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The men's golf team won its first tournament of the year and the last of its fall season at the
Nelson Invitational See page 3
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Men make a run for it, win ACCs
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By THOMAS STEINBERGER The Chronicle
You've got to have skills to hit the court with the Duke Bailers. THAD PARSONS/THE CHRONICLE
By ELIZABETH BROWN The Chronicle
THE DUKE BAILERS, a group of about 30 basketball fans who gather for pick-up games every chance they get, show off their skills at the Wilson Recreation Center
Sneaker squealing and trash the gym draws a crowd to play a talking. Wall slamming and little full-court, full-body-contact leather pounding. This is not just basketball. What you may not playing around. know is that you’re probably Stop by the Wilson Recreation watching Duke Bailers in action. Center on any weekday afternoon The Duke Bailers are a group of basketball aficionados who and you’ll see that amateur basketball is not just for the athletimeet for pick-up games every cally challenged. Almost every day, chance they get. United by an e-
mail list, they stay updated on scrimmage opportunities. “We used to play every Saturday at 11 because it’s the best way to get rid of a hangover,” said senior Bill Rozakis. “But now the weekends have died down a little bit.” See BALLERS on page 16 'P-
After 23 years of coming up short, the cross country team ran its best race of the year Saturday at the ACC Championships. An experienced Blue Devils squad, led by junior Sean Kelly, avenged second-place finishes the past two years and led Duke to its first ACC title since 1977. “We haven’t been around for that long, but it means a ton to our team because N.C. State was so much better than us the past couple years,” Kelly said. ‘To come from a big loss to a resounding win this year, it’s awesome.” The race was especially sweet for Kelly, who capped a strong team performance by winning the individual title. “He always listens and he’s really learned from his mistakes,” senior Terry Brennan said. T don’t think it could have unfolded any better.” Kelly’s victory did not come easy, as he ran even with Brennan and Virginia’s Bob Thiele before breaking away in the last 300 meters to nip Thiele by less than two seconds. “Sean made a big move on the last hill and that was basically the difference in the race,” Brennan said. See ACC CHAMPIONSHIP on page 11, SPORTSWRAP
County hopefuls Itemslehl scolds media, political system gear
for race un Ml By MATT ATWOOD The Chronicle
When Durham County voters travel to the polls next week, they will cast their vote not only for a presidential candidate, but also for five positions that lie a bit closer to home: the Durham County commissioners. The commissioners, the highest authority in Durham County, are responsible for determining county policy and planning for the county’s future. They set the budget and tax rate each year, oversee and appoint officials to other branches of the county government and adopt county ordinances. Almost all this year’s candidates have focused lei on dealing with the county’s expanding population by attracting businesses ■* and other nonresidentiai Swore & Local development to balance the tax base, improving public education and reducing crime. The commissioners will also deal with property revaluation for the first time since 1992. Property values are expected to have increased over the last eight years, which will increase the average homeowner’s actual property taxes, if not the tax rate. The county is also planning a long-term capital improvement program that could bring a new courthouse, libraries, schools and other facilities but comes with a price tag of $522 million. In June, commissioners approved a working version of the plan, which could raise property tax rates by five cents or more starting in 2002. Nine candidates are running to fill the five spots on the county commission. Each commissioner serves two-year terms, and all five go up for re-election every even-numbered year. Of the five incumbents, four are seeking re-election: Chair MaryAnn Black, Vice Chair Ellen Reekhow, Joe Bowser and Becky Heron—all Democrats. See COMMISSIONERS on page 5
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scandal with fellow Wa Post reporter Bob Woodwa. 1972, Carl Bernstein has become a popular media pundit in the political commentary circuit. Yet before a Page Auditorium audience full of students and parents Saturday,
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Bernstein slammed the two realms iiK/' within which he has spent most of —mm his life—media and politics. “Something’s not working both in our media and in our political system,” Bernstein said. “To use the psychobabble of the day, they’re both dysfunctional.” The media has become “bastardized,” he said, and has forgotten the tenets of good journalism. “We in the media are losing W sight of the ideal of the best attain- f able version of the truth and are increasingly seeing the domination of [coverage] that has less to do with truth or context,” he said. Bernstein recounted that on the day real estate developer Donald Trump’s involvement with Marla Maples became public, newspapers chose to run the story with more prominence than the Nelson Mandela’s return Rom CARL BERNSTEIN, of Watergate fame, spoke at Duke Saturday. He attacked the political prison and the agreement to reunisystem and the media, which he accused of propagating an “Idiot Culture" of ignorance. fy Germany, both of which occurred that day. Bernstein said. “For the first time, “On the first edition of Prime Bernstein named media king Rupert Murdoch’s New York Post, radio the weird and the stupid and the Time Live, the heralded newsmagazine with Diane Sawyer,” personality Howard Stern and the loud and the coarse are becoming Bernstein said, “Diane did not go TV show The McLaughlin Group, our cultural norm, and even our to the Berlin Wall. Diane did not which he deemed the “pantheon of cultural ideal.” Bernstein also condemned the go to Johannesburg. Diane went Idiot Culture.” our cash-saturated political system, Marla “Instead of readchallenging of apartment to the Maples. That is the triumph of ers, we give them what we think which he said has become “corruptthey want without giving the best ed, corroded —almost completely Idiot Culture.” version of the truth,” attainable Sec BERNSTEIN on page 17 this triumph, As guilty parties in .
Meet the County Commission candidates, page 4 � A road trip on the info
superhighway, page
6
The Chronicle
Newsfile
World
page 2
•
pose sanctions against Sinn Fein, the IRA’s political wing, unless the IRA
takes concrete steps to surrendering weapons.
Renewed clashes break out on the West Bank Israeli troops drove back Palestinian stone throwers with rubber-coated bullets and tear gas at many trouble spots in the West Bank and Gaza Strip, wounding more than 50 Palestinian civilians.
Indonesian anger rises as gap with U.S. widens Relations between the United States and Indonesia have deteriorated after many disputes between the U.S. ambassador and Indonesian officials who said the United States was meddling.
Political change in Ivory Coast leads to killing The cries of elation at the overthrow of Ivory Coast’s military junta in a popular
Crippled Cole begins journey from Yemen Sailors aboard the USS Cole stood at attention as the battered destroyer glided out of Aden port, towed by tugboats to a Norwegian heavy-lift ship that will take it home to repair the gaping hole in its side.
into chaos.
Weather TODAY: SUNNY High: 65 Low: 36
TOMORROW:
CLOUDY --
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High: 74 Low: 46
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“Roads? Where we’re going we don’t need roads.” “Back to the Future”
MONDAY, OCTOBER 30, 2000
Gore spends weekend vigorously campaigning to ensure minority vote
uprising had barely begun when 55 bodies were found dumped in a pile, allegedly killed by the paramilitary police.
President succeeds military leader in Peru Peru’s top three military commanders resigned after rumors they might be plotting a coup to restore the ousted spy chief, a figure whose dismissal sent the nation
National
Bush, Gore prepare for final week
FROM WIRE REPORTS
Unionists issue final deadline to IRA The Northern Irish peace process faced another crisis as Ulster Unionists voted to im-
&
By SANDRA SOBIERAJ Associated Press
she said before boarding a bus caravan with the vice president,
While the MACOMB, Mich. Republican side mostly rested Sunday, Vice President A1 Gore and Sen. Joseph Lieberman, D.-Conn., blanketed TV talk shows, rocked Detroit’s black churches and motored
running mate Lieberman and his wife Hadassah. At home in Austin, Texas, Gov. George W. Bush interrupted his day off to address California Latino supporters by satellite. He pre-
through Michigan with a blunt homestretch message: “George Bush is not ready to be president of the United States.” Tipper Gore appealed to those who don’t see her husband’s personal appeal, telling Macomb County’s swing voters the presidential election is not ‘The Dating Game.” “You don’t have to fall in love with A1 Gore—l already did that,”
dicted he’ll beat Gore there because he is working to earn every vote while Gore, who will make a late dash to California Tuesday, has taken its 54 electoral-vote grand prize for granted. President Bill Clinton, banished to the wings, preached at two Washington-area black churches, trying to excite likely Gore voters to turn out on Election Day.
By JIM ABRAMS Associated Press
WASHINGTON Congress’ final budget battle with President Bill Clinton resumed with a rare Sunday session. Republicans vowed to stay until Election Day rather than accede to the President’s demands but held out hopes that a deal could be struck in the next two days. “There are some ideas being exchanged,” Majority Leader Trent Lott, R-Miss., told reporters after convening the Senate. “There is a mood —that it is time to bring this to a conclusion.” But he added, “I’m resigned to being here on Election Day if that’s what it takes.” With nine days remaining before the election, nego-
“Women in Finance A Day at Lehman Brothers Friday, November 17, 2000
November 10,2000 Send your Resume to Dimple Karelia dkarelia@lehman.com
\MMoD(l[il][lSl[li]o(g®lffl
See
ELECTION on page 18
tiations were inching forward, with the two sides mulling new White House proposals on school construction, ergonomics and other issues that have held up agreement on a bill funding labor, education and health programs. House Appropriations Committee Chair Bill Young, R-Fla., said it was a “positive step” and held out hopes the bill could be finished by Monday night. “The White House has laid out a fairly straightforward proposition for ending the divisions at least on the major bill that divides us,” said the top Democrat on the committee, Rep. David Obey of Wisconsin. “I would hope we would have flexibility on the part of both sides.” See BUDGET on page 18
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tlegrounds still tight tossups. With nine days left in the campaign, the rhetoric got even sharper, with Lieberman flatly asserting Bush is not ready to be president. “Maybe someday, but not now. Now George Bush is not ready to be president of the United States, the kind of president you need and deserve,” Lieberman told a rally on the lawn of Macomb County Com-
Congress, Clinton deadlocked on budget
Lehman Brothers
10:30AM-4:00PM
The latest polls give Bush a narrow but notable edge in a race that has seesawed since the summer conventions. State polls dramatize the historic closeness of the contest: Gore appears ahead in Florida, Bush up in Ohio and other bat-
”
P-
MONDAY, OCTOBER 30, 2000
The Chronicle
PAGE 3
Study examines tumor diagnosis
Don’t fence me In This fence by Lancaster Dormitory near the construction Edens Quadrangle was torn down over the weekend, but no one knows who the perpetrators were.
By MARKO DJUKANOVIC The Chronicle
Sometimes, a late diagnosis of childhood brain cancer may not be the fault ofinadequate detection
mechanisms. Earlier this month at the annual meeting of the American Society for Therapeutic Radiology and Oncology, Duke Comprehensive Cancer Center researchers presented this and other intriguing and counter-intuitive results of a study they conducted this year. The scientists analyzed data collected from 122 patients with medulloblastoma, a common childhood brain tumor, and found that faster-growing tumors in children are generally diagnosed earlier than slow tumors. Additionally, the study found that girls are diagnosed earlier than boys, and it also detected a small but statistically significant tendency for those with birthdays in autumn to have medulloblastoma. “These [results] are particularly interesting because people are taught to believe that a delayed diagnosis means a higher level of cancer” said Dr. Edward Halperin, professor ofradiation oncology and the study’s lead author. He also noted that this particular finding will have important impacts on lawsuits filed against physicians for not detecting a cancer early enough. Halperin attributed the difference in diagnosis time to brain plasticity, or the ability to adjust. “A common question is How did the tumor [in the brain] get so big?”’ said Halperin. Hut if it grew slowly enough, the brain adapted and there were few symptoms.” However, if the tumor is fast-growing, it is usually identified in six to eight weeks because the symptoms surface quickly and are frequent and obvious. Medulloblastoma is characterized by a tumor in the posterior portion of the brain, the cerebellum, and has a tendency to grow locally and spread See BRAIN TUMORS on page 16
Correction A page-one story in the Oct. 27 issue misrepresented the amount of money President Nan Keohane originally allocated to non-alcoholic programming. She gave $64,000.
>
Committee to study tenure process By STEVEN WRIGHT The Chronicle Provost Peter Lange has selected five faculty members to review the process by which the University grants appointments, promotions and tenure. “My expectations are that [the committee! will do a thorough review of making sure we hire and promote faculty of the quality we seek and the process and method by which we do that,” said Lange. The committee, which has met twice since its creation earlier in the month, will submit its report to the provost and the Academic Council in January. Officials have not yet decided if the document will be made publicly available in its entirety. Committee members said they will be meticulous in investigating every aspect of the the appointments, promotions and tenure process. “We’re looking at everything that has to do with the appointment, promotions and tenure process,” said James B. Duke Professor of Psychology Peter Holland, chair of the APT review committee. Holland added that one of the strengths of the committee is its makeup—each of the five members has already been through the tenure process and succeeded. To form its evaluation, Holland—a former chair of the University’s APT committee—said the committee
A Durham Trattoria
will compare each aspect of the process with those of Duke’s peer institutions and will seek feedback on the current system. Thus far, Holland said, the committee has received relatively few comments. The committee will not formally request student input. From the few comments the committee has received from faculty, Holland said he has heard that the process is confusing and shrouded in mystery. But the misconceptions may not be of widespread concern. Margaret McKean, an associate professor of political science, said she has not been confiised by the tenure process or the expectations placed upon faculty. “I think [the Department of] Political Science does a fine job of mentoring and letting juniorfaculty know about expectations,” she said. “We are provided with plenty of support and information about the [process],” Another significant topic faculty members expect the review to address is the role of teaching and service in tenure decisions. Some faculty members said they would like to see an increased focus on teaching but worried that, without more resources, placing such an emphasis on classroom interaction would make tenure even more difficult and confusing for faculty. Gathering input has also been a challenge for the committee. Some faculty members have only recently See TENURE
on page 17
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The Chronicle
PAGE 4
2000 Durham Elections
MONDAY. OCTOBER 30, 2000
Pam Adams
County Commissioner .
.
Political Party: Libertarian Political Experience: Chair, Libertarian Party of Durham County Education: Not given
Nine candidates are running for the five available county commissioner seats in Durham. Here are profiles of each of the candidates. interviews by Matt Atwood; layout by Ross Montante
Pam Adams could not be reached for comment.
THREE PHOTOS COURTESY OF THE HERALD-SUN OF DURHAM
Political Party: Democrat Political Experience: County commissioner, 1990-2000; chair, Durham County Commission Education: BA in English, Benedict College; M.S.W., Social Work, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
Political Party: Democrat Political Experience: Durham County Commissioner, 1996-2000; Chair of the Durham Human Relations Commission Education: B.A. in Public Administration, NCCU; Assoc. Degree in Business Administration, Durham College
MaryAnn Black stresses the importance of passing the Capital Improvement Program. "[We need] to help get the bond referendum passed so we can fund some additional schools," she said. Black recommends improving transportation, preserving open space, smart growth and improving health care. She also proposes helping children with emotional or behavioral problems to learn. "If we can identify [and] address those children and their parents... early on, we can... free up the learning process for them," she said. She also advocates attracting businesses to provide better jobs. "When you move someone from welfare to work, but they're working in fast food with minimum wage, they can't support a family."
"Education, economic development, crime control, transportation” —those are Joe Bowser's top priorities. "[We need a] reduction in the poverty rate in Durham County," he said. "I equate that with economic development; bring in industry that will provide clean blue-collar work with good-paying jobs." Bowser said attracting businesses would balance the county's residential growth, and reduce crime along with poverty. He also proposed improving the county's existing roads to reduce gridlock and cited his fiscal responsibility. "Since I've been on the board, we've been able to reduce taxes twice," he said, pledging to offset any increase in property values this year with a decrease in the tax rate.
Political Party: Republican Political Experience: Vice Chair, 4th Cong, District Republican Party; past chair, Durham Republican Party Education; B.S. in Mathematics, Washington College; M.S, in Statistics, Virginia Technical Institute Robert Appleby thinks a city/county merger, which failed to pass the county commissioners and the City Council in August, is still worth pursuing. "It was my experience that the current county commissioners did not support [the merger] even though they gave lip service to it," he said. "I think the people of Durham County, the majority of them, are for it, because they realize that we're too small to have two governments." Appleby also proposes replacing school buses with city buses and expanding city bus service to prevent children from being unsupervised on the bus; developing charter school districts as well as individual charter schools in North Carolina; and encouraging a grassroots-level movement to repeal the state and federal income tax.
Joe Bowser
MaryAnn Black
Robert Appleby
Philip Cousin
Ricky Hart
Becky Heron
Political Party: Democrat Political Experience: Durham County School Board, 1996-2000 Education: A.B. in Religion and Philosophy, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill; M.Div., Duke University Divinity School
Political Party: Republican
Political Party: Democrat Political Experience; County Commissioner, 1982-2000; past member, Durham Planning and Zoning
"How do we balance our booming economy with maintaining our quality of life?" This question, Philip Cousin said, summarizes the main issue the county commissioners must address in their upcoming term. Cousin advocates working to increase the number of students who stay in school. "I'd like to see a decrease in our dropout rate, closing the gap between our minority and majority students," he said. He also suggested improving the county's infrastructure and attracting businesses to balance the increasing population of the county, and preserving open space in the county. "I would like to see established very clearly an urban growth boundary so [we don't lose open spaces]," he said.
