Commencement 2000
A SPECIAL ISSUE OF THE CHRONICLE �Friday, May Calendar of events � page 2 Special ceremonies � page 6 Four years in review � pages 10 -19 Commencement speaker profiles � pages 20 21 -
12,2000
The Chronicle
PAGE 2
•
Commencement 2000
FRIDAY. MAY 12, 2000
2000 CALENDAR OF EVENTS SATURDAY, MAY 13
FRIDAY, MAY 12 3:00 p.m.
Walking tour of West Campus. Tour departs from the the University Chapel.
5:00 p.m.*
Baccalaureate Service for degree candidates whose surnames begin with letters A through G. University Chapel. Sermon by William H. Willimon, Dean of the Chapel. The President’s Charge by Nanncrl O. Keohane, President of the University.
steps
11:30 a.m.*
of
Baccalaureate Service for degree candidates whose surnames begin with letters H through O. University Chapel. Sermon by Dr. Willimon. The President’s Charge by President Keohane. (/'■ (Admission of guests by blue tickets only.)
3:00 p.m.*
Baccalaureate Service for degree candidates whose surnames begin with letters P through Z. University Chapel. Sermon by Dr. Willimon. The President’s Charge by President Keohane. (Admission of guests by yellow tickets only.)
4:30-6:00 p.m.
Reception honoring the graduating classes. East Duke Lawn, East Campus. (In the event of rain, East Campus Union.) Music by the Duke University Wind Symphony. Kraig Williams, Conductor.
8:30 p.m
Demonstration Recital. Benjamin N. Duke Memorial Organ University Chapel.
SUNDAY, MAY 14 10:00 a.m.**
Graduation Exercises. Wallace Wade Stadium. Conferring of degrees by President Nannerl O. Keohane. In ihe event of rain, Graduation Exercises will occur as planned at Wallace Wade Stadium However, if there are severe weather conditions, an announcement will be made from the lectern to cancel the ceremony.
*
**
The procession of candidates for the baccalaureate service begins ten minutes prior to the hour. Guests without tickets are invited to view the service in Page Auditorium via closed circuit large screen television. The procession of candidates
for the graduation exercises begins thirty minutes prior
to
the hour
HAPPY THER’S: and.
GRADUATION!
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FRIDAY, MAY 12, 2000
The Chronicle Commencement 2000 •
PAGE 3
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The Chronicle
PAGE 4
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Commencement 2000
FRIDAY, MAY
12, 2000
SPECIAL EVENTS
DISTRIBUTION
DUKE GARDENS
OF DIPLOMAS
The Sarah P. Duke Gardens, with 55 acres of landscaped and woodland gardens and 2,000 kinds of plants, has five miles of allees, walks, and pathways. The Blomquist Garden of Native Plants, which displays the most beautiful Southern wildflowers in a dramatic pine woodland, will be at peak performance during Commencement Weekend. The Gardens are open daily from 8:00 a.m. till dusk.
(Following the Qraduation Exercises)
TRINITY COLLEGE A.8., B.S. Diplomas will be distributed at departmental ceremonies at the conclusion of the Graduation Exercises. If the department of the first major held its Commencement event prior to the Graduation Ceremony, then the diplomas will be available at the Quadrangle at Perkins Library. (In the event of rain, Lobby, Allen Building) -
MUSEUM OF ART During Commencement Weekend, the Duke University Museum of Art is open from 10:00 a.m. until 5:00 p.m. on Friday, May 12; from 11:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. on Saturday, May 13; and from 12:00 noon to 5:00 p.m. on Sunday, May 14.
THE SCHOOL OF ENGINEERING B.S.E. Honors and Diploma Ceremony. University Chapel M. Engin. M.-Room 213, Wilkinson Center -
THE SCHOOL OF NURSING School of Nursing, Trent Drive
-
HOOF <N’ HORN
M.S.N.
The 2000 Commencement Production of Hoof l n’ Horn, Duke’s distinguished musical theater group, is “A Chorus Line.” During the Commencement Weekend there are three performances, on Friday, May 12, at 8:00 p.m., on Saturday, May 13, at 2:00 p.m. and 8:00 p.m. in Reynolds Theater, Bryan University (Center. Admission is by tickets purchased through Page Box Office (919-684-4444).
THE NICHOLAS SCHOOL OF THE ENVIRONMENT M.E.M., M.E Williams Hall of Science, Leon S. Levine Science Research Center -
THE FUQUA SCHOOL OF BUSINESS Fuqua School of Business, Faculty Lounge
-
M.B.A.
THE DIVINITY SCHOOL M.C.M., M.T.S., M.Div., ThJM. Alumni Memorial Common Room, New Divinity Building
PARKING
-
Parking for the Baccalaureate Services is available in the large facilities behind the Divinity School and the. Biological Sciences Building. For the Reception on East Campus, Duke Police Department officers will be available to assist with parking in areas adjacent to the residence halls. For the Graduation Exercises, ample parking is available in the paved facility at the corner of Cameron Drive and Science Drive and in the East and West Gate lots of Wallace Wade Stadium. Handicapped persons may be driven to the entrance of each venue, but their vehicles must be parked elsewhere. Please check with officers at each location for instructions. It is strongly recommended that persons needing assistance allow sufficient time for arrival prior to events.
THE SCHOOL OF LAW M.L.S., J.D., LL.M. Room 2028, Law School -
THE SCHOOL OF MEDICINE M.D. Searle Center. During the Reception M.H.S. (Physician Assistants) -Durham Marriott Hotel M.H.S. in Clinical Research Davison Lawn -
-
THE GRADUATE SCHOOL M.S., M.A. The President’s Box, East Gate, Wallace Wade Stadium M.A. (Liberal Studies Program) Washington Duke Inn M.S. (Physical Therapy Program) Von Canon Hall. Bryan Center M.A.T. Old Trinity Room, Union Building, West Campus M.P.P. Fleishman Commons, Ground Floor, Sanford Institute Ph.D. Page Auditorium -
INFORMATION
-
-
During the Commencement Weekend, all inquiries should be directed to the Information Desk in the Bryan University Center (919-684'2323) or the Duke Police Department (919-684'2444).
-
*
American Dance Festival
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FRIDAY,
MAY
The Chronicle Commencement 2000
12. 2000
PAGE 5
*
SPECIAL CEREMONIES FRIDAY, MAY 12
FRIDAY, MAY 12 (continued)
12:30 p.m.
REGINALDO HOWARD SCHOLARSHIP. Luncheon, Old Trinity Room. Union Building, West Campus
6:00 p.m
B.N. DUKE LEADERSHIP PROGRAM AND TRINITY SCHOLARS Dinner, Searlc Center.
2:00 p.m
ARMY ROTC. Commissioning Ceremony. Baldwin Auditorium. East Campus.
6:30 p.m
NAVAL ROTC. Commissioning Ceremony. Baldwin Auditorium, East Campus. Followed by reception, East Union.
2:30 p.m
AFRICAN AND AFRICAN- AMERICAN STUDIES. Reception and Awards Ceremony. Upper East Union, East Campus
6;30 p.m
WOMEN’S STUDIES. Reception and Ceremony for Majors and Minors. Nelson Music Room, East Duke Building.
3:00 p.m
ARMY ROTC. Commissioning Reception Lilly Library, East Campus.
7:30
THE SCHOOL OF MEDICINE. Hippocratic Oath Ceremony. University Chapel.
3:00 p.m,
PROGRAM IN EDUCATION. Reception Room 202, West Duke Building.
8:00 p.m
Mat
p.m
Vo r U
PROGRAM IN THE STUDY OF SEXUALITIES AND CENTER FOR LGBT LIFE. Reception and Certificate Distribution. Rooms 201 and 202, Flowers Building. continued on page 6
Moih
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•
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For Reservations call 489-2669 after 3 p.m.
RAMA
Japanese Seafood and Steak House Sushi Bar -
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Early Bird Special! Steak, Shrimp, and Chicken for two
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919-366-4400
The Chronicle
Pi >AGE 6
•
FRIDAY,
Commencement 2000
MAY 12, 2000
SPECIAL CEREMONIES
SATURDAY, MAY 13
SATURDAY, MAY 13 7:30 a.m.
WLLIAM J. GRIFFITH UNIVERSITY SERVICE AWARDS. Recognition Breakfast. Von Canon Hall, Bryan University Center.
9:00 a.m
FUQUA SCHOOL OF BUSINESS. Special Ceremony. Edmund M. Cameron Indoor Stadium. Reception Fuqua School of Business.
to
follow. Atrium,
9:00 a.m
NICHOLAS SCHOOL OF THE ENVIRONMENT. Recognition Ceremony. Reception to follow. Courtyard, Leon S. Levine Science Research Center
9:00 a.m
A.B. DUKE SCHOLARSHIP PROGRAM. Breakfast. Oak Room, Union Building. West Campus.
(continued)
1:30 p.m
MARINE LABORATORY. Reception honoring graduating undergraduate, graduate and professional school students who have attended the Marine Laboratory. Williams Hall of Science, Leon S. Levine Science Research Center.
4:00 p.m
JEWISH BACCALAUREATE SERVICE. Freeman Center for Jewish
Life, 1415 Faber Street.
6:00 p.m
THE SCHOOL OF MEDICINE. Oath of Maimonides. Freeman Center for Jewish Life, 1415 Faber Street.
6:00 p.m
ARTS AWARDS CEREMONY. Presenting student awards in the creative, visual, and performing arts, including Benenson Awards and Sudler Prize in the Arts. Museum of Art. East Campus.
Freeman Center for
6:30 p.m
CATHOLIC MASS. Baldwin Auditorium
10:00 a.m
PUBLIC POLICY STUDIES Hooding Ceremony for Master Degree Candidates. Formal Lawn, Sanford Institute Building.
6;30p.m
12:30 p.m
PUBLIC POLICY STUDIES. Luncheon and Awards Ceremony. Formal Lawn, Sanford Institute Building.
THE DIVINITY SCHOOL. Service ofWorship and Hooding Ceremony. University Chapel. Reception to follow. North Chapel Courtyard. (In the event of rain, Alumni Memorial Common Room.)
7:00 p.m
THE SCHOOL OF LAW. Hooding Ceremony. Edmund M. Cameron Indoor Stadium. Reception to follow. Front Lawn, Law School.
12:30 p.m
INTERNATIONAL HOUSE. Reception. 2022 Campus Drive AIR FORCE ROTC. Commissioning Ceremony and Reception Washington Duke Inn.
7:00 p.m
1:00 p.m
THE SCHOOL OF NURSING. Hooding and Recognition Ceremony. Griffith Film Theater. Bryan University Center. Reception to follow. Von Canon Hall.
7:00 p.m
BLACK CAMPUS MINISTRIES. Graduation Celebration Page Auditorium.
9:00 p.m.
CLASS OF 2000 GRADUATION PARTY. Zone W Parking Lot, West Campus.
9:00 a.m
JUDAIC STUDIES. Continental Breakfast. Paresky Student Lounge, Jewish Life. 1415 Faber Street.
Don’t Drink and Drive, but do Drive your Drink.
SUNDAY, MAY 14 8:00 a.m.
THE SCHOOL OF LAW. Breakfast. Front Lawn, Law School
12:00 noon THE DIVINITY SCHOOL. Reception and Diploma Distribution Alumni Memorial Common Room, New Divinity School.
Congrats, Grads!
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FRIDAY, MAY 12,
The Chronicle
2000
Commencement 2000
*
PAGE 7
SPECIAL CEREMONIES SUNDAY, MAY 14 (continued) 12:00 noon THE SCHOOL OF ENGINEERING. (Master of Engineering Management) Reception and Diploma Distribution. Room 213, Wilkinson Center. 12:00 noon THE SCHOOL OF NURSING. Reception and Diploma Distribution School of Nursing, Trent Drive.
12:00 noon FUQUA SCHOOL OF BUSINESS. Reception and Diploma Distribution Atrium, Fuqua School of Business. 12:00 noon THE GRADUATE SCHOOL (Ph.D.) Doctoral Ceremony. Page Auditorium. Luncheon to follow. Clock Tower Quadrangle. West Campus. 12:00 noon THE SCHOOL OF LAW. Reception. Front Lawn, Law School Diploma Distribution, Room 2028, Law School. 12:00 noon THE SCHOOL OF MEDICINE Reception. Searle Center. 12:00 noon BIOLOGY. Honors Ceremony and Diploma Distribution. Edmund M. Cameron Indoor Stadium. Reception to
follow.
12:00 noon COMPARATIVE AREA STUDIES. Reception and Diploma Distribution West Duke Lawn, West Duke Building (In the event of rain, Room 105, West Duke Building.)
12:00 noon ENGLISH. Luncheon. Room 328, Allen Building 12:00 noon ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCES AND POLICY. Reception and Diploma Distribution. Courtyard, Leon S. Levine Science Research Center.
12:00 noon COMPUTER SCIENCE. Luncheon and Diploma Distribution. Great Lawn Leon S. Levine Science Research Center.
12:00 noon GERMANIC LANGUAGES AND LITERATURE. Reception and Diploma Distribution. Front Porch, Old Chemistry Building. (In the event of rain, Lobby, Old Chemistry Building.)
12:00 noon CULTURAL ANTHROPOLOGY. Reception and Diploma Distribution Room 136, Social Sciences Building. 12:00 noon DRAMA. Buffet Luncheon and Diploma Distribution. Sheafer Theatre, Bryan University Center.
12:00 noon HISTORY. Diploma Distribution. Baldwin Auditorium. East Campus Luncheon to follow. Front Lawn. Baldwin Auditorium
12:00 noon EARTH AND OCEAN SCIENCES, Reception. Side Lawn, Old Chemistry Building
12:00 noon LITERATURE. Reception and Diploma Distribution. Women’s Studies Parlor, East Duke Building.
12:00 noon ECONOMICS. Reception and Diploma Distribution. Reynolds Theater. Bryan University Center.
■ ABERCROMBIE
&
FITCH
•
continued on page 8
LECHTER'S HOUSEWARES •JC PENNEY
•
DECK THE WALLS
•
CHAMPS
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RADIO SHACK ■
2
*
i
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12:00 noon CHEMISTRY. Reception and Diploma Distribution. Lobby, Paul M. Gross Chemical Laboratory. 12:00 noon CLASSICAL STUDIES. Reception and Diploma Distribution. Room 226, Allen Building.
m *
Free Gift Wrapping! Get Free Mother’s Day Gift Wrapping Saturday, May 13 in Center Court. We are making it easier to get your Mother’s Day shopping all wrapped up. Just bring your same day South Square Mall purchases to Center Court for Free Gift Wrapping. Limit 2 per customer. South Square Mall...the right place, right now!
