The Chronicle Blue Devils inch past Terps, spark flames at home Williams’ 8 points in 13 seconds save Duke from defeat
Illegal bonfire may jeopardize
By ANDREA BOOKMAN
By SARAH McCILL
COLLEGE PARK, Md. When the public-address announcer gave the one-minute warning at the end of the second half of Saturday’s game, the red sea in Cole Field House began the “overrated” chant. Two minutes earlier, some confident fans had already left the building. It felt over. But an inspired 10-0 run in the last minute of regulation, followed by an overtime period in which Duke never trailed, gave the No. 2 Blue Devils (191,7-0 in the ACC) a 98-96 victory over No. 8 Maryland (14-5, 5-2). “If you were grading the game, you’d say Maryland played better,” Duke coach Mike Krzyzewski said. “Someone’s playing better than you, they’re fresher, you have to figure out how you are going to hang in there. They didn’t fight harder than we did. We fought just as hard as they did.” The fight began in earnest with only one minute left in the second half, when Terrapin guard Drew Nicholas made only the second of two free throws, drawing Maryland’s lead to 10. Off the ensuing inbounds pass, Jason Williams drove to the basket for a quick layup. As the Blue Devils pressed Maryland’s inbounds play, Williams found See COMEBACK in SpOltSWTap page 6 �
There was no permit, no University sanction. And as a result, there may be no authorized bonfire after Thursday’s game against the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. But consequences were of no concern as students filtered out of dormitories and commons rooms into the cold night air of Clocktower Quadrangle following Saturday night’s men’s basketball game; instead, the screams and hugs of amazed jubilance turned into a focused lust for one thing alone—fire. As per tradition, the Mirecourt bench was the first to be sacrificed to the flames, over the futile protests of a lone policeman. “Let it burn, let it burn,” cheered students welltrained in the art of collective mobilization on the grounds of Cameron. “I was just screaming my head off,” said junior Therese Rohrbeck, referring to the men’s basketball team’s gaspinducing turnaround. “It was intense, it was awesome, we just kicked aThe defenseless York bench was the second to be pushed into
future blazes
The Chronicle
The Chronicle
JASON WILLIAMS(top left) saved the game after a miserable first 39 minutes during which Carlos Boozer (top right) the Blue Devils were outplayed on both ends. Duke’s overtime win sparked a bonfire (bottom) back on campus.
See BONFIRE on page 4
Duke avenges early-season loss with 92-42 win Mosch leads Blue Devils to victory over Clemson with 30 points, 11 rebounds By THOMAS STEINBERGER The Chronicle
GEORGIA SCHWEITZER drives past Marci Glenney to bolster Duke’s already solid lead in the first half. Duke handed Clemson its worst loss in 21 years.
ROTC
In the middle of the press conference after Sunday’s women’s basketball game, a cell phone rang in Cameron’s Hall ofFame Room. “That’s probably the president wanting to talk to me,” joked Clemson coach Jim Davis. Fortunately, Davis has a sense of humor. Led by a 30-point, 11-rebound performance from sophomore Sheana Mosch, No. 4 Duke (20-1, 8-1 in the ACC) ran all over the No. 16Tigers (155, 6-2) in a 92-42 rout yesterday at Cameron Indoor Stadium. The 50-point margin was Clemson’s worst loss ever in the ACC. “Duke was awesome, absolutely awesome,” Davis said. “I’m not sure the [WNBA’s] Houston Comets could have beaten them today’ Duke did just about everything well, using pressure defense and their trademark transition game to jump to a 15-5 lead after four minutes. As the Tigers began to cut back fast-break op-
STUDENTS BALANCE ACADEMICS WITH TRAINING, PAGE
portunities, senior point guard Georgia Schweitzer ran arguably Duke’s best half-court offense of the season to open up a 56-19 halftime edge. The Blue Devils worked the ball well, showing the patience to find an open shot on almost every possession. “Our passes were really sharp tonight. It was just like zip,” freshman forward Iciss Tillis said. “We were just in a zone as a team. Everybody knew where we were on the court.” A zone was the apt description, typified by Mosch setting a Duke record with a 12-for-12 shooting performance and by the team’s 10 firsthalf steals. Clemson’s second-leading scorer Erin Batth was held to no points and Marci Glenney was the only Tiger in double-digits with 10 points. “I’ve seen UConn and Notre Dame play and we played Tennessee,” Davis said. “That performance today is as good as I’ve seen this year. They can compete with anyone in America.” Despite playing four consecutive tight games, See REVENGE in SportSWiap page 7 �
3 � STUDENTS GATHER FOR VIGIL, PAGE 5
The Chronicle
Newsfile
FROM WIRE REPORTS
Two popular Dartmouth professors murdered Susanne and Half Zantop, longtime professors at the Hanover, N.H., college, were found dead Saturday in their home after an apparent double homicide.
Taking many by surprise, Pope John Paul II named seven cardinals—including a liberal—Sunday, only a week after he set a record by announcing 37 new “princes” of the church, expanding the ranks of those who will some day elect his successor.
World Economic Forum
protestors simmer
Demonstrators gathered peacefully Sunday afternoon at the World Economic Forum meeting in Zurich, Switzerland, after riots broke out late Saturday.
The United States will send $5 million in emergency supplies to earthquake-stricken India, officials said Sunday, and could send more as the situation worsens. It also
day afternoon.
Bush will not intervene in California crisis President George W. Bush has called for a Cabinet meeting Monday to discuss the California power crisis, but aides made clear that the administration wants the state to solve the problem. Fractions phased out for NYSE stocks The New York Stock Exchange will trade all its stocks in decimals today, the last step in a government-mandated move that has been planned for three years.
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United States allocates emergency aid to India
began distributing 100 metric tons offood Satur-
Vatican names 7 more new cardinals
Weather
World
page 2
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“Pooh,” said Rabbit kindly, “you haven’t any brain.” “I know,” said Pooh humbly.
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National
MONDAY, JANUARY 29, 2001
Rescue teams search Indian rubble Over 6,000 have been confirmed dead and tens of thousands more are still missing By HEMA SHUKLA Associated Press
BHUJ, India Exhausted searchers using everything from sophisticated rock-cutting tools to their bare hands clawed through rubble Sunday, hoping to find survivors lingering among the thousands believed buried by western India’s massive earthquake. More than 6,000 bodies had been found since Friday’s quake, and the death toll was expected to go much higher. Some authorities estimated it would reach 10,000; others said 16,000 or more. A leading rescue official said there couldbe up to 30,000 dead in one town alone. As India’s prime minister ap-
pealed for help, frantic rescuers and sniffer dogs uncovered a few signs of life Sunday amid the destruction in Gujarat, the western Indian state that took the brunt of the blow. In Anjar, 30 miles southeast of the hardest-hit town, Bhuj, a 3year-old girl was unearthed from the rubble alive. Across town, sniffer dogs located another sign of life in a heap ofrubble. After three hours of digging, soldiers found a man, only his face visible under twisted and crumpled masonry. Unable to reach him, rescuers released water from a plastic pouch, drop by drop, into his mouth. Chipping slowly at the blocks so
as not to unsettle the unstable mound, the soldiers removed the pieces of debris one by one. Three hours later, the man was free, and a cheer went up in the crowd. Too weak to speak, too exhausted to smile, the man, identified only as Maganbhai, was carried away. Authorities will know by Monday if any more people are alive
under the rubble, Gujarat State Home Minister Haren Pandya said. The emphasis will then switch to clearing the rubble and removing the dead bodies. Friday’s magnitude-7.9 quake— India’s strongest in more than 50 years—struck on Republic Day, a national holiday here.
GOP shows confidence in Bush agenda By GREG TOPPO Associated Press
WASHINGTON The U.S. Senate’s Republican leader predicted Sunday that Congress will approve by July 4 a cornerstone of President George W. Bush’s domestic agenda—his 10-year, $1.6 trillion tax cut proposal. Meanwhile, Vice President Dick Cheney said Bush might compromise to assure passage of his education reform package, suggesting the president might sign a bill that did not include private-school vouchers. Appearing on “Fox News Sunday,” Senate Majority Leader Trent Lott said Americans “will get every bit” of Bush’s proposed tax cut. Democrats discussed a much smaller figure.
“The mix may be a little different from what the president proposes, but he may actually like some of the changes that may be made because of the economy,” Lott, R-Miss., said. “We have excess cash. We have a slowdown in the economy. So any immediate injection into private hands where the people can... save it or spend it the way that it would be helpful to the economy, I think, is very positive,” Lott said. The U.S. House’s top Democrat, Rep. Richard Gephardt of Missouri, said tax cuts on the order of $7OO billion to $750 billion over 10 years were appropriate. He said, however, that Congress must be careful not to count on projections of a substantial federal surplus.
The Chronicle
MONDAY, JANUARY 29, 2001
PAGE 3
award. “Why I originally looked into it was the scholarships.... Now I gy Becky Young Take a walk down the hall of a typical Duke fraternity section, and The Chronicle love the whole program,” said Air Force ROTC student Adam Joyce, a you might stumble upon something a bit surprising for an all-male resfreshman. “Having no military experience, I was sort of shocked to find In ironing of a full-size board. pressed pants atop idence: a freshly pair a world where laundry baskets filled with crumpled t-shirts outnumber wrinkle- out how much I love it.” The program requires students to take military-specific classes, including lab free khakis, the Duke Reserve Officers’ Training Corps’ required dress days create in which they leam and participate in military customs and courtesies. courses to the rule. an exception Army ROTC students can count on three hours of physical training, three hours of The dress days—in which students must walk around campus in full uniform— represent some of the primary values ofthe ROTC program; responsibility, identi- lab time and up to three hours of ROTC classes per week. The classes include an introduction to the army for freshmen, map reading and navigation for sophomores, adty and leadership. vanced military operations for juniors and military justice and leadership for seniors, “Part of what we’re trying to teach is teamwork, and the uniform identifies them good opportunity Navy Force it is a ROTC students must also take one course related to the military each semester, group,” Air Capt. Karla Mika said. “Also, as part of a along with a required weekly two-hour drill and lab period, which includes athletics, to practice the customs and courtesies ofthe military.” The University maintains ROTC programs for all four branches of the United public speaking, small team exercises and general training in military codes of conStates Armed Forces: the Army and the Air Force each have separate programs and duct. Similarly, Air Force ROTC requires enrollment in its classes; a leadership labothe Navy and Marine Corps are incorporated into one group.The Army and Air Force ratory twice a week and additional physical training for two to three hours per week, Much of the course subject matter includes an overview of military history. “It’s programs at Duke work in conjunction with programs at North Carolina Central Uniimportant for cohesion of a unit body to have a sense of heritage,” Army Lt. 26 the in in Air Army participate very ROTC, students and participate versity; 17 Duke Col. William Adams said. “Just as companies have a strong sense of corporate culForce program. The naval program draws the most students, with 55 participants. Sec ROTC on page 5 frEvery year, ROTC programs gain student interest through the scholarships they
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PAGE 4
MONDAY, JANUARY 29, 2001
Fiery bash may cost Crazies their UNC bonfire P- BONFIRE from page
Bobby McCord, 13, and his 11-yearold brother Richard looked on in awe from the Sigma Chi fraternity bench. “I think it’s cool,” said Richard, who was visiting his sister Angie, a sopho-
I
the fire, which shot fireworks of flaming debris into the air as the bench became kindling. ‘This is what a bonfire should be,” said sophomore Annie Way. “It’s illegal and it’s spontaneous and you don’t sit around knowing it was all planned.” But that spontaneity may have its costs. The Durham fire marshal told police Saturday night that the permit for Thursday’s UNC game would be suspended, said Executive Vice President Tallman Trask. Trask will meet with city officials today. “We had a set ofrules and we need to
continue to abide by them,” said Trask, adding, T don’t think anyone expected this to happen—it was quite a game.” Durham Fire Chief Otis Cooper was unavailable for comment. Assistant Vice President for Student Affairs Sue Wasiolek arrived at the fire bundled in a sweater and looked on as firefighters killed the last remaining flames. “I’ll just say that I was thrilled with the game and disappointed with the bonfire,” she said. The fire was also opposed by some students who felt the win did not merit a tradition usually reserved for UNC and tournament games. “Maryland does not deserve five
more. T am definitely gonna write
STUDENTS HOIST A BENCH into the post-game bonfire Saturday night. After Duke’s overtime win at Maryland, festive fans descended on Clocktower Quadrangle to celebrate with an unauthorized bonfire. benches,” sophomore Brian Goldfarb said. “But this is great. This is why I love Duke.” To those uninitiated to Duke’s sacrifi-
cial rites, there were surprises. “Where are all the naked people?” wondered freshman Jonathan Drillings. “I thought there were supposed to be naked people
”
about it in my journal when I get back to school.” The crowd erupted early on when Krzyzewskiville head line monitor and Chronicle senior associate sports editor Norm Bradley, armed with his megaphone, granted tenters an allnight grace. But the sentiment was none too gracious as a team of firefighters descended on the blaze, taking aim with hoses until all that remained was a charred skeleton of benches and a pool of black water. “Go to hell, firefighters, go to hell,” some cheered. T think it sucks,” said junior Dave Widders of the fire’s forced death. Tm bummed. It ruined the fun.” Yet as Billy Joel’s “We Didn’t Start the Fire” thundered from the Sigma Chi commons room, Way had a different take. “It’s more interesting to have the firefighters come,” she said. “It kind of validates things.” Amhika Kumar and Lucy Stringer contributed to this story.
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MONDAY, JANUARY 29, 2001
ROTC students dress for success ROTC from page 3 ture, military culture has developed over a very long time, and this helps give the students a sense of identity and a feeling of something greater.” The weekly dress days—during which students can only carry book bags without logos and must only use sidewalks while walking around campus—also serve to
teach students military values. Additionally, said Navy Capt. Dennis Haines, they make the program visible. “Other students on campus need exposure to the military, and it’s important for [ROTC studentsl to have the opportunity to be seen in uniform,” he said, adding that it also teaches the ROTC students to pay attention to “professionalism and detail.” Students said the uniform days were a good way to show their pride. “It doesn’t bother me [to wear the uniforml. It’s simply a lifestyle change and so now there’s nothing different about it,” said junior and Navy ROTC student Claire Huffstetler. “It’s just part of the job and responsibilities and then once you get control of all your responsibilities it becomes more of a pride thing.” Each of the Duke ROTC programs stresses the importance of academics. “Our goal is to commission officers in the Air Force; to do that you must have a degree,” Mika said. “So, academics are [the students’] first priority, no matter how well they can lead.” ROTC monitors participants’ grades and provides tutors when needed. “We have a number of facilities and extra help we can provide students,” Navy Lt. Jonathan Rucker said. “But it’s more an attitude, willingness and desire [that gets them through the program].” Once they do get through the program, ROTC students encounter a prospect that most seniors do not face: they need not search for jobs—instead, they will become commissioned officers in the U.S. Armed Forces. “For me personally, I liked the fact that... after graduation, I would be immediately put in a position of leadership where I would be legally and morally responsible for [my] men,” said Army ROTC student Andrew Exnicios, a senior. Indeed, ROTC officials agreed that the sense of responsibility provides a major draw for students. “It’s also a symbol of that sense ofbeing beyond just a job... not just because you’re wearing a uniform, [but because! you are upholding, supporting and defending the Constitution of the United States,” Air Force Col. Dennis Porter said. “You’re serving a higher purpose.”
