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THE INDEPENDENT DAILY AT DUKE UNIVERSITY

The guy who’s done it all Since 1956, Breyers lead man Arthur Brodie has watched Duke grow up By ELIZABETH BROWN The Chronicle

Arthur Brodie may not be the hot dog guy, the bagel guy or the crazy towel guy. But he is a cherished campus figure and friend to students, faculty and staff across the University. At the moment, many students may know him as the Breyers Ice Cream guy, but over the past two decades, his familiar face has graced several campus eating spots. “He knows just about everybody that comes through here,” said Dining Services co-worker Renee Jones. “Or they know him.” This fall, Brodie moved from Trinity Cafe to the new Breyer’s Ice Cream stand on West Campus. But his history at Duke started in 1956, when the Franklin County “farming country, cotton and tobacco land” native first arrived at the University. “I helped build the golf course,” Brodie said. “It was the first job I had—digging up trees, digging up stumps.” “I worked for Eddie Cameron—you know, [as in] Cameron Stadium. He was my boss at the golf course. He was the man we had to please and look good for when he came around,” he added. “He was a good guy, though.” In 1958, after serving in the Korean War, Brodie moved to Durham for good. Over the next few years, he worked at places THE BREYERS GUY, also known as Arthur Brodie, has made his mark on the University after See BRODIE on page 7 � 20 years of employment.

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WWW.CHRONICLE.DUKE.EDU

VOL 96, NO. 98

OIE focuses on worker mobility � By the end of the semester, the Office of Institutional Equity hopes to have a strategic plan that addresses ways to encourage employees to grow professionally. By AMBIKA KUMAR The Chronicle

As Vice President for Institutional Equity Sally Dickson walks around campus, she might notice the abundance of students of different ethnic backgrounds. And she might notice a diversity among employees. At the same time, she would find a prevalence of Latino and black employees at lowlevel positions and the relative dearth of such employees who work at the senior level. Developing a plan to eliminate this disparity will be one of Dickson’s top priorities in the coming months. “One of the areas I’m looking very carefully at is how people, particularly minorities and in particular, African Americans—how we as an institution offer opportunities for [them] to grow professionally within the organization,” Dickson said. By the end of the semester, Dickson hopes to have a strategic plan to address the issue of mobility. She and Vice President for Human Resources Clint Davidson are already reviewing the University’s training programs and launching several more. “This is a piece of work that never quits. You’re never done,” Davidson said. “We’re working on a new set of programs we hope will focus on critical skills as well as some of the basic skills, so that two years from now... these folks are well positioned to successfully compete.” Several employees said they did not know about programs currently offered to help them gain the skills necessary to get a better job at the University. Some said they would take advantage of such opportunities. “About 75 to 80 percent of my employees are [Latino], [English as a Second Language] classes would be great for them and for me,” said Moe Salim, manager at the Armadillo Grill. “I have to See MOBILITY on page 6

>

Hospital officials ponder Oakleigh’s uncertain future By AMBIKA KUMAR The Chronicle

For months, the status of Oakleigh Substance Abuse Treatment Center has hung in the balance as Durham Regional Hospital officials assess whether they can continue its funding. But even if the hospital decides to close the facility, the impact may

well be minimal. “There’s absolutely no talk about quitting providing the treatment, but there is serious talk about, ‘Would it be better to move patients into the hospital?”’ said Don Brady, Durham Regional’s administrative director of marketing. “You have a big building, and you do something else with it.... We’re not looking at not treating those particular patients.” Oakleigh treats people with drug and alcohol addictions. In addition to providing three- to five-day detoxification sessions, the center is one of the few remaining treatment locations nationwide that

Academic

has a 28-day treatment program. Established over 10 years ago, the facility itself has 27 beds but serves just 12 to 13 patients per year. It has its own dining facilities, basketball court, weight room and chapel—an environment that allows patients to remain completely isolated during their treatment. Between 20 and 40 full-time employees work at Oakleigh. But over the last five years, Oakleigh has been losing money, something that only compounds Durham Regional’s multimillion dollar deficit. “It’s almost impossible to find any insurance company that will pay for [a 28-day program],” Brady said. “We have a building and program set up to do long-term treatment, and what we’re doing is short-term detoxification.” Brady said that if Oakleigh were shut down, the program would be transferred to the hospital itself, where patients could acSee OAKLEIGH on page 7

page council oks long-range plan,

THE OAKLEIGH CENTER is on&of the few substance abuse treatment locations to offer a 28day treatment program, but may be closed by Duke for financial reasons.

