The Chronicle
Snorts
m
w ■
Duke dukes Dukes In a tongue-twisting women's lacrosse game today, the Blue Devils host the James Madison Dukes. See page 15
..
Scholars discuss CAPS director named interim VP Jim Clack will serve during the search for a new Student Affairs leader care psychiatric By JAIME LEVY
Recent studies have shown that law enforcement officials can be effective in ensuring that mentally ill people take
their prescribed medication. By MARKO DJUKANOVIC The Chronicle
When it comes to dealing with the mentally ill, treatments are difficult to administer and are very often controversial. All too often, psychiatric patients end up in the hospital over and over again because they do not self-administer prescribed treatments. “You see patients revolving in and out of a hospital and it’s demoralizing,” said Dr. Marvin Swartz, head of Duke’s Division of Social and Community Psychiatry. A recent study has found an effective but controversial approach that teams law enforcement with doctors: Having a judge order a patient to stick to his treatment can achieve promising results. The study’s results, published in the April issue ofthe British Journal of Psychiatry and the December 1999 issue of the American Journal of Psychiatry, found that treatment encouraged by the force oflaw can reduce the number ofviolent acts committed by psychiatric patients as well as reduce their rate of hospital readmission. But the issue at the heart of the matter has to do with the limits of this approach, called involuntary outpatient commitment programs. Mary See MENTAL ILLNESS on page 6
The Chronicle
President Nan Keohane announced Monday that Jim Clack, director of Counseling and Psychological Services, will serve as interim vice president for student affairs. Clack will be vice president during the national search seeking a replacement for current Vice President for Student Affairs Janet Dickerson, who will leave July 1 for a similar position at Princeton University. The search committee has not yet been named. “[Clackl is very highly regarded both by people in Student Affairs and in other parts ofDuke, and is clearly someone people respect and enjoy working with,” Keohane said. “He is also enthusiastic about using the post for active service, really making a difference on some key issues, during his time
in office.”
Both Keohane and Clack pointed to alcohol, diversity, residential life and academic integrity as the four primary issues that would come up during his term. Clack stressed his interest in ensuring that students who drink do so responsibly. He said he wants to be sure
JIM CLACK will take up the helm of the campus’ alcohol discussions when he becomes interim vice president for student affairs. that “if it is going to happen, it’s going to happen in healthy and safe ways,” Instead of focusing on top-down solutions to excessive drinking, Clack is interested in making stu-
dent interaction the best way to ameliorate a dangerous culture. “I think students get caught in the thing of where they might be aware of fellow students [with See CLACK on page 9 >
Dorm-building project promises changes this fall Campus conversation will now turn to space allocation
The construction is likely to inconvenience many students
By GREG PESSIN
By GREG PESSIN
The Chronicle
The Chronicle
Some say it’s at the heart ofall ofthe University’s social problems. West Campus space allocation, the
Almost as soon as the final graduate leaves campus May 17, dump trucks and bulldozers will roll onto campus for a two-year stint excavating the Ocean parking lot and building a new dormitory complex there.
topic of some of the University’s most
contentious debates over the last decade, will once again become the focus of campus discussion this fall. Although Residential Program Review director Judith White still must plan the four-year Main West Campus dormitory renovation project beginning in fall 2002, she will also begin leading the residential life steering committee toward creating a new s Pace allocation scheme. “Allocation is one piece of the larger aP of what we want the whole residential area for upperclassmen to look hke at the end of renovations,” White said. “Next fall is a good time for us to start talking because we really need to a%n our long-term goals with where
After fences are erected and Wanna-
®
See SPACEALLOCATION on page 8
THE CURRENT CONFIGURATION of quadrangles as mixes of different kinds of groups is likely to be changed once the new dormitory is built.
maker Drive is closed off, the workers will spend the bulk of the summer preparing the site for the 380-bedspace quadrangle that will eventually take shape around the current parking lot. At the same time, University officials will be warning students about the changes they will find when they return to campus—altered parking zones, new pedestrian paths between Edens and Main West quadrangles and noise and dust from a massive construction project, said Judith White, director of the Residential Program Review. Through e-mails, the Residential ProSee
CONSTRUCTION on page 9
P*
Students host Marketplace soup kitchen, page 4 � Wrestling prepares for trip to Iran, page 15
'
The Chronicle
Newsfile
•
World
page 2
™«w,™ ra
Gunfire wounds 6 children in D.C. zoo Gunfire rang through the National Zoo in Washington on Monday evening as a feud between youths turned violent, leaving a 12-year-old boy brain dead and five other children wounded. Chechen rebels attack Russian troops Just days after Chechnya secessionist Aslan Maskhadov allegedly ordered guerrilla commanders to suspend fighting for peace talks, rebels attacked a Russian military convoy Sunday, Russian officials said Monday. Albright responds to laptop disappearance After the disappearance of a laptop with highly sensitive files, Secretary of State Madeleine Albright Monday stripped her intelligence office of its right to police itself.
Republicans criticize weekend raid in Miami House Speaker Dennis Hastert, R-111., joined a growing chorus of Republican criticism Monday over the use of force in last weekend’s raid on the home of Elian Gonzalez’s Miami relatives. Cholera outbreak kills nearly 400 Somalians Cholera outbreaks are sweeping through the famine-ridden villages in southwestern Somalia, killing nearly 400 people in the past two weeks, local authorities said Monday. Nike chair Knight cancels contribution Nike chair Phil Knight will not make a $3O million gift to his alma mater, the University of Oregon, because of the university’s decision to join the Workers Rights Consortium, a studentbacked monitoring group.
Weather TODAY:
TOMORROW:
RAIN High: 55 High: 58 -s Low: 39 Low: 52 “Imagine if birds were tickled by feathers. You’d see a flock of birds come by, laughing hysterically!” Steven Wright (the comedian)
Mull
&
By JOEL BRINKLEY with STEVE LOHR
N.Y. Times News Service
The Justice WASHINGTON Department intends to ask a federal judge this week to break Microsoft into two companies to bring about competition in the software industry, officials and others aware of the government’s deliberations said Monday. The proposal comes less than a month after settlement talks between the government and Microsoft broke down and a federal judge found Microsoft in wide violation of federal and state an-
titrust laws. But even though the judge,
Regal University Hotel
Refreshments from 4:30-s:lspm Meeting begins at s:lspm
Door Prizes
cept the proposed remedy. Microsoft called the idea “a radical and extreme example of government regulation that would be bad for consumers and for the high-tech economy.” A spokesperson, Mark Murray, added, “There is no basis in the evidence presented in this case for this sort ofradical remedy.” Several people with knowledge of the Justice Department’s plan said it called for one company to retain the Windows operating-system business and for the other to take the rest of Microsoft’s operations, including software pro-
By RANJAN ROY Associated Press
SEMPORNA, Malaysia Rescue teams searching southeast Asian seas Monday zeroed in on a
band of heavily armed assailants, who had stormed one of the world’s top diving resorts and sped off with 20 hostages. An American couple escaped by refusing to swim out to the kidnappers’ boats and then hiding overnight in nearby bushes. Philippine Muslim rebels who are seeking the release of militants jailed in the United States claimed responsibility Tuesday for the kidnapping. But Philippine officials quickly expressed skepticism over the statement.
H Tradition ofStewardship
Wednesday, April 26
Thomas Jackson, ruled that the company was a predatory monopolist, there is no assurance that he will ac-
grams like Word and Excel, Microsoft’s Web browser and its Internet businesses. The result would be about a 6040 split of Microsoft’s estimated $23 billion in revenue this year, with operating systems being the lesser share. While in some ways the plan would create two monopolies in place of one, the premise is that their incentives would differ and that they would therefore behave differently. The Justice Department’s inclination to seek a breakup of the company was reported Monday by The Wall Street Journal, The Washington Post and USA Today. See MICROSOFT on page 6
Rebels take 20 hostages in Malaysia
Federal Credit Union
Annual Meeting
TUESDAY, APRIL 25 20nn
Prosecutors recommend the creation of two separate software companies
©uke {Hmbersrttp
All Credit Union Members are invited to attend our
National
Justice Dept, urges Microsoft breakup
-
.***■
i'i I
&
Support
(919) 684-6704 24-Hour Automated Service Line (919) 660-6000 Web Site
www.dukefcu.duke.edu
Main Office 1400 Morreene Rd. Durham, NC 27705
Office Hours: M-Th, 8 am-5 pm; Fri, 8 am-6 pm Drive-Thru Hours: M-Fri, 7:30 am-6 pm
Duke South Office Lower Level Orange Zone, Rm. 0251 Hours: M-Th, 7:30 am-4 pm Fri, 7:30 am-5 pm
Defense Minister Najib Tun Razak said Monday that an air-and-sea search team had determined where the hostages—half of whom were foreign tourists—were being held, following their abduction the previous evening on the lush Sipadan Island in eastern Malaysia. “We now know their exact location,” Najib said without giving details. The Philippine and Malaysian navies were coordi nating the rescue effort. Malaysian police said they suspected “political motives” were behind the attack. “We believe a foreign element is involved,” Inspector General of Police Norian Mai said.
TUESDAY, APRIL 25. 2000
The Chronicle
Student harassment case dropped By JAIME LEVY The Chronicle
The case involving a student arrested for violating a restraining order was dismissed last week due to First Amendment concerns. Pratt senior Albert Estok was taken to court last week for posting messages on DevilNet that his exgirlfriend found threatening. A domestic violence protective order, issued against Estok in late February, specifically said he could not post on DevilNet if he referred to the victim. But the judge dismissed the case after prosecutor Ashley Jenkins pointed out that Estok’s postings to a DevilNet bulletin board were not specifically directed at the victim and that he is therefore protected from prosecution by the First Amendment. “If he made any threats, then I would do my best to do something about it,” Jenkins said. The restraining order is still in effect, but Lt. Sara-Jane Raines—the Campus Police officer working on the case—said that because the district attorney will not prosecute for nonspecific postings, she will not try to obtain another warrant against Estok for doing so. “I think it is highly unlikely that someone will take out a warrant on that particular point [of the restraining order!” Raines said. Raines added that because the case is in criminal court, the Trinity junior cannot appeal the district attorney's decision. “The victim doesn’t have any rights in the criminal court system,” Raines said. “All she can do is live with the decision.” Estok said he is still banned from Central Campus, where the victim lives, and the Alpine Atrium. See COURT CASE on page 7
&
PAGE 3
Sleep clinic seeks respite for the weary
Medical Center faculty use behavior modification to help patients fight insomnia By ELIZABETH CANTER The Chronicle
With about 70 different sleep-related illnesses, more than 40 million Americans suffer from little or no shut-eye. For the students and others experiencing sleepless nights or daytime in bed,
the Medical Center’s Sleep Disorders Clinic seeks to help. The clinic is the result of colla'boration between the neurology and psychiatry departments at the Medical Center, explained Gail Marsh, associate professor of medical psychology. ‘The world of sleep disorders is split between people with insomnia and people who sleep excessively during the day,” he said. “The neurology department deals with those who have excessive daytime sleeping, while the psychiatry half deals mostly with insomnia.” Marsh, who deals mostly with nonclinical insomnia research at the clinic, explained that insomnia is a serious disease that is hard to outgrow. “Once you leam to become an insomniac, it becomes conditioned,” he said. “People train themselves to become tense right before bedtime, and you can visibly see them tighten up and their blood pressure increase.” Marsh said the Medical Center has developed and is exploring new insomnia treatments. “Our insomnia treatment group pioneered a technique called behavior modification techniques,” he said. “These work better in the long run than sleeping pills, which tend to lose their utility over time.” He explained that behavioral treatment tries to relax patients at bedtime, working to clear their mind. ‘Treatments try and bar those emotionally laden thoughts,” he said, adding that this behavioral treatment needs to be tailored for each patient. Marsh emphasized that maintaining a consistent sleep schedule is key in modifying an insomniac’s behavior. “We try and combine [behaviorall techniques and put them together in a package for each patient,” he said. “We’re
ELIZABETH FULK/THE CHRONICLE
LEIGH GOODRICH, a data technician at Duke's sleep disorders clinic, assists a patient at the Medical Center. still working on how to balance that said she did not explore the clinic as an package and what you need exactly” option because the problem eventually A fairly widespread problem, insomwent away on its own. She added that nia is one of a few diseases that is mostwriting in a diary has helped her sleep. Because there are many different levly self-diagnosed. “Patients come into the center and tell us they have insomels and degrees of insomnia, the center nia,” he said. “We ask a few questions does partially screen its patients by askand then say ‘OK and try and treat it.” ing a few questions before beginning But sleep disorders extend far betreatment. “Chronic insomnia is techniyond insomnia. cally something that you’ve had to have Dr. Aatif Husain, director of clinical had from three to six months, and experineurophysiology training programs at enced two or three nights a week,” Marsh the clinic, said that any negative impact said. “So we ask questions so we can just of sleep on an individual’s performance focus on those who are chronically ill.” warrants treatment. “It doesn’t need to He added that a recent trauma might be serious at all, it only needs to be dis- cause some temporary difficulty in abling,” he said. “If a student feels it’s afsleeping. “The more transient folks usufecting his school work or social life, then ally get better by themselves, but iftheir the individual should come get help.” problem becomes chronic then they Trinity freshman Joanna Zuercher, should seek treatment,” Marsh said. who got less than four hours of sleep each Depression is another common cause night for weeks at a time first semester, See SLEEP on page 7 �
Arj v K u w
Bibliomania
ALLERGIC??? A
CHILDREN
&
ADULT ALLEf
If you are 12 years of age or seasonal allergy symptorr qualified to participate i study. Qualified participan at no cost: •
•
•
•
Allergy skin tesl
EKGs and Lab Te
Study related medu
Compensation for your til
3o\:HU
booWW Duke University
OUTDOOR SALE
Wednesday, April 26 Thursday, April 27 Friday, April 28 10 am to 4 pm �
�
On the patio just outside the Gothic adjacent to the Bryan Center walkway*
Save 30%-90% You will be able to go home with books for your shelves and change in your pocket. *Rain site will be outside the Gothic in the Bryan Center.
