The Chronicle Survive and advance
Nurses consider
ByANYASOSTEK The Chronicle
69 WINSTON-SALEM Gathered in a huddle 64 with about three minutes Kansas left in the game, Nate James gave his teammates a simple message: “We’ve been in this situation before. Let’s do what we’ve done over and over again. Let’s win this game.” The team took that message to heart, playing heads-up defense and nailing every free throw down the stretch to ensure that this one didn’t slip away. “We beat a hell of a basketball team today,” coach Mike Krzyzewski said of the 69-64 victory over No. 8 seed Kansas (2410). “I’ve been in over 60 of them in the NCAA, and this was a big-time game.” Duke (29-4), which advanced to the Sweet 16 for the third straight year, will play No. 5 seed Florida (26-7) Friday in
Duke
unionizing By MARKO DJUKANOVIC The Chronicle
Citing lost career opportunities, mandatory overtime and lowered staff levels, a number of Duke Hospital’s nurses are considering forming a union David Miller, a spokesperson for the International Union of Operating Engineers—the organization that launched the petition drive to organize the nurses —said the likelihood of forming a union depends largely on how much the nurses want it, and on whether they can be clearly informed about their options. “We are holding regular meetings [about unionization] —we want an educated workforce,” said Miller, adding that many nurses do not realize that they have a federally protected right to form a union. Because the issue is so contentious, many nurses at Duke Hospital declined to comment or would not give their names. But some wear badges that read “NUPA,” or Nurses Unionizing for Patient Advocacy. Improving the quality of care for patients is the main goal of unionization, some nurses said. “Our primary responsibility is to help the patients, and we cannot do that if we are overworked,” said
Syracuse, N.Y. But for a brief second late in the game, it didn’t look like the Blue Devils would ever make it to Syracuse. With Duke clinging to a two-point lead and under a minute left, Kansas
forward Nick Bradford recovered the deflection off Shane Battier’s eighth and final block of the night and powered the ball through the hoop and drew the foul from Jason Williams. Bradford’s ensuing free throw gave Kansas its first lead since the 19-minute mark. But freshman Carlos Boozer, who dominated the post in the second half, would then make the two biggest plays ofhis young collegiate career in the next 30 seconds. First, Boozer tipped home a miss to put Duke back out in front by one. And on the Jayhawks’ next possession, Boozer intercepted an errant pass by Bradford near midcourt and chased the ball down near the sideline, giving Duke the possession and the lead with under 30 seconds left. The ball eventually found its way to Chris Carrawell, who was fouled. Carrawell then hit two clutch free throws to put Duke up by three. On the ensuing Kansas possession,
one nurse.
SHANE BATTIER recorded an astounding eight blocks and scored a game-high 21 points
Kirk Hinrich, who had already sunk three three-pointers in the game, lost his defender behind the three point line, but his potential game-tying shot with seven seconds left sailed wide. Carrawell chased down the rebound and called timeout while on both knees to give Duke posses-
sion and pave the way for Jason Williams’ two free throws that sealed the victory. “I thought our freshmen hit amazing free throws down at the end,” said Krzyzewski, who won his 50th NCAA tournament game. See KANSAS on page 5, SPORTSWRAP
The push for unionization has captured local media attention in the past weeks, resulting in coverage that Duke Hospital CEO Mike Israel says might tarnish the Hospital’s credibility and reputation for providing quality care. “These articles could undermine See UNIONIZATION on page 15 W
Brackets be damned: Weekend brings upset after upset By ADAM GANZ The Chronicle
WINSTON-SALEM Chris Carrawell had an idea why Duke was just one of three higher-seeded teams to survive Upset Sunday, the NCAA Tournament’s most upside-down day in recent memory. ‘You have all these teams going out there with tight asses,” Carrawell said after a scrappy defensive performance keyed No. 1 Duke’s 69-64 win over eighthseeded Kansas. “They’re playing tight.” The battle-tested Blue Devils looked anything but afraid as they improved to 9-3 in games decided by less than 10 points. But that was not the case for South region top seed Stanford, which fell 60-53 to No. 8 North Carolina, or for No. 2 seeds Cincinnati and Temple, upset by Tulsa and Seton Hall, respectively.
rnament Bracket
Ohio State, a 1999 Final Four participant, also fell by the wayside, as did de-
fending champ Connecticut, though the fifth-seeded Huskies’ loss to No. 4 Tennessee was technically not an upset. When the second-round dust had settled, Duke and Michigan State were the only No. 1 seeds still standing. In fact, the Sweet 16 contained just four of the top 12 seeded teams.“You have to go out firing all your bullets,” Carrawell said. “You have to shoot the shots you normally shoot. You can’t say, T have to be perfect.’ You have to go down playing the way you’ve been playing all year.” The Blue Devils escaped the upset bug, but by the time they took the floor in the final game of the second round, they were well aware of its victims.
Wilßec resumes
See
Semi-
Regionals
Finals April 1
24&26
winners this weekend
March
East Duked)
National Championship April 3
Oklahoma St. (3
South CAROLINA N.
MIAMI :fu
UPSETS on page 9, SPORTSWRAP �
previous hours, page
ANDREA OLANO/THE
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CHRONICLE
The Chronicle
Newsfile
•
World
page 2
Fire in fraternity house kills 3 in Penn.
Associated Press
RutemKANUNGU, Uganda ba Didas heard what sounded like an explosion, then saw black smoke billowing from the brick structure on a hilltop compound where members of a religious cult had been living for several years. The farmer and his neighbors heard screams coming from the chapel, but they couldn’t get close to the new building inside the
other students jumped to safety in their underwear from a secondstory window. Maryland hostage crisis continues A murder suspect holding three people hostage in Dundalk, Md. for a third day fired shots out
By MARK LANDLER
N.Y. Times News Service
TAIPEI, Taiwan —A day after Taiwan’s Nationalist Party was swept from power after more than 50 years, the fury of the losers erupted Sunday night, forcing President Lee Teng-hui to barricade himself inside his party headquarters as thousands of disaffected supporters battled with the police for hours. While the worst riots in a decade raged outside the building—sealed like a fortress with cordons of riot police officers and powerful water cannons—Lee bowed somewhat to the intense anger, and agreed to step down as party chair in September, a year earlier than planned. The unraveling of the Nationalist Party after its
Weather
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Low: 45 "I was trained by British intelligence. But in retrospect I would rather have been a poet. Or a farmer." -John Mason, The Rock '-a
sects are mushrooming across Africa as many people become disillusioned with the inability of politicians to improve their lives. In one case, also in Uganda, a sect turned into a guerrilla movement that used claims of religious powers to attract fighters. In Kanungu, cult members locked themselves in the chapel early Friday and nailed doors and windows closed, then sang for a few hours before dousing themselves in gasoline and paraffin and setting themselves ablaze, said David Sseppuuya, deputy editor-in-chief of the government-owned New Vision
newspaper, quoting investigators. “According to an eyewitness on See UGANDA on page 13
Violence follows Taiwanese election
Earthquake strikes
stage for possibly the early Monday, but there largest sale of nuclear were no reports of damplants in U.S. history. age or injuries.
High; 50 Low: 44
what happened to the leaders,” Didas said, standing a short distance from where charred bodies lay spread across the floor of a 120foot by 30-foot structure. Circumstances surrounding the deaths—who the dead were and how the fire was started—remain foggy. Little was known about the cult, although it appeared to incorporate Christian beliefs and local farmers said it was led by a former prostitute. Syncretic Christian religious
compound where members of the Movement for the Restoration of Ten Commandments of God lived in this remote corner of southwestern Uganda. Police said Sunday it may take them a week to determine how
of a window Sunday evening after several hours of calm following a morning burst of gunfire.
TOMORROW: MOSTLY CLOUDY
MONDAY, MARCH 20,2000
many people died in the Friday morning fire, but they believe there were as many as 470 victims—of mass suicide or mass murder. “We did not see any person running away. We really don’t know
By GEORGE MWANGI
A fire in an off-campus fraternity house near Bloomsburg University in Pennsylvania killed three people early Sunday morning, while
Authority will choose Japanese coast A moderate earthMonday between two companies bidding for quake with a magnitude the authority’s two nu- of 5.4 struck near the clear plants, setting the northern coast of Japan
TODAY:
National
Police fear 470 dead in Uganda cult fire
FROM WIRE REPORTS
Pope will tour Israel in millennial pilgrimage The Holy Land awaits John Paul 11, whose millennium pilgrimage in the steps of Jesus will take him across territory riven by ancient hatreds, among people desperate for peace. Pilot dies in Texas air show crash An Air Force F-16 fighter jet crashed Sunday afternoon while performing maneuvers as part of an air show near Kingsville Naval Air Station in Texas, killing the pilot, Air Force authorities said. New York will sell nuclear power plants The New York Power
&
candidate finished last in a bitter three-way presidential race poses huge potential dangers for Taiwan at a time of delicate transition. The country’s newly elected president, the opposition leader Chen Shui-bian, is viewed with deep suspicion by China for his past advocacy ofTaiwanese independence. So far, Beijing has had no official reaction to his election, but Washington is so concerned that senior administrators have been dispatched to China to keep tensions from escalating. As the magnitude of their defeat became clear to the Nationalists, the tensions long simmering in their ranks exploded into the streets of this normally tranquil capital. See TAIWAN on page 14 >
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The Chronicle
MONDAY. MARCH 20, 2000
PAGE 3
Faculty-in-residence trade cozy homes for bustling dorms By TREY DAVIS The Chronicle
After going through the
freshman 15, the sophomore
slump and senioritis, many people are happy to leave college and dorm life behind. However, in 10 East Campus residence halls and in a few houses in Trent and on West,
some professors choose to live side-by-side with students and be as much a part of everyday dorm life as any 18-year-old. “In my advanced middle age, I am stimulated by the energy and freshness of 18year-olds,” said Bill Allard, a math professor and Southgate’s 1 faculty-in-residence, who joined the program when his children left home. “The only drawback as far as I am concerned is occasional noise from drunk students in the wee hours of the morning.” Through the faculty-in-residence program, which has existed in some form for almost three decades, Duke professors serve three-year terms living in spacious apartments in oncampus residence halls. “I think most of them enjoy the more frequent and informal interaction with students,” said Associate Dean for Residential Life Benjamin Ward, the program’s director and an associate professor ofphilosophy who
lives in the Arts Theme House. Angie McCord, a Trinity freshman and Southgate resident, feels that Allard is very supportive of residents. “He attends all our [House Council] meetings and is really helpful
with that,” McCord said. Dean ofTrinity College Bob Thompson feels this sort of involvement is very important, and he explained why the ma-
could be reappointed. Ward stressed that only the very best candidates are reappointed. While Stangl’s reappointment application included 65 letters of recommendation collected from residents, advisers and parents, not all students have such glowing praise for the program. “I’ve never met my facultyin-residence,” said Trinity freshman Matthew Signer, who could not even think of the professor’s name. Suzanne Lieb, also a Trinity freshman, does not interact with her faculty-in-residence, but she has met both Allard and Stangl when visiting friends in other dorms. “Southgate’s and Bassett’s I know are really good,” she said. Stangl conceded that some parts of the program are not up to par. ‘There is a lot of variability. There is definitely a learning curve,” she said, adding that the first year in dorms can be a tough for professors. Vincenzo Quadrini, an assistant professor of economics, ANDREA OLAND/THE CHRONICLE in Gilbert-Addoms dormiDALENE STANGL, the popular faculty-in-residence in Bassett Dormitory, is hoping she and her husband will be reappointed to lived for the first time this year tory the dorm. They have amassed 65 letters of recommendation in her quest for a second three-year term. and is satisfied with his experijority of faculty-in-residence intelligence, their passion, their available to help residents ence overall. “I’m experiencing now the live on East. “The program is lives,” said Dalene Stangl, an through these times. She pointOne that affects the first-year assistant professor of the praced to a diary entry sent to her dormitory experience I never campus primarily and is a tice of statistics and faculty-inby a former resident who had had,” said Quadrini, explaingood way to introduce firstresidence in Bassett Dormitory. taken a semester off from ing that as a student in Euyear students to interacting In return, Stangl said she and Duke. “There is not much in rope, he never lived on a colwith faculty outside of the her husband, Rick Richardson, this world that anyone could lege campus. Quadrini said he has hosted classroom,” he said. offer the residents a sense of give me that I would cherish more than the story that stustudent dinners and discusParticipants receive free family and community. For Stangl, the benefits of dent shared with me,” she said. sions and helped residents with housing and a paid six-month leave after their three years of closeness come with drawThis year, there are five opentheir economics problem sets. service, but Ward said these inbacks, and she said the hardest ings for the faculty-in-residence However, he said, a lot of the centives were minor compared part of her job is “watching the program. Before 1998, faculty success of such a program deto the more intangible benefits destructive parts of campus could only serve one term, but pends on student support. culture such as drinking, exam the standard changed after “You need the willingness of of faculty-student interaction. students to participate in those Thompson formed a review com“I enjoy their conversations, cramming and selective rush.” However, she likes being mittee that decided faculty meetings,” Quadrini said. their ideas, their diversity, their
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PAGE 4
MONDAY, MARCH 20,2000
Leaders work to define, differentiate new student group By JONATHAN SHEETZ The Chronicle
Who coordinates the coordinating
committees?
Officers from four student groups recently joined together to form the Student Affairs Collaboration Committee —a group that is part problem-solving think tank and part ambassador to the administration. But representatives from the Inter-Community Council claim their organization is already charged with those same goals. The ICC is now working to revise its mission to more clearly reflect SACC’s aims of coordination and communication. If the ICC becomes more effective, then the fledgling SACC may fold. “[We] have no desire to start a group that’s useless, or ineffective or that duplicates another group...,” said Trinity senior Jim Lazarus, vice president of Campus Council and one of SACC’s organizers. “It’s not being done right now by ICC or by any other group on campus. If we discover that [after an amendment is made], ICC is doing everything SACC was going to do, we have no qualms saying, ‘OK, SACC is not needed any more.’” Last month, representatives from Duke Student Government, Campus Social Board, Campus Council and the Duke University Union met in the first gathering of SACC. Set up as a problem-solving group, SACC members discussed Duke’s fire
safety policy, in light of the Seton Hall dorm tragedy and examined the University’s policies on flier posting and event security. “We thought that it would be very
“[We] have no desire to start a group that’s useless or ineffective If we discover that [after an amendment is made], ICC is doing everything SACC was going to do, we have no qualms saying, ‘OK, SACC is not needed any more.’”
helpful for the administration to hear related, but distinct views on issues, as well as for the organizations themselves to be able to explain to each other their takes on these problems...,” said Pratt senior Brian StemJim Lazarus, SACC organizer and Campus Council vice president pel, director of DSG computing and one of SACC’s organizers. “It’s not a formal body—more a meeting of in“[SACC’s ideas are] important and state a formed minds.” But while SACC brings together goal for what the ICC could and should be... representatives from four organizaThey helped the ICC have a clearer vision of tions, the ICC executive board comprises delegates from 14 student what it could be doing.” groups—including some of the SACC Jeremy Huff, vice president for community interaction participants. According to its mission, the board was created to “discuss shared inter“[SACC’s ideas are] important and the more visible campus organizations ests and University issues, and bring student interests to the attention of state a goal for what the ICC could and said they did not think these commushould be...,” said Trinity senior Jeremy nication groups were particularly efthe administration.” fective at representing their views. And, at an ICC meeting earlier this Huff, DSG vice president for community interaction and chair of the ICC. month, SACC organizers came to re“If there were an issue I felt had to be addressed, I probably wouldn’t apsolve the two groups’ overlapping “They helped the ICC have a clearer vision of what it could be doing.” proach an administrator,” said Pratt agendas. The ICC executive committee voted Vice President for Student Affairs senior David Hoang, adding that he would not go to student groups, either. to submit a by-law change that would Janet Dickerson, who has long empha“I don’t really know what they do. I allow the group to deal efficiently with sized the need for communication bestudent issues—obviating the need for tween students and administrators, would probably write [a letterl to The SACC. Regardless of the outcome, said that overlap between the two Chronicle, or write something on DevilNet.” SACC plans to meet twice more this groups was unnecessary. Jaime Levy contributed to this story. Many students not involved with semester.
Staff meeting resumes Friday
at
3:30 p.m.