Political Experience: Candidate for Durham County Sheriff, 1998; Candidate
for Durham County School Board, 1994 Education; B.A. in Business
Commission
Administration and M.A. in International Criminal Justice, Trinity University
Education: BA in English and Retailing, University of South Carolina
Ricky Hart draws a major distinction between himself and the curcommissioners, whom he criticizes for spending too little time in actual schools. "I'm proactive. I'll get out there and you will see my face," he said. "1 will go, and I will talk to the maintenance person there, the bus driver there... and the students there, because they know what's going on." Hart added that population growth throughout the county requires an expansion of infrastructure —businesses, schools, public water and sewer facilities. "Prior planning prevents poor performance," he said. Hart also proposes eliminating or reducing the county vehicle tax, or else using its revenues to fund youth programs. rent county
Becky Heron, a county commissioner for 18 years, thinks the county's rapid growth necessitates careful planning for the future, but she says its finances are strong. "Durham County is in great financial shape," Heron said. "We have a good fund balance; we were able to reduce taxes [by two cents in 1998-99 and by one cent in 1999-2000], and this year we held the line.... We are one of very few counties that have a AAA bond rating." Heron also said she would reduce the tax rate after property revaluation, and added that she does not accept donations from political action committees, or from individuals in amounts over $lOO. "I have been practicing campaign finance reform since 1988," she said. Tm independent; I'm not beholden to anyone."
Attend an open forum to join the discussion about the renovation of Perkins. Refreshments will be served at all the meetings. Faculty
Wed., Nov. I
11:30 a.m.
-
Faculty
Thurs., Nov. 2
11:30 a.m.
-
1:00 p.m.
226 Perkins
1:00 p.m.
Breedlove Room (204- Perkins)
Undergraduates
Wed., Nov. 1
1:00 p.m.
-
2:30 p.m.
Bryan Center Meeting Room A
Grad. & Prof. Students
Wed., Nov. 15
7:00 p.m.
-
8:30 p.m.
Breedlove Room
Library Staff
Thurs., Nov. 2
(204- Perkins) 8:30 a.m.
-
9:30 a.m.
226 Perkins
For the more information or to participate in the discussion via email, go to http://staff.lib.dukc.eclu/renovatioii/.
MONDAY, OCTOBER 30, 2000
The Chronicle
Democrats have 3:1 ratio of local voters
Ellen Reckhow
Tom Stark
Political Party: Democrat Political Experience: County Commissioner, 1988-2000; Vice Chair, Board of County Commissioners, 1994-00 Education: B.A. in Economics, Boston University; M.C.P. in City and Regional Planning, Harvard University
Political Party: Republican Political Experience: Chair, Durham Open Space and Trails Commission; Candidate for Durham City Council, 1995 Education: A.B. in Political Science, Duke University; J.D., Duke University School of Law
Ellen Reckhow has three top priorities if re-elected: education, crime reduction and promoting "smart growth." She hopes to lowerthe dropout rate while renovating existing schools and building new ones. "We set a goal of reducing the crime rate by 6 percent by 2000, and we've achieved that goal," said Reckhow, the co-chair of the Durham Crime Cabinet, which aims to cut crime by 5 percent more by 2002. She advocates "smart growth"—preserving open space, improving the county's infrastructure and revitalizing downtown Durham. "We need more sidewalks, more bike paths, more public transit, so people have choices under how they move about the community."
Tom Stark thinks Durham's burgeoning population needs to be balanced with nonresidential growth, such as businesses. "The most immediate issue is that the tax base is out of balance," he said. "Residential development is what causes sprawl and what causes gridlock." Stark also proposes improving teacher salaries. "You can adopt a lot of programs, but it's the quality of your personnel that matters," he said. He advocates fighting youth crime by cracking down on gangs and providing alternatives such as youth sports or scouting programs; supports rewriting the zoning code to encourage farmland preservation; and opposes "burying a tax increase" in property revaluation.
� COMMISSIONERS from page 1
The fifth current commissioner, Bill Bell, who is not running this fall, is also a Democrat—a testimony to the strength of the party in Durham County, where Democrats outnumber Republicans by almost three to one. Looking to capture seats for the first time are Democrat Philip Cousin, Libertarian Pam Adams, and Republicans Robert Appleby, Ricky Hart and Tom Stark. The Republicans admit they have a tough race ahead ofthem, but remain confident that they can attract some Democratic voters. “You have to stay positive,” Appleby said. “But you cannot win in Durham County without a lot of Democratic votes. The question is, can we get enough of them?” The Democratic candidates said they see their political affiliation as a bonus, but admit that it alone will not get them elected. “It brings advantages in that Durham County is heavily Democratic,” Cousin said. “[But] other candidates are running who are qualified candidates and who
PAGES
are nice people.... It is a campaign that is issue-driven.”
Adams, the Libertarian candidate, could not be reached for comment. The five candidates who receive the most votes in November’s election will take office in December and choose a chair and vice chair from among themselves at that time.
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The Chronicle
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The Chronicle
PAGE?
Open House All Duke undergraduates are invited to learn more about Spring 2001 courses offered by the Program in Drama, such as
The Criminality of Art (DRA 118.03) The Broadway Theater (DRA 187.01) Producing in America (DRA 1635.01) and many more. Meet and talk with Drama faculty and students about courses and productions.
TODAY
--
Monday, October 30
4:30-5:30 PM Branson Theater, East Campus FREE PIZZA!
Oceans Connect: Culture, Capital and Commodity Flows Across Basins Oceans Connect, an inter-disciplinary project, emphasizing historical and contemporary interconnections across bodies of water, invites you to consider one of the following course offerings for Spring 2001:
Portugal, Portuguese-Speaking Africa and Brazil
Leslie Damasceno
AALL 158
Jewish Culture
Eric Zakim
ENG 381(2)/ CULANTH 380S**
Revolutionary Discourse In/and the Atlantic World
Baucom
HST 76(2)/ AAAS 71
Third World and the West
Jan Ewald
TuTh 9.10-10.25 am
Carr 243
ITAL 160S
Italian Identities bet. the Mediterranean Europe
Roberto Dainotto
TuTh 10.53-12.10 pm
SocSci 220
Caribbean in the 18th Century
Barry Caspar
TuTh 12.40-1.55 pm
Carr 133
PORT 121
in the Mediterranean
**Only open to graduate and professional students
>
ikne Jl
jwÂť4L>
Lang. 208
11.50-12.40
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Piot
TuTh 2.13-3.30 pm
Art Mus. 107
Monday
Franklin Cntr
7.00-9.30 pm
&
HST 1278 AAAS 1278
MWF
Www .duke.edit/u 'ch/ocea i is/
i
The Chronicle
PAGES
MONDAY, OCTOBER
Man flashes girl near Edens lot C From staff reports At 12:10 a.m. Oct. 28, a man exposed himself to a student in Edens parking lot C, said Maj. Robert Dean of the Duke University Police Department. The student told police that the man—described as being in his 30s, 510”, of medium build and wearing a tan long-sleeved shirt and baseball cap—drove up to T) T T 1 UJLICJI/ her in his car, got out and yelled Hey! The man was IVItTUKI o naked from the waist down. The student ran down the Edens fire lane toward Camelot Dormitory. The subject drove down the fire lane following her but then backed out of the fire lane and drove down Towerview Drive toward Duke University Road. The student did not get the license plate number of the car because it was covered, but she described it as a four-door dark green Nissan, possibly a Sentra.
TOW, TOW,
30. 2000
TOW
YOUR CAR... About 10 cars that were parked on Chapel Drive in a fire lane Sunday night got towed to the University impound lot. The unlucky drivers will have to pay $45 plus the price of the ticket—another sloo—if they want to get their cars back.
„
“
”
Bike stolen: Someone stole a student’s $3O lock and $2OO green Diamond Buck Accent bike between 11 a.m. Oct. 9 and 7:30 p.m. Oct. 27 from the bike rack behind Baldwin Auditorium, Dean said. Stereo system swiped: An employee reported that between 6:30 p.m. Oct. 26 and 8 a.m. Oct, 27, someone broke into her vehicle and stole her $l2O AIWA radio/cassette stereo system, Dean said. There were no signs of forced entry. Clothes carried off: A student reported that between 3:20 and 3:30 a.m. Oct. 27, someone stole two pairs ofkhaki pants worth $6O and two pairs of khaki shorts worth $5O after the student left them in a dryer in room 104 ofHouse B, Dean said
Glowing rabbit creator to come to Duke From staff reports
______
Holopoetry and telepresence Vr-r-mTri art pioneer Eduardo Kac, infa- iIILWiS mous for genetically engineering a Dniripn glow-in-the-dark-rabbit this year -PKlii<r J with help from French scientists, will participate in a symposium Nov. 6 from 7 to 9:30 p.m. in the Levine Science Research Center auditorium. The symposium, entitled, “Art, Genetics, and Ethics: The Tangenic Art ofEduardo Kac” is free and open to the public. Seating is limited.
Loop opening further delayed: The opening of The Loop has been delayed—again. The latest hold-up will set back the restaurant’s opening an additional
week, but the Breyer’s ice cream kiosk is expected to open on time. Joe Pietrantoni, associate vice president for Auxiliary Services, said the delay was caused by complications with the electricity supply. The Chapel Hillbased burger and pizza restaurant was originally going to open after fall break, was delayed a week, and is now expected to open Nov. 13. United Way campaign makes headway: The University’s United Way campaign had raised $1,009,290 as ofOct. 13. This year, a record 20 percent ofthe donations came from individual members of the University community. In addition, this year also witnessed a significant increase in the number of campaign volunteers. See BRIEFS on page 17 �
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MONDAY, OCTOBER 30, 2000
The Chronicle
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SPRING 2001 CORE COURSES Sociology 145, Nations, Regions
TTh 9:10
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the Global Economy
Instructor: Peter Volpe is pursuing a doctorate in Political Science from Duke University. His research interests center on issues of International Political Economy, including globalization, trade, and finance. He graduated summa cum laude from Vassar College (1991) with a BA in Political Science. Peter has taught courses at Duke and N. C. State University in Raleigh. Globalization" is the catch-phrase used to describe the integration of capital, information, and technology that has broadened the reach and impact of the world's economic, social, and political forces. This course examines the changing nature of the global economy, its disparate impact on different regions, and the economic, political, and social dynamics of rapid globalization and economic change. Primary regions covered include Asia, Latin America, and Africa and also a look at North America and Europe (i.e., the dynamic interrelationship between the latter and the former group of countries will be considered). Topics: the historical origins of the development project and its transformation under globalization; consequences of market integration; strategies and models of economic development; the formation of economic blocs; and the various forms of resistance that have emerged in reaction to the processes of globalization. Also, study of the way globalization has impacted states' conceptions of their security and has altered traditional definitions of national interests.
Sociology 159: Sociology of Entrepreneurship TTh 5:25
6:40 p.m. Instructors: Evan Jones who teaches the M&M Entrepreneurial Capstone, has been a guest lecturer in Sociology 159 for the past five years. He received his Bachelor's degree in Economics from Duke University and his MBA from the Kenan Flagler Business School, UNC, Chapel Hill. Evan brings considerable business experience to the classroom. He founded TSI Soccer, a specialty mail order and retail company, in 1989 and served as Chairman & President/CEO of the company until 1997. Vanessa V. Tinsley is a doctoral candidate in the Department of Sociology and will receive her Ph.D. in 2001. Her specialty areas are in organizations, labor markets, and work. She has published on (1) personnel practices of multinational firms and (2) comparative institutional structures explaining unemployment. Vanessa's dissertation research focuses on the impact of unions on organizational restructuring practices. -
This course will provide students with a survey of intellectual thought on the subject of entrepreneurship. Knowledge and application of theory are emphasized. The historical origins and current causes of entrepreneurship are considered. Primary emphases are sociological, although entrepreneurial actors and activities are examined from psychological, political, and economic perspectives. Entrepreneurship is considered from a supply side perspectiveâ&#x20AC;&#x201D;the personal, social, and cultural characteristics of entrepreneurs-and a demand side perspective-the organizational, economic, and societal conditions that give rise to new enterprise. Entrepreneurship is reviewed from various levels of analysis: the individual, organizational, industrial, organizational field, and global levels. Students explore how, when, and where new businesses are likely to form and what affects their relative chance of success. The final section of the course considers the topic of organizational behavior, organizational change, and how to create an effective organization. The course encourages analytical integration of theory and its application to understanding real world events.
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MONDAY, OCTOBER 30,
2000
The Chronicle
Established 1905, Incorporated 1993
The greeks must go
This
year’s recently released housing statistics contain no sur-
prises—West Campus is disproportionately white, and it will remain like that as long as predominantly white institutions are guaranteed privileged housing on this campus.
For decades, all fraternities except for one on West, the all-black Alpha Phi Alphas, have been mostly white. Paradoxically, they are unable to recruit minorities to their sections for the same reason that minorities are not there now —because the groups are overwhelmingly white to begin with. The structure of the housing system, which guarantees historically 90-plus percent white institutions a lion’s share of the space guarantees that the environment on West will not change. President Nan Keohane has already announced that she is committed to preserving fraternal and other selective residential groups on this campus. Duke should therefore own up to the fact that this is a greek campus and that the administration believes that this system’s benefits outweigh those of a racially and ethnically diverse living system. If this administration is to continue taking this stand, it must be willing to explain its double-talk on the issue. It must explain why it targets recruiting of minority students at the same time it encourages a system that creates environments on certain campuses that make them less diverse than the school. It must explain diversity’s true benefits if different people are not going to live near each other to learn from each other. Diverse recruitment is futile unless it is institutionalized in housing and other areas of campus life. In short, the current system is not the right one. In fact, the only real solution is to allow full integration of the campus by eliminating selective living altogether. For years, groups have called on the University to re-evaluate the nature and consequences ofselective living on campus. Nothing has changed. Selective living groups, because of their inherent prejudice toward those different from their members, must be eliminated. By randomly assigning blocks of about 10 rising sophomores to houses where they would live for the remaining three years, if they choose, students could live with a small group of their friends while learning to interact with others. There is a tremendous benefit to living with people with whom you might not normally choose to live. It breaks down comfort zones, teaches students about one another and especially about how to live together fairly. Social options could be preserved by these new housing groups and cultural organizations, who would be free from the draconian alcohol restrictions fraternities now face, and even non-residential fraternities. Clearly, something is keeping administrators from implementing this solution, so in the meantime, selective and fraternal houses should be moved to Edens Quadrangle and the areas closest to it. These organizations’ presence makes West uninviting for many students. Moving them to regular living space seems like an acceptable short-term step toward the kind of change this campus desperately needs.
The Chronicle GREG PESSIN, Editor TESSA LYONS, Managing Editor AMBIKA KUMAR, University Editor STEVEN WRIGHT, University Editor MARTIN BARNA, Editorial Page Editor BRODY GREENWALD, Sports Editor JONATHANANGIER, GeneralManager
NEAL PATEL, Photography Editor JENNIFER ROBINSON, Photography Editor JAMES HERRIOTT, City & State Editor SARAH MCGILL, City & State Editor ELLEN MIELKE, Features Editor MARKO DJURANOVIC, Medical Center Editor JONAS BLANK, Recess Editor JAIME LEVY, TowerView Editor ROSS MONTANTE, Layout and Design Editor MARY CARMICHAEL, Executive Editor KELLY WOO, SeniorEditor REGAN HSU, Sports Photography Editor MATTATWOOD, Wire Editor DAVE INGRAM, Wire Editor CHRISTINE PARKINS, Sr. Assoc. City & Stale Editor TREY DAVIS, Sr. Assoc. City & Stale Editor CHERAINE STANFORD, Sr. Assoc. Features Editor JAKE HARRINGTON, Sr. Assoc. Layout Edtor MEREDITH YOUNG, Sr. Assoc. Med. Ctr. Editor ANDREA BOOKMAN, Sr. Assoc. Sports Editor NORM BRADLEY, Sr. Assoc. Sports Editor RAY HOLLOMAN, Sr. Assoc. Sports Editor JEREMY ZARETZKY, Creative Services Manager ALAN HALACHMI, Online Manager SUE NEWSOME, Advertising Director ADRIENNE GRANT, Creative Director CATHERINE MARTIN, Production Manager MARY WEAVER, OperationsManager NALINI MILNE, Advertising Office Manager NICOLE HESS, AdvertisingManager STEPHANIE OGIDAN, Advertising Manager The Chronicle is published by the Duke Student Publishing Company, Inc., a non-profit corporation independent of Duke University. The opinions expressed in this newspaper are not necessarily those of Duke University, its students, workers, administration or trustees. Unsigned editorials represent the majority view of the editorial board. Columns, letters and cartoons represent the views of the authors. To reach the Editorial Office (newsroom) at 301 Rowers Building, call 684-2663 or fax 684-4696. To reach the Business Office at 103 West Union Building, call 684-3811. To reach the Advertising Office at 101 West Union Building call 684-3811 or fax 684-8295. Visit The Chronicle Online at http://www.chronicle.duke.edu. ® 2000 The Chronicle, Box 90858, Durham, N.C. 27708. All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced in any form without the prior, written permission of the Business Office. Each individual is entitled to one free copy.