The Chronicle
Prayer
PAGES
for
Relief To show support for the victims of the earthquake in El Salvador earlier this month, members of Mi Gente, Lambda Upsilon Lambda Fraternity, Inc. and others held a Catholic mass and candlelight vigil at the Chapel last night. During fundraisers last week, the groups raised about $9,000 for relief efforts.
9uke!9miierattg Durham
North Carolina 27708-0027
Executive Vice President
TELEPHONE 19191684-6600 FACSIMILE (9191 68-4-8766
203 ALLEN BUILDING BOX 9002 7
January 29, 2001
BONFIRE CLARIFICATION The number of permitted bonfires listed in The Chronicle last week was not correct. We did not request permits for bonfires following the ACC Tournament Championship game (March 11) or the NCAA Men’s Regional Finals (March 24 or 25). The decision not to seek permits for these games was made by the administration and DSG, in response to general student sentiment last year that bonfires following those games would have been superfluous.
The University has obtained City permits for four potential bonfires, following both games against North Carolina (February 1 and March 4), and following NCAA Women’s and Men’s National Championship Games (April 1 and 2). The first permitted basketball bonfire is Thursday, February 1.
We should also clarify the guideline regarding time limitations. For the first North Carolina game, which starts at 9 p.m., we asked you not to add fuel to the fire after T.OO am. Our intention is to have the fires bum out within a reasonable amount of time following the games. Regardless of game time, no additional fuel should be placed in the fire more than two hours following the game. (The March 4 UNC game begins at 3:30, so nothing should be added to the fire after 7:30 p.m.) Sorry for the confusion.
Jordan Bazinsky
President Duke Student Government
Tallman Trask 111 Executive Vice President Duke University
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Bad time for a bonfire is no doubt that the men’s basketball team’s comeback against Maryland Saturday night called for a celebration. But since the University had no fire permit, the decision to start a bonfire in the enclosed Clocktower Quadrangle was a poor one at best. The law is clear: You do not start fires without a permit. In order for fire department officials to prepare a site and to oversee a bonfire safely, they need advance notice; this is why permits exist. Duke students should have respected the law and refrained from lighting Saturday’s bonfire. The unfortunate aspect of the need for permits is that they take the spontaneity out of the celebration. Students could argue that if they know they can burn benches at only four games, the planned nature of these burnings makes them less of a product of the exuberation of the moment. But burning things is a privilege, not a right. No matter how great the victory, students are not entitled to burn benches—unless they are legally granted that privilege with a permit. However, when they are legal, bonfires are an enjoyable, traditional and reasonably safe way to celebrate. Therefore, the University should seek and the fire marshall should grant as many permits as possible for next year—ideally one for every game. Students would not use all of these permits, but they would have the opportunity to celebrate a victory spontaneously. The permits would also assuage the city’s legitimate safety concerns. Because students did burn benches without a permit, the fire marshall has said he will revoke the permit for Thursday night’s game against the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. The fire department has the right to make such a decision; permits are always subject to behavior at past bonfires. Nevertheless, the fire marshall should allow Thursday’s celebration to continue, while taking steps to make sure it is carried out safely. Telling students that they cannot burn benches after the Carolina game could make them feel more antagonistic toward the administration and the fire department. If such ill feeling escalates, and the bonfires Thursday remain banned, it is conceivable that students might continue with the burnings illegally, this time in a deliberate act of rebellion as much as a celebration. Needless to say, this is not a desirable outcome. We do not want a repeat ofMarch 1998, when students caused a riot by burning benches without a permit, in defiance ofthe police and the administration. With the exception of Saturday’s blaze, students have met the administration’s and city’s requirements regarding bonfires. Banning the bonfires also punishes the entire student body, even those who did not take part in Saturday’s burning. A better solution is to treat students who set fires illegally the same way as anyone else who does so: Let them spend a night in jail. If this approach becomes necessary, the police should take all possible care not to use undue force on students and to arrest only the primary instigators, not passive onlookers. You need a permit to burn a bench. Students should respect this law, but the fire department should also try to stop the tension from escalating and let the Carolina celebrations continue safely, as planned.
There
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 JONATHANANGBER, GeneralManager
JENNIFER ROBINSON, Photography Editor NEAL PATEL, Photography Editor SARAH MCGILL, City & Slate Editor JAMES HERRIOTT, City & State Editor MARKO DJURANOVIC, Health & Science Editor ELLEN MIELKE, Features Editor JAIMELEVY, TowerView Editor JONAS BLANK, Recess Editor MARY CARMICHAEL, Executive Editor ROSS MONTANTE, Layout and Design Editor REGAN HSU, Sports Photography Editor KELLY WOO, SeniorEditor DAVE INGRAM, Wire Editor MATT ATWOOD, Wire Editor CHRISTINE PARKINS, Sr. Assoc. City & State Editor TREY DAVIS, Sr. Assoc. City & State Editor MEREDITH YOUNG, Sr. Assoc. Health & Science Editor ANDREA BOOKMAN, Sr. Assoc. Sports Editor NORM BRADLEY, Sr. Assoc. Sports Editor ALAN HALACHMI, Online Manager SUE NEWSOME, Advertising Director ALISE EDWARDS, Creative Services Manager MARY WEAVER, Operations Manager ADRIENNE GRANT, Creative Director CATHERINE MARTIN, Production Manager NALINI MILNE, Advertising Office Manager NICOLE GORHAM, Classifieds Manager STEPHANIE OGIDAN, Advertising Manager The Chronicleis published by the Duke Student Publishing Company, Inc., a non-profit corporation independent of Duke University. The opinions expressed in thisnewspaper 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 Flowers Building, call 684-2663 or fax 684-46%. 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 http7Avww.chronicle.duke.edu. ® 2001 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 individualis entitled to one free copy.
29. 2001
Letters to the Editor
Letter neglects many aspects of intelligent design lam writing in response between people of the same ing about.” I think it takes an to Jerry Huang’s Jan. 25, ill sex.” If this were true, the incredible amount of chutzthought-out, patronizing penis would not fit into the pah for any one person to and completely illogical let- anus in such a snug manner, assert that they know the ter about the mistake of In addition, the hand is thoughts and intentions of God, as Huang implies that being homosexual. Huang is shaped in a design that is perhe does. Ultimately, homo“saddened that some of my feet for self-stimulation; howfellow men choose not to ever, people like Huang who sexuality, like heterosexualienjoy the wonderful design are firm believers in the Bible, ty, is not only about physical they possess.” Although nei- would probably frown upon pleasure but about emotional ther of us is homosexual, we self-stimulation—although bonds between two people. can assure Huang that our the body was designed by God Adam Starr homosexual friends are in such a convenient manner, Trinity ’Ol Huang writes, “some peoenjoying their design. Huang contends, “we are pie believe they have better Jay Steele designed for a union between ideas than God, that God Trinity ’Ol a male and a female, not doesn’t know what He’s talk10Keybiblical.html /chronicle /2001101/25/ see llwww.chronicle.duke.edu letter, http: for referenced
Duke’s administration needs
to aid
cultural groups
Phil cultural landscape—a type of requests, our voices were reading While in the cultural evolution. More stu- heard. It sounds cliche, but article Tinari’s without struggle, there is no January issue ofTowerview, I dents with different backare to speak progress. Campus leaders was overcome with a feeling grounds willing are more must remember this when expecting and resentand pure up of disgust ment. lam a recent graduate from campus leaders—this is pushing for change. Duke of Duke University and when a very good thing. Apathy needs a multicultural center. a current student and good was the culprit before I left, Only positive things can come out ofsuch a center and friend of mine e-mailed me but now a new dawn is risthis person’s article from ing. The cultural evolution since I am a gift-giving alumTowerView, it sent me back demands that the current nus, I plan on doing my part to those college days that standards of multicultural to see that such a center is swiftly passed. It made me events be revamped and constructed. As for my man remember that Duke, in all funding for new avenues Tinari, who seems to dream of its greatness, in all of its approved. The guard will of a date with Hitler, and a menage-a-trois with Joseph splendor, still allows its fair eventually change, it is sureStalin and Karl Marx, you share of John Ashcroft ly inevitable. The only queswannabes through its hal- tion is will those in power might want to experience the allow for a smooth transition, real world before you write lowed halls. The issues of ’9B are still or will it be a rough ride to such eloquent garbage again. Maybe a week or two in East hot buttons in ’Ol, but the the mountain top? During my time at Duke, St. Louis, Mo., the southside issue that still rings louder than a five-alarm fire is that it was quite evident that the of Chicago or Dade County, of diversity and the core of power maintained a Florida will convince him. University’s need to support tight grip on the growing Elmer Chisholm it. What the campus is wit- minority, yet when we Trinity’9B steadfast our in in change is a the remained nessing /01 /24/t2lThecultural.html article, http:! see /www.chronicle.duke.edu/chronicle/2001 for referenced
The University fails to meet its promises of diversity As student leaders, we are writing in response to
the article published in the January issue ofTowerView entitled “The Cultural Revolution.”
powerless to change them;
anyone who has ever dealt with a Duke Student
Government budget will understand. The saddest aspect of this entire situation is that Wednesday’s article both received praise from progressive students and was simultaneously ignored by the majority of the population because it did not contain the magic words—fraternity, sorority rush or
We just want the development office to save their stamps and recognize that because of the poor excuse for a minority support system—a system that is largely fostered by the students themselves —we don’t plan to give Duke one red cent after graduation. Besides, we’ll send our kids to a good school. One where the dean of the Chapel doesn’t have to release a report every few years to remind people that they are unintellectual elitist drunkards.
Yes, cultural organizations participate in BandAid programming which does little to change the way people think about race at Duke. Yes, we are exoticized daily. But as student organizations that receive funding from the University, we are not at the liberty to do basketball, If there were a cultural what we desire. We must program what revolution at Duke, no one we receive funding for, and would know, for it would Carliss Chatman frankly, this University surely not grace the pages of Trinity ’Ol Chronicle, see loves to happy dancing The After years at Duke, we and singing people of Richard Jones color —minstrels would be do not desire to serve on a Trinity ’Ol not want committee. We do the proper term. We are disgusted by the to meet with the president, Stan Williams programs that have become executive vice president or Trinity ’Ol signature events, but we are even Coach K. for referenced article, see http://www.chronicle.duke.edu/chronicle/2001/01/24/t2lThecultural.html
On
the record
Maryland does not deserve five benches Sophomore Brian Goldfarb commenting on the size of the bonfire that followed last Saturday’s men’s basketball victory over the Terrapins (see story, page one)
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Weekend WIMJP“UJIP§ A look at the ACC
In this week's
Virginia's Marcie Dickson hit two game-tying shots, one at the end of regulation and one at the end of the first overtime to help the Cavalier women’s basketball team to a 76-73 double-overtime victory over Wake Forest Sunday.
In another women's basketball nailbiter, Maryland pulled out a 55-53 win over North Carolina after nine ties and 19 lead changes. The win gives the women Terrapins four in a row and places them tied with three teams for third in the ACC •
i
/
.
The Native Sons and Daughters of Kansas honored former UNC men's basketball coach Dean Smith Friday night as 2000 Kansan of the Year. The weekend featured speakers, receptions and parties in honor of the anniversary of Kansas' statehood. •
overtime against Maryland and eventually win by two.
~—-
Sweet revenge Duke avenged its only loss of the season by thumping No. 15 Clemson 92-42.
Track
Record-setting day
last week.
Duke's track teams broke four records at the Terrier Classic.
Page
X)
J
Sportswrap is the weekly sports supplement published by The Chronicle. It can be read online at www.chronicle.duke.edu To reach the sports department at 301 Flowers Building, call 684-2663 or e-mail sports@chronicle.duke.edu
Wrestling
Narrow defeat Duke's wrestlers were dropped by Virginia in Charlottesville.
Sports in Brief Continuing their struggles of late, the Los Angeles Lakers suffered a 91-81 drubbing at the hands of the Knicks yesterday. Shaquille O'Neal, out with a foot injury, was clearly missed by the Lakers, who shot a miserable 33 percent from
Associate Editors: Andrea Bookman, Norm Bradley, Paul Doran, Kevin Lees, Craig Saperstein Graphics Editors: Ross Montante and Brian Morray Writers: Fozail Alvi, Nick Christie, Elizabeth Colucci, Evan Davis, Gabe Githens, Andrew Greenfield, Harold Gutmann, Ray Holloman, Michael Jacobson, Kevin Lloyd, Clinton McHugh Adrienne Mercer, Christina Petersen, Tyler Rosen, Thomas Steinberger, Catherine Sullivan, Sarah Unger, GregVeis, WilYork
Women's Basketball
Jr
*
Sportswrap
Duke rallied from 10 points behind in the last minute to force
Known for tremenball-handling dous skills, sophomore Sheana Mosch has had a breakout week in the absence p of star Alana Beard. scored 84 points in Duke's three wins over Virginia, North Carolina and Clemson
*
Special thanks to Chronicle editor Greg Pessin and managing editor Tessa Lyons
Comeback kids
Hr jA.
issue
Men's Basketball
Rising star
•
Editor: Brody Greenwald Photography Editor: Regan Hsu General Manager: Jonathan Angler
•
the field.
In the Australian Open women's final, 24-year-old Jennifer Capriati won her first major tournament Friday after 11 years on tour by beating top-seeded Martina Hingis 6-4, 6-3. On the men's side, Andre Agassi successfully defended a major title for the first time in his career with a 6-4, 6-4, 6-2 win over Amaud Clement yesterday.
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"1 kind of wish we didn't beat them at Clemson now. We must have made them really mad."