Duke University Divinity School Center for Continuing Education presents Holy Eucharist every Tuesday in Lent at 12:15 p.m. (Memorial Chapel) sponsored by the Episcopal Center
Catholic Mass every Wednesday evening at 5:15 p.m
Taize Evening Prayer every Tuesday Evening at 5:15 p.m. (Memorial Chapel) (no service held during Spring Break)
Choral Vespers
Ash Wednesday Services Wednesday, March 6 at 5:00 a.m and 5:15 p.m. (Duke Chapel)
Procession of the Stations of the Cross Friday, April 21 at 11:30 a.m. (beginning on the Chapel steps, proceeding through West Campus, and returning to the Chapel steps for the University Service of Good Friday)
Palm Sunday Services of Worship Sunday, April 16 at 9:00 a.m. and 10:50 a.m (beginning on the Chapel Steps)
(Puke Chapel Crypt)
*
Evening at 5:15 p.m. (Memorial Chapel) (no service held during Spring Break)
every Thursday
University Service of Good Friday Friday, April 21 at 12:00 noon (Duke Chapel)
Catholic Palm Sunday Services (immediately after the Procession of the Sunday, April 16 at 9:00 a.m. (Baldwin Auditorium) Stations of the Cross) and 9:00 p.m. (Duke Chapel) Catholic Liturgy of Good Friday Friday, April 21 at 5:00 p.m, (Duke Chapel) Slack Ministries Worship
Campus
Sunday, April 16 at 7:00 p.m. (Mary Lou Williams Center) Holy Week Worship Service Monday. April 17 at 12:00 noon (Memorial Chapel) Holy Week Worship Service with Eucharist Tuesday April 16 at 12:00 noon (Memorial Chapel) Holy Week Worship Service Wednesday, April 19 at 12:00 noon (Memorial Chapel)
Solemn Service of Tenebrae Friday. April 21 at 7:30 p.m. (Duke Chapel)
The 2000 Kenneth W. Clark Lectures featuring:
Gordon Fee, Ph.D. Professor of New Testament Regent College
“Wisdom Christology in Paul? Some Reflections on the Pre-existence of Christ in Paul” March 21,11:00 a.m. Centenary Lecture Hall, 022 New Divinity
Easter Vigil
Saturday. April 22 at 6:30 p.m. (Duke Chapel) sponsored by the Catholic Student Center (all are welcome)
Easter Sunrise Service Sunday. April 23 at 6:30 a.m. (Duke Gardens)
Easter Sunday University Services of Worship Holy Week Worship Service Sunday. April 23 at 9:00 a.m. Thursday. April 20 at 12:00 noon (Memorial Chapel) and 11:00 a.m. (Duke Chapel) Maundy Thursday Service of the Lord’s Catholic Mass for Easter Supper —Stripping of the Altar Sunday, April 23 at 11:00 a.m. (Fage Auditorium) Thursday. April 20 at 7:30 p.m. (Duke Chapel) sponsored by the Catholic Student Center Catholic Liturgy of Holy Thursday Black Campus Ministries Worship Thursday, April 20 at 9:00 p.m. (Duke Chapel) Sunday, April 16at 7:00 p.m. (Mary Lou Williams Center)
For Information Call GS>4--2572 www.chapel.duke.edu
“Paul and the Trinity: The Experience of Christ and the Spirit for PauVs Understanding of God” March 22, 2:30 p.m. Alumni Memorial Common Room, New Divinity The Clark Lectures are free and open to the public. For more information, call: Center for Continuing Education (919) 660-3448 E-Mail: div-conted@duke.edu
MONDAY, MARCH 20, 2000
The Chronicle
PAGES
Wilßec reinstates earlier closing time By KATIE SOULE The Chronicle
Citing lack of student interest and high operational costs, Wilson Recreation Center director Bill Harvey has decided not to extend the center’s hours permanently. Pressed by Duke Student Government and the
Graduate and Professional Student Council, administrators had kept the gym open from 6 a.m. until 2 a.m.
Sunday through Thursday during a trial period from late November through mid-December. Harvey made the recent decision along with Executive Vice President Tallman Trask and Athletic Director Joe Alieva. The administrators used data kept by the Duke Card office from the beginning of the semester to determine the final hours for the center, which \yill now run from 7 a.m. to midnight Monday through Thursday. The Wilßec will remain open from 7 a.m. to 10 p.m. on Fridays, from 9 a.m. to 10 p.m. on Saturdays and from noon to midnight on Sundays. DSG officers said they were displeased by the decision. “I’m disappointed witjj the decision not to permanently extend the gym hours because I feel as though there definitely is student interest and demand in extended hours,” said Trinity senior Bob Koch, DSG vice president for facilities and athletics. “Unfortunately, I wasn’t involved in the decision process, and raw data can be interpreted to say what you want it to say.” Harvey cited what he called low usage to justify his decision. While the trial period was in effect, an average of 27.3 students enteredThe facility between midnight and 1 a.m. and an average of six came between 1 and 2 a.m. Late-night users represented about 4 percent of those who came throughout each day. However, administrators do not keep statistics on when people leave the gym, meaning that it is difficult to tell exactly how many people were inside the building between midnight and 2 a.m. During exam week, when the gym was open 24 hours, an average of 2.4 users per night entered the gym between midnight and 8 a.m. Harvey also said one or two students per day used the gym from 6 to 7 a.m. during the trial. Administrators said they felt that the benefits to these students were outweighed by the cost ofkeeping the center open. Harvey said the trial period cost an extra $4OO per week for labor alone and that he would have trouble finding night monitors now. “The two monitors who worked at night during the trial period are not willing to work any more,” he said. The gym has been open during normal hours this semester, and Harvey said there has been a 60 percent boost in evening usage, due mainly to throngs of Krzyzewskiville tenters camped outside the gym doors.
HEALTH-CONSCIOUS students work out on the Wilßec’s line of cardiovascular equipment late one night last semester.
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Friday, March 31, 2000 7:00-10:00 pm (North and East Gates ONLY will open at 6:45 pm)
Wallace Wade Stadium Duke is capping a year-long 75th birthday celebration with a bash for the entire community! Join us for an evening of family fun, food, music, prizes and A SPECTACULAR FIREWORKS SHOW!
ACTIVITIES horthose seeking signs
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Student ID's Contiki Tours Eurail Passes Travel Insurance
OTHER 75TH EVENTS: March 24th: 9 am-1 pm Eye & blood pressure screenings Duke South Atrium April
7th-9th
Duke Uniu. Religious Life Staff invites the public to a weekend of community worship services. For scheduled events, call 684-6220
The Chronicle
PAGE 6
MONDAY, MARCH 20,2000
Duke pickup truck Nobel Prize winner will speak Thurs. stolen from campus From staff reports A $19,000 Duke-owned Ford Ranger 2000 pickup truck was stolen from the power substation at Tow-
erview and Wannamaker drives early last week, said Maj. Robert Dean of the Duke University Police Department. On March 14 at 11:11 p.m., Campus Police officers noticed that the substation’s fence was open and that the chains used to lock both the inner and outer fences had been cut. They could not tell if anything was taken. On March 15 at 6:13 a.m., an n i employee reported that the vehi-1 01 ICC cle, DU #B7O with license number MVV-9512, was stolen along with a n onA «f c Kcporis $650 tool box mounted on its back. The truck had been parked within the fenced-in area, but it was unlocked and the keys were left inside. •
Fight breaks out: A fight between several
men spilled into the Emergency Department waiting room March 12 at 4 p.m. and ended with a Campus Police officer being struck in the back and four men charged with an affray and removed from campus, Dean said. The fight started on Spruce Street in Durham before ending up in the Emergency Department. Four men were charged with an affray: 18-year-old Fashaun Green Demuwas of 201 Clayton Rd., Larry Johnson of 602 Barnes St., 45-year-old Norman Mayo Sr. of 1103 Fern St. and 34-year-old John Flowers of 6126 Hilton St. “This is something that can happen in any time in the Emergency Department,” Dean said. “That’s why we have officers stationed there 24 hours a day, seven days a week.” See POLICE REPORTS on page 15 �
From staff reports Nobel Prize winnerVal Fitch, a professor of physics at Princeton University, will discuss “What Paces Discoveries in Physics: Close Calls and Near Misses” on March 22 at 4 p.m. Fitch won the Nobel Prize in 1980 for discovering violations of fundamental symmetry principles in the decay of neutral Kmesons. His speech, a special colmath the for loquium department, will be held in 114 Physics Building and is designed for a general audience. For infor-
mation, call 660-2812.
Applications available for Trustee committees: Duke Student Government is distributing applications and information packets for student representative positions on Board of Trustees committees and committees. Presidential Positions are available on the Trustees’ business and finance, academic affairs, buildings and grounds, medical center affairs, student affairs and facilities and environment committees. Also, the President’s Advisory Council on Resources and the President’s Committee on Black Affairs are looking for students. Applications are available outside the DSG office and are due March 24.
DeWitt Wallace Center for Communications and Journalism
SPECIAL TO THE CHRONICLE
DEAN OFTHE DIVINITY SCHOOL Gregory Jones, center, poses with Kay Carlton, left, and Susan Marney McDonald.
Donations endow 2 financial aid, field education and job Divinity School scholarship placement. Since 1990, the Baptist funds: The Divinity School’s student population at the school has
Baptist House of Studies recently risen from 25 to nearly 100. The late John W, received pledges for Carlton earned both to two TWpwo $200,000 his divinity and doctorendowed scholarship al degrees from the funds —The John W. University and taught Scholarship Pi Ivi J Carlton preaching at the school Endowment Fund and The late Carlyle Marney, a Scholarship the Carlyle Mamey Endowment—to help support teacher at the school, was a popular lecturer at schools across the Baptist students. The Baptist House administers country. Marney’s papers are courses in Baptist history, thought housed at the University. See NEWS BRIEFS on page 14 � and practice and helps students with
Faculty Scholar Award Class of 2001
presents:
1999-2000 Futrell A in Communications and Journalism
The
Awarded By Duke Faculty To selected juniors for:
to
•
•
Jason DeParle
•
outstanding academic record independent scholarship potential as a contributing scholar
Selection Process
The New York Times
Departments/Programs: nominate 1-2 candidates submit materials (including student essay) •
•
After the award presentation, Mr. DeParle will present a public lecture on:
Faculty Scholar Committee: selects semi-finalists conducts interviews (Saturday, April 15) recommends winners to Academic Council •
•
“Life After Welfare: Reporting on the Human Impact of Policy and
”
Tuesday March 21,2000 8:00PM-Room 04 -
Terry Sanford Institute of Public Policy ***»*!
iaC|iqi!|i:|Lqmi!U!|i!|mU|l2|
•
Want To Be Considered? Consult your Department Chair or DUS for additional information
Applications Due To DUS: April 5 To Faculty Scholar Committee: April 7 (noon)
The Faculty Scholar Committee Academic Council (684-6447)
The Chronicle
MONDAY, MARCH 20. 2000
PAGE?
Clinton visits India to discuss economics, nuclear policy By JANE PERLEZ
N.Y. Times News Service
NEW DELHI, India
President
gill Clinton, accompanied by his daughter, Chelsea, but not by Hillary Rodham Clinton, arrived to a low-key welcome here Sunday night for a state
visit that the administration hopes will set the foundation for a new relationship with India. Before getting down to business here, however, Clinton is to pay a one-day visit to Bangladesh, the first by an American president to that country. Security concerns apparently led to an unusual last-minute change in plans for the Monday itinerary. Shortly after the president arrived here, the White House announced that because of “concerns raised by the Secret Service” he would not make a planned visit to the Bangladeshi village of Joypura. Officials declined to elaborate on the statement beyond saying that for security reasons, the trip to the village 20 miles northwest of Bangladesh’s capital, Dhaka, had been canceled. Bangladesh does not have a recent history of violent incidents. Clinton was to have taken the presidential helicopter to the village, spending about 90 minutes there in a primary school for girls and meeting with women who have successfully started small businesses with loans from the Grameen Bank. The bank, which was founded in Bangladesh, has been seen as a world model for that type of tiny economic development loan. Clinton will
meet with some of the women and children from the village at the American Embassy in Dhaka. Clinton is the first American president to visit India in 22 years. The last visit—by President Jimmy Carter, who made some unflattering remarks about the government before an open microphone—did not go so smoothly. This time, and with those memories faded, each side appears determined to make a good impression. Chaotic and congested New Delhi was being scrubbed and scoured Sunday, with curbs freshly whitewashed and new red gravel laid on sidewalks. Bright lilies and dahlias were being hastily arranged at the gates of the memorial to Mahatma Gandhi, where Clinton will pay homage. On the edge of the Raj Path, the majestic boulevard that is the fulcrum of the imperial British design of official New Delhi, a worker on his knees tried to patch a rut with a trowel, a bit ofsand and gravel and a plastic bottle of dirty water. Not far away, a cow pulled an ancient lawn mower as a man pushed it, trying to cut down the lush green grass to a smooth carpet. In public, Clinton and the Indian leaders are set to proclaim a friendship based on shared values of democracy and economic interests, a case the president will probably make most passionately in an address to the Indian parliament. In private, Clinton will attempt to walk the delicate line ofletting the Indians know that the United States strong-
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ly disapproves of their nuclear weapons but without appearing to scold his hosts, who are sensitive to what can be perceived as big brother hectoring them. The Indians got a taste of what was on Clinton’s mind when he said at a nuclear nonproliferation conference in Washington last week: “There are those in the region who hope we will simply accept its nuclear status quo and move on. I will not do that.” The Clinton administration has pressed India to sign the Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty, and Clinton will stress this again with Prime Minister Atal Behari Vajpayee, Clinton aides said. Indian officials say that the United States is hardly persuasive in demanding that India should adhere to a treaty that the US. Senate failed to ratify last fall. Clinton will also try, his aides say, to make headway with the Indians on Kashmir but without playing a mediating role, which the Indians reject. The president recently called South Asia “the most dangerous place” on earth, a conclusion drawn from the dispute over Kashmir between India and Pakistan, two hostile neighbors with nuclear weapons. Clinton will urge the government to consider a dialogue with Pakistan, and Saturday he will give a similar message to the military government in Pakistan during his stopover there. At the moment, relations between the two countries are so sour that there is no official dialogue and scant contact between citizens, Clinton administration officials have said.
Much easier for Clinton will be his acknowledgment of the Indian hightechnology industry and the contributions it has made to the American computer world. Clinton will also make note of the efforts by the Indian government to reform the economy, which has been choked by high tariffs and state-run
management. The United States sees many considerable prospects for American busi-
ness in India. In the coming years, $250 billion will be spent in India on
power-generating equipment and $lOO billion on telecommunications, said former American ambassador to India Frank Wisner. “The visit is a terrific opportunity for the United States to root itself in the region, to get some traction on the issues to create a privileged position for us as we go forward,” said Wisner, who is now in private industry. In a newspaper column welcoming Clinton, Uday Bhaskar, the deputy director of the Institute of Defense Studies and Analyses in New Delhi, was more cautious. He wrote in the Sunday Times of India Sunday that India and the United States were moving “a bit gingerly, like two porcupines trying to be
friends.” Expectations should not be too high, Bhaskar said. But if all goes well, he added, “the Clinton visit and the entourage that accompanies him will be able to realize the potential between natural but currently wary allies.”