Dr. Craig LaForce and Dr. Karen Dunn, Board Certified in Allergy and Immunology
Student Flex Cards Visa, Master Card & American Express accepted
Bryan Center 684-3986 Monday-Friday 8:30 am- 5 pm Saturday 10 am- 4 pm •
TUESDAY. APRIL 25,2000
The Chronicle
PAGE 4
Juniors open Marketplace to homeless for Easter meal By GREG PESSIN The Chronicle
On most weekend afternoons, sleepy freshmen in their flannel pants or running shorts fill the Marketplace,
nibbling on French toast sticks, pasta and salads. The crowd that filled the Marketplace last Saturday was
markedly different. Seventy-five residents of the Community Shelter for Hope came to the Marketplace for a free Easter dinner Saturday, thanks to an effort planned and funded by two Trinity juniors and aided by three Marketplace employees
and several other undergraduates. Roommates Anil Vedula and Neil Ghodadra dreamed up the idea last semester. The pair began planning and calling administrators after Ghodadra and his family helped with an Atlanta holiday hunger drive last year. “They were really flexible and open to the ideas,” Ghodadra said. “They were thinking we could get food from the Marketplace, but I thought we should get people here as a change of scenery and because it’s a nice place to eat.” They arranged for a Duke Transit bus to take the guests to and from the dinner and for the food to be cooked by Dining Services employees. “We thought this would be a good way of providing help at a time when everyone needs a good meal,” Vedula said. “We helped provide this unity between the Duke and Durham communi-
ty and think we should provide more of these opportunities to show Duke is really interested in helping the Durham community.”
Originally they wanted to turn the
Marketplace into a soup kitchen for
Thanksgiving, but they eventually realized that a November project would be too big a project so early in the year. The Easter meal is designed as a start for an annual program that will include Thanksgiving, too. Most of the organizers’ time was spent planning the event and serving the food, although they got some time to chat with their guests. ‘They were really interesting people,” Ghodadra said. “One guy was reading a book about Oscar Wilde and talking about him. Even I didn’t know what he was talking about.” Another guest explained to Ghodadra the health benefits and philosophical underpinnings of vegetarianism, claiming that primitive man was vegetarian and that humans should not think of themselves as above other animals.
“Once people were in there, it was fun. I had a really great time,” Ghodadra said. ‘There were families eating and kids running around. One kid was running around with a banana, and I thought, ‘What a great scene.’ But the best part is when they all said thank you. It piade me feel like I was really making a difference.”
DREW KLEIN/THE CHRONICLE
I
PLEDGE ALLEGIANCE TO
FAUST
Made with fresh ingredients... Fat-Free whole black beans Fat-Free tomato salsa And Low-Fat organic basmati rice
I■
THE COSMIC CANTINA Burritos are... Low in Fat High in protein High in energy And Really Healthy And Best of All:
THE COSMIC CANTINA is
TOTH
�*
FUTU
The Costs and Rewards of
open
late!!
Open from lunch until 4am daily. Located at: 1920/2 Perry St. Call for Take Out: 286-1875 Now Available on Campus at: The Cambridge Inn (Cl), Fuqua School of Business, The Law School and East Campus
DSG
Next year’s Duke Student Government executive officers and Cabinet members were sworn in Monday in a Bryan Center Ceremony.
Ixoo MUCH]
Knowledge
An Evening of Great Music, Cool Technology, New Books, and Big Ideas Presented by the
UNIVERSITY SCHOLARS PROGRAM Duke University
April 25, 2000, 7-9:30 p.m.
TONIGHT
Beginning in Sheafer Theater, Continuing in Von Canon-C Bryan Center, West Campus For more information call 684-1964 www.usp.duke.edu ../
plait 180:
ELtPiUNT
from Thomas Dobson’s
| low-rez scan]
TUESDAY, APRIL 25, 2000
The Chronicle
DURHAM b 1
north
«
°
-'
n
PAGES
*
27700-O937
jd»c@acpub-D
BOX
90937
April 24,2000
Dear
Students.
se!K,4ay
H
,
paruculariy
the day,
“
the
SistimeofV*
l SemeSK
“
'*
onts to have
a
good
isr3 ss5S^
consumption is a seno
ou f that we look 9U or of help, call
your ra.
for»« d We re looking .
„
“
»„
.
and safe U* —«« to
.
f rinsses. **
Please help
doesn'*
»»
„ „
yo dangerous- See
Sincerely,
,
Jordan Bazmsky
jc JJ^dent Affairs
Janet Smith D for President
Vice
lu
®
DSC president
’
TUESDAY, APRIL 25,2000
The Chronicle
p 'AGE 6
Involuntary treatment plan spurs ethical concerns “The Kendra Webdale case is tragic, a tricky issue. Elizabeth Kiss, director of but at no time can patients be forced to this but also rare,” said Swartz, pointing out the Kenan Institute for Ethics, emphatake their medication. Swartz said that the violence rate of the severely sized the need to respect people’s autonnot abunapproach is used frequently but omy. “On one hand, we’re moving toward mentally ill, when separated from subdantly by Durham judges. a more draconian, punitive approach,” minor. is relatively abuse, stance Professor of Law and Philosophy said Kiss, citing a decrease in clemency that Zdanowicz believes However, inof strategy Martin Golding said this trying minors as adults as examand generally was voluntary outpatient commitment Webdale’s tragic death “But there’s also a greater underthat need ples. real problems of representative should be carefully weighed against standing more of mental illness.” to be addressed. “New York had basic human rights. “It’s a hot pistol bethat it is hard to know which She added share tragedies of similar cause the person in question hasn’t done than its may work. In treatments the state certain why because part in large resulted anything yet,” he said. is in creatmind, the real challenge her compliance to ensure treatment enacted an did little New York Last summer, “a framework which susto community ing need medication outpatient commitment program called for individuals who treatment of mentally i 11...” said. tains the she community,” in safely live the Kendra’s Law, named after Kendra Web“In the best of possible worlds, said. of treatshe balancing But effectiveness by death a was to her pushed dale, who there should be someone other than a schizophrenic who neglected to take his ments and societal safety with preservsuch judge telling them to take the medicine.” makes this autonomy ing patients’ medication.
� MENTAL ILLNESS from page I
Zdanowicz, executive director of the
Treatment Advocacy Center, said nearly
half of individuals diagnosed with schizophrenia and manic-depressive illness suffer from an inability to recognize that they are ill. Consequently, they do not take their medication. Under the laws suggested by the recent studies, if a patient is unable or unwilling to seek treatment, a physician may request a hearing with a judge. The patient is then assigned a course of treatment; if the patient does not comply with the treatment, the physician may request that law enforcement officers transport the patient to a clinic—-
Justice Department readies plan to break up Microsoft
MICROSOFT from page 2 As recently as last week, officials said the 19 states that joined with the Justice Department in the case appeared to be seeking remedies short of a breakup. Now that the states have been briefed on the federal
plan, they generally support it, several officials said. But it is not clear whether the states will endorse the plan in full or formulate a plan of their own by Friday, the deadline set by the judge. It also remains possible that the states will fail to agree among themselves, in which case they are to submit a proposal based on the opinion of the majority. The broad idea behind the Justice Department’s plan is to create incentives for increased competition in the operating-system and related businesses. One reason Windows has no significant competitors is that Microsoft generally does not create software for nonWindows operating systems, with the exception of Apple Computer’s. Microsoft Office, the suite of programs that includes
Word for word processing and Excel for spreadsheet calculations, commands over 90 percent of that business, known as application software, so an operating system that cannot work with Office stands little chance of prospering. But Microsoft argues that a new applications-software company would have no more incentive to write for smaller operating systems than the company does now. Murray, the Microsoft spokesperson, said, “There is no evidence that would lead anyone to believe that Office stands as the linchpin for resolving all of the government’s concerns.” Because any break-up proposal would almost certainly be stayed pending appeal, the government plans to ask for several interim restrictions on Microsoft’s behavior, to remain in force for three years if a breakup plan is ultimately approved and implemented, and 10 years if it is not. As part ofthese so-called conduct remedies, Microsoft would have to publish a standardized price list for Win-
Crook
is taking
Reservations for Graduation Weekend on Thursdays through Saturdays, 10 am through 3 pm
Fine Southern Dining Bar & Dining room open every evening at s:3opm Sun. Brunch I0:30am-2pm Crook’s Corner 610 W. Franklin St. Chapel Hill, North Carolina 919-929-7643
THE MARKET PLACE Restaurant at Erwin Square Mow Serving •
Slimmer Fare Shrimp Salad Pasta Salad Qazpacho
First Union Plaza 2200 W. Main Street (two
blocks from East Campus)
•
Catering
Take Outs Welcome
286-6699
"Best Sandwiches in Durham" (
•
ture Microsoft’s web browser and no others. Microsoft would also have to make available the Windows interface codes that allow other companies to write programs for Windows without discrimination. And the company would not be allowed to build certain new applications, such as Web browsers and media players, into Windows without also offering a version ofWindows that did not provide access to that new application. Computer makers would get a discount on Windows if they asked for Windows without the new feature. Microsoft calls most ofthese ideas excessive, beyond the scope of the evidence presented during the trial, and notes that these conduct remedies might be stayed pending appeal, along with the breakup proposal.
The Interview...
I
'
dows so that the company could not raise the price for companies that do not go along with Microsoft’s requests. Microsoft would be forbidden to strike exclusive contracts with other companies, as it did with Internet service providers that in past years were asked to fea-
Also serving soup, salads, desserts Serving Hours: Mon-Fri ii:00-8:00 P m Sat 11.30 3:30 pm -
"Good morning, thanks for your interest in Andersen Consulting. ...Tell me about your practical business experience." Well, uh, I, uh was the I spent a year working as
a paid advertising intern at The Chronicle, Duke University's Daily Newspaper. I gained valuable experience working closely with clients to develop effective advertising campaigns and help them to meet their marketing goals. I also worked with the production department to ensure the creation of advertisements to clients' specifications, expanded clientele and maintained close relationships with current customers. Additionally, I helped to devise innovative ways to market the paper.
treasurer for the underwater basket-weaving club and I took up ticket money at the movie theater for a summer. Does that count? ...No, okay, well, I, uh, I also spent a summer working as a lifeguard and helped run the snack counter at the pool. How 'bout that?
"Wow. It sounds like you have some great experience. I think you would be a great addition to our team."
"Don't call us, we'll call you. Thanks and bye-bye."
The Chronicle
The Duke Community’s Daily Newspaper
Paid Advertising Intel We have the experien
TUESDAY, APRIL 25, 2000
The Chronicle
PAGE?
Nocturnal students may adjust poorly to adult hours
ASLEEP from page 3 of insomnia. “Their insomnia can be treated by just putting them on antidepressants and solving that problem,” Marsh added. The more typical causes of the dozens of different types of insomnia are largely unknown, although Marsh said that the condition does seem to be genetic in some cases. Marsh explained that because there are so many different types ofthe illness, many with overlapping or unclear symptoms, it is hard to pinpoint causes. “Some people have had trouble sleeping since they were babies, and they’re called primary insomniacs,” Marsh said. “At the other end of the spectrum are folks who just feel like they’re not getting enough sleep, even when our sleep monitors show us that they are getting a pretty good night’s rest.” The other focus of the clinic, excessive daytime sleeping, largely addresses sleep apnea, a disease
Court case tossed �COURT CASE from page 3 The victim, who was out of town Monday, dated Estok for a month and a half; their relationship ended in December 1998.The victim said earlier that Estok has been harassing her since then, and that it “has gotten pro-
gressively worse” this semester. Estok, however, denies the victim’s allegations. “I have called that girl once in the past year, sent maybe a half dozen e-mails after that phone call until she asked me to stop,” he wrote in an e-mail. “At no point until she asked me to stop did she make me aware I was bothering her.” He added that his postings to Devil Net, which is affiliated with The Chronicle, were not meant to be threatening and were instead designed to help him with “resolution of some thoughts.” DevilNet Editor Jordi Weinstock, a Trinity junior, said Estok can still post on the site, but all posters’ email addresses are listed. “We will only take action in the event that he or any other user posts something legally problematic,” Weinstock wrote in an e-mail.
Dr. J.C. Bazemore, Optometrist Is your complete Eye Care Specialist Complete Eye Care Service: from emergency treatments to exams and fittings, we'll take care of your eyes.
Laser Vision Correction Available Contact Lenses call for free trial fitting. •
-
Call for an appointment today.
918 Broad St. 286-2225 1 block from East Campus •
Don't F
O R G
n
E T
to order early
Secretaries Week! Spring Flowers Corsages Arrangements •
•
Campus Florist 700 Ninth St. 286-5640 Mon-Fri 8-6, Sat: 9-4, Sun; Closed •
caused by breathing problems, and narcolepsy, a neufive times a year to answer questions about sleep disrological problem resulting in uncontrollable napping, orders,” he said. “We are trying to get some education Husain explained that sleep apnea is generally out there in the community.” caused by being overweight and although the cause of For Duke students, many of whom go to bed in the narcolepsy is largely unknown, it does tend to run in wee hours of the morning, Marsh warns four families. To diagnose those patients who might suffer years of this unbalanced nighttime schedulethat lead to from excessive daytime sleeping, they will need to similarly harmful habits later in life. “When students spend the night in the hospital so we can monitor who go to bed at five every morning for four years their breathing, heart rate and brain waves.” He graduate and go to Wall Street, they often have to deal added that some patients may need medication. with their disorders to make it to their day jobs on The clinic, which Husain said has been official for time,” he said. “Fortunately, there are behavioral techonly two years, is working to reach out into the comniques to deal with this.” munity and raise awareness. He said that although he He added that of the students who do come in the does not use support groups for his patients, some of clinic, many are seniors facing graduation and a more the clinic’s doctors do choose this option. daytime-oriented work schedule. “We get some stuMarsh explained that some of the clinic’s specialdents who come in, but mostly after they have sought ists go out and give speeches to other physicians and help from counseling services, who then refer them audiences. “There are lectures at Duke about three to over here,” he added.