4 � Women’s basketball tops Maryland, page 13

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The Chronicle

Newsfile

World

page 2

FROM WIRE REPORTS

Nayy enforces new civilian policies The Navy has tightened its rules on allowing civilians to participate in training exercises aboard submarines until the investigation into the sink-

O’Neill signals change in global finance plans

Treasury Secretary Paul O’Neill said the Bush administration does not favor giving Russia more favorable debt terms this year and that Japan must

ing of a Japanese fishing

find its own solutions to its decade-long economic

trawler off Hawaii is completed. Art exhibit outrages New York City mayor New York City Mayor Rudolph Giuliani said a color photograph of a nude black woman as Christ at the Last Supper at the Brooklyn Museum of Art was “disgusting” “outrageous” and “antiCatholic.” Bush meets today with Mexican president In his meeting with President Vicente Fox of Mexico today, President George W. Bush plans to dicuss his dream of a freely flowing North American energy market.

malaise.

House subpoenas ex-White House aides Former chief of staff John Podesta, lawyer Beth Nolan and adviser Bruce Lindsey will be subpoenaed for the next House hearing into financier Marc Rich’s pardon by former president Bill Clinton. Afghanistan’s opium production halts U.N. drug control officers said the Taliban religious militia has virtually wiped out opium production in Afghanistan—once the world’s largest producer—since banning poppy cultivation in July.

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FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 16. 2001

Barak accepts role of defense chief Israel’s prime minister will serve on Prime Minister-elect Sharon’s cabinet By DEBORAH SONTAG

New York Times News Service

JERUSALEM Ehud Barak, the caretaker prime minister, conditionally agreed Thursday night to serve as defense minister under Prime Minister-elect Ariel Sharon, the right-wing leader who crushed him at the polls last week, Israeli news reports said. According to a terse statement from his office, Barak also tentatively agreed to bring his Labor Party into a national unity government with Sharon’s Likud Party. This would be a victory for Sharon’s determined bid to forge a stable government.

“I believed always, and I believe now, that Israel needs unity,” Sharon said before entering a three-hour meeting with Barak in Tel Aviv. “That will enable us to reach security and peace.” The agreement between the two men, who presented themselves as ideological opposites during a heated campaign, is conditional on a final coalition agreement and the endorsement of both parties. But it appeared Thursday night to be as good as a done deal, with only “the bridging of small gaps on minor issues” remaining, according to the statement. By next week, then, Sharon, once considered unelectable to Israel’s

top office, could be sworn in at the helm of a broad, consensus governmerit. And if Thursday night’s agreement stands, Sharon is likely to be flanked by two Laborites, Barak as defense minister and Shimon Peres as foreign minister. Nine days ago, after suffering a 25-point election loss to Sharon, Barak announced that he was resigning as Labor leader, quitting his parliament seat and taking a break from politics. But that break lasted only until Peres, a rival, stepped in as party elder to lead the negotiations for a unity government with Sharon’s Likud. Before long, Barak took over the negotiations.

Democrats propose $750 billion tax cut By ALAN FRAM Associated Press

WASHINGTON Congress’ top Democrats announced their party’s budget priorities Thursday, including a tax cut less than half the size of President George W. Bush’s $1.6 trillion, 10-year plan. As they did, Republican leaders downplayed the defections of the first two GOP senators, a pair of New England moderates who said they could not back Bush’s proposal because it would be too costly. With the Senate’s 50-50 partisan balance and just one Democrat so far voicing support for the plan—Sen. Zell Miller of Georgia—every senator’s vote may be crucial to the fate of the tax plan, the heart of Bush’s economic program.

“I’ve got a lot of work to do,” Bush told reporters before meeting with GOP members of the House and Senate budget committees. “But I’m convinced that when the American people hear our plan, they will support it. And I think we’ve got a very good chance of

getting the tax package through.” “This is not the beginning of any crack” in Republican support, said Senate Majority Leader Trent Lott, R-Miss., who predicted eventual passage of tax cuts “in the range” of $1.6 trillion. The dissenting Republicans were Sens. James Jeffords of Vermont and Lincoln Chafee of Rhode Island. “I’d like to see a few more years go by with a good economy before I could embrace such a large tax cut,” Chafee told a reporter.

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FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 16, 2001

PAGE 3

Modems dwindle, West gains substance-free dorm

ISPs gain ground

By DEBO ADERBIGBE The Chronicle

� OIT looks for viable solutions as the dialup modems deteriorate and off-campus students complain that commercial internet service providers are too expensive. By MOLLY JACOBS The Chronicle

The ethemet connections found in all University housing are fast and reliable, but for those who choose to live off campus, simple tasks like checking e-mail and shopping online can be time-consuming and expensive.