MONDAY, MARCH
Letters to the Editor
The Chronicle
Columnist misunderstands
Established 1905, Incorporated 1993
John McCain’s message
take a look at the smug face George W. Bush is a candiand empty head of Epstein, date like Bill Clinton, borLet’s get this straight: rowing others’ ideas instead Th 6 so-called “Religious of having ideas of his own polled to set the record Right” does not control the and fast-talking his way out straight. First Epstein Republican Party, even of scandalous indiscretions wants to get rid of public though it may try. America such as drug use. Thank goodness that schools, and now he wants will be a better place when to reject the concept of these wannabe Christians McCain tried to rescue the altruism while comparing gain a little morality to Republican Party from the John McCain to Adolf stiffen their spine. Pat hypocritical Christian Hitler? What is wrong with Robertson and Jerry Falwell Right. The sooner Falwell this kid? He has got to be don’t help the Republican and Robertson are robbed of the biggest idiot ever to Party one bit. George W. what little political influwrite for The Chronicle, Bush has cost himself the ence they have left, the beteven if he is borrowed from election by smoozing with ter off Christians and The Duke Review. For all these creeps. Americans and Americans will be. you students out there Republicans should be outKelly Bowling thinking that going to Duke raged that Bush spoke at University. Jones proves you are intelligent, Bob Trinity ’99 see chronicle 2000 02/29/1 Uohnmccain.html column, http:! www.chronicle.duke.edu for referenced After reading another
one of Alex Epstein’s mindless, head-up-his (well, you know) columns, I feel com-
Risky business The United States needs to continue to exercise restraint and not actively intervene in struggles between China and Taiwan
Walking
a tightrope may not be the easiest thing for the United States to do in the Far East, but it beats the consequences of falling off. For the first time in the 50 years since the communists drove the party leaders to Taiwan, the island’s leader is not a member of the Nationalist Party. This Saturday, Chen Shui-bian won a hotly contested election for the Taiwanese presidency, and the change to the status quo could upset already precarious relations with the mainland. In the past, Chen’s Democratic Progressive Party has called for independence from mainland China, whose government strongly desires reunification. Even before the election, Chinese officials warned that picking the wrong candidate could incite a military response. Although Chen quickly promised not to declare Taiwan’s independence during his term of office, this show of defiance from Taiwanese voters could fuel smoldering tensions in the region—and quickly draw the United States into the fire The United States has to balance several competing concerns in this foreign affairs hot spot. On one hand, America’s current policy of “strategic ambiguity” precludes direct recognition ofTaiwanese independence or active military intervention on behalf of it. However, many Americans, including members of Congress, feel rightly compelled to support a strengthening yet young democracy that is being pushed around by its communist neighbor. But by changing its policy now, the United States risks a dangerous showdown with China. Even beyond the trade implications of confronting China, a sudden increase ofUS. support for Taiwan may spark a conflict that could quickly escalate from a regional skirmish to a global engagement of two nuclear powers. Because of the unsavory ramifications ofcommitting wholeheartedly to either side, the United States should continue its current policy ofwait-and-see. This is not the time to intervene. However, now is also not the time for the United States to stop its active engagement in the Far East. Through a continued, albeit wary, partnership with China, America can continue promoting freedom through capitalism, hoping that globalization will help effect change in Chinese politics and improve human rights in the country. Even as the United States remains strategically ambiguous in the Taiwan Straits, the potential certainly exists for the conflict to explode at any point. Perhaps Taiwan will declare its independence or maybe China will decide it has had enough of Taiwan’s quasi-independent status. If either side crosses the proverbial line in the water, America must be ready to take decisive action to protect democracy. In the meantime, the United States must struggle to get both sides in this quarrel to sit at the bargaining table and attempt to secure a lasting resolution. •
The Chronicle KATHERINE STROUP, Editor RICHARD RUBIN, Managing Editor JAIME LEVY, University Editor GREG PESSIN, University Editor NORM BRADLEY, Editorial Page Editor JONATHAN ANGIER, General Manager NEAL MORGAN, Sports Editor CHRISTINE PARKINS, City & Stale Editor MEREDITH YOUNG, Medical Center Editor TIM MILLINGTON, Recess Editor JAKE HARRINGTON, luiyout and Design Editor TREY DAVIS. Wire Editor MARY CARMICHAEL, TowerMew Editor ANYA SOSTEK, Sr. Assoc. Sports and L'niv. Editor VICTOR Zl IAO, Sr Assoc. Sports Editor LIANA ROSE, Sr. /issoc. Medical Center Editor ROB STARLING, Online Developer MATT ROSEN, Creative Services Manager CATHERINE MARTIN, Production Manager MARY TABOR, Operations Manager LAUREN CHERNICK, Advertising Manager DANA WILLIAMS, Advertising Manager
20, 2000
PRAT IK PATEL, Photography Editor KELLY WOO, Features Editor ALIZA GOLDMAN, Sports Photography Editor KEVIN PRIDE, Recess Editor ROSS MONTANTE, Layout and Design Editor AMBIKA KUMAR, Wire Editor NORBERT SCIIi'RER, Recess Senior Editor RACHEL COHEN, Sr. /Issoc. Sports Editor VICTOR CHANG, Sr. Assoc. Photography Editor JASON WAGNER, Sr. Assoc. Features Editor ALAN HALACHMI, SystemsManager SI JENEWSOME, Advertising Director ADRIENNE GRANT, Creative Director NALINI MILNE, Advertising Office Manager SAUNDRA EDWARDS, Advertising Manager BRYAN FRANK, Sew Media Manager
Die Chronicle is published by the Duke Student Publishing Company, Inc., a non-profit corporation independent of Duke University. The opinions expressed in this newspaper are not necessarily thoseof 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 dieauthors. To reach the Editorial Office (newsroom) at 301 Flowers Building, call 684-2663 or fax 684-46%. To reach die Business Office at 103 West Union Building, call 684-3811. Toreach the Advertising Office at 101 West Union Building call 684-3811 or fax 684-8295. Visit The Chronicle Online at http7Avww.chronide.duke.edu. (0 2000 The Chronicle. Box 90858, Durham, N.C. 27708. All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced in any form widiout the prior, written permission of die Business Office. Each individual is entitled to one free copy.
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Epstein’s argument deserves a sarcastic response I would like to congratulate Alex Epstein for his courageous opinions that represent a bold political philosophy based on sound reasoning. In his Feb. 29 column Epstein writes: “When practiced consistently, [altruism] has had and can have only one
possible result—death and destruction.” Now, I don’t know about you, but when I think about the word “altruism” in a political context, the first word that immediately pops into my mind is “death,” which is closely followed by “destruction.” When governments begin embracing altruistic profor referenced column,
grams, such as public education for all, basic health care for children and the poor and food for those that are hungry (mind you, all at the expense of violating one’s
inalienable right to keep all ofone’s possessions) we must consider the implications placed upon the individual—namely, death and destruction. Obviously, it necessarily follows that choosing arbitrary moral codes—such as valuing basic human dignity over pure capitalism—puts us on a slippery slope leading to a totalitarian regime resembling the likes of Stalin or Hitler. The error of assigning arbitrary moral
codes to government policies is avoided, however, when unlimited economic freedom is chosen as the highest good in a society. Aside from philosophical America disagreements, would do much better in an uninhibited laissez-faire system in which equality of opportunity is not considered. For truly promoting the rights of individuals in a free society has nothing to do with the fact that individuals need things such as an education to preserve democracy or food and medicine in order to survive. Matt Ching Trinity ’Ol
see http: 11 www.chronicle.duke.edu /chronicle/2000/02/29/1Uohnmccain.html
Epstein disgracefully compares McCain I hope Alex Epstein’s Feb. 29 column in The Chronicle was meant to be a replace-
ment for Monday, Monday, because it stretched the bounds of logic to laughable extremes. Epstein goes on a tirade against Sen. John McCain, comparing him to Adolf Hitler and Joseph Stalin. Why? Not because McCain has advocated rounding up millions of innocent civilians and shipping them to death camps, but because he preaches the virtues of selfsacrifice and charity over the naked self-interest so precious to Epstein’s conception of democracy. The very notion of a college for referenced column,
sophomore lecturing McCain—or any war veteran, for that matter—on the ideals of sacrifice is absurd. McCain spent more years in a Vietnamese prison than Epstein has spent as a legal driver. McCain knows a thing or two about sacrifice, and he is hardly the first public figure to espouse the ideals Epstein so roundly condemns. John F. Kennedy said much the same thing in a frequently quoted speech (Ask not what your country can do for you) and George W. Bush’s “favorite philosopher,” Jesus Christ, preached and lived a life of sacrifice and charity. McCain’s politics may not
to
Hitler
appeal to Epstein. By reaching out to Democrats and independent voters in his Presidential bid, McCain has
understandably alienated many conservatives. But to compare a man who spent five years in a prison camp for his country to two of the worlds most prolific mass murderers is disgraceful. McCain, like every veteran, is an American patriot, and should be treated as such. John McCain may not deserve our vote for president, but as an American, he certainly deserves our respect.
see http:! / www.chronicle.duke.edu/ chronicle /2000 / 02 /29/1
Steve Koprince Trinity ’OO
Uohnmccain.html
On the record You have all these teams going out there with tight asses.... They’re playing tight. Chris Carawell reacting to the wave of upsets in the NCAA tournament (see story, page 1)
Letters
Policy
The Chronicle welcomes submissions in the form of letters to the editor or guest columns. Submissions must include the author’s name, signature, department or class and, for purposes of identification, phone number and local address. Letters should not exceed 325 words; contact the editorial page department for information regarding guest columns. The Chronicle will not publish anonymous or form letters or letters that are promotional in nature. The Chronicle reserves the right to edit letters and guest columns for length, clarity and style and the right to withhold letters based on the discretion of the editorial page editor.
Direct submissions to: Editorial Page Department The Chronicle Box 90858, Durham, NC 27708 Phone: (919) 684-2663 Fax: (919) 684-4696 E-mail: lcltcrs@chroniclc.dukc.edu
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PAGE 2
SPORTSWRAP
MONDAY, MARCH 20,20^
This Week in Duke Sports
\IS -,ife V':, "
Monday
The men’s basketball team lived to see another day, barely escaping No. 8 seed Kansas last night in Winston-Salem. See page 1, The Chronicle See page 3, sportswrap
•
9
\
W. Hoops vs. W. Kentucky NCAA 2nd round
•
8:35 p.m., Cameron Indoor Stadium
I Men’s tennis Duke dropped two of three over spring break.
See page 8
•
W. Tennis vs. NCSU
•
2:30 p.m., Duke Tennis Stad.
Baseball
None
NCAT
@
3 p.m., Greensboro
W. Lax vs Vandy 3 p.m., Koskinen Stadium
M. Lax vs. UNC
G ame of Basketball
NCAAs
@
Men: Fri./Sun., Syracuse, N.Y. Women: Sat/Mon., Richmond, Va. If the women win as expected tonight, it will be the third straight year that both basketball teams have advanced to at least the Sweet 16. The men play in Syracuse where they will first meet No. 5 seed Florida. The women travel to Richmond and will play LSU and should they advance, could face No. 1 Connecticut.
Friday
24
Men’s lacrosse Duke lost two in a row for the first time since 1996. See page 9
•
M. Hoops
•
“It was a great look, I thought it was going in. You don’t know how badly I wanted to hit that shot for all of my teammates. It just didn’t happen that way.’’
NCAAs
@
W. Tennis vs. Clemson
2:30 p.m., Duke Tennis Stadium
•
Saturday
25
Third round, vs. Florida Syracuse, N.Y.
M. Tennis vs. Notre Dame
•
Kansas’ Kirk Hinrich, on his potential game-tying three-pointer
Baseball
@
Georgia Tech
26
M. Tennis vs. Tex. Christian
•
I p.m., Duke Tennis Stadium •
W. Lax vs. Georgetown •
W. Tennis vs. Georgia Tech II a.m., Duke Tennis Stadium
•
Track
@
Alabama Relays
•
Sat. thru Sun., Birmingham, Ala.
•
Rowing
@
•
M. Golf
@
NCAAs
@
M. Lax vs. Georgetown 1 p.m., Koskinen Stadium M. Tennis vs. Notre Dame 1 p.m., Duke Tennis Stadium
Northeastem/Clem
•
Clemson, S.C.
7 p.m., Atlanta
M. Hoops
East Regional Final Syracuse, N.Y.
12 p.m., Koskinen Stadium •
1 p.m., Duke Tennis Stadium •
-
1:30 p.m., Duke Tennis Stadium
23
7 p.m., Koskinen Stadium
The men’s basketball ACC tournament See page 6
M. Tennis vs. Baylor
•
•
nr*
A look back through photographs.
22 •
The women's basketball te&m easily advanced to the second round with a 29-point win over Campbell. Duke hosts W. Kentucky tonight in Round 2. See page 4
\
Wednesday
21
20
Duke smokes Camels
:
Tuesday
*••••• ;
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� Blue Devils survive
Baseball
Georgia Tech
@
1;30 p.m., Atlanta
Schenzel/EZ Go
Sat. thru Sun.
Cover photo by Drew Klein
•
Baseball
Georgia Tech
@
7:30 p.m., Atlanta
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SPORTSWRAP
MON DAY, MARCH 20, 2000
PAGE 3
Defense keys Blue Devil victory in otherwise ugly game I Duke committed a seasonhigh 23 turnovers, but it was the defense, led by Shane Bather’s
eight blocks, that carried the day. WINSTON-SALEM
Jason Williams
face of a 2-for-15 shooter who racked up more guard or a point in the biggest than assists turnovers game of the season. The freshman’s ear-to-ear grin belied a dismal statistical performance, but it told the story of a game won with fourwheel drive instead of typical highspeed cornering. “You look at the stats and you say we didn’t play well today, but I thought that we played really well,” Duke coach Mike Krzyfcewski said. “They did not get anything easy, and neither did we. That’s why the game was so low scoring.” Duke tied a season high with 23 turnovers —led by Williams’ eighthut this game was not about offensive
didn’t wear the
win. I saw it in Coach and I had it too.” On a day when the Blue Devils shot 37 percent and were nonetheless more accurate than their opponents, it was clear that the more resilient defensive performance won out. Kansas, which employed a variety of zone defenses in its Friday win over
DePaul, stuck almost exclusively with an aggressive man-to-man scheme against the Blue Devils.
Adam Ganz Game Commentary And the tactic worked brilliantly, limiting Duke's penetration and denying passes on the perimeter. That is, until
productivity. It was Shane Battier blocking a career-high eight shots. It was Williams grabbing nine rebounds and coming away with four steals. It was Carlos Boozer grinding out 15 points and 13 rebounds —eight on the offensive end. And, fittingly, it was Boozer's timely gem of a steal, followed moments later by Chris Carrawell’s crucial defensive rebound, that put Duke over the hump
foul trouble took hold. “We had not faced a team that played that good a defense in the lane,” Krzyzewski said. “You compound that with [Kirk] Hinrich hitting threes and it looked like we were playing horribly. We were not playing badly.” But Hinrich, who scored 11 of Kansas’ first 13 points, picked up his third foul with 8:36 to play in the first half. Minutes later, Nick Collison and Ashante Johnson went to the bench with their third fouls, softening the Jayhawks’ defense. Duke, on the other hand, never relented. Battier held star freshman Andrew Gooden to 3-for-ll shooting, and the Blue Devils improved to 20-0 when holding their opponent to under
in a 69-64 victory. ‘The way to win a game like this is to
70 points. “[Batter]
put together back-to-back defensive stops,” Battier said. “We were not going to win the game by shooting jump shots, shooting threes.” Williams could afford to be all smiles after his lowest scoring output in 13 games (nine) and his third-worst of the season. His two free throws with 2.2 seconds left iced the game. ”If that [shooting performance] was on my mind, I would have missed the two free throws,” Williams said. “I just looked at my teammates and I saw the desire to
was a warrior today,” Carrawell said. “He was not going to let me lose. That’s Shane Battier.” Carrawell put together a warrior-like performance of his own, holding Jeff Boschee to eight points on 3-for-12 shooting. The senior’s 15 points were his highest output of the postseason and included a pair of clutch free throws with 3.8 seconds left. “We showed we can play any way,” Carrawell said. “If shots are not falling, we have to find other ways to win. Today it was defense. It was gritty.”
Duke Students & Str'f; Bring this ad for
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CARLOS BOOZER wrestles Kansas’ Nick Collison for a rebound during Duke’s 69-64 win in last night’s second round showdown.
PAGE 4
SPORTSWRAP
MONDAY, MARCH 20,2000
Women’s hoops cruises through Ist round Duke faces unlikely By RAY HOLLOMAN The Chronicle Moving into the second round of Puke 71 the NCAA tournament is one Campbell 42 thing, but getting on head coach Gail Goestenkors’ good side is entirely another. The No. 2 seeded Blue Devils (27-5) set a team-record for margin of victory in the NCAA tournament Saturday night, knocking off the 15th-seeded Campbell Camels (22-9), 71-42 and easily advancing into the second round of the East Regionals. But in a game as short in solid play from either side as it was in excitement, even the record-winning margin wasn’t
foe in Lady Toppers By VICTOR ZHAO The Chronicle
enough to put a post-game smile on Goestenkors’ face. “I thought we were going to be rusty” said Goestenkors, whose team hadn’t played a game since winning the ACC championship 12 days before. “And we definitely were, especially on offense” Although the Blue Devils salvaged a respectable 45 percent shooting effort from the floor, it didn’t come from a precision offensive attack. In its first live-run in nearly two weeks, Duke stumbled on offense, often forcing up shots early in the shot clock and, as freshmen JENNIFER ANDERSON/THE CHRONICLE Sheana Mosch and Michele Matyasovsky showed in the second half, flubbing even the GUARD MISSY WEST lunges for a loose ball during Saturday’s first round romp over Campbell in Cameron Indoor Stadium. most wide open layups. “I thought we were a little rushed tonight,” said Duke’s recent super-sub Missy West, who most forced by a Duke team since an 81-45 blowout of led the Blue Devils in scoring with 15. “We fired up Sacramento State Dec. 20 and the fourth highest total some shots maybe we shouldn’t have taken.” all season. But the most disturbing line in the Duke romp was ‘They always had a hand in the passing lanes,” the turnover column. . Campbell senior Lisa Rugg said. ‘They were there before The Blue Devils coughed the ball up 20 times we could get there. We were outhustled a lot of times.” Yet the Blue Devils couldn’t shake their offensive against a vastly overmatched Campbell squad, nine more than they had surrendered to a tight North woes in the second half, either. Even ACC player ofthe Carolina defense in the ACC title game. year Georgia Schweitzer fell victim to Duke’s cold But while the offense was struggling, the Blue Devil shooting, hitting just 4-of-10 shots from the floor for defense kept the team cruising and the large contineight points before Goestenkors reinserted her into the gency of over 1,000 “Camel Crazies” that had arrived lineup late in the game. on the seven charted buses, out of the game. “She was frustrated and not playing her game,” said Duke exploited its large height advantage over the Goestenkors, who pumped her fist in approval when Trans America Conference champions, forcing 14 Schweitzer connected on a three with 38.7 seconds left. turnovers and holding the Camels to 3-of-22 shooting “I want her to gain her confidence back before [the secduring a 17 minute 34-9 run that turned a 2-2 game ond round]. I think she did that.” into a 36-11 romp just before halftime. But with a team that relies so heavily on youth as Campbell only added three more points before halfthe Blue Devils do, sometimes just moving on is the time, giving the Blue Devils a 36-14 advantage and biggest victory of all. “I think our freshmen had a lot of nerves to get becoming the third team to score 14 or fewer points in a half against Duke. out,” Goestenkors said. “Hopefully they got that out of The 26 total turnovers by Campbell marked the their system.”