Letters to
the
Editor
Title IX rules exist to protect womens’ athletics John Gleason’s letter in don’t meet this objective sented gender. However, at a Oct. 26 issue of The They can either show they school where men are underChronicle embodies the gen- are gradually increasing represented in athletics, a man would be eligible to play eral misconception surround- opportunities for the undering the legality of women in represented gender (note on a women’s team. Gleason is wrong in college sports. I’d like to clar- Duke’s fairly recent additions of women’s varsity asserting that allowing ify a few points. Title IX functions under lacrosse and crew teams) or women on men’s teams leads the assumption that the show that the needs and to the demise of women in ideal situation of college ath- abilities of that gender have sports; on the contrary, it proletics would be for a school’s been met. motes fair gender represenathletic program to repreAt a school where women tation in athletics. The laws sent both genders in away are underrepresented in athallowing women to play on a that is in proportion to its letics, a woman is eligible to men’s team are not total population. play on a men’s team if there “absolutely nuts,” as Gleason For example, at a school is not a women’s team for that claims, nor are they intended whose student body is 40 sport and if she is qualified to give women an unfair percent female, women enough to play, advantage over men. They would represent 40 percent At the same school, a man simply ensure that both genof the athletes. Recognizing would not be eligible to play ders have equal opportunithat this goal is not easily on, say, the women’s field ties to play sports. reached by some institu- hockey team because he tions, Title IX provides two would be taking a spot away Beth Moore provisions for schools that- from the already underrepreTrinity ’O2 for referenced letter, see http://www.chronicle.duke.edu/chronicle/2000/10/26/12Ncaamust.html
Review mistook swordfish for mahi-mahi dish Thanks for taking the time to enjoy a meal at Squid’s. We always appreciate it when our Durham venture into neighbors Chapel Hill for a gustatory excursion.
We did want to clarify an error in the review, though.
Squid’s has been participating in the Natural Resources Defense Council’s “Give Swordfish a Break” ban for
for referenced
over two years. While we
understand that this ban has been lifted, we choose to continue to allow that population to rebuild some strength and number before we start serving swordfish again. In all likelihood, the fish that the critic had was mahi-mahi, a plentiful species that runs off the North Carolina coast. Again, thanks for the
review and the visit to Chapel Hill. We just wanted to clarify this point and ensure the public that we actively pursue methods of responsible seafood harvest and aquacultre to ease environmental impact. Sam Poley Executive Chef,
Squid’s Restaurant and Oyster Bar
letter, see http://www.chronicle.duke.edu/chronicle/2000/10/20/ro7Squids.html
On the record We used to play every Saturday at 11 because it’s the best way to get rid
ofa hangover.
Senior Bill Rozakis explaining the impetus for creating the pick-up basketball organization, Duke Bailers (see story, page one)
Announcement Applications for columnist positions and Monday, Monday for the Spring 2001 semester will be available outside 301 Flowers Building this Thursday.
Letters
Policy
The Chronicle welcomes submissions in the form of letters to the editor or guest columns. Submissions must include the author’s name, signature, department or class, and for purposes of identification, phone number and local address. Letters should not exceed 325 words; contact the editorial department for information regarding guest columns. The Chronicle will not publish anonymous or form letters or letters that are promotional in nature. The Chronicle reserves the right to edit letters and guest columns for length,clarity and style and the right to withhold letters based on the discretion of the editorial page editor.
Direct submissions to: Editorial Page Department The Chronicle Box 90858, Durham, NC 27708 Phone: (919) 684-2663 Fax: (919) 684-4696 E-mail: letters@chronicle.duke.edu
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PAGE 2
SPORTSWRAP
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This Week in Duke Sports
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Monday
� Cross country takes title
30
Led by junior Sean Kelly, the men’s cross country team won the ACC Championship this weekend in Raleigh Kelly won the individual title to pace the Blue Devils. See page 1, The Chronicle
MONDAY, OCTOBER 30, 2000
•
Tuesday
Thursday
Wednesday
31
None
•
Volleyball Forest
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•
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•
Women’s Soccer hosts ACCs Thurs.-Sun., Koskinen
7 p.m., Winston-Salem
� Men’s golf wins Nelson
•
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It took a trip to Stanford, but the men’s golf team beat rival No. 10 N.C. State
Thur.-Sun., College Park
(Jame of the Week
this weekend at the Nelson Invitational Blue Devil Leif Olson finished in second place in the event. See page 3
� Football loses Bth game of season
After a close first half, Duke made mistakes in the second and See page 6 could not hold off Maryland’s LaMont Jordan.
Friday
� Men’s soccer shuts out UNC-Greensboro Junior midfielder Demetrio Sanchez scored three goals in last See page 4 night’s drubbing of UNC-G in Greensboro. •
� Women harriers finish 4th at ACCs Duke is disappointed with its best-ever result.
See page 7
Saturday
Women’s Basketball vs. Athletes in Action (EXH) 7 p.m., Cameron Indoor Stadium Tennis
•
7:30 p.m., Cameron Indoor Stadium
Rolex Regionals
@
•
Thur.-Sun., Winston-Salem
� Volleyball plays local rivals Duke split matches versus North Carolina and N.C. State in Cameron this weekend. See page 5
•
Men’s Basketball vs. California All-Stars (EXH)
Football
Wake Forest
@
Winston-Salem
Women’s Golf @ GolfWorld Championships
•
Men’s Soccer vs. Wake
Forest
Fri.-Sun., Hilton Head, S.C.
7 p.m., Koskinen Stadium
QUOTE OF THE DAY “This golf course... anyone can shoot 62 out here without batting an eye.”
•
Rowing
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Head of the
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Tiger Woods, before Duffy Waldorf shot a 62 to win the National Car Rental Classic
here's your chance to rea go somewhere. Congratulations. All the cramming, insomnia and junk food breakfasts have paid off. You're in college now and soon, you'll be facing questions about your life. Like what to do with the rest of it. One thing is for sure, if you're a student of color, with an INROADS internship you could have a serious job every summer while you're still in school making contacts and gaining experience in your chosen field of study. Hey, it won't be easy, but then again if you wanted it easy, you wouldn't be reading this right now. -
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•
Volleyball
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Florida State
1 p.m., Tallahassee
MONDAY, OCTOBER 30, 2000
SPORTSWRAP
PAGE 3
Men’s golf upsets rival No. 10 N.C. State at Nelsoi
Leif Olson s second-place finish propelled the 19th-ranked Blue Devils to a wire-to-wire victory By ANDE E WGREENFIELD “After playing five
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LEIF OLSON, shown hen earlier in the season, finished second this weekend to lift the B' e Devils to the Nelson Invitational title.
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by Leif 01son who flred r dS of 68 71 and 72 to flnish in second Place at 2 T par, three strokes back of individual medalist under Steve Sokol from Florida Southern. Olson led the event after two rounds, but Sokol’s final-round 64 propelled him to the win. Olson had been unable to regain his stellar form from a season ago and had not finished higher than 29th until two weeks ago at the Duke Classic, where he tied f r seventh - But was only a matter of time until the sophomore got his game back, as he showed this week. “This fall I have been struggling a lot on the greens and with my ball-striking,” Olson said. “This weekend I hit a lot of greens in regulation and I hit the ball very solidly. This combination led to my strong finish.” During the fall season, Duke has been known to get off to slow starts and then claw its way back in the later rounds to salvage a fifth- or sixth-place finish. This week, the Blue Devils were determined not to play themselves out of the tournament on the first day. They fired a team-total of 280 to take a four-shot lead at 4-under par after the first day. One day later, not even harsh winds and heavy rains could stop the Blue Devils from extending their lead over Duke Classic winner N.C. State by two shots. “Since we have been getting off to slow starts in the past, I was concerned with how the guys would handle having the lead for the first time after Day 1 and then again after Day 2,” Myers said. “But the guys stayed loose all week and handled the pressure like true professionals.” Duke was able to hold on to the lead the final day thanks in part to the play of junior Brandon LaCroix, who rebounded from difficult rounds of 77 and 83 to shoot a final-round 72. “Brandon’s final round was really big,” Myers said. “He’s been having a tough fall season, but with Matt [Krauss], Leif and Kevin [Streelman] playing well, he was able to relax a little more and post a really good score when it counted.” Olson wasn’t the only Blue Devil to crack the top 10 this week. Krauss, a junior, has played consistent golf all season and continued that this week by ' Ue
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shooting rounds of 71, 72 and 71 to finish in a tie for fourth at 1-over par. Over the past year and a half, Krauss has been Duke’s top golfer, winning at the ACC Championships and receiving honorable-mention All-America honors in 1999. This fall, Krauss, who is ranked 26th in the nation, has finished in the top 10 in four out of Duke’s five tournaments. Duke’s solid play this week can also be attributed to the play of seniors Streelman and Paul Tucker. Streelman was one of the reasons for the Blue Devils’ fast start in the first round, when he fired a 2-under 69. Streelman would go on to shoot rounds of 74 and 77 to finish in a tie for 27th at 7-over par. Tucker fired three solid rounds of 72, 76 and 74 to finish in a tie for 36th at 9-over par. “This was a really solid event for us from start to finish,” Myers said. “We have had difficulty playing well at the Nelson as a team and beating N.C. State in the past few years. We just got better with every tournament all fall.” With this win, Duke will have a lot of confidence heading into the spring season, which opens Feb. 19-20 in Jacksonville, Fla. at the Mercedes-Benz Invitational.
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Don't miss a single exciting moment as the best women's collegiate soccer players vie for the coveted ACC Championship. All Session, Single Day and Group Tickets available. Order your 2000 ACC Women's Soccer Championship tickets today.
Order your tickets by calling the Duke Ticket Office at 919-681-BLUE.
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SPORTSWRAP
PAGE 4
MONDAY, OCTOBER 30, 2000
Men’s soccer blitzes UNC-Greensboro in Big 4 finale Duke’s play over the weekend was described by coach John Rennie as having “moments of brilliance” offenGREENSBORO Last night, the soccer stadium sively, with tremendous defense throughout both games. in Greensboro was filled with UNC-G fans hoping to In last night’s game, Rennie needed look no further witness a redemption of last year’s Big Four than Demetrio Sanchez to find that brilliance, as the Tournament, at which the Blue Devils emerged victojunior midfielder scored three times in just over eight rious when a Spartan player scored on his own goal. minutes at the end of the first half. The crowd’s mood was optimistic: everyone knew Sanchez’s first goal came in the 34th minute of play, ninth-ranked Duke was favored to win the tournaoff an assist by freshman forward Jordan Cila. Under ment’s final game this year, but confidence in the duress from a double team, Cila passed out of trouble UNC-G squad was high coming off its first-round 6-0 and found Sanchez, who was open near the goal. crushing of N.C. State. Sanchez scored again in the 39th minute, this time But when the Spartans (12-6-1) took the field assisted by a pass from Dwayne Harris. Sanchez’s final against the Blue Devils yesterday, they got far more goal was unassisted, as he lifted the ball over the head than they bargained for as Duke (12-4) shut them of Spartan keeper Joe Crump to boost the Blue Devils’ out 5-0. lead to 4-0 at the half. The third goal of the night, occurring just 17 seconds after Sanchez’s second score, might have also been the most exciting. Senior forward Ali Curtis, reigning Hermann Trophy winner, collected his 51st career goal to tie Tom Cain’s record for the most career goals at Duke. The goal leaves Curtis with just one game in the regular season, in addition to the postseason, to sepaAMY UNELUTHE CHRONICLE rate himself from Cain as the highest scoring player in DEMETRIO SANCHEZ led Duke in scoring yesterday with a hat Duke history. trick against UNC-Greensboro. “It feels great, it’s probably one of those things that 10 years from now, I’ll look back on,” Curtis said. Despite his stellar career performance and position as an important team leader, Curtis remains uncertain “Right now I’m just trying to enjoy it, I’m really excited about it.” about whether or not he will score again to hold the Curtis was taken out ofFriday night’s game against record alone. UNC-Charlotte after scoring two goals, leaving him “The way things are looking right now, I may not one shy of Cain’s mark. Though he laughingly admitscore any more goals,” Curtis said. “We have a lot of ted he was a little nervous about that, the senior guys on the team that are able to step up and score superstar expressed his confidence in Rennie’s deci- goals for us and that’s very important, especially going into the postseason. I’d like to break the record, but sion-making and leadership. “Coach Rennie really knows what he’s doing,” right now we’re playing great soccer and that’s what’s Curtis said. “He made sure everyone had the rest they important.” needed to come out and play well tonight.” The Blue Devils will close their regular season And play well they did. Cila capped Duke’s scoring against Wake Forest at home in Koskinen Stadium early in the second half for the team’s fifth and final goal. Saturday at 4 p.m. By CLINTON McHUGH The Chronicle
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MONDAY, OCTOBER 30, 2000
SPORTSWRAP
PAGES
Volleyball avenges earlier loss to Wolfpack, falls to UNC By WILYORK The Chronicle
The Duke volleyball team gave its season a boost yesterday, defeating the N.C. State Wolfpack 3-1. Frustration had begun to set in for the Blue Devils, who entered play riding a five-game los-
ing streak. In the first set, the Blue Devils got
out ofthe gates quickly, scoring five consecutive points to open the match and eventually racing to a 9-1 lead. Twelve kills in the first game ultimately pushed
the team through with a 15-7 victory, good for a 1-0 lead in the match. N.C. State seemed poised to answer the Blue Devils’ first-game win with a run of its own in the second, taking an early 4-0 lead. However, Duke was able to regroup and surpass the Wolfpack, winning the second game 15-10. State hung tough with the Blue Devils in the match’s third game, though, finally breaking through with a hard-fought 16-14 win that pulled the Wolfpack back within one game of Duke. But the Blue Devils would not be upset by the Wolfpack for the second time this season, as they stayed poised and played effectively in the fourth game. The two teams traded points for some time, and for a while, it looked as if the Wolfpack would have a
chance to even the match. But late in the game, the Blue Devils ran off a string of six consecutive points to win the game 15-9 and the match 3-1. Of the team’s five straight losses entering yesterday’s match, the last three had been five-game matches. ANDY STAMP/THE CHRONICLE Coach Jolene Nagel ASHLEY HARRIS and the Blue Devils snapped a five-match losing was quick to say that, streak with a convincing win over N.C. State yesterday. while things have been
frustrating as of late, the team still had reasons to be positive. “I’m trying to remind the girls not to focus just on the win-loss, but also on the strength of the teams we’ve played,” Nagel said. “We haven’t regressed since the beginning of the season. We’ve been a little inconsistent, but we just need to keep hanging tough. We ended up playing the top two teams in the league within two weeks, and we took them both to five [sets], so we know we match up well.” Junior outside hitter Dorrette Burwell said the team had begun to feel the effects of the streak. “It gets very frustrating,” Burwell said. “And the past three matches were extremely frustrating. We could have won them all, but it was one of those deals where you do one little thing that just messes it all up.” Burwell added that she thought Sunday’s match was a good one to get the team back on track. “The Carolina match on Saturday really broke our backs,” she said. “We just wanted to rally, and we knew we could beat State. Player for player, we’re just above them.” Coach Nagel felt yesterday’s win would help the team in preparing for
the season’s stretch run. “If we finish strong and have a strong
I Duke (16-9,5-6) N.C. State (7-17,1-11)
2 15 10
1
15 7
4
14 16
15 9
Kills: Burwell, Dill, Harris, Sonne-13 (Duke); Williams-19 (N.C. State) Assists: Harris-35 (Duke); Williams-53 (N.C. State) Digs; Harris-20 (Duke); Kraeger-13 (N.C. State)
ACC tournament, there we are, right back in the thick of things,” Nagel said. “We just have to be strong.” At least yesterday’s victory ensured the confidence level of the Blue Devils would return to a high level. “It definitely boosts our egos to know we can win,” Burwell added. “We’ve played a tough schedule, so we’ve seen how we match up out of conference. Nothing’s changed since the preseason; we know we can play with anyone.” The team plays its next two matches on the road against Wake Forest and Florida State. The Blue Devils will finish the regular season at home against Maryland and Virginia before playing in the ACC tournament in mid-November.