Although the University has a free dial-up service that off-campus residents may use free of charge, problems with its modem pool have led many off campus residents to choose DSL or cable modems as their primary form of Internet use. Currently, four of the hardware devices (terminal servers) that support the modem pool have stopped working. Each terminal server supports 32 modems and currently there are three working terminal servers for the express modem pool—which allows users online for 15 minutes—and one server for the extended pool, which allots users four hours. Ginny Cake, director of customer support for the Office of Information and Technology, said OIT cannot predict when the other terminal servers will stop working, nor can they guarantee the life cycle of the modem pool.. Two years ago, the University made the decision not to upgrade or replace the current modem pools that are technologically outdated because the maintenance cost was too substantial and because commercial Internet Service Providers could provide faster and more reliable connections. “Many users have taken advantage of these alternative dial-up services and other faster offerings such as DSL from Verizon and BellSouth and broadband options such as Roadrunner from Time Warner,” Cake wrote in an e-mail. But, while these high speed Internet services are fast and efficient, residents must pay for them out-ofpocket. Several different options are available in the Durham area right now. Verizon Wireless offers a DSL line for $36.95 per month and an introductory package that includes a free modem, free self-instalSee

MODEM on page 5 �

Two years ago, the Office of Student Development designated Epworth Dormitory as a substancefree dormitory. Now, OSD has announced that a new substancefree living group, Chatham, will allow students seeking such housing to enjoy it on West Campus. The new group, which will have room for 15 females and 15 males, will be located in a portion of the Old House CC dorm. Now in its second year on East, substance-free housing was placed in Aycock Dormitory. Students have been supportive of the concept, said Bill Burig, Assistant Dean of Housing Assignments. “All of the feedback from what we have had so far is positive,” he said. Priority for space in the group will be given to rising juniors who lived in last year’s substance-free Epworth and current residents of substance-free Aycock. As a result, residents currently living in Old House CC will receive priority in the overall housing selection process. Students living in substance-free housing must sign a contract stating they will never enter the dorm at any time under the influence of alcohol or drugs. Burig said the housing option was a good idea. “We should always try to be supportive ofstudents who choose this living style,” he said. The idea of a substance-free dorm was introduced several years back by the Campus Social Board, who initially wanted the housing on West Campus. Housing Management decided to put it on East so that the idea could be phased in and accepted first. Last year, 350 rising freshmen applied for substance-free housing, and 87 of those applicants were granted housing in Aycock. Most

OLD HOUSE CC DORM will house a new substance-free living group, Chatham, which will ask its 30 residents to be alcohol- and drug-free in the dorm. students said they did not regret their decision. “It's nice to have a clean dorm all the time,” says freshman Vivian Yeoh. “We don't have people coming into our dorm sick, and we like it that way.” Fellow Aycock resident Shuping Koh plans to apply for a room in Chatham. “If anything, I would more pick the dorm for it's location, and our priority,” she said. “But the substance-free aspect is yet another positive one.” Currently, two West Campus dorms—Camelot and Nottingham—are smoke-free. Substance-free living groups are a good option, said K. Leigh Hamm, a resident advisor at Nottingham and graduate student in

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the Divinity School. “A lot of our residents get disappointed when beer causes sickness in their bathrooms, and the bottles in the hall force them to go elsewhere. However, the idea limits the types of people you can live with.” For now, substance-free housing, and its expansion on West, is only one aspect of the current housing discussion, said Burig. “Currently there is a lot of discussion surrounding West Campus,” he said. “So all plans to create new living groups there are on hold, and we await the results of the trial of the Chatham group.” Housing officials targeted Old House CC since the dorm has the highest resident turnover rate.

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FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 16, 2001

Academic Council endorses final long-range plan By DAVE INGRAM The Chronicle

Provost Peter Lange presented the final draft of the University’s long-range plan to the Academic Council Thursday, restating the plan’s major themes before presenting it to the Board of Trustees next week. Titled “Building on,Excelence,” the document is the result of two years of effort and, pending the Trustees’ approval, will guide University planning for the next five years.