Flowers for Mom!
Free Gold Card Member Gift! Saturday May 13 only! ,
If you are already a Golden Opportunity Card
member you are invited to stop by South Square Mali’s Center Court, Lower Level to pick up your free coco husk-lined hanging basket and seed packet when you present your card. Limit one per customer, while supplies last. Some restrictions
may
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■
The Chronicle
Pi>AGE 8
•
FRIDAY,
Commencement 2000
MAY 12, 2000
SPECIAL CEREMONIES SUNDAY, MAY 14 (continued) Certificate Distribution. Joint with Sociology. Front Lawn, Social Sciences Building.
12:00 noon MATHEMATICS AND PHYSICS. Buffet Luncheon and Diploma Distribution. Dining Room, Leon S. Levine Science Research Center. 12:00 noon PHILOSOPHY. Reception and Diploma Distribution. Teer Engineering Library. 12:00 noon POLITICAL SCIENCE. Buffet Luncheon and Diploma Distribution. Cambridge Inn Quadrangle, Union Building. West Campus. (In the event of rain, Room 210, Perkins Library.)
12:30 p.m
THE SCHOOL OF ENGINEERING. Honors and Diploma Ceremony. University Chapel. Preceded by reception The Chapel Court.
BIOLOGICAL ANTHROPOLOGY AND ANATOMY. Luncheon and Diploma Distribution. Primate Center
12:30 p.m
MUSIC. Reception and Diploma Distribution. Mary Duke Biddle Music Building.
PSYCHOLOGY. Reception and Diploma Distribution. From Lawn, Davison Building (In the event of rain, Zener Auditorium, Sociology/Psychology Building.)
12:00 noon PUBLIC POLICY STUDIES. Reception and Diploma Distribution. Fleishman Commons, Sanford Institute Building. 12:00 noon RELIGION. Diploma Distribution and Essay Award Announcement. York Chapel. Reception to follow. Room 05 (Student Lounge), New Divinio School 12:00 noon ROMANCE STUDIES. Reception and Diploma Distribution. Courtyard, Perkins Library. 12:00 noon
SLAVIC LANGUAGES AND LITERATURE. Reception and Diploma Distribution. Room 109, Languages Building.
12:00 noon SOCIOLOGY. Reception and Diploma Distribution. Front Lawn, Social Sciences Building.
Duke Unirer/iti) Computer Store Great savings on extra-low ■
Monitors Clearance Specials $249.00 Apple Studio Display, 16", blue $99.00 HP 52,15" monitor $99.00 IBM G54,15" monitor -
..
..
Printers Epson Stylus 760
-
Clearance Specials $129.00 $109.00 . $89.00
Epson Stylus 660 Epson Stylus 440
3:00 p.m
PHYSICIAN ASSISTANTS. Diploma Distribution and Reception. Durham Marriott Hotel.
Live Picture 2.6 tor Macintosh Live Picture Reality Studio 1.0 tor Windows LTI Treasures ot American History, Mac/Win Macromedia freehand Graphics Studio 7.0, Mac Mathsoft MathCad Pro 7.0 student edition, Windows.... Metacreations Power Photos IV tor Macintosh Microsoft Visual Interdev 1.0 for Windows Microsoft Mastering Web Site fundamentals, Windows. RIS Reference Manager 2.1 tor Macintosh RIS Reference manager 2.1 with Capture tor Macintosh Strata Videoshop 4.0 tor Macintosh Visio IntelliCad 98 tor Windows
Demo and Open Box Equipment Powerßook G3, 400MHz, 64mcg, 6gig, DVD, modem, Enet.... $1,499.00 $999.00 ißook, 300MHz, 32meg, 3gig, modem,Enel, Tangerine $999,00 PowerMac G4, 350MHz, 64meg, lOgig, CD, modem $299.00 Apple STudio Display, 16", graphite ..$79.00 $119.00 $229.00
Aslra 1220P PhotoDelux scanner Aslra 2200 USB/SCSI scanner....
Epson PhotoPC 550 camera forollon PNS92A-1P ethernet adapter farallon PN593-1P ethernet adapter, PCI card faratlon PN594-1P EtherMac card farallon PNS9SA-1P PCMCIA ethernet tor Mac Global Village 56k/10bt PCMCIA combo card tor Mac. Global Village leleport 56k cxtermal modem tor Mac Global Village 56k PCMCIA modem tor Mac lomega ]AZ ISA SCSI adapter Rubbermaid CPU stand
Aslra 4000U Scanner Dell Latitude CPI M366X1, 64meg,
Miscellaneous Software Clearence Specials AutoDesk Collection, Windows AutoDesk 3D Studio Apprentice, Windows Borland DBase 7.0 Client-Server, Windows Borland Introßuilder, Windows Extensis Powcrsuite tor Photoshop, Mac/Win txtensis Powcrsuite tor Quark Xpress, Mac/Win Live Picture LivePix Deluxe 2.0, Windows Live Picture Live SOHO 2.0, Windows Live Picture Looney Tunes Photo Print, Windows Live Picture Photo Vista 1.01, Mac/Win
ENGLISH. Awards Ceremony and Diploma Distribution. Page Auditorium
prices at our convenient location in the Bryan Center
Clearance Specials $999.00 PowerMac G3, 350MHz, 128meg, 12gig, modem, Zip drive $1,199.00 PowerMac G3, 400MHz, 192meg, 12gig, DVD, SCSI card PowerMac G3, 400MHz, 128meg, 12gig, Zip, 16megVRAM $1,099.00 $1,299.00 PowerMac G3, 450MHz, 128mcg, 9gig, 16meg VRAM Computers
2:00 p.m
C carance Sa 2
Miscellaneous Hardware Clearence Specials
493-7797
Reception and Diploma Distribution 2101 Campus Drive
Museum of Art.
12:30 pm
ASIAN AND AFRICAN
LANGUAGES AND LITERATURE
ART AND ART HISTORY. Reception and Diploma Distribution. North Gallery,
12:00 noon PROGRAM 11. Reception and Diploma Distribution. 2022 Campus Drive. 12:00 noon
2:00 p.m
.
12:30 p.m
$129.95 $l/9.95 $199.95
6.4gig, 13.3" screen
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Dell Optiplcx P6350,128meg, 6.4gig, Enet, Windows 2000 Dell Optiplex P6450,128meg, 7.sgig, Enet, Windows NI Dell Ultrascan 1200HS, 17" monitor Dell C/Port Replicator w/monitor stand
$599.00 $799.00 $279.00 $219.00
Epson EPL-5/00 Laser Printer.... Epson Stylus 900 inkjet printer Epson Stylus 640 inkjet printer
$249.00 ..$89.00
$349.00
HP DeskJet 810 C printer HP Omnibook XE2, 400MHz, 64/6, DVD, 14,1" screen IBM PC3OOPL PH 266MHz, 64meg, 4.2gig, CD, Win 95 IBM PC3OOPL PH 450MHz, 64meg, 6.4 gig, 32x CD, N1 IBM G72,17" monitor IBM 15" flat panel monitor IBM ThinkPad 1500, 366 MHz, 64/4.8,14.1", modem IBM ThinkPad 390X, 400Mttz, 64/6.4,14.1", modem IBM ThinkPad 600, 500MHz, 64/12,13.3" screen .
12:00 noon MARKETS AND MANAGEMENT STUDIES PROGRAM. Reception and
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$599.00
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www. dukes to res.duke.edu/cpu store Department of Duke University Stores®
FRIDAY, MAY 12, 2000
The Chronicle Commencement 2000 •
Grand opening Northgate Mall Take an additional
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•
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and more!
PAGE 9
Victory at last over Carolina
The Achievement Index Hurricane Fran Housing
DUPD
FRIDAY, MAY 12, 2000
The Chronicle
PAGE 10
1
fAnc II
contrlerffj
0-11: Anatomy of a football season The Mongolian Barbecue Four more years tor Bill Clinton
Freshman
Year Johnny, the Mediocre Human Men’s soccer; from No. 1 to done
"The Gala Employee-Bashing Issue" Duke: #4 m U.S. News Marrero
taHovHflfl ■
Jesse
M m
The return of bench-burning The promise of Chinese food on points Limited Advanced Placement credits
Wild Bull’s pulled out from the points program, the Mongolian barbecue was examinations. On the playing fields, the football added to the newly renovated Great team suffered through a heartbreaking Hall and administrators promised an year. After a series of near-victories, the on-campus Chinese food restaurant. Bill Burig, assistant dean of student team finished with an 0-11 record. its unveiled a new plan in suffered development, soccer team The men’s own anguish: A 6-0 start propelled the February to improve the often-criticized Blue Devils up to the No. 2 spot in the and tensely observed housing lottery nation, but a mid-season collapse kept process. Although many students spoke Carolina. highly of the changes—which allowed the team out of the NCAA tournament. The storm killed more than 20, causthe men’s them to select their preferred room from seasons, dollars After two subpar millions of worth hundreds of ing available on campus—others conany returned to earlier basketball team of damage and leaving some areas withof senior tinued to express discontent with the play by form. Led the strong for weeks. out power process. When the University required most Jeff Capel and two rising stars—sophoLater in the spring, the administraof its employees to come to work the day more Trajan Langdon and junior Steve after the storm, many balked at the Wojciechowski—the Blue Devils rode a tion toyed with the idea of moving the prospect of traveling in such dangerous mid-season winning streak to an ACC SHARE selective living group from its home in East Campus’ Epworth Dormiconditions. The contentious debate regular season title. The highlight of the season occurred tory, but scrapped the plan after resiforced Duke to reevaluate and reshape in January, when students watched dents protested. its severe weather policy. In politics, the national election In the spring, spirited discussions Duke beat the University of North Carsurrounded the Achievement Index, a olina for the first time in four years. The brought University students out to the novel grading mechanism proposed by flames of burning benches rose late into polls in droves as Bill Clinton clinched a the night above Clocktower Quadrangle second term as U.S. president. Sen. Val Johnson, associate professor of statistics. The AI would have assigned each as students celebrated the narrowly Jesse Helms hung on to his seat over Democrat Harvey Gantt and Professor student an adjusted grade point average won victory. The postseason, however, was disof Political Science David Price recapbased on the relative performances of appointing for the Blue Devils, who tured his spot in the House of Represenhis or her classmates. Proponents of the index argued that fell to North Carolina State in the first tatives. North Carolina also reelected the plan would counteract grade inflaround of the ACC tournament and to Gov. Jim Hunt. The year ended in fierce controversy tion and improve equity in grading Providence in the second round of the as two Duke University Police Departacross disciplines. Critics charged that NCAA tournament. On the national academic scene, the ment officers were punished for handit would be no more accurate than the 1996-97 school year was kind to the Unicuffing a black freshman and detaining current system while promoting destructive academic. versity. In U.S. News and World Report him in the back seat of a squad car for 30 minutes after an unknown individual In a referendum sponsored by Duke magazine’s annual ranking of colleges, the University jumped from sixth place misidentified the students as the culprit Student Government, 88 percent of undergraduates opposed the AI. The Arts to fourth. The Medical Center held of a recent theft. The two officers, who were white, and Sciences Council narrowly defeated steady at fifth place. In a separate survey, Dining Services were widely deemed guilty of racially the plan at the end of the year. One noteworthy academic change earned a number-one ranking for motivated mistreatment, sparking a campus-wide debate and a series of did occur in November, however, as the healthiness of campus food. protests that continued into the first council voted to limit the amount of Campus food options changed somegraduation credit students could earn what during the year. Papa John’s and weeks of the summer. Almost immediately after the Class of 2000 entered Duke, the campus was struck with a natural disaster: Hurricane Fran. Although campus facilities remained mostly unscathed and many freshmen frolicked in the muck of East Campus, the hurricane carved a path of destruction through Durham and central North
through taking Advanced Placement
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If Gargoyles Could Talk Sketches of Duke University
William E. King
“And my own guess wouliid be that any alumnus of Duke who didn’t punish him or herself with a thoroughly miserable post-adolescence will find among these new photographs a rush of welcome memories rising from the pages,” Price writes.
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From the Chapel tower silhouetted against a fiery sunset to a small child playing cowboy in Duke Gardens, from a pensive turn-of-the-century Trinity College student to the raucous crowd in Cameron Indoor Stadium, the images in this book help explain one of the deepest mysteries about Duke how one ofAmerica’s youngest major universities has become so deeply loved by so many people in so short a time.
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The Chronicle Commencement 2000
FRIDAY, MAY 12, 2000
*
PAGE 11
FILE PHOTO/THE CHRONICLE
Our crowd was unbelievable tonight. They’ve been camping out for two weeks and think they did an job I
unbelievable
for us.
They’re a big reason why we pulled out the win in the last two or
three minutes of the game.”
Sophomore guard Trajan Langdon, on Duke’s 80-73 home win over North Carolina on Jan. 29,1997. Langdon modestly forgot to mention that he was also a big reason why Duke pulled out the win.
THE ACHIEVEMENT INDEX (top right) failed in the Arts and Sciences Council, but the proposed alternative grading system prompted an outpouring of student concern. THE CLASS OF 2000 (top left) moved onto East Campus with the usual assortment of boxes and bags. This year’s seniors were the second class to live on the all-freshman East and awaiting their arrival was a newly renovated gymnasium. TRAJAN LANGDON (left) hit a crucial three-pointer in the final minute to lead Duke to an 80-73 win over North Carolina in Cameron Indoor Stadium. The win over the Tar Heels was the first in several years for the Blue Devils and students celebrated with a massive bonfire on Clocktower Quadrangle.
THE HIKES OF OF KII A M i
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Gothic Price $47.96 Robert F. Durden is Professor Emeritus of History at Duke University.
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The Chronicle
PAGE 12
Those Drinky-Drink Kids The Comeback over Carolina IFC alcohol distribution ban
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BSA “study-in” at the Allen Building Six weeks of Krzyzewskiville
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*
Commencement 2000
Both on and off the court, the basketball dominated campus life in 1997-98. The resurgent men’s basketball team finished one game shy of the Final Four, losing a heartbreaker to the Kentucky Wildcats. The teams also provided the spark for the most controversial issue of the year, the battle for bonfires. The previous year’s dangerous revelry had prompted an administrative ban on the fiery celebrations, but students celebrating Duke’s stunning come-from-behind home victory over North Carolina in late February paid the prohibition no heed. Immediately following the afternoon game, nearly 2,000 students gathered for a beer-soaked foam party, waiting for night to fall before attempting to set their benches ablaze. Police resistance to the students’ efforts turned the campus into a chaotic chess board for much of the night, with some students creating diversions for the police while others lit fires in secluded quadrangles. Frustrated and angered by police actions, students accused the administration of smothering a time-honored campus tradition, a position that gained supporters when administrators vowed to remove all benches from campus. Three nights later, hundreds of students gathered on Clocktower Quadrangle and, in the absence of a significant police presence, successfully burned nearly every remaining bench on campus while angrily denouncing President Nan Keohane. The next day, administrators agreed to permit a bonfire on campus if the men’s team won the national title. The men’s team fell short, however, as did the women’s basketball team, which nevertheless won its first-ever ACC regular season title and also came within one game of the Final Four.