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PAGE 6
SPORTSWRAP
MONDAY, OCTOBER 30, 2000
Jordan’s 2nd-half dashes Duke’s hopes of Ist win After running for a mere 12 yards in the first half, LaMont Jordan ran wild for touchdowns of 77 and 28 yards By PAUL DORAN
“We went into halftime with a lead and we talked about playing hard and coming out playing hard again, continuing to get after their running backs,” Duke coach
The Chronicle
OMAR QUINTERO/THE
JLE
RYAN FOWLER tears at Maryland running back LaMont Jordan’s jersey. Jordan tore through the Duke defense for 158 yards Saturday afternoon.
Costly mistakes keep Duke from surprising lowly Terps Don’t be deceived by the final score in Maryland’s 20-9 victory over Duke.
This one was a lot closer than the 11point differential makes it look. Late in the fourth quarter, the Blue Devils were actually in the football game. But as so often has been the case this year, costly mistakes at critical junctures of the game doomed the Blue Devils.
Trailing 10-3 with time running down in the fourth quarter, the Blue Devils marched the down the field in a desperate attempt to tie the game. Duke had been close on at least two previous drives in the second half, but just had not been able to punch the ball into the endzone.
Finally, on third-and-8 at the Maryland 20-yard line, the Blue Devils reached into their magic hat and pulled out a gutsy trick play. After receiving the ball on a doublereverse flea-flicker, receiver Ben Erdeljac, Game Commentary testing his skills at quarterback, found Bryant wide open near the right hash “[There were] too many mistakes mark. Bryant had a clear path to the end offensively,” Duke coach Carl Franks zone and Duke had what appeared to be said. We had a problem getting [our the game-tying touchdown. offense] started again. We should have The score made it 10-9 Maryland with had a lot more points than we did.” 8:31 remaining and the momentum In addition to the usual struggles of swinging in favor of Duke. All its special the offense Saturday, one of the most teams had to do was send the ball damaging blunders came from an unexthrough the uprights for the extra point. pected source. The special teams—the And then, a funny thing happened on one group of players that has been a ray the way to the 10-10 tie—it didn’t hapof light for this team in an otherwise dark pen. Freshman Brent Garber shanked and gloomy season—robbed Duke of its the kick and, in a single instant, the commomentum in a contest that was, at the plexion ofthe game changed entirely. time, anyone’s ballgame. See COMMENTARY on page 10
Barrett Peterson
“
>
For the first time Maryland 20 all year it was 9 actually close, so Duke close that some thought that big fat zero in the win column just might vanish. But it was just not to be. Instead, the football team watched its halftime lead turn into a 20-9 loss against the Maryland Terrapins (4-4, 2-3 in the ACC) Saturday. Duke (0-8, 0-5) held a 3-0 lead going into the locker room until LaMont Jordan, the Terrapins’ preseason All-America running back exploded for a 77-yard touchdown rush on the second play of the third quarter. The run was part of Jordan’s 158 yards rushing, all but 12 of which came in the second half. More significantly, though, it gave the Terps a lead they would hold for the rest of the game.
Maryland Maryland Duke
0 0
Carl Franks said. “Then they popped one on us.” However, it wasn’t over yet. While Maryland scored later in the third quarter to expand its to 10-3, Duke advantage answered on a double-reverse flea-flicker from wide receiver Ben Erdeljac to quarterback D. Bryant. The gimmick turned into a success as Bryant found himself wide open and caught the ball at the five-yard line before cruising in for Duke’s only touchdown. All of a sudden, the Blue Devils found themselves in uncharted waters. All they needed was a converted extra point and they would be out of the red in the second half for the first time all season. See MARYLAND on page 10 �
20, Duke 9 0 3
10 0
10 6
20 9
� GAME STATISTICS Duke 19 40—13 22-38-2
3 66 7—Bl 5—43.0 33.04
Maryland
First downs Rushes—Yards Turnovers Return yards Possession time At
Douglas Epperson Pierce
12 10 2
Maryland
At
McCall Hill
Sikyala
I �PLAYERS
1
7-59 5—35.2 26:56
Penalties—yards Punts—Avg.
Duke
Jordan
34-172 12-23-3 182
Comp-Att-Int Passing Yards
Yd 28 20 10
TD 0 0 0
Yd 158 13
TD 2 0 0 0
� PASSING Duke
Int
Erdeljac
At Cp 38 20 11
Yd ID 184 0 20 1
Maryland
At
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Yd TD 118 0 64 0
Bryant
McCall
17
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6
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Rec. 6
Yd 79
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47 35 18 10 20
Rec. 3 3
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Douglas
Epperson
Battier
21 8 3 2 11
Cp 9 3
1 0
Bryant
Maryland
Hatala Gary
Dugan
2
OF THE GAME � Maryland; RB LaMont Jordan Although he was silent in the first half, Jordan was
the pri-
mary difference in the second half as touchdown runs of 77 and 28 yards put the game away.
Duke: Defense �
A much-maligned unit gave the parents a good show, highlighted by a first-half shutout. Although the offense didn’t capitalize, Bob Trott’s D put the team in a position to win.
22 27
ID 0 0 0 0 0 1
TD 0 0 0
MONDAY, OCTOBER 30, 2000
Duke women finish 4th at ACC tourney
SPORTSWRAP
PAGE 7
In their best-ever finish at the conference championships, the Blue Devils ran past everyone but intrastate rivals N.C. State, North Carolina and Wake Forest. By CATHERINE SULLIVAN The Chronicle
While their male counterparts were celebrating their first conference title in more than two decades, the Duke women left Raleigh with a somehow-lacking fourth-place
finish at Saturday’s ACC Championships. Although the Blue Devils have never finished as high as fourth place in this race, coach Jan Samuelson-Ogilvie was not satisfied. “We were not pleased with our finish by any means,” Samuelson-Ogilvie said. “Every single one of our women could have run better today.” The Blue Devils were defeated by intrastate rivals N.C. State, North Carolina and Wake Forest. The Wolfpack is the perennial top team in the ACC, although the Tar Heels won the conference last season. Duke beat N.C. State by one point at the Notre Dame Invitational early in October, but the Wolfpack was saving some of its top runners for these later races. “N.C. State and UNC brought all of their big guns today,” Samuelson-Ogilvie said. As usual, the Blue Devils were led by star sophomore Sheela Agrawal. She finished third in a field of 69 runners with a time of 18:15.3. This performance was good enough to earn her a spot on the All-Conference team for the second consecutive season. Still, Agrawal was not happy with her performance. “I was a little disappointed,” she said. “Everyone has some good days and some bad days, and this was not one of my good ones.” Agrawal was defeated by one of her long-time rivals, UNC freshman Shalane Flanagan. Agrawal and Flanagan, both from Massachusetts, raced in high school and have already competed several times this year. Flanagan finished in first place with a time of 17:38.1 and was named ACC freshman of the year for her performance. Rounding out Duke’s top-five runners were senior Megan Sullivan (16th place, 19:07.7), junior Katie Atlas (21st, 19:18.0), junior Maddy Woodmansee (30th, 19:30.7) and freshman Lisa Nagorny (36th, 19:35.9). The next big test for the Blue Devils comes in two See WOMEN’S CROSS COUNTRY on page 11 �
Duke
Mi
Students & Staff: Bring this ad for
your generous Duke Discount!
OMAR QUINTERO/THE CHRONICLE
Even to parents, he’s your Daddy! Shane Battier, shown here leaping for a jump shot over Nick Horvath’s outstretched arm, led the Blue team with 23 points in a 77-57 victory over the White team Saturday.
SPORTSWRAP
PAGES
MONDAY, OCTOBER 30, 2000
The Chronicle
What better way to cap off an unsatisfactory season than with a more than satisfactory win? In its last home-field competition of the season yesterday, the field hockey team (7-11), plagued by a losing record, sealed its season with a well-fought 3-1 victory over the Yale Bulldogs (3-11). Although Friday’s overtime sudden-death loss to Virginia (10-6) was a disappointment, the Blue Devils managed to maintain intensity and focus for their last performance on Williams Field. With President Nan Keohane applauding from the sidelines, Duke dominated Yale from the first blow of the whistle. Three minutes into play, Sarah Wright
JESSICA PLUCK pushes the ball upfield during yesterday’s 3-1 victory over the Yale Bulldogs.
knocked in her first goal of the season, assisted by Courtney Sommer on a penalty corner rebound. In the 13 penalty corners that would follow throughout the course of the game, Duke would only score on two more. However, this number wasn’t indicative of the team’s scoring opportunities. The Blue Devils dominated play offensively, firing 20 shots in comparison to Yale’s six. Duke had several beautifully orchestrated offense rushes, but it could only manage a 1-0 lead at the half. The intensity continued in the second half as the Blue Devils peppered Yale goalie Wendy Ketner with shots, one of which hit the post and was barely deflected out of bounds. Duke finally put in its second long-awaited goal at the 14-minute mark when Angie North fired a shot off a stick stop from Robin Merritt. Deflecting off the stick of a Yale defenseman, the ball sailed past Ketner into the top corner of the net. The Blue Devils scored on a similar play with three minutes left to play, as Sommer floated a ball into the net. Although the Bulldogs retaliated late in the game, their one goal with 22 seconds left to play, was not enough to bring them back. Even though it was comforting to end the regulation on a win, Friday’s match against UVa didn’t have the same outcome. In its last ACC game ofthe season, Duke was ready to fight its way out ofthe last spot in the conference and seek revenge against the team that knocked it out of the ACC tournament last year. But the Blue Devils once again came up short. At
the 18-minute mark of the first half, Virginia’s Jessica Coleman fired in a straight shot off a penalty corner. Minutes later, after a beautiful passing sequence in front of the Duke goal, Katie Slocum tipped another ball past Blue Devil goalie Hallie Smith. Down 2-0 at the half, Duke’s revenge was in jeopardy. However, a different Blue Devil team stepped on the field the second half, and Virginia’s victory would not come so easily. Seven minutes into play, Liz Bateman tipped in a
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By ELIZABETH COLUCCI
■' Saves:
.
Field hockey wins final home game of regular season
Duke-4 (Hallie Smith), Yale-10 (Krissy Nesburg)
8 � Penally Corners: Duke-13, Yale-4 c--
■ 'S goal off an assist from North. Finally on the board, the Duke offense turned up the intensity. With 23 minutes remaining, Merritt earned her third goal of the season by netting a powerful penalty stroke past Virginia goalie Becky Worthington. All tied up at the end ofregulation, the teams started into a seven-aside sudden death overtime. Five minutes later, a Virginia penalty corner sealed the match. Carrie Goodloe fired a shot into the boards and left the Blue Devils with yet another abrupt, sour ending. “This is the third time in a row we’ve lost to UVa in seven-aside overtime,” said Sommer. “Though it’s disappointing, we really fought this weekend.” Despite a weekend ofmixed results, Sommer seemed extremely optimistic about Duke’s rematch against UVa this Thursday in the first round ofthe ACC tournament. “The ACC tournament is an excellent opportunity to play with the best teams in the country,” Sommer said. “After this weekend, we know we can beat UVa.” *:
»ty
tm WMA'M
Every 6.3 seconds someone dies of hunger. 75% are children.
The Hunger Banquet Thursday, November 2
•
6:30 pm
Von Canon A
Food Coupons are available on the BC Walkway (or contact kvw@duke.edu, jessica.schweer@duke.edu, leah.kinlaw@duke.edu)
Sponsoredby Duke University Stores
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MONDAY, OCTOBER 30, 2000
SPORTSWRAP
PAGE 9
Vanderbilt frustrates women’s soccer, hands Duke 2-0 loss By NICK CHRISTIE The Chronicle Duke needs to rediscover its scoring touch. Despite outshooting Vanderbilt 16-7 Saturday night, the women’s soccer team lost to the visiting Commodores 2-0. The loss was bitterly disappointing for the Blue Devils, who before their final home game of the regular season honored the team’s six seniors. “Soccer is a veiy humbling game,” a clearly disappointed coach Bill Hempen said. “It’s terribly frustrating sometimes. Right now we’re humbled and frustrated.” Early on, it appeared as though Duke might ride the wave of momentum from Senior Night to victory, as senior co-captain Alexis Highsmith helped produce a couple of scoring chances for the Blue Devils.
ROBERT TAI/THE CHRONICLE
KATIE HEAPS battles for a loose ball against Vanderbilt Saturday evening. Duke was defeated 2-0.
But Vanderbilt quickly squelched any ideas Duke had of taking an early lead, as sophomore Kat Carroll scored on Vanderbilt’s first shot, only four minutes into the game. After receiving a nice back pass from teammate Laura Hershenow, who drew two Duke defenders before dropping the ball back, a wide open Carroll blasted a perfectly placed 30-yard shot over Duke goalkeeper Isis Dallis into the upper-left hand comer of the net. The Blue Devils’ Sarah Pickens nearly scored eight minutes later off a terrific individual effort, dribbling past all ofVanderbilt’s defenders and shooting from inside of 10 yards. However, Commodore goalkeeper Stacee Sproul charged off her line to make an excellent sliding save, deflecting Pickens’ strike over the end line. Although Sproul made six more saves, she did not face another shot as threatening as that one the rest of the game. Instead, Sproul watched her defense absolutely shut down a Duke squad that couldn’t finish any scoring opportunities. Despite a plethora of chances, including a vast array of crosses that went into or sailed through the 18-yard box without connecting with another Blue Devil, Duke only forced Sproul to make one other difficult save the entire night. That opportunity came in the game’s 74th minute when Duke substitute Brigid Bowdell battled her way through two defenders, only to have a well-positioned Sproul block her low-angle shot from 12 yards out. Clearly puzzled, Hempen searched for answers to his team’s dismal offensive performance. “We couldn’t connect that last pass to be more dangerous,” he said. “We’d keep it, we’d keep it and then we’d turn it over in the middle of the field, as opposed to up front. We were just [unable to make]
that killer pass.” Perhaps as a result of their inability to score, the Blue Devils’ defense began to falter late in the game. Vanderbilt scored its second goal after forward Emily Wilpers took advantage of a Duke turnover at the top of the 18-yard box.
|
1 0
Vanderbilt (11-8) Duke (12-6)
Duke; none Vanderbilt: Kat Carroll (Laura Hershenow, Jen Talavera) 4:21; Emily Wilpers (Carroll) 88:00
Duke-16, Vanderbilt-7 H � Shots: Corner Kicks; Duke-4, Vanderbilt-4
'f.
||
Saves; Duke-2 (Isis Dallis), Vanderbilt 7 (Stacee Sproul) � Fouls; Duke-17, Vanderbilt 18
*
The Commodore freshman dribbled in behind Duke’s defense, and beat Dallis for a game-clinching goal in the 89th minute. “I think sometimes the turnovers take us by surprise,” Duke defender Katie Heaps said. “We play great games, we outshoot every team we play. We’re just not getting any goals. We control every game we play, just nothing’s happening.” In contrast, the Commodores played one of their better games of the season, outhustling the Blue Devils and capitalizing off Duke’s mistakes. “We were very pumped,” said Vanderbilt forward Jen Talavera, who assisted on Carroll’s goal in the first half. “I played off my teammates —we pressured so hard [and] we just worked for each other.”
The Blue Devils clearly need to rebound quickly
from Saturday’s disappointing loss. Duke hosts the ACC tournament, which begins Thursday.
SPr IJMq in Education 660-3075 duke, vmw. edu/web/education
Program
Foundations of Education EDUC 100.01 Staff- TTh 9:10-10:25
Specific Learning
Event 3
Disabllities/Disorders
Erie "Comlt Boriiht| Bodwsim* TmllEiliiiliiSi The Trite itori| of Rinerlei'i First Bail Coach Track
EDUC 495.01 Davis- W 3:55-6:25
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Monday October 30« Meet Coach Gumbo for Lunch- Noon 201 Rowers Bidg. Campus Presentation. 5 o.m. 201 Flowers Bldg. Book Reading at the Regulator, 7 p m=, Ninth st= •
Foundations of Education EDUC 100.02 Di Bona-TTh 10:55-12:10
•
•
Coach Gumbo has coached distance runners at Huntington Beach High School in Southern California for 12 gears. Nhere he also came out of the closet as the nation's first openly gay hign school coacn. He then coached for three years at Saddleback Community College, one year at Pacifica High school, and is currently working on a ph.D. in jocioiogf* at the University of California Irvine, where he currently teaches the Sociology of Sport and Men and Masculinities, He is the author of three books including his recent book “Trailblazing: The True Story of fimerica’s First Openly Gay Track Coach”.