Western Kentucky had no business being here, and head coach Steve Small knew it. Not after key reserve Shatika Hutcherson was academically disqualified before the season even began. Not after the 1999 Sun Belt freshman of the year Kristina Covington went down for the season with a tom ACL in Western Kentucky’s season opener. Not after freshman Elisha Ford tore her ACL in practice four days later. Not after Kenosha Chastang, the team’s tallest player, left the team in January to move back to Ohio. And certainly not after a dismal 67-62 loss to Arkansas State that dropped the Lady Toppers’ record to 5-6 in early January. “It’s remarkable that this team’s even in this position,” Small said. But there was Small (or Ears, as his players playfully call the witty coach with the flapping side doors), sporting a smile a mile wide, complaining about the lack of food and generally mucking it up with reporters during the press conference prior to tonight’s second-round contest between his lOth-seeded Lady Toppers (22-9) and the second-seeded Blue Devils (275) in Cameron Indoor Stadium at 8:35 p.m; • And this is the same WKU team that was, at one time, down to eight healthy scholarship players, “I asked everybody on campus if they want to play basketball—that didn’t work,” Small said. “IVe asked volleyball players. I see people, I tell them I can get them eligibility and a scholarship. It didn’t work.” But what eventually worked was his players getting better. Junior forward Shaßae Mansfield emerged into an All-American, Senior Jaime Walz bounced back from a torn ACL suffered last season and played her way on to the All-Sun Belt team. And Hutcherson straightened out her grades and became a valuable sixth member ofthe rotation. With the players gelling and the injuries disappearing, the Lady Toppers have won 17 oftheir last 20 games, with their onlylosses coming against Sun Belt juggernaut and the West’s No. 1 seed, Louisiana Tech. ‘We’re excited to play [tonight],” Small said. “I know we’re going against the odds. We know how good Duke is, but we’ll lay it on the line. Hopefully, it will be an exciting game.” See W. KENTUCKY on page 10
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SPORTSWRAP
20. 2000
Ticket Policy for East Regional Finals To be placed in the lottery, stop by Sue Wasiolek’s office in 209 Flowers Bldg, on Monday, March 20, between 10 a.m. and 4 p.m. Your DukeCard is required, and you can only sign up for yourself.
•
Tickets are non-refundable and non-transferable, unless there is a wait list. The wait list will be created Monday night, if needed. •
Lottery results will be posted outside 209 Flowers Building Tuesday morning at 10 a.m.
•
Tickets must be picked up at the Carrier Dome in Syracuse, IM.Y. with your Duke Card.
•
ONE CHAMPION ONE RING ONE COMPANY
CHRIS CARRAWELL guards Jayhawk Nick Bradford
Battier overcomes sluggish Ist period KANSAS from page 1, The Chronicle “Carlos came up with a great defensive play. Carrawell had a heady play saved the ball and called timeout. It is just the difference in the game—two plays.” As far as Kansas was concerned however, the difference may have just been one play.
>
On the possession that eventually led to Hinrich’s missed three-pointer, the Jayhawks initially worked the ball around the perimeter looking for an open shooter to knock down a three. Kansas coach Roy Williams called a time out too softly for the referees to hear, and then dropped his hands when he saw where the ball ended up. Jeff Boschee, the Jayhawks’ three-point ace during the season, heard Hinrich calling for the ball. But Hinrich, who staked Kansas to its early 13-4 lead with his three early three-pointers, was unable to convert his final open shot. “It was a great look, I thought it was going in,” Hinrich said with tears in his eyes. “You don’t know how badly I wanted to hit that shot for all of my teammates. It just didn’t happen that way.” Hinrich’s play to open the game stunned Duke, which made a concerted effort to come out strong after its lackluster first half performance in the 82-55 win over Lamar in the first round ofthe tournament Friday. Against Kansas, Duke managed only nine points in the first 10 minutes, making just 2 ofits first 15 shots. Krzyzewski attributed the Blue Devils’ early offensive woes to strong defense ‘They knocked us back, we haven’t faced a team that played such good defense in the lane,” Krzyzewski said. “I told the team, we’re not playing bad. We just have to adjust to high-level game.... They didn’t get anything easy today and we didn’t either. It was extremely difficult to score.” The Blue Devils’ strategy was to fight defense with defense. Battier in particular came on strong, playing the entire game and finishing with eight rebounds and a career-high eight blocks. After a dismal shooting first half (l-of-4 from the field and 0-for-l from three-point land) Battier ended up contributing 21 points, 10 from the free throw line. Battier and Boozer went on an offensive tear in the second half, scoring 21 of the team’s 34 points. “Good players have to find ways of scoring,” Battier said. “I didn’t resign myself to be just a jump-shooter. Your game goes as your jump shot, and mine wasn’t falling. I posted up more, took off the dribble and played more aggressive.” And in a game that had all the drama and intensity of a Final Four contest, Battler’s aggressiveness proved to be a difference between a trip to Syracuse and one way trip home to Durham. “Playing against a team like [Kansas! in this round is like playing a regional championship game,” Krzyzewski said. “The level of play out there today, effort-wise, was regional championship/Final Four.”
■ec m rs
The chase to the NCAA men’s and women’s basketball championships is beginning as colleges across the country take the
court to prove who’s the best
And, in the end, only one team receives
the coveted NCAA Championship ring Only one
Jastons^
60 DUKE!! 0
Department of Duke University Stores'
OO-0537
SPORTSWRAP
PAGE 6
MONDAY, MARCH 20,2000
[rugglei
ly against
Test, but eventually prevail
A look back at the 2000 ACC tournament Photos by Adam Ganz
DUNLEAVY return
CHRIS CARRAWE
tries to
ion ai
provided D
a huge lift all weekei
end Juan Dixon, who scored a team-high 19points.
nament title. The Blue Devils defeated Maryland 81-68 for the title
SPORTSWRAP
MONDAY, MARCH 20, 2000
PAGE?
On to the Sweet 16 Late 10-0 run lifts Heels past No. 1 Stanford
Amaker, Seton Hall knock off No. 2 Temple By JIM O’CONNELL
By BEN WALKER Associated Press
1®
Associated Press
RMMIMMMg BUFFALO,
Ala. I m BIRMINGHAM, A lot from freshman
WrapMEß Joseph Forte and
a little,
bit of Tar Heel tradition turned out to be too much for top-seeded Stanford. Forte hit two huge three-pointers and North Carolina, considered a borderline pick for 'the NCAA tournament at the outset, upset Stanford 60-53 Sunday in the second round of the South Regional. “Maybe now we’re pushing the right buttons,” Tar Heels coach Bill Guthridge said. Ed Cota added 10 assists, seven points and seven rebounds as the eighth-seeded Tar Heels (20-13) recorded their 30th straight 20-win season. They also quieted, for now, speculation that Guthridge should be replaced. “We always feel like we’re in the game. We just have to play North Carolina ball,” Cota said. Forte finished with 17 points, sparking a decisive 10-0 run in the closing minutes and punctuating his effort with a game-ending dunk. “I was struggling most of the game. Coach told me I was shooting like I was scared and to not shoot at all if I’m going to shoofscared,” Forte said.
N.Y. Ty impressive -
jap Shine was so
BRENDAN HAYWOOD reacts after being fouled in UNC’s shocking upset of Stanford
Tournament Scoreboard South Region
East Region
#1 Duke 69, #8 Kansas 64
Battier (Duke): 21 pis. 8 rebs. 8 blks
#
10 Seton Hall 67, #2 Temple 65
Shine (SHU): 26 pts, 5 asts
53 #8 UNC 60, #1 Stanford Forte (UNC): #7 Tulsa 69, #2 Cincinnati 61
Coley (Tulsa): 16 pts, 16 rebs
#3 Oklahoma St. 75, #ll Pepperdine 67
#6 Miami 75, #3 Ohio State 62
#5 Florida 93, #4 Illinois 76
#4 Tennessee 65, #5 UConn 51
Jonzen (OSU): 21 pts/w.rebs Miller (Florida): 19 pts, 9 rebs
17pts. 5 rebs
Tyler (Miami): 20 pts. 9 rebs
El-Amin (UConn): 3 pts. 1 as!, 13 mins
that even Shaheen Holloway was brought to his feet. Seton Hall’s backup point guard became the backup hero Sunday, helping the Pirates advance to the regional semifinals for the first time since 1992. Replacing the injured Holloway in the first half, Shine scored a career-high 26 points, including the winning threepointer with 18 seconds left in overtime, to give the lOth-seeded Pirates a 67-65 victory over second-seeded Temple in the second round of the NCAA tournament. “I just tried to step up when I saw him go down,” Shine said of Holloway, who hurt his ankle eight minutes into the game and had to be carried off the court. “I was just ready for my opportunity. When I got into the game we were kind of down. I just wanted to provide a boost.” He started a three-point barrage that turned a 14-8 deficit into a 31-29 halftime lead and it didn’t stop in the second half. The Pirates finished 15-for-30 from threepoint range, and Shine was 7-for-11. The last of those threes gave the Pirates a 66-65 lead and had Holloway standing and jumping on his good leg.
Duke Women’s Basketball NCAA WOMEN’S TOURNAMENT Second. Round
•
Tonight
*2 DUKE vs. ••
•
•
#
IO
W.
Kentucky
8;30f•••• lttdoot* Stadium
a Valid Duke ID. These free student tickets will be distributed at the Ticket Office in Canteron Indoor Stadium today, Monday March 20 beginning at B:3oam. Only one ticket per student. All other tickets are $lO for Adults and $6 for Youth and Students. All tickets are general admission. Tickets can be purchased at the Duke Ticket B:3oam to 4:3Opm. Doors open at 7:oopm. Office on Monday
to the
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SPORTSWRAP
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MONDAY, MARCH 20
Men’s tennis drops 2 of 3, including loss to No. 2 Bruin
The Blue Devils completed their disappointing spring break with a 5-2 loss to No. 13 Pepperdine Thursdj 5 WESTWOOD, Calif. UCLA Not even warm California 2 sunshine could change Duke the outcome everyone has grown to expect in men’s tennis’ cross-coast rivalry. For the eighth time in the nine meetings between two of the nation’s top programs, Duke was no match for the UCLA Bruins. While last month’s 5-2 defeat to UCLA at the National Team Indoor Championships was viewed nationally as an upset, it didn’t surprise anyone when the second-ranked Bruins (14-2) again triumphed 5-2 over No. 3 Duke (9-3) at the Los Angeles Tennis Center six days ago. The Blue Devils entered the match with the third-ranked doubles combo and three ofthe top-45 singles players in the nation, while UCLA couldn’t boast even one singles players in the top 50. But none of that mattered when the two teams took to the court, as the Bruins swept the three doubles matches and won four of the six contests in singles. Afterwards, there were no answers, only excuses, for Duke. “It could have been different with Pedro [Escudero],” Blue Devil coach Jay Lapidus said. “We’re a totally different team with him in the lineup. He makes us very tough for other teams to match up with.” Escudero, Duke’s preseason No. 1 player, missed the first nine matches of his senior season, but he returned from his injuries triumphantly a week
ago yesterday in a three-set win at No. 3 singles in the Blue Devils’ 6-1 victory over Princeton, which kicked off a disappointing 1-2 California road trip
for Duke. Escudero came out sizzling against Princeton as he won his first set at love, but he struggled through the next two sets before finally putting it away in a third-set tiebreaker. Lapidus said that the long match, combined with a rigorous practice Monday, caused Escudero’s arm to swell up and prevented him from playing Tuesday against the Bruins. His teammates sorely missed him. Duke defaulted the No. 3 doubles match when Michael Yani was struck by a ball in the eye, while UCLA’s JeanNoel Grinda and Jean-Julien Rojer guaranteed the Bruins the point for doubles when they rattled off four consecutive games to defeat Duke’s duo of Ted Rueger and Andres Pedroso, 8-4, at No. 2 doubles. On court one, Ramsey Smith and Doug Root—previously ranked third among the nation’s doubles teams —blew three break chances in three different games to dump a frustrating match, 8-6. “It was one of those days,” Lapidus said. “Doug was missing returns on break points and they were coming up with big shots, so it was a combination of both. When you miss one or two on break point, you start to see a domino effect and it becomes easier to miss more.” Despite losing all three doubles contests, the Blue Devils evened the match score at 1-1 when Porter Jones
raced through his match at No. 5 singles with a dominating straight-set victory. After Marko Cerenko dropped his match at No. 6 singles in two sets, Pedroso again pulled the Blue Devils into a tie with a remarkable second-set rally over Grinda. Down 5-2 in the second set, Pedroso ripped off five consecutive games, celebrating his 6-4, 7-5 win by raising both arms jubilantly in the air after a a Grinda backhand sailed wide to complete the comeback. But it wasn’t there for Duke’s top two players. Root, who squandered six of the critical nine break opportunities in his doubles match by failing to put the service return into play even on four second serves, saw the dominoes continue to fall as he lost four straight games in the first set and four out of five in the second set of a 6-3, 6-4 steamrolling by Brandon Kramer at No. 2 singles. Smith jumped out to a 3-1 first-set lead over Jong-Min Lee, but Lee gave Duke’s top man trouble all day on his serve as Smith was broken six times in a 4-6, 2-6 defeat. Smith did erase five match points in the final game, but Lee closed out the match and the Blue Devils with a blistering cross-court return winner off of one of Smith’s toughest serves of the day. “Ramsey got off to a real quick start and got up on him early, but the way Lee returns and counters, it’s really hard to solidify breaks,” Lapidus said. “It’s hard to attack him and of our guys
who could play him [Root and Smitj are attackers, so it’s hard for Us match up with him.”
t
The Chronicle
-
Thursday, the Blue Devils drop pa another disappointing match Pepperdine (13-0). Although the ranked Waves entered undefeated am having defeated UCLA on Feb. 1, thei mediocre national ranking made Dufc the early favorite. Yet, again without Escudero, the Bln Devils dropped four out of six single matches and all three doubles matcha in a 5-2 defeat at the Ralphs-Stran Tennis Center in Malibu, Calif.
j
By BRODY GREENWALD
|sfc
lIS Tuesday, Mar. 14 No. 2 UCLA 5, No. 3 Duke 2 The Bruins knock off the Blue Devils for the eighth time in nine tries in a battle between two top-five teams.
Sun. Mar. 12—Duke6, Princeton 1 Thur. Mar. 16—Pepperdine 5, Duke 2
� Pedro Escudero returned to the lineup Sunday and won at No. 3 singles, but his arm swelled and prevented him from playing the next two matches. Porter Jones did not play against Princeton, but won his other two matches.
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(DAY.
SPORTSWRAP
MARCH 20, 2000
PAGE 9
zyzewski claims he Men’s lacrosse drops 2 games in a row iredicted UNC’s win The Chronicle
t
UPSETS
from page
1. The Chronicle
“We are all college basketball fans, and we’ve been watching,” Shane Battier said. “We’ve seen it. If that’s not motivation, I don’t know what is.” “And it didn’t help that they kept announcing the scores [on the public address system].” Carrawell traced the uneasiness at the top to a somewhat unlikely source: Cincinnati's Kenyon Martin. Martin, the consensus national player of the year, broke his right fibula in the Conference USA tournament, dashing the title hopes ofthen-No. 1 Cincinnati, Rather than inspiring the rest of the pack, Carrawell said, Cincinnati’s free fall actually made things tougher on the nation’s other top teams. The fact that this tournament is wide open, perhaps more so than any in the past decade, has made more than a few contenders go wide-eyed at the possibilities, and caused them to buckle under pressure, too.