•
Wrestling
Events at Duke
Men's Basketball vs. North Carolina
M®
Wednesday vs. Gardner-Webb, 7:30 p.m., Cameron Indoor Stadium
Men's Basketball
Jim Davis, Clemson women's basketball coach during the press conference in Cameron's Hall of Fame room after losing to Duke by 50 points
Thursday vs. North Carolina, 9 p.m., Cameron Indoor Stadium Sunday vs. Florida State, 1 p.m., Cameron Indoor Stadium
Sunday.
vs. Elon, Friday 3 p.m. and Sunday, 1 p.m., Jack Coombs Field
Thursday, 9 p.m.
Cameron Indoor Stadium This is the way it should be. Does it get any better? Williams vs. Forte, Haywood vs. Boozer, Krzyzewski vs. Doherty at Cameron. Two top-
Swimming/Diving Saturday vs. Davidson, 1 p.m., Taishoff Aquatic Center
five teams, two ACC-unbeatens, one heck of a game.
Baseball
If you love brainstorming because it feels like an athletic event, we'll introduce you to some Olympians.
Microsoft
Looking to work on the coolest technologies, with unlimited resources and endless career opportunities?
Or just looking for free food and free software? Come hear about what Microsoft has to offer you this year and in the future Fulltime and Intern Positions What: Microsoft Presentation
When: Tuesday, January 30 at 7:00 pm Where: 203 Teer Auditorium
also see us at www.microsoft.com/college Microsoft is an equal opportunity employer and supports workplace diversity.
©
2000 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved.
ore
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SPORTSWRAP
MONDAY. JANUARY 29. 2001
PAGE 3
Ravens ‘D’ silences Giants in Super Bowl
Pro Bowl linebacker Ray Lewis was named MVP of Super Bowl XXXV after a 34-7 massacre By BILL PENNINGTON
New York Times News Service
Fla. Unflagging, tireless defense made Ravens JH TAMPA, the Baltimore Ravens this season, and in the 7 biggest and final NFL game of the season, it was Giants more defense—unrelenting and dominant from start to finish—that made the Ravens Super Bowl champions. The Ravens scored first last night in Super Bowl XXXV, intercepted Kerry Collins a record-tying four times and returned a kickoff for a touchdown in a thorough 34-7 rout of the Giants. It was the first Super Bowl victory for the Ravens, a franchise that originated in Cleveland and moved to Baltimore five years ago. The loss brought a sour conclusion to a Giants season of surprising successes. It was also the first defeat in a Super Bowl for the Giants, who had won their two previous appearances, in 1987 and 1991. As expected, the Giants found it difficult to move against the Ravens, who had the second-rated defense in the NFL this season. But the Giants were unexpectedly sloppy on offense, especially Collins, who was coming off his best game as a professional. On Jan. 14, he led the Giants into the Super Bowl with a 41-0 victory over Minnesota in the NFC title game. Last night, Collins completed only 15-of-39 passes for 114 yards, and the Giants gained only 150 yards overall. As an indication of the dominance of the Ravens’ defense, Baltimore’s middle linebacker, Ray Lewis, was named the game’s most valuable player. Jamal Lewis ran 27 times for 101 yards for the Ravens, and quarterback Trent Differ completed 12-of-25 passes for 153 yards. He was intercepted once. In an inelegant game filled with punts and penalties, Baltimore led, 17-0, before the Giants scored in the third quarter. In a chaotic 36 seconds of the third quarter, the teams combined to score three touchdowns, all on returns. With Baltimore leading, 10-0, and successfully harassing Collins, Ravens’ cornerback Duane Starks intercepted a poorly thrown pass and returned it 49 yards for a touchdown. The score seemed to assure Baltimore of victory and left Collins lying face down on the grass. It was Collins’ fourth interception of the game. But on the ensuing kickoff, the Giants’ Ron Dixon caught the ball on the three-yard line and dashed through the Ravens for a 97-yard touchdown return. It appeared the Giants, now trailing, 17-7, were back in the game. Brad Daluiso’s kickoff, however, reached only the Ravens’ 16yard line, and Baltimore’s stellar kick returner, Jermaine Lewis, was in a full sprint before the Giants’ coverage could muster its defense. Lewis got to the right sideline quickly and emerged from a bunched group of players alone for an 84-yard touchdown return. Quickly, the Giants trailed 24-7. The plays were the first back-to-back kickoff returns for touchdowns in Super Bowl history. Thirty-six seconds is also the fastest
Tale of the
tape How IheRavens’defense faired in Super Bowl XXXV
� Held NY to 150 yards in total offense •84 yds. passing 66 yds. rushing �NY punter Bard Maynard punted the ball 11 times. Both teams combined for a Super Bowl-record 21 punts. •
•
� Forced five NY
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turnovers
•49 yd j n t re tum for touchdown by Ravens’ Duane Starks.
�NY quarterback Kerry Collins sacked four times for a total loss of 29 yards.
that three touchdowns have been scored in Super Bowl history. The game began with a succession of punts and plodding offensive football by both teams, before Baltimore scored the first points with a sudden strike through the heart of the Giants’ defense. The Ravens enjoyed superior field position throughout the first half, which proved costly to the Giants. Offensively, it made them cautious. Defensively, it made the Giants overly aggressive, and the Ravens, in turn, confidently took more calculated risks. The first of those Ravens gambles came after Baltimore took possession at the Giants’ 41-yard line midway through the first quarter. After a three-yard run by the rookie Jamal Lewis, Baltimore spread the Giants out with wide receivers split near the ERIK CAMPOS/KRT sidelines and with the speedy receiver Brandon Stokley in the slot, covered by cornerback Jason Sehom. BALTIMORE’S JAMIE SHARPER (right) charges downfield with Ray Lewis at his side after a first-half interception
Call 416-0393 or visit
w.BobSchmitzPro erties.com
SPORTSWRAP
PAGE 4
'
MONDAY,
‘JANUARV 2*),' £OOl
Weekend track feats headlined by Atlas On the men’s side, Tom Gianturco celebrated his homecoming with the fastest leg of Duke’s 4xBoo relay team, which finished first among the field of collegiate teams. By EVAN DAVIS The Chronicle
LUKE PALMISANO wrestles for the Blue Devils. Duke lost to the Virginia Cavaliers this weekend to open ACC competition
Wrestling narrowly loses to UVa In the ACC opener, the Cavaliers outlasted Duke in a tight contest with 4:48 remaining in the match to go up 12-3. Soliman’s win evens his career record at 14-14, and road a straight fired-up Ups his road winning steak to four. victories, Fresh off three Duke wrestling team opened its ACC season this “The lighter weights did really well,” freshman weekend with a hard-fought 19-15 loss to the heavyweight Levi Kamehm said. “[For the heavier weights], there were some tough guys on top and I Virginia Cavaliers in Charlottesville, Va. In a meet that went down to the wire, Virginia think we really went with them. We just lost some (4-5,1-1 in the ACC) was able to pull ahead of the close ones.” The Blue Devils watched their early lead dwindle Blue Devils in the later rounds. Cavalier redshirt sophomore Brian Muir’s major decision over as Duke dropped the next four matches. Josh Frank Comely in the 174-pound weight class cost Sheridan, Tim Marcantonio and Tom Cass all lost Duke four team points and put the Cavaliers up their weight classes, which, along with Comely’s loss, put Virginia up 16-12. for good, 13-12. “We did pretty well, but we lost a couple of differComely, only a freshman, has posted dominant numbers for the Blue Devils, with a 22-10 record ent weights that we shouldn’t have,” Kamehm said. Duke refused to quit as 197-pound Daegan this season as Duke’s only 174-pounder. But Saturday afternoon, the Pennsauken, N.J., native Smith delivered a strong showing to overthrow Zach Freday, 13-8, to come within a single point of was introduced to the ACC. out to an the Cavaliers. early The Blue Devils (8-5, 0-1) pulled With the match riding on his shoulders, Cavalier lead as the lighter weight classes posted three out of four wins. heavyweight Ryan Painter overpowered Duke’s Sophomore Tommy Hoang and senior Sean Karnehm for a 10-3 decision. Painter’s triumph gave Meakim gave Duke an early 6-0 lead with victories Virginia the three points it needed to cement its first ACC duel match of the season, while Duke in the 125 and 133-pound weight classes. 41st career and win marked his began the conference season in defeat. Hoang’s victory “I had been [in that position] several times his 15th this season. Junior Harry Clarke then fell to Virginia’s Bob before,” said Karnehm ofhis final position. “If I won, Seidel at 141 with a 6-3 decision that cut the Blue we’d win the match. It wasn’t new for me, but there was a good bit of pressure. I was up against a fairly Devils’ lead in half. Andy Soliman recorded Duke’s last win for four tough, strong kid and I couldn’t pull off the points matches at 149, defeating Ernesto Vera via a fall we needed to win.” By CHRISTINA PETERSEN The Chronicle
rollerhockey
captain s’
meetiTTg
nday, January 29 7pm 20 wilson center
Duke’s men’s and women’s track teams continued to shine at the Terrier Classic in Boston this weekend. Katie Atlas won the mile in what women’s coach Jan Ogilvie called a “very loaded field” with a time of 4:43.34. Atlas’ time is fast enough to be considered an NCAA automatic qualifier, the first ever posted by a Duke athlete. Atlas’ feat was even more impressive given her inexperience with that particular event; the junior had never before competed in the mile. Atlas wasn’t finished, however. She also anchored the women’s 4xBoo relay en route to a victory in that event, making her a double winner for the weekend. Atlas, along with Kristy Doody, Allison Hofmann, and Maddy Woodmansee, won the 4xBoo with a time of 9:14.33. Megan Sullivan also shattered expectations, setting a school record while competing for only the second time in the 3000-meter run. Sullivan’s time of 9:35.28 bested the previous Duke record by over two seconds. While Ogilvie expected strong efforts from her runners, even she was surprised by how quickly they would achieve success.
“We expected both Katie and Megan to run fast, but Katie’s performance exceeded our expectations,” she said. Also exceeding expectations was the men’s team, which received strong efforts from its freshmen this weekend. The men’s 4xBoo team finished the race as the top collegiate team with a time of 7:47.87. The win was especially sweet for sophomore Tom Gianturco, a Boston native whose homecoming performance saw him run a leg of 1:56, the fastest of the Blue Devil squad. Amazingly, Gianturco ranks as the relay team’s oldest member—Aaron Paul, Casey Reardon, and Jon Amt are all freshmen. “It’s nice to see them improve each time out,” men’s coach Norm Ogilvie said. “Hopefully by the end of the year they will be sub-7:40, and that would be very competitive. They’re young and getting experience.... We’re excited for them.” Adding to the freshmen success was Calen Powell, a tight end on the football team who competed in the pentathlon this weekend. Powell, one ofthe top decathletes in the nation during his high school days, finished second in the pentathlon with 3239 points, the third highest total ever recorded by a Duke competitor. “This was a great start—to get second in his first pentathlon,” Ogilvie said. “He really should be a factor in the ACC outdoors in the decathlon. He’s a Blue Devil to watch.” Brendan Fitzgibbon, the reigning conference champion in the 1500-mile run, was the top collegiate finisher in the mile. The senior’s time of 4:10.92 joined Terry Brennan, Bill Spierdowis, and two relay squads in qualifying for IC4As. Both track teams will look to continue their success next weekend at Notre Dame’s Meyo Invitational.
MONDAY [ANUARY 29. 2001
SPORTSWRAP
PAGE 5
At Ford Motor Company, protecting the environment is one of our most important initiatives, That’s why Heidi is so important to our future. As the daughter of an engineer, Heidi grew up in the Ford family. From day one, she knew about our commitment to automobiles. She didn’t know that our commitment to the environment was just as impressive. The fact is, Heidi’s environmental goals and ours are one in the same. Through the Ford College Internship Program, Heidi had the opportunity to experience our environmental protection efforts first-hand. From closing underground storage tanks to taking our waste minimization efforts to new levels, her ideas made a real impact. As it turns out, her internship was just the beginning. Since joining the company full-time in 1998, Heidi has coordinated important environmental with a team of engineers including the restoration of local waterways. Today she serves as projects the environmental contact for seven assembly plants and four other facilities located in the U.S., Canada, and Mexico. Thanks to people like Heidi, we’re working smarter and safer than ever before. Where will your ideas take us? Come and learn more about Ford Motor Company and our internship opportunities at: -
Summer Opportunities Fair January 31,2001 Bryan Center 10am
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We will be recruiting for the following functions Global Product Development and Quality Finance Information Technology Visit our website at mycareer.ford.com •
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By choice, we are an Equal Opportunity Employer committed to a culturally diverse workforce
SPORTSWRAP
PAGE 6
MONDAY, JANUARY 29. 2001
Men’s basketball’s miracle over Maryland Q ome |j a clc I countdown
L,
I
0:57 Williams for 2
"
Williams steal Williams hits Nicholas misses 2FT from Nicholas 3-pointer
90-82 90-82 i*
0:48
0:50
0:38 Williams for 3
mi
."■■■
0:30 James steal from Dixon
0:24
0:21
Dunleavy misses trey
James hits 2 FTs
90-85 90-Si 90-88 90-88 90-88 90-90
COMEBACK from page 1, The Chronicle
the ball when Nicholas hobbled it on the left baseline. And as quickly as the previously-struggling Duke guard gained possession of the ball, he let fly a long, fade-away threepointer that swooshed. Williams’ trey brought the Blue Devils to within five of their opponents for the first time since the first half. Duke then called a 30second timeout in which the Blue
Devils were instructed to foul. Andre Buckner came in to take some pressure off starters Shane Battier and Mike Dunleavy, both of whom played the final seven minutes of the games with four personals. Duke’s mini-run had injected the Blue Devils with some confidence. “We didn’t make a run all day,” senior and Maryland native Nate James said. “Once we did, we knew we had them.”