Foundations of Education EDUC 100.03 Di Bona- TTh 12:40-1:55 Educational Psychology EDUC I 18.01 Malone- W 3:55-6:25
Teaching Practices in Elementary Language and Content Areas EDUC 1085.01 Webb- TTh 2:15-3:30
Motivation and At-Risk Students EDUC 123.01 Jones- Th 3:50-6:20
Infancy, Early Childhood, and Educational Programs
EDUC 121.01 Webb- Th 3:50-6:20
Early Childhood Intern EDUC 1605.01 Chafe-T 3:50-6:20
Jr-Sr Tutorials
172T
EDUC 140.01
Ballantyne- M 3:55-6:25
Children, Schools, and Society
EDUC 192 Juniorsand Seniors
Jones, Malone, Webb
Http^/lgbt.stuaff.duke.edu/athletics.html
Marxism and Society EDUC 139.01 Mardt-TTh 12:40-1:15
The Psychology of Work
Independent Study EDUC
Sponsored by Rthletic Department, Center for LGBT Life, GLSEKTriangle, Gothic Queers, Queer Grads, Program in the Study of Sexualities, Women's Center, Women’s Studies. For more information contact lgbtcenter@duke.edu or 684-6607
2-001
Secondary School
Teaching EDUC 2155.03 Wilson- M 3:55-6:20
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inquire about the Holton Prize v
in Education
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SPORTSWRAP
PAGE 10
Duke relinquishes 10 Disappointed straight points after missed extra point
MONDAY, OCTOBER 30, 2000
Duke prepares for Wake
MARYLAND from page 6 But the Blue Devils did something they have done well all year—turn an easy play into a difficult situation, as kicker Brent Garber missed the extra-point. Instead of evening the score at 1010, Duke left it at 10-9, forcing itself to find away to score again to win the game. Franks’ squad just couldn’t do it though, and Maryland tallied 10 unanswered points, the last ofwhich
Is
COMMENTARY from page 6 “When the score is 10-9 and we have the ball compared to 10-10,1 feel like we are a lot more comfortable,” said Maryland placekicker Brian Kopka, who added a field goal on the Terps’ next possession to expand Duke’s deficit to 13-9. “Even though they had just scored, our team as a whole was a lot more upbeat because we were still winning the game.” The Terrapins took that confidence and scored 10 points on their next two possessions to put the game out of reach. “I thought it was really a big miss, unfortunately for Duke,” Maryland coach Ron Vanderlinden said. “At the time, 10-9 looked really good to us.” Though Garber’s miss was critical to the team’s chances for getting back into the game, his gaffe was just one of many poorly timed mistakes Duke made throughout the game. It seemed like every time the Blue Devils made a good play, they would turn around and shoot themselves in the feet. For instance, Franks seemed particularly concerned with some of the decisions that his young QB made late in the game. Franks saw one particular play as proof of Biyant’s youth and inexperience. “It was fourth-and-2 and I called a pass play [that] we thought we could get off,” Franks said. “But D. thought he saw an opportunity to sneak the ball and [unfortunately] they were blitzing. We’ve gotta leam that there is a better play to get there
1
than that.” Franks stopped short of criticizing his quarterback and instead acknowledged it is all part of a growing process for Bryant. ‘There’s so many new things that he’s going through and trying to leam [right now],” Franks said. “It’s a very big learning experience for him.”
came on a 28-yard Jordan touchdown run with 3:18 left that effectively put the game out of reach. “We really pushed them to get
down the field and get that last touchdown we needed to put the game out of reach,” Terps coach Ron Vanderlinden said. “The offense answered, and that’s the mark of a team that’s got a lot of character.” Maryland’s offense, though stagnant in the first half, played very well coming out of the gate for the second D. BRYANT celebrates after catching a touchdown pass from wide receiver Ben Erdeljac that stanza. The Terrapins broke big plays, could have evened the score at 10-10. converted key downs and scored Those same penalties and kept the team’s winless season when they needed to. They also wore down a Duke defense that spent too turnovers were key to the Blue alive and pinned all hopes of breakmuch time on the field thanks to Devils’ loss. For instance, Bryant ing it on next week’s game against offensive turnovers in the endzone twice threw interceptions when also-winless Wake Forest. “Our guys worked hard this Duke was within scoring distance in and penalties like roughing the kickweek,” Franks said. “We gave ourthe second half. er that resulted in extra Maryland first downs. “I thought the defense played very selves a chance in the fourth quarter, “I thought our offense showed a well,” Franks said. ‘They gave us a something we haven’t done in the lot of poise coming out in the secchance to win the game... but we last three weeks. But it’s a tough sitond half and not having any penalseemed to throw interceptions in the uation, very frustrating.... Next week we got two teams that haven’t won a ties,” Vanderlinden said. “They endzone too many times.” For the Blue Devils, it was yet game so we’re just going to see who were doing what they needed to do to secure the win.” another disappointing loss that wants it more.”
IM Basketball Officials' Clinic November 2,7:00 pm 020 Wilson Center
*
MONDAY, OCTOBER 30, 2000
ACC CHAMPIONSHIP from page 1, The Chronicle Duke’s main concern was host team and favorite N C State, which had won the previous five ACC titles and already defeated the Blue Devils twice this season. Duke came in having had a break-through year, though, climbing to No. 12 in the latest poll and being rated the top team in the Southeast. “Ifs been a dream season for us,” coach Norm Ogilvie said. “Everything’s gone the way we wanted it to.”
Nonetheless, despite being ranked higher than the
No. 14 Wolfpack, the Blue Devils might have had doubts as to whether they could supplant the perennial ACC champions on their home course. “A lot of people doubted us, I’m sure N.C. State didn’t
think this could happen,” Kelly said. When the pressure for the title arose, however, Duke’s greater experience may have given it the edge over a younger and perhaps more talented N.C State team. In the last two miles, we took control of the race,” Ogilvie said. “We felt that each of the last two races we ran them tougher, and we felt like the third time had to be the charm.” Duke now turns its attention to the Nov. 11 regional championships in Greenville, S.C, where the team hopes to guarantee a position at the NCAA Championships. “We have two rungs left on the ladder,” Ogilvie said. “We want to finish top 15 in the country.” Although Duke loses two of its top runners next year in Brennan and Brendan Fitzgibbon, freshman Chris Williams’ 14th-place finish provides hope for the future. “As a freshman, [l4th] was a great spot to finish in,” said Williams, who missed All-ACC honors by just five seconds. “It was just a great day.” Ogilvie felt that, despite the comfort of running on its home course, N.C State’s five straight titles made it less aggressive than the Blue Devils. “Our guys got really hungry, they [didn’t] want second three years in a row,” he said. “State will be very angry when we see them in a couple weeks [at regionals].” While Duke came out extremely motivated, it stuck to a game plan of beginning conservatively and attacking when other teams tired towards the end.The Blue Devils pulled off the bold strategy in cruising to a 10-point victory over the Wolfpack. “I think we did it just right, we ran really smart,” Williams said. “Coach Norm tells us to just race the last mile and we did that pretty well. “Some of the guys heard that N.C State would send out a rabbit,” he added, referring to a runner who starts fast in an effort to lure other teams into using up too much energy early in the race. Indeed, N.C State’s Devin Swann sprinted into the lead in the beginning before dropping back to 13th, just ahead ofWilliams. The Blue Devils didn’t fall for the tactic, though, maintaining a conservative position until Swann and N.C State began to falter. Williams credited the leadership of Brennan with getting the team in the right mindset before the race. “I don’t know if that was the strategy or if [Swann] was really trying to win,” Williams said. “At our team meeting before the race, Terry made the best point to just stay within ourselves.” The Blue Devils proved they could do just that Saturday, giving the type of disciplined performance that should propel them to the NCAA Championships. ..
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PAGE 11
Women runners set sights on regionals
*
WOMEN’S CROSS COUNTRY from page 7
weeks at the NCAA Southeast Regionals in Greenville, S.C. The top three teams at that race receive automatic bids into the national championships, and the fourth-place team can also qualify depending on how it performed earlier in the year. We 11 be ready in two weeks,” Samuelson-Ogilvie said. “But we’re running a little scared now and we need to come together as a team.” Regionals are also important for Agrawal individually. The top four individual finishers automatically qualify for nationals, and several at-large bids are also given. Last year as a freshman, Agrawal placed sixth at regionals before going on to finish 28th out of 300 runners at NCAAs. I would love to qualify for the individual race,” Agrawal said. “But it’s more important that the team makes it. We just need some confidence, some good workouts and some rest.”
4
:
No. 12 Duke dispels doubts with ACC title
SPORTSWRAP
MS®
Place
Team N.C. State North Carolina Wake Forest Duke Virginia
Place 3
Name Sheela Agrawal Megan Sullivan Katie Atlas Maddy Woodmansee Lisa Nagorny
1 21
30 36
Total 43 52 92 106 107 Times 18:15.3 19:07.3 19:18.0 19:30.7 19:35.9
SPORTSWRAP
PAGE 12
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MONDAY, OCTOBER 30, 2000
ets ii age merit
Interdisciplinary
Certificate
Program
New Elective Courses Spring 2001 -
ENV 182, Business and the Environment (2512) TuTh 12:40-1:55 p.m. Instructors: Ronie Garcia-Johnson/Erika Sasser 'This course is designed to provide students with an understanding of key themes, debates, and concepts in the study of business and the environment. It provides an historical overview of the role of business in society, focusing on the evolution of management tools, policies, and institutions to protect the environment. The first part of the course will explore the interaction of business, civil society, and government actors in the United States; particular attention will be paid to firms and associations in the auto, chemical, and forestry industries. Students will learn about the innovations of these business, civil society, and government actors as they confront environmental degradation and one another. The second part of the course will move from the domestic level to discuss global level issues, including the rise of the global environmental movement, international environmental law, and the attempts of firms and industry associations to promote deregulated international commerce. Students will learn how firms and industries are taking their domestic solutions beyond US borders in the form of certification institutions to cope in a globalized world, and explore the consequences for the environment." http;//www.duke.edu/~rgarcia/b&e.html
Political Science 161, Business, Politics and Economic Growth (5025) MW 2:20-3:35 p.m. Instructor: Herbert Kitschelt
Politics affects the economic performance of firms, sectors and whole national or regional economies. This course analyzes the political institutions and power configurations that impinge upon economic outcomes in advanced postindustrial democracies and select newly industrializing politics. Moreover, the course shows that diversity among capitalisms persists despite "globalization" of markets for goods and services. Among the subjects of the course are (1) the political governance of the financial system; (2) corporate research and development strategies; (3) institutions of human capital formation; (4) the organization of economic interests, and more specifically the bargaining regimes between employers and employees. The course probes into the dynamic relationship between national and subnational modes of capitalist governance and processes of economic globalization.
Markets
Management Studies (MMS) 195.01, The Cultural Economy of Cybernetics (4124) TuTh 2:15 3:30 p.m. Instructor: Eddie Shanken & -
This course explores the impact of cybernetics on the formation of culture. Students learn the history of cybernetics and its relation to fields such as information theory, artificial intelligence, and artificial life. Cybernetics anticipated an intrinsically interdisciplinary systems aesthetics that the course will map onto parallel developments in art, film, and literature. Students will also examine the relationship between cybernetics, cyberspace, and WWW-based multi-media. Readings will include canonical texts on cybernetics and writings by artists and critics about the relationship of cybernetics to the economy of culture.
Sociology 198.01, The History and Philosophy of American Business: From 1850 Present (1145) -
TuTh 10:55 a.m. 12:10 p.m. Instructor: Gary Hull -
This course focuses on the landmark events in American business since 1850, and on the philosophic ideas at the root of those events. Over the last 150 years, America has experienced the greatest economic achievements in history. But what made it possible for America to go from: transportation by horse and buggy to travel by supersonic jet; from a meager food supply to supermarkets; from communication via pony express to cell phones and email; from uncomfortable and cramped multi-family dwellings to temperature controlled single-family homes; from relative poverty and a life expectancy of about 40 to unprecedented wealth and a life span of about 80? And what were the social, political, and philosophical causes of this dramatic transformation? What is the source of the economic innovation and how did the modern corporation develop? Was this economic development caused by the efforts of labor unions? By government legislation? By individual entrepreneurs and wealth creators? Was the cause historical inevitability? America's abundance of natural resources? Or was it caused by certain fundamental ideas, such as a respect for property rights, individualism, and reason?
MONDAY, OCTOBER
Commentary
30, 2000
After asking the
PAGE 11
in the centerfold Quotation questions
for years, a reporter finds out how it feels to see her name—in an issue of Playboy
On the prowl Kelly Woo About a month ago, someone came up to me and with a smirk said, “I saw you in Playboy.” Since then, I’ve had an insightful lesson in journalism. Yes, I am in Playboy, but it’s not what you think. I’m quoted in an article on Playboy.com. Last spring, a freelance writer called me for more details on an article The Chronicle had just run on the unofficial graduation requirements. He needed a quote for a story he was writing about sex on campus, and knowing his next paycheck depended on it, I obliged. Little did I know that several months later, I would regret it. My quote was innocuous enough—something about how sex in the gardens was probably the most difficult of the requirements since so many people go there. Still, I was roundly teased, especially by my colleagues here at The Chronicle, when the gossip spread. They would snicker and gasp and say, “Kelly Woo! What were you thinking?!” Yes, what was I thinking? But what is any source thinking when he or she gives a quote to a publication? For the first time, I was on the other side of the fence. Usually, I was the one who printed what people said, without seeing the consequences. And I started to wonder whatever happened
to my sources—whether or not they were teased by their peers, if they regretted what they said and why they did it at all. So, I decided to investigate what happened to my sources after they appeared in my stories. Here is what two of them had to say about their
some kind of bias against Playboy? Sure, the magazine’s got a smutty reputation, but I was quoted in a story for the online site. There is a difference. So, what did I learn? I learned to what lengths students will go to promote their own interests, or see their name in print. Having seen my name in experiences: a byline many times, I suppose I am Junior Christine Varnado was quot- immune to that particular thrill. ed in my Feb. 16, 1999 story about a “The people I know do like [being defunct scholarship she and two others quoted] because it applies to what were supposed to receive. they’re doing with their time here, a Because of the rather serious nature project they’re working on or an issue of that story, Varnado was not ribbed by that’s important to them,” Varnado said her friends about her quote. However, in her interview. she has teased others for what they Kakad said, “In both [stories] I’ve said in The Chronicle. had something to say about the topic, “My boyfriend was quoted about and I wouldn’t mind other people Jimmy Johns going off of points knowing how I feel. I also wouldn’t mind other people because of their sneaky underhanded practices... and we got a big laugh out knowing how I feel, but as a journalof that.” ist, I can’t really do that. I must When the topic is serious, Varnado said, “People are like, T saw you in The WD6ODEP VoTep. Chronicle, way to go.”’ me about People also said that to
appear to be impartial. The thing is, journalists crave as much attention as sources do. That’s why, when the Playboy writer called, I gave him a quote. Not just out of pity but because I rarely get the opportunity to venture my personal opinion. I was irked by the reaction to the quote, not because it was mocking in tone, but because there was more of it than I had ever gotten from my three years’ worth of Chronicle articles. But that’s how it should be; Sources should always get more attention than writers. They put themselves out there, on the line, for all the world to see. As a journalist, I can hide—in my office, behind other people’s words, behind impartiality. And that is both a blessing and a curse.
Kelly Woo is a Trinity senior and senior editor of The Chronicle.
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Junior Meera Kakad was quoted in my Nov. 6, 1998, article about Student Action with Farmworkers, specifically about tutoring Latino children. Kakad also did not get teased for her quote. In fact, she got a very favorable response. “A lot of people saw the article and said, ‘Oh cool, I didn’t know you did that and how do you get involved,”’ she
said. Now, why didn’t people say that to
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THREE BLIND MICE find their dictionary Monday, Monday THREE BLIND MICE As we return to ACES Web for another round of login timeouts, we can’t help but question the choice of the “bookbag.” Why the Jansport tire-bottom pack? Maybe it’s there to make the graduate students feel more at ease with this newfangled technology business. Let’s be compassionate here—millennial adjustment doesn’t exactly come easy to these poor souls, as we can see by their fashion sense, or lack thereof. Remember ‘bajas’—those woven Mexican anoraks? Case in point. How about a nifty baja along with a smart pair of black jeans and some chic blue Reebok high-tops? At least those Divinity students registering for PREACHNG [sic] were putting their courses in the right bookbag.
But really though, psych, and art history should slide into a Kate Spade shoulder bag, and Environmental Science should fall into a cloth Wellspring tote. Why stop there? Foreign languages should drop into the woven, study-abroad-in-theThird-World satchel, while economics and public policy studies should slip into the one-strap pseudo-euro daypack, complete with cell phone appendage. Due to the various versions of campus conformity, the trendy messenger bag would have been our default choice for the ACES bookbag. But for now, the tirepack will have to do as we struggle to lift our exhausted little heads from our desks and reload enough times to GO REGISTER! Meanwhile, the graduate students (if they’ve figured out a few mouse tricks by now) are rightclicking on the bookbag to look for the “buy now option. They’d sling the old thing over one shoulder and take naively confident strides down the campus catwalk.