FRIDAY, MAY 12, 2000
Other significant happenings in Duke sports occurred away from the playing field. Athletic Director Tom Butters retired after two decades on the job and, after several outside candidates declined interest in the position, the University hired Associate Athletic Director Joe Alieva. During 1997-98, Duke also added women’s crew as a varsity sport. Amid all of the change around campus, one trend remained constant: Race relations persisted as a divisive issue. During the fall semester, the Intercommunity Council organized Race Day in front of the Chapel, drawing about 500 students, faculty members and employees for an open discussion. Later in the fall, the Black Student Alliance held a “study-in” at the Allen Building to demand administrative action on behalf of the campus’ black community. Administrators responded, and the year witnessed several significant improvements for minority concerns. Driven by Race Day, the study-in and a letter of support from more than 250
non-black faculty members, the administration increased the value of the Reginaldo Howard Scholarship, relaunched the search for a full-time director for the Mary Lou Williams Center for Black Culture and added tenuretrack positions to the Program in African and African-American Studies. The campus’ queer community was at the center of controversy in the fall after Facilities Management workers whitewashed over slogans on the East Campus bridge that had been painted by Gothic Queers. The decision sparked student protests and an administrative apology. University policy in social life and residential life endured deep scrutiny during the year. The Interfraternity
Council banned its member fraternities from distributing alcohol while the University contemplated an outright ban on kegs. Meanwhile, the Upperclass Residential Planning Group spent the year producing a model for the future of University housing; the plan released in February called for a new, suite-style dormitory to be built in the Ocean parking lot area on West Campus. The resi-
dential discussions generated consistent student interest as the committee tossed around a wide variety of ideas for reconfiguring West Campus living arrangements. The social scene continued its transformation from an environment in which on-campus fraternity keg bashes raged several nights a week to one dominated by smaller gatherings off campus at private houses and local bars—including several new bars like George’s Garage, Steve and Clark’s and’ the James Joyce Irish Pub. The year’s Duke Student Government elections included the usual dose of controversy, this time from an outside organization. The DSG Judiciary found IFC guilty of bribery and election tampering after it staged an election drive that offered a monetary reward to the fraternity with the best voter turnout. The Medical Center continued its incredible growth in 1997-98;-most notably, the Duke University Health System signed a lease to operate Durham Regional Hospital after several months of negotiations. The year ended on a sad note with the April 18 death of 80-year-old University President Emeritus Terry Sanford, who had also served as North Carolina governor and a US. senator. The funeral ceremony, which was held in the Chapel, drew nearly 2,000 mourners.
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The Chronicle Commencement 2000
FRIDAY, MAY 12, 2000
PAGE 13
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Professor of Law and Public Policy Joel Fleishman, at the funeral of the former governor, U.S. senator and University president, who died April 18,1998, at the age of 80. TERRY SANFORD’S FUNERAL (above) drew thousands of mourners in April 1998, The beloved “Uncle Terry" was president of Duke from 1969 to 1985 and twice ran for the White House.
RACE DAY (top right) in September was called by student leaders concerned with the campus climate. The Intercommunity Council asked President Nan Keohane to cancel classes, but she refused. Still, hundreds turned out for speeches and discussions in front of the Chapel. THE EAST CAMPUS BRIDGE (right) became the scene of controversy in October, when Facilities Management workers whitewashed over slogans that had been painted by Gothic Queers. University administrators later apologized for the action.
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The Chronicle
•
Commencement 2000
FRIDAY, MAY
our years
Unless you're coming a short distance from
campus in a four-wheel-drive vehicle, you’re not going to make it.” Executive Vice President Tallman Trask, explaining his decision to implement the severe weather policy on January 25,2000 PRATIK
BLIZZARD (above): In January 2000, a surprise winter storm dropped more than a foot of snow on the campus, canceling several days of classes. For the following week, students dug out from under the white stuff, with many breaking out the snow scrapers for the first time.
BURN, BABY, BURN (right): After the men's basketball team’s thrilling comefrom-behind victory over the University of North Caiolina in February 1998, a University-sponsored foam party proved a paltry substitute for forbidden bonfires. Three days later, students set benches ablaze on the quad to protest what they saw as an attempt to smother the traditions of the “Old Duke." FRAN-TIC WEEKEND (top right): Just days after the end of 1996 move-in, Hurricane Fran pounded the Triangle, inflicting millions of dollars of damage. Although much of Durham lost power for several days and employees faced difficulties getting to work, the campus emerged soaked but mostly unscathed.
PATEL/THE
CHRONICLE
12. 2000
iY MAY 12, 2000
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The Chronicle Commencement 2000 *
Ww
PAGE 15
I
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gw uvl They played very hard; they
played unbelievably. They were the better team tonight, and they beat us. We gave it our all, they gave it their all, they just ended up winning.” Trajan Langdon, on the Connecticut Huskies and their 77-74 upset of Duke on March 29,1999
77-74 (right): The 1998-99 men’s basketball team went on a tear through the regular season, the ACC tournament and most of the NCAA tournament But the Blue Devils met their match in St. Petersburg, Fla., where the Connecticut Huskies toppled No. 1-ranked Duke.
Enjoy.”
WILREC (below): The Class of 2000 eagerly watched the construction of the Wilson Recreation Center for several years, and when it finally opened in August 1999, students crowded inside.
Gary Wilson, Trinity ’62 and major donor to the Wilson Recreation Center, offering advice to students during the building's October 1999 dedication
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PAGE 16
Basketball Conn-quered in St. Pete Overturned DSG elections Capital campaign kickoff
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Duke-DATA merger No class on MLK Day Women’s hoops reaches finals
Junior Year
Alpine Bagels
Women’s golf championship New provost Peter Lange Dave M athews
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The Hindi controversy English department shake-up Multiple bonfires
Need Your Computer Fixed Fast?
•
Commencement 2000
The campus may have been basketball-centric in 1997-98, but the hoops craze reached an even higher level in the Class of 2000’s junior year, as Duke became the first school ever to place both its men’s and women’s basketball teams in the national championship game. The women started the year off slowly at 1-3, but blazed through the conference schedule with a 15-1 mark. Led by six seniors, Duke returned to the Elite Eight for the second straight year before facing three-time defending champion Tennessee. The Blue Devils shocked the Volunteers, capturing the program’s biggest win ever and earning its firstever berth in the Final Four. Duke then rolled past Georgia before top-ranked Purdue validated its ranking with a 6245 win in the national championship. The men, one of the country’s most dominating teams during the decade, cruised through the regular season, had an unprecedented 19-0 mark in the ACC and boasted a school-record 32 straight wins heading into the title game against Connecticut. But the Huskies pulled through late, 77-74, silencing the thousands of raucous fans gathered in front of the big screen in Cameron Indoor Stadium. The loss in the championship game stunned the campus, but more disappointments lay ahead: Elton Brand, who swept every major national player of the year award, announced his decision to leave for the NBA draft shortly after Coach Mike Krzyzewski underwent hip replacement surgery. Will Avery soon followed his roommate’s lead, while Chris Burgess decided to transfer. Then, in perhaps the most surprising move, freshman Corey Maggette jumped ship, and the combination of departures seemed to leave the once-mighty program in tatters. The University also prepared for a
FRIDAY, MAY 12, 20nn
the academic Curriculum 2000. When implemented in fall 2000, the new curriculum will mandate foreign language study and call for stricter distribution requirements. The curriculum’s January approval capped off a year-long process which involved little of the controversy that characterized the Achievement Index. The curriculum’s chief architect, Professor of Political Science Peter Lange, was appointed provost several months after his initiative passed. The plan to overhaul upperclass residential life also neared completion, as officials spent much of the year considering
significant front;
possibilities for renovating Main West Campus. A scaled-down version of the initial ambitious and costly plans, the proposal suggested converting Trent Dormitory into academic space and at that time envisioned 400 new bed spaces on West. Throughout the year, much administrative energy focused on Duke’s efforts to improve its financial status with a $1.5 billion capital campaign. The Campaign for Duke went public in October with an extravagant bash in Cameron Indoor Stadium. At various points during the year, officials announced multi-million dollar gifts donated toward the campaign’s ambitious goal, with the largest being $2O million from Microsoft chair Bill Gates and his wife Melinda, a Duke alumna. During the year, several relatively new student groups—including the
Campus Social Board and Students Against Sweatshops—asserted their presence on campus. After a 31-hour student sit-in in the Allen Building in January, SAS and administrators agreed to toughen the University’s stance against sweatshop conditions in factories that manufacture Duke-licensed products. The January sit-in paved the way for future protests,
and successes, at other universities across the country. Socially, the off-campus, house party scene continued to grow, which raised many safety concerns early in the fall More bars opened on Ninth Street and Brightleaf, including two more Irish pubs The Health System enjoyed another robust year, acquiring several new facilities, throughout North Carolina, including Raleigh Community Hospital. The campus student governments however, suffered through a turbulent year. The Duke Student Government elections were tainted by apparent voter fraud involving 500 extra ballots. And Eric Phifer, Graduate and Professional Student Council president, entered a protracted dispute with his executive council. The feud went so far that, for a time, Phifer refused to call GPSC meetings. The English department also experienced its ups and downs during the year, weathering a harsh external review and the departure of several prominent faculty members. By the end of the year, however, the department hired a new chair and made offers to five top professors. In the fall, the men’s cross country
team qualified for the NCAA tournament for the first time in 27 years. Meanwhile, the men’s soccer squad suffered a stunning 3-2 upset against unheralded Jacksonville in the first round of the NCAAs. The football team began the season with two straight wins and six weeks later was poised for a bowl run. But the Blue Devils dropped their final three contests, and the poor finish cost head coach Fred Goldsmith his job. The Duke sports highlight of the year happened after graduation, when the women’s golf team won the national championship in Tulsa, Okla. The win was the fourth championship in school history and the first for a Duke women’s team.
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The Chronicle Commencement 2000
FRIDAY, MAY 12, 2000
PAGE 17
*
RICHARDRUBIN/THE CHRONICLE
PRATIK PATEL/THE CHRONICLI
STUDENTS AGAINST SWEATSHOPS (top left) held a sit-in in the Allen Building in January 1999, which ended when administrators agreed to compromise on SAS’s call for manufacturers of University-licensed apparel to disclose factory locations. During the night, students engaged in a heated game of Risk. JULIAN BOND (above) was the keynote speaker at the University’s annual Martin Luther King Jr. Day Service. This year marked the first time that Duke canceled classes in honor of the holiday.
DAVE MATTHEWS (left) and Tim Reynolds rocked a sold-out Page Auditorium in February.
NICOLE ERICKSON (far left) helped lead the women’s basketball team to a regular season ACC title and its first-ever national championship game. After a stunning upset of defending national champion Tennesee, the Blue Devils ultimately succumbed to the Purdue Boilermakers. VICTOR CHANG/THE CHRONICLE
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Commencement 2000 The University renamed the School of EnThe Class of 2000 entered the University with a major weather event in 1996 gineering in Pratt’s honor, and engineers preparing to graduate suddenly found and severe weather provided a memothis Hurricane themselves renamed Pratt seniors. bookend as year, rable After a mass exodus from both the Floyd devastated eastern North Carolina men’s more and women’s basketball teams, the and a surprising blizzard dumped unprecedented success of 1998-99 did not than a foot of snow on the Triangle. For the most part, Floyd missed Duke carry forward into 1999-2000. Still, both in its mid-September tear through the teams performed well beyond expectastate, causing a preemptive class canceltions, with the men finishing the regular lation but only dropping a few inches of season with another ACC championship rain on the campus. The eastern part of and the top spot in the national rankings. the state fared much worse, with floods But youth and short benches caught up destroying thousands of homes and with both teams in the Sweet 16, as the men fell to Florida and the women lost to killing millions of animals. The January snowstorm was not as Louisiana State. The fall semester dangerous, but much more significant for brought hopes for an improved football team, with new coach Carl Franks and the campus, which was shut down for several days. Many students, freed from three his Airborne offense. But Airborne took a days of classes, spent hours frolicking in nosedive early, and the team finished 3-8. Duke Hospital and the Health Systhe snow. Unfortunately, when warmer times came, the University rescheduled tem suffered their share of difficulties in 1999-2000, beginning with a four-day classes for a series of weekends. The University also experienced its first shutdown of all human subject research alcohol-related death in decades when in May. The federal government imposed Pratt junior Raheem Bath died of aspirathe suspension because of administration pneumonia, a condition he apparently tive flaws in the approval and oversight ofresearch. The Health System also concontracted by inhaling his own vomit. Altinued to face financial troubles, with though Bath died in November, administrators did not acknowledge the connection Durham Regional Hospital losing millions of dollars and changes in healthwith alcohol and binge drinking until February. Officials then formed an alcohol task care financing prompting an adminisforce and began a wide-ranging discussion trative shakeup and the elimination of about Duke’s policies and student culture. 170 positions at Duke Hospital. The fiSocial life also came into focus in the nancial stresses on the Hospital also spring as Phi Kappa Psi fraternity and Pi started talks of a nurses’ union. Beta Phi sorority were given lengthy susDurham continued its transformation in 1999-2000 as officials pursued a merger pensions for excessive drinking. The University’s capital campaign of city and county governments. The city rolled on toward its $1.5 billion goal in reelected Mayor Nick Tennyson in the fall. 1999-2000, and with more than three In the spring, much of Durham was captiyears left to go, fund raisers have raked in vated by plans to renovate the abandoned American Tobacco Company complex. nearly $l.lB billion. The total was augmented greatly in fall 1999 by Duke’s secThe face of the campus continued to ond largest gift ever: $35 million from forchange, with the opening of several huge mer Pfizer chair and CEO Edmund Pratt. new buildings. Most notably, the Wilson The Chronicle
PAGE 18
■■ ■■ ■■
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Hurricane Floyd The Blizzard of 2000 B-ba(l frosh
Senior Year Medical Center research-shutdown Planning for new dorm
Dickerson departs TowerView Nurses’
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FRIDAY, MAY 12, 2000
•
Recreation Center transformed student life on West Campus, as undergraduates and graduate students used the spacious weight rooms, dozens of fitness machines and renovated pool. The building generated its share of controversy, as employees successfully lobbied the administration to reduce entrance fees. University administrators devoted much of their year to the future, both near and far. For the short term, the University unveiled and refined plans for a new 380bed dormitory on West Campus, designed to connect the main quadrangles with Edens Quad. Academically, Duke combined its botany and zoology departments into a unified Department of Biology. Looking farther ahead, new provost Peter Lange began strategic planning for the University’s academic future as he and other administrators began preparing a document outlining Duke’s academic goals. Many non-academic administrators focused on the campus master plan, which earmarked areas for new construction and promoted the somewhat contentious idea of a primarily walkable campus. For the second straight year, Duke
Student Government’s executive elections were overturned, this time because of incompetence by the Election Commission. In the revote, the results of several vice president races switched, suddenly turning losers into winners. The year ended with a flurry of administrative departures, as several hospital executives and business school dean Rex Adams announced their resignations. Most surprisingly, Vice President for Student Affairs Janet Dickerson announced her upcoming exit to Princeton University. And as the Class of 2000 headed to Myrtle Beach—or to Confederate flag-free locales—the bright, sunny weather made the hurricanes and snowstorms of freshman and senioryears seem quite far away.
