become a campaign issue in races for state legislatures. Protests by extrem ist groups will become intense. In the meantime, let's hope that women in the process of making some of the hardest, most painful decisions of their lives are not harassed by extremist groups or thwarted by financial hardship. Let's also hope state legislators are not overwhelmed by their new responsibilities to determine abor tion rights in their states. And let's hope the "chill wind" does not turn into a full-force gale. Sarah Cagle and go free because he was fa mous. Now, the system has cracked down, and Washburn has been left to pick up the pieces. He has been banned from the NBA with nothing to fall back on, the dreams of money and fame are dead, and he will wait out the next two years toying with his shattered career. Could anything have stopped this tragedy? Coaching. If the people in Washburn's life had helped him learn how to handle the success instead of fo cusing on the success itself, he may not be in this situation. If someone cared enough to instill in him the will to win at life and not just on the court, he may still have his dreams today. Washburn is the current sports star crushed by greed in athletics and if those in the athlete's life don't strive to teach more than victory at any cost, he won't be - the last where-there 4s tk victory Randy Basinger TnW To the editor: A recent article in The Tar Heel, "Grads unite for benefits" (June 29), contained a number of factual errors. The writer, Paul Bredderman, stated that Graduate Students United (GSU) has presented the administration with a petition requesting that all of the nearly 5,000 graduate students at UNC receive a minimum stipend of $4,000 per semester. In fact, GSU has not yet petitioned the administration. The graduate students and faculty in the department of history deliv ered a petition to the Provost last spring. GSU has not yet approached Memories' of Summer, 1 989 r I'm not taking any classes this summer, so I've been forced to turn to more esoteric pursuits in order to keep my mental faculties, such as they are, honed to perfection. For example, lately I've been looking back with fond remembrance on times that have not yet happened. It's really not that difficult; just combine one part nostalgia and two parts speculation. All this brainwork has left me with a) a headache and b) a query (and thus a topic for this column): How will future generations remember the summer of 1989? Maybe it's a little early to wax nostalgic; after all, summers in the South generally last until about the middle of February. Nonetheless, our actions now will one day be the stuff memories and endless, droning sto ries are made of. Kind of chokes you up, doesn't it? Every summer has some kind of theme to it. For example, 1968 will forever be marked by the "sexual revolution and draft-card burning"; now we have Rob Lowe and flag burning I guess the more things change, the more they really do stay the same. Maybe 1989 will make its -mark fer- safety -in-air- ttavel.-Today-any jumbo jet can make a quick Scenes from the year 2000 The last ekffcant hides in -the last ram nest. i i ' Reader 's Forum the provost with our concerns and objectives and will not do so until we have researched them (we aren't grad students for nothing). Your reporter's statement that we are requesting "that all of the nearly 5,000 graduate students at UNC re ceive a minimum $4,000 per semes ter stipend" is a lovely idea, but it's also incorrect. Of the nearly 5,000 graduate stu dents, only 2,427 receive stipends, according to Graduate School Dean Henry Dearman (Chapel Hill News paper, 62189). We want to see those of the 2,427 who earn less than $4,000 Eric Chasse Staff Columnist emergency landing even over the ocean by utilizing one of the several convenient oil slicks around U.S. coastlines. Personally, I think 1989 will be remembered as the summer of the movie sequel. Has anybody else no ticed the local theaters lately? You've got "Star Trek V," "Ghostbusters II," "Karate Kid III," plus about a half dozen other flicks with retreaded plots. Somebody should tell Hollywood that the writers' strike has been over for a long time now; it's OK to come up with an original story line every now and then. The classics never had sequels; it just wouldn't be natural to see an ad for "Gone with the Wind II: The Reconstruction Years" or "Casablanca III: Follow Bogie and Bacall as they open a bar 'n grill in Hoboken." Catch a clue, Hollywood the truly great movies don't need sequels. I mean, Police Academy VI" didn't exactly receive-an abundance of Osca-nomi nations, now did it? per semester raised up to that level. (We do not want to see graduate stu dent stipends leveled or the number of stipends reduced). Two other ob jectives tuition remission to the in-state rate and free medical insur ance would also only benefit those graduate students who receive sti pends. But since almost all graduate students receive a stipend at some point in their program, we'd all bene fit in the long run. Cindy Hahamovitch Graduate Student History Of course everyone makes a lot of money on sequels, but the recent rash of Roman numerals on marquis signs leads me to believe they're taking a good thing too far. Pretty soon we'll start seeing blockbusters like "Ishtar ID" grace the silver screen; then we'll know that society as we know it has officially ended. Fire all the writers and shoot three films at once just change around the scenery and the camera angles. Change the titles a little, release the flicks about six months apart and gross $20 million on each one. Not bad for a week's work. As long as this sequel craze is confined to Hollywood, I suppose it is relatively harmless. With any luck, the rest of society won't catch on to this disconcerting trend, this bastion of unoriginality and shameless repli cation. For if the plague did spread, before long even our memories would run together ... "Oh, I remember the summer of '89. It was just like '92 ... or was it '93?" Eric Chasse is a senior from Hopewell Junction, N.Y., who is just twked-effihat-he can 4 -afford 'id-pay- five bucks a shot at the movies.