Let’s take these lovably dorky graduate students by the hand on a field trip to J. Crew so they can look just like the rest of us. Maybe in return for our kind deed they’d teach us a few key vocabulary words so that we could impress our professors by sounding as remarkably intelligent as graduate students do! After a few lessons, we too would toss our heads back, assume a lofty, more-righteous-than-thou tone and casually refer to our vast theoretical base. ‘With respect to this protopost-colonialist text, vis-a-vis socialist-feminist problematics, I’ve begun to reflect on the discursive articulations of negotiated hegemony.” Wow. Graduate student lexicon must be the key to all success! We really need to nip this vocabulary problem in the bud. If the discriminating public can just crack down on the offenders before the words get too complicated, we wouldn’t have graduate students spouting out words that most people can’t correct because they haven’t ever heard of them, anyway. Too often this absurdity is recognized as genius. Just because the word has more than three syllables does not mean that it is being used correctly. It’s just that most people don’t know that it’s wrong. So we need to be ever vigilant of those who capitalize on the low vocabulary threshold of the general public. Unfortunately, though, the impending Ph.D. is enough of a deterrent for most people, so instead of criticizing graduate students, we end up picking on the average guy who calls into a radio station and declares on-the-air that his mind is a virtual “cesspool of information.” OK, pal. Whatever you say. But why should this poor fellow get all the flak? We must make a concerted effort to eliminate the tendency toward hyperusage by those who have a free rein with their internal thesaurus. Just because it was on their SAT vocabulary flashcards does not mean that they have license to interject any word they want into the conversation. Tangentially related to this syndrome is the phenomenon where the same person tells you that s/he
was late to meet you due to an interminable wait at the bus stop, after sitting through an interminable class, listening to an interminable presentation. That’s when you know you’re dealing with a case of justlearned-new-word overuse. The remedy? Shift F7. That’s right, all you Microsoft Word junkies, the thesaurus. With the touch of a few buttons, “chew” becomes “masticate,” and “talk” becomes “chew the fat.” This really goes haywire when a computer virus infiltrates your spell check function and wreaks havoc with your word choice, coming off as presumably poor +
vocabulary skills In case you haven’t experienced this one first hand, what we’re talking about here is the transformation of Lieberman into librarian, or better yet, Liberian. As if this isn’t bad enough, a potentially more problematic situation occurs when the spontaneous letter-changing variant takes over. Let’s use the hypothetical of changing L’s to T’s, for example. If you thought having the
name Lolita was bad, think about the damage this virus could do with that. Same goes for even seemingly harmless names like Lilly. Does this have anything to do with the fact that we talk about computer viruses as ifthey’re STDs? “So how do you think you got it?” “I don’t know—maybe he had it, and I got it from him.” “Did you have protection?” “Yeah, I did, but I think it might have been old.” So heed our warning: In this technological revolution, we’re never safe from the virus or the shameless vocabulary abuser. But be kind—look past your TA’s tapered acid-wash jeans and suede bucs with the same tolerance you applied to the beerlessness at Oktoberfest. You never know when you’ll need to borrow his tire-bottom bookbag to change a flat.
In the spirit of Halloween, THREE BLIND MICE warn you to beware of ghouls, in our opinion the most underrated spooky creatures.
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MONDAY, OCTOBER 30, 2000
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The Chronicle: Other things that should be glow-in-the-dark: Mary The Chapel: My damn DukeCard, so I could find it: Lucy Same goes for my keys: Martin Brody Lemurs (they’re not so different from rabbits): Jenny, Matt, Regan Trent: Ross The food from Grace’s Cafe (it might already be):
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Account Representatives:
Monica Franklin, Dawn Hall, Yu-hsien Huang, Lars Johnson Anna Carollo Account Assistant: Sallyann Bergh, Matt Epley, Sales Representatives: Chris Graber, Jordana Joffe, Constance Lindsay, Margaret Ng, Tommy Sternberg Creative Services: Dallas Baker, Jonathan Blackwell, Laura Durity, Alise Edwards, Lina Fenequito, Megan Harris, Annie Lewis, Dan Librot Preeti Garg, Ellen Mielke, Taeh Ward Business Assistant: Classifieds: Kate Burgess, Nicole Gorham, Jane Hetherington
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MONDAY, OCTOBER 30,2000
The Chronicle
Westminster Presbyterian/UCC Fellowship
The Chronicle publishes several public service calendars through the week as detailed below:
Duke Bulletin Board Community Calendar Sports Events Arts Events
Entertainment
Monday Tuesday-Friday Monday
Tuesday Friday Thursday &
To submit a notice for our Duke Bulletin Board and Community Calendars, send it to the attention of “Calendar Coordinator at the address below, fax or e-mail. Submissionsfor these calendars are published on a space-available basis with priority given to Duke events. Notices must be for events which are free and open to the public orfor which proceeds benefit a public/not-for-profit cause. Deadline for the Bulletin Board is noon Thursday. ”
To submit a noticefor the Sports. Arts or Entertainment calendars, send it to the attention of the Sports Editor, ArtsEditor, or Recess Editor, respectively, at the address below: The Chronicle, Box 90858, Durham. NC 27708. Fax: (919) 684-4696. Phone: (919) 684-2663 (Notices may not be taken over the phone). E-mail: calendar@chronicle.duke.edu for community calendar and bulletin board notices only.
meets 9-
10:00 p.m. in the Chapel Basement Lounge. “Haphour,” an informal time of refreshments and fellowship, begins at 8:30 p.m. All are welcome.
TVZSPAY The City ofDurham Parks and Recreation Department presents Halloween “Spook”-ta-cular events: Pre-teen Carnival (ages 6-12) at Edison Johnson/560-4270, Preteen Party at the W.D. Hill Recreation Center/560-4292, and HALOW-ENO “Fun for the Whole Family!” at West Pi. On the Eno/471-1623. Call the locations for information on event activities. Join prizewinning photographer and formerMac Arthur Fellow Wendy Ewald for the Brown Bag Lunch Discussion Series ‘Who s Looking? Photography and Ethics” -
The discussion will begin at 12:00 noon at the Center for Documentary Studies. Drinks and dessert provided. Please RSVP to cdthomps@duke.edu. The
Duke University English Department presents a symposiumby David Scott Kastan, ProfessorofEnglish
and Comparative Literature at Columbia
University, entitled, “From Codex to Computer: or, Shakespeare Bytes”, at 4;oopm on Tuesday, October 31st, in the Carpenter Boardroom on the second floor of Perkins
Library.
PAGE 13
Presbyterian/UCC Campus Ministry Bible Study meets ;00 p.m. in the Chapel basement, Room 036. at We will be studying Genesis. Bring your lunch and
12:1 5-1
your Bible.
Pablo Oyarzun, Philosophy Department, Universidad de Chile, will present a lecture on “Cuatro figuras de la tradiccion y la cara borrosa del indi viduo” (on Borges). 4:00 p.m., Breedlove Room. Perkins Library. Sponsored by Duke University, Department of Romance Studies, Duke in Madrid program, Center for Latin American and Caribbean Studies, Working Group of Discourses of Knowledge and Ideological Articulations in the Americas.
fWW Author readings of The Case of Dr. Sachs: A Novel, by Martin Winckler at 12:00 noon at the Osier Literary Roundtable, Administrative Conference Room, 14218 Red Zone, Duke Clinics. For more info call 416-2146.
Distinguished
Lecture Series: The Division of Earth and Ocean Sciences, Nicholas School of the Environment, presents “Modeling Natural Systems,” a lecture by Brad Wemer, Complex Systems Laboratory, University of California, San Diego. 3:00 p.m. in 201 Old Chemistry Building. Refreshments to follow the talk.
Women’s Center: The Power OfWords: Readings from the Women’s Center Book Exchange. Members of the Duke community read from their favorite works from the book exchange. For information, call 684-3897. 6:00 p.m., Few Federation, West Campus.
Living with Advanced/Metastatic Cancer Support Group is held every Friday from 3-4:30 p.m. at Cornucopia House Cancer Support Center in Chapel Hill. For information, call 967-8842. www.comucopiahouse.org.
Watch The Case of Dr. Sachs, a French film directed by Michael Deville based on the book by Martin Winckler, 7:00 p.m., Griffith Film Theater, Bryan Center. A dessert reception with the author will follow.
The Center for Late Ancient Studies presents A SYMPOSIUM; Paulinus and the Cult ofFelix of Nola: The Recovery of a Late Antique Pilgrimage Site, 3;30 p.m. Speakers include Dennis Trout of the University of
Missouri-Columbia “The Nola of Paulinus”; Tomas Lehmann, of Westfalische Wilhems-Universitat, Munster, “Early Christian Art and Architecture at Nola”; and Dieter Korol of Westfalische -
The Ruins in Modem Chinese Visual Culture presents Wu Hung, the Harrie A. Vanderstappen Distinguished Service Professor in Art History at the University of Chicago, 7:00 p.m.. Toy Lounge, Dey Hall.
-
Wilhems-Universitat, Munster, “Campanian Wall and Vault Mosaics to ca. 500 C.E. and Their Stylistic Development.” Room 2048 East Duke Building. Public is invited. Co-sponsored by the Departments of Art and Art History and the Center for Medieval and Renaissance Studies. -
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The Orange County Dispute Settlement Center presents “Communication and Conflict Resolution Skills,” instructed by Anna Cassilly, 9:00 a.m. to4;00 p.m. This workshop uses games, role-plays, lecture and discussion to explore more effective ways to communicate and to reach winAvin solutions toour conflicts. sBo,Orange County Dispute Settlement Center, 302 Weaver St., Carrboro. Cancer Wei Iness Orientation Group(for cancer patients, family members and extended caregivers) meets Mondays from 12 noon-1:30 p.m. at Cornucopia House Cancer Support Center, Chapel Hill. For info, call 967-8842. ,
The “Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and Transgender in Athletics” Series will feature “Eric ‘Coach Gumby’ Anderson, Trailblazing; The True Story of America’s First Openly Gay Track Coach.” Meet Coach Gumby for Lunch at 12:00 p.m. in 201 Flowers Bldg. An All Campus Presentation will follow at 5:00 p.m. in 201 Flowers Bldg., and then there will be a book reading at the Regulator, 7:00 p.m., Ninth St. The Wesley Fellowship (United Methodist Campus Ministry) Food for Thought-Faith Issues over Lunch, 12:15 p.m.. Wesley Office, basement of Duke Chapel. AH are welcome. For more information, call 684-6735 or e-mail jenny.copeland@duke.edu. The Women’s Center presents “Setting Goals for a Successful Life.” Join Mary Willingham as she guides a discussion exploring how to make executable goals for a successful life. Leant how to live a life with direction and promise and develop personal goals to obtain a rich and fulfilled life. 7:00-9:00 p.m. To register, call 968-4610. The Department of Art and Art History, Institute of the Arts, and Women’s Studies Program present the renowned artist Judy Chicago, Duke University Artistin-Residence, lecturing in Griffith Theater, the Bryan Center, at 7:00 p.m. Ms. Chicago will be discussing her recent book co-authored by British art writer, Edward Lucie-Smith. The title ofher lecture is “Contested Territory: Women and Art”. The lecture is free and open to the public. Teer House Healthy Happenings: Polycystic Ovary Syndrome: New Treatments and Insights about Your Metabolism. 7:00 p.m. Dr. Ann Brown. To register, call 416-3853. 4019 N. Roxboro Road, Durham.
Broadway at Duke
presents “The Complete Millenium
Musical (Abridged)” by the Reduced Shakespeare Company. A dissected account of 1000 years of world history from Beowulf to Baywatch, a history like you’ve never heard it before. 8:00 p.m. Page Auditorium. Tickets are $22,519,516 (Duke Students $ 17,$ 14,$ 11). Group discounts available. The Duke Department of Music presents "The Norwegian Hiking Buddies,” Gregory Fulkerson, violin, and Michael Adcock, piano, playing works by Greig, Sinding. and Delius, 8:00p.m., Nelson Music Room, East Duke Bldg., East Campus. Admission free. Individualsrequiringspecial assistance can contact the Music Department at 6603300 well in advance to make arrangements.
Duke Faculty and Staff LGBT Group “Equity and Sexuality, 5:00p.m. inroom2ol Flowers (Conference Room). The event will sponsor a panel givingan overview of Same Sex Benefits and issues of equity at Duke. There will be a question-answer period after the presentations and a reception to follow the event. Special Worship Service TAIZE Evening Prayer. Held each Tuesday during the academic year in the tradition of the Brothers of Taize. All are welcome. 5:15 p.m. Memorial Chapel. -
Inquiring into the Catholic Faith: a Conversation. Tuesdays from 7:00-9:00 p.m. Catholic Student Center, Room 037, Chapel Basement. All are welcome.
Novelist and James B. Duke professor of English Reynolds Price reads ghost stories for Halloween. For information, call 660-5816. Limited seating. 7:00p.m. Thomas Room, Lilly Library, East Campus. Freewater Presentations: Bram Stoker’s “Dracula.”Free to Duke University students with ID and $3.00 to nonDuke students. 7:00 and9:3op.m. Griffith Film Theater, Bryan Center. For more information, call Duke University Union at 684-2911. The Manna Christian Fellowship will be hosting a discussion on “Worship, Bible Study, And Fellowship” tonight and every Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. in the Chapel Basement. For more information, contact Ed Lee at ejl2@duke.edu or visit www.duke.edu/manna.
Study Night and Special Programs with the Episcopal Center at Duke. 7:30-11:00 p.m., 505 Alexander Ave. (behind the Duke Police station). Open to everyone. Duke Artists Series; Renee Fleming, soprano. 8:00 p.m. Acclaimed as “America’s favorite soprano,” Renee Fleming is undoubtedly one of the most successful American sopranos today. Contact the Box Office at 684-4444 or fax your order directly to the Box Office at 660-1729. Visit http://auxweb.duke.edu/boxoffice
THtKSPAr “Table Talk!” A drop-in lunch sponsored by the Westminster Presbyterian/UCC Fellowship, the Baptist Student Union, and the Newman Catholic Student Center. At the Chapel Basement Kitchen, 12 noon-1.00 p.m. Come join us! Dr. Peter Storey, former president of the South African Council of Churches and a visiting professor at Duke Divinity School, will speak about South Africa’s Truth and Reconciliation Commission. His talk, sponsored by the Christian Legal Society and the Black Law Students Association, is titled “Without Truth, No Healing; Without Forgiveness, No Future.” For information, call 613-7015. 12:15 p.m., Room 3043 of the Law School, Science Drive atTowerview Road, West Campus. Teer House Healthy Happenings: Medicare: An Overview and Update. Stephanie Bass. To register, call 416-3853. 2:00 p.m. 4019 N. Roxboro Road,
The Duke Wind Symphony, conducted by Kraig Williams, presents “Halloween Concert,” 8:00 p.m. in the Baldwin Auditorium. Costumes optional. Special guests; Cartoon Characters. Admission free.
Durham.
Southern Circuit; “One of Us.” A documentary about her eccentric family by Susan Korda. Korda builds compellingportraits of the fascinating members of her family, including a glamorous mother who saved the lives of 30 strangers during World War II but was willing to abandon her own daughter. In a searing indictment of Germany, her family, and ultimately herself, Korda pulls no punches. Korda is featured as part of Southern Circuit, a tour of six internationally recognized independent film/video artists to nine Southeastern cities. Tickets are free for Duke students and employees, $5 for the public. For information, call 660-3099. 8:00 p.m. Center for Documentary Studies, 1317 W. Pettigrew St.
Pilgrims,”4:3op.m. R00m226 Allen Building. Public is invited; reception following. Co-sponsored by the
The Wesley Fellowship (United Methodist Campus Ministry) Small Group Discussion on Faith Politics will meet at 9:30 p.m. in the Wesley Office, Chapel &
basement. All are welcome” For more information, call 684-6735 or e-mail jenny.copeland@duke.edu.
All Hallow’s Eve Worship Service. The congregation will gather on the front Chapel steps and move inside during the service. All are welcome. For information, ca11684-2572. 10:30p.m. Duke Chapel, West Campus.
VV£PN£SP*r Integrative Medicine Study Group; Lauren Jubelirer. “Acupuncture Case: Allergies." For information, call 286-0411. 12 noon. 2993 Duke Clinic.
The Center for Late Ancient Studies presents Dennis Trout from the University of Missouri-Columbia.speaking on “History
at the Tomb; Saints, Poets, and
Department of Classical Studies and Religion.