TUESDAY, APRIL 25,2000
The Chronicle
PAGES
Plan for independent student clusters draws support � SPACE ALLOCATION from page 1 we’re going to move people when their dorms are being renovated.” The review began in spring 1997 with
questions about allocation—the placement of sophomores in Trent and the racial homogeneity of West Campus—but after a few years, its focus changed from philosophical to architectural. By next year, though, the schedule of West Campus renovations and upper-
quadrangle or more than one,” White said. “Given that independent students make up two-thirds of the upperclass residential group, is one quad enough, or would students want more than one?” The strategy of clustering students by living preference first appeared in a
plan written in February 1998 by the National Panhellenic Council, the Interfraternity Council and the Black Student Alliance. Earlier this year, it reappeared in a report presented to the Board of Trustees by William Chafe, dean of the faculty of arts and sciences. For years, some have argued that many minority students choose to avoid the fraternity-dominated West Campus lifestyle in favor of the quieter, cleaner Central Campus. This plan is designed as a compromise between fostering diversity of students and of living groups on West. When thinking about the issue over the summer and in the fall, this balance should be in the front of students’ minds, said incoming Duke Student Government President Jordan Bazinsky. “I think we need to talk about this as an inclusive environment,” the Trinity junior said. “We really need to have an inclusive campus and at the same time be receptive to [living] groups’ concerns.”
class students’ temporary displacement to Trent Drive Hall could affect housing preferences. Students might shy away from rushing or picking houses that would be moved for renovation later in their college careers. As a result, the campus conversation will return to space allocation, to questions about where fraternities, theme houses and independents might be placed once all construction is completed in fall 2006. “Opening the new dorms between Main West and Edens will be a very significant step in changing the way the campus climate feels residentially. I think it will be as fundamentally different as the shift of all first-year students to East Campus... because it will allow us to think in new ways about how we put different patterns of living groups Keohane thinks the clusters plan together, how people make their choices for where they want to live,” said Presicould be the best way to achieve that dent Nan Keohane. “We hope that it will goal. “I know one of the biggest obstaallow us to encourage more stability, so cles is the different types of preferences that people expect to stay in a single people have for the way they want to house after they move, rather than sort live, how loud they want to party and how quiet they want to be and how of continually moving around and trading up, getting what they regard as betmuch they want to reach out to other folks for programs and how much they ter space.” just want to get their work done,” she Over the last year, the ideas of clustering similar living groups in certain said. “I don’t think it’s beyond our powWest Campus quadrangles and directly ers to devise a system in which we have clusters of people living near each other linking East and West campus dormitories have silently picked up steam. Bewho have relatively common goals withcause Keohane has guaranteed that fraout creating a fraternity ghetto or a seternities and selective houses will lective living angle in which everybody remain on West, these questions of is off by themselves.” Since last summer, students and adplacement may become the focus of next year’s dialogues. ministrators have also been tossing “When we talk about allocation, we around the idea of linking East Campus are assuming we want an independent dormitories to West Campus houses, so
Wanna bowl'
E-mail rst@duke.edu
ANDREA OLAND/THE CHRONICLE
THE TRANSITION FROM EAST CAMPUS to West Campus may be smoothed by more formal
con'
nections between first-year and upperclass houses.
that students would always be guaranteed a spot in a house among their freshman friends. In other words, students who did not rush a selective house would be guaranteed space together in an independent West Campus dorm affiliated with their freshman house. Many independent students argue that the idea could eliminate the anxiety of independent housing picks, the general unfamiliarity of neighbors on West and the incentive to join selective groups even if students would otherwise not wish to do so. Since then, White said, the idea for a link has developed into a flexible model, where students could always return to the West Campus house after living in selective houses, and the West link could serve as a home base of friendly faces and a familiar lifestyle.
“I don’t know if that will be a decision that will be made in the end, but it’s an example of the kind of thing people are talking about, and that would create a sense of continuity in itself,” Keohane said. “If people know they can move together to a space which is as attractive as any other—and all these spaces ought to be equally attractive—then I think it will create a whole different set of choices, so that I would certainly think there would still be selective groups, but people may have different motivations for pledging them. They may have a set of members who are there for reasons that have to do with their desire to build a particular community, not to live in a particular space, and I think that will make a big difference.” Dave Ingram and Richard Rubin contributed to this story.
TUESDAY, APRIL 25. 2000
The Chronicle
PAGE 9
Clack hopes to become more Construction workers plan well-known among students to begin early in mornings CLACK from page 1 drinking problems]... but they’re reluctant to confront fellow students about it because of fears of loss of friendship,”
Tm going to have to get out and about,” he said. “[But] it comes easy for me. I really think that if students know me, we’ll get along fine.” Jim Lazarus, co-chair of the task said Clack, who is currently co-chair, with Dickerson, of the alcohol task force’s force’s cultural assessment subcommitsubcommittee for intervention and treat- tee and the student point-person for alment. “Until students help students, it’s cohol discussions this summer, said he is confident that Clack will be able to going to be extremely difficult.” Clack said he would like to see his work with students, even if he does not philosophy about interpersonal rela- know them yet. “Jim has a great [rapport] with stutionships extend into every aspect of Duke life. dents I’ve seen,” said Lazarus, a Trinity Describing his practice of saying junior. “He treats students as colleagues “good morning” to everyone he passes and peers, not as a student-administraon his way to work, Clack said stutor relationship.” Clack, 63, said he was unsure dents frequently seem shocked by his friendliness. whether he would be interested in the “I would hope that I can help Duke in permanent post, adding that his apsome small way to become a more pointment as interim vice president was friendly, caring, compassionate, civil fairly sudden. place, and that means students being Keohane said she will not address concerned about caring about each other the question ofwhether Clack is a canand behaving in that way” he said. didate until a search begins, Dickerson said Clack’s personality is “We agreed that he will need to focus characterized by a balance of serious- his attention on the interim vice presiness and humor. dency in the early months, especially, “He’s willing to speak up and help and that we won’t address the question any group he’s part of come to a concluof whether he’ll decide to be a candidate sion in away that is timely,” she said. until we are well into the search,” Keo“He’s good. He’s great. I hired him.” hane said. “This will mean that he can As director of CAPS, Clack works concentrate on getting the job done and mostly with individual students and not be distracted by thinking about next small groups ofstaff and faculty. steps from the start.” Although he is teaching a freshman Keohane said she expects to name a seminar this semester, Clack acknowlsearch committee by the end of the acaedged that his reputation with students demic year, although the search itself is not particularly wide-reaching. will not start until the fall. &
Duke University
Center for Instructional Technology The CIT staffwill host
Faculty Appreciation Reception April 25th from 4:00-5:30 P.M. Rare Book Room of Perkins Library to
recognize the efforts ofDuke faculty and staffwho are using technology in teaching. The CIT thanks the supporters ofthis event:
The Washington Duke Inn and Golf Club Duke University Men’s Basketball Team The American Dance Festival Duke University Primate Center The University Carillonneur The Terrace Shop Duke University Sports Promotions Office The Oak Room Duke University Stores More information is available at http://ivww, lib, duke edu/cit/citawards htm .
.
from page 1 gram Review will explain general information to all returning students, and the Housing Assignments Office will send more specific information to students living adjacent to the site. Over the course of the summer, these two offices, along with the parking office, may collaborate on a mailing about final changes. But perhaps the most drastic alteration will be the noise and dust the project brings with it. The workers’ days will begin at 7 a.m. and end at 4 p.m. ‘That’s with the understanding that people arrive at work at 7 a.m. but would not expect loud noises before 8 a.m.,” White said. “At a certain point you can’t meet students’ sleeping hours and still get work done.” A few fraternity members said their housing decisions were not related to construction concerns; meanwhile, some independents said they
run, providing a dorm on West so that we can phase out Trent will be beneficial,” he said. If the workers run behind schedule, they may work on the weekends, but students will be notified by their resident advisers in advance. Wooden fences will surround the site near dormitories, and large
chain-link fences covered with tight mesh will surround the rest. Workers will also periodically soak the site to keep dust at a minimum. White said the builder, Boston’s Beacon-Skanska Construction, has extensive experience at universities and research institutions, “They’re used to working in sites right next to someone’s residence hall or laboratory, and that’s part of why we picked them,” she said. The project is expected to get final approval from the Board of Trustees in May. Administrators and architects are still deciding how to distribute residential, social and service had considered the inconvenience space in the tower that will lie at the when choosing housing for next year. quad’s southeasternmost point and “A lot of my friends are deciding connect it by elevator to Edens. not to live around this area because of White is now considering making the cafe two stories, but that change construction,” said Pratt junior Emmanuel Chang, who said his own would displace eight beds. She, the move from Windsor to House G was architects and the builders are meetnot prompted by the project. “A lot of ing this week to find a place to make people won’t like the noise.” up the bedspace. ‘There are still parts of the plan that are still under conIncoming Duke Student Government President Jordan Bazinsky, a sideration,” she said. “As soon as stuTrinity junior, said that although the dents get back in the fall, we’ll be work will be a minor inconvenience, it looking for responses on this.” Jaime Levy contributed to this story. will be worth it in the end. “In the long
TUESDAY, APRIL 25,
The Chronicle li
Established 1905, Incorporated 1993
A system in need ofreform
The
recent controversy surrounding former Duke basketball player Corey Maggette points to a systemic problem with men’s college basketball. Maggette allegedly took $2,000 from a summer league coach while he was still in high school. If the allegations are proven true, Duke will be held responsible for his actions under NCAA rules. However, that does not absolve the system of its guilt. Elite young basketball players are placed in a no-win situation. They are constantly told that they possess a special gift that will one day earn them millions, but they can’t cash in until they renounce their college eligibility. Meanwhile, their families often struggle to make ends meet and they struggle to come up with spending money. The temptation to make a quick buck, even if not big bucks, is always present. From the corrupt AAU summer leagues to the most prestigious college campuses, the system must change. To begin, the NCAA should pay men’s college basketball players a reasonable weekly stipend. Several players have accepted tiny amounts of money from agents—throwing away their college careers for a little spending money. Considering the NCAA’s recent billion-dollar agreement with CBS, it can afford to invest in the people fans are tuning in to see. Certainly this stipend cannot compete with the millions the NBA can offer for the top players, but this could keep players in the NCAA who need the experience and who would otherwise have to jump to the NBA. We have reached the point where playing college basketball is viewed by players as nothing more than a weigh station on the road to the NBA. This situation is not good for the players, not good for the schools and not good for the game of basketball.
A more perfect union
Duke
Hospital nurses’ efforts to unionize have accelerated in the last week; they gathered more than 1,000 signatures and are preparing for a hearing next week that will determine the terms of a unionization vote. At the same time, however, they learned that the union would bring with it a right to strike. Hospital administrators oppose a union on the grounds that nurses’ concerns would not be effectively addressed by such a group. But if the majority of nurses in the hospital want to form a union, the hospital should allow them to do so. However, the union should explicitly state in its nurse-negotiated contract that it cannot take such a drastic step. Nurses claim the motive for forming a union is improved patient care—clearly, a strike would be counterproductive to that stated goal. Even without this bargaining chip, a nurses’ union would have significant power. Collective bargaining will increase nurses’ voice in hospital decisions, and the hierarchy of a union will give them an organization to vent their complaints. If this month’s administrative shakeup is any evidence, the Hospital is committed to improving conditions for nurses. A union seems to be an appropriate and effective way to help employees on the front lines of patient care.
Letters to
the
Editor
Women’s organization in law school deserves funds For several years the law school has enjoyed the image of being “woman friendly.” In fact, this image is one of the ways the law school tries to attract outstanding female students from the pull of other law school offers. Duke has one of the highest female
faculty rates, more women with higher GPAs and more female participation on law
journals than at other com-
petitive law schools. However, last week the Duke Bar Association handed down what is perceived by many women as a resounding message: Try as you might,
this law school is anti-woman. Last Wednesday, the DBA announced its budget allocations for the coming academic year. In an unexpected move, DBA cut the budget for the Women Law Students’ Association—the most active association at the law school—from last year’s $750
to a token $l5O, In 1999, WLSA held more lectures, symposia and social events than any other student group in the law school. Although women represent the majority of students at the law school, when it comes to funding discussion on women’s issues and supporting the only women’s group, the clock appears to have turned back to the days when Duke was graduating only men. Like many women, I came
to Duke Law School expecting to find a supportive environment for the professional formation of women as lawyers. The image—the faculty, the student body and WLSA’s endorsement sent to every admitted student—got me. However, my first year has seen only male professors, and although each was highly qualified, I soon felt that promise of support lacking. WLSA filled that gap. It
While I am glad to see issue of a moratorium on the that The Chronicle reported death penalty is a legal issue, on the law school’s moratorinot a political one. A moratoum vote, I am surprised by rium on the death penalty is a the negative slant the article way to address the serious took. The Chronicle’s article flaws in the current system. basically brushed the vote This is not the decisive issue aside as an unimportant vote our opponents made it out to that does not reflect the be. Our message is simple: If views of the student populawe are going to execute people tion. In reality, our law school in this country, we would like was well informed about this all jurisdictions to be sure vote and its ramifications. An that, among other things, overwhelming 64 percent of they are not executing innovoting students chose to supcent people. I would hope that port a moratorium on the future lawyers do not find death penalty. this a radical notion. The Chronicle’s article also Those opposed to this vote accepts as fact the idea that refused to argue the issue on this was a political issue. The the merits because there is no for referenced article,
Ethnic groups should We were afraid to speak up about this, but Laila ElHaddad and Nader AlAnsari’s courage have given us the motivation to speak out against Duke University Improv’s Big
The Chronicle is published by the Duke Student Publishing Company, Inc., a non-profit coiporation independent of Duke University. The opinions expressed in this newspaper are not necessarily those of Duke University, its students, workers, administration or trustees. Unsigned editorials represent the majority view of the editorial board. Columns, letters and cartoons represent the views of the authors. Toreach the Editorial Office (newsroom) at 301 Rowers Building, call 684-2663 or fax 684-46%. Toreach the Business Office at 103 West Union Building, call 684-3811. To reach the Advertising Office at 101 West Union Building call 684-3811 or fax 684-8295. Visit The Chronicle Online at http://www.clironicle.duke.edu. © 2000 The Chronicle, Box 90858. Durham. N.C. 27708. All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced in any form without the prior, written permission of the Business Office. Each individual is entitled to one free copy.
cut, every WLSA program—from the panel of. North Carolina women judges to the proposed community service project aiding battered women—is in jeopardy. The forum and the association have been as vital to the law school as that pro-woman image the law school touts to its external community,
Without one, the other could not exist. However, if left to DBA, I am afraid Duke will lose both. Marjorie
Menza Law ’O2
The writer is co-chair of the WLSA.