Buckner immediately fouled Nicholas, who missed both free throws. Chris Duhon grabbed the rebound on the second missed throw, and another quick threepointer from Williams gave the Terps only a one-possession lead. Guard Juan Dixon fumbled while dribbling the next inbounds pass, and James capitalized and
dished the
Duke 98, Maryland 96 (OT) Box Score Maryland
Mouton Morris Baxter Dixon Blake Nicholas Miller Mardesich Holden Wilcox Team Totals
Duke Battier Dunleavy
Boozer James Williams Buckner Duhon Christensen
MP 32 23 24 38 29 13 26 9 23 8 225
FG 5-10 6-10 3-7 6-14 4-10 2-3 3-4 2-3 5-10
3PG 1-2 0-1 0-0 1-3 1-4 0-1 0-1 0-0 1-3
0-1
0-0
TO 4 0 4
FT 2-2 1-1 1-2 4-4 2-2 4-8 3-4 0-0 3-5 0-0
5
3 1 1 0 1 0 41
36-72 4-15
20-28
MR 42 36 34 41 42 1 21
FG 5-17 6-12 5-9 4-9 7-16 0-0 1-3
8
0-0
Ft FT 7-10 7 3-4 8 5-7 9 6-6 5 9-13 7 0-0 0 2-2 2 0-0 0
3PG 3-11 3-6 0-0 2-5 2-8 0-0 0-1 0-0
21
2 21
BLK ST 0 1 2 2 2 1 3 0 0 1 0 1 0 3 0 1 '0 0 1 0 5
A TO BLK ST 15 3 1 0 0 2 3 0 0 0 2 0 15 4 5 10 0 2 0 0 0 0 110 2 0 0 10
PF 4
5 4 3 5 1 2 3 4
PTS 13 13 7 17 11 8 9 4
14
0
0
31
96
PF
4 4 3 2 2 1 3
PTS 20 18 15 16 25 0 4
2
0
21
98
Team
Totals
225
28-66 10-31 32-42 41
22
5
Maryland
46
44
6
96
Duke
37
53
8
98
Officials: Hess, Boudreaux, Higgins Attendance—l4,soo
10
ball to Williams.
Dunleavy then missed a threepoint attempt, and James made the offensive rebound. Fouled by Maryland guard Byron Mouton as he went up for a layup, James nearly converted the shot for a potential three-point play. Instead, he made two clutch free throws that tied the game at 90. “Whenever I’m shooting free throws, I think back to when I’m in the'gym by myself,” James said. “I block all that out. I think, ‘Knees bent.’ When you let the crowd get in your head is when you have missed free throws.” Instead of missed free throws, Duke had overtime after Nicholas missed a three-pointer at the buzzer. Meanwhile, Maryland’s late-game misses at the line helped the Blue Devil cause. “We’re fortunate they missed some free throws,” Krzyzewski said. “But they played a marvelous game. Maryland was superb.” Forty seconds into overtime, though, star Terrapin forward Terence Morris fouled out. With about two minutes left in regulation, another Maryland starter, guard Steve Blake, who had spent much of the game driving past Williams and passing inside to Morris, Lonny Baxter and Tahj Holden, picked up his fifth personal. “Foul trouble had a bearing on the whole game,” Krzyzewski said. “We had to manage our guys with four fouls. Our guys play a lot of minutes, and they play a lot of minutes having fouls. Maybe they are more conditioned to that type of situation.”
JASON WILLIAMS and Nate James close in on Danny Miller for a critical Duke steal Williams made two free throws
after Morris was replaced, and Duke led by two —its first lead since early in the first period. Baxter then put in a layup on Maryland’s end, which Battier followed with a trey. Dixon then made a driving move and picked up another Terrapin basket. Dunleavy turned the ball over on the Blue Devils’ next possession, after which Mouton committed an offensive foul. Moments later, Dixon fouled Battier, and the senior found himself on the line with two minutes remaining and Duke hanging onto a narrow onepoint lead. Battier made both free throws, but within fifteen seconds Maryland had made up the difference off good Holden foul shots. Duke retained possession of the ball for the next minute and a half, and even though the Blue Devils did not score, their three offensive rebounds in sequence kept the Terrapins from scoring. Finally, Baxter fouled Battier, who only made one of two free throws. Holden came away with the defensive rebound, and Dixon cut in for a layup. In position under the basket, Battier deftly blocked Dixon’s shot. Williams rebounded, and the clock expired. “I knew Dixon was going to take the last shot,” Battier said. “I knew he was going to try to get fouled; he’s an automatic free throw shoot-
er. I also knew the refs were going
to let us play. I just stood under the basket, Juan went right to the hoop, and I just swatted his shot away.” Battier may never have been in a position where his block would matter if it were not for Duke’s 82 run to end the first half. Down by 15 with 2:42 remaining in the first period, the Blue Devils allowed only one Maryland basket for the rest of the half. In addition, Duke utilized a Battier three-pointer and a Duhon jumper to cut the lead further.
After Duhon’s basket, Maryland held the ball for the last shot of the half and missed. As the Terps ran to the locker room, officials realized that time had not expired. Maryland gained possession of the ball with 36.4 seconds in the half; even though they used the entire shot clock, 1.4 seconds remained. Dunleavy threw a baseball pass the length of the court, Battier faked a cut to catch it, and Williams grabbed the ball and drove for a layup. Maryland coach Gary Williams
saw this as a major turning point. “They get a chance to regroup,” Williams said. “There’s 1.4 seconds left, the ball bounces off to Williams. Things happen.” One of Coach Williams’ players, though, held his team more culpable. “Playing against Duke you have to play 40 minutes,” Mouton said. “We played 38.”
MONDAY.
SPORTSWRAP
JANUARY 29, 2001
PAGE?
PHOTOS BY REGAN HSU/THE CHRONICLE
CLOCKWISE FROM TOP LEFT: GEORGIA SCHWEITZER launches a three-point shot in Duke’s dominating first half; Sheana Mosch drives through the Clemson defense for two of her career-high 30 points; freshman center Crystal White moves laterally as she defends the Tigers’ Maggie Slosser; and Rochelle Parent hugs a jubilant Schweitzer as the Blue Devils celebrate their 50-point victory over their visiting rivals.
Revenge plays factor in blowout s
I REVENGE from page 1, The Chronicle
fatigue seemed to be absent from the Blue Devils all afternoon. One factor may have been their 18-point loss at Clemson last December. Both coach Gail Goestenkors and Tillis admitted that that loss gave the team plenty of motivation. “Yeah, pretty much,” said Tillis, when asked if this game was retribution. “We remember what it felt like to lose there. It was payback time, I guess.” Payback came not just by lighting up the Tigers for 92 points, but also by destroying Clemson on the boards. Mosch and freshman Rometra Craig helped the Blue Devils dominate the glass 23-7 in the first 20 minutes, and they finished with a 41-22 advantage. “We had goals as a team,” Tillis said. “As far as our rebounding, we were really determined. We have worked really hard in lots of practices at rebounding.” Goestenkors saw a different team than the one upset last December, despite playing this time without leading scorer Alana Beard. Mosch had a career night, but it was Duke’s ability to play as a unit that overwhelmed an often tentative Clemson squad. “Our intensity [and] our focus,” said Goestenkors of the differences between her team’s approach and Clemson’s. “We’re a good rebounding team, we’re a good passing team, we’re a good transition team. We were not good at any of those aspects at Clemson and I think that goes back to our intensity and focus.” Even without the injured Beard, Duke is emerging as one of the elite teams in the country and took a twogame lead in the ACC more than halfway through the conference season. Yet despite Sunday’s blowout, Goestenkors was hardly amazed, pointing out that her team’s previous four games have all been agonizingly close. “I don’t think we’re out of the woods yet,” said Goestenkors about capturing the ACC regular season
Duke 92, Clemson 42 Bo* Scorn Clemson Forns
0-0 011-2 0-0 0-0 0-0
0 3 3 1 3 2 1
A 2 0 0 2 1 1 0 2 1 0
0-0
1
0
17-49 3-11
5-10
22
9
FG 3PG 1-1 0-0 7-10 2-2 12-12 2-2 3-9 0-2 4-9 3-5 1-2 1-2 0-0 0-0 1-2 0-0 2-9 1-6 1-2 0-0 3-4 1-2 0-2 0-0
FT 0-0 0-0 4-4 22-2 00-0 0-0 0-0 10-0
R A 4 5 0 4 11 6 1 5 8 2 0 5 0 0 0 1 11 3 0 4 1 3 0
Stokes Aderhold Crowe
MP 21 30 20 18 33 23 6 10 12 21 6
FG 1-4 4-7 1-4 3-6 3-8 1-6 0-1 1-2 1-5 2-5 0-1
Team Totals
200
MR 20 19 29 26 Craig Schweitzer 29 Krapohl 13 Gebisa 3 Gvozdenovic 5 West 15 Brown 7 Matyasovsky 22 White 12 Team 200 Totals
Glenney
Batth Scott Floyd
Slosser Gaines Queen
Duke Parent Tillis Mosch
3PG 0-1 0-0 0-0 0-1 1-3 0-0 0-0 0-0 1-2 1-3 0-1
FT 02-2
R
3 2
11
3-
35-62 10-21 12-14 41
Clemson Duke
26
TO
18
BLK ST
PF PTS
0
7
3
17
19
23
42
36
92
56
Officials: Demayo, Salerno, Outlaw Attendance—6,l94
title.“It’s not like we’ve been dominating our opponents.” And as for the 18 turnovers the Blue Devils committed, the coach would not hear of letting a fifty-point win change the way she begins her next practice. “We’ll run for our turnovers, like always,” she said.
SPORTSWRAP
PAGES
MONDAY, JANUARY 29, 2001
Opportunity knocked... Sheana answered By BRODY GREENWALD The Chronicle
In the heart of Pennsylvania in a quiet town called Clearfield, a coach began teaching his daughter the arts of baseball and basketball. Sheana Mosch picked up both sports with ease, starring in them by age 10. She played eight seasons of baseball and a year of high school softball, but her greatest exploits always came on the basketball court. With the guidance of her father and Sheana learned about the future high school coach, George Mos< two men who would everything she ever needed for basketball success from Babe Ruth and Pete Maravich, two ofAmerica’s most flamboyant sports heroes. From baseball’s Sultan of Swat she took her jersey number; from Pistol Pete she picked up everything else Although Maravich passed away during Sheana’s youth and his exploits survived only in newspaper clippings and vintage videotapes, his legend remained fresh in the Mosch household, When her father first showed Sheana an old tape of Maravich playing basketball, college basketball’s all-time scoring leader and all-time star of the outrageous made an immediate impact on a girl who would use his game as a model for hers. “I think growing up, my favorite skill to improve on was ball-handling,” Sheana said. “I love dribbling the ball and just playing around with it. When my dad showed me a tape of Pete Maravich, I loved it because he did things with the ball that I had never seen anyone do before. He was so much ahead of his time, it was incredible. I wanted to emulate him, do the things that he did.” By the time Sheana reached eighth grade, she was spinning the ball around on her finger and practicing the rest of the moves that made Maravich, basketball’s ultimate show_
man, a star.
By the time Sheana reached Duke, she was spinning around defenders and mirroring her idol in every way, with the exception of his on-court flair, which was never adopted by the girl who might be as quiet and low-key as her hometown, population 6,000. Despite averaging more than 44 points per game his final three seasons in college and setting multiple scoring records, Maravich received more notoriety with between-the-leg dribbles and behind-theback passes during an era when they were as yet unheard of and viewed as entirely arrogant. Unlike Maravich, Sheana’s ability to do just about anything with the ball—her coach compares her to the greatest ball-handlers the Duke program has ever boasted—only emerges in warmups During games, she opts for the safer, lessflashy pass in order to limit her turnover total, a conservative element of her game that has left many fans in the dark when it comes to her latent talent. “She works on the little things, which [Maravich did]. A lot of people just want to come and work on their shot, but she worked on her ball-handling, she worked on her passing, she worked on all aspects of her game,” Duke
coach Gail Goestenkors said. “I know she can do all of the tricks, all of the drills that Pete Maravich could do, but other people don’t know it unless they see her working on her game ”
PHOTO BY REGAN HSU/THE CHRONICLE
Until last Monday, however, much of the basketball world knew little ofthe other side of the game Sheana’s coaches have seen—her ability to score at will. For several weeks in practice, Goestenkors and the Duka coaching staff puzzled over a riddle for which no answer seemed apparent. Each day they watched as Sheana played phenomenally, aggressively cutting to the basket and creating short-range jump shots for herself. Then each game, they watched as the same person played passively, choosing to wait on the wing while freshman sensation Alana Beard did all the driving and attacking for the Blue Devils. Goestenkors gathered the team and asked each of them to say who they felt was the team’s best finisher; each ofthem in turn replied Sheana Mosch. “Her ability to penetrate and lose her defender, it’s the best on the team,” freshman point guard Vicki Krapohl said. “No one can stop her when she decides she’s going to the basket,” ACC player of the year Georgia Schweitzer added. Despite her teammates’ high opinions ofher, Sheana still deferred to Beard and Schweitzer. The veteran coach met a couple times with Sheana, imploring the sophomore to play more assertively, giving her the green light to shoot when she pleased. Still, there was no response, only glimpses of what could be. “She’s afraid of shooting too much, and I told her I would let her know if she shot too much,” Goestenkors said. “Those are words players love to hear, they they have the green light and they need to shoot more, but she still just wasn’t as aggressive.” Then Beard went down with an injury, and the Sheana Mosch of practice began to let fans in on Duke’s little secret. With Beard on the bench, Sheana had by far her best game of the season in a thrilling victory over Virginia in Charlottesville, matching her previous career high with 25 points on an endless stream of slashes to the hoop. After a 12-for-15 shooting performance, however, Sheana uttered the words that her coaching staff would not have wanted to hear, and it remained unclear whether her breakout night against the Cavaliers would become a forgotten footnote or a fabulous forecast. “I’m happy with the part I’m playing on the team, whether it’s scoring or not scoring at all,” Sheana said the day before the North Carolina game, Duke’s second without the services of Beard. “I don’t feel any kind of extra pressure to score and to make up for the points that Alana gave us. I don’t think that’s something I could do. I don’t think that’s one aspect I can just take over.” Five days later, Sheana’s prediction seems like the only thing she has done that has been off the mark. In a three-game span, everyone, including Sheana, discovered that in the tranquil and modest two-guard lay the potential for a conference all-star. With apparent ease, Sheana took command of the scoring load by single-handedly more than accounting for Beard’s team-leading 17 points per game. Against the conference’s elite opposition, Sheana matched or improved upon her career high in all three games ofBeard’s absence, shattering her previous season average of 7.4 points per game with a one-week total of 84 points that culminated yesterday afternoon. Against Clemson, Sheana dropped in 30 on a perfect shooting night—l2-for-12—that raised the bar for Duke’s all-time best performance from the field. After half a season of quiet contributions, Sheana’s 34 field goals in three games prove there is no secret formula, no magical combination she needs to decipher once Beard returns. As former Duke great Kira Orr explained, only Sheana can determine what will happen after her teammate rejoins the starting lineup. “She just needs to keep doing the things she has been doing the last three games—being aggressive, taking the ball to the basket, drawing fouls,” said Orr, Duke’s alltime assist leader who became a close friend of Sheana’s after working out with her for a month this summer. “Before she was... waiting for Alana to do those things. She needs to realize they can both be out there doing those things and it will only make the team that much more deadly.”