The Chronicle Class of 2000 Jennifer Anderson
Liana Rose
Victor Chang
Matt Rosen
Lauren Chernick
Richard Rubin
Jillian Cohen
Laurie Sapperstein
Rachel Cohen
Bill Gerba
Rachel Medlock
Anya Spstek
Toby Coleman
Aliza Goldman
Tim Millington
Rob Starling
Saundra Edwards
Neal Morgan
Angela Fernandes
Erin Holland Yu-hsien Huang
Caroline Nichol
Katherine Stroup Jason Wagner
Adam Ganz
Jon Huntley
Kevin Pride
Bob Wells
Pauline Gave
An
Brian Kane
informal reception
Victor Zhao
be held for Chronicle willSeniors and their graduation guests Sunday, May 14from 1:00 until 3:oopm The Chronicle Editorial Office 301 Flowers Building •
The Chronicle Commencement 2000
FRIDAY, MAY 12, 2000
*
REEM
HAFEZ/THE CHRONICLE
JASON
«T
I his is not the first gift I have given. It has been a 55-year relationship with the University, so It should not be surprising that i would be happy to be able to give this kind of gift”
CARL FRANKS (above) came into his first season as Duke’s football coach with high hopes about a potential bowl game berth, but the Blue Devils skidded early and finished 3-8. MCDONALD’S (top right) suffered through months of delays before opening in January, but once the fries started cooking, the Golden Arches became a popular fixture in the Gothic Wonderland. EDMUND PRATT (right) gave $35 million in October to endow and rename the School of Engineering.
PAGE 19
Retired pharmaceutical executive Edmund Pratt, Engineering '47, after giving $35 million to endow and rename the school he attended
WAGNER/THE CHRONICLE
The Chronicle
PAGE 20
•
Commencement 2000
In
e Elizabeth Do Commencement Speaker
FRIDAY, MAY 12, 2000
many ways, Elizabeth Dole, Woman’s College ’5B, never left Duke. After following her brother to the University, Liddy Hanford Dole was elected president of the Woman’s Student Government Association, named May Queen and, on graduation day, honored as The Chronicle’s Leader of the Year. She used her political science major as a steppingstone to a high-profile career in public service. And as often as she has returned to Duke, for family members’ graduations, Board of Trustees meetings from 1974 to 1985 and to speak at 1997’s Senior Week, Elizabeth Dole has found Duke visiting her. Fifteen years after she graduated, Dole was giving a speech in Durham. A man sat alone in the back row of the auditorium, and after Dole finished answering questions, the man shuffled down to meet her. “T was sitting in the back row 7 to see if you were projecting. You did wTell, but you were rocking a little bit,”’ said the man, who Dole remembered as her Duke public speaking teacher, Professor Weatherby. “That just proves Duke professors continue to care about you,” she said. Throughout hsr ill-fated run for the presidency, Dole, former president of the American Red Cross, found Duke alumni and students toiling hard on her side. At this year’s keynote commencement speech, Dole will encourage members of the Class of 2000 to follow her into public service. In her eight years as president of the Red Cross, Dole met with families who lost everything to civil war, people who dreamed to speak freely and dissidents who fought for the right to vote. Americans’ disgust with and apathy toward their political process concerns and motivates her. “One of the reasons I ran for president [is that] when I graduated, it was considered a noble thing to do. Today, there is a lot of cyni-
cism, there is a tarnishing of the institutions,” she said. “I wanted to call people to public service. It’s a great way to give back. We should see how blessed we are in this country... I want to really get people excited again about serving.” Dole’s service began at Duke with student government and carried through the presidential cabinets ofRonald Reagan and George Bush. Still, she can recall individual student town-hall meetings and conversations she had as student body president. “I found things that I feel passionately about. Search until you find that sense of mission. Today that means doing many jobs. When you find that match that you feel passionately about, you will put so much of your life into it...,” she said. “If I look back, I gravitated to these opportunities, and it has been very fulfilling.” The Harvard Law School graduate will sprinkle her talk with reminiscences from her life at Duke and her work with students, faculty and administrators. She will also use her real-world experience to drive home her messages. For example, she was dismayed to learn earlier this year that marketing executives were struggling to find a label for the generation of the Class of 2000, which is on the tail end of Generation X. She will tell this year’s graduates to shed the labels entirely. “Why not dispense with labels?” she asked. “They are perceptions brought to life. Nothing so shapes the individual as beliefs.... Acting on belief is the essence of having a purposeful life.” By the numbers, this speech is one of a hundred that Dole gives every year and one of a handful of commencement addresses she has presented. But for the woman who spoke at 11 graduations last year, this commencement ceremony is special. “I really wanted to be at Duke this year,” she said. “It’s like coming back home.” —Greg Pessin
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The Chronicle Commencement 2000
FRIDAY, MAY 12, 2000
PAGE 21
*
rinity senior Holly Cooper went to high plicable to Duke life. It’s something I’ve left school in Raleigh. And she decided to stay Duke with and something to which everybody home in North Carolina for college. can relate.” But after four great years at the University, She thinks that her fellow undergraduates, Cooper, this year’s undergraduate commencegraduate students and even parents and alumment speaker, is ready for some changes—startni will be able to connect to this message. ing with her Sunday speech. Cooper hopes members of the Duke commu“I’ve given speeches when I was younger,” nity will recognize that their time at the UniCooper said. “I was in student government and versity has been filled with free thinking. I won an essay contest in third grade and I had “I think it is something that brings out an asto give a speech.” pect of Duke that people could look back and But she’s not too nervous; she knows she say, Teah, that was true,”’ she said. made the right decision. She’s just excited. In many ways, Cooper’s Duke career has Almost as excited as she is about moving to been centered around her desire to reach out San Francisco just after she receives her deand to challenge herself. gree in public policy studies, to do online secuFor her junior year, she decided to study in rity work for alladvantage.com. Greece—with no Duke program, without her “I worked at the FBI last summer and friends and in a completely unfamiliar culture. they’re opening a new division in the compa“Going abroad was a really big thing,” she ny for security, fraud and privacy rights,” said said. “I thought it would be a good place to be Cooper, who graduated from Enloe High if I wanted to go to several countries. It was School. “It’s definitely challenging. I wanted something different.” to leave North Carolina and do something From the start, Cooper has been involved completely different.” with Dukes and Duchesses, the school’s underFor Cooper, the big gig Sunday and the leap graduate ambassadors and tour guides for its across the country represent the capstones to special guests and visitors. four years of learning how to challenge herself “I wanted the chance to serve Duke,” she and think on her own. said. “There are so many aspects of Duke I Duke has taught Cooper the important lesson wanted to know more about. I wanted to meet “to constantly challenge yourself to reach out of administrators, faculty, members of the Board your comfort zone and seek new things whether of Trustees.” academic, physical or spiritual,” she said. But out of all the people she has met during The idea of free thought will be the focus of her time at Duke and out of all the activities her speech to the thousands gathered at Walshe has participated in, Cooper said she will lace Wade Stadium. miss her friends the most. In her work in the classroom and with Dukes Her final farewell to her friends throughout and Duchesses, as well as in Kappa Alpha the Duke community, Cooper’s commencement Theta sorority, Cooper has learned, more than speech is something she has been thinking about for two years. anything else, the value of critical thinking. “I went to graduation my sophomore year “The speech will focus on the importance of and thought maybe I would consider doing it,” thinking for yourself and living in an environment where you’re constantly challenged to she said. “I decided on the topic in the fall of think about new things,” Cooper said. “It’s this year.” something I think is important and very ap—Greg Pessin
Holly Cooper Student Speaker
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Comics
PAGE 22
FRIDAY, MAY 12, 2000
THE Daily Crossword
FoxTrot/ Bill Amend ©
YOU
AREN'T PLAN-
WHY?
NING To WEAR
THOSE Boots WITH THOSE PANTS, I HOPE.
THEY MAKE YOU LOOK LIKE YOU'RE HEADING OFF To STAR FLEET
ICK. THANKS FoR THE WARNING. I'LL Go
ACROSS
2000 BillAmcnd/Dist by Universal PressSyndicate
H's STAR FLEET'S I WANT To
I NEVER KNEW YOU
CARED So MUCH ABOUT PAi&E'S
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1 Wanamaker
and Houston 5 Do another land survey 10 Dirty air , Silver! 14 Away!
15 Related on mother's side 16 Misprint 17 Dexterous beginner? 18 With 20A, business brush-otf 20 See 18A 22 Suffix for 23 24 25 27 29 32 34 36 37 38
Dilbert/ Scott Adams TO THE UNTRAINED EYE IT NIGHT LOOK AS IF I DO NO
Edited by Wayne Robert Williams
BUT INSIDE HERE IS A RAGING SEA OF KNOWLEDGE NANAGENENT AND STRATEGIC THINKING,
f
approximations Singer Sayer Medical picture
Harvest Mayberry boy
Gets started Ford Ford First murderer Last breath Spanish river Dixie Chicks instrument 39 OPEC member 40 Pronounce
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GURGLING SOUND?
41 Hawks' former arena 42 Saint43 Beth and Don 45 Morays 46 Out of
"
(discordant)
47 49 52 54
Mil. rank Wind dir. Alphabet start
With 57A,
thoroughness 57 59 60 61 62
Doonesbury/ Garry Trude YEAH, I TH/NKI H/E'RENOT MJONH/M IN ACTUALLY A POKER. GAME RELATE?. RIGHT. ALTHOUGH
maxim See 54A Jai follower? Mosaic piece Characteristic “Smoke Gets in Your Eyes” composer
63 Whiskey sprite 64 Moody displays 65 Inkling DOWN Shoulder wrap Actress Anouk
3 Spooked expression
4 Earth 5 Challenge twice Gay" 6 7 Virile 8 ABA member 9 Ewe's-milk cheese 10 Letters on Cardinals' caps 11 Expression of secrecy 12 Numbered musical piece 13 Golly! 19 Hungarian violinist 21 Tenth of MCXC 26 Antenna 28 In a bad way 29 Islands discovered by Tasman 30 -Ude, Russia 31 Writing "
implements
32 Interlock 33 Having the skill
34 Machine parts 35 Actress Sothern 38 Market protests 42 Successor of Ramses I 44 Terminates 45 Excretes 47 Make off with
48 Comic routine 50 Trap 51 Twin Cities suburb 52 Deeds 53 Panache 55 Via, for short 56 H.H. Munro 58 Caspian, e.g.
The Chronicle: Salute to Graduation They’re painting the grass: and covering the walkway stench: You’re trying to figure out the hood thing:
You’ve cleaned your room: You’re yelling at your parents: Pratik Be nice to them, they paid for this: ...Catherine, Adrienne, Creative Roily Say Hi to Rachel at Graduation. She’ll be there:
Zits/ Jerry Scott & Jim Borgman OUSTTHINKCfAUTHE MONEY WEVE vmwm&w RIfIN£SEBWF OOH£<S.
6»»T<*ni Rs**fA*N
HEY, COLLEGE SMOKERS!
Account Representatives:
Monica Franklin, Dawn Hall, Yu-Hsien Huang Account Assistants: Kathy Lin, Caroline Nichol, Stephanie Ogidan, Pauline Gave 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 Librot, Rachel Medlock, Jeremy Zaretzky Business Assistants: Veronica Puente-Duany, Preeti Garg, Ellen Mielke Classifieds Matthew Epley, Nicole Gorham, Richard Jones, Seth Strickland
.
V
Kate, Rich Greg, Jaime Hi, Norm! Neal, Brody
g
|
Good Luck and Best Wishes!
ALERT!
WANT TO EARN $25 IN ONE HOUR?
Due to the permanent closing of Wannamaker Drive and the Ocean (Edens A) parking lot on May 22, 2000...
Researchers at Duke University Medical Center are interested in getting college smokers’ opinions regardless of whether or not you want to quit! Please call 956-5644 for more information.
ALL cars must be removed from the Ocean & Wannamaker Dr, by 7:00 a.m. on Monday, May 22,2000.
-
ALL CARS THAT REMAIN IN THE OCEAN LOT & ON WANNAMAKER DR. AFTER THAT TIME WILL BE TOWED AT THE OWNER S EXPENSE. i
Please note that the Edens B and Edens C parking lots will remain open.
Thanks! Duke University Residential Program Review
•
www.duke.edu/web/rpr
FRIDAY, MAY 12, 2000
The Chronicle Commencement 2000 •
PAGE 23
The Chronicle
.
Classifieds
page 24 Spacious 2 bedroom apt. mini-
blinds included, hardwood floors, Quiet neighborhood-Grad students only, $625 per month, close to Duke East Campus, newly renovated, A/C, new ceiling fans. IBA, 6889121 10AM-6PM, Security deposit
Announcements Can you Tell a Cucumber from a Pickle? 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.
required.
SUMMER SUBLET. Fully furnished 2 bedroom luxury apartment. Private deck overlooks pool, on-site tennis courts, exercise facility, car wash. Pets ok. 10 minutes to Duke campus. 493-7281
Love Duke, Love Golf! 1/2 Price Great Gifts. Golf Prints.
VW Cabrio, 99, auto, dk green, LOADED, warr. only 5k mi, $18,500. 479-7168.
HONDA CIVIC ‘B9 LX SEDAN -4 DOORS
$2,750 Automatic, A/C radio cassette, 125,500 miles. Runs great, very reliable. New tires (2), battery, time-belt, radiator. Call 490-4446.
Who is selling a car before graduation under $700? Call 3097415.