“To be one of the few institutions that helps to define what is best in American higher education, we need to build on our current strengths and improve our weaknesses,” Lange said, To help him accomplish those goals,

the council unanimously endorsed Lange’s plan, the first detailed vision for Duke since the “Shaping our Future” plan of 1994. The new plan will coordinate a total of $727 million in investments over five years, Lange said. It

centers around nine goals that range from developing the faculty to increasing technology use. This final draft of“Building on Excellence” is very similar to the previous version, although its goals for student life have been more fully developed, “The quality of our student body will grow significantly in five years with recruitment and financial aid,” said Lange, expressing hope that improving student life would have wide-ranging ef-

fects, especially in drawing top faculty. To improve student life the longrange plan outlines 12 areas for the University to focus on. In addition to recruitment and financial aid, the plan ineludes suggestions for increased diversity, social space, interaction between students and professors, connections between undergraduate and graduate students and increased interaction with the Durham community, *

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ACADEMIC COUNCIL on page 6

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Medical Center researchers seek to build human artery By MATT BRUMM The Chronicle

Dr. Laura Niklason envisions a time when patients requiring heart bypass surgery can have new arteries grown in the lab rather than unreliable replacement leg veins. Niklason, an assistant professor of anesthesiology and biomedical engineering, began making arteries with cow cells six years ago. Since then, she has conducted trials on pig arteries, and plans to tackle human vessels this spring. “Cow vessels grow wonderfully in the lab,” Niklason said. “We were able to grow vessels that were quite strong—as strong as native arteries.” Although pig cells can be used to create new arteries, they rupture at somewhat lower pressures, and there is also evidence that they dilate after implanta-

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“It’s the complexity of going to the moon,” Lawson said. “It’s a phenomenally difficult task. It’s very cool, but it’s very complicated.” The intricate process required to synthesize artificial vessels demonstrates why functional success may be elusive. Overall, vessel growth takes between six to 10 weeks to complete. “The [structure used to build an artery] is like the scaffolding on the outside of a building,” Niklason said. “We start putting vascular smooth muscle See

ARTERY on page 12

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FRIDAY, FEBRUARY

PAGES

The Chronicle

16, 2001

Student finds uninvited man in closet after shower Computer damaged: A student reported that From staff reports between 8:50 a.m. and 1:05 p.m. Feb. 13, someone A student reported Feb. 10 that she found a man inside her closet after returning from a shower at about broke into his Alspaugh Dormitory room and caused $7OO in damage to his computer by pouring 10:10 p.m., said Maj. Robert Dfean of the Duke water through the air vents ofthe computer, University Police Department. The student re- p in Hampton left her room ULILHi said. There were no signs of forced 1 had Dean ported that she entry into the room. Dormitory unlocked with her roommate inside T> DTl7l?c but that when she returned, her roommate was DKIEJ o Cars entered: Two vehicles parked in gone and a 6’o” man who appeared to be Indian with brown eyes, wearing a dark shirt, dark pants the lot on Duke University Road across from the and blue ball cap with white cursive letters was inside Chapel Drive extension were entered between 1 a.m. her closet Feb. 11 and 1 a.m. Feb. 15, Dean said. She told the man to leave, and he left running. She Someone broke out the $l5O left front window from later found a ripped white Fruit of the Loom T-shirt a student’s vehicle sometime between 1 a.m. Feb. 11 and reported that a credit card had been taken from and 1 a.m. Feb. 15, Dean said. The perpetrator stole a her wallet. Her roommate reported that $6O in cash $4OO Sony stereo and a $l5 CD, and a credit card had been stolen from her wallet. Between 8:30 a.m. Feb. 14 and 1 a.m. Feb. 15, some_

one broke out the $l5O right front window of a student’s vehicle, Dean said. Nothing was stolen.

Car vandalized: An employee reported that between 6:45 a.m. and 8 p.m. Feb. 14, someone entered her secured vehicle and stole her $BO Sony portable CD player, the front grill work and headlights worth $7OO total and the $l5O electric wiring to the headlights, Dean said. The vehicle was parked in the H parking lot at Erwin Road and Anderson Street. There were no signs of forced entry.

Locker entered: A student reported that between

1 and 2:15 p.m., someone stole his $25 wallet containing $45 cash, a credit card, a driver’s license and Duke identification from his unlocked locker in the basement of Card Gym, Dean said.

Students concerned about Internet cost � MODEM from page 3 lation kit and a free computer camera. AT&T offers 150 hours of Internet per month for $4.95 and unlimited hours for $21.95. If OIT discontinues the maintenance of its own modem pools—ultimately resulting in their deterioration—many off-campus residents believe the University should provide subsidies to defray the cost of com-

mercial alternatives. “Duke needs to come up with some sort of broker agreement with a high speed service to make sure students, who need to use the Internet to take and teach class, have access when they are not on campus,” graduate student Jeff Goldman said. “I don’t think it’s a question. You have to have Internet access to be an effective graduate student.” Most undergraduate students interviewed said the modem pool deterioration does not affect them because they subscribe to commercial services. Still, Cake said her office is working with administrators University-wide to determine possible solutions to the concerns raised by dial-up users. As technology advances and Internet-sawy students become more discriminating, OIT is now pressured to provide a high-speed service—comparable to those available privately. “Most people buy a DSL because after you have used ethemet as an undergraduate you can’t go back to a 56k modem,” said Andrew Miller, a student in the master of engineering management program. “Whatever OIT comes up with is going to have to compete with the other plans out there now. Since DSL has just come on the market, it is pretty affordable right now.” ■y-V-