MONDAY
[ARY
29. 2001
SPORTSWRAP
PAGE
Oklahoma State mourns after Saturday’s airplane crash By OWEN CANFIELD Associated Press
5
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MARK LEFFINGWELL7AFP
.OCAL OFFICIALS examine the wreckage of an Oklahoma State team plane outside Byers, Colo.
Duke in Berlin Fall 2001
event,” Buzzard told reporters yesterday afternoon at a news conference. Buzzard also responded to questions about the aircraft, including who
STILLWATER, Okla. Oklahoma State coaches and players were secluded yesterday, a day after two reserve provided it. “All three aircraft that were used on players and eight other members of the basketball traveling party died in a the trip were private and they were proplane crash in Colorado. vided to the university by the alumni It was unlikely that coach Eddie and businessmen,” Buzzard said. The Sutton would meet with the media, plane that crashed was provided by sports information director Steve Dick Bogart of Oklahoma City, he said. Buzzard said at a briefing in GallagherHarry Birdwell, vice president of Iba Arena. Sutton was in meetings with business and external relations at athletic director Terry Don Phillips Oklahoma State, said college officials continually review the best ways to much of the morning. “This is a day for...Buzzard said, his transport teams. voice trailing off. ‘There’s a lot of pain.” “I assure you weTe going to leave no Sutton stayed in his office until stone unturned in terms of review of our after 1 a.m. yesterday, notifying family policies to be sure that our student athmembers and meeting with his griev- letes and staff and officials of the uniing players. versity are as safe as they can possibly “it was tough on him,” said Tom be,” Birdwell said. “We will do a complete Dirato, OSUs director of radio and televi- review of our policies and re-evaluate sion. “There’s none of us who could imagthe standards of safety that just have to ine what it would be like getting on the be part of any activity such as this.” On campus, when students would phone and calling a father, a mother, an uncle or just people that you know and normally be getting ready to yell at a say, ‘What you heard is correct, he didn’t television during the Super Bowl, the survive.’ It took a toll on him.” mood was gloomy and subdued. Many Reserve players Dan Lawson and awoke to have the tragedy of the night Nate Fleming died when the before hit them again. “Everyone is pretty melancholy,” Beechcraft King Air 200 went down in a field about 40 miles east of Denver. freshman Chris Shumake said. “They’re just walking around like zombies, sort The crash also killed the team’s playby-play announcer, its sports informa- of. You hear of airplane crashes like in Europe and overseas, but you never tion officer, a radio engineer, two manthink of it hitting home.” agers, the team’s administrative assisThe university made counselors availtant and the two pilots. able to the players and staff members. Officials scheduled a memorial service for 3 p.m. Wednesday at Gallagher- Plans were being made for a memorial Iba Arena as a “special time of prayer service that will be held in Gallagher-Iba and a time of thanks, and an uplifting Arena, perhaps on Thursday.
SAFETY ATTENTION OWNERS Of DELL LATITUDE AND INSPIRON LAPTOPS BOUGHT BETWEEN TUNE 22 AND SEPTEMBER 15,2000. Dell Computer has issued a safety recall tor certain batteries in some of these laptops. It you have not checked to see if your battery is involved in the November recall, please go to the Computer Repair website, click on "DELL SAFETY RECALL". It your serial number is listed, cither contact DELL at 877-741-6420, or Computer Repair at 684-6760.
Information Meeting Monday, January 29 5:15 p.m. 119 Old Chemistry For applications,
Duke Univer/iky Computer Repair
www.dukestores.duke.edu/cputix ra
contact:
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01-0723
SPORTSWRAP
PAGE 10
MONDAY, JANUARY 29,
2001
Tar Heels win 14th straight game Shocked Terp fans
pelt Boozer’s mom
By DAVID DROSCHAK •,
Associated Press
60 RALEIGH
It was North UNO Carolina’s lowest point total during 52 its 14-game winning streak. The Maryland Tar fifth-ranked Heels also turned it over 16 times and missed 11 of 20 free throws. But North Carolina’s 60-52 victory over N.C. State yesterday was not a cause for great concern heading into its top-five showdown with Duke Thursday night. “We have to just be happy with a win and learn from a win,” said Joseph Forte, who led North Carolina with 21 points, eight rebounds and five assists. “We are not going to play perfect basketball all the time,” Forte added. “We have a winning streak, but a winning streak doesn’t help you in your next game. The streak is great, but it’s nothing we dwell on, it’s nothing like if we lose tomorrow we’re not a
good team anymore.” The Tar Heels (17-2, 7-0 in the ACC) led by as many as 11 early in the second half, but scored only five points over a nine-minute span, allowing the Wolfpack back into the game. N.C. State (10-8, 2-5) closed to 49-48 with 4:14 left, but Forte sank an 18-footer and Brendan Haywood made two free throws less than three minutes Jater after the Wolfpack had pulled within one again. Haywood was 2-for-9 in his previous two games from the line and was shooting 49 percent there this season, but the 7-foot center hit both and the Tar Heels escaped with their perfect ACC mark intact. “Brendan is a team leader and we expect him to do things like that,” point guard Ronald Curry said of the clutch free throws from the 7-footer. “He’s been working a long time on them. He comes in at night, he comes in before practice shooting free throws.” The Tar Heels got two more free throws and a dunk by Forte, and a free throw by Curry over the final 25.3 seconds to close out their 15th win in the last 18 meetings with the arch-rival Wolfpack. “Composure is always a big part on the road,” North Carolina coach Matt Doherty said of the win in front of
By RAY HOLLOMAN The Chronicle
ASSOCIATED PRESS
KRIS LANG rips down a rebound against N.C. State yesterday, 19,722 rowdy fans at the Entertainment and Sports Arena. “You know, they’re a scary team.” Doherty said he has been confident during his team’s best winning streak since North Carolina started the 1997-98 season 17-0. The coach had reason to feel differently Sunday as the Wolfpack came charging back. “We’ve got good players and they made big plays,” Doherty said. “But sometimes you’re helpless as a coach because there isn’t a play you can call, there is not a defense you can devise. I started grasping at straws there a little bit at the end.”
COLLEGE PARK, Md. For the second time in three seasons, the Duke-Maryland men’s basketball game took a backseat to the postgame antics of the Cole Field House crowd. Renee Boozer, the mother of Duke’s starting center Carlos Boozer, was struck in the head by a bottle thrown from the rowdy Terrapin crowd disappointed by the home team’s 98-96 overtime loss to the rival Blue Devils. The incident occurred almost two years exactly after Tony Van Horn, uncle of Baltimorenative Nate James, was involved in an altercation with Maryland fans. Following the stunning come-from-behind victory, the Maryland crowd began hurling debris toward the Duke bench as both teams hurried offthe floor. Renee Boozer, seated directly behind the bench, was struck by part of the debris. She was treated by the Duke medical staffand did not visit the hospital. Boozer’s father, Carlos Boozer Sr., meanwhile spoke briefly to the media gathered in a cramped Cole Field House hallway on his way to speak to his son. “I went to school here, she went to school here,” the elder Boozer said. “They should never treat fans like that. Carlos thought about coming here, but going to Duke was the best thing he did.” Neither school made any official comment on the matter, nor have the Blue Devils yet officially initiated any action with the Atlantic Coast Conference. Two years ago, Van Horn and James’ father, a marine sergeant, were pelted by ice and debris from the hostile Maryland crowd. “[Spectators] were throwing stuff at us all game long,” Van Horn said at the time. “Finally something hit one of us and we went up there after those people.” After the incident two years ago, the ACC officially investigated the behavior of the Maryland crowd, but no punishment was handed down to the school.
Finish a second major. Focus on a foreign language. Complete a ‘year’ of chemistry or physics.
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DUKE SUMMER SESSION 2001 Term I: May 17- June 28 Term il: July 2 August II -
You matterat University Health Systems. As a teaching hospital, our wide variety of patients and the complexity ofthtdr care provides the opportunity to expand your knowledge and the autonomy to help remind you why you are a nurse. Our team environment truly presents )ou with opportunities to enhance your future...as well as ours...while thestrong relationships you foster will allow you to experience many disciplines and not just nursing.
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MONDAY. JANUARY 29. 2001
Tide turns when Blake fouls out in contest’s final minutes LEGENDARY from page 6 come in to keep Blake from fouling out, a slashing Williams forced Blake into his fifth personal foul. “[Steve Blake fouling out] was the key,” Maryland coach Gary Williams said. “We had a sub sitting at the table, we wanted to swap offense for defense, we wanted to save him for the end.”
Jason Williams sank both his free throws and somewhere in the middle of the chaotic Cole Field House crowd yelling for their Terps to hold on for the first home win over Duke in four years, that trademark Jason Williams smirk began to break across his face like a wave that seemed more 38 years than 38 minutes in the making. And then it was really about to be all over. “When I fouled out I thought it was going to be OK, I thought we had the game,” Blake said. “But a team like Duke doesn’t give up.” Still down by nine at 84-75, the Blue Devils went back to a full-court press, a defense they had using sparingly and with little success in the
it was that Williams was not through. After backup point guard Nicholas missed both free throws on an Andre Buckner foul, the Blue Devils raced back down the court. Chris Duhon fed Williams for an open three and it was not just victory that came calling, it was something just short of destiny. “As badly as Jason had been playing for him, he was magnificent in those last couple minutes,” Krzyzewski said. Yet the Blue Devils still had two points separating them from overtime. But this time, even Williams could not do it. A steal by James gave the Blue Devils possession of the ball without
having to foul and immediately the team looked to Williams. But the visibly fatigued point guard stumbled on his way to the basket, narrowly avoiding a traveling call as he fell to the court. One scare survived, there seemed little question that the Blue Devils were going to find some way to win, so when James was fouled following a Dunleavy missed three, it was more fitting than euphoric for the Blue first half. Devils when the Baltimore native After trading free throws for bascalmly sank both free throws. kets, the wheels did not just fall off for “Playing against Duke you have to the Terps—they flew off. play 40 minutes,” said Terp swingman Williams drove down the lane with Byron Mouton. “We played 38 and it Blake watching from the sideline, got us in trouble.” spinning through a pair of Maryland Five minutes later when the Blue defenders and snaking the ball up and Devils finally left winners, it was Williams who smiled the brightest, through to pull Duke within 90-82. Three-point expertise aside, it was grabbing the ball and throwing it high clear that Nicholas was not Blake. into the Cole ceiling. And it was Blake who slumped farthest back in his lockAnd he was not stopping Williams The Blue Devil point guard then er after the game, wearing a visible turned and chased down the inbound dejection so strong it might as well have been a scar across his face. pass in the hands of Blake’s replace“It hurts a lot to play so well and ment Nicholas, smothering him in a double team with Nate James. then have the turning point of the Improbably, Williams pulled the ball game being fouling out,” said a worn out of Nicholas’ hands, turned and Blake, whose voice barely carried to fired a three-pointer to pull Duke the gaggle of media outside his locker. within five for the first time in over 26 “This is definitely the worse loss I’ve minutes and drop the raucous ever had.” For the Blue Devils, who have not Maryland crowd from fever pitch to silence before the ball ever left the net. lost since a one-point defeat against “Jason’s shot to cut it to five was a No. 1 Stanford in December, it was simmonster shot,” Krzyzewski said. “He ply a matter of getting the job done. shot it almost sitting in our bench.” “We just made winning plays to win Five points in six seconds with a tonight,” Krzyzewski said, succinctly livid Gary Williams providing the capsulizing a game where his team backbeat, stomping in anger on the was outplayed for most of the contest and still left winners. Maryland sideline. But not everybody made winning What the Terps’ coach did not know then was that the bad news was not plays for Duke. that his lead had just been cut to five, Some were legendary.
\
I Duke
Career Center
mmmmm
Career Center Calendar, Jan. 29
~
J
Feb. 5
Monday, Jan 29 OCI & Jobtrak Overview for First Time Users, 106 Page, 2pm AiMS Shadowing Program Info Session, 106 Page, 3pm For Engineering & CPS Majors: Getting Ready for the Summer Opportunities Fair, 203 Teer, 4pm Tuesday, Jan 30 Career Skills Workshop: Interviewing Tips, 106Page, 2pm AiMS Shadowing Program Info Session, 106Page, 3pm For Grad Students: Self-Assessment Series, 217 Page, s:lspm Wednesday, Jan 31
2001 SUMMER OPPORTUNITIES FAIR! 10am
~
4pm in the Bryan Center
Thursday, Feb 1 OCI & Jobtrak Overview for First Time Users, 106 Page, 11am AiMS Shadowing Program Info Session, 106 Page, 4pm Friday, Feb 2 CAREER FORUM: Working Abroad What’s True, What’s Not Von Canons, I:3opm to 4:3opm, Reception to follow ~
Monday, Feb 5 For Engineering & CPS Majors: Interview Skills, 203 Teer, 4pm
Working Abroad:
What’s True, What’s Not, Friday, 1:30~5pm in the Von Canons
All Duke students interested in working abroad are invited to attend discussion panels with guest speakers and alumni who have extensive international work experience in a variety of fields. Three panels will run concurrently and will repeat throughout the afternoon. International coffees, beverages and treats will be served. Panel topics include: International Teaching Volunteer & Short-Term Work Experiences Int’l Business and Economic Development For more info, log on to; •
•
•
http://cdc.stuaff.duke.edu/cs-careerforums.html
This week!
The Summer Opportunities Fair Looking for a summer job or internship? If you are a freshman, sophomore or junior, be sure to attend the 2001 Summer Opportunities Fair this Wednesday, January 31 in the Bryan Center. Meet representatives from nearly 80 businesses, organizations and summer camps, hand out your resume, and discover all the great options available to you for gaining experience and building your resume this summer. To see who is attending the SOF log on to the Career Center Website (see URL below) and pick up tomorrow’s Chronicle for the special SOF Guide. For an updated listing of organizations and businesses attending the SOF, log on to http://cdc.stuaff.duke.edu and select Summer Fair from the Quick Picks drop-down menu
Employer Information Sessions Jan 29, Goldman, Sachs (Firmwide), 7pm in Von Canon C
Feb 1, The Brattle Group, 7pm in the Old Trinity Room
Jan 30, Microsoft, 6:3opm in 203 Teer
Feb 4, EH Lilly (multiple divisions), 6pm at the Regal Hotel
Feb 5, Cap Gemini Ernst & Young, 7pm in the Old Trinity Room
CAREER CENTER figm 1 DUKE 110 Page Building (West
S«hih|| tgr
Campus) Appointments: 660-1050 Student Helpline; 660-1070 http://cdc.stuaff.duke.edu
PAGE 12
SPORTSWRAP
MONDAY. JANUARY 29. 2001
MONDAY, JANUARY
Commentary
29, 2001
PAGE?