Show and their shameless stereotyping. It’s time that DUI stop making a name for themselves by trashing ethnic groups during their so-called “charity fund-raising events.” If they think their one token minority member will shield them for referenced
valid reason to oppose a moratorium on the death penalty. They did not want to address the facts, because the facts strongly pointed in our favor. The capital punishment system is racist, discriminates against the poor and has condemned innocent people to death. I fail to see how correcting these problems amounts to a political issue. Our law school has agreed that there are certain basic legal protections that arise above politics. In the end, that is why this vote passed. Kevin Paul Law ’O2
see http://www.chronicle.duke.edu/chronicle/2000/04/21/01Lawstudents.html
KATHERINE STROUP, Editor RICHARD RUBIN, Managing Editor JAIMELEVY, University Editor GREG PESSIN, University Editor NORM BRADLEY, Editorial Page Editor JONATHAN ANGIER, General Manager PRATIK 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 SCHURER, Recess Senior Editor RACHEL COHEN, Sr. Assoc. Sports Editor VICTOR CHANG, Sr. Assoc. Photography Editor JASON WAGNER, Sr. Assoc. Features Editor ALAN HALACHMI, Systems Manager SUE NEWSOME, Advertising Director ADRIENNE GRANT, Creative Director NALINI MILNE, Advertising Office Manager SAUNDRA EDWARDS, Advertising Manager BRYAN FRANK, New Media Manager
was only at WLSA meetings and events that I met female faculty and professional role models where I could engage in intellectual discussion about gender-based implications of the law and the classroom. With the recent budget
Chronicle inadequately covered moratorium vote
The Chronicle
NEAL MORGAN, Sports Editor CHRISTINE PARKINS, City & State Editor MEREDITH YOUNG, Medical Center Editor TIM MILLINGTON, RecessEditor JAKE HARRINGTON, luiyout and Design Editor TREY DAVIS, Wire Editor' MARY CARMICHAEL, TowerMew Editor ANYA SOSTEK, Sr. Assoc. Sports and Univ. Editor VICTOR ZHAO, Sr. Assoc. Sports Editor LIANA ROSE, Sr. Assoc. MedicalCenter 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
2000
not
be offended by DUI
from charges of bigotry, they are sorely mistaken. As students proud of our
Irish heritage and all things Irish—including the James Joyce—we feel their shameless portrayal of a Lucky Charms type Irishman during the Big Show makes us sick and demeans our whole homeland. We are tired of Hollywood and Hollywood wannabee’s like DUI passing off the Irish as drunk, Lucky Charms eating, gold-hoarding short people. They’re always
after our Lucky Charms. We demand an apology from the group, and a round of Guinness for the campus. Maybe then Irish students on campus can receive their due and stop being associated with leprechauns. Chris McAnneny Trinity ’OO
Mihir Gandhi
Trinity ’Ol
And Five Others
letter, see http://www.chronicle.duke.edu/chronicle/2000/04/17/08Duishould.htm,
On the record / would hope that 1 can help Duke in some small way to become a more friendly, caring, compassionate, civil place, and that means students being concerned about caring about each other and behaving in that way”
Jim Clack on one of his goals as interim vice president for student affairs (see story, page 1)
PAGE 11
Clinton and Millington—what a legacy Through our stories, headlines and leadership efforts, devotion to The Chronicle is bound in back issues avoid “a long, maudlin reflection” on descended from a lofty, semi-divine what my legacy is. Like the president, my time at Duke—and if my own position among the clouds—the perhaps I’m deluding myself a little Shotgun Blues mother doesn’t want to read my nursings, it’s a safe bet 15,000 strangers
President of the United States!—to a that in these closing days I can leave a very human figure yearning only for a lasting mark on the way my peers don’t either. favorable spot in the history books and think of me. So I can’t be funny, clever or reflec- perhaps a little R&R.in a White House Presidents and editors can’t shape tive, and I don’t have much left to say antechamber. In those same eight memories—people shape their own. about Duke. Instead, I’ve been ponderyears, I’ve gone from being a shy preFor all the excitement they’ve held, my ing something else entirely: President pubescent to a 21-year-old—still shy at time with The Chronicle and Clinton’s The clunking, wheezing, soon-to-bereplaced search engine on The Bill Clinton. He took office when I was times but mostly serenely overconfi- tenure in the White House will one day Chronicle’s web page tells me that I’ve in ninth grade, spanked Bob Dole when dent about my future. dim to nothing in the collective conwritten 122 articles. Multiply that by I was a freshman and now, he’ll head out From time to time, our paths have scious. My work here will be reduced to the paper’s circulation of 15,000, and to pasture just after I start medical crossed: In March 1998, Clinton faced 123 yellowing pages in bound volumes that means there are be 1.83 million school. During the so-called “Rush the prospect of impeachment and disof the paper, and Clinton’s torch will be copies of stories I’ve written drifting Limbaugh” phase of my life—long soft- grace while I faced the prospect of a C kept burning at a presidential library through the cosened among the lib- in organic chemistry. Perhaps we drew in Little Rock. conoral extremists on strength from each other—he will mos— most Even when no one is reminiscing The Chronicle’s leave office with high approval ratings about either of us, we’ll have those signed to a lumi- in mj mind nous ether of .recystaff—l loathed and I found away to get into my topshrines to ourselves to visit. I can only ] became men together Clinton. But recentcling bins, bound choice medical school. Two years ago, it hope that Clinton looks back as fondly reference volumes ly» like Winston seemed unthinkable. on 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue as I will j 77 7 77. and the ashes of admittedly OJ travelling in Smith admitting So what does all this have to do on 301 Flowers. long-dormant bonthat he loved Big with the 123 articles I’ve written for Brother, I’ve confires. Then, throw The Chronicle? Like Bill Clinton, the Tim Millington is a Trinity senior and OppOSlte dITeCtIOVIS fessed to myself time has come when I start pondering editor of Recess. in a year’s worth of head!.mes I ve writ-tthat I’ll look back ten—my dubious favorite remains fondly on the Clinton years. iNt. iiKc. CiL “Yabba-dabba-Duke! Devils rock It’s hard to imagine Americans Flintstones,” the day Elton Brand and electing another president so much 5-N WC r< l_~) 3O ■ -T 1 r U'<= company dispatched Michigan State in larger than life —certainly not with 3C the Final Four last year. Finally, add a only A1 Gore and George W. Bush to -'-0 U<s HCW year of steering Recess on the narrow choose from. It’s hard to imagine a '=§ -i road between tasteless and tedious. leader who could inspire his enemies When you add it all up, few students to risk everything to smite him or his ever get the kind of opportunity I’ve admirers to sacrifice their ideals in his had to inflict my voice on the defense. It’s hard to imagine a presiUniversity community. Now, in article dent who could seek to remake some of number 123, comes the crowning the nation’s oldest prejudices and then moment—an article in which I am risk succumbing to the world’s oldest allowed, almost obliged, to produce wit temptation. But it’s not the political theater of and wisdom about four years as a college journalist. Unfortunately, I’ve the Clinton presidency I’ll remember long-since spent all my wit on Recess with a smile. In my mind, Clinton and and I’m saving my wisdom for final I became men together, admittedly by exams. Plus, my mom warned me to travelling in opposite directions. He
Clinton and
t
,
,
•
-
.
.
.
i
;
Commentary
TUESDAY, APRIL 25, 2000
”
_
*
'
=
If
A Duke education through the eyes of KP Dylan Everyday Dharma Kevin Pride One cold night a few months ago I was alone in the an unexpected knock at my door reverberated against the living room windows and startled me. The clock read 11:45.1 wasn’t expecting any guests, although such random visitors aren’t totally out of the ordinary, so I eased off the couch and peered through the shades into the cold, hollow January night. There was a woman on the porch. A stranger. I slowly cracked the door about a foot open and said or rather, asked—“Hello?” Before I could even finish m y greeting/inquiry she began: “Can I just come inside for a few minutes? I need your help, and I need to come in for just a minute.” ‘What’s the problem? Do you need something?” ‘Yeah. I need help. I need $2O. Can I just come in for
house, reading late, when
—
a second?”
I’m not sure that the printed word can appropriately capture the abruptness of this woman’s speech. She
was almost bullying me with her words, her requests.
I was, by force, on the defensive.
“Twenty dollars? Why would I just give $2O to a stranger? Besides, I don’t have any money here.” (A le, l “And if I did, I probably...” ‘Come on, man. I’ll do some housework,” she said, with visibly growing desperation. “You look like a nice m an. I’]} d ean U p around the house or something.” You should probably go now. I’m on the phone,” I lle d, again, feeling a strange sense of guilt.
“Isn’t there some kind of arrangement that we can make for $20?” she implored, her right eyebrow bending upward, a faux-sexy smile stretching her mouth. She clumsily licked her upper lip. I wasn’t sure what to say. I went on the defensive. “You’ve got to go. Goodbye.” I shut the door on her. I saw her slap her hip and grimace in defeat as it shut and the deadbolt definitively slid home. I waited for something like 30 seconds and looked out the window onto the porch. The woman was gone. I couldn’t sleep that night. Her image kept creeping back into my mind, what she looked like. She was a black woman, just barely shorter than myself, and she looked rough, hard. Her skin was speckled and looked like a worn tire, and her broken posture belied the forceful nature of her proposition. She wore a navy jacket, a pair of dark jeans and a turquoise skier’s ear warmer. She smelled like heavy smoke. I had never been propositioned for a sexual act before, at least not like this, not in away that would involve an exchange of funds. And especially never at my own home. I somehow felt invaded. I began replaying the events in my head, analyzing them, searching for the underlying desperation that must have led this woman to approach a stranger’s house and ask for money, eventually sinking to a willingness to do anything for money. I envisioned numerous different scenarios. Maybe she was just broke. Perhaps she needed money for drugs or alcohol. My thoughts gradually grew kinder, though not necessarily sympathetic. Was the woman a prostitute, or just a desperate mother? She might have hungry kids to feed. Or she might be facing eviction. Despite my speculation, the fact was that I just didn’t know. A myriad of possibilities whirled around in my
head. What if I had invited her in? What would that have been like? Maybe she just would have done some housework. Or maybe not. But then I imagined the next door that she might knock on. And I imagined the myriad of possibilities that she must be imagining as she knocks on that door. Then I thought of the host of different possible creatures that might answer the knock, and my mind couldn’t help but think that maybe, just maybe, someone out there might not be nearly as civil as I was in handling her. And suddenly I didn’t feel so invaded anymore. I just felt bad—for her and for the world in general. I really don’t know what all of this means. It’s one of those situations that I’ve thought about quite a bit and still, a solution eludes me. This is my “senior column,” and I’m supposed to wax philosophical or look back misty-eyed on my experiences at Duke. But nothing really jumps out at me, at least nothing that I care to see in print. Instead, I’ve just told a story about something that happened to me one night. And I guess if there’s one truth that can be gleaned from the whole thing, it’s that most of us are pretty damn lucky just to be alive and healthy. Sure, term papers suck, and all-night study sessions take their toll, but again, we’re pretty fortunate to have the opportunity to endure these things, to have that kind of stress, instead of having to worry about where the next meal is coming from or where you’re going to sleep. It’s a hard time to be a Duke student right now, with classes ending, finals looming and graduation on the line. But really, it’s not that hard. Kevin Pride is a Trinity senior and editor of Recess.
Comics
PAGE 12
TUESDAY, APRIL 25,2000
THE Daily Crossword
Through the Looking Glass/ Dan Kahler
1 5 9 14 15 16 17
Edited by Wayne Robert
Williams
ACROSS Unruly kid Pond coating Doorstop
Five-star review Ballet skirt
Loop of land Type of rug or
code 18 Spoken 19 Group of fish 20 Karl Marx's pets?
23 Omega's cousin
24 Cave-dwelling fish 25 Ruffles on shirts 29 Does something
31 34 35 36
Gilbert/ Scott Adams
Aussie bird Sun-dried brick Flesh mark Moran of "Happy Days"
OILBERT IS ONE OF OUR SOCIAL mSFITS
HELLO!
(
m
37 Pancho Villa's
YOUR
pet?
40 On the sheltered side 41 Property claim 42 Opening letters 43 "Viva Vegas" 44 Swiss peaks 45 Fixed part of a dynamo 46 ‘Much About
LJILL
""'IT
T*
3
2!
Nothing"
3
i
1
o
i£23
Doonesbury/ Garry Trudeau
47 Grammatical starter? 48 St. Patrick's pets? 57 Significance 58 Landscape dip 59 Hoodwink 60 Afterwards 61 Actor Sharif 62 Progress like The Blob 63 Overact 64 Cost per unit 65 Slant 1 2 3 4
DOWN Promote oneself Very unusual State firmly Bulls or Bears, e.g.