Author readings of The Case of Dr. Sachs. A Novel, by Martin Winckler at 7:00 p.m. in the Regulator Bookshop, 720 Ninth St. Teer House Healthy Happenings: Boundaries: Four Steps to Keeping Them Healthy, Ruth Ledesma. To register, call 416-3853. 7:00 p.m. 4019 N. Roxboro Road. Durham
Freewater Presentations: Pink Floyd’s “The Wall.” Free to Duke University students with ID and $3.00 to nonDuke students. 7:00 and 9:30 p.m. Griffith Film Theater. Bryan Center. For more information, call Duke University Union at 684-2911. The Duke Institute of the Arts presents "Voices ofMali.” two of Africa's rising stars with their bands, a part of the LivingTraditions Series. 8:00p.m, in the Reynolds Theater, Bryan Center. Tickets are $2l. 17 ($ 10 Duke Students). To charge in advance, call 684-4444. Shenandoah Shakespeare Express: “The Roaring Girl" Written by Shakespeare competitors Thomas Middleton and Thomas Dekker. the play is a romantic comedy and a bawdy documentary about a notorious woman of Renaissance Lond Performance is 8:00 p.m. Call 684-4444 tor tickets. Sheafer Theater. Bryan Center, West Campus.
University Union: Opening reception for artist Gail Hillow Watkins. For information, call 684-2911. 5.00 p.m. Brown Gallery, Bryan Center, West Campus.
Duke
Heat up a chilly night with First Friday fun as the Museum and Aero Cafe stay open until 9:00 p.m. Catch an off-
beat movie, explore the blockbuster traveling exhibit, and enjoy delicious snacks. Visit the Museum’s web site at www.naturalsciences.org for details. The JC Raulston Arboretum presents Moonlight in the gardens; After-dark LandscapeLighting Showcase, 6.00 p.m. to 9:00 p.m. at the JCRA. Contact Sandie Holdan at 515-3132. $2O for JCRA members and $25 for non-
members. Refreshments will be served.
Freewater Presentations; “East is East.” Free to Duke University students with ID and $3.00 to non-Duke students. 7:00 and 9;30 p.m. Griffith Film Theater, Bryan Center. For more information, call Duke University Union at 684-2911, The Velveteen Rabbit, sponsord by Manpower Inc., debuts tonight at 7:30 p.m. in the Gaddy-Goodwin Teaching Theatre. The play lasts under one hour, with no intermisssion. There is plenty here for both younger and older children to relate to. Recommended ages are 5 and up. Tickets ($8 adults, $6 children) go on sale at the RLT box office on Monday, October 30.
SArumr The Duke University Medical Center Department of Ophthalmology presents Medical Alumni, a part of the Grand Rounds 200 Schedule, 8:00 a.m 9:30 a.m. in the Duke University EyeCenter, Homaday Conference Room. For more information, contact Michelle Evans at 684-3836 or michelle.evans@duke.edu. -
Homebuying 101; Freehomebuyingseminar,9:lsa.m. to 12:00 noon. Learn everything you need to know about how to purchase a home. How much home you can afford, how to get the seller to pay your closing costs, low down payment loans, negotiating a deal, how to pick a realtor and builder, special financing options, tax benefits and more. Reservations are needed. Call 505-3082. Academy of Trial Lawyers. 1312 Annapolis Drive in Raleigh. Duke Gardens: "The Joys of Butterflies and Insects in the Garden." Tom Meeker, the director of the Butterfly House at the N.G. Museum of Life and Science, will explore the jobs of butterflies in the garden. Tickets are $lO for the public. $7 for Friends of the Gardens, family tickets are Sl2 for Friends and Sl5 for the public; call 684-3698. 10:00 am. to 11:30 am. Meet at the new Horticulture Service Area. World Bead Day! Smokey Mountain States Intergalactic Bead Festival in Asheville. NC. 10:00a.m.-6:00 p m.. National Guard Armory. Over lorty vendors from nineteen states with an extraordinary display of ancient, antique, vintage, and modem handmade beads. For information call 888-729-6904.
The Chronicle
page
•
Classifieds
u JAY-Z
CD’s for $14.98 at the Listening Booth Sale. Tuesday, October 31st from 11:00am until 8:00pm. Mad Wax. 1007 W. Chapel Hill Street, 680-2944.
Announcements AUSTRALIA INFO
Going to Australia to study abroad this spring? Or, are you interested in study opportunities
HIV TESTING:
The Duke Student Health Service offers FREE, Superconfidential HIV Testing for Duke students Test results do not go on your medical record. Call the Infirmary at 681appointment. for an WELL Covered by the Student Health Fee
for fall? Meet associate director Russ Alexander, from the Univ. of New South Wales, on Wed., Nov. 1, from 4 to 5:15 p.m. in 121 Allen. An informal introduction to Australia, what to expect, classes, financial tips & travel presented. info be will Questions? Call the Office of Study Abroad, 684-2174. Calculus Homework?
Teaching is more than telling. Learning is more than remembering. Take a Program in Education course for interactive discovery and inquiry. For more information call 660-3075 or visit
Get any
derivative automatically. Step-bystep, with each step explained
www.duke.edu/web/education.
FREE! www.calclol.com.
Education Studies Presents the Duke University/ International School of Brussels Fellowship Program (a
Early
Childhood
Apts. For Rent Female roommate
experience).
postgraduate
OUTKAST
&
classy 2 BR
Information Meeting, Thursday, November 2, 2000, 212 West Duke
wanted
FREE MONEY Giving away $lOO to the 1000th person to sign up for
—
Fantasy Sports at smallworid.com using promo-code NCS.
Autos For Sale
THE ARCHIVE
1969 Karmannghia, reliable and cute, hard top, auto stick, $3200, Blansky® mind919-563-1038. spring. com.
Literary magazine wants your poetry, fiction, art. New deadline Nov 1. to Questions, submissions arb9@duke.edu.
Child Care Assistant, 2 part time positions available, to assist with the safe and loving care of infants and toddlers at busy downtown church. Sunday mornings and
evenings required. (Approx. 5.5 hours per week). First Aid, and CPR cert is a plus, but we will provide cert for the right applicant, Must be dependable, a nonsmoker, at least 18 years of age and willing to undergo criminal background screening. $l5/Hour. To apply please mail or fax a resume and letter of interest to: Program Minister, 215N Church St., Durham, NC 27701 Fax 688-0974. Wednesday
Local church needs child care givers Wednesday evenings 69pm. Contact Vicky at 382-3393 for more information.
TUTOR/CHILDCARE NEEDED After School Child Care/Tutor in Reading and Math for 4th Grade Students (in our Home) needed. Good Communication Skills and
Required. Transportation Competitive pay. Please call 4891900 or 660-2649.
Help Wanted
Who is eligible: Full time students with 4 semester courses OR 12 semester hours Ages 18-24
ARTIST ASSISTANT
Part-time,
flexible hours, hang assist in studio.
paintings, Responsible, detail-oriented. Framing experience helpful. On688-8852 or site training. ntmink@aol.com.
Fitness World Front desk employees needed immediately for part-
time/full-time positions.
100 for completion ofboth
FUQUA LIBRARY part time assis-
9)684-3539, rodney.folz@duke.edu, box 2620 DUMC, Durham NC 27710.
tant. Copying, filing, dependability,
as a
BARTENDERS NEEDED!!! Earn $l5-30/hr. Job placement assistance is top priority. Raleigh’s Bartending School. Call now for information about our fall tuition Offer ends soon!! Have special. fun! Make money! Meet people!
www.cocktailmix-
er.com
Bright, energetic person, thought by Durham real estate renovation and management company to handle leasing and other task, great working environment, salary and benefits. Monday-Friday. Fax resume to 919-416-1893. Will train.
Courier Needed Courier needed to work for the Judicial Officer in the Office of Tasks Development. Student include daily delivery of mail to student residence halls. Hours are flexible, but reliability and timeliness are pertinent. Please call 684-6313 for more information. Work-study
EARN UP TO $l5O for a psychology study. We need motivated subjects to participate in a diary study on memory over the next 6 weeks. Contact Jennifer Talarico at jenrico@psych.duke.edu for more information.
GENERAL HELP WANTED distributing phone cards. No experience necessary, full or part-time. 1-800-5307524.
2 Bedroom, 1 bath very close to Duke. Good attic storage, 1/2 acre lot. Garage. Ask price. 850-9334223 or 612-5265.
HEALTHCARE resumes, CVs, and editorial services. A Health Care Focus Writing & Resume Service. 380-3770 or www. healthcarewriting. com
HOUSESITTER needed. Durham, N’gate Park, brick, 2BR, 1 BA, wood floors, furnished or not. $6OO/1 person, $6BO/2 people utils included in exchange for property mgmt. Min. 2-yr commitment & 4 refs required, will consider only professional person, grad, med or postdoc students. No smoke/pets indoors. Interviewing now. Avail,
James Joyce Irish Pub is hiring Reference required. Call Ernie, 683-3022 or 824-7798.
PTwaitstaff.
Magnolia Grill seeks PM Dessert Pantry for full-time Tuesday thru Saturday 2PM-until. Please apply Tuesday-Saturday 10AM-4PM at 1002 Ninth Street, Durham.
late Nov. 220-7643. Live off Campus with friends! Act now to get the best locations for the Bob 2001-2002 school year. 416-0393. Schmitz Properties. Visit us on the web at www.bob-
MAXIM Healthcare Services has immediate openings for students to work part time hours with developmentally disabled children. All positions involve working one on one in the clients home or community. GREAT PAY & EXCELLENT WORK Experience. Call today (919) 419-1484 ask for Joe Elia,
schmitzproperties.com.
Meetings
-
Needed Student (preferrably WorkStudy Funded) to do filing, light typing, errands, copying, etc. Needed
DUKE IN MADRID ORIENTATION Important session will be held on Mon., Oct. 30 at 5:30 in 129 Social/Psychology for Spring 2001 DIM participants. If you are unable to attend, general study abroad orientation sessions will be offered on Mon., Nov. 13 at 4 p.m. in 139 Social Sciences or Tues., Nov. 14 at 6 p.m. in 136 Social Sciences. For additional information, contact the Study Abroad Office, 121 Allen Bldg., 684-2174.
PART-TIME INTERN
Salomon Smith Barney, a leader in the financial services industry, is seeking a part-time intern, 15-20 hours a week, to work with two of our senior financial consultants. Flexible hours. Juniors Preferred. Duties include help with marketing, customer service, data entry, etc. Please mail, fax or email resume to: George Littlewood, Salomon Smith Barney, PO Box 52449, Durham,
The Chronicle classified advertising
Email Fax 490-7135. 27717. george.littlewood@rssmb.com. Equal Opportunity Employer.
DUKE IN ROME SUMMER 2001 Information meeting will be held
on Mon., Oct. 30 at 5:30 p.m. in 226 Allen Bldg. Applications will be available in the Office of Study Abroad, 121 Allen Bldg., 684-2174.
SATISFACTION WANTS YOU!!!
-
-
Satisfaction Restaurant is now hiring for waitstaff, delivery drivers, bouncers, cooks, and hosts. Impress your friends and family by working in the coolest bar in Durham! Apply in person or call Saraßeth 682-7397.
-
DUKE IN SPAIN SUMMER 2001
Want to study in Madrid & this summer? Malaga Information meeting will be held Wed., Nov. 1, at 5 p.m. in 228 Gray Bldg. For it’s 27th summer, Duke in Spain will include field trips to; Barcelona, Cordoba, Sevilla, Granada, Segovia & Toledo. Applications are available in the Office of Study Abroad, 121 Allen, 6842174.
whatdoyouwannabe? Largest selection of Halloween merchandise in the Triangle!
payment Prepayment is required
Costumes Masks Accessories for adults and children
Cash, Check, Duke IR, MC/VISA or Flex accepted (We cannot make change for cash payments.) 24 hour drop off location
•
Home of the
-
•101 W. Union Building or mail to; Chronicle Classifieds Box 90858, Durham. NC 27708 0858
TlUfivi APAR
for Spring Sc
NORTHCATE MALL 286-7857 •
(beside
University
J J It'ir’Js
Mall 932-7779
1
ts&'&lil 'il- J- Vt«'£ i"il
&
slutlonl 111
I T
:10%OFF
2 BEDROOIN
Belk’sJ
Crabtree Ualley Mall 789-9195
with this ad Jl
>
Jri= t
T M I
NOW Avai
Mask
-
Call 684-3811 if you have any questions about classifieds, No refunds or cancellations after first insertion deadline.
Houses For Rent
$530/ weekly
Earn
Tuesday through Friday mornings...
•
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
jleimers@usgs.gov.
hours to be discussed. Rate to be discussed. Contact Beverly Clark at 681-4760.
participant
-
|
www.lib.duke.edu/fsb/fuquapp2.ht
Ifinterested, please contact: Betty Burton Research Triangle Institute Research Triangle Park, NC (919) 485-2760
business rate $6.00 for first 15 words private party/N.P. $4.50 for first 15 words all ads 100 (per day) additional per word 3or 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
detail.
attention
tests
Confidentiality: Your ID will not be disclosed
VOLLEYBALL COACH Coach needed for USAV 17-under team, Sunday afternoon practices and 6 or 7 Saturday tournaments from early November through email: March. Contact
Kelly.
•Must have own transportation $
1-800-648-4849 www.ststravel.com.
Morning
and afternoon hours available. Free membership included! Call 544-9000 if interested and ask for
Duration: The interview and testing will take approx 3.5 hours, Location: Research Triangle Institute, Research Triangle Park Incentive:
Hiring On-Campus Reps SELL TRIPS, EARN CASH, GO FREE!!! Student Travel Services America’s #1 Student Tour Operator Jamaica, Mexico, Bahamas, Europe, Florida
1-800-
NEEDED! CALL NOW!! 981-8168 ext. 9018.
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(919)676-0774.
SPRINGBREAK 2001
BARTENDERS MAKE $lOO-$250 PER NIGHT! NO EXPERIENCE
Are you taking a year off before medical or graduate school? A full-time Research Technician position is available in the laboratory of Dr. Rodney Folz. This position requires a college degree and an interest in molecular biology. Applicants should have either a knowledge of, or a desire to learn, such techniques as PCR, cell culture, DNA and protein analysis, and cell transformation and transfection. Contact Dr, Rodney Folz at
required.
Looking for FULL TIME COLLEGE UNDERGRADUATES to participate in an Educational Research Project
•
Child Care
apartment. Have your
own bedroom, own bathroom. Lots of space. High ceiling. Kitchen, living room. One block from East on Watts near Main. campus $325/month. 680-0742.
Building, 4;oopm.
•
for
www.PerfectCollegeCar.com. Your parents never had it this good!!!
MONDAY, OCTOBER 30, 2000
!fc!t-'lr
MONDAY, OCTOBER 30, 2000
The Chronicle
AUSTRALIA SUMMER 2001
Misc. For Sale
Information meeting for Duke in Australia’s 6-wk,, 2-course, summer program will be held Wed., Nov. 1, at 5:30 p.m. in 140 Bio Sci. Meet program director Richard Searles, Dept, of Botany and associate director Russ Alexander from the Univ. of New South Wales, and learn more about this popular program in Australian Culture & Biogeography. Questions? Call the Office of Study Abroad, 121 Allen, 684-2174.
PAGE 15 AAAA! Early Specials! Spring Break Bahamas Party Cruise! 5 Days $279! Includes Meals. Parties! Awesome Beaches, Nightlife! Departs Florida! Get Group Go Free!! springbreaktravel.com 1-800-678-6386.
Room For Rent Private entry to room and bath. 2
Halloween Costumes
All children’s costumes $5 each. Best prices on adult costumes, wigs and accessories plus 100’s of quality adult rental costumes. Formalwear Outlet Daniel Boon village in Hillsborough. 6448243.
blocks from east campus. $350 includes utilities. 286-2285 4191223.
-
Services Offered
TENT FOR SALE
Basketball Season is around the corner, and you may need a TENT, I’ve got one. $lOO w/tarp and all
parts. Perfect for K-ville. Michael X 0202, mrbl3.
"Best Soups and Sandwiches In Durham" Now selling Brunswick Stew and Chili
Best Prices Guaranteed! Cancun, Jamaica, Bahamas & Florida. Sell trips, Earn cash & Go Free! Now hiring Campus Reps. 1-800-234-700. endless-
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Street Clinical Associates serving the Duke Community since 1984. Conveniently located right off Ninth Street. Visit our web site www.citysearch.com/rdu/msca or call 286-3453 xlso.
Catering Available Take Outs Welcome
summertours.com. Spring Break Specials! Cancun & Jamaica $419! Including Drinks & Food! Don't take a chance buying your trip from a companyhundreds of miles away- too many scams! Call or stop by our office at 133.5 E. Franklin St. in Chapel Hill. Springbreaktravel.com 1800-678-6386.
WWW.LEISURETOURS.COM.
seling for all age groups, Main
Information meeting will be held on Mon., Oct. 30 at 5:30 p.m. in 226 Allen Bldg. Applications will be available in the Office of Study Abroad, 121 Allen Bldg., 684-2174.
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NEED A VACATION? Hawaii, Las Vegas, Mexico, Florida/Disney, Caribbeans and more... (receive 15 discount cards on airfare, car rentals, hotels, golfing, dining, camping and skiing). Plus 3 FREE CRUISES. Only $1295.00...800785-4058.