The last-second snatch
Bill and Hillary Clinton did not go quietly into that good night—they cut one last round of deals Then we saw the Saturday Morning years. In a delicious symmetry, the As someone who worked closely with Mess Occur. Now it will be hard to sepa- Clintons were bookended by Bushes; her puts it: “Hillary, though a Liberties rate
Bonnie from Clyde. It was a graceless, grabby, gabby exit—crooks in striped outfits sprinting through the breached wall, Clintonites vandalizing Maureen Dowd the People’s House and prying W’s from computer keyboards, and the Clintons’ I love that Bill merry laughter echoing. WASHINGTON Clinton wants to emulate Jimmy That creeping Clinton nostalgia curCarter and work in the field of conflict dled into creepiness. Bill and Hill took enough loot to fill a small hotel and libresolution. Talk about the fox in the henhouse, erated enough criminals to populate a Not since the troublemaking goddess new Australia. Eris threw the apple of discord into an Only Bill Clinton could provoke a Olympian banquet has anyone been round of Dan Burton abuse-of-power able to create as much conflict as fast as hearings after he’d left office. Only our Bill. Hillary Clinton, in her first days as a Eris had only one apple. Bill has senator, could engender a debate about orchards. Whenever things get peacewhether the Senate should tighten up ful, whenever Clinton seems to have the gift ban. gotten his act together, he goes appleHillary is telling people how relieved picking again. she is to put the last eight years behind Despite the self-inflicted chaos and her. Maybe she regarded this final soap-operatic strife of the last eight spree—including her gazillion-dollar years, the country was feeling pretty book deal and her bulging hope chest of good about the Clintons as their last day parting gifts from Democratic contribuhere dawned. tors—as the final chapter ofher old life, The vapid election and vituperative rather than the tawdry, disappointing unelection had fostered some Clinton first chapter of her new life. The Clintons always want one more nostalgia. He was a hard worker who did some good things. His heart was in pass, one more Mulligan. Even after they hawked seats on Air the right place, even if his libido wasn’t. He was a diverting rogue, astonishing Force One, nights in the Lincoln tactician and miraculous escape artist. Bedroom, state dinners, very pricey coffee and their friendship, they still You had to give him that. Many also forgave Hillary’s sins with enjoyed the benefit of the doubt. Small commodities trading, Travelgate, health wonder, then, that they expected care and stonewalling. Her dutiful Americans to stomach a White House Senate campaign persuaded them that fire sale of presidential pardons and she should have a chance to perform—- senatorial influence. On his last all-nighter in the White and be judged —on her own. She had been a senator for all of two House, Bill was clearly feeling way too and a half seconds when the buzz about empathetic toward Marc Rich and others who were hounded by prosecutors for a potential presidency commenced.
both families have a distinctive sense of entitlement. The Bushes think they’re good people and therefore entitled. The Clintons think they do good works and are therefore entitled. When Bill and Hillary omnivorously trade political favors for personal ones, they don’t realize this defines them as much as a policy act. In David Maraniss’s biography of Bill Clinton, he writes of Hillary wanting to build a pool at the Arkansas mansion. Dick Morris explained to her that she could not do that in a poor state. She angrily replied; “Why can’t we lead the lives ofnormal people?” (She must now think that normal people own $2,340 Spode soup tureens.)
Methodist, thinks of herself like an Episcopal bishop who deserves to live at the level of her wealthy parishioners, in return for devoting her life to God and good works.” Maybe the Clintons have been justifying the unjustifiable for so long they can no longer tell the difference. Sitting on Denise Rich’s chairs and Steve Mittman’s ottoman, in the lambent light of Walter Kaye’s chandelier, they certainly have a lot to ponder. They shouldn’t be too pleased with their reflection in Steven Spielberg’s china.
Maureen Dowd’s column is syndicated by The New York Times News Service.
THE ARTFUL DODGER hands out the most coveted awards Monday, Monday THE ARTFUL DODGER The Golden Globes have come and gone and they have left the Artful Dodger a truly inspired fellow. Inspired not to act—l have not the spirit of a thespian. Inspired not to direct—l don’t look good in a beret. Rather, lam inspired to have awards of my own, but I want them to be different. Where others look to recognize the unsung heroes of or an art or craft, I want to reveal the unsung Neros of this university. My awards are different, they are for people whose own perverted visions of the world and themselves scare the rest of us on a day-to-day basis and create good comedy. These are the Dodgers. Category One; Whiniest Man in the University. This award goes to the male student who, in his infantile moaning, has done the most to debase notions of masculinity and virility already on the run in America. His character on the evolutionary chart wears a man-purse. There was no real competition for this one. The Dodger goes hands down to sophomore Rajus Korde, who was interviewed by The Chronicle for a piece last week on—and I swear this is true—old showers. The Chronicle quoted Rajus, “It happened pretty much every morning... there were one or two days when it was bearable. [A note: this means that, for Rajus, it was mostly unbearable] It was definitely not hot water though.” The article continued, “Korde said he had talked to other Edens residents who had experienced the same problem.” We can only imagine the scene down in Edens as Rajus took his first cold shower: Rajus (shivering, betrayed): This water is unbearable! It is so cold!
Showerer 1: Yeah, it is. Oh well. I’ll go shower at my friend’s place on West. Rajus (raising a clenched fist): Not me. I shall organize against this cold water. Oh yes. Justice shall be done! I shall ca11... The Chronicle! Korde comes across as a character from Gulag Archipelago—until we remember that he is talking about—cold water. Rajus, you are now the only person to ever organize an activist group around the cause of water temperature. Moreover, your name is Rajus. That sounds like some antagonist in a Disney Movie. May you spend eternity in an ironic hell of cold showers and strange nomeclature.
Clarence, with strange men turbating in Perkins Library.don’t you have something better to d0...? -
Category Two: The Most Inept Administration OfficialWho The Artful Dodger Will Now Challenge To A Bacon and Doughnut Eating on Main West In Front of The CL That is a mouthful, both in the sense that a bacon and doughnut Eating Contest would result in mouths literally “full” of bacon and doughnuts, and also in that it is a long title. The Dodger goes to Clarence Birkhead, the Chief of the Duke University Police Department, for his Jan. 26 letter to the editor, titled, “Enforcement of Parking and Traffic Rules to Increase.” Clarence, with strange men masturbating in Perkins Library, drunken freshmen urinating in each other’s windows and kleptomaniacs roving the campus, (all real cases, taken from The Chronicle’s police blotter), don’t you have something
better to do with your time than ticket? Don’t you miss doing real police work? How about a nice scavenger hunt, Clarence? I will write the clues and put them around campus for you. Or an Easter Egg hunt, if the logic involved in a scavenger hunt is too much. I respect that you have to do your job, but you sold twice as many parking permits as you had spaces—anyone but a University would be sued for doing this. So I propose a challenge. We eat bacon and doughnuts. The Dodger will come, dressed in disguise, and we will eat. If I win, I get to be the Chief of Campus Police for a day, and in that day I can forgive 20 parking tickets. If you win, you get to write this column for a week. You can say whatever you want. Feel free to respond in the form of a letter to the editor by next Monday. Category Three: Duke Student Who Most Unintentionally, Obviously and Comically Grapples with His Own Sexuality in a Public Forum: The Dodger goes to Jerry Huang for his letter to the editor of The Chronicle last week. One’s views on homosexuality aside, nobody writes a 273 word piece continually stressing how “a simple examination upon human morphology would reveal that we are designed for the union between a male and female, not between people of the same sex.” Are you convincing us or yourself Jerry? Sigmund Freud would find a wondrous and paper-worthy slip in Huang’s last line, “I have no ill feeling toward homosexuals. I am only saddened that some of my fellow men choose not to enjoy the wonderful design they possess.” We get the feeling that Jerry himself has been doing a fair amount of thinking on “the wonderful design” that his “fellow men” possess. A well-deserved Dodger for a well-designed, if confused fellow. The Artful Dodger would like to thank all in the Duke Community who, with high SATs and little thought, live their lives in a Dodger worthy manner everyday. You are truly the proof of the pudding.
The Chronicle
•
Comics
page 8
Blazing Sea Nuggets/ David Logan
&
MONDAY, JANUARY 29, 2001
THE Daily Crossword
Eric Bramley
*
ME get this ...Vou Did work, But it caug-ht
OK
With
Edited by Wayne Robert Williams
ACROSS 1 Dangles bait on the water 5 Infield cover. for short 9 Tie the knot 14 Bruins of sports 15 Gannon College city 16 Nebraska city 17 Having wings 18 Money plant? 19 Extend a subscription
20 Neil Armstrong or Buzz Aldrin 23 Matched outfits 24 Hawaii's ocean: abbr. 25 19th-century round dances 28 Cupid 33 Emulate Cicero 34 Small combo 35 Govt. med. grp. 36 Sally Ride or Mae Jamison 40 Requirement for a UFO 41 Throw in the towel 42 Two-masted vessel 43 Computer displays 46 Anchor-chain
Doonesbury/ Garry Trudeau
openings
47 Wallach or Whitney 48 Pelvic projections 49 Jake Gam or John Glenrr 57 Divided Asian nation 58 Rat-bottomed boat 59 Poker fee 60 Up and about 61 Incite 62 Man from
Gilbert/ Scott Adam YOUR STOCK RISE IF A SI ANALYST SAN > THING!
Edinburgh
HOW THAT -VEN
63 Irascible 64 Prognosticator 65 Highland hats DOWN 1 Twofold 2 Rights org. 3 Blueprint
Site of the Circus Hall of Fame Entices Zodiac ram Outer covering Rozelle or Rose 9 Pestle's partner 10 Set an arbitrary punishment
11 Rajah's wife 12 Ms. Perlman 13 Exhibit boredom 21 Turn back 22 Tracker's trail 25 Errand boy 26 Long, narrow ridge 27 Keats poem 28 Musical upbeat 29 Catcher's glove 30 Sinatra song. •_ Life* 31 Cease-fire 32 Curses 34 Showing strain 37 Rout 38 Giraffe kin
39 Informative TV 44 Double-dealing 45 Chicago cow owner 46 Batsman 48 Door hardware 49 Card game for three 50 Stance
51 Carney and Linklettor , 52 Musical composition
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MONDAY, JANUARY 29, 2001
The Chronicle
PAGE 9
The Cornucopia House Cancer Support Center's M ind- ■&? Body Skills Weekly Group will be discussing "Quieting the Mind." The group will be facilitated by Valerie Living with Advanced/Metastatic Cancer Support Group Proffitt, Ph.D. and is open to people living with can- s heldevery Friday from3-4:3op.m.atCornucopiaHouse cer, family members, and extended caregivers, 12;00 Cancer Support Center, which moved to the Overlook Bldg.,Ste22o, 111 CloisterCourt,Chapel Hill. Forinforto 1:30 p.m. For more information, call 401-9333. mation, call their new number at 401-9333. www.corBiology Department Seminar; John Stinchcomb, a gradnucopiahouse.org. uate student in the Department of Biology, will speak on "Deer, Insects, and Morning Glories: A Tangled Second Annual Seminar Series in Honorof Black History Web of Selection and Response," 4:00 p.m., Month: "Race and Medicine; Historical Perspectives." Topic; "Precolonial Background." For information, call Biological Sciences Building. 684-5882. 4:00 p.m. Breedlove Room, 204 Perkins Teer House Healthy Happenings: Living Well with a Library, West Campus. Chronic Health Condition or Disability. Pam Dickens. To register, call 416-3853.7:00 p.m. 4019 N. Roxboro Freewater Films: "The People v. Larry Flynt," with Woody Harrelson and Edward Norton. For information, call 684Road, Durham. 2911. 7:00 and 9:30 p.m. Griffith Film Theater, Bryan Freewater Films: "From Dusk Till Dawn." For infor- Center mation, call 684-2911.7:00 and9:3o p.m. Griffith Film Shabbat Services (Reform, Conservative and Orthodox) Theater, Bryan Center, West Campus. at the Freeman Center followed by Kosher Dinner at 7:30 Come watch a screening of "The Prison Sutras," the p.m. Reservations required for dinner. 684-6422 or jewaward-winning documentary about the Buddhist monk ishlife@duke.edu. and former prison convict Fleet Maul, 7:30 p.m., Breedlove Room (204 Perkins). Contact Anna Skorupa, International Jazz Festival. Guest artist Jimmy Greene, alto/tenor saxophone, with theDuke JazzEnsemble, directamslO, for more info. ed by Paul Jeffrey. 8:00 p.m. Baldwin Auditorium, East This evening the Barnes & Noble cafe manager, Carrie Campus. Herring, will cite The Republic of Tea's informative The Duke Institute of the Arts presents "The Spider and Book "The Book of Tea Herbs: Appreciating the Varietals and Virtues of Fine Tea and Herbs" in her the Buddha" and "Folded Under a Stone Sleeping," movediscussion of the preparation of different varieties of ments created and performed by Sha Sha Higby, 8:00 p.m., Sheafer Theater, Bryan Center. Call 684-4444 or tea, 7:30 to 8:30 p.m. order online at tickets.duke.edu. The Wesley Fellowship (United Methodist Campus Ministry) Small GroupDiscussion on SpiritualFormation will meet at 9:30 p.m. in the Wesley Office, Chapel Go to a Bead Festival, 10:00 a m. to 6:00 p.m., Big Barn basement. All are welcome. For more information, Convention Center. Over thirty vendors from fifteen states call 684-6735 or e-mailjenny.copeland@duke.edu. with an extraordinary display of ancient, antique, vintage, and modem handmade beads for sale. For festival information, call 888-729-6904, or visit http://beadPresby terian/UCC Campus Ministry Bible Studymeets shows.com. at 12:15-1 ;00 p.m. in the Chapel basement. Room 036. Raleigh Little Theatre presents "Anansi Tales of the We will be studying Genesis. Bring your lunch and *
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The Chronicle publishes several public service calendars through the week as detailed below: Monday Duke Bulletin Board Community Calendar Tuesday-Friday Sports Events Monday Arts Events Tuesday & Friday Entertainment 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. Submissions for 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, Arts Editor, 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.edufor community calendar and bulletin board notices only.