“With all those high seeds falling, it seemed like deja vu. Like, ‘Oh no, it’s going to happen to us too.’” Chris Carrawell Things are craziest in the West region, where No. 4 LSU is the highest-seeded team advancing to the
regional semifinals at Albuquerque, N.M. Tenth-seeded Gonzaga, an Elite Eight team in 1999, faces No. 6 Purdue, which upset Oklahoma Saturday. Duke struggled early against Kansas, an unusualjly-strong No. 8 seed, falling behind 13-4. For a while it looked like the Blue Devils might go the way of Stanford and Arizona, which lost to Wisconsin Saturday night in Salt Lake City, Utah. “With all those high seeds falling, it seemed like deja vu,” Carrawell said. “Like, ‘Oh no, it’s going to happen to us, too.’” But the Blue Devils survived, and while some of the day’s upsets were hot talk in the Duke locker room, no one seemed to raise an eyebrow over at least one result. “I told my staff yesterday that I thought North Carolina would win,” Duke coach Mike Krzyzewski said, while adding a jab at the tournament selection committee. “They are good and they come out of the ACC, which is a good conference, worthy of more than three bids.”
Duke 69, Kansas 6ft Box Score Kansas
Gooden
Gregory Collison Hinrich
Boschee Chenowith Bradlord Earl London
Johnson
Team Totals
MR 22 25 19 28 36 19 27 7 10 7
Duke
Carrawell Battier Boozer James Williams Dunleavy Horvath Sanders Team Totals
FG 3-11 3-11 4-9 4-7 3-12 3-4 2-6 0-1 1-4 2-4
3PG 0-1 0-0 0-1 3-5 2-8 0-0 0-0 0-0 1-2 0-0
TO 1 4 2 3 2 2 2 0 0 1
FT 2-2 1-4 0-0 1-3 0-0 1-2 3-3 0-0 0-0 0-0
BLK 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 0
ST
2
11
PF
PTS
24
x
1
0 4 0 2 0 2 1 1 0
10 The men’s lacrosse team might have Brown topped its opponents in nearly every Duke 9 statistical category during a spring break road trip, but the Blue Devils came up short in the most important tally; the final score. No. 6 Duke (3-2) suffered its first two losses of the season, falling to unranked Brown 10-9 Saturday a week after enduring a one-goal defeat at the hands ofthen-No. 6 Loyola. In Providence, the Blue Devils never led after the first quarter despite outshooting the Bears and winning more ground balls and faceoffs. Duke trailed 9-8 with less than three minutes remaining in the game when senior defender Stephen Card received a one-minute slashing penalty, and Brown capitalized. Sophomore Jeremy Metz scored the Bears’ first extra-man goal of the match with 1:33 to go for a twopoint advantage. Chris Hartofilis pulled the Blue Devils within one with 11 seconds to play, but it was too late for Duke to avoid the upset in cold and snowy Brown Stadium. Duke trailed 6-3 before scoring three unanswered goals to tie the score more than six minutes into the third quarter. Jared Frood and T.J. Durnan notched the last two scores in extra-man situations, the Blue Devils’ only such goals in eight opportunities. With the match tied 7-7 late in the fourth quarter,
Brown freshman Michael Hughes scored his third goal of the afternoon to give the Bears a lead they wouldn’t relinquish. Durnan led Duke with three goals, while Frood added three assists. The Blue Devils outshot Brown 36-29 but were stifled by goalie Beret Dickson’s 15 saves. The March 11 matchup of two of the nation’s top six teams saw one streak end and another con-
tinue. Loyola picked up its NCAA Division Irecord 26th straight regular season victory by edging Duke 11-10 and snapping the Blue Devils’ 27-game regular-season win streak against nonconference opponents. On a rainy afternoon at Baltimore’s Curley Field, Duke jumped to a 4-1 advantage in the first 16 minutes of play. But the Greyhounds (3-0) responded with a six unanswered goals to take the lead for good. The Blue Devils had a chance to send the game to overtime after Hartofilis scored his career-high third goal of the afternoon to cut the deficit to one with 1:48 to play. Duke regained possession with under a minute remaining, but lost the ball—and a shot at the tie—on the endline with 20 seconds to go.
EEvI iPi ;
By RACHEL COHEN
Saturday, Mar. 18 Brown 10,No. 6 Duke 9 With three minutes left, All-America defender Steve Card received a one-minute slashing penalty and Brown scored an extra-man goal to take a 10-8 lead. OTHER RESULT
Sat. Mar. 11—No. 6 Loyola 11, No. 4 Duke 10
Duke’s losses mark the tirst time since 1996 that the Blue Devils have lost two regular-season games in a row. Duke’s loss to Loyola snapped a 27-game regular-season winning streak against non-conference opponents, fe* With their win, the Greyhounds extended their Division I record ot 26 regular-season wins in a row.. &
You can earn money during the year while contributing to the future of medicine. We need healthy individuals to participate in medically supervised research studies to help evaluate new medications. YOU may be eligible. You have to meet certain criteria to qualify for a study, including our free medical exam and screening tests. tunities. See below for our current st
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25-69 6-17
8-14
41
14
FG 5-10 5-11 5-9 3-6 2-15 0-2 0-1 0-0
FT 5-5 10-11 5-7 5-6 2-2 0-0 0-0 0-0
R 3 8 13 5 9 2 0 0
A 2 1 0 0 6 0 0 0
3PG 0-0 1-3 0-0 1-4 0-7 0-2 0-0 0-0
20-54 2-17
27-31 44
Kansas Duke
17
BLK ST 1 0 8 2 1 2 0 0 0 4 0 0 0 0 0 0
PF PTS 0 15 2 21 15 2 12 3 3 6 3 0 10 10
10
8
15
35
29 34
35
69
64 69
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Officials: Christman, Rucker, Range Attendance— 14,252
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PAGE 10
.
...SRORISWRAP
Western Kentucky narrowly lost to top seed Lady Techsters J
W. KENTUCKY from page 4
Duke 71,
42
Campbell And Western Kentucky is no stranger to exciting games. Campbell FG FT R ATO BLK Cromartie 01-4 7 0 3 0 In its first-round contest against sev4Rugg 1-5 8 16 0 Western Marquette, enth-seeded Moore 2-9 0-C 2 0 3 0 1Kentucky escaped with a 68-65 win Washington 0-2 1 2 2 0 1-8 0-14120 when Kiesha Oliver’s midcourt heave at Emory Hinkle 52-2 5 2 1 0 the buzzer barely rimmed out. Cress 0-0 0 0 3 0 1-2 0-0 3-4 2 11 0 In its final game before the NCAAs, C Redick Redick 0-1 0-0 0 0 1 0 the Lady Toppers met up with Louisiana A.Gambrell 0-3 3-41130 Tech in the Sun Belt conference champiStanley 0-0 0-0 0 0 0 0 0-1 0-0 0 0 0 0 onship game, and nearly shocked the Love 0-1 0-0 2 0 0 0 Crump Western ralKentucky Lady Techsters. Morrison 0-0 0-0 0 0 0 0 lied from a 22-point second half deficit Team Totals 14-51 12-17 34 8 26 11 and tied the game with 1:32 to play. FG FT R ATO BLK Although Tamicha Jackson’s 30-foot Duke left gave bomb with 1.2 seconds Parent 21 12-2 4 2 1 0 Louisiana Tech the win, the Lady Schweitzer 23 0-0 5 4 3 0 4-11 Rice 26 5-6 6 3 5 1 2Toppers didn’t come away from the conMosch 29 0-0 3 15 1 4-7 test empty-handed. 3-4 2 5 2 0 24 2-6 Gingrich “I think the second half against Matyasovsky 26 4-7 0-0 413 1 West 17 6-14 1-1 3 2 0 0 Louisiana Tech gave everybody confiBrown 6 0-0 0-0 0 1 0 1 dence and momentum coming into the Hayes 20 1-3 2-4 7 0 0 0 tournament,” WKU guard Jamie Britt Gvozdenovic 2 0-0 0-01100 Gebisa 6 0-0 1110 1-1 said. “Being able to outscore and outTeam 3 0 play Tech in the second half lets us know that we can play with anybody in Campbell 28 14 42 the country. Duke 36 35 71 “If we play that well against them, field goals: Campbell 4-16 (Rugg 0-1, Moore 0-4, and they’re a solid three team in the 3-pt Washington 0-2, Emory 1-2, Hinkle 2-4, Cress 1-2, Gambrell 0country, we can play and beat anybody.” 1); Duke 8-18 (Schweitzer 3-4, Rice 1-2, Mosch 0-1, Gingrich 1-3, Matyasovsky 1-1, West 2-7) Britt may think so, but the Lady Steals: Campbell 5 (C Redlck 2, Hinkle, Stanley, Washington); Toppers still haven’t beaten a team Duke 16 (Rice 3, Gingrich 2, Hayes 2, Matyasovsky 2, ranked in the top 25 of the RPI until Schweitzer 2, West 2, L Brown, Mosch, Parent) Marquette. So should they be nervous facing a Duke team that advanced to the Small said. “I’ve got my Nike bonus, I’ve Final Four last season? Not if your name got my college bonus. If the girls would is Steve Small. hurry up and lose, I can go collect my “I’ve already gotten my bonus,” bonuses. But I don’t want to lose.”
GIRLS! HUNDREDS VISIT
MONDAY, MARCH 20
Game time: Tonight, 8:30 p.m. Place: Cameron Indoor Stadium TV/Radio: WDNC 620AM No. 10 Western Kentucky 22-9 Coach Steve Small Guard LaVonda Johnson. Jr. (6.3 ppg) Guard Natalie Powers, So. (10.6 ppg) Guard Jaime Walz, Sr. (15.7 ppg) Guard Jamie Britt, Sr. (15.6 ppg) Forward Shaßae Mansfield. Jr. (18.5 ppg)
Series record: 0-0 Common Opponent: Vanderbilt Duke won 68-59; WKU lost 73-57 No. 2 Duke 27-5 Coach Gail Goestenkors Guard Krista Gingrich. So. (8.1 ppg) Guard Sheana Mosch, Fr. (8.6 ppg) Guard Georgia Schweitzer, Jr. (15.5 ppg) Forward Rochelle Parent, Jr. (5.4 ppg) Center Lauren Rice, Sr. (9.6 ppg) -~
ANALYSIS Western Kentucky starts exactly one frontcourt player, but she’s a good one. Mansfield, a third team All-America, scored 17 points and grabbed 14 rebounds in WKU’s win against Marquette Saturday. “Shaßae Mansfield is just incredible,” Goestenkors said. “She reminds me a little bit of what [Virginia forward] Schuye Laßue will be.” Although none of WKU’s guards are athletically imposing, all four of them can pull the trigger from beyond the arc. All-Sun Belt selections Walz and Britt and heady point guard Powers are playing with much confidence. But Duke’s guards are playing their best basketball of the season right now.
When Small looks down his bench, he doesn’t have to look far. The Toppers only dress nine and only Shatika Hutcherson and Katie Wulf see playing any playing time. “We’ll have to stay out of foul trouble,” Small said. “I’ll make sure to notify the referees early that we don’t have a big, deep bench.” The Blue Devils would be hard pressed to look rustier than the way they looked Saturday. Western Kentucky is riding high on confidence and momentum after nearly upending Louisiana Tech in the Sun Belt final and surviving a close game against Marquette in the tournament opener.
THE NO
m m
Western Kentucky plays mostly zone to conserve the energy of its primary six-player rotation, and that spells trouble against a strong three-point shooting team like Duke. Defensively, Parent and Rice should be able to contain a weakened Mansfield, who sat out practice yesterday with a stomach virus. Despite its near-upset of La. Tech, Western Kentucky is still an unimpressive 2-7 against teams in the RPi’s top 50. Duke journeys on, 72-59. Compiled by Victor Zhao
Seniors graduating inlay, September, & December 200(1, Don’t let your parents lose sleep this year. Remember to get your senior portrait taken this week. Portrait appointments were sent through the mail and by email
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Login required for OIT Computer Clusters starting Spring Break 2000 From March 10-20 (Spring Break) OIT will be upgrading the PC and Macintosh computer clusters with new software that will require users to log in and enter a password in order to use a computer. _
1. What you’ll see when you try to use a computer You’ll see one of the login boxes below:
OIT
O Guest (disabled) %
Registered ACPUB User
ACPUB User ID: [| Password: —■
OK
j
Cancel
|
Help
| Shu‘ Down... |
Shutdown...
IBM-PC
OK
MAC
2. How to login Use your acpub userid (also known as login or user name) and password to log in. Once logged into the cluster computer, users will be automatically logged into e-mail and other password-protected services such as SISS/ACES Web. In most cases, users will not have to log in separately for these services—the one time login will suffice. Mac and PC computers will differ slightly in their automatic login capabilities. This is known as “single sign-on”.
3. If your user name is invalid Make sure you’ve entered your user name correctly. If it still doesn’t work, then you may have a “stale” password (one that has not been changed since July ‘9B). People with older passwords could not be automatically converted to this new system and thus must register manually. This is not applicable for Macintosh computers. To register: 1. Click “OK” on the invalid username alert box. You will be sent back to the SnareWork login box. Enter your acpub userid and leave the password field blank to start registration. 2. You will then be asked to enter your password twice. Use your acpub password. •
3. Continue with the instructions on the screen and you will be converted to the new system. We strongly suggest that you change your password using SSH (a secure Telnet program) if you have not changed it since July 1998. See http://www.oit.duke.edU/docs/csg/7.html for instructions on how to log in and change your password using a telnet program. •
4. Log out before you leave Use the logout icon on the desktop. Wait for the dialog box and click “Yes” to confirm your logout. more than just your e-mail is at risk —personal student information is now available online and accessible with your acpub userid and password. So don’t forget to LOGOUT!
Remember,
Auto-logout for unattended machines If the computer is inactive for more than 20 minutes you will be automatically logged out. This time limit is subject to change
5. Keep it confidential—don’t share your password. More than just your e-mail is at risk —personal student information such as grades and Bursar’s information is online and accessible with your acpub userid and password
For more information see h ttp://www. oit duke.edu/helpdesk/clustersliogin/ .
now available Duke University
r ri
Officeol Information Technology
PAGE 12
SPORTSWRAP
MONDAY, MARCH 20,2000
BLUE ETA 1 GOOD LUCK TO THE MEN’S AND WOMEN’S BASKETBALL TEAMS IN THE TOURNAMENTS NCAA* MEN’S AND WOMEN’S ACC CHAMPIONS T-SHIRTS IN STOCK.