Autos For Sale
www.Roxboro.net/Golfshot
Store Now, Pay Later! Clean your school clothing and store it at The Washtub, $5 00,
Www
PerfectCollegeCar.com.
Your parents never had it this
(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.
goodltl SAAB SPG 900 Turbo, 1989, 11 OK miles, alarm system, power windows/sunroof, alloy wheels, good tires, Bosch sound system. A/C, forest green paint, gray leather interior, sport model. $5,475. Call 4935992
Apts. For Rent Nice 2 bedroom. 1 and 1/2 bath duplex for rent. Close to Duke Deck, storage area, fenced yard. Available in May $750/month. Call 919-562-5255.
1996 Jeep Cherokee 4dr, 4wd, green, Sspeed, 47k, $14,000Negotiable, Power Locks/Windows, CD. (919)-401-9460.
FRIDAY, MAY 12,2000
Child care needed for 11 month-old boy in our SW Durham home. 3 3pm, days per week, 11:30am non-smoker. Need own transportation, references required. If you’re caring, reliable and interested, call 403-8256. -
After-school childcare 2 days/week & Wed) for our 8 year old. Must have dependable car, good driving record, references, and ability to meet our daughter's standards for personality. More than fair pay for 6-7 hr/week. Call Bill or Kathy or at 682-1180
(lues
CHILD CARE NEEDED
After school care in my home. Two children to be picked up from school. Com homework supervision. Hours to be approx. 3p.m. until 6 p m., sometimes until 7 p.m. Must have own transportation and references. Pease call after 7 p.m. 471 -8259. Monday, needed Babysitter Wednesday, and Friday Mornings.
Flexible hours. One child. $6.00/hour. Call Diana 403-1585. Part-time child care in my SW Durham home. Hours flexible. Experience with children, own transportation and references needed. No smokers. 489-6447.
Responsible person to care for 6 and 9 yr. old children in our home. Must have own car, non-smokers preferred. Child care needed for July and August, students encouraged to apply. 732-7252. Fall 2000 semester Baby sitter needed Mondays 11:30-3:30 for wonderful 2 y.o. girl. N/S. Contact ddchapin@aol.com or 493-1743. -
“Seeking reliable, nurturing persons to care for adorable 15 months old. Days flexible, 9:004:30. Near 9th St. References experience required. 416-1919.” +
Help Wanted We ship National
&
International
UPS-FedEx-USPS
for summer work? Interested in working on a Duke Research Study? Learn to do blood pressures. Call Kathy Aicher at 419-5847.
Looking
All your personal goodsBooks, Clothes, Stereo, Computers, Monitors, Printers, Scanners, Golf Clubs, Pictures, etc. [ Buy
BARTENDERS NEEDED!!!
Job placement priority. top 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. www.cock(919)676-0774. tailmixer.com c Earn $l5-30/hr. assistance is
Seeking Dance Instructor for Studio to teach Tap & Jazz classes. Call (252)492-4982 or email dancer@vance.net.
Summer assistant—Office of the Provost, provide clerical support and make deliveries. Must be physically fit for light lifting. Energetic, motivated & dependable. 15-20 hrs a week. Start ASAP. Call Pat Scott at 684.2631 or e-mail pat.scott@duke.edu.
Comprehensive science teacher sought for 2000/2001 school year at the Kantner School. A pre-collegiate Pre-K to 12 private independent school near Chapel Hill, Durham and Hillsborough, NC. Call 919-732-7200 for more information. lovers wanted!! Bug Entomology Specialist needed in insectarium and Butterfly house conservatory at the Museum. Responsibilities include daily maintenance, rearing and record keeping plus exhibit development for invertebrates, fish and frogs. A BS in Biology and/or related experience preferred. Must be able to work in high heat and humidity and work weekends and holidays as required. Knowledge or interest in arthropods a plus. Salary $B-9/hr plus excellent benefits. Send resume to; NC Museum of Life and Science, HR Dept., PO Box 15190, Durham, NC 27704. No Phone Calls. Student Assistant needed in the Office of the Sr, Vice President for Public Affairs starting Fall, 2000. To apply call 681-3788, or bring your resume to 211 Allen Bldg,
Afterschool tutor/childcare needed for our 3rd grade students in the afternoons. Please call 489-1900 Evenings, 660-2649 days. Come join our team! Full and Part-time Animal Keeper's needed. Care for over 60 different species of animals. HS or GED required, excellent physical condition, hardworking and loves animals. Weekend work required. $B-
excellent benefits.
-
Send
resume to: NC Museum of Life and Science, HR Dept., PO Box 15190, Durham, NC 27704. No Phone Calls. Also check out our job line for other employment opportunities.
(919)220-5429. Alliance Architecture, in downtown Durham is seeking an administrative assistant/messenger. Must have reliable transportation and be able to work M-F, 15-20 hours/week. Please fax resume to email 682-9665 or to becca@alliancearchitecture.com.
BARTENDERS make $l5O-S2OO per night. No experience necessary. Call 1-800-981-8168, ext 276.
the materials and pack it yourself, or leave It with us to pack and ship,
3b
Shop* at Northgata
Between Hard* Taetar and Boston Market 1720 Guess Rd. Hours; Mon Frl 10AM 6PM Sat 10AM 4PM Closad Sunday MC/VISA/DISCOVER/AMEX •
-
•
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Pack, Box Ship 286-9494 &
Tm Chronicle classified advertising rates
business rate $6.00 for first 15 words private party/N.R $4.50 for first 15 words all ads 10(5 (per day) additional per word 3 or 4 consecutive insertions -10 % off 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 (maximum 15 spaces) $2.50 for 2 line heading $2.00 extra per day for Boxed Ad deadline 1 business day prior to publication by 12:00 noon -
Every Saturday from Sam -12pm Historic Durham Athletic Park
Bun With The
ßulls We’re Batting 2000
NORTHGATE
BARBER SHOP
Bulls Baseball All Weekend! Fri.
5/12
Fireworks
-
-
-
-
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 e-mail to: classifieds@chronicle.duke.edu or mail to:
Full Service Style Shop Mon.-Fri. 8-5:30 Sat: 8:00-5:00
286-4030
Sat. 5/13
■Hi
Sun.
5/14
Mon.
5/15
-
ANGLE
jmZik Orthopaedic
gSEmm*.Associates, P.A,
Blue Cross Blue Shield of North Carolina
Northgate Shopping Center Durham
Blue Cross/Blue Shield of NC Batting Helmets (while supplies last)
-
'
Triangle Orthopaedic Day/Night Doubleheader Mother’s Day & Pepsi Autograph Sunday & Kids Run the Bases Marriott Monday Mixer
919.956.8ULL dlirhambullS.COm
For More Information:
near Harris Teeter
Or Visit Our Website:
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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 Call 684-3811 if you have any questions about classifieds. No refunds or cancellations after first insertion deadline.
SEEKING RESEARCH ASSISTANT 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. •
at
Not Just Paper
1010W. Main Street
(Near East Campus between Papa John’s & James Joyce)
•
Phoner 688-6886 Mon-Fri 8-6 Sat 9-4 FOAM PEANUTS BUBBLE WRAP •
TAPE
•
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FRIDAY, MAY 12, 2000
The Chronicle
Records Associate. Gift Responsible for the membership and communications functions as well as providing customer service to members and visitors. Non-profit database system (Blackbaud), Windows 95, MS Office, and bulk mail procedures required. Experience in processing receipts non-cash sales and Internet transactions. Ability to act as Museum’s representative with Full Public and members. Time/Excellent benefit package, Salary in the high teens, available immediately. Mail or fax cover letter and resume to: Museum of Life and Science, Attention: Human Resources PO Box 15190, 433 North Durham, Murray Ave Carolina 27704. FAX (919)2209639 or come by and fill out an application. NO PHONE CALLS PLEASE. Also check out our job line for other employment opportunities, (919)220-5429.
database
SUMMER JOBS BC INFO DESK
The Bryan Center Information Desk is now hiring for summer positions. Flexible day, evening, Great and weekend hours. atmosphere. Call 684-2323, or stop by Monday-Friday between 9am-spm and ask for Sue.
HIRING! Certified Aerobic, Yoga, and Weight Room instructors. Competitive pay with facility benefits. For more information call Chapel Hill-Carrboro YMCA at (919)942-5156.
Kickboxing
Needed: Student to work 20-30 hours per week assisting with the set up and delivery of computer equipment. Should be able to install and configure hardware components .and install software. Do basic level troubleshooting and assist users with software questions and problems. 'Must be familiar with Win9s, Win9B, Microsoft Office Programs. Rate: SB.OO/hr. Contact: Dan Saldana @ 684-3675. OFFICE MANAGER needed for a growing Durham Architectural Firm. Responsibilities include general administrative duties, as well as human resources, accounts receivable/payable assistance and assisting the two firm Principals. Experience in marketing/public relations helpful. Competitive salary and benefits, including a 401k Plan and profit sharing. Excellent potential for advancement. Please mail resume and references to Duda/Paine Architects, 905 West Main Street, Brightleaf Square, Durham, NC 27701, attention Mr. Jeffrey Paine. Summer Position at Fuqua School, GIBER. Must be resourceful, organized and computer literate Please call 660-7837.
Love kids? The Little Gym is hiring gymnastics instructors and/or birthday party leaders. Must be able to work weekends. Gobd pay, fun work. Gymnastics background helpful. University Drive, Durham,
403-5437.
Nita’s Hallmark Shop, Durham is seeking full and part-time, day sales associates Nice working atmosphere. Call Dianne 4893049
HAVE AN AMAZING SUMMER ADVENTURE! Prestigious coed camp in beautiful Massachusetts seeks caring, motivated college students & grads who love kids! & GENERAL SPECIALTY (Athletics, Tennis, Waterfront, Arts, Crafts, Theatre, Pioneer, Etc.) COUNSELORS needed. Join a dedicated, fun team. Competitive salaries+travel+room+board. Call Bob or Barbara at 1 -800-762-2820. 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 17thAugust 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 1-800-5620737,
PAGE 25 2712 Armfield Great 3 BR open contemp w/vltd clng, new kitchen & complete privacy on 1 4 ac wooded lot btwn Dur & Hillsborough. $140,900. Call Sudi at Peak, Swirles & Cavallito, 226-2083. -
Houses For Rent 1 BR. Bath. Available now. Walk to East Campus. 5350/month 419-1223 or 286-2285 &
2306 Monthaven. 3BR, 2BA 1860 Sq.Ft home in Willowhaven CC, 8 miles n/w of DUKE in Durham county $164,900 309-0814, hoffgang@juno.com
Executive home available 5/12/00 Five bedrooms. 3 bathrooms all appliances including washer and dryer 2600 sq ft $2OOO 00 per month. 1 year lease. Woodcroft area. Call 403-0722 or page 3104438.
Misc. For Sale
Modern five bedroom house (1.5 miles from West) with deck and garage available for one year lease. Call Bill McQutchen at 804-3279902.
FOR SALE
Houses For Sale
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
2306 Monthaven. 3BR, 2BA 1860 Sq.Ft home in Willowhaven CC, 8 miles n/w of DUKE in Durham county. $164,900. 309-0814, hoffgang@juno.com.
Law office furniture for sale Copy machine, secretaries desk with chair, 4 filing cabinets and other accessories. Call 620-0204.
FOR SALE Need to sell before graduation! 1 Full-size couch. (S80), 1 futon ($5O), 1 stereo with CD and dual tape deck ($5O). Prices negotiable Email swcs@duke edu
Personals Give the gift of life to an Indian couple, $2,000 reward Donate your eggs and join NCCRM fertility patients in the quest to build a family. Indian or Indian American preferable. For more into call (919)233-1680 or 1-800-933-
7202 ext 109 or www nccrm.com.
Neal, Vic, and Bullet Have fun on the streets, doing consulting work, and picking up ladies, respectively of course. I'll miss you all next year -Brody
MUST SELL
Mrs Morgan.. We can’t believe he’s graduating! Let us dance around Wally Wade.
WE'LL ERA COLLEGE If you’re stuck with a si in default, the Army m If you qualify, we’ll red to $65,000. Payment is debt or $1,500 for each whichever is greater. You’ll also have train in. of skills and enough se to last you the rest of y
Get all the details from Army Recruiter.
490-6671
ARMY. BE ALL YOU CAN BE! www.goarmycom
Do you? •
•
•
Love taking responsibility? Finding smart solutions? Thrilling your customers and coworkers with your results? Being an active part of the team? Possess the ability and desire to learn quickly?
If so, we need you as our Marketing Assistant!
Responsibilities include: •
• • •
Coordinate comprehensive public relations program, including media relations, internal/external communications, publications, event publicity & marketing Assist in developing annual marketing plan and budget Coordinate mall merchant support programs Coordinate placement of seasonal staff
Qualifications needed: Excellent oral and written communication skills Proficiency in Microsoft Word, Excel and PowerPoint • Web publishing skills • Proven organization and time management skills • Experience in customer relations • Bachelors degree in Marketing, Advertising or Communications required or equivalent job
•
•
experience necessary
Fax or e-mail resume, cover letter and salary expectations to:
diannec@northgateassociates.com (919) 286-3948
Roommate Wanted 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!! 1/3 UTILITIES—RENT IS $430 -493-4914 OR JMS3O@DUKE.EDU +
Services Offered DON’T RENT THAT TRUCK! Why drive when you don't have to?
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your belongings and fill the tank! We provide you with a trailer doorto-door and with the loading and unloading. Save money, time, and aggravation! Call MoveAmerica today and ask for you free mtving estimate: 1-888-701-0123 of email us at info@moveamerica.com or our website at visit
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FRIDAY, MAY 12, 2000
The Chronicle
PAGE 26 Translations, German into English, 317-1024.
Beautiful Deerfield apartment now available for sublet for both summer sessions, or longer. Spacious 2 BD, each with private bath, living room, porch (IOOOsq ft ), located in peaceful Duke Forest, close to west campus. $7OO/mo for the first three months including swimming pool, exercise room, tennis courts, laundry facility. Call 309-0281 or email cuw@duke.edu.
The Chronicle
Weekly Every Thursday May 18
May 25 June 1 Junes June 15
Summer sublet at The Forest starting third week in May until third week in August, fully furnished. Call Kate, 383-7340.
June 22
Beautiful Deerfield apartment now available for sublet for both sum-
Display Advertising Deadline
mer sessions, or longer. Spacious 2 BD, each with private bath, living room, porch (IOOOsq. ft ), located in peaceful Duke Forest, close to west campus. $7OO/mo for the first three months including swimming pool, exercise room, tennis courts, laundry facility. Call 309-0281 or email cuw@duke.edu.