MONPAY,
JANUARY V), VXA
The Orange County Dispute Settlement Center presents
Mediation Skills, instructed by Colleen Durocher, 8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. Determine interests which underlie positions;practice reflective listening ski 11s, askingeffective questions, and refraining; observe a mediation demonstration; and practice the six-step mediation process. To register of for more information, call 9298800. "Table Talk!" A drop-in lunch sponsored by the Westminster Presbyterian/UCCFellowship, the Baptist Student Union, and the Newman Catholic Student Center. At the Chapel Basement Kitchen, 12 noon-1:00 p.m. Come join us! Wesley Fellowship Food for Thought Faith Issues over Lunch 12:15 p.m. in the Wesley Office located in the basement of the Chapel. For more information; -
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684-6735; www.duke.edu/web/wesley.Wesley campus minister
jenny.copeland® duke.edu; -
Jenny Copeland.
Come and enjoy a slide & video presentationby British visual artist Sonia Boyce, 4:00 p.m., John Hope Franklin Center, Room 240. A reception for Sonia Boyce and David A. Bailey, the Mary D.B.T. and James H. Semans International Visiting Professor of Art History, will immediately follow Ms. Boyce's presentation. For more information, call 684-2224 or 684-2867. Lecture; University of Cape Town professor John deGruchy will discuss "The Rhetoric and Reality of
Reconciliation." Sponsored by the Duke Divinity School. For information, call 660-3416.4:00 p.m. York Chapel, West Campus.
Biology Department Seminar: Dr. Bruce Nicklas of the Department of Biology will speak on "Thinking with the Eye, Seeing with the Brain; The Quirky Path to Biological Genes on Chromosomes," 4:00 p.m., Sciences Building.
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Wesley Fellowship Administrative Board Meeting 6:00 p.m. in the Chapel Basement.
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Westminster Presbyterian/UCC Fellowship meets 9-
10:00 p.m. in the Chapel Basement Lounge. "Haphour," an informal time ofrefreshments and fellowship, begins at 8:30 p.m. All are welcome.
TV£sP*r The Orange County Dispute SettlementCenter presents Mediation Skills, instructed by Colleen Durocher, 8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. Determine interests which underlie positions; practice reflective listening ski 11s, asking effective questions, and refraining; observe a mediation demonstration; and practice the six-step mediation process. To register of for more information, call 9298800.
Barnes & Noble presents Preschool Storytime, 10:00 a.m. In celebration of Kevin Henkes' Latest release, Wemberly Worried," you are invited to a party! Please join us for reading, activities, and snacks. For more information, call Heather Elliot at 419-8290. "
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SAumr
W£PN£SPAY
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your Bible.
Center for Documentary Studies: Workshop for "A CommunityPortrait," discussing the interaction between contributed community photographs. For more information, call 660-3663. 6:30 p.m. 1317 W. Pettigrew St.
Wesley Fellowship Freshman Small Group -10:00 p.m. on East. For more information: jenny.copeland@duke.edu; 684-6735; www.duke.edu/web/wesley.Wesley campus minister Jenny Copeland. -
rwpswr Teer House Healthy Happenings: An Activity Group for People Who Are Blind or Visually Impaired. Readings from Well-Known Poets. To register, call 416-3853.10:00a.m. 4019 N. RoxboroRoad, Durham. Teer House Healthy Happenings: Toddler Group Nancy Murray. To register, call 416-3853. 12 Noon 4019 N. Roxboro Road, Durham.
Presbyterian/UCC CampusMinistry Drop-In Lunch is held in the Chapel Basement Kitchen, 12 noon-1:00 p.m. Cost in $1.50. Come join us!
Spiderman" performed by Seriousplay, the theatre's novice troupe of young performers ranging in age from 12 to 17. This production will be performed at 2:30 p.m. at the N.C. Museum of History and at 7.00 p.m. at the Raleigh Barnes & Noble. Admission is free. Call Carmen Mandley at 821-4579 for more information. QuadranglePictures: "X-Men." For information, cal 16842911.7:00 and 10 p.m. Griffith Film Theater, Bryan Center, West Campus.
Encounters With the Music of OurTime: Works by Daniel Trueman, "Machine Language." Trueman has united his love of classical music,Norwegian Hardanger fiddling, homemade instruments and computers in an original musical score. 8.00 p.m. Nelson Music Room, East Duke Building, East Campus. The Duke Institute of the Arts presents "The Spider and the Buddha" and "Folded Under a Stone Sleeping," movements created and performed by Sha Sha Higby, 8:00 p.m., Sheafer Theater, Bryan Center. Call 684-4444 or order online at tickets.duke.edu.
swp*r Go to a Bead Festival, 10:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m., Big Barn Convention Center. Over thirty vendors from fifteen states with an extraordinary display of ancient, antique, vintage, and modem handmade beads for sale. For festival information, call 888-729-6904, or visit http://bead-
Join us for the opening reception for "Our Lives in the United States," an exhibition of photographs and stories by English-as-a-second-language students at shows.com. Durham's Jordan High School, on display in the CDS Porch Gallery through March 30. The work in the exhi- Center for Documentary Studies: Workshop for "A bition was created by the students with assistance from Community Portrait," discussing the interaction between teacher Marcie Pachino and from Lissa Gotwals. 5:00- contributed community photographs. For more information, call 660-3663. 2:00 p.m. 1317 W. Pettigrew St. 7:00 p.m. The Center for Documentary Studies is located at 1317 W. Pettigrew Street. For more information, call 919-660-3663, send email to docstudies@duke.edu, Quadrangle Pictures: "X-Men." For information, call 684or visit the Web site at http://cds.aas.duke.edu. 2911.8:00 p.m, Griffith Film Theater, Bryan Center, West The Wesley Fellowship (United Methodist Campus Campus Ministry) will celebrate Eucharist at 5;30 p.m. in the The Mallarme Chamber Players presents the annual Gala Wesley Office, basement ofDuke Chapel. All arc welBenefit Concert and ChampagneReception, featuring the come. For more information, call 684-6735 or e-mail return of artistic directorand flutist Anna Ludwig Wi Ison jenny.copeland @duke.edu. from her Vietnam sabbatical. Tickets are available in only from the Carolina Theatre box office (560advance Fellowship (United Campus Methodist The Wesley Ministry) Senior Class Small Group. 7:00 p.m. at Jenny's. 3030). Call 560-2788, for more information. For more information, call 684-6735 or e-mail jenny.copeland @duke.edu. Freewater Films; "The People v. Larry Flynt,” with Woody Harrelson and Edward Norton. For information, call 684-2911.7:00 and 9:30 p.m. Griffith Film Theater, Bryan Center.
ANP PISfWS
Duke University Museum ofArt, East Campus: "Bad Boys of the 80s: Francesco Clemente, Eric Fischl, David Salle A Duke Alumnus Collects." Four graphic paintings by three of the 1980smost provocative artists exploring issues of sexuality and self-identity. Through March 11.
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Duke University Museum of Art, East Campus Lou Williams: In Her Own Right." An exhibition ex ing Williams' life as a musician, composer, and arranger Through March 18. Duke University Museum of Art, East Campus: "Peter Gourfain's Reliefs: Bronze Doors for the Nasher Museum of Art." The panels of the Fate of the Earth were conceived in two stages, first as a group of eight bronzes in 1984, then with an addition of 16 larger panels in 1989. Duke's set was cast in 1997. Other examples can be seen at the Cathedral ofSt. John the Divine in New York and at the Neuberger Museum in Purchase, N Y. Through February 11.
Duke University Museum of Art, East Campus; "Southern Gate; African American Paintings from the National Museum of American Art, Smithsonian Institution." Through June 2002 in the North Gallery. Duke University Museum of Art, East Campus: Permanent collection; "Old Master Paintings Gallery," recent loans and gifts of Italian, Flemish and Dutch works from the late 14th to 18th centuries.
Duke University Museum of Art, East Campus Hours; Tuesday, Thursday, Friday, 10:00 a m. 5:00 p.m.; Wednesday, 10:00 a.m. 9:00 p.m.; Saturday, 11:00 a m. 2:00 p.m.; Sunday 2:00 5:00 p.m.; and closed Monday and holidays. For more information, call 6845135. Webpage: http://www.duke.edu/web/duma. -
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Brown Gallery, Bryan Center, West Campus: "The Last Flower Show," experimental photography by The Bay Valley 5. ShowingthroughFebruary 16. Regularly open from 9:00 a.m. to 6:00 p.m. Web page: www.union.duke.edu/visualarts.
Center for Documentary Studies: "Personal Histories," works by Radcliff Bailey, Juan Sanchez and Renee Stout who use familyphotographs to explore their past. Through March, Juanita Kreps Gallery. For information call 660-3663.
Center for Documentary Studies: "A Community Portrait," a companion exhibition organized in conjunction with Personal Histories. This continuous installation will occur simultaneously in two exhibition spaces; the Lounge Gallery at CDS and on-line at the Personal Histories Web site at
http://cds.aas.duke.edu/personaLhistories.Participants should provide a family photograph and plan to participate in one of three workshops. For information call 660-3663. Perkins Library: "Moving Cultures: Latin America at Duke." An exhibit tracing the history ofLatin American Studies at Duke and the development of the library's Latin American collections. ThroughFebruary. For more
information call 660-5816. Touchable Art Gallery, main lobby, Eye Center: Art and crafts by people with visual impairments. Pan-African sculpture and contemporary batiks from Mozambique. Through January 20. Gallery hours are weekdays, 9:00 a.m. to 3:00 p.m. Call 416-2150 for more information.
Duke Institute of the Arts; "Dancers: Body Soul." Photographs by Steve Clarke. Through February 17. Bivins Building, East Campus. &
Sarah P. Duke Gardens, entrance parking area, off Anderson Street. "Twining Vines: CreatingConnections Among Plants, Animals and People," artwork by elementary, middle and high schoolstudents from across North Carolina. Some 30 paintings on wood panels will help to beautify the construction site where Duke Gardens is building a visitors and education center. Daylight hours daily. Call 684-3698 for more information.
mcmcumr* THE FCJL KITCHEN IS OPEN to all students, faculty and staff. 5:30 p.m. to 8:00 p.m. Monday through Thursday. Points/Flex/Cash/Check/IRs. Check our website (http://fcjl.stuaff.duke.edu) for menu.
Help adult students learn about the Internet, e-mail, and basic word processing. The Durham County LiteracyCouncil needs volunteers fortwo hours a week to teach computer basics. For more information contact Marc Siegel at 489-8383.
The Durham Center seeks volunteer intern for the Prevention Kids Club program for children ages 6-12. Must have prior experience working with this age group and general computer skills. Must have transportation and commit for 10 weeks. Contact Rachel Faulkner. 560-7552.
The Chronicle
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Classifieds
page 10 Nice Duplex Apartment for Rent. Good neighborhood near Duke. Includes Stove Fridge. Prefer Grads, Professionals. $420 month. Ed 919-663-3743 (Leave Message)
Anniversaries JENNY, HAPPY ANNIVERSARY
One bedroom apt. near Duke All appliances $445-$525/ mo 416-0393.
I LOVE YOU
Announcements
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Fraternities, Sororities, Clubs, Student Groups. Earn $l,OOO- this semester with the easy Campusfundraiser.com three hour Fundraising event. No sales required. Fundraising dates are filling quickly, so call today! Contact
Caring,
Child Care enthusiastic
babysitter
needed for delightful 3-year old. 1:45-4pm. Mon-Thursday. Competitive pay, non-smoking, references required. Andrea 644-8265 We are looking for a responsible part time caretaker with excellent driving record/car for our cute 8 and 6y/o daughters from 2:45PM to 5;45PM Mon-Fri. She is expected to drive them from school to afternoon activities, and supervise homework. Please call evenings 402-0813
Campusfundraiser.com at (888) 923-3238, or visit www.campusfundraiser.com
NEED FREE HELP WITH YOUR WRITING? The Writing Studio is now open! We offer Duke undergraduates the opportunity to meet with
Help Wanted
trained tutors to discuss individ-
ual writing concerns. Both advance appointments and drop-in sessions are available. For times and locations, visit our website:
AFRICAN LANGUAGE TUTOR
Traveling to Guinea in April. Need crash course in Pulaar/Fulani,
www.ctlw.duke.edu/wstudio
Excellent wages and flexible hours. Please call Tim at 929-4793
SOPHOMORES!! Minority students who are sophomores may be eligible for the Coca Cola/United Negro College Fund Internship Program. For more information, see Dean Bryant, 02 Allen Building.
BE A MATH TUTOR! If you took Math 26L, 31L, 32L at Duke and want to help others, we need you to be a tutor! Be a math tutor and earn $B/hr (sophomore-senior) or graduate tutors earn $l2/hr. Apply in the Peer Tutoring Program, 217 Academic Advising Center, East Campus, 684-8832.
TALENT NEEDED
Performance Artists, Musicians, visual artists, dancers . and entertainers alike needed for new E-mail Chapel Hill venue.
susanw@resonanceproject.com for more information. Cashier/ Teller We’re growing- come grow with us! Our cashier/teller position is a challenging job full of opportunity at a good wage- $8 an hour to start, $9 an hour after one year. And it includes company-paid medical coverage too! Apply now at 2014 Guess Fid., Durham.
Apts. For Rent NEW TOWNHOUSE Very nice, very convenient to Duke and Durham Freeway; 2 BR, $875/ month. 280-4272.
Psychiatric Research 75/25 W/S needed Pis. Call Nikki Smith 6843746
COACH NEEDED Triangle Area Lacrosse League (TALL) seeks women's coach to assist with a Select travel team for spring season (Feb. -mid May). Previous playing and/or coaching experience is desired. Call Joyce Bailey 933-4633 for more info.
RAINBOW SOCCER COACHES Volunteer coaches WANTED! needed for Youth, ages 3-13, and Adults, 9th grade and older. Practices M&W orT&Th, 4:15-5:15 for youth, 5:15-Dark for adults. All big, small, happy, tall, large hearted, willing, fun-loving people qualify. Call 967-3340 or 967-8797 for information.