Commentary
MONDAY, MARCH 20. 2000
PAGE 9
The WTO’s new opposition American corporations are concerned that the WTO might take away their corporate welfare American sovereignty is mostly democratic —despite the obvious shortcomings of American democracy. The transfer of this sovereignty to an undemocratic institution like the WTO is unacceptable. Wes Nichols Until recently, the anti-WTO movement has been confined exclusively to People concerned about the growing the left, or at least those most interested in issues such as the environment, dimensions of unaccountable private labor and safety laws. The WTO’s Feb. have long society our global power in has stirred the been convinced that the World Trade 25 ruling, however, of because of its role. ranks right-wingers a nefarious Organization plays for American sovereignty implications repeatedly have convictions These and its ability to coordinate industrial been affirmed when the WTO routinepolicy. Before this ruling, the WTO’s environmental, ly rules against pesky infringement of safety and labor soverAmerican on the concerns was not eignty grounds that trade to important based restrictions right-wingers principles on these got angry, because it only violates free trade. the concerned are These laws country’s control not usually—if over environment always —enacted to or safety legislaafter years of tion. The latest agitagrassroots indicated ruling tion by concerned could government American bureaucrats can that the citizens; unelected corporate major our no subsidize longer secret sessions in them then overturn and retire to their luxurious Swiss exporters with luxurious tax breaks chalets. Therefore it is not surprising (estimated at $3.5 billion annually) that 50,000 sturdy citizens dropped in because it constitutes illegal export subsidies and violated the principles of on the WTO’s meeting in Seattle last November to register their discontent free trade. The right-leaning folks got with the organization’s role and the angry, because “nobody tells the big boys what to do.” type of globalization it fosters. The intentions of export subsidies The United States’ membership in noble; We want to promote exports are transferred the WTO has effectively decrease the trade deficit and all the trade and to American sovereignty body. For me, American sovereignty is that good stuff. But the fact is that the the not sanctified and holy—as it is for Pat debate over these subsidies reveals conserbetween contradictions glaring least, at Buchanan —but the very
Wes-word
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Expansion
The right'leaning folks because “nobody tells the big boys what do. ”
vative rhetoric and practice. In theory, we live in a “free market” where businesses “compete” to sell their products. In practice, business “competes” to get
the most government welfare possible and then they merge with the “competition” ensuring their freedom from market pressures—and they laugh all the way to the bank. Fortunately for those who actually believed the rhetoric about how capitalism works, the wheels of Clintonian democracy are turning, and soon things will be back to the normal state of inefficiency. United States trade representatives are working with confidants in Europe to find a solution outside the framework of the WTO because of the “far-reaching” implications ofthe decision. To enforce the decision would end plutocracy as we
know it and would leave hundreds of
corporate-sponsored
politicians
scratching their heads in search of new ways to give the big boys undeserved advantages. The lesson is this: If the WTO rules against the big boys—such as General
Electric, Monsanto, Microsoft, Ford Motor Company and all the other major corporations who benefit from illegal corporate welfare, we find a convenient way to circumvent the ruling. If, on the other hand, the WTO rules against environment and safety laws the fruit of the democratic labors of common folk—then we are supposed to listen to the organization and accept it as part of the costs of free trade in a democratic society. —
Wes Nichols is a Trinity senior.
vil
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WONDERBOY and NASTYMAN’s non-excellent adventure Monday, Monday
®
WONDERBOY andNASTYMAN
So we bet you are all anxious to hear how your heroes WONDERBOY and NASTYMAN spent our spring break. Well, frankly, so are we. You see, it all started when we traveled to the motherland —thats right, Africa—for some big-game hunting with our favorite uncle, Ted Nugent. After that, it starts to get blurry. The Nuge suggested we go on a spirit quest to find the true meaning of Monday, Monday. After three days alone in the barren plains of woe, we were at last visited by the awesome presence of the angel Prasha, who spoke to us thusly: ‘You are the greatest in the history of Monday, Mondays. The world trembles at your words and the gods themselves pay much homage to the glorious majesty that is WONDERBOY and NASTYMAN.” We told the spirit to tell us something we didn t know. And then we punched him in the stomach. Needless to say, that was the end of that. We woke up four days later in a Tijuana brothel. The Nuge was nowhere to be found, and we were left without a clue. Driving back to Duke, there was absolutely nothing in the world we wanted more than to find a radio station carrying the NCAA tournament. We tried AM stations, we tried FM stations, but alas, there was no satisfaction to be found. We even listened to two-andn-half hours of a Baptist sermon, thinking that there would inevitably be scores within the next five minutes. And it’s not even like there are no sports stations in the South—there were no less then four stations within broadcast range of Durham covering
NASCAR. That’s right folks, because the only thing more exciting than watching a bunch of rednecks drive around in a circle is listening to another redneck tell you all about it. This is what is wrong with America. NASCAR is perhaps the greatest evil since the ill-fated Yahoo Serious invasion of 1989. The other day, we saw a commercial, for a cartoon based on NASCAR. Apparently, the tobacco companies have decided that people in the South don’t start using chaw young enough. Remember kids: first you get the chaw, then you get the mullet, then you get the women. And now that we are back, you readers have absolutely no idea how difficult it is to be creative when there is NCAA hoops on in the background. The game we were watching just went to halftime, so
...the only thing more exciting than watching rednecks drive around in a circle is listening to another redneck tell you all about it. we are going to write as much as possible before the action restarts. Too late, it’s back damn you Ted Nugent. Anyway, there were probably about five
Duke students at the Duke-Lamar throwdown fan) Friday night. Some idiot (probably a NASCAR for sign-ups hold idea to great thought it would be a of games round first and second for the ticket lottery in the middle of spring break. We halfway expected to come back and be told that housing picks and class registration were also held when we were off having fun. Have a nice day.
We shouldn’t complain about the tourney so much though; it’s great to have a built-in excuse for not doing anything for an entire weekend. Frankly, we would slack off all day with or without nonstop hoops coverage, but at least this way we feel like there’s a valid reason for all the work we aren’t doing, unlike the time we went on the quest to find the Tooth Fairy to prove our love of midgets. You might have seen the reenactment in the Conseco commercial. Not many people know, but the Tooth Fairy spent his early years in the Midget Wrestling Circuit fighting such notables as the Lollipop Guild and Duke Student Government President-elect Jordan Bazinsky. Speaking of our favorite li’l target, it seems that Bazinsky’s staff was less than honest in getting the men’s basketball team to endorse his candidacy. In yet another case of Duke setting the standard of DSG didexcellence for fellow colleges everywhere,who seems to a candidate n’t find it necessary boot so, doing and, in falsified documents lied, have to did his all-around darndest to make DSG an even bigger joke than it already was. Jordan Bazinsky, we salute you. Short-dan (damn we are funny) has raised the bar even higher for next year’s DSG candidates in their unending quest to outdo this year’s electoral folly. Expect to see negative campaigning, soft money contributions from organizations like the National Rifle Association and more prostitutes than you can shake a stick at. And don’t forget about the Nuge. Because Big Ted may be down, but hell if he’s out.
WONDERBOY and NASTYMAN would like to note that if any of you think that short jokes yet old aj'tei a while, xou obviously weren 7 watehiny The Fresh Prince of Bel Air for seven ylorious seasons.
The Chronicle
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Comics
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MONDAY, MARCH 20
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MONDAY. MARCH 20, 2000
The Chronicle
Duke Collegium Musicum: Chapel Lunchtime Concert, directed by Timothy Dickey Featuring works by Henry Purcell. 2 Noon at the Memorial C hapel, Duke Chapel. Admission is lice.
forihe Study of Agingand Human Development George Maddox Annual Lecture: “Understanding the End ofLife: A New Source of Vitality for Geriatrics,” by Christine K. Cassel, MD, Professor and Chair of Geriatrics and Adult Development, Mount Sinai Medical Center, New York, NY. Sponsored by Duke Center for the Study of Aging and Human Development. 5:00 p.m., Scarle Center, Duke Medical CenterCampus. For
('enter
1
several public service calenThe Chronicle publishes dars through the week as detailed below: Monday Duke Bulletin Board Tuesday-Friday Community Calendar Monday Tuesday & Friday Thursday
Sports Events Arts Events
Entertainment
To submit a notice for our Duke Bulletin Board and Community Calendars, send it to the attention of “Calendar Coordinator at the address below, fax or e-mail- Submissions for these calendars are published on a space-available basis with priority given to Duke events. Notices must be for events which arefree and open to the public orfor which proceeds benefit a publie/nol-for-profit cause. Deadlinefor the Bulletin Board ”
is noon Thursday. Tosubmit a noticefor the Sports, Arts or Entertainment calendars, send it to the attention ofthe Sports Editor, ArtsEditor, orRecess Editor, respectively, at the address below: The Chronicle, Box 90858, Durham, NC 27708. Fax: (919) 684-4696. Phone: (919) 684-2663 (Notices may not be taken over the phone). E-mail: calendar@chronicle.duke.edu for community calendar and bulletin board notices only.
MONPAY
Prcsbyterian/UCC Campus Ministry Bible Study meets from 12; 15-1:00 p.m. in the Chapel Basement, room 036. We will be studying Romans. Bring your lunch and bring
your Bible.
information, call 660-7502.
Phi Beta Kappa and Sigma Xi Joint Meeting: MatlCartmill, Phi Beta Kappa VisitingScholar, Professorof Biological Anthropologyand Anatomy at Duke University will speak on “Language and Human Evolution,”4:oo p.m.. Freeman
The Wesley Fellowship (United Methodist) celebrates eucharisl each Thursday afternoon at 5:30 in the Wesley Office. All are welcome.
Center for Jewish Life.
Center for Latin American and Caribbean Studies: Patricio Valdivieso.lnslutode Ciencia Politica in Santiago, Chile,“Politics, Ethics and Education of the I mprovement of Democracy. Working Proposal for Developing Countries; The Case of Chile.” 5:30 p.m., for more information call 681-4514.
Film and Video Program and Duke University Museum of Art: An evening of fi Ims in association with “Christian Haye Curates: Emerging Artists From the Project at Harlem.” Free. 6:00 p.m., Duke University Museum of Art. For more information call 684-5135.
Cedric N. Chatterley and Alicia J. Rouverol will present slides and readings from their new book. “I Was Content and Not Content: The Story ofLinda Lord and the Closing of Penobscot Poultry” (Southern Illinois University Press), 7:00 p.m. at the Center for Documentary Studies. ry of science and medicine, University of Wisconsin. sponsored by the Center for Documentary 5:00 p.m. in Room 022, New Divinity. For more infor- This event is Studies, the UNC Southern Oral History Program, the 660-3500. mation call UNCCurriculumin Folklore. Southern Illinois University Duke Eye Center Monday Night Lecture: Dr. Julie Press, and the Regulator Bookshop. For more informaWoodward, “Cosmetic Eye Surgery.” Latest techniques. tion call 660-3663 or visit the web site at To register call 416-3853. 6:30 p.m., Duke Eye Center. http://cds.aas.dukc.edu. o
"From Dayton to Topeka: Creation and Evolution in American Classrooms.” Lecture by Ronald L. Numbers, Hilldale and William Colcmant professor of the histo-
international Christian Fellowship meets every Wednesday at 7:30 p.m. in the International Students Inc. office in the Chapel Basement.
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Groupa Swedish Folk Music with Anon Egeland, Norwegian Hardanger Fiddler, performs in Reynolds Theater at 8:00 p.m. For more information and reservations call 919-684-4444
:,
Duke Artist Series presents Alicia de Larrocha, piano. 8:00 p.m.. Page Auditorium. For information and tickets call 684-4444
SHALOACH MANOT MAKING at 8;00 p m.. Giles FREE PRESENTS!! Make "Shaloach Manot" bags for Purim. It's a good deed to give a present to someone. Come one, come a11... and come away with a free present !!!! Questions, contact Nanci at 684-4493 or nanci .steinberg -
Westminster Presbyterian/UCC Fellowship meets from 9:00-10:00 p.m. in the Chapel Basement Lounge. "Haphour," an informal time of refreshments and fellowship, begins at 8:30 p.m. All are welcomed!
msm
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Joint Presentation: Mama Lola, a healer and spiritual leader Taizc Evening Prayer, Every Tuesday at 5:15 p.m. in of the Haitian community in New York City, with Karen Duke University Chapel. Candlelight Prayer Service in Brown, a professor of the sociology and anthrothe tradition of the brothers of Taizc. Call 684-2572 for McCarthy pology of religion at Drew University and the author of information the book "Mama Lola: A Voudou Priestess in Brooklyn,” HAMENTASHEN BAKING at the Freeman Center for 8:00 p.m. in Griffith Film Theater. Bryan Center. For Jewish Life - with FCJL Chef Felix 6:00-7:00 p.m. information call 660-3500. Free and open to public. Freeman Center Dining Room. Contact jewishlife Film Festival; "Soylent Green" The End of the CHUG IVRIT6:IS PM “Return to Israel." Join Roger with Charlton Heston. 9:00 p.m.. 104 Old Chemistry Kaplan in a Hebrew speaking table over dinner from Building. For more information call 681-4514. the FCJ L’s amazing kitchen! All levels welcome. Contact -
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jewishlife
TWRSPAY
Woman to Woman Discussion Series: Healthy Approaches to Embracing Menopause. To register call 416-3853. 7:00 p.m., Teer House.
Lunch. Cost is
Two Films that examine the changes in Cuban society's view ol gays “Gay Cuba" and “Butterflies on the Seal lold" will he presented at 7:00 p in. at the Center 1(11 Documentary Studies. These screenings are offered In conjunction with an exhibit of photographs by Ernesto lki/an, titled "El Periodo Especial" in Cuba, on display at the center through May 26. -
Westminster Presbyterian/UCC Fellowship Drop-in 12:00-1:00 p.m. in Chapel Basement Kitchen. 51.50. Come join us! Noon Talk: Carl Hancock Rux, pod and performance artist. Lunch provided. Mary Lou Williams Center lor Black Culture. For more information call 684-3814.
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The Sell
Knowledge
Symposium meets every Tuesday in. in the Breedlove Room, next to the Perk in ci kins Library. Come explore spiritual questions in a iclaxcd, non-denominalional setting. --'9 p
al
I
Tour the The Sarah P. Duke Gardens: Five miles ol walkways lead through one of the premier gardens of the southeast. The Blomquist Garden ofNative Plants and the Asiatic Arboretum are special features. 2:00 p.m. For more inhu -
mation call 684-3698. The Mind. Brain, and Behavior
Distinguished
Lecture
Leslie Ungerleider. chief of the Laboratory ol Brain and Cognition at the National Institute of Mental for Cognition Freewater Presentations: "Good Morning Vietnam" with Health, will speak on “Corlicol Circuits Duke Center lor Kohii, Williams. 7:00 and 9:30 p.m. in Griffith Film and Awareness." Sponsored by the Cognitive Neuroscience. 4:00 p.m.. Love Auditorium. Theater. $3 lor public, free for Duke students. Levine Science Research Center. For more information
WEPNE-SPW
Series;
call 684-2823.
u^u:n
'■ Health (’cmci Employee Sneak Peek: We ’ w,,nt y°u to be among the first to explore the new
'
h'ldren s Health Center. located adjacent to Duke Hospital on Erwin Road! Come by fora lour, door prizes,
and
K)r
"
e from 7:30-9:00 a.m. and 12:30-2:(K) p.m.
3:1
Freewater Presentations: "The Dinner Game.” 7:00 9:30 p.m. in-Griffith Film Theater, Bryan Center. S3 ge eral admission, free for Duke students.
Dr. Marion Woodman, internationally known authorand Jungiananalyst, will present a lecture on "Dreams of the New Millennium" at 7:30 p.m. at the Binkley Baptist Church in Chapel Hill. Admission isSB for members. SlO for nonmembers. For more info, call 919-942-8926 or www.ncneighbors.com/870/
Sergio & Odair Assad, Guitarists, perform lonite in Reynolds Theater at 8:00 p.m. For more information and reservations call 919-684-4444,
OPENING of “FAMIILY OF BROTHERS”. 5:30 North Carolina Jazz Festival with guest artists The Italian p.m., Freeman Center for Jewish Life. Exhibition of sculpture and video installation; talks by Uri Katzenstein, All-Stars. 8:00p.m. in Baldwin Auditorium, East Campus For more information and tickets call 684-4444. Eric Meyers, Kristine Stiles, and student curators; reception following. Contact jewishlife
Duke University Department of Music-Student Recital; Timothy Chung, violin. 5:15 p.m. in Bone Hall, Biddle Music Building. Admission is free.
PURIM Meet at the East Campus Bus Stop at 7:00 p.m. to carpool to Beth El Congregation for the 7:30 p.m. Megillah reading. Contact jewishlife
PAGE 11
Choral Vespers Service. Every Thursday at 5 p.m. in Duke University Chapel. Candlelight Vespers Service featuring the Duke University Vespers Ensemble. Call 684-3898 for information.
SATVKPAY
Spanishand Latin-American Film Series: “The Darkside of the Heart” by Eliseo Subiela of Argentina. 7:00 p.m. in Room 116, Old Chemistry Building. Freewater Presentations; "Brazil.” 7:00 and
9:30 p.m in Griffith FilmTheater. Bryan Center. S3 general admission, free for Duke students.
Duke University Medical Center Department of Ophthalmology: Grand Rounds 2000/ General, 8:00 a.m.. Hornaday Conference Room. Duke University EyeCenter. For more information call 684-3836.
Marion Woodman, internationally known author and Jungian analyst w ill hold a Dreams Workshop to accompany her lecture on Friday. Workshop is today from 10:00 PARSHAT HA SHAVUAH The weekly Torah pora.m.-4:00 p.m. at the Binkley Baptist Church in Chapel tion, with Rabbi Pinny Lew of Chabad. Explore the Hill. Admission is 525 for members. S4O for non-memweekly Torah portion. We wi II cover the text and expound bers. For more info, call 919-942-8926 or visit old and Then new commentaries. upon it with some w'ww.ncneighbors.com/870/ we will have a discussion with Q&A. Knowledge of Hebrew is not necessary. Time 7:00 p.m. Location Encounters With The Music of Our Time: featuring Freeman Center for Jewish Life. Contact jewishlife William Banfield’s "SpiritualSongs," as well as theCiompi in a performance of Mario Davidovsky's "Siring Quartet the 8:00 Hallelujah Singers. p.m. Marlena Smalls and No. 5". 8:00 p.m. in the Nelson Music Room, East Quartet at Reynolds Theater. Cosponsored by Duke University Duke Building. Admission is free. Office of Religious Life. Hayti Heritage Center, and the Mary Lou Williams Center for Black Culture. For Quadflix: "Magnolia." 7:00 and 10:00 p.m. in Griffith Film more,information call 684-4444. Theater. Bryan Center. Tickets are S3. Dr,
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-
Duke University Union
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Major Attractions committee Chamber Arts Society. Chamber Music Society ofLincoln Center. 8:00 p.m.. Page Auditorium. For tickets and infor-
presents hip-hop artist Wyclef Jean. 8:00 p.m.. Page Auditorium. For information and tickets call 684-4444.