Noon, each Monday :;|
before publication
w
•
Wm
Advertising Department 101 West Union Building Phone: 684-3811 Fax: 684-8295 •
Annual Send Home Issue Published: Wednesday, July 19 Display Advertising Deadline: Friday, June 30
You can earn money during the year while contributing to the future of medicine. We need healthy individuals to participate in medically supervised research studies to help evaluate new medications. YOU may be eligible. You have to meet certain criteria to qualify for a study, including our free medical exam and screening tests. See below for our current study opportunities.
Current Study Opportunities SILLY
#
f COMPENSATION
TIMELINE
> PEjUIPEMENTS
__
200
Up to $lOOO
Healthy, non-smoking males and females ages 18-45
Period One Check In Check Out
6/2 6/4 Out-Patient Visits: 6/5 & 6/6 Period Two Check Out Check In 6/30 7/2 Out-Patient Visits: 7/3 & 7/4
209
Up to $lOOO
214
Up to $l3OO
Healthy, females ages 45-60 Healthy, non-smoking males and females ages 18-85
PPDDEVELOPMENT
Call for dates and times Check In 5/19 6/2 6/16
Check Out
5/21 6/4 6/18 Out-Patient Visit: 6/26
Conducting clinical studies sirice 1983
The Chronicle Commencement 2000
FRIDAY, MAY 12, 2000
•
PAGE 27
READY FOR THE REACH YET? m. »
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Pergob Winter
Pergob Spring
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Blomquist Pavilion
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FRIDAY, MAY 12,2000
Commencement 2000
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Asiatic Iris Bridge
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Four 11” x 14” high definition color photographs of the Sarah R Duke Gardens are offered for the first time by the official Gardens’ photographer Ed Albrecht. He has captured the beloved pergola at the height of 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 ORDER FORM
No. Prints
Pergola Spring -
Pergola Winter -
Culberson Asiatic Arboretum the Iris Bridge arches gracefully over water with a colony of purple iris anchoring it to the land. In the quiet of the Blomquist Garden of Native Plants, the Pavilion offers a place to pause and survey a peaceful scene.
I hese photographs are ideal for birthday gifts, Mother’s Day, graduation or any occasion where
memorable pictures will provide pleasure for years to come. They are museum quality and independently tested to last over 60 years.
I he first photograph is priced at $45. Each additional photograph ordered at the same time is specially priced at $4O. With all four pictures you can bring the beauty of the Sarah P. Duke Gardens into any home. $45
First Print
Additional Prints Shipping/Handling Charges NC residents add 6% sales tax
40 $3
Blomquist
Total
$
Send order to: SPDG, Box 90341
}
Duke University Durham, NC 27708-0341
Iris Bridge °
Make check
to: Sarah R Duke
Gardens. Allow 4 weeks for delivery.
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(PLEASE PRINT)
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FRIDAY, MAY 12, 2000 1 THE CHRONICLE
GoHjcyiatuiaiituti Q'lcuiuciiel!
DUKE
PAGE 1
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THE CHRONICLE/FRIDAY, MAY 12, 2000
PAGE 2
#■
DUKE
FRIDAY, MAY 12, 2000/THE CHRONICLE
IfiaduateA.!
PAGE 3
Welcome Parents and Families of the Class of 2000 Along with the Chapel, Perkins Library and the Gardens, the Gothic Bookshop is a place not to be missed when you are on campus.
Graduation Weekend Hours Friday, May 12 8:30-6:00 Saturday, May 13 Sunday, May 14
10:00-5:00 11:00-3:00
Take Home a Duke Author! New titles by Duke authors published or soon to be published from July 1, 1999 through June 30, 2000 Aers, David
Faith, Ethics and Church: Writing in
Flanagan, Owen
England, 1360-1409
Medieval Literature and Historical Inquiry: Essays in Honour of Derek
Dreaming Souls: Sleep, Dreams, and
theEvolution ofMind From Slavery to Freedom: A History of
Franklin, John Hope
African Americans
Pearsall
My Life and an Era: The Autobiography
Why Parties?: The Origin and
Aldrich, John H.
of Buck Colbert Franklin
Transformation of Political Parties in Gaines,
Astrachan, Owen L. Ballard, Bruce Bamberger, William Behn, Robert Benz, Maudy Boatwright, Mary Taliaferro
Primate Anatomy: An Introduction Why Governments Waste Natural Resources: Policy Failures in Developing Countries A Computer Science Tapestr}’: Exploring Programming and Computer Science With C++
Garelick, Rhonda
Caspar, David Barry
Clay, Diskin Clotfelter, Charles T. (editor)
Closing: The Life and Death of an American Factory Rethinking Democratic Accountability
Hamilton, James
Empire
Hardt, Michael
Oh, Jackie Hadrian and the Cities of the Roman
Chief JusticeCornelius of Pakistan: An
Empire
Reading Renunciation: Asceticism and Scripture in Early Christianity Paradosis and Survival: Three Chapters in the History of Epicurean Philosophy Philanthropy and the Nonprofit Sector in
Dianotto, Roberto
de Lucca, Robert (editor)
Communities Giordano Bruno Cause, Principle
Coles, Romand
Davidson, Cathy N,
Hauerwas, Stanley
Herrup, Cynthia
Dirlik, Arif
Dorfman, Ariel
Dunlap,
Susan
J
Durden, Robert
English, Peter
and the 2nd Earl of Castlehaven The Logic ofEconomic Reform in
and
Counseling Depressed Women The Gray and theBlack: The Confederate Debate on Emancipation Rheumatic Fever in America and Britain A Biological, Epidemiological, and Medical History Corn in Clay Maize Paleoetbnobotany in Pre-Columbian Art Renaissance Transactions: Ariosto and Tasso
Humphreys, Margaret Cady, Edwin (editor)
Yellow Fever and the South Pebbles, Monochromes, and Other Modern, Poems, 1891-1916 (hardback) Pebbles, Monochromes, and Other Modern Poem, 1891-1916 (paperback) Suffering Divine Things: Theology As Church Practice
Cady, Edwin (editor) Hutter, Reinhard
Jameson, Fredric Judelson, Debra and Dell, Diane Kaplan, Alice
&
Business and
Life
Finucci, Valeria (editor)
Student
Flex Visa, MasterCard
&
Miller, Marlin A. Mitin, Vladimir Moi, Toril
Petroski, Henry Pierce-Baker, Charlotte Piot, Charles Price, Reynolds Quilligan, Maureen
Randall, Dale
BJ. (editor)
Radway, Janice
John
Roberts, J. Deotis
Rojstaczer, Stuart Ropp, Theodore Smith, D. Mcxxly Virgin, Lawrence
Vogel,
Steven
Local Histories/GlohalDesigns: Colonialily, Subaltern Knowledges, and Border Thinking Freud and the Bolsheviks: Psychoanalysis in Imperial Russia and the Soviet Union Quantum Heteroslructures: Microelectronics and Optoelectronics What Is a Woman?: And Other Essays The Book on the Bookshelf Surviving the Silence: Black Women s Stories of Rape Remotely Global: Village Modernity in West Africa
Blue Calhoun The Allegory ofFemale Authority: Christine De Pizan's Cite Des Dames The Language ofAllegory.- Defining the Genre Soliloquy of a Farmer's Wife: The Diary ofAnnie Elliott Perrin,
17 December 1917-31 December 1918 A Feeling for Books: The Book-OfThe-Month Club, Literary Taste, and Middle-Class Desire The Imperial Monetary System of Mughal India Africentric Christianity: A Theological Appraisal for Ministry Gone for Good: Tales of University Life After the GoldenAge War in the Modern World
John Introduction to Experimental NonlinearDynamics: A Case Study in Mechanical Vibration
Cats' Paws and Catapults: Mechanical Worlds ofNature and
People
booWho)3
some special orders,
American Express
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and New Testament
Mignolo, Walter
Wiliams, G. Walton Wilson, William
20% off All Hard Cover Books 10% off All Paperbacks Excludes already discounted books and
Dependent Rational Animals.- Why Human Beings Need the Virtues Drawing from Within: Unleashing
Apocryphal/Deuterocanonical Books
Richards,
The Women s Complete Wellness Book The Collaborator: The Trial Execution ofRobert Brasillacb Keyssar, Alex The Right to Vote: The Contested History ofDemocracy in the United States Kitschelt, Herbert; Ladd, Helen Continuity and Change in and Lange, Peter (editors) Contemporary Capitalism Krzyzewski, Mike Leading With the Heart: Coach K's Successful Strategiesfor Basketball,
-.
Your Creative Potential Women in Scripture: A Dictionary Named and Unnamed Women in the Hebrew Bible, the
Meyers, Carol
Brecht and Method
:
Eubanks, Mary
Meglin, Nick
Russia
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Unity Essays on Magic The Postcolonial Aura: Third World Criticism in the Age of GlobalCapitalism Postmodernism and China The Nanny and the Iceberg
Dirlik, Arif
Edward Said and the Religious Effects of Culture The Wisdom of the Cross: Essays in Honor ofJohn Howard Yoder A House in Gross Disorder- Sex, Law,
Hough, Jerry
Somethingfor the Boys: Musical Theater and Gay Culture Still Acting Gay. Male Homosexuality in Modern Drama Self/Power/Other: Political Theory and Dialogical Ethics The Oxford Book of Women’s Writing in the United States Place in Literature: Regions, Cultures,
Before Nietzsche
The Life of Richard Strauss Economic Engagements With Art The Blood of Guatemala: A History of Race and Nation Calculating Risks?: The Spatial and Political Dimensions ofHazardous Waste Policy Jameson Reader
Hart, William
a Changing America Clum, John
Nihilism
Goodwin, Cranford Grandin, Greg
Analysis With Letters and Speeches Clark, Elizabeth
Master-Slave Relations in Antigua
Gillespie, Michael Allen Gilliam, Bryan
Understanding Maclntyre
Braibanti, Ralph
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Violence The Music of the Inferno: A Novel
Macintyre, Alasdair
Plantation Collecting VisibleEvidence Exporting Environmentalism • U.S. Multinational Chemical Corporations in Brazil and Mexico Rising Stan Dandyism, Gender, and Performance in the Fin De Siecle Bondmen and Rebels: A Study of
Jane
Garcia-Johnson, Ronie
Japan
Ankel-Simons, Friderun Ascher, William
Lawrence, Bruce
Harbin and Manchuria: Place, Space, and Identity Shattering the Myth Islam Beyond
Runaway Slaves: Rebels on the
America Permitted and Prohibited Desires: Mothers, Comics, and Censorship in
Allison, Anne
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Duke University 684-3986 Upper Level Bryan Center •
OfMice and Bells Simulating Ecological and Evolutionary Systems in C Mail Orders Accepted: Gothic Bookshop Box 90851, Duke University
Durham, NC 27708 e-mail: gothic@informer.duke.edu
THE CHRONICLE/FRIDAY, MAY 12, 200 >0
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FRIDAY, MAY 12, 2000 /THE CHRONICLE
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The Wangle’s Premier Shopping and Dining Experience Across the Street Hatr Design Brlghtleaf 905 Restaurant
PAGE 5
SHIPMENT
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THE CHRONICLE/FRIDAY, MAY 12, 2000
FRIDAY, MAY 12, 2000 / THE CHRONICLE
Q'laducUe^!
PAGE 7
BAIN
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THE CHRONICLE/ FRIDAY, MAY 12, 200' >0
PAGES
9
DUKE
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FRIDAY, MAY 12, 2000 1 THE CHRONICLE
Global resources,
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THE CHRONICLE/FRIDAY, MAY 12,
DUKE
2000
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FR
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MAY 12, 2000 1THE CHRONICLE
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PAGE 11
Thri gives
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Q'laduat&i!
PAGE 13
Trilogy would like to congratulate the Duke Class of 2000 and welcome our new ROCKSTAR Trilogians. Robert Brauns Angel Coviello Daniel Davis Robin Guthrie Geoff Habicht Chris Lau Sean Murphy Elliot Rapp Luke Roush Erin Spahn Dan Sutera
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FRIDAY, MAY 12, 2000 1THE CHRONICLE
ituiaucUei!
PAGE 15
it! TULATIONS! whereto buy your iper outlet prices.
ng to go far.
205 W, MAIN ST. Carrboro 933-5544 •
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PASTA BELLA
Congratulations to the Class of 2000! UATION AY! 3:30 pm
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A Fresh Pasta Shoppe Ultimate Dining at a Fresh Pasta Restaurant •
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offers a variety of vegetarian, seafood, chicken, and beef dishes Menu
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Take Outs Welcome
286-6699
THE MARKET PLACE Restaurant at Erwin Square
•
Mon-Thurs 5:00-9:30pm Fri-Sat 5:00-10:00pm Closed Sunday •
Reservations still available for graduation weekend Only 10 minutes from Duke. 806-3112 361-3666 .
"Best Sandwiches in Durham"
First Union Plaza 2200 W. Main Street
•
Also serving soup, salads, desserts Serving Hours: Mon-Fri 11:00 8:00 pm Sat 11:30-3:30 pm -
(two blocks from East Campus)
Seniors/Parents! Get your official copy of
ONLV AVAILABLE HERE!
mdudefsHpping
©ukc ®mbersttp 2000 <§ratmation r
Share your memories with family ana friends Oder your copy TODAY! Call 660-1740. ,
.
and handling
Duke Recording Studios Featuring: Commencement Speaker
Elizabeth Dole
0044 Bryan Center Box 90846 y// <<< Durham, NC 27708 Phone: (919) 660-1740 Fax: (919) 660-1719 E-mail: swells@acpub.duke.edu
X S
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P' 'AGE 16
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THE CHRONICLE/FRIDAY, MAY 12, 200'•0
DUKE
FRIDAY, MAY 12, 2000 1THE CHRONICLE
'naducU&il
Air Force ROTC Commissioning Ceremony Eric D. Badger Jeffrey T. Barber Bernie E. Beigh Joone H. Choi Rebecca A. Coffman Michael R. Coriale Heather G. Dyches Nana Han Alexander L. Heyman Megan R. Huff Paul A. Lysko Corey M. Miller Richard D. Parry Johnathan P. Proctor Paul J. Sebold Daniel R. Silver Dennis C. Sumera Peter A. Weld
Ld
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These graduating leaders have AIMED HIGH and will become the United States Air Force’s newest Second Lieutenants. Everyone is invited to witness AFROTC Detachment 585’s finest become commissioned officers in the United States Air Force.