Costume Shop: Bryan Center costume shop is hiring people to work making costumes and props for theater productions at Duke. These positions involve sewing. NO EXPERIENCE NECESSARY. Starting rate: $6.50/hr. Work-study is desired. For more information call Kay Webb at 660-1704 or email
RAINBOW SOCCER seeks a File Maker Pro computer savvy individual for seasonal/year ‘round office and field work. Precise data entry skills and soccer experience necessary. Flexible hours. Please call 967-3340 or 967-8797 ASAP.
Kay.Webb@duke.edu. Courier: Durham law firm seeks a part-time courier/office services clerk. Must be responsible, have dependable auto with proof of
SAFEHAVEN
insurance, valid driver’s license and good driving record. Mon., SAM -12 Noon, Tues. 12 Noon 6PM, Fri 812 Noon; 15-20 hours weekly. Familiarity with office equipment a plus. Competitive salary with mileage reimbursement. Fax your resume to 419-1600, attention: Administrator of call 490-0500 for a telephone interview.
A safe space for students on VOLUNTEERS campus NEEDED!! For more info contact Women’s Center at 684email 3897 cmhls@duke.edu
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SALES & MARKETING INTERNSHIPS
Experienced, responsible person needed to care for delightful, 21/2 year old in our home near West Campus. Hours flexible, approximately 2-3 hours, 3 days/wk. $lO/hr. References required. Call 490-0829.
Nations's largest publisher of college and university campus telephone directories offering paid fulltime summer sales & marketing internships. Tremendous practical business experience and resume booster. Position begins in May with a week-long, expense paid program in Chapel Hill, NC. Interns market official directories locally, selling advertising space to area businesses in specific college markets. Earnings average $3200.00 for the 10-weekprogram. All majors welcome! For more information and to apply, visit our website at www.universitydirectories.com or call 1-800-743-5556 ext. 225.
Healthy adults (16 to 72) who are non-smokers are asked to participate in an investigation of the effect of endotoxin on lung function. Two Compensation. visits required. Contact Cheryl Yetsko (919) 6680380.
PHYSICS TUTORS NEEDED
Scene Shop: .Bryan Center scene shop is hiring people to work building sets and props for theater productions at Duke. These positions involve working with power tools. NO EXPERIENCE NECESSARY. Must be able to work a minimum 2 hours shift. Starting rate: $6;50/hr. Work-study and Non-work study positions available. For more information call Fritz Szabo at 660-1714 or e-mail Fritz.Szabo@duke.edu.
Be a physics tutor for the Peer Tutoring Program today! Tutors needed for physics 54L. Earn $B/hr as an undergraduate tutor or $l2/hr as a graduate student tutor. Pick up an application in 217 Academic Advising Center, East Campus, 684-8832. Or print the application off the web:
www.duke.edu/web/skills
The Chronicle classified advertising
rates business rate $6.00 for first 15 words private party/N.P. $4.50 for first 15 words all ads 10c (per day) additional per word 3or 4 consecutive insertions -10 % off 5 or more consecutive insertions 20 % off
MONDAY, JANUARY 29, 2001
Full Service Salon Haircuts 120l) Family Haircut Center $
Office Assistant needed 3-4 hours/day, ASAP. Must be familiar with office functions and Microsoft
applications. 919-941-5008 for JR, or jpabon@newhorizonsrtp.com. Position as office assistant. Potential for research experience in the Medical Center. Various duties include data entry and analysis, library work, office duties. Flexible hours. Contact 681-8742 or Peg at PRODUCTION INTERNS NEEDED Banzai! Entertainment start-up production company. Opening 3-9 month internships in film and music production. Contact Justin at banzaii@aol.com or 969-6909. Several work-study students are needed to assist the Anxiety and Traumatic Stress Program in the DUMC Psychiatry Department. Our rapidly growing collection of research data requires data entry, input from scannable forms, data management, and occasional database programming. Rate of pay $6.80/hr. minimum. Contact Ron Garrison, 684-5130. Want to work from home and make $l2-$l5/hour? The Duke Center for Living needs a responsible individual to phone screen potential research subjects for a large clinical trial. The position requires organization, attention to detail, and excellent phone skills. Familiarity with basic medical knowledge and terminology a plus. The calls can be unmade from home on weekends or evenings and will require 5-20 hours per month. If interested contact Leslie Kelly at 919-660-6739.
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special features (Combinations accepted.) $l.OO extra per day for all Bold Words $1.50 extra per day for a Bold Heading (maximum 15 spaces) $2.50 for 2 line heading $2.00 extra per day for Boxed Ad
Sylvan Learning Center needs college grads as part-time math and
science instructors. Flexible afternoon and Saturday morning hours. Requires enthusiasm for teaching and working with kids. 309-9966. TWO RAINBOW SOCCER ASSISTANTS WANTED for Chapel Hill recreational league. Approx. 25 hrs/week, weekday afternoons and Saturdays. Must be dependable, good with kids of all ages, and have coaching and refereeing experience, organizational skills, dynamic attitude, and reliable transportation. Please call 967-3340 or 967-8797 ASAP.
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deadline 1 business day prior to publication by 12:00 noon payment Prepayment is required Cash, Check, Duke IR, MC/VISA or Flex accepted (We cannot make change for cash payments.) 24 hour drop off location •101 W. Union Building or mail to:
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phone orders: call (919) 684-3811 to place your ad Visit the Classifieds Online!
http://www.chronicle.duke.edu/classifieds/today.html Call 684-3811 if you have any questions about classifieds No refunds or cancellations after first insertion deadline.
Duke Med Center FT/PT Great Hours. Excellent customer service skills, and friendly personal$l2-17/hour. ities required CALL MIKE 1-888-587-4340
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THE SWEETEST GIFT OF ALL
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Chronicle Classifieds Box 90858, Durham, NC 27708 0858 fax to: 684-8295
VALLET PARKING ATTENDANTS
Mon. Fri. 8 am 6 pm Sat. 8 am 5 pm Walk-ins welcome
2BR 2BA house, North Durham 6miles to Duke Fenced and Safe. Inlaw suite, $750/month. 477-2911
Country living, min to Duke/UNC, 3BR/2BA split, lg deck, 14565f, 3yr, move-in condition, $129,000. 919-304-5484 Horse Farm has house available. 12 bedrooms, 1 bath, central heat/ac, large fireplace, stone terrace, lovely setting, yard service. 15 minutes to Duke. $BOO/month. No pets. 620-0137 TOWNHOUSE FOR RENT, 2 Bedroom, 1.5 bath in WALDEN POND 5 minutes to Duke, Washer & Dryer included. Available MidCall 469-2744, January. $725/month
Lost
ss*oo OFF Any local delivered order
Campus Florist
DUKE IN ANDES FALL 2001
vary
Local orders only
Exp. 2-11-01
be
so
high!
Information meeting will be held on Tues., Jan. 30 at 5:30 p.m. in 208 Languages. Welcome resident director Dr. Juan Carlos Orihuela and learn more about
this exciting opportunity to study language and culture in La Paz, Bolivia, Applications available in the Office of Study Abroad, 121 Allen, 684-2174.
DUKE IN BERLIN FALL 2001 Information meeting will be held on Mon., Jan. 29 at 5:15 p.m. in 119 Old Chem. As Europe’s gateway to the East, Berlin is rapidly becoming a geopolitical and arts center. Learn more about study in Germany’s town. largest university Applications are available from the Office of Study Abroad, 121 Allen Building, 684-2174.
L earn to with the
Chapel Hill Flying Club
¥
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never
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Coupon must be presented Minimum order of $35.00 Delivery charges may � •
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FOUND
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Men’s Black Jacket with Keys. 6130712
SPANISH-ENGLISH BILINGUAL needed for research-assistant position studying autobiographical memory. Fun lab, flexible hours, great experience. Email memlab@psych.duke.edu for application and info on duties and wages
Best Service Best Prices 8 Blvd. Plaza 4125 Chapel Hill Blvd 489-0500
WORK STUDY STUDENT
The Office of Science & Technology needs a student for the Spring Semester to do some campus deliveries and scanning. Flexible hours and above-average pay. Contact Jane Glenn @ 684-2548.
pmusser@duke.edu
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Choir director, United Church of Chapel Hill. Part-Time, 10 months. Talented 25-voice, adult choir. 9423540.
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NON-PROFIT-SINCE 1961
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Member owned Lowest
rates
Fully insured Excellent Safety Record •
Campus Florist 286-5640 286-1802 VALENTINE’S HOURS Mon. Fri. 9-6 Sat. 9-5 Sun. 11-5
700 Ninth Street -
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Call 968-8880 HORACE WILLIAMS AIRPORT, CHAPEL HILL
MONDAY, JANUARY 29, 2001
DUKE IN VENICE SUMMER 2001 Second information meeting will be held Wed., Jan. 31 at 5:30 p.m. in 234 Allen. Meet program director Prof. Gregson Davis and learn about opportunities to study Venetian civilization, culture, and art history in this unique city. Applications are available in the Office of Study Abroad, 121 Allen, 684-2174. Application deadline: Feb. 16.
FLANDERS & THE NETHERLANDS
Summer 2001 6-wk, 2-cc program: History of Art & Visual Culture. Information meeting will be held on Wed., Jan 31, 5:30 p.m., 108 East Duke Bldg. For applications contact: Office of Study Abroad, 121 Allen Bldg., 684-2174. Application deadline: Feb. 16.
The Chronicle Tickets Duke-UNC Basketball
Travel/Vacation Tickets
Wanted. Will pay top dollar. Call Rick 683-3866
FLORIDA STATE Student Buying up to three graduate student or reserved tickets PLEASE call 401-5912 Looking for 2 tickets to either Maryland, NO State, or Georgia Tech B-Ball games. Call Ryan at 613-1046 Need 2 tickets for Men’s Basketball FSU game on Feb. 4. Parents in town want to see game. Alex, 613-0247, afb2@duke.edu
Includes Meals Free Parties! Awesome Beaches, Nightlife! &
Depart From Florida! Cancun & Jamaica $439! springbreaktravel.com 1-800-678-6386 AAAA! Spring Break Panama City $129! Boardwalk Room w/ Kitchen Next to Clubs! 7 Parties Free Drinks! Daytona $159! South Beach $199!, springbreaktravel.com 1-800-678-6386 -
MYRTLE BEACH HOUSES
Student seeking 2 tickets to NCSU game. Will pay top dollar. Please call Mandi at 384-8936
You Never Know how many friends you have until you rent a cottage at the beach. Spring Break & Graduation Week Party Houses and Condos. Crawl to Pirates
NEED B-BALL TIX
Need 2 tix for any men’s home game.
FURNITURE FOR SALE
NEED BBALL TICKETS ANY WEEKEND GAME
2 matching dressers, 1 large and 1 small. Good condition. $l2O for both. Also small desk, $20.00. Call 380-7719 Iv. message or email nalini@duke.edu.
Please call/ email asap. Sarah,
Professional, confidential counseling for all age groups, Main Street Clinical Associates serving the Duke Community since 1984. Conveniently located right off Ninth Street. Visit our web site www.mainstreetclinical.com or call 286-3453 Xl5O.
AAAA! Spring Break Bahamas Party Cruise! 5 days $270!
NEED B-BALL TIX NCSU GAME
Misc. For Sale
Services Offered
949-6206/ seb3@duke.edu.
NEED TICKET: Need 1 ticket for any home men’s basketball game. Please call Kelly at 6131748
NEED TICKETS
Need 1-2 tickets for any home men’s basketball game. Please call Tracey @ 490-5421 Student seeks 2 tickets for FSU game 4 Feb. visiting family will be very grateful for your help!!! Call 613-0868 or e-mail lem2@duke.edu
PAGE 11
Cove! MYRTLEBEACHTOURS.COM 800-714-8687.
Spring Break 2nd Semester Specials!!! Cancun from $439 with the most reliable air. Meals and drinks available. Space limited, call today. Group organizers travel FREE!! 1-800-SURFSUP or www.studentexpress.com AAAA! Spring Break Bahamas Party Cruise! 5 days $270!
Includes Meals & Free Parties! Awesome Beaches, Nightlife! Depart From Florida! Cancun & Jamaica $439! springbreaktravel.com 1-800-678-6386
Planning for the future...
Although sophomores still have two years left at the University, the Annual Fund, Alumni Affairs and the 2003 class officers sponsored three dinners last week focusing on life after Duke. Each of the first two nights drew about 12 alumni and faculty members and over 30 students, but on the biggest night, Friday (pictured above), more than 80 people came to discuss careers in medicine. Students, bankers, lawyers and public policy faculty members filled Von Canon hall Tuesday night to feast on Foster’s catering and chat about possible careers. The dinners continued Thursday with a focus on technology. “Everything went exceptionally smooth,” said Heather Oh, class president and event organizer. “I was really, really pleased with the outcome.... In both directions [for alumni and students], it was time well spent.” Heather Bennett, director of young alumni for the Annual Fund, was charged with inviting area alumni to the events. “The response from the alumni has been great,” she said. “I have a lot of people saying ‘Why hasn’t this happened before?'”
WOMEN’S Jill
ation of the life ing. Jr.
STUDIES
jinn. AT DUKE UNIVERSITY
Professor John de Gruchy
Announces 2001 AWARDS FOR DUKE STUDENTS '
Gender and Race Research Award: Open to undergraduate or graduate students to pursue projects on the intersection of gender and race.
JANE HETHERINGTON/THE CHRONICLE
University
of Cape Town
Gender and Science Research Award: Open to graduate students whose projects promote scholarly exploration and research on the intersection of gender and science, math or engineering. Dora Anne Little Service Award: Open to Duke undergraduate or graduate students who demonstrate excellence in service to the campus and the surrounding community. Anne McDougall Memorial Award: Open to undergraduate or graduate women students who pursue areas of human service by studying psychology or related fields. Preference is given to returning students. Anne Firor Scott Research Award: Open to undergraduate or graduate students engaged in women's history to spend time in archives and resource centers where they can make use of original historical materials. Ernestine Friedl Research Award: Open to advanced graduate students enrolled in any department working on the cultural, social, and biological constructions of gender in their dissertation.
Each award provides a one-time grant of up to $1,500. Eligible students may apply for as many awards as are applicable Deadline for application is March 1, 2001. For more details on awards and infonnation on the application process, contact Cyndi Bunn in Women's Studies at 684-4052 or <cyndi.bunn@duke.edu>.
“The Rhetoric and Reality of Reconciliation"
4:00 p.m. Monday, January 29 York Chapel Second Floor of the Divinity School
The Chronicle
PAGE 12
MONDAY, JANUARY 29, 2001
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