5 Gems and gravel
6 Anathematize 7 Flaming Gorge state 8 Open slipper 9 Does dishes 10 Singer Merman 11 Portal 12 Pleased 13 Building addons 21 Earlier Central American 22 Lab dish 25 MalcolmWarner 26 Ms. Rogers St. Johns 27 Cartons 28 Theater award 29 Sore points 30 'Thief* star 31 Upright 32 Perform incorrectly 33 Al or Bobby of auto racing 35 Cut 36 Italian island
38 Sanction 39 Relation in degree 44 Hold together
45 46 47 48
Domain
Advantage D sharp Small landmass
49 50 51 52
Keen on Smell
53 54 55 56
E.T. vehicles Breakfast area Rest fitfully Offed
Paper quantity Himalayan
mystic
The Chronicle: A toast to staffboxes; and managing editors of disappearing volumes:. Richard Seth Rubin and managing editors of days already gone by: Timothy and former roommates: Norman and the future: Andrea and Pratik, who is the man: Pratik, Aliza, Cary, Laurie and Neal and Neal, who is definitely THE MAN: Nobody, but Jake came up and Stroup, who is the best boss lady ever: Marla and David and photographers: Richard Seth Rubin, AO, EF, DK Roily Cheers!: .
FoxTrot/ Bill Amend V 2000Bill Amend/Oist
by Universal Press Syndicate
%
*l*
(k
b
®
PETRIFIED dust?
TOCK ;UNKIT'T
£5) TUESDAY
Healthy Happenings: “Six Easy Steps to an Effective Estate Plan for You and Your Family.” 2:00 p.m. at Teer House, 4019 N. Roxboro St., Durham. To register, call 416-3853.
VACUUMING
Account Representatives:
MORE OFTEN
Account Assistants:
Monica Franklin, Dawn Hall,
Yu-Hsien Huang
Kathy Lin, Caroline Nichol, Stephanie Ogidan, Pauline Gave
WRAP
PASSOVER LUNCH: Kosher for Passover lunch at the Freeman Center for Jewish Life. 11:30 a.m.-1:00 p.m. Cost: varies. Payment: points, flex, cash or check. Contact jewishlife
I GUESS I SHOULD BE
Sales Reps: ..Jillian Cohen, Jasmin French, Nicole Hess, Erin Holland, Lars Johnson, Jordana Joffe, Tommy Sternberg Creative Services: Dallas Baker, Alise Edwards, Bill Gerba, Annie Lewis, Dan Übrot, Rachel Medlock, Jeremy Zaretzky Business Assistants: Veronica Puente-Duany, Preeti Garg, Ellen Mielke Classifieds: Matthew Epley, Nicole Gorham, Richard Jones, Seth Strickland
Community Calendar “Culture or Multiculturalism?” A lecture by Roger Kimball. 5:00 p.m., Breedlove Room, Perkins Library. Free and open to the public, one of the most prominent critics of academe speaks about recent trends in the American University, and how they have affected Duke. Sponsored by Duke Conservative Union.
Department of Music Student Recital: Sonwha Lee on piano. 5:00 p.m. in Nelson Music Room, East Duke Building, East Campus. Free. For information, call G6O-3300.
Taize Evening Prayer, Every Tuesday at 5:15 p.m. in Duke University Chapel. Candlelight Prayer Service in the tradition of the brothers of Taize. Call 684-2572
PASSOVER DINNER: Kosher for Passover dinner at the Freeman Center for Jewish Life. 5:00-7.00 p.m. Cost: varies. Payment: points, flex, cash or check. Contact jewishlife
Healthy Happenings: “Relief from Insomnia; Getting the Sleep of Your Dreams.” Lecture by Bill Wohlgemuth. 7:00 p.m. at Duke Health Center at Herndon Road, Durham. To register, call 416-3853.
.
Author Reading: Ann Prospero, a local poet, will read from her first novel, “Almost Night.” 7:00 p.m. at the Regulator Bookshop. For information, call 286-2700. “FROM FAUST- TO THE FUTURE: The Costs and Rewards of (too much?) Knowledge." An Evening of Great Music, Cool Technology. New Books, and Big Ideas. Presented by the University Scholars Program. At 7:00 p.m. in Sheafer Theater, University Scholar David Plylar will perform his compositions for piano. From 8:00-9:00 p.m. in Von Canon C, there will be a panel discussion and demonstration of wearable computers. The discussion will be followed by a reception and book display. For more information, call 684-1964.
The Center for Documentary Studies continues its African Diaspora Film Series on at 7:00 p.m. with two films about African American women in the arts. “Conjure Women” features several African American women-photographer Carrie Mae Weems, jazz singer Cassandra Wilson, and others-discussing their work in the arts. “Conjure Women of the Arts” documents a collaborative project between mother and daughter artists Bettye and Alison Saar, including a discussion of their use of found objects in their work and a look at their relationship, motivation, and role as African American women. The series offers monthly screenings of films and videos by ot. about-people in the African Diaspora. AH screenings are free and open to the public. For more information call 919-6603663 or visit the Center’s web site at http://cds.aas.duke.edu/
Classifieds
TUESDAY, APRIL 25. 2000
2000 GRAD AND PROF.
SCHOOL CANDIDATES Tickets must be
Baccalaureate up on April 24,
25 at 9:00 picked noon or April 26, April j (11.-12:00 in Room 353 2/at 1:00-4:00 p.m. Gross Chemical Laboratory.
Durham Public Schools seeks VISTA applicants, a Corporation of National Services program. 12 months position working with volunteer tutor and family involvement programs in an elementary school. Call Carol, 560-3650.
Spacious 2 bedroom apt. miniblinds included, hardwood floors, Quiet neighborhood-Grad students only. $625 per month, close to Duke East Campus, newly renovated, A/C, new ceiling fans, 2BA, 6889121 10AM-6PM
BIOLOGY POSTER SYMPOSIUM
Summer Sublet. Ibdr, fully furnished, available May 8-Aug. 14. Close to West Campus. $550 plus utilites. Females only. Call 4166616.
May 2000 Honors Candidates will present their research findings on Thursday, April 27th, 2pm-spm, Hall of Science, Levine Science Research Center. The Duke Community and Public are invited to attend. Refreshments provided.
NEEDED ARABIC TUTOR tutor for colloquial Seeking summer
Prefer native speaker from jordan/Lebanon/Syria region. Rate negotiable. If interested, please call email at or Erin
Arabic.
wardoo37@mc.duke.edu.
Seeking summer childcare for 2yr old in our Durham home. Must be creative and energetic and like children. 4 days per week, pay negotiable. Call Kerry 416-0139.
Help Wanted
SUMMER SUBLETS: Close to Duke. Call 416-0393 Available June 14.
BARTENDERS NEEDED!!! Earn $l5-30/hr. Job placement assistance is top priority. Raleigh’s Bartending School. Call now about our spring tuition special. $lOO savings with valid student ID. Offer ends soon!! Have fun, make money, meet people. (919)6760774. www.cocktailmixer.com
INTERNSHIP
Paid Internet Intership lead campus promotions for new online company. Call Adam 1-888-420-9800 ext.3l9, or email: adam@moneyformail.com.
Undergraduate Admissions is hiring undergraduate students to lead tours this summer. If you will be in Durham, consider spending a few hours a week telling prospective
PREBUSINESS SENIORS The Prebusiness Handbook for Duke Seniors and Alumni is available in 02 Allen Building. Get your copy before you leave!
students what you love about Duke. email interested, K allison.bevan@duke.edu. All interested students will be contacted after April 21st to discuss scheduling and training. Any questions may be directed to 684.0175.
Store Now, Pay Later! Clean your school clothing and store it at The Washtub. $5.00, (plus normal cleaning charges), stores it all summer and you can even pay for it when you return. Call for more details. The Washtub 684-3546.
BIOLOGY POSTER SYMPOSIUM
May 2000 Honors Candidates will present their research findings on Thursday, April 27th, 2pm-spm, Hall of Science, Levine Science Research Center. The Duke
Apts. For Rent
Community and Public are invited lo attend. Refreshments provided.
APARTMENT SUBLET
Bedroom available 5/11 in 2 bedroom apartment 2 minutes from West EMAIL Campus.
Can you Tell a Cucumber from a Pickle?
,
BABYSITTER WANTED afternoon Semi-regular and evening honors. Must be in town for the summer. Call Jenny at 2861563.
Autos For Sale
BE A SUMMER TOURGUIDE!
KASI2@DUKE.EDU.
Travel the world through food while learning the ropes from some of the Triangle's top food pros. Get paid while honing your culinary knowledge. If food is your passion, Fowler's can help. We need good people. Come grow with us. Call Cris or Mark, 683-2555.
FOR RENT: 1-3 BR apts. for summer or school yr. close to Duke. Hardwood firs. Appliances. Call 416-0393 Furnished Studio Apartment. Available May through mid-August. Looking for clean, responsible person to live in fully furnished studio apartment. Located 2 miles from West Campus in quiet, safe residential neighborhood. AC,WD available. $490/month. Call Tom @ 490-3726.
CODY CODS & ENTROPY Don’t miss two great bands at the
Hideaway Tuesday night, 10p.m.! Good music, good beer, good fun!
The Chronicle classified advertising
business rate $6.00 for first 15 words private party/N.R $4.50 for first 15 words ail ads 100 (per day) additional per word 3 or 4 consecutive insertions -10 % off
The Chronicle
www.PerfectCollegeCar.com. Your parents never had it this good!!!
1998 VW Golf GTI, 2door 4cylinders, yellow, Sspeed. AC, AMFM/Cassette/CD Changer. 28k, $13,950, Negotiable. Power steering, power locks, moon roof, new tires-alloy wheels. 919-835-1191.
EXCELLENT INTERNSHIP OPPORTUNITY with major investment firm. Must be highly motivated with superior written and oral communication skills. 25 hours/week required. If interested, fax resume to 490-4714 and call John at 490-4732.
Car Great Condition. 1991 Honda Accord EX. $3,500 or B/O $3,000 below blue book value. MUST SELL. Call 401-9006.
(maximum 15 spaces) $2.50 for 2 line heading $2.00 extra per day for Boxed Ad -
Administrative Assistant needed for Internet Pharmacy specializing in international sales. Fluency in Spanish preferred. Salary 25K+. Call 919-304-4405.
Full
communication skills and moderate to extensive computer knowledge with regard to data management (SAS and Excel). Willingness to learn new software packages and computer network maintenance. Ability to train individuals on new software packages and respond to basic hardware/software questions. Position will involve some in-state travel. Course work in statistics or computer science a plus. Please fax your resume to Jennifer at Innovation Research and Training @919-933-7115. We are an equal opportunity employer.
FUQUA LIBRARY JOBS The Fuqua School of Business Library seeks undergrads and graduate students for the position of Circulation Desk Attendant and Reference Assistant during the Summer 2000 semesters. Dependability and punctuality a must! Local and/or on-campus job references preferred. $7/ hour minimum. Apply on the Web!
http://www.lib.duke.edu/fsb/fuquajob.htm
HEALTH COMMUNICATION SPECIALIST
STD/AIDS Hotline. Will provide sexually transmitted disease and HIV/AIDS information, prevention, and referrals to callers via 24-hour hotline. Full and part-time positions available Hours available primarily in the afternoon. One weekend shift required per week and a minimum of 20 hours per week. Bilingual Spanish/English: Will provide HIV/AIDS information, education, support and referrals to Hispanic callers via national Hotline. Parttime afternoon and evening shifts available. Spanish fluency and one weekend shift required. Requirements include the ability to retain and communicate related information, excellent interpersonal and listening skills, Previous experience with hotlines, crisis center, or social work desirable but not required. Paid training provided Send resume and cover letter to ASHA. RO. Box 13827, Dept. NSTDAH, RIP, NC, 27709 or Fax to 919-361-8425, or email to kimmen@ashastd.org in a format readable by Word 97. AA/EOE Visit our website at www.ashastd.org National
English:
Want a free trip to Europe? what are you doing this summer?
want a free trip to europe? rockcity.com will take you
there be a cast member of rockcity europe,
our second road show
exclusively on the net.
visit rockcity.com to apply.
-
-
part or time Data Management/Computer Support position for small evaluation research company in Chapel Hill. Individual must possess excellent
page 13
Daytime Loving Nanny needed to start end of June/beginning of July caring for 2 babyboys (both 6 mos.) in central SW Durham community F/T, M-F, 8-4. Child care experience, local references, dependable transportation required. Salary nego. depending on experience. Non-smoking household. Call 419SI 07 or 403-0454, daytime or evening.
Egg Donor Sought: 10.000 Comoensat
-
5 or more consecutive insertions 20 % off special features (Combinations accepted.) $l.OO extra per day for all Bold Words $1.50 extra per day for a Bold Heading
BARTENDERS make $l5O-$2OO per night. No experience necessary. Call 1-800-981-8168, ext 276.
•
For Brain
MRI/Alzheimer's Research
Ideal for Pre-med or Grad School Applicants Candidates should exhibit: •
High CPA
Psychology, Neuroscience, or Computer Savvy Benefits: Publication & Clinical Experience, flexible summer start date, good pay. Please email resume to murali@acpub.duke.edu. •
We are a happily married couple eager to a If are you become parents. with very high individual compassionate intelligence, an appealing personality, and
good health, please send your confidential response to; PO Box 4366
Highland Park, NJ 08904-4366
deadline
1 business day prior to publication by 12:00 noon
We ship National
-
e-mail to: classifieds@chronicle.duke.edu or mail to:
Chronicle Classifieds Box 90858, Durham, NC 27708-0858 fax to: 684-8295 phone orders: call (919) 684-3811 to place your ad Visit the Classifieds Online!
http://www.chronicle.duke.edu/classifieds/today.html
s
FFIC E
SCH
■.
.
All your personal goodsBooks, Clothes, Stereo, Computers, Monitors, Printers, Scanners, Golf Clubs, Pictures, etc. Buy the materials and pack It yourself, or leave itwith us to pack and ship.