13 May 00, 1:00 PM, Washington Duke Inn For more
information about Air Force ROTC, contact Captain Straffin at 660-1869 or visit www.duke.edu/afrotc
jjA[
PAGE 17
CONGRATULATIONS Oi *oOC/C/ Duke Students, Employees, and Family Members
Save 20% on a
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M-F 9-6, Sat 9-5
M-Th 9-8, F-Sat 9-6
Northgate Mall
Graduation Weekend at
•the Freeman Center for Jewish Life
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An affiliate of Hillel: The Foundation for Jewish Campus Life
Friday, May 12
DUCK
GRADUATION SHABBAT SERVICES Reform and Conservative Minyanim 6:00 PM
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Saturday, May 13
FINE COLLEGIATE APPAREL
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MAIMONIDES CEREMONY In honor of graduating Jewish Medical Students 6:00 PM No reservations required All events take place at the Freeman Center
•
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Graduation Gifts Duke Sweatshirts, T-shirts, Shorts & Hats Kid’s Apparel Duke Alumni T-Shirts •
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THE CHRONICLE /FRIDAY, MAY 12, 2000
PAGE 18
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DUKE
9
FRIDAY, MAY 12, 2000 1 THE CHRONICLE
'naduat&i!
PAGE 19
Congratulations Christopher T. Shih We look forward to being a part of your future.
11 yf[H Investment Banking www.leggmason.com Member NYSE, Inc.
'kets nagement STUDIES An Interdisciplinary Certificate Program at Duke University
Congratulations! To Fall 1999 and Spring 2000 recipients of the Markets & Management Studies Certificate A reception honoring the Certificate Awardees will be held Sunday, May 14, 2000
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THE CHRONICLE/ FRIDAY, MAY 12, 200i >0
DUKE
m
'naduai&i!
FIFRIDAY, MAY 12, 2000 /THE CHRONICLE
PAGE 21
Congratulations Graduates!
Andersen Consulting is pleased to announce that the following Duke University graduates
The Medical Center Store wishes the graduating class of2ooo the very best in their futures.
have accepted positions with our organization Amy Berman Biological Anthropology and Anatomy
Carole Gardner Economics
Caroline Helwig Psychology
Min Lee
William Dzurko Biomedical Engineering
Erin Squires Economics
Victor Zhao Electrical Engineering
Sylvia Huang Economics
Sara Burchell Computer Science
Kerri Willa Biology
Randi Melton Economics
Danielle Coote Political Science
David Shi Biomedical Engineering
Caitlin Krause English
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History
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mMmdm After you graduate, stay connected to your Duke friends at DukeAlumni.com
Follow the links for up-to-date info on Alumni Club presidents and local events, Duke Magazine, Duke merchandise, and all the exciting services offered by the Duke Alumni Association. DukeAiumni.com hosts Websites for these groups: Friends spread out around the globe; Greek Organizations; Living Groups; Student Organizations; Alums of an Academic Major; Alums Working in the Same Industry; Or, create your personal homepagel
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PAGE 22
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'nadtud&i!
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THE CHRONICLE/FRIDAY, MAY 12, 2000
m
'naducU&i!
FRIDAY, MAY 12, 2000 1 THE CHRONICLE
jx Congratulations
\fu f
LOUIS SUDLER PRIZE IN THE CREATIVE AND PERFORMING ARTS Christopher James Dyer T’OO
Graduates!
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DALE B.J. RANDALLAWARD IN DRAMATIC LITERATURE Maria Francesca Fackler T’OO
ALEX COHEN AWARDS Imoh Ime Essien T’ol Talya Elise Klein T’o2
JOHN M.CLUM DISTINGUISHED DRAMA GRADUATE AWARD Carmen Ila Abrazado
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FILM &VIDEO PROGRAM UNDERGRADUATE FILMMAKER AWARD Benjamin Michael Epps T’OO
FILM &VIDEO PROGRAM GRADUATE FILMMAKER AWARD Radha Watsal
HAL KAMMERER MEMORIAL AWARD IN FILM AND VIDEO
MARY DUKE BIDDLE FOUNDATION VISUAL ART AWARD
Benjamin Michael Epps T’OO
VERNON G. PRATTAWARD Chetana Murthy T’OO
ANNE FLEXNER MEMORIAL AWARDS FOR CREATIVE WRITING Fiction: Jason Todd Wagner T OO
23
TOMMASO lACOVELLAAWARD FOR EXCELLENCE IN ACTING
Lauren Elizabeth Hutchinson T’OO
Leslie Suzanne Pritchard T’OO
Live Lobster Fresh Oysters Cherrystones Tuna Farm-Raised Catfish Mahi Mahi Salmon Grouper Rainbow Trout Shrimp Scallops Blue Crab •
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PAGE
MARY DUKE BIDDLE FOUNDATION SUMMER INTERNSHIP AWARDS Virginia Reagan Baydoun T’OO Alicia L. Carter T’OO Jordan A. Winokur T’ol Erin Chase Thayer T’ol
WILLIAM KLENZ PRIZE IN MUSIC COMPOSITION
Emily Raasch Gates T’OO Michael Vernon Cause T’OO Poetry: Melissa Anne Walker T ‘O3
HENRY SCHUMANN MUSIC PRIZE
ACADEMY OF AMERICAN POETS
David Plylar T’ol
UNIVERSITY AND COLLEGE PRIZE Allison Marie Gluvna T’OO
JULIA HARPER DAY AWARD FOR DOCUMENTARY STUDIES
Catherine
Hart (Kate) Waters T’OO
JULIAWRAY MEMORIAL DANCE AWARD
Marc Faris
LIONEL HAMPTON
JAZZ AWARDS
Dustin PizzoT’o3 Trygye Dolber E ‘O3 Benjamin Cook E’o3 Justin Desimone T’o3
ANNE MARIE PARSONS JAZZ AWARD
Carley Ann Petesch T’OO
Dustin Pizzo T’oo3
DANCE WRITING AWARD
JULIAWILKINSON MUELLER PRIZE FOR EXCELLENCE IN MUSIC Christopher James Dyer T’oo
Meredith Anne Young T’OO
DASHA EPSTEIN AWARD IN
PLAYWRITING Allison Marie Gluvna T’OO
REYNOLDS PRICE AWARD FOR
SCRIPTWRITING Shannon
Elizabeth Strickland T’OO
Sonwha Lee
T’oo
BASCOM HEADEN PALMER LITERARY PRIZE Keeley Cathleen Schell T’OO
THE CHRONICLE/FRIDAY, MAY 12, 2000
P''AGE 24
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FR DAY, MAY 12, 2000 /THE CHRONICLE
PAGE. 25
They drove their cars around the traffic circle backwards without wrecking them, they tunneled under East, painted the bridge and scaled the dome and now these seniors have completed the final, unofficial graduation requirement...
...they made their 2000 Senior ift. If you haven’t yet, it’s not too late!
Pledges and payments to
the senior
gift may be submitted through June 30, 2000 to The Senior
Gift, 2127 Campus Dr., Durham, NC 27708. Please call The Duke Annual Fund at 684-4419 for additional information. Donors will be
recognized
on a
plaque in the Alumni Lounge. (Donors listed at right made gifts by May 1.)
Daniel Richard Adrien Alexandra Lynn Akers Miles David Alexander Grant Rosser Allen Michael David Alpern Samuel Vincent Angiuoli
David Benjamin Arthur John Laurence Auerbach Townsend Woodward Bancroft Michael Clement Barone Michael James Baughman Caryn Melinda Bell Elizabeth Ann Bell
Andrew James Hamilton Bentley Slefanie Leigh Berman Susan Nicole Bernstein Kristen Harris Best Robert Frederick Bierig Katrin Patrizia Binzel Valerie Lauren Blechar Angela Christine Bohn Kelly Elizabeth Booth Christine Elizabeth
Borasky Christopher David Brandt Pauletta Jean Brown Whitney J. Brown Christine Ann Brusato
Andrea J. Bullock Sara Jocelyn Burchell Thomas Arnold Antoine Seller Burns lan Nicholas Butler-Hall Melissa L. Carder Thomas Willis Carrulh Crystal Nicole Carter Nicole Marie Charlebois Edgar Mahan Cheely 111 Cory Keryei Chen Daveen Chopra Aimee Byonghee Chung Tameta Rosette Clark Martha Holly Cooper Tachea Renee Corbett Matthew Allen Cornwell Brandon Ray Cox Kathryn Sympson
Crutcher Sarah Elizabeth Dean Adam Walter Decker Janet Devor Deland Denise Margaret Dietz Janies F. Donnelly, IV Courtney Ruth Drake William Edward Dzurko Elisabeth Chafee Emory Mehmet Eren Ergin Paul Revere Ervin, 111 Brett Preston Ethridge Eugene Chan Farng Susanna Claire Fawthrop Michael Stuart Ferrell Victoria Anne Fisher
Jamie Margaret Fleming Alexandra Denise Floyd
James Song Floyd Kari Margaret Forde-Anderson Jennifer LeAnne Forte Janice Ann Forlman Jessica Marcella Franklin Andrew Clayton Fritsch Adam Daniel Canz Marcos Francisco Garcia Pauline Charlotte Gave Helena Lois Gerhardt Fasion Boineau Gibson
Jason J. Gonzales Eric Seth Gordon Nicole Patricia Grannis Elizabeth Mary Grant Kelly Erin Grant Lindley Anne Green Nancy Hobbie Grinstead Krishna Venkata Gumidyala Robin Elizabeth Guthrie Emin Mehmet Guvenc Katherine Cannon Haley Kathleen Elizabeth Ham Micole Kathryn
Hamburger Adil Haq Julian Joseph Harris Renee Caroline Hasten Christine Marie Hayes Julie Lynn Hendrix Jonathan David Hess Alexander L. Heyman Jeffrey Michael Hindman Lara Anne Hirsh Marion Drum Holder Elizabeth Anne Holdsworth Lauren Nicole Hollingsworth Brian David Horvath Eugene Hsu Caroline Yingwen Hu Yih Huang
Daniel Robert Huber Kirsten Lee Hultquisl Mrs. Melissa Marie
Iversen-Hales Sasha Dae Jackowich Christopher Randall Jordan John Patrick Judd Michael Gerald Kamas Margaret Murphy Kane Megan Lynn Kavanaugh Michelle Lynne Katz Julia Elizabeth Keith Nancy Pierce Kennedy
Sherrill Lyles Kester John Christian Kelner Christina F. Kim Dana Elizabeth King Beth Amy Kirshenbaum Jacquelyn June Labowski Rebecca Christine Lageman
Sarah Jane Lagier Alessandro Domenico Lancia Charles Joseph Lane Hoang Van Lam
Gretchen Anne Phillips Matthew Ronald Pittman Heather Ann Posnanski Brian David PuUin Amrith Venkat Ram
Jennifer Lynn Lasher Kate Richardson Lawrence
Elliot James Rapp Susannah Jane Rast Brooke Alison Reilly Dana Michele Rhule Tara Lauren Riedley
Kelly Ann Lawrence Brian Edward Leach Barry Norwood Lee 11a-Jung Lee Sonwha Lee Amie Patricia Lehman Brian Matthew Leu Erika Nicole Lindgren Stuart Drayton Louie
Enuly Elizabeth Lukas Erik Bowden Lundgren Sabrina A Luo Lauren Kathleen MacWilliams Kristin Katherine Druse Manleufiel Kevin Patrick Marchetli Biliana Zdravkova
Marlcheva Colleen Ann Maurer William Carson
Maynard, IV Christine Keats McCarthy Francis Gant McCloud Brooke Ayer McFerran Lucas Moore McKeon Tonya Rae Mead Kara Medoff Mark Aaron Michael Gladys Lanier Mitchell
Heather Hillary Morris Katherine Lane Murphy Kadzi Nhamburo Mulizwa .Anil Sathia Nathan James Richard Nelson Charles Lawrence Newman Brooke Adrienne Nixon
Jeremiah 0.
Norton
Harold Reed Ogrosky Esther Sebum Oh Jason Lawrence O’Meara Victor Jan Orlikowski Sara Rebekah Osterling Christine Marie
Paczkowski Sebastian Carlos Palazio Laura Elizabeth Panaltoni Reena Harshad Pandya Kesliini Chunilal Parbhu Helicia Gabrielle Paz Erica Z. Pearson Niels Christian
Peetz-Larsen Sarah Elizabeth Peifer Peter Pliillip Pellegrino Kimberly Ann Petersen Emily Erin Parry Peterson
Thomas Walker Robinson
Adam Rosenblatt Keren Malka Rosenzweig Lukas Miller Roush Douglass McDonald Ruth Daniel Carl Schiffner Adam Richard Schimel
Jessica C. Schlenoff Lauren V. Schnabel Carisa Ilene Schneider Craig Daniel Schubert Hannah Abigail Scoville
EUzabeth Mary Scully Paul Joseph Sebold Amit Kantilal Shah Stephen Warren Shapiro Jason Michael Shepherd Alexis Danielle Sherwin Robert Liggett Shibley Melanie Simone Shirley Catherine Emily Signorile Daniel Robert Silver Edward Bardin Simmons,
JR
Lisa Ann Smith Robin Rebecca Smith Shannon Lee Smith Rudolph Arturo Spaulding Erin Michele Squires June Suparatana Srisethnil Kelly Christine Slets
Shannon Elizabeth Strickland
Jessica Loren Stumpfel
Heather Williamson Swagarl John Anthony Swalina Jinho Danielle Tackes Michelle Mary Tajirian Matthew Allen Todd Andrew Paul Tojek Edward Le Marchant
TrafTord Kelly Marie Trainor Gabriel Ernesto
Tsuboyama Paul Heschel Tzur Justin Lu Van Buren Richard Stockton Vandermass Jason Scott Veloso Jessica Erin Vick Christina Yvette Wallace Kathryn Anne Walters Catherine Hart Waters Matthew David Weiss Peter Alexander Weld Mary EUzabeth West Tristan Paul While Maranda Kale Whilener
Andrea Lynn Wigodsky Hayley Noel Wilkinson Kerri Beth WiUa Colin Traian WiUiams Camille June Wilson Heather Winslow AUson Jane Witte Benjamin Kai Pan Woo JilUan Marie Woodruff Katherine Jenny Worboys Willis Yu-Lin Wu
John Richard YanukUs Carla Wray Yarger Valerie AUnka Zanchettin Lisa E. Zeidner
PAGE 26
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DUKE
FRIDAY, MAY 12, 2000 1 THE CHRONICLE
duateA!