Blue Roach: The Soulful CoffeeHouse-Poet and performance artist Carl Hancock Rux.as part ofthe Spoken Word Series. 8:30 p.m.. East Campus Coffee House. For more information call 684-3814.
mp*r
mation call 684-4444
swpay Tourthe The Sarah P. Duke Gardens; Five miles of walkways lead through one of the premier gardens of the southeast. The Blomquist Garden ofNative Plantsand the Asiatic Arboretum are special features. 2:00 p.m. For more information call 684-3698.
Department of Botany-Duke University. Plant Physiology Seminar; "Fluorescent in situ Hybridization The Stewart Conversations-2000; Jeremy Sugarman. (FISH) Analysis ofGeminivirus infected Plant Nuclei." M.D.. speaks on "Ethical Issues in Primary Care." 3;00 by Dr. Doninique Robertson. Department of Botany. p.m. in the New man Catholic Student Center Parish. Chapel North Carolina State University. 10;00a.m.. Room 140. Hill. For information call 919-929-3730. Biological Sciences Building. . Duke Chapel Choir-Rodney Wynkoop. conductor. Rutter. Osier Literary Roundtable: Guest writer Marianne “Requiem." with orchestra and Vierne. "Mass." with two Gingher. Meets at 12 Noon in Administrative Conference organs. 4:00 p.m.. Duke Chapel. General admission: S10; Room. Red Zone 14218, Duke Med Center. Students: S5.
Graduate Program in Ecology Seminar Series: Nigel The Wesley Fellowship limited Methodist) meets each Pitman speaks on "Predictability and Homogeneity in Sunday evening at 6:30 in the Divinitv School Student Upper Amazonian Tree Communities." 12:45-1:45p.m.. Lounge Room 144. Biological Sciences Building. Quadflix: "Magnolia." 8:00 p m. in Griffith Film Theater Free symposium on Environmental Justice Law and Bn an Center. Tickets are S3. Policy. 1:00 p.m.. North Carolina Central University Law School. Moot Courtroom. For more information call Lynda Stogner. NC Bar Association. 019-677-0561.
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"A Decade of Performance." looping video of Uri Kat/enstein's performance art events. 3.00 p.m.. Brow n Gallery. Bry an Center. For more information eall 6546422.
Become a Duke Ambassador! Help hundreds of patients and visitors who come through the Duke Hospital lobln each da\; provide room information, pick up charts, run errands in the Hospital, and answer phone. Training pro \idcd. For more information call 654-3533
John Hope Franklin Seminar for Interdisciplinary SunJies in the Humanities: "Race and Nation-Building The Communitv Son ice Center is tuns accepting apph in the Americas." 4:00 p.m.. Breedlove Room. Perkins cations lor the 2000-01 student co-directors and studertt Libratv For more information call 654-6470. stal l'. Application deadline for student co-directors is March 24. for staff the deadline is April 14 Contae. Rob Leonard Duke University Department ol'Musie-Sludent ReeitaL; or Maranda Whitener. ()S4-43" 7 Moseotli. Nelson Musie Slaey soprano. 5:30 p.m. in Room. East Duke Building. Admission is free. Carrboro Farmer's Market is mm open. TOO a m until 12 Noon each Saturdav until late December The market FACULTY SHABBAT With visiting artist I n is located on Carrboro Town Commons, next to Town Kal/enstein, Reform and Conservative minyanim. Hall. See the up-to-date market information available on Dinner Followed by a kosher dinner. Ser\ iees 6:00 p.m.. the internet at www .earbimilarmersmarket.eom 7:30 p.m. Follow ing dinner Uri w ill give a tour of his Cost RSVP is exhibit and diseuss his artwork. SlO. The Durham Center seeks volunteer intent for the hevention requested by Wednesday. March 22 Location Freeman Kids Club program for children ages (>-12 Must have prior Center for Jew ish Life. Contact jew ishlife experience working with this age group am! general com puterskills Must luvcti'ans|XHlation and commit for 10 weeks Duke I 'Diversity Department of Music-Student Recital: Contact Rachel Faulkner. 300-7532 6:45 Siler, Lindsey Neilsson and Sharon soprano. p.m. in Bone Hall. Biddle Music Building. Admission is Friends of the Durham Library Spring Itook Sale Sal Mar free. 25(10:00a.m.-3:UOp.m.land Sun. Mar. 2(m2:00 oaton m i SI forhardbacksandS.3o fv»r paperbacks. Main 1 ibr.irv I iarage Campus Crusade for Christ meets Friday evenings at and Auditorium. 300 N. Roxboro St. 300-0130. 7:00 p.m. in Carr 135. ‘’
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The Chronicle
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Announcements COURSE OFFERINGS FALL 2000
Interested studying abroad, but missed application deadlines? Applications are still being accepted for the following Duke-in study abroad -programs: Andes, Berlin, China, OTS/Costa Rica, Russia and Venice Applications are available in the Office of Study Abroad, 121 Allen Bldg., 684-2174,
Professor Courses. (DPC 183S) SCIENCE AND RELIGION (cz, ns) Taught by Professor Edward M. Arnett T.Th. 3:50-5:05p.m. in 228 Gross Chem Lab. (DPC 1965) HUMAN POPULATION GLOBAL GROWTH AND CHANGE (ns). Taught by H. Professor William* Schlesinger. Web 3.50-6 20p m in 144A Biological Sciences Distinguished
abroad@asdean.duke.edu.
Thursday, March 23, Bpm, Page Auditorium $22 for Duke students, $25 general public. Call 684-4444 for tickets.
Apts. For Rent 1 BR apt. Close to Duke. Hardwood floors and washer/dryer. Available ASAP! $450/mo. Call 416-0393
Karate for Women
(DPC 2075) PSYCHOBIOLOGY (C-L; Psychology 2075) (ns, ss). Taught by Professor H. Keith Brodie, Monday 2:205:00p m. 205 East Duke. See ACES and Course Synopsis on-
Build strength and confidence, get
fun exercise, learn karate and selfdefense. and join a great community of women. Traditional Okinawan karate Located in Downtown Durham All ages, fitness levels, etc. welcome. Call Mary Margaret at 225-3306
line for details.
EGG DONOR NEEDED An infertile couple desperately wants to conceive a child needs help from you. If you are 21 -30 and a college student or graduate you can make a tremendous difference to our lives by becoming an egg donor. It is the gift of life itself. The donation process is managed entirely by the Duke Assisted Reproductive
WYCLEF JEAN TICKETS!!!!
STUDY ABROAD FOR FALL
FALL 2000
Technology
clinic(AßT) which offers excellent medical care, donor-recipient matching with complete anonymity, and donor compensation. Call the ART clinic at (919)694-5402 for
SUMMER OPPORTUNITY
Be an RA this summer to a group of 20 undergraduate students from Hosei University in Tokyo, Japan who will be study ing at Duke on a special program for three weeks, July 27 Aug. 15 (evenings & weekends Central campus included). apartment, excursions, and stipend provided. Some knowledge of Japanese useful but not Please submit required. resumes by Fri., March 24. Interviews will be conducted during the following week. Questions? Contact Dr. Amanda Kelso, Office of Study Abroad, 121 Allen Bldg., 684e-mail: 2174, akelso@asdean.duke edu.
details. Please mention this ad
:
HOUSE COURSES FALL 2000
-
APPLICATIONS available now in 04 ALLEN BUILDING or online at
http://www.aas.duke.edu/trinity/houseers/hc.html. for people wishing to teach a House Course in Fall 2000. Deadline for submission. Monday, April 17, 2000. MAY GRADUATES Apparel cards for Commencement are due NOW, Office of the University Marshal. 353 Gross Chemical Laboratory. -
Reliable, responsible babysitters wanted for infant twin girls in Hope Valley, Durham. Own transportation a must. Competitive pay. 493-3055
Help Wanted ATHLETIC JOBS THAT BUILD RESUMES! HORIZON CAMPS seek fun-loving, experienced instructors and directors in all athletic areas. Swimming, Tennis, Basketball, Baseball, Softball, Lacrosse, Soccer, Golf,
Gymnastics, Hockey, Volleyball, Archery. Weights/Fitness and Openings at 4 CO-ED children's camps in NY, ME and PA. Top camp Salaries, plus.Room, Board, Laundry & Travel. Apply online at www.horizoncamps.com or call (800) 544-5448 for more info. AUTISM SOCIETY OF NC needs CAMP COUNSELORS for summer residential camp serving children and adults with autism. Located 30 minutes south of Chapel Hill. Internship credit possible. Needed May 21 August 5. Contact Becky Cable at (919) 542-1033 or bcable @ autismsociety-nc.org. -
The Chronicle
BARTENDERS make $l5O-$2OO per night. No experience necessary. Call 1-800-981-8168, ext 276.
Part-time office clerk/courier for Durham law firm; must be available M-W-F from 9am to 12 noon; need reliable transportation; $B.OO per hour mileage, call Administrator at 490-0500 or fax resume to Administrator at 490-0873.
Chronicle Business Office seeking student for summer. Approx 12-15 hrs per week. May-Sept. Can start immediately for training 6 hrs. per week. Call Mary Tabor 684-3811.
+
Graduate Student. Needed parttime (around 15-20 hr/wk) to write/edit a research paper on religious coping and health for professional psychiatric journal. Prior publications required, as well as high-quality writing skills. Needs research experience in the social and behavioral sciences, and must be able to understand research methods. References are required for writing skills. Must be a current Duke graduate student and use Word97. $2O-25/hr depending on writing skills and research experience, plus authorship. Leave message at 681 -6633 with interest and
qualifications.
STUDY AT THE BEACH Free Pizza and information luncheon. Learn about the NEW Fall Semester courses offered at the Duke Marine Lab Friday, March 24th, Noon-1 ;30. Rm 101 Old Chem. For more information call 613-8070
MONDAY, MARCH 20,2000
HAVE AN AMAZING SUMMER ADVENTURE! Prestigious coed camp in beautiful Massachusetts seeks caring, motivated college students & grads who love kids! & GENERAL SPECIALTY (Athletics, Tennis, Waterfront, Arts, Crafts, Theatre, Pioneer, Etc.) COUNSELORS needed. Join a dedicated, fun team. Competitive salaries+travel+room+board. Call Bob or Barbara at 1 -800-762-2820.
Research technician needed in cell bio lab. Molecular biology and mouse experience required. Call Jennifer at 684-6290
RONALD MCDONALD HOUSE Relief Managers needed for parttime work. Seeking conscientious individuals with good people skills to provide hospitality to families who are experience stressful times. Requires overnight stay one weekend per month as well as shifts to help cover holidays and staff vacations throughout the year. Duties include guest relations, registration, and house upkeep. College degree preferred, with business/manage-
ment experience (or willingness to learn.) For information, call Jenny Dixon at 416-3955
SOHO SHOES accepting applications for energetic, fashion forward' sales associates for trendy, upscale store opening in April at Northgate Mall. Retail experience preferred. Fill out applications at the Mall Information Now
desk Between 3/20/00-3/24/00 Students needed for office responsibilities to include making deliveries, answering phones copying, filing, retrieving and sorting mail, etc. Work up to 10 hr/wk @ $6.00/hr. If interested please call 684-3377 or 684-4318.
INTERESTED IN A POLITICAL CAREER? Apply for the 2000 Democratic Campaign Management Program. Housing and living stipend. Learn the nuts and bolts of campaigning from top political consultants while electing progressive Democrats to Congress. Qualified graduates placed in full-time salaried positions across the country. Call 847-8641008
SUMMER JOB
Data entry/clerical position, 20-30 hours per week, $6.85 per, hour. Auxiliaries Finance office. Call 6603750
Morning Receptionist RTP LAW FIRM NEEDS A FRIENDLY PROFESSIONAL WITH EXCELLENT COMMUNICATION SKILLS AND COMPUTER EXPERIENCE. SOME ADMINISTRATIVE WORK INVOLVING MATH AND TIME ENTRY AND SOME SECRETARIAL WORK REQUIRED. MON-FRI 8:30-1. SEND RESUME TO PO DRAWER 12218, RTP, NC 27709.
WORK-STUDY Summer and More East Campus continuing Education. Register students for classes, workshops and camps. Telephone answering, data entry, general office. Work this summer and next year. $7.50/hr. Contact Janice 684-3095, —
jblinder@duke.edu
rates
Houses For Sale
-
mattress set Queen, brand name, new, still in plastic, retails for $399’
sacrifice for $195. 919-528-0509.
Three seat sofa: $320. Twin bed with box & frame: $6O. Big dining table and four chairs: $l5O. Two night tables: $8 & $l5. Long cocktail table: $2O. Wooden bookcase with four shelves: $l5. lamp: High standing $25. Halogen lamp (black): $7. Night table lamp: $l5. Color TV, 3years, 20 $6O! inches: Microwave, 1997: $2O. Four slit toaster: $7. Desk lamp: S5. Vacuum cleaner, Toshiba; $2O Printer (Mac) with $5O color cartridge: $5O. Plates (20 pieces): new; $l5. Pans & pots (4 pieces): $lO, Silver: $lO. Less than one year old. Call 489-2776 or sshin@duke.edu.
HIV TESTING The Duke Student Health Service offers FREE Superconfidential HIV Testing for Duke students. Test results do not go on your medical record. Call 684-3367 for an appointment. Covered by Student Health Fee.
Karate forWomen Build strength and confidence, get fun exercise, learn karate and self-defense, and join a great community of women. Traditional Okinawan karate. Located in Downtown Durham. All ages, fitness levels, etc. welcome. Call
or Central America s229rt, Europe 1690w. Other Worldwide destinations cheap. Only terrorists get you there cheaper! Book tickets on-line www.airtech.com. or 212-2197000.
Mexico/Caribbean
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Foreclosed and repossessed. No or low down payment. Credit trouble OK For current listings call 1800-311-5048 x4102.
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BARBER SHOP
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Misc. For Sale
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Cash, Check, Duke IR, MC/VISA or Flex accepted (We cannot make change for cash payments.) 24 hour drop off location: 101 W. Union Building e-mail to: classifieds@chronicle.duke.edu or mail to: Chronicle Classifieds Box 90858, Durham, NC 27708-0858 fax to: 684-8295
of trees. Great for kids/pets Beautiful home, great neighborhood! Near Duke, UNC & RTp $162,900. 484-8716.
Travel/Vacation
business rate $6.00 for first 15 words private party/N.R $4.50 for first 15 words all ads 10c (per day) additional per word 3or 4 consecutive insertions -10 % off 5 or more consecutive insertions 20 % off
deadline 1 business day prior to publication by 12:00 noon payment
white kitchen w/island and breakfast area w/bay window. Garage large fenced in back yard w/iots
Mary Margaret at 225-3306,
4-5 BR houses, close to campus for as little as $240 per person/month. Spacious rooms, hardwood floors, all appliances, security systems and off-street parking. Available June Ist. Call 416-0393
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special features (Combinations accepted.) $l.OO extra per day for all Bold Words $1.50 extra per day for a Bold Heading (maximum 15 spaces) $2.50 for 2 line heading $2.00 extra per day for Boxed Ad
HOUSE FOR SALE!
By owner, 6 Drummond Court Woodlake neighborhood Durham 3BR, 2 1/2BA, 2 story, large ter BR w/walk-in closet. Living room, family room, dining room
There are those who shy away from challenges. And then there are those who travel 9,000 miles looking for them.
International Opportunities
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Stop by and find out more about how YOU can be part of the next group of Peace Corps volunteers to serve overseas!
phone orders:
call (919) 684-3811 to place your ad Visit the Classifieds Online! http://www.chronicle.duke.edu/classifieds/today.html Call 684-3811 if you have any questions about classifieds, No refunds or cancellations after first insertion deadline.
www.peacecorps.gov 800-424-8580
Information
Table Tuesday, March 21,2000 9 a.m. 3 p.m. Bryan Center Walkway
Mon.-Fri. 8-5:30 Sat: 8:00-5:00*
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Information Session Tuesday, March 21, 2000 6:30 p.m. 8:00 p.m. Bryan Center, Von Canon C -
286-4030 Northgate Shopping Center Durham near Harris Teeter
)NDAYi
The Chronicle
MARCH 20. 2000
PAGE 13
solated Ugandan religious cult members commit mass suicide from page 2 around and bid the site, they came and they heard the people to farewell that the Virgin Mary would appear on Friday, so they did expect to die on Friday,” Sseppuuya said. Didas said the cult was established in 1994 by former prostitute Credonia Mwerinde at her family’s compound. He said members of the cult did not socialize with others in the area and communicated only by gesture, although they did sing and pray aloud. The women WO re white veils, and the men wore black, green or red shirts, he said.