L
Put that college degree to use by enrolling into the Air Force Officer Training School. Upon successful completion of the Officer Training School, you will become a commissioned Air Force officer with earned respect and benefits like great starting pay. medical and dental care, management and travel opportunities. For more on how to qualify AIM HIGH and get your career soaring with the Air Force Officer Training School, call 1-800-423-USAF, or visit our website at www.airforce.com www.airforce.com -
Shops at Northgate Boston Market 1720 Guess Rd. Hours; Mon Frl 10AM 6PM Sat 10AM 4PM Closed Sunday
Between Harris Teeterand -
-
Call 684-3811 if you have any questions about classifieds, No refunds or cancellations after first insertion deadline.
International
UPS-FedEx-USPS
Lessons That Will Last A Lifetime.
payment Prepayment is required 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
&
-
•
MC/VISA/DISCOVERIAMEX
Pack, Box Ship 286-9494 &
TUESDAY,
The Chronicle
PAGE 14 Local Publisher hiring for both summer and permanent positions. Knowledge of html and web page work needed for summer position. Good writing and people skills needed and knowledge of Quark (or similar program) desired for permanent position in the marketing department. Send resume to 700 Kent Street, Durham, NC 27701 or email tammy @ cap-press.com
LOOKING FOR A SUMMER JOB?
We have numerous full-time and in opportunities part-time Durham, RTP, and Chapel Hill. Express to Please fax resumes Personnel at 572-6733 or email to
lblindley@durhamnc.expressper-
sonnel.com. You may also reach us by calling 572-6755. Love kids? The Little Gym is hiring gymnastics instructors and/or birthday party leaders. Must be able to work weekends. Good pay, fun work. Gymnastics background helpful. University Drive, Durham, 403-5437. Mental health residential home in Durham needs FT treatment associate who will provide curriculum of treatment around activities of daily living. Hours flexible (typically 2ndshift/school hear, Ist shift summer/vac, some weekend). Family-Style and serves 3 youth with behavioral challenges. Bachelors degree required or near completion! Prefer behavioral sciences. Recent women
graduates encouraged to apply. $9.80+/hour plus benefits to start. Fax resume to Youth Quest Inc at (917) 463-6035, or call (919) 4908842.
NEWSPAPER AD BP 2000
Mktg-Promotions
Manager.
Ultimate
Summer Job!!! Energetic, self motivated, responsible person to execute restaurant/bar promotions for an Intn’l Brewer. Must be 21 & have own
transportation. E-mail salary. job@getm2.com or 0177 Attn. Charles
Competitive resume to fax 202-548J. Cavalier.
TENNIS & GOLF COUNSELORS NEEDED FOR PREMIER SUMMER CAMPS IN MASSACHUSETTS & NEW HAMPSHIRE. Positions available for talented, energetic, and funloving students with specific skills in Tennis and Golf. GREAT SALARIES, room, board and travel. June 17th-August 16th. Enjoy a great summer that promises to be unforgettable. Check out or web site and apply on line at www.greatcampjobs.com or call 1-800-562-0737. Part-time accounting/bookkeeping position available. Responsibilities to include accounts payable and receivable, bank reconciliations, spreadsheet production, and fixed
asset management. Computer experience a must. Please fax resume to 929-7913.
RESEARCH ASSOCATE TEEN WEB SITE EVALUATION
The Chapel needs an attendant to work on Saturday evenings 4;45 pm 9:00 pm. beginning May 20 through September 2. If you need only a few hours of work each week, we would be glad to have you work with us. There may be other evenings to work as well. Contact Jackie Andrews at 6842177 if you’re interested.
APRIL
25^
Houses For Rent
-
NEED EXTRA MONEY?
Medical Center Library needs individuals to work various positions with flexible weekend, night and day hours available. Call 6601100.
TRIPPS RESTAURANT
Now hiring FT/PT Wait Staff / Host Staff / Bar Staff Dinner Only. Flexible Hours / Professional Team Environment / Great Money / Quality Food and Service. Call for info, and directions at 286-9199. Located at 918 W. Club Blvd. Durham NC.
3-5 Bedroom houses CLOSE TO DUKE, 9th St, and Brightleaf Sq. All apps. sec. sys. Call 416-0393
Need to sell before graduation! 1 Full-size couch. ($80), 1 futon ($5O), 1 stereo with CD and dual tape deck ($5O). Prices negotiable Email swcs@duke.edu
DIDN’T GET A
Great Kensington Trace 2bdr/2.5ba condo fully furnished. Pool, tennis, laundry on site. Walk to shop-
ping/restaurant/movies. $82,450. Mary Kemp Tripoint 244-3875 or mary kemp @ mindspring.com.
Misc. For Sale 2 Desks, Pier 1. Pappisan Coffee table, Dining table, lamps, shelves, Futon, chairs, plant stands, mirror. Call Pauline at 401 -9006.
SINGLE?
Undergraduate student roommate(s) to find and rentseeks a 2/3 bedroom apt.
613-3476.
FEMALE ROOMMATE WANTED TO SHARE 2000 SOFT HOUSE LOCATED 5 MILES TO DUKE ACROSS FROM A PARK HUGE ROOM, GARAGE SPOT, DECK HOT TUB, BBQ PIT, SATELLITE TV, W/D, AND GREAT ROOMMATES!! RENT IS $430 1/3
Houses For Sale
-
Will conduct research related to adolescent sexual health and Internet education supporting an evaluation project, and also support the president of the organization in presentation and proposal development. Full-time position requiring skills in library and webbased research, MS Word and Powerpoinl, some statistical analysis, effective communication (oral, written and interpersonal.) Must have leadership, flexibility, teamwork, independent work style, and knowledge of qualitative and/or quantitative research methodology. Preferred masters in public health, library sciences, sociology, journalism or related field. Experience in proposal development desirable. Send resume and cover letter to ASHA, PO Box 13827 Dept. RA, RIP, NC 27709, fax to 361 -8425 or email to kimmen@ashastd.org in a format readable by word 97. Visit our Web site at www.ashastd.org AA/EOE.
FOR SALE
AVAILABLE JUNE IST:
Room For Rent
+
UTILITIES—493-4914
Room Available in Grad. Student House for summer. Beginning May through mid-August and/or Fall. Clean and spacious in quiet, safe neighborhood. Located 2 miles from West Campus. AC,WD available. $290/ month. Call Tom @ 490-3726.
OR
JMS3O@DUKE.EDU
Summer Sublet. Room available in 4 BR house from mid-May to midAugust. Safe, quiet neighborhood. 2 miles from West Campus. AC, WD. $305/month. Call 383-9335,'
MAKE SURE YOU GET VAXED.
NEED CHILD CARE?
Experienced Day Care Provider. Good, quiet neighborhood. Weekly, daily, hourly rates. 732-9323,
Hepatitis B is a very uncool thing. It's a liver infection that can make you really sick for weeks or months. Most people pick it up as teenagers or young adults, so college is prime time for hepatitis B. You can get it by having sex, or by exposure to infected blood or body fluids through scrapes or cuts on the playing field. 1 Or through repeated sharing of an infected person's toothbrush, earrings or razor. 2 Even potentially by being pierced or tattooed. The only good thing about hepatitis B is that it's easy to prevent. Just go to the on-campus hepatitis B vaccination clinic listed below, and they'll start you on hepatitis B vaccination. Finish the three-dose series, and you won't have to worry about missing out, messing up or turning an embarrassing shade of yellow.
ting yA
Deadline for the y, May 12 ncement I Monday, May 1.
Chronicle Advertising Department 101 West Union Building
Don't take the risk. Get vaccinated.
Vaccination Day Schedule Qate Tuesday, April 25, 2000 Time
Place
684-8295
-
AS 0
Bryan Center &
2,
Diseases. July 1995:139-158. transmitted diseases. MMWR. 1998;47(RR-1): 101-104
HipAlitisS
SmithKlme Beecharn Pharmaceuticals Dec. 1998
WHY TAKE THE RISK?
©SmithKline Beecham, 1998
so*
sO't^
A$P
Brought to you as an educational service by
E87368
p
6:30 p.m.
for Disease Control and Prevention. Epidemiology 1. Centers Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. 1998 guidelines for
Phone: 684-3811 Fax:
11 a.m.
©Printed
in U.S.A
Sports
The Chronicle TUESDAY, APRIL 25, 2000
Lights to be installed at baseball field
An anonymous Duke graduate donated $350,000 to fund a project that will have lights put in at historic Jack Coombs Field. The lights will enable the Blue Devils to play night games on campus next season, making them the seventh ACC team to have such a facility.
Duke squares off with Dukes tonight Former Duke By 808 WELLS The Chronicle
For the women’s lacrosse
team, now is the time to draw a
line in the sand. No. 3 Duke (9-4) faces No. 4 James Madison (11-4) in a game that could very well determine
who gets one of the coveted top four seeds, and a first-round bye, in the NCAAs. Both teams enter the game with serious questions about
their play down the stretch, but there is little doubt that each squad is capable of making a
Ryan stable after double bypass surgery >
Hall of Fame pitcher Nolan Ryan was listed in stable condition yesterday following emergency bypass surgery in Austin, Tex. The 53-year-old Ryan did not have a heart attack, his son Reid reported. Ryan, who is baseball’s career leader in strikeouts with 5,714, is expected to be hospitalized for one week.
MEGHAN WALTERS and the Blue Devils look to a big win against James Madison after a tough loss to archrival North Carolina.
� Mets win eighth straight Matt Franco’s RBI infield single
mthe bottom of the ninth gave Ibe streaking New York Mets a 1-0win over Los Angeles. It is •be longest winning streak for few York since they took nine marow in May 1998. New York baswon 10 of their last 11 Sanies overall.
11 was almost like somene brought kryptonite to
J
SuPerman.”
—Reid Ryan, Nolan’s son,
00 his father's needing emer-
flency bypass surgery
James Madison’s success has come via its offense, which generally is ignited by midfielder Jess Marion. Marion, a two-time All-American, has been a nightmare for opposing teams, racking up a schoolrecord 53 goals to go along with seven assists. But Marion hasn’t been the only spark on offense, as fellow All-Americans Amy Brew and Julie Martinez join her to form one of the most potent offensive trios in the nation. Brew has 29 goals and five assists, while See LACROSSE on page 20
star Schill
retires From staff and wire reports
Former Duke baseball player Vaughn Schill informed the Seattle Mariners he was retiring from baseball, according to an article in Baseball America. The infielder, who was a fourth-round pick this summer, was hitting .250 in 16 atbats for Class A Lancaster. According to the article, Schill was unhappy with his role in Lancaster. A shortstop with the Blue Devils, Schill was upset he was moved to third base to make room for Antonio Perez, who was part ofthe Ken Griffey Jr. deal with the Reds. “He was wanting to play more,” Mariners farm director Benny Looper said. “He told me unless I could guarantee him he was going to play, he was going to retire” Looper made no promises, and Schill was true to his word and has left the game. Schill told the Mariners he was interested in pursuing other opportunities.
>
Wrestling goes East...
� Jazz go up 2-0 in series with Sonics The Utah Jazz beat the Seattle SuperSonics last night, 101-87. The Jazz were led by veterans Karl Malone and John Stockton’s 23 and 21 points, respectively. During the game, Malone also became one of only four NBA players to score more than 4,000 points in the playoffs. Game 3 will be played in Seattle on Saturday. No team since the Houston Rockets in 1995 has come back to win a best-of-five playoff series after being down 2-0.
deep postseason run. However, the Blue Devils are not focusing on all of the hype surrounding the NCAA tournament and the seeding process. “For us, that’s not the smartest thing for us to focus on,” coach Kerstin Kimel said. “For our team, the most important thing is being prepared to play James Madison.” Although James Madison is ranked in the top five, the Dukes are coming off consecutive twogoal losses, 10-8 to Georgetown and 12-10 to Loyola. In addition to their late-season slide, they haven’t proven they can win close games. The Dukes have only played in three games which were decided by two goals or less, and have lost all three.
� Ohio State expects to say good-bye to Redd Ohio State junior guard Michael Redd has scheduled a press conference today at 10 a.m. to discuss his draft intentions. While Redd is not divulging his decision, Buckeye senior guard Scoonie Penn said he expects >Redd to declare for the NBA draft, making him the 13th underclassman to do so.
PAGE 15
Coach Clar Anderson planned a May exchange trip to Russia and Iran for Blue Devils By KEVIN LEES The Chronicle
Clar Anderson, Duke’s wrestling coach, spent a year in Eastern Europe in the late 1980s training for the 1988 Olympics. Now, he wants to give the same opportunity to his team at Duke. “It was just an incredible experience,” he said. “I spent a year in mainly Eastern Europe training there for myself for the ’BB Olympic trials. At that time, supposedly the countries were in conflict with us in the Cold War, but the people were incredibly acceptable and friendly and open to Americans, so I was welcomed into those countries.”
