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DUKING IT OUT OVER UNIVERSITY ANTI-SWEATSHOP INITIATIVES

          Duke Univ. "scored big media points" with its "bold
     anti-sweatshop initiative," and other colleges are "lining
     up to follow suit," according to Stella Hopkins of the
     CHARLOTTE OBSERVER.  Diane Bratcher, a spokesperson for the
     NY-based Interfaith Center on Corporate Responsibility:
     "It's really a terrific first step.  But the Duke thing has
     a couple of weaknesses."  Under its new rules, Duke
     licensees, who "ring up" $20M a year from Duke items, risk
     losing rights to the name if they use prison or child labor,
     allow unsafe working conditions or fail to pay at least the
     minimum wage.  The Univ. of NC -- whose licensees do $75M a
     year in sales -- "expects to have an anti-sweatshop draft
     ready in a few weeks."  Critics of Duke's code say that it,
     along with the Apparel Industry Partnership's guidelines,
     "share shortcomings, mainly in wages and inspections." 
     Interfaith's Bratcher: "Typically, the prevailing or market
     wage is a starvation wage."  Lora Jo Foo, President of S.F.-
     based Sweatshop Watch, a small, nonprofit, watchdog group:
     "For it to be more than just a media-PR thing ... you have
     to have monitoring, inspections and a sustainable living
     wage.  Otherwise, you're just monitoring to make sure
     sweatshops continue" (CHARLOTTE OBSERVER, 3/15).
          MORE ON THE WAY? An editorial in the LAS VEGAS SUN
     addressed the "boost" in sales given to UNLV by its strong
     finish of the basketball season: "A university is not a
     business.  Higher standards are expected of colleges and
     universities, and in this instance they should expect more
     from those who make a profit from their association with a
     university.  The Board of Regents, which oversees Nevada's
     universities and community colleges, should follow Duke's
     lead and address this as soon as possible" (L.V. SUN, 3/15).

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