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PAGE 16
The Chronicle
MONDAY, OCTOBER 30, 2000
Bailers count Caldbeck on their team, too Researchers link diagnosis, gender BALLERS from page 1 These days, they usually get together in a precious two-hour, late-aftemoon time slot. And these hard-core, innovative players have taken the after-school activity to a new height. “It’s guys that play a lot,” explained junior Mike Carolan. ‘The idea behind the list was that people would show up at different times and they wanted to try to coordinate when they were going to show up. And e-mailing was easier than calling people individually.” Four years ago, the idea for the e-mail list was implemented on a much smaller scale—just for a tight group of about 10 friends who liked to play together. Now it has expanded to include around 30 players, each of whom can initiate a pick-up game for any takers. So how does a student go from gym rat to Duke Bailer? Skill and sportsmanship. “You get on [the list] if you’re good,” Rozakis said. “And fun-to-play-with good,
not ball-hog good.” Thanks to the list, members of the Duke Bailers can lace up their shoes and hit the courts knowing that the intensity of the match-ups and the caliber of the players will not disappoint them. “It’s really good competition,” said Rozakis. “You get a great workout. And the games are really good.” At a Division I school like Duke, just because a student doesn’t have an official jersey doesn’t mean he or she can’t play. Members of the Duke Bailers have won
the intramural championship the last two years. And at last year’s men’s team open try-outs, many ofthe players in the running were from the Duke Bailers list. In fact, the Duke Bailers do have representation on the men’s squad. Senior Ryan Caldbeck is part of their crew. “Everybody up there loves to play and has played somewhere competitively before,” said Rozakis. “They could’ve gone somewhere else to play basketball that’s not as good educationally—a [Division 111 school where they could’ve had a spot on the basketball team. But here they can’t.... They came here for the education.” Of course, that doesn’t mean they let their academics get in the way of their game. T really love playing basketball. There’s a camaraderie, a connection that develops with the guys you play with,” said Carolan. Graduate student and fellow Duke Bailer Kent Lehnhofadded that the “good-natured ribbing” that goes with the games is a great source of stress relief. Although still young, the group has already made some loyal ties with recent alumni. At Homecoming last year, as Carolan pointed out, 10 former Bailers showed up to play. “Some of the Duke Bailers old-time listers will challenge the new ones, Lehnhof said. “A lot of guys who went to Duke as undergrads and were members ofthe list and are now in med school or consulting firms had such a good time that they come back.” ”
BRAIN TUMORS from page 3 across the spinal fluid and to the cerebrum. Its common symptoms include vomiting, nausea and a staggered walk.There are approximately 8,000 new cases of the disease reported each year. The study also found a correlation between the duration of symptoms prior to diagnosis and the patient’s gender. Halperin speculated that this finding may be due to specific hormonal processes or even social biases. He pointed out that boys’ clumsiness may be attributed to the child’s gender, rather than a disease, and shrugged off by the parents. The study also found that out of 122 children
�
with medulloblastoma analyzed at the Medical Center, 44 were bom in the fall. Halperin explained that previous studies have confirmed a disproportionate amount of babies in the United States are bom in the fall. However, statistically speaking, only 31 of the 122 patients should have had fall birthdays. Stephen George, a professor of biometry who aided Halperin with the study’s design and data analysis, said that although a small sample size may appear to skew the results, the observed differences in the data were still large enough to rule out random chance with more than 95% certainty. ‘The statistics test takes small sample sizes into account and [in these cases] won’t detect a small probability,” George said. Dorothy Watson, a Cancer Center statistician working on the study, added that the she was surprised by the result, especially because the differences were detected in such a small sample. The observed birthday trends are further supported by larger sample sizes used in national studies conducted in Norway and Japan. These studies found a greater incidence of winter birthdays in people with the disease. Winter is the most common time of births in Europe. Halperin speculated that these trends may be a result of varying seasonal factors like environmental pollutants or drugs taken for allergies or other seasonal conditions. He said the findings call for a more involved study to determine the causes of these trends; however, he also cautioned that his study only reported on the observed trends and was not intended to prescribe the best time ofthe year to have a baby.
MONDAY, OCTOBER 30, 2000
The Chronicle
PAGE 17
Some faculty still Reporter blames Bush, Gore for apathy waiting for letter BERNSTEIN from page 1
TENURE from page 3 received their letters requesting input, while others are still awaiting the October 6th letter, which was sent via campus mail. Even those who are aware of the request for input said they intend to reply, but that they did not have enough time to formulate responses. John Thompson, chair of the Department of History, said that sending the letter requesting information now may have been a mistake. He said he thinks the committee would have gotten a higher response rate had they sent it over the summer and given faculty more time to consider the topic. “It’s sitting on my desk waiting for me to write something,” said Thompson. “I bet it’s sitting on a lot of people’s desks.”
Price plans evening of spooky storytime BRIEFS from page 8
Employees will receive benefits confirmation: Employees who registered during benefits open enrollment ending Oct. 14 should receive confirmation of their benefits between Nov. 6 and Nov. 10. All remaining employees—including those hired between Aug. 14 and Oct. 11—must register the week of Nov.
unresponsive to any
cause that is not sponsored by
millions of dollars.” As evidence, he pointed to the virtual city of “lobbyists, pollsters, [public relations] people, grassroots organizations and corporate special interests” that occupies a few blocks near Capitol Hill. Washington has become awash with dirty money and those who will take it,” Bernstein said. But he had only praise for the press’s coverage of the current presidential race, and blamed the candidates themselves for any public disinterest in the election. Something’s not working if these two men are the best we have to offer in a nation of 270 million
people,” Bernstein said as the crowd erupted in applause and laughter. “Maybe if you’re really interested, you might pay attention to two preppy princes avenging the death of their fathers.”
Bernstein then spent time analyzing the cam-
paign as he has done nationwide on various TV shows. Vice President A1 Gore is wrong to refuse President Bill Clinton’s help on the campaign trail,
Bernstein said, and real debate on the issues has become lost in a “fog of rhetoric.” Bernstein also discussed the potential of the Internet to provide the public with more in-depth analysis than is possible in print or on television, and plugged voter.com—his Web site—on political news and analysis.
OHAMACrtwesUai Science^a*uH Policy, Spring
200
Courses
6 as well.
>N 25: Introduction to Environmental Sciences and Policy
Live for Life sponsors employee health fair: Live for Life will sponsor a health fair for employees from 9:30 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. Nov. 2. The fair, held at the Searle Center, will feature issues such as fitness, diet and healthy living and will include forums on menopause, stress management and meditation.
:ploration of basic environmental principles in the life, physical, and •cial sciences. Emphasis on understanding how the atmosphere, r drosphere, lithosphere, cryosphere, and biosphere function, and how iese spheres interact with human consumption, production, and jchnological patterns and processes. NS/NS, QID, STS TTH 12:40-1:55
Price to tell haunting tales: James B. Duke Professor of English and noted author Reynolds Price will provide a free reading of ghost stories at 7 p.m. Oct. 31 in the Thomas Room ofLilly Library. Retired trial attorney to speak: Dave Gold—a retired trial attorney, author and software company founder —will discuss his lifelong experiences at 7:30 p.m. Nov. 1 in the Biyan Center’s Shaefer Theater. The lecture, entitled ‘Thinking the Unthinkable,” will recount the lessons that Gold learned from three unlikely spiritual “teachers.”
ENVIRON
ENVIRON
Thank you.
495.01: Changing Environment, Changing Health
Examination of the interaction between human health and the environment. Major human health consequences of environmental pollution in the context of national and international environmental policy. NS/NS, STS TTH 10:55-12:10
I
PT*
495.02: Understanding Global Change
Interactions between climate and terrestrial ecosystems, with particular emphasis on understanding underlying mechanisms. Exploration of climate change projections at the regional and global scale. NS/NS, STS TTH 2:15-3:30
RON
149: United States Environmental Policy
Focus on environmental policy full range of the social sciences ethical, legal, and institutional decision-making. SS/EI, STS,
issues in the United States. Covers the including the political, economic, issues
W
involved in environmental
TTH 9:10-10:25
INVIRON 182: Business and the Environment Thank-you notes are eye-catching Don’t forget to send one after your next interview.
Order today. Enter code PUB4SJX, and save $l5
A historical overview of the role of business in society, focusing on the evolution of management tools, policies, and institutions to protect the environment. Exploration of the interaction of business, civil society, and government actors in the United States as well as discussion of global level issues. SS/STS TTH 12:40-1:55
www.chelseapaper.com Parly Invites
•
Resume
Letterhead
•
Holiday
Cards
For additional information see ACES or contact 613-8060
The Chronicle
PAGE 18
MONDAY, OCTOBER 30, 2000
Democrats aim at Bush’s credentials, GOP hits California ELECTION from page 2 munity College, repeating lines he used on three network morning shows. Mrs. Gore, who normally keeps her introductions short and sweet, also piled on, saying voters want experience and “somebody who understands foreign policy.” Ralph Nader, the Green Party candidate who is pulling support from Gore among liberals in key states such as
Michigan, where Gore has a slight edge,
dismissed him as ineffectual. “If Gore cannot beat the bumbling Texas governor, with that horrific record, what good is he? What good is he? Good heavens, this should be a slam dunk,” Nader said on ABC’s ‘This Week.” Gore previously had left it to lowerprofile surrogates to question whether Bush’s five-and-one-half years as gover-
nor with limited state constitutional powers qualify him to be president. Aides did not rule out that Gore himself would take up the charge, if he makes no headway in the next several days. Late Saturday night, Gore signaled the shift in focus in commenting on his endorsement by The New York Times, which said Bush’s knowledge and resume were lacking. “My already high estimation of The New York Times has risen even further,” Gore told reporters aboard Air Force Two. He is “now throwing every negative kitchen sink at the governor he can find,” complained Bush spokesman Ari Fleischer, who said Bush’s final-week theme will be “bringing America together.” Underscoring his confidence, Bush
will campaign in New Mexico, California, Oregon, Washington state, Minnesota and lowa—all states that Democrats traditionally win in presidential elections. His parents, former President Bush and first lady Barbara, will be out on the trail, too, along with former Sen. Bob Dole, the 1996 GOP nominee, and wife Elizabeth Dole. At home in Austin, Texas, Bush went to church hand-in-hand with wife Laura, took a back pew and a hymnal. Outside Tarrytown United Methodist Church, he told reporters there was nothing like being around friends “you can count on” and “a little spirituality to prepare my mind for the final week.” “Keeps life in perspective—properly in perspective, I might add,” Bush said.
Bush addressed 200 Latino Republicans meeting in Anaheim Hills., Calif. “While my opponent has been busy counting the votes of California, we’ve been working hard to win them,” said Bush, who will campaign Monday and Tuesday in the biggest state, where a GOP upset would cripple Gore. “It’s becoming pretty clear that the vice president is taking California for granted,” he said, noting that Gore has now changed his plans to go there Tuesday. T hear he’s going to rush in at the last minute,” Bush added. Gore told Detroit church worshippers: “The next nine days will determine if we have grown weary in doing g00d.... We have left Egypt but we have not yet arrived in Canaan.”
Seven of 13 spending bills remain unsigned as elections nears BUDGET from page 2 Lott said earlier Sunday on ABC’s “This Week” that Clinton was demanding that Republicans “cave to what his demands are.” Clinton, calling on lawmakers to put aside partisan demands, also said a deal was within reach. “I am not trying to provoke a confrontation here,” Clinton said Saturday. “They’ll get some of what they want; we’ll get some of what we want.” Only seven of the 13 annual spending bills have been signed into law, almost a month into the new fiscal year. Possible vetoes hang over at least two others, and the two sides are still far apart on a huge $350 billion bill to fund labor, education and health programs. Also drawing a veto threat is a 10-year, $240 billion tax relief package that contains a $1 boost in the minimum wage. Clinton says the measure is unac-
&
ceptable because he says too much of a $3O billion giveback to Medicare providers goes to health management organizations. Senate Democratic leader Tom Daschle of South
Dakota also accused Republicans of bowing to special interest groups in blocking Clinton’s demands for tax breaks for school construction. “The bill that’s currently before us gives three times as much in tax breaks to the executives getting business lunches as it does providing for school construction,” Daschle said on “Fox News Sunday.” The House and Senate both met late Sunday for the main purpose of approving another 24-hour extension for federal operations while the budget negotiations continue. Clinton has refused to sign more than a oneday extension, arguing that lawmakers should be attending to their business rather than campaigning at
History, Conscience, and Protest The History Department welcomes newly \TT\ appointed Associate Professor Thavolia Glymph, T who will teach in the African-American Studies \ and History Departments at Duke. Dr. Glymph is the author of the forthcoming study of “The Making of Freedom and the Destruction of the Plantation Household: Southern Women in Slavery and Freedom ”
Conscience and Protest in History Courses for Spring 2001 Destruction of Southern Slavery History 1965.16
Globalizing Protest: Workers, NAFTA, History 104.05 The Victorian Orphan History 1065.03 Comparative Social Movements History 128.01
Latino Experience in North America History 162A.01
Disability in American Culture History 196.13 History of Poverty in the U.S. History 21 IS.OI
Thavolia Glymph Wednesday; 3:55-6:25, EA 100 &
WTO John French TuTh, 12:40-1:55, EB 136 Susan Thome Thursday, 3:50-6:20, EB 242
Lawrence Goodwyn TuTh, 12:40-1:55, EB 114 Greg Grandin TuTh, 2:15-3:30, EB 240
Katherine Castles TuTh, 10:55-12:10, EB 241 Alex Keyssar Wednesday, 3:55-6:25, EB 242
home. The House approved the extension 342-7, with 84 members not voting. The Senate vote was 67-1. Negotiators met Sunday to continue wading through hundreds of provisions lawmakers are trying to attach to the final spending bills. They also must confront the remaining big issues: the tax package; school construction; new workplace regulations that Republicans are trying to block; and an amnesty for illegal aliens being pushed by the administration and strongly opposed by Republicans. The workplace regulations would set standards to prevent repetitive-motion injuries and other work-related ailments. The White House also insists that school construction projects abide by prevailing wages, which in many cases are union scale. Lott called both a pre-election “payoff to big labor.”
MONDAY, OCTOBER 30, 2000
The Chronicle
PAGE 19
Association for Women In Business Undergrad Career Panels All Greek Women are Invited to Attend!
Tonight 6:30-9:30 pm at Fuqua Sign up for AWIB mentor programs, and attend these Q & A discussion panels: •
General Management & Operations Marketing Consulting Finance & Banking •
•
•
Questions? Email Kim
at
kimberly.tinstman@duke.edu or
contact Michele at the Duke Career Center, 660-1070.
SPRING 2001 WRITING 20 OFFERINGS Students may choose from thefollowing classes focused on issues in the Sciences, Social Sciences, and Humanities Sections .29/.30/.34
Into theField: Research and Writing Culture—Or, When Indiana Jones Meets the
Sections .04/.05/.06
Virtual Media and the Rhetorics ofTolerance and Intolerance: Responding Critically to Internet Discourse
Section .16
Anti-Evolutionism in American Culture
Section .56/.57
Community and Identity in Contemporary America
Section .15
When Believers Fight: Religion and Disagreement
Sections .51/.52
Other Worlds: Utopian and Distopian Writing
Sections .26Z.27Z.28
Rhetorics of Place
Sections .58Z.59
Health Care and Society
Sections .537.54
What We Leave Behind: Literary Canons as Cultural
Writing Class Sections
.17/.18/.38/.41 Classes and Classification: Equality, Difference, 43/.50/.61 and Identity in American Law and Politics
Section .46
Moral Disagreements in American Life
Sections .47Z.48
Bad Art: Taste and Censorship in Twentieth Century Visual Art
Sections
.23Z.24Z.25
Ethnic Self-Representation
Sections
.01/.02/.03
When Cultures Intersect
Sections . 19/.35/36/.37 .39/.40/.44/.45./68
Crime and Punishment in America
Representations Sections .64/.6S
The Rhetoric ofCommunities: Reading Others, Reading Ourselves
The Ethics of Citizenship
Sections .717.72
Regulating Speech; “Verbal Hygiene” and Public
The Art of Memory; Exploring the Modem Cultural Archive
Section .14
The Student Body: A Question of Public Health
Section .10
Becoming Visible: The Rhetoric and Ethics of
Sections .11 /. 1 21. 13 Sections .20/.21 1.22
the Visual
Debate
Sections
.07/.08/.09
Sports and Modem Society
Sections .31/.32/.33
Novel Visions
Sections
.66/J3
Making Genders
Sections .627.63
Writing Home: Representing Domestic Ideals
The Arts in America
Section .55
Are We Avant-Garde?
Section .49
MONDAY, OCTOBER 3U,
The Chronicle
PAGE 20
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