For Anderson, the people he met and places he went culminated into memories he will never forget. “It was an incredible experience to see communism at the brink of when it was going under,” he said. “It was chaos, it was needing change. Just traveling around, some of the amenities we have here are just so foreign to those folks.” Through the friends he made then, he has organized a similar trip for his team this summer. Twelve of the members of the wrestling team leave May 12 for an overseas exchange in two decidedly exotic locations: Russia and Iran. “It’s places I think will stretch my guys, not only athletically, but impact them personally,” Anderson explained. “Why not to France or Nova Scotia or Finland and I say, Tf you want a vacation, you can take
ADAM GANZ/THE CHRONICLE
SEAN MEAKIM and the Blue Devils are getting their passports in order as they prepare to become the first American wrestling team to visit Iran since 1979. one.’ I was going to try to take them to somewhere that’s really going to challenge them.” The team’s travels begin in Moscow, where it will participate in a number of matches with university students and train with national coaches. “Moscow was for so long, the enemy,” Anderson said. “And now to be able to meet with the folks, to know that these are stu-
dents just like they are, that is my main emphasis.” May 18, Duke travels to Tehran, where the Blue Devils will train with the Iranian national team, which is in preparation for the Olympics in Sydney this summer. “It will be the national coaches of the Iranian team, we will be training at their Olympic center,” Anderson said. “They See IRAN on page 19 P-
TUESDAY. APRIL 2S
The Chronicle
PAGE 16
I spent 4 years at Duke and all I got were these t-shirtdefem team called the Blue Devils. And because a little more than three years ago, Duke felt it needed to convince the basketball world it was back. extra large?” As a freshman, though, I don’t think I college my t-shirt of The last free quite appreciated what the team had to career. One of the greatest perks of university life, forever gone. Fll leave Duke come back from. That year’s juniors had with a heavy suitcase stuffed with all never seen Duke win more ACC games the free shirts I’ve accumulated in my than it lost That’s year’s seniors had never seen the Blue Devils beat Carolina. four years. from So the real moment Duke came back free t-shirts came basof Many my (or in this case white—it was in black ketball games, though I don’t remember in was around 11 p.m., Jan. 29, Cameron) For the first getting any my freshman year. round of the preseason NIT at Cameron, 1997, when Trajan Langdon hit the three they decided to give students flimsy white to put away those Tar Heels. The bonfire hats from Chase, which was sponsoring afterwards was easily the best of my four years, proving that a good bench-burning the tournament. too much spontaneity and too to requires, Someone had forgotten to explain my If no one got hurt, it problittle restraint. minthat “Doors 90 open and me friends a utes before game time” means “Get there ably wasn’t very fun bonfire. In October of sophomore year came the at least 90 minutes before game time ifyou want a decent seat.” So we wandered in black t-shirt with the blue No. 6 on the about half an hour before tip-off and ended front, handed out at Midnight Madness. up standing on the TV side behind the far In a sign of campouts to come, bracelets basket. That’s when I learned that most of were distributed at some ungodly hour the seats in the student section are that morning, and I remember arriving quite a bit earlier.The line already snaked obstructed view. But when Duke went on a run in the along most the parking lot. I wore the black sixth-man t-shirt to second half, I also learned that the best is not the Carolina game that year. I remember in cheering about Cameron part the clever chants. It’s the moment a Blue the horror as each minute passed and the Devil hits a back-breaking three and Tar Heel lead grew. We’d suffered 1,400 sweaty students start jumping up through six weeks of camping out. Six and down and into each other, high-fiving weeks of cold and rain and wind and pudanyone within reach and screaming as dles creeping into the tent. Six weeks of disorganized tent checks and fitful nights loud as their lungs will let them. in sleeping bags. One of my earliest free t-shirts was longBut we were doing it to see Carolina sleeved, came from my freshman dorm and said in big blue letters, BACK IN humiliated in a battle of top-ranked BLACKweII. Back in Black was the basketr teams. It never occurred to us we’d be ball team’s slogan that year, because Nike trailing by 17with under 12minutes to go. We all know what happened. Maybe had decided black was the in color, even for a
I could almost hear the slow, sad music in the background as I handed over my DukeCard and the guy asked, “Large or
1918
Rachel Cohen more than any game in my four years, the Cameron Crazies charged the court that afternoon feeling like we helped determine the outcome. Maybe it was because we had so convinced ourselves we deserved to win. But maybe our screaming and jumping, the noise and the heat, made a difference. Right around that time sophomore year the trail of t-shirts gets hazy. There were two Duke blue March Madness tshirts last season, plus the “Turning the Sweet 16” one I got at the Devil’s Den during the away UNC game. All year long, that team walked, talked and blocked shots like one that would win a national championship. We all believed it, and Til never forget the silence in Cameron when Langdon lost the ball for the final time. One t-shirt I wanted but didn’t get commemorated the 1999 women’s Final Four; Duke gave them out to little kids at a game this year. I’m still annoyed that a couple of my colleagues on the sports staff, who were handing out shirts, wouldn’t give me one Without a doubt, the second best basketball game I attended in my four years was last season’s regional final in shocked Greensboro when Duke Tennessee. When the Blue Devils led by 11 at halftime, I remember thinking, If they can just hold onto the lead for a while, they have a shot. Well, the first TV
timeout came and the three-time ing national champs had already erase most of the deficit. Oh well, I though] They gave them a game for a half. But when the next timeout came, ane the next and the next, I’d look up at the scoreboard to see Duke still holding a lead. And when it was over, the Blue Devils had reminded everyone that there’s nothing in sports like a good upset Then there are my three, soon to be four, Chronicle t-shirts. I admit I’ve never worn one in public. Sometimes I wonder why I spend so much time here; though I’ve certainly covered my share of coo events, I would never have put in st many hours if the only rewards had been a few big basketball games. In a bizarre way, that’s what I like about The Chronicle, that it’s rarely easy I think back to when I received my firs free staff t-shirt, and what the paper has done for two people whose columns wil appear tomorrow. Neal, who didn’t speal for the first seven months of freshmar year, then ate a full pound of beef and has n’t shut up since.And my former neighboi Kate, who used to make her roommate li to Chronicle editors and say she wash home, but whose voice mail now explain she can be reached at 684-2663. So because this is a senior column ani has to end on a cheesy note, I’d like I thank all my colleagues who have mad these four years bearable, from the sell proclaimed best class in Chronicle sport history to my editors (especially Joel, wb I know will read this and likes having hi name mentioned). As we like to say, thi column wrote itself. Rachel Cohen is a Trinity senior an associate sports editor of The Chronicle.
AMERICAN SPEEDY PRINTING Parkway Plaza
-
4215 University Drive
Letterhead, Envelopes, Brochures, Flyers, Invitations,
High Speed Copying, Business Cards, Newsletters, Folding, Mailing & Carbonless Forms. We accept art or electronic media (ZIP, Syquest or FTP), or we will Design & Typeset for you. FULL COLOR COPYING & PRINTING
ERSITY®
Printing Services 8:00 AM-5:00 PM Mon.-Fri. Pickup and Delivery available We welcome Duke Procurement Cards or Department Purchase Orders
Tel: 493-0985
Fax: 493-7339
pbs4print@inkie.com
ill H *3B*
ostens
JUNIORS AND SENIORS ORDER NO -
April 24-26 (Monday Wednesday) -
10:00 a.m. 4:00 p.m. University Store, Upper Level Bryan Center -
Sponsored by
Duke
University Stores*
The Chronicle
TUESDAY, APRIL 25, 2000
PAGE 17
Yes Mr. Donkey, there is a waffle
time without making any progress. For the last two months, I’ve wondered about how a donkey eats a waffle. Admit it, you’ve probably thought about this also. One ofthe least respected species of the animal kingdom coming face to flour with one ofAmerica’s favorite snacks. It’s a grandiose topic worthy of its own shelf at the Library of Congress. No? Are you kidding me? You mean to tell me you’ve never even thought about this? Honestly, I hadn’t either, until I began chatting with a couple of my roommates one night. And in a blur of time not more than 10 minutes long, I had been introduced and enlightened to the donkey/waffle world. After seeing that I had included a Wile E. Coyote reference in one of my stories, they suggested, no, demanded that I put a “donkey eating waffles” reference' in a story before the end of the year. Simple enough I thought, until I actually tried to put these references in my stories and met the fate of a completely anal editor (By the way Neal, for the last time, you are not a better quarterback than Spencer Romine!). “Hiding her shoulder injury, Schweitzer fought through her sophomore year like a donkey eating waffle.” Ripped apart. “Marie Ferdinand sparked the Tigers on their gamebreaking run, and the game was over quicker than a donkey could eat a waffle.” Crashed and burned. Infuriated and discombobulated, I came to the conclusion that Neal the Editor simply didn’t appreciate how a
■an
of Smack Victor Zhao
donkey eats a waffle. Granted, he’s probably never seen a donkey eat a waffle. So I’ll take it upon myself in this “senior column” to explain to Neal and my readers, both of them, the beauty and pageantry of an ordinary donkey enjoying the delightful breakfast snack, and the mind-numbing analogies that can drawn from it. Initially, the donkey takes a glance at the waffle. Intrigued by the texture, the donkey takes a bite of the waffle. He’s not sure what he just ate. Little more than five years ago, I first started writing sports for my high school paper. I did it because I liked sports, and because I had memorized most of the alphabet by then, I figured I could write about it too. Heck, I can train a orangutan to be a competent sports writer—teach him a few cliches, feed him a couple of bananas and before you know it, he’s writing better columns than Frank Dascenzo. Jump ahead a few years to my sophomore year, and Fm beginning to think I actually liked doing this. But one ill-timed and ill-fated story I wrote drew some critical response and made me rethink this whole sports journalism thing. Obviously, the donkey’s never had anything like a waffle before, so he’s not really used to the taste. But something about the waffle convinces him to keep
taking more bites, and pretty soon, the donkey is hooked. I realized a long time ago that I wasn’t any good at sports writing, partly because I can only read English at a second-grade level. But I also realized pret-
ty early that The Chronicle isn’t about writing or editing, it’s always been about the people you interact with and enjoying your time with the paper. That’s why I wanted to take the opportunity to thank Joel Israel, Neal Morgan, Nick Tylwalk, Roily Miller and mostly everyone else I’ve worked with at the paper for letting me enjoy four years working in the dingy offices. From that frustrating night staring at ridiculous headshots and wondering if it’s too yellow on the printout, to that time two years ago when Michele VanGorp actually came up to the office looking to kick my ass, it’s the people up here who have really made a difference and kept me coming back. After taking his last bite, the donkey still isn’t sure what to make of the waffle. But he knows one thing for sure, he doesn’t regret eating that waffle. In the end, my experience at The Chronicle allowed me to ride along with The Journey for four years, and sit courtside for the most memorable athletic event I’ve ever witnessed in person last year in Greensboro. And for that, I can only feel fortunate. Fortunate because I didn’t end up like the mindless zombies at this school who become rabid followers of that other basketball team. Instead, Nick and the paper helped me discover a team that was truly worth rooting for and a joy to cover. These last four years sure have flown
fast. After two months of thought, I couldn’t think of a better description for these four years than that one phrase that smacks of genius. Like a donkey eating a waffle. Victor Zhao is a Pratt senior. He’d like to remind Nick Tylwalk that they never got to finish the NHL99 series from that day in San Jose, and apologize to sports promotions genius Marc Di lorio for not including his picture in this column.
Story
;
reakdown
Memorable
:
Sometimes a thought just strikes you out of nowhere. And sometimes, you think about something for the longest
lead
(2/7/97)
women's basketball team's matct Forest, three mascots in full attire Wake Forest cheerleaders in a five A wart-hoQ, a lion, and oumbv
This year, the Class of 200Q has one more unofficial graduation requirement to check off the list: Making a Senior Gift
(and getting your name engraved for posterity on a plaque in the Alumni Lounge).
et d unA You may give an undesignated gift to the
Each member of the Class of 2000
Annual Fund or you may direct your gift
will leave Duke with some very special
toward any school or area of university
memories. The Senior Gift affords us the
life that has special meaning for you. Do
opportunity to make an impact at Duke.
you worry about the Ozone layer? Give
Make your senior gift today. Pledges
to the School of the Environment.
may be fulfilled through June 30,2000.
To make a gift or pledge online, visit the Annual Fund web site http://annualfund.duke.edu (go to “Making a gift online”)
TUESDAY. APRIL 25 A
The Chronicle
PAGE 18
Wilkens’ retirement brings end Coleman, Hornets tie playoff series, to record-setting coaching career beat Sixers in overtime, 108-98 By PAUL NEWBERRY Associated Press
Lenny Wilkens ATLANTA resigned today from the Atlanta Hawks after the worst season of a 27-year career in which he won more games than any coach in NBA history. Wilkens’ resignation was announced at Philips Arena by team president Stan Hasten and general manager Pete Babcock. The coach did not attend the news conference. “Atlanta will always hold a special place in my heart,” Wilkens said in a statement. “I have so many wonderful memories, both personally and professionally, but it is time to explore new challenges and new opportunities.”
The 62-year-old Wilkens, who coached the Hawks for seven years, had two years left on his contract, paying $10.4 million. The team said it would honor it until he finds a new job. The decision was not unexpected after the Hawks struggled to a 28-54 record, their worst mark since moving to Atlanta in 1968. The team missed the playoffs for the first time since 1992, losing 25 ofits final 31 games. “We all concluded mutually that this was a good time to give everybody a chance to start from scratch, start a new chapter in their lives,” Hasten said. Before coming to Atlanta, Wilkens had stints in Cleveland, Seattle and Portland. His career record is 1,179-981 and his lone NBA championship came with the Sonics in 1979.
Wilkens, an All-American guard at Providence and a nine-time NBA All Star, was the second person elected to the Hall of Fame as a player
and coach. In 1997, Wilkens was honored as one of the 50 greatest players in NBA history and one of the 10 greatest coaches, the only person on both lists. He got his 939th victory in early 1995, passing former Boston Celtics coach Red Auerbach. In 1996, Wilkens coached the U.S. Olympic team to a gold medal in Atlanta after serving as an assistant in the 1992 Games. The Hawks had at least 50 victories in three of Wilkens’ first five years, then finished second in the Central after battling with Indiana until the final week of the strike-shortened 1999 season. Wilkens signed a four-year, $2O million contract extension in 1997. But in a bid to shake up a stale franchise and get past the second round of the playoffs for the first time since moving from St. Louis, Babcock engineered a deal that sent leading scorer Steve Smith to the
Portland Trail Blazers for Isaiah Rider and Jim Jackson.
Rider’s discipline problems were well documented, but the Hawks were in need of a makeover as they moved into the new 19,445-seat Philips Arena. They wanted to dump Smith’s longterm contract and switch to an uptempo offense with younger, faster players. Rider didn’t show for the first day of training camp, missed a practice and skipped a team flight.
By JENNA FRYER Associated Press
Back in Hornets 108 CHARLOTTE the playoffs after a five76ers 98 year absence, Derrick Coleman scored eight ofhis 29 points in
overtime, leading the Charlotte Hornets to a 108-98 victory over the Philadelphia 76ers to tie their playoff series last night. Coleman and the Hornets now go to Philadelphia—where Coleman spent almost three years before signing with Charlotte—for Game 3on Friday night. Allen Iverson, who scored a career playoff-high 40 points in Game 1, tied his career playoff low with 13 points. It was the first time in Iverson’s 10 playoff games he failed to lead the 76ers in scoring.