UGANDA
Local leaders said members of the sect slaughtered their cattle and feasted
for a week before the fire, drinking a large supply of soft drinks and singing religious songs, according to the independent newspaper The Monitor. Cult members from inside and outside the compound had been invited to a ceremony Friday to inaugurate the chapel, which had recently been built by Mwerinde on the graves of her parents, Didas said. In other buildings on the compound, there were images of the Virgin Mary and several rosaries.
Didas, whose farm adjoins the compound, said two men, one identified as Joseph Kibweteere and the other an unidentified Catholic priest, were Mwerinde’s deputies. It was not known if any of the three had died in the blaze. A report Sunday in the Monitor disputed that account, saying Kibweteere was the sect leader. He had reportedly predicted that the world would come to an end Dec. 31 but changed that to Dec. 31, 2000 after nothing happened, the newspaper said. Curious onlookers and people from Kanungu trading center, less than a mile from the compound, peered into the building, holding sprigs of rosemary to their noses to ward off the stench. Tumwesigye Kajungu, a former schoolteacher from the trading center who refused to join the cult, said his wife and six children died in the blaze. “I last saw my wife on March 8. She
Asuman Mugenyi, another police spokesperson, said the adults who died would be treated a suicide victims, but the deaths of those under 18 years old would be regarded as murder. The victims included children, although the charred condition of the bodies could make it impossible to identify them or arrive at a conclusive figure the numbers of dead, Sseppuuya said. Doctors began autopsies Sunday.
told me something was going to happen on the 15th. And if nothing happened, then she would see me again,” he said. In the capital, Kampala, 217 miles to the northeast, deputy police spokesperson Eric Naigambi said the cult had been regarded as peaceful.
ties closed down a school in the compound about a year ago because it was not following a prescribed curriculum and all instruction was done through gestures. Relatively little is known about the philosophy of the movement.
“...they came around and bid farewell to the people and they heard that the Virgin Mary would appear on Friday, so they did expect to die on Friday.” David Sseppuuya,
New Vision, a Ugandan
”
Didas, the farmer, said that authori-
deputy
editor-in-chief of newspaper
government-owned
In the mid-1980s when Uganda was emerging from 15 years of bloody civil war, a woman calling herself a spirit medium said she could lead a guerrilla army through battle unscathed. Alice Lakwena told members of her Holy Spirit Movement they would be protected from bullets by rubbing themselves with oil pressed from shea nuts. In 1987 she sought refuge in neighboring Kenya. Her cousin, Joseph Kony, took up the insurgency and called it the Lord’s Resistance Army and said it was based on the Ten Commandments. The LRA is responsible for the deaths of hundreds of people in northern Uganda and the abduction of children and youths.
The Chronicle welcomes back its tan readers. By the way, please recycle this paper.
f
a lecture by
Timothy Lenoir
THE DEPARTMENT OF RELIGION PRESENTS A LECTURE BY
professor of history, Stanford university
RONALD L. NUMBERS HILLDALE AND WILLIAM COLEMAN PROFESSOR OF THE HISTORY OF SCIENCE AND MEDICINE AT THE UNIVERSITY OF WISCONSIN AND AUTHOR OF DARWINISM COMES TO AMERICA AND THE CREATIONISTS
Monday, march 20,4 pm 136 social sciences building reception to follow
>«> LL
Timothy Lenoir is the Chair of the Program in History and Philosophy of Science at Stanford and the author of The Strategy of Life: Teleology and
Mechanics
in Nineteenth-Century German Biology and Instituting Science: The Cultural Production of Scientific Discipline. Professor Lenoir is especially interested in the history of human-computer interaction, and also in the history of bioinformatics, digital imaging, virtual reality, and genomics.
Sponsored by the Kimberly
For information, please call 684-1964.
Jenkins University Professorship in New Technologies and
Society^
/■*-',! l'Jo>
"FROM DAYTON TO TOPEKA: CREATION AND EVOLUTION IN AMERICAN CLASSROOMS MONDAY, MARCH 20 5:00 PM, ROOM 022 NEW DIVINITY THIS LECTURE IS FREE AND OPEN TO THE PUBLIC. FOR MORE INFORMATION, PLEASE CALL 660-3500.
The Chronicle
PAGE 14
MONDAY, MARCH
20,2000
Israeli performance artist will host variety of events � NEWS BRIEFS from page 6
Award brings Israeli performance artist to Duke: Uri Katzen-
stein, a famous Israeli performance artist, has been named the first recipient of the Evans Israel Academic and Cultural Residency Programs. He will be in residence at the University from March 19 through 31, to present “Families,” a conglomeration of exhibitions, performances and lectures. Katzenstein will present four public exhibitions while at Duke. At 5:30 p.m. March 23, he will present “The Family of Brothers,” a sculpture, sound and video-performance, at the Freeman Center for Jewish Life. “Relatives,” at the Louise Jones Brown Gallery in the Bryan Center, will be shown at 3 p.m. March 24. He will also present a lecture on his work at 12 p.m. March 28 at the Center for Documentary Studies. Finally, “Surnames” will be a live performance accompanied by the exhibition of “Blood Drawings” at 5 p.m. March 29 at the Duke University Museum of Art. The program, funded by the Evans Family Foundation, is a three-year project meant to promote exchange of arts between Duke and Israel. The foundation was founded in honor of the late E.J. “Mutt” Evans, former mayor of Durham, and his wife, the late Sara Evans.
Neuroscientist to speak: Leslie Ungerleider, an internationally recognized neuroscientist, will speak in the Levine Science and Research Center’s Love Auditorium at 4 p.m. Thursday. Ungerleider, the chief of the laboratory ofbrain and cognition at the National Institute of Mental Health will discuss the “Cortical Circuits for Cognition and Awareness” as the last part of the 19992000 Mind, Brain and Behavior Distinguished Lecture Series. Her talk is free and open to the public. Ungerleider’s research interests include determining how “top-down” influences of attention and memory affect perceptual processing. She also explores the cortical mechanisms mediating perception and memory in humans. Anthropologist looks at peace in Guatemala: Diane Nelson of Lewis &
Clark College will discuss “The More You Kill, the More You Will Live’: The Maya, ‘race,’ and the Bio-political Economy of Peace in Guatemala.” Nelson’s speech will be at 3:30 p.m. Friday, in the Breedlove Room in Perkins Library. The speech comes as part of the John Hope Franklin Seminar for Interdisciplinary Studies in the Humanities; this year, the seminar’s theme is “Race and Nation-Building in the Americas.” Nelson is an assistant professor of anthropology and sponsoring faculty in
Latin American studies at Lewis & Clark. Her work examines the relationships between Mesoamerica, ethnic national identities, gender, popular culture, film, new technologies, power and subject formation. For more information, contact Mark Olson at 684-6470 or email mark.olson@duke.edu.
Biblical scholar speaks:
New
Testament scholar Gordon Fee will give his first lecture, “Wisdom Christology in Paul? Some Reflections on the Preexistence of Christ in Paul” at 11 a.m. Tuesday in room 022 of the Divinity School. His second lecture, “Paul and the Trinity: The Experience of Christ for and the Paul’s Spirit Understanding of God” will take place at 2:30 p.m. Wednesday in the school’s Alumni Memorial common Room. Fee, a professor of New Testament at Regent College and an ordained minister with the Assemblies of God, is coming through the annual Kenneth W. Clark lectures.
Semans is chair of the Duke Endowment and was recognized for her public service. Kreps, a former secretary of the U.S. Department of Commerce, was recognized in the education category.
Keohane recognized for out standing leadership in education: President Nan Keohane won the fifth: annual Josephine D. Clement Award fori Exemplary Community Leadership ft r Public Education in Durham. She shared the award, presented last
Thursday by the Durham Public Education Network, with North, Carolina Central University Chancellor Julius Chambers. The award honors the late Clement, a civil rights and public education advocate from Durham—and recognizes individuals who rally the community around initiatives to set high standards in public schools.
Spiritual leader and scholar to speak: At 8 p.m. Wednesday, Mama
Lola, a healer and spiritual leader of the Haitian community in New York City, Hunt presents awards to 2 Duke and Karen McCarthy Brown, a professor figures: As part of the N.C. Council of at Drew University, will give a joint preWomen’s annual awards banquet, Gov. sentation in Griffith Film Theater. Brown, a professor of the sociology Jim Hunt presented awards to Mary D.B.T. Semans, a former University and anthropology of religion, is the autrustee, and Juanita Kreps, a long-time thor of the book Mama Lola: A Voodou professor who earned her doctorate in Priestess in Brooklyn. economics from the University. For more information, call 660-3500,
Taiwan election sparks dissension in Kuomintang ranks TAIWAN from page 2
Protesters, the vast majority of them supporters of Soong, cried “Lee Teng-hui is a traitor!” and pelted the Nationalists’ headquarters with eggs and stones. They set upon the arriving cars of Nationalist officials, smashing windshields. One adviser to Lee was dragged out of his car and beaten; another fled in a panic. “The KMT is very weak now,” said Lee Ching-ping, who attended Sunday’s emergency meeting of the Kuomintang, as the Nationalists are known in Taiwan. “The question is: Who will be the next leader of the party?”
For the party, Lee’s departure would leave a major vacuum. The charismatic, 79-year-old president has utterly dominated the Nationalists for more than decade, since he succeeded Chiang Ching-kuo in 1988. But Lee’s leadership has been more .visive than is commonly thought in the outside world, where he is viewed as the man who brought democracy to Taiwan. In recent years, the party has become split between native-born Taiwanese—like Lee—who favor taking a strong line toward China, and mainlandborn people—like Soong—who favor a more conciliatory approach. Lee ignited a firestorm in July when he an-
nounced that Taiwan and China could negotiate re unification only on a “special state-to-state” basis. China, which views Taiwan as a renegade province, denounced Lee for taking the first steps toward Taiwan independence. The party split was aggravated when Lee clashed with Soong, a Nationalist heavyweight who had become one of the country’s most popular politicians as the provincial governor of Taiwan. After Lee picked the more reserved Lien Chan instead of Soong to be his designated successor, Soong declared that he would run as an independent and was expelled from the party.
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Antonia Abraham Angelique Barker Lauren Barton Jess Bennett Marissa Bohrer Janina Brodsky Christina Burigo Aileen Cannon Elizabeth Colucci Suzy Driggs Erika Estrada Cameron Fitzsimmons Lauren Freedman Lindsay Freud
Danielle Friedman Katie Granson Erin Gregg Elizabeth Gulledge Rachael Halstuk Lindsay Hilgers Meredith Jarblum Jenny Kaszton Lily-Hayes Kaufman Erica Keany Kelli Keck Abby Levin Lauren Liao Kristin Luneberg
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PAGE 15
The Chronicle
MARCH 20. 2000
urses split over merit, effectiveness of unionization �UNIONIZATION from page in1 our institution,” he wrote in munity confidence
Strongly
worded March 19 letter to the editor in of Durham. Herald-Sun rhe the health care industry With recent criticism of“Articles like these make continued, he a whole, claims that can create even greater fears and apprehensions among patients and their families.” The nurses’ primary concerns dealt with the mandatory 12 hours of overtime per week, a high nurse-to-patient ratio and a system that overworks incoming nurses, forcing some to leave the Hospital. The Herald-Sun stands by its coverage as “a fair and accurate report of nurses’ complaints.” union by pointing Miller extolled the benefits of anurses’] position in [the “improve would it out that as give them a voice in as well bargaining, collective all aspects of employment.”chief operating officer of But Brenda Nevidjon, issue is very complex. said the Hospital, Duke “David Miller is an outsider—he periodically visits but he is not an employee nor does he live here,” Nevidjon said. “There’s such change going on in the Hospihealth care forced by the changes outside that [change].” on front line of Nurses are the tal.... Nevidjon expressed concern over the fact that some nurses were even thinking of forming a union. “I hope those who are considering it realize that the union is not always what it seems and often has its own agendas,” she said. Miller declined to comment on the number of signatures the lUOE has collected so far. To set up a vote on unionization, 30 percent of employees must authorize it through a petition. At that point, a simple majority of nurses would have to vote in favor of the idea. Nurses at the Hospital have mixed opinions about whether unionization is necessary. “I have always enjoyed open lines of communication, [and] I don’t think there’s anything a union would solve,” said a critical care nurse who has spent over 20 years working in the Hospital.
A nurse in the intensive care unit mentioned that after years of experience, she has learned how to word questions to her supervisors in away that will bring answers. But one nurse expressed her dissatisfaction with
Le
not the answer to all problems. The VA has had a union since 1974.
“Unionization is to be employed when negotiation breaks down,” he said, adding that the best is one that works with management toward a union the quality of communication between nurses and common goal. management. The issue of unionization at Duke Hospital has the “We’ve been standing up at these meetings —they catalyst may hear us but they’re certainly not listening,” she said. potential to become a powerful precedent and hospital, flagship is a for nurses “Duke’s everywhere. nurse concerns about the actual Another voiced bargaining power of a nurses’ union, pointing out that one that gets a lot of attention and visibility,” Bouchunlike workers in other professions, nurses cannot er added. Nevidjon maintained that Duke Hospital’s posilegally go on strike. North Carolina is also a right-to“We work state, so workers cannot be required to join the tion continues to be what it has always been.raise for to mechanisms all staff internal have many union once established. processMichael Boucher, head of the nurses’ union at the issues [and] make suggestions on improving said. es,” exshe Center, Veteran’s Medical Administration Durham Richard Rubin contributed to this story. plained his personal philosophy that unionization is
Firefighter’s gear stolen from truck �POLICE REPORTS from page 6 Laptop stolen: A $1,200 Duke-owned Dell laptop was stolen from an employee’s unsecured third-floor office in Duke Clinic between 9:30 a.m. March 16 and 8:56 a.m. March 17.
As part of the NORTHERN CANADA VISITORS SERIES,
The Center for North American Studies and the Canadian Studies Program at Duke are pleased to invite you to attend:
Two presentations by award winning documentary filmmaker and widely published author,
James Cullingham *2:3OPM; “We Have Such Things at Home Video and talk ”
on links between South Africa’s former Apartheid and Canada s former ‘lndian Policy’ and *S;SOPM: Collage of work and discussion on “Rising Expectations and Problems Facing Native Canadians in the Near and Middle North "
Firefighter gear taken; A Roxboro, N.C. firefighter reported that his fire bag was stolen from his truck, which was parked in the Hanes House lot between 7 p.m. March 9 and 8:15 a.m. March 10. The bag contained $BOO worth of property, including a helmet, goggles, coat, pants, a $lOO oxygen mask and leather boots.
TUESDAY, MARCH 21, 2000 at 2016 Campus Drive
Processor swiped: Someone stole a Duke-owned $BOO Optiplex processor and Dell 128-megabyte memory chip from an unsecured office on the first floor of Duke Hospital, Dean said. An employee reported that the property was stolen between 7 p.m. March 8 and 8 a.m. March 9.
CANADIAN Mr. Cullingham is currently a producer for CBC-TV/Radio Canada’s HISTORY PROJECT. He is developing a series of documentary films about Canadian addition, he rivers and a biographical film about Mohandas Gandhi in South Africa. In lectures and contributes to the GLOBE AND MAIL and other publications.
Equipment stolen: An employee reported that someone stole 25 cases of Duke-owned cleaning equip-
THINGS AT HOME, a In 1997 Cullingham directed and produced WE HAVE SUCH native policy. It documentary film about Canada’s relationship with South Africa over August 1997. It has been was first screened at the Montreal World Film Festival in sold for broadcast in Canada, France and southern Africa.
ment, worth $825, from the Hospital loading dock, said. The property, which was taken around 7:45 a.m
Dean
March 15, was not secured.
DVD player swiped: Someone stole a $5OO Dukeowned Sony DVD player from the first-floor study area in Lilly Library between 9 a.m. and 2 p.m. March 8. The perpetrator detached the DVD player from a TV monitor before stealing it.
Camera stolen: A student reported her camera stolen from the Bryan Center food court area between 6 and 6:30 p.m. March 4.
She accidentally left the $2BO silver Pentax
camera a chair in the area. She found the camera case—without the camera—in the lost and found, Dean said.
°n
Canada Visitors Look for updates on subsequent speakers in the Northern Present, and Near Future APRIL 11- Shelagh Grant, ‘The Inuit of Nunavut: Recent Past, Series;
of the Arctic Landscape APRIL 13- John Moss, “Enduring Dreams: An Exploration For further information, please call 684-4260
The Chronicle
PAGE 16
MONDAY, MARCH 20
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