Through Graduation Weekend Traveling Exhibition
THE RUNNING STAS: IMAGES OF ISRAEL IN POSTAGE STAMP ART At
The Freeman Center for Jewish Life
V
PAGE 27
>7,' How crazy do you have to be to volunteer during your last semester at Duke? A BIG THANK YOU
Our thanks to the Dukc-Semans Fine Arts Foundation for their generous support, and to the
Rosenzweig Museum and North Carolina Jewish Heritage Foundation for kindly lending the exhibit. #919-684-6422 1415 Faber Street Corner of Campus Drive and Swift Avenue
these seniors for being just crazy enough to volunteer their time and energy to make the Senior Gift and Senior Week 2000 unprecedented successes. Congratulations and best of luck to you all.
to
Jason Bailey Townsend Bancroft
s .
-
Mip/J
in
\J. Store level â&#x20AC;&#x2122;C-
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Friday, May-12 Saturday, May 13 9:ooam 4:3opm -
-
Azim Barodawala Dhamian Blue Kelly Booker Keat Crown Moulin Desai Marc Di lorio Justin Fairfax Adrian Felix Kristy Gonowon Katherine Haley Lara Hirsh Meredith Irish Nancy Kennedy Bob Koch Shelly Lambert David Margoiis Linnea Miron Jeremiah Norton Alexa Panagoulis Helicia Paz Luke Roush Lauren Schnabel Carisa Schneider John Snyder Rudy Spaulding Randy Starr Carolyn Struthers MattWeiss
LEAVE VOUIt
THE CHRONICLE/FRIDAY, MAY 12, 2000
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'najAuai&i!
Congratu lati ons Class of 2000!
PAGE
29
Cong rat u lat ions.
You
MADE
IT.
While yoWrz visiting the gardens/ visit:
Located
the pergola on the terraces of the Sarah P Duke Gardens. Open Commencement Weekend Friday and Saturday near
9:00 a.m.
-
5:00 p.m.
Sunday
1:00
p.m.
-
Telephone: Department
of Duke
INTERNATIONAL
5:00 p.m.
684-9037
In Chapel Hill on Hwy 54 just off 1-40 / 919 493-6311
University Stores® 00-0551
New Lunch & Dinner Platters World’s Greatest Hamburgers With Most Beautiful Fixin's Bar
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THE CHRONICLE/FRIDAY, MAY 12, 2000
PAGE 30
Hi
DUKE
'naJUcai&i!
FRIDAY, MAY 12, 2000 1 THE CHRONICLE
CONGRATULATIONS!
PAGE
CONGRATULATIONS!
ALPHA KAPPA DELTA International Sociology Honor Society
SPRING 2000 INDUCTEES
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Amy Lynne Alexander Rachel Judith Chait All Muhammad Curtis Isis Maat-tet Dallis jodi Gayle Flecker Jana Leigh Gasn Bryn Gareth Gostin Kelly Ann Goldsmith Lars Erik Johnson Michael David Lauer Martha Smith McMahon Amanda Marie Ross Lesley Jill Rudolph Valarie )o Samulski Adrienne Naomi Schneier Sima Diane Sistani
Sociology Majors Graduating Spring 2000 Best of luck with your future endeavors! A reception honoring the awardees will be held Sunday, May 14,2000 12:00 Noon 2:30 pm in the Sociology Department -
Sociology Faculty
&
Staff
to*
rfptcazrtr/4rtt&Uca*t Studies 'Ptoynam 2000 tfaadcuUctty *7Jt<&fon& cutd 7ftuton& &
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Douglas Joseph Brown
Jersino Jean-Mary
Gladys Lanier Mitchell
Keva Wontoria Collier
Mara Michael Jebsen
Julia Elizabeth Mitchell
Tachea Renee Corbett
Johnny Franklin Jones, 111
Lance Eric Philadelphia
Jeremy Mba Ebie
Kevin Duquion Brendell Lewis
Carmelita Nicole Price
Sura Ullah Sa-Laam Edmond
Aaliyah Nadirah Madyun
Damani C. Sims
Samantha Deon Farlow
Kelly Alicia Malcom
Anya Felice Sostek
Thembi Dalila Finch
Simone Michelle Manigo
Kimberly Camille Sue-Ling
Benjamin Jason Hanauer
Andrea Danielle Martin
Bridgette Nicole Thornton
Stephanie Marie Harris
Nikova Rashida Mason
Jache L. Williams
Alcide Leroy Honore
Kimberly Yvette McCrae
Keirston Rhanel Woods
31
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THE CHRONICLE /FRIDAY, MAY 12, 2000
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FRIDAY, MAY 12, 2000 1THE CHRONICLE
Graduation Mass to
honor the
Class of 2000 & recipients of Graduate Degrees
CONGRATULATIONS Computer Science Majors!
All are welcome
Saturday, May 13 6:30 pm East Campus
I
•
There will be no scheduled Catholic Masses on campus during the summer. Our regular Masses will resume the weekend of August 27-
m
Father Joe Vetter
6844882
joev@duke.edu
mms liiiliil '
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Joanna Walsh, FCJ 684-3354 sr.Joanna@duke.edu ,
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Low Student, Teacher & Youth Airfares International Student, Teacher & Youth ID Eurail & Britrail Passes Work & Study Abroad Programs
•
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Adventure Tours Budget Accommodations Travel Guide Books & Gear
''l mS i ill I ill lilli 8111 :
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Baldwin Auditorium
Sister
PAGE 35
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Michael Abernethy, Jr. Christopher Adams Peter Avenarius Brian Bank Ralph Bodenner, IV Christopher Brandt Robert Brauns Ryan Braunstein Douglas Brown William Bryant Bara Burchell Matthew Cannata Edward Caughey Ha in Chang Arnab Chaudhuri Alice Chen Alexander Chrisman Allison Connolly Angelique Coviello Michael Dean
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Christopher Dyer Jennifer Edwards Daniel Fowlkes John Fries Ralf Haring Shawn Hutchinson Eric Isenman John Kime Carleton Kingsford Seth Kirshenbaum Cameron Lampley Michael Lee benjamin Link Iris Liu Sryan Looper Sabrina Luo Sret McMillan Pavid McMillan Robert McWaters Andrew Michael
Corey Miller William Milliken, 111 Benjamin Morcos Stewart Noe Roger Obando Victor Orlikowski Sol Oster-Katz Ashis Patnaik Nathan Poliak Lenore Ramm Scott Roh Matthew Rosen Steven Ruby Peter Smith Michael Strauss
Jessica Stumpfel Paniel Sutera Heather Swagart Sryan Tig he Mark Vikner ■
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THE CHRONICLE/FRIDAY, MAY 12, 2000
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FRIDAY, MAY 12, 2000/THECHRONICLE
PAGE
39
1
50% diploma ('em se/eclfavmebj i
X.
CARVING TREE GALLERY Noithgate Mall Durham 416-9775 •
•
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DEPARTMENT OF ROMANCE STUDIES SALUTES THE FOLLOWING GRADUATES OF 2000:
\
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Rick
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10-500 People Whole Pigs • Heavy Hors d'oeuvres Breakfast Lunch Specials Sandwich Platters Vegetable and Fruit Displays Available All Day! Graduation, Weddings Business Meetings •
•
and it's always fresh!
j
French Majors/Minors Jean Arkedis, Isis Artze, Christopher Bennett, Katrin Binzel, Monique Blanco, James Boyda, Emily Bramowitz, Evan Briggs, Pauletta Brown, George Brown, Maya Corneille, Julian Cotter, Megan Cronin, Nia Davis, Courtney Drake, Carrie Dvoranchik, Dana Ehrlich, Olivia Ellis, Justin Fairfax, Merritt Fajt, Susanna Fawthrop, Christopher Finley, Victoria Fisher, Gabrielle Gerelle, Dixie Gill, Aliza Goldman, Nicole Grannis, Lindley Green, Frances Gres, Vanina Guerrero, Benjamin Hutz, Jersino Jean-Mary, Matthew Kovalick, Jorie Lagerway, Kristina Lewis, Tracy Liang, Erika Lindgren, Margaret Lynch, Edward Miller, Reena Pandya, Christine Ragusa, Dana Rhule, Abby Richardson, Michael Roger, Stephanie Rogers, Joanna Sattin, Ana Maria Sauer Basagoiti, Jaunique Sealey, Charlotte Shivers, Catherine Signorile, Jennifer Sills, Olga Sooudi, Erin Spahn, Carolyn Struthers, Brooke Szostak, Kelly Trainor, Michael Vassilaros, Julia Viner, Yuri Waldo, Victoria Wigodzky, Amber Williams, Ann Williams, Elizabeth Woffington Italian Majors/Minors Rebecca Coffman, Erin Coomer, Alexis Gantsoudes, Emily Trueblood, Valerie Zanchettin
4015 University Drive
•
Durham
BB&T Plaza behind South Square
•
419-0907
poled susan monaco bisouZ
Spanish Majors/Minors Alexandra Akers, Justin Alston, Katherine Andino, Catherine Arenson, Tawney Baines, Jessica Beattie, Jessica Bell, David Benda, Kirsten Best, Kim Best, Julie Bradley, Earl Brown, Sara Burchell, Steven Burke, Crystal Carter, William Case, Jodi Citrin, Elyana Cohen, Timothy Coyle, Kathryn Crutcher, Marisa Donnelly, Andrew Elliston, Megan Ford, Karen Freeman, Marcia Gomez, Monica Gonzalez, Shelby Granowitz, Marybeth Gregorski, Kathryn Griffin, Bernadette Hall, Margaret Hendrickson, Lara Hirsh, Ana Holmes, Pamela Homiak, Elaine Horn, Janice Horvath, Brent Johnson, Julie Johnson, Michele Kalme, Jason Karam, Erin Kelley, Michelle Khan, Chloe Ki email, Bradley Kimmel, Zachary Klughaupt, Michael Krieger, Rebecca Lageman, Gregory Lane, Ricardo Martello, William Maynard, Tiffany McConnell, Brooke McFerran, David McMillan, Demetri Merianos, Sarah Miller, Linnea Miron, Robert Moore, Mary Moore, Lisa Myers, Valerie Nahmad, Matthew Navidomskis, Wesley Nichols, Meghan O’Meara, Patrick Oppman, Evan Osborn, Lama Panattoni, Joia Pardo, Keith Paxton, Barrett Peterson, Karla Pita-Loor, Laura Podolsky, Jessica Powell, Cara Power, Marc Regenbaum, Bobbi Rubin, Melanie Rubinsohn, Jami Saltiel, Jamie Satnick, Joanna Sattin, Susan Schell, Elizabeth Scully, Manisha Shanbhag, Terence Sharma, Ingrid Sheriff, Melanie Shirley, Elizabeth Silver, Nicola Smith, Rudolph Spaulding, Rebecca Strassberg, Lora Taylor, Lynley Walker, Matthew Weiss, Robin Wheeler, Lindsey Willison, Jillian Woodruff, Alethia Young
PLEASE JOIN US FOR A RECEPTION HONORING OUR GRADUATES FROM 12:00 2:00 PM SUNDAY, MAY 14, 2000 PERKINS LIBRARY COURTYARD -
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Congratulations Seniors! Secondary School Elementa School Tara Brown Joshua Berger Maya Corneille Christine Billington Atefia Ebrahimji Anne Bonner Crossman Karen Freeman Lisa Fajgenbaum Joyce Lee Brandi Flannery Marybeth Gregorski Christine Lukasiewicz Renee Haston Jennifer Robb Meridith Jucovics Christine Yoo Norma Kellogg Tricia Martin Heather Morris Earl Childhood Education Studies Ebony Bryant Cara Power Kathryn Regan Diane Fogarty VaShondra Richmond Gabrielle Gerelle Lesley Rudolph Amy R. Jones Megumi Naito Susan Schell Paige Sitterson Emily Erin Peterson Jessica Vick Laurie Sapperstein Amber Williams
2000 Winfred uinton Holton Prize Winners LaKeisha Riley & Kim S Joyce Lee Julia Mitchell Samantha Murray Laurie Sapperstein
Program in Education
CONGRATULATIONS CULTURAL ANTHROPOLOGY 2000 GRADUATES Doctor of Philosophy Tracy Lynn Brown Ya-Chung Chuang
Jennifer Lynn Hirsch Masamichi Sebastian Inoue Sylvia Lim
Master of Arts Nichole Green
Lisa Kay Neuman
Kirsten Harris Best David Todd Bolno Adam Henry Bund Min Soo Christopher Chung Eric Walker Clark Tanya Denise Copeland Nia Malika Davis Matthew Vincent Diglio Elisabeth Chafee Emory Olivia Jane Ellis
William Francis Gerba Kathryn McCabe Griffin Lara Anne Hirsh Hanan Ahmed Javaid Suneeta Jan Kaimal Lesley Ann Lovell Scottie Austin Montgomery Brooke Adrienne Nixon Karla Isabel Pita-Loor Stacy Alicia Rusnak Christopher Robin Verigan
Major
Second Major Amanda Beth Feldon Daniel Guy Fowlkes
Maryetta Thrift Owens Katherine Reid Stroup
Minor
Hillary Berliner Elyana Ruth Cohen Jason Russell Crane Heather Lyndsay Fowler
Michelle Giraldo Elliott Lee Hazen Amie Patricia Lehman Iris Liu
Rachel Ann Medlock Elizabeth Kathlyn Nicula Jennifer Evelyn Ryan Harmony Rose Salzler Promise Rebekah Terrell Yayra Akosua Tuprah Kathryn Anne Walters Neal Mo Yang
Sponsoredby Duke University Stores
*
P''AGE
THE CHRONICLE/FRIDAY, MAY 12, 2000
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PAGE 47
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All Others
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A reception honoring the awardees will be held Sunday, May 14 from 2:00-3:00 pm at 2101 Campus Drive. Please join us. For more information, call 684-4309.
PAGE 48
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Restaurant “Specializing in Italian Cuisine 7
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SUBSCRIBE TOBAY
Division of Earth and Ocean Sciences Nicholas School of the Environment
Keep in touch with Duke News, Sports, Opinion...
Congratulations Graduating Class of 2000 Carolyn Barber Kevin Kuzma Jaime Palter
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Karen Hauptly James B. McGuire Jason Wilkinson
Special Congratulations
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A reception and diploma distribution honoring the awardees will be held Sunday, May 14 at noon Between the Old Chemistry and Foreign Language Buildings Please join us. For further information, call 684-5847
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PAGE 56
THE CHRONICLE /FRIDAY, MAY 12, 2000
CONGRATULATION^ GLASS OF 2000 adcilttcm to ouw be&t wiaAe&j /i/ea6& ui/c w4e to tUawl /
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Special Store Hours for Graduation Weekend Friday, May 12 and Saturday, May 13 8:30 a.m.
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6:00 p.m.
University
Sunday, May 14 10 a.m.
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Upper Level, Bryan Center 684-2344 VISA, MasterCard, American Express, Discover, Personal Checks, FLEX, IRIs •
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