Charlotte went back to the basics in overtime, using its huge front line of Coleman, Anthony Mason and Elden Campbell to dominate the 76ers. The Hornets hit their first six shots and 8of-9 in the extra period. Mason opened the OT with a bruising layup that gave the Hornets a 93-91 lead. Coleman then took over, scoring six straight points on a layup and two 15foot jumpers for a 99-95 lead with 2:47 to play. Coleman then took away a rebound at the other end from Tyrone Hill and Charlotte capitalized when Eddie Jones hit a three, Coleman added a turnaround jumper and Mason and Campbell dunked to even the series 1-1.
Campbell finished with 20 points while Jones had 19 and Mason scored 14’ Iverson was held in check the entire night by Jones, who unlike in Game 1 stayed out of foul trouble and, in Iverson’s face. Iverson was horribly off early, missing badly on a three-point attempt and bricking a layup in the first half. He had just seven points at the break on 2-for-8 shooting. He wasn’t any better in the second half, either. His first shot of the third quarter didn’t even hit the rim, and as he struggled to get anything off on Jones—-who has a six-inch height advantage on Iverson—he ended up passing the ball more than shooting it. What shots Iverson did take either rattled off the rim or grazed the glass and bounced into Charlotte’s hands. He missed a three-point attempt with under a minute to play in overtime and shot just 5-for-21 for the game. But the rest of the Sixers picked up the slack for him, allowing Philadelphia to maintain an 89-84 lead with four minutes to play. But Charlotte’s David Wesley hit a three-pointer and the Hornets tied it at 89 when Mason dunked with one second left on the shot clock and 1:01 to play in regulation. The Hornets then took a 91-89 lead, their first since early in the fourth quarter, on Campbell’s tip-in with 26 seconds to play. The 76ers tied it on Eric Snow’s jumper with 12 seconds to go.
YOU'VE WORKED HARD THIS SEMESTER! As you unwind during the last day of classes, keep this in mind-
If you choose to celebrate with alcohol, do so wisely: Know that too much alcohol can load to problems: physically, academically, legally and socially! Pe aware that fraudulent IP use will lead to judicial action. Vace yourself so you can remember the whole experience!
Keep an eye on each other. Call the infirmary if you have any 654-5567 or 911 for omorgoncioo.
Respect others’ decision not to drink.
y
v 'li’t 'i
VP The Chronicle
"A "i I- "I "I
v yen
'
TiIFSDAY, APRIL 25, 2000
PAGE 19
Maple Leafs overcome 2-goal Wrestlers’ families and friends deficit to win series on road contributed money for trip abroad kicked out to the high slot, where Juneau swept the puck inside the near Steve started a post 3:45 into the game. 2 four-goal spurt in the Ottawa After failing to score during an period, lifting the Toronto abbreviated two-man advantage, second Maple Leafs into the second round of Ottawa went ahead 2-0 when the NHL playoffs last night with a 4-2 Kravchuk’s point shot through traffic beat Joseph 3:59 into the second perivictory over the Ottawa Senators. Toronto won the best-of-seven od. But just 12 seconds later, Ottawa series 4-2 and will open the Eastern Conference semifinals Thursday night defenseman Sami Salo passed the at home against the New Jersey puck right onto Thomas’ stick in the slot, and he unleashed a quick shot for Devils. Thomas, Mats Sundin, Sergei his sixth goal of the series. “We never quit in here,” Joseph Berezin and Wendel Clark scored as the Maple Leafs erased a 2-0 Senator said. “We played hard and we knew we lead built on goals by Joe Juneau and could come back.” A Thomas pass then went off Igor Kravchuk. The Senators outshot the Maple Kravchuk’s skate onto the stick of Leafs 38-24, but their failure to hold Sundin, breaking in on the left side. the lead resulted in an opening-round Sundin scored into an open side of the elimination for the second straight net to tie it at 7:16. Berezin was allowed to sneak in year and third time in four seasons. The team that held the shots advanfront of goalkeeper Tom Barrasso and whack a shot in to put the Maple Leafs tage lost all six games of the series. “We played re’al gritty,” Toronto ahead 3-2 at 10:40. goaltender Curtis Joseph said. “We A Cory Cross pass went off a series of sticks and skates to Clark, who was played tough along the boards.” A capacity crowd of 18,500 parked alone at the side ofthe Ottawa watched in dismay„as the Senators net. He easily swept the puck in with became the first team to lose at home 1:13 left in the period. in the series. The Senators’ top line of Radek “I think the last game was key for Bonk, Marian Hossa and Magnus us,” Joseph said. “Getting up 3-2 in Arvedson did not score in the series, dramatic fashion (with a come-fromthe first between Canadian teams behind, overtime victory), I think that since the Vancouver Canucks beat the spilled over into tonight’s game.” Calgary Flames and the Maple Leafs Ottawa got the early lead on a rush en route to the 1994 Stanley Cup when Shawn McEachern’s shot was finals. From wire reports 4 KANATA, Ontario Toronto Thomas
DINING SERVICES SPECIALS FOR &
11 pm -1 am Sunday, April 30
The Perk & Alpine Atrium Extended Hours Monday, May 1 Thursday, May 4
The
EAST
Marketplace Midnight Breakfast 11 pm 1 am Sunday, April 30 -
(included in First Year and Upper Class Plans)
get into Moscow. We expect everything to go through smoothly.” The Blue Devils will be the first college team to visit Iran since the 1979 upheavals that left the nation’s rela“Iran wants folks to tions with the United States frayed. come over, they’re Recently, however, a trying to open doors more moderate Iranian government has pushed to the West.” for gradually normalizCoach Clar Anderson ing ties with the US. “Iran wants folks to come over, they’re tryorganization sponsor them and have ing to open doors to the West and athhad to raise the money the old-fashletics has been a door that has opened ioned way, from family, friends, and up to a lot ofcountries, so they are the those in the community. ones that are trying to push this “Usually, the trips that are spon- through,” Anderson said. sored by a national organization or the “The Iranian National Team Olympic USA Olympic committee are the top Committee has made a personal invite, dogs who go there,” Anderson said, “[the so they’re pushing it through... programs! who are usually on full Anything like this is a step in the right scholarship” direction in improving relations. r
T
LOW 1 STUDENT
CZ
CO
to
‘AIRFARES E
f
f I
-
a open until
up our visas until we
13
WEST
The Great Hall Midnight Breakfast
exchange matches. They will leam different styles, including more freestyle wrestling, and different to the approaches sport. The team expects both Russian and Iranian competition to be tough. Anderson hopes that after the matches, there will be time to practice with their opponents and to build confidence. While the wrestlers are excited to be preparing for the trip, th'iey haven’t ha vd a la*had large
Securing passports and visas has also been difficult, considering the severe travel restrictions Americans face in going to Iran. Regardless, Anderson expects everything to work out. “The whole process is pretty difficult,” he said. “The Iranian thing is being handled by a friend of mine who lives overseas. Since we don’t have a consul, [in the U.S.I, we don’t pick
_Q
reading period T? V A IVTC ■■■ ■ ■
IRAN from page 15 will be organizing, training, and assisting us while we compete at, hopefully, age-appropriate, skillappropriate levels.” There will be time for sightseeing and experiencing travel in the two countries, but the Blue Devils’ main task will include competing in a variety of
>
Europe Africa Asia South America More Than 100 Departure Cities! Eurailpasses Bus Passes Study Abroad *
•
•
2 am
•C3*
M Bi H M B I
Trinity
•
•
sfudenf
universe 'com
IT’S YOUR WORLD. EXPLORE IT.
Cafe Extended Hours Monday, May 1 Thursday, May 4
-
open until 1 am
I www.StudentUniverse.com CO
800-272-9676
o CD
=3
O CD
TUESDAY. APRIL 25jnnn
The Chronicle
PAGE 20
JMU will have to solve Duke’s defense and goalie Chaney
P LACROSSE from page 15
Martinez has 40 goals and 10 assists. Despite the seemingly daunting task of trying to stop the trio, the Blue Devils don’t plan on introducing any new wrinkles on the defensive end. “We’re not going to do anything special to defend [Marion, Martinez and Brew],” Kimel said. “Our defense has been playing well as unit and we just plan
to continue that.” In Duke, the Dukes face a physical, punishing defense that most teams have been ill-prepared for. Duke has allowed just one of its last eight opponents to reach the double-digit mark in goals. Amy Noble and Meghan Walters have proved that they can shut down their opponents’ top attackers, and have stepped up their level of play in big games. Even if James Madison manages to break through Duke’s front line, it will still have to contend with goal-
keeper Shannon Chaney, who has been solid between the pipes all season. The Blue Devils find themselves in a similar position as James Madison. The Blue Devils are coming off a heartbreaking 7-6 loss to North Carolina in the ACC semifinals. In the North Carolina loss the team failed to score in the last 25:34 of the game. The team s tendency to endure late-game scoring droughts (i.e., Virginia, Maryland) is something that the coaching staff has addressed this week and feels more confident about going into the matchup vs. James Madison. “We sometimes have a tendency to get scared and try to keep the ball,” Kimel said. “Offensively, we need to be creative and do a better job of reading the defenders. The last two days of practice have been great and we have positive momentum going into
“Offensively, we need to be creative and do a better job of reading the
Hi
c
defenders”
> x
■»>
Coach Kerstin Kimel [James Madison]
”
Still, for Duke to be successful, the Blue Devils will have to get some easy opportunities against James Madison’s Jennifer Corridini, The goalkeeper was invited to last year’s U.S. Lacrosse Squad Trials and is considered to be one of the game’s best. The only question left now is whether the Blue Devils will stand their ground.
Four ballplayers will sit out game for Elian From wire reports Four Florida Marlins players, including MIAMI starting third baseman Mike Lowell, plan to miss Tuesday night’s game against San Francisco to honor a call by Cuban Americans for a work stoppage over the Elian Gonzalez case. Marlins general manager Dave Dombrowski said the team will respect the decision of any of its employees to support the protest. He said the club’s frontoffice workers, players and coaches would be excused with pay for the day. “I agree with it 100 percent,” Marlins manager John Boles said. “The skids were greased when I recommended them to do it. There are more important things in the world than our game with the San Francisco Giants. Not a lot, but this is one ofthem.” Lowell, whose parents are Cuban exiles, will miss the home game along with pitcher Alex Fernandez, Vladimir Nunez and Michael Tejera, who’s on the disabled list.
Pergola Spring -
Pergola Winter -
Third base coach Fredi Gonzalez, infield coach
Tony Taylor and bullpen Luis Perez also plan to be absent, as does Cuban-American Hall of Earner Tony Perez, an assistant to Dombrowski. Cuban Americans in the Miami area are protesting
how the six-year-old Gonzalez was taken from his great-uncle’s home during the weekend. The Marlins will close their downtown Marlins en Miami Store for the day. Lowell, born in Puerto Rico, is married to a Cuban woman. “It really hits home,” Lowell said. “It’s a sensitive issue and I have to be responsible. It’s a little more important than one baseball game. Thank god, it’s not the seventh game of the World Series.” Fernandez started Monday night against Philadelphia and was the winning pitcher. “I wouldn’t have pitched [tomorrow],” he said. “I’m making it a point as a Cuban American, and I’m proud to say that. You won’t be seeing me here
Blomquist Pavilion
Take the gardens Home with You! J
s?r
2
Eoyi 11” x 14” high definition color photographs of the Sarah P. Duke Gardens are offered for the first time by the official Gardens’ photographer Ed
Culberson Asiatic Arboretum the Iris Bridge arches gracefully
where memorable pictures will provide pleasure for years to
over water with a colony of purple iris anchoring it to the
come. They are museum quality and independently tested to last over 60 years.
land. In the quiet of the Blomquist Garden of Native
Albrecht. He has captured the
tomorrow.” Said Dombrowski; “Anyone who’s passionate about the situation, we will respect their wishes.” “We have also alerted the Giants of the situation because they’ll be flying into this. They also have Livan [Hernandez] and we wanted to make them aware.” Nunez will start Wednesday night against former Marlins hero Hernandez. Both pitchers were born
in Cuba. In March 1999, Marlins owner John Henry joined a protest outside Baltimore’s spring training camp in Fort Lauderdale, Fla., after the Orioles announced their intention to play an exhibition game against a Cuban team in Havana.
Asiatic Iris Bridge
The first photograph is
beloved pergola at the height of Plants, the Pavilion offers a its spring glory with a canopy of lavender wisteria. The pergola is less frequently visited in the depths of winter but when frosted with ice and snow the scene is poetic. In the
hese photographs are ideal With all four pictures you can for birthday gifts, Mother’s Day, bring the beauty of the Sarah P. graduation or any occasion Duke Gardens into any home. 99 If ff If
ORDER FORM
No. Prints
**>
W 99
W fK !f ff
Iff
tf f
Iff f} &t
f!f 9f
Additional Prints x $4O Shipping/Handling Charges NC residents add 6% sales tax
-
Peri :ola Winter -
f Iff
If ff if -9? If UP ff Iff f St
$45
First Print
Peri ;ola Si
Blomi
priced at $45. Each additional photograph ordered at the same time is specially priced at $4O.
place to pause and survey a peaceful scene.
luist
N-
Send order to: SPDG, Box 90341 Duke University Durham, NC 27708-0341
=
Total
&
J
$
Iris Bridge Total No. Prints
«
Make check to: Sarah P. Duke Gardens. Allow 4 weeks for delivery. fV
M»
H4M«u
MW
6.W
#*
V
»**
•W>
»
NAME
(PLEASE PRINT)
STREET/PO BOX NO /
WMM
,(•
»y
WW
J> JJJt «w»
M ;«JM
gg
,«•
Vat
ft gg ,V
ftp
fif
<¥»
.»
.Jf IJM
,*»
JJf Jf JJ« J£Jgj£ y