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The Chronlcle

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FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 16. 2001

Keohane acknowledges lack of minority administrators have for a better position and a better life and a better salary. But especially a better life.” Davidson said he plans to focus on facilitating movement ofall Duke employheartbeat.” Currently, about 40 to 45 percent of ees, but Dickson emphasized the special vacancies at Duke are filled internally, significance, given Duke’s history, of and about 38 percent of promotions are making sure black employees are able to move up in the institution. filled by minority employees. She added that this goal cannot be Davidson hopes to raise both of fulfilled without addressing the issue on these numbers. He said that in addiseveral levels. tion to providing training, it is imporFirst, the University must closely extant that Duke supervisors consider their own employees first when filling amine its recruitment policies, particularly in senior-level searches. Second, it vacancies, something with which emmust ensure that there is training for ployees agreed. “When you’re a good worker, [superthose who want to rise within the instivisors! don’t want you to jump to anoth- tution. And finally, Duke must ensure er position. We don’t know anything if that there is a climate where differences no one tells us,” said housekeeper Cesar are appreciated. President Nan Keohane acknowlCruz. “What I would say to Duke is that they don’t tell us what opportunity we edged that the lack of senior-level miMOBILITY from page 1 train people who speak no English and have no skills. If there are English classes offered, I would use them in a

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nority administrators is a problem. “I worry about it a lot,” Keohane wrote in an e-mail. “With [Vice President for Student Affairs Janet] Dickerson's departure, Vice President Dickson is the only member of my senior management team who is African American, and things are not much better at the next level—deans, other vice presidents and vice provosts and vice chancellors.” Keohane said that the University has made progress by increasing the number of finalists for several positions. In

one case, a candidate did not want to relocate his family. In other cases, minority candidates have not been selected in the final round. She added that on the manager level, several factors contribute to the problem, some of which are out of the University’s control. In particular, there is a relatively small pool of potential senior

managers. “It takes a long time to show the results [of University effortsl at the senior level,” Keohane wrote. “Once or twice recently we have lost out because we could not match the compensation offered to a candidate without completely exploding our compensation structures and thus causing resentment among other employees.” University officials argue that the lack of senior officials plays a significant role in the lack of lower-level mobility, because it the climate of an institution has everything to do with an employee’s mentality. “If you know you’re in a place where you see people advancing, where you see that the institution cares for you, where you feel respected, where you see role models of African Americans and Latinos, that’s a full climate,” Dickson said. “It’s not just one thing.”

Bumess updates council on Durham neighborhood project ACADEMIC COUNCIL from page 4 IN OTHER BUSINESS: John Bumess, senior vice president for public affairs and government relations, updated the council on the progress of the Neighbor>

hood Partnership Initiative. The program, started in 1996, attempts to build relationships between Duke and 12 neighboring Durham communities. “Our hope is to improve the quality of life in these neighborhoods, but also to think about the effects of service, particularly on our students,” he said. About

300 students, staff and faculty members currently volunteer in the seven local schools targeted by Duke. Bumess said that $4.4 million has been raised by

the NPI for Durham. Among its work are projects to encourage home ownership, improve education, increase access to health care and foster interaction between Duke and the city. “These are folks who need help in order to reach their goals,” Bumess said. “The loss of tobacco and textile companies means we really don’t have a strong corporate presence in the downtown. What that means

in our own community is that people look to Duke [to serve this function!, and we don’t have the revenue and budgets of a corporation ”

Despite that obstacle, faculty members praised the NPI as a successful and ongoing effort—particularly the construction ofTrinity Heights, a group ofhouses off East Campus for Duke staff and faculty members. “I hope all this might encourage new professors to live in Durham instead of Chapel Hill,” said Professor of Classical Studies Mary Boatwright, who said she has two children attending Durham Public Schools.

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Fewer patients come to Oakleigh for 28-day session � OAKLEIGH from page 1 cess any emergency medical services immediately. For patients who are not as medically ill, employees of the facility would simply provide the same services

inside the hospital. Still, Bill Renn, program director of the University of North Carolina Alcohol and Substance Abuse Program, said some patients need recovery services that are not likely to be provided by a hospital. “You lose a specialized recovery addictions service.... There’s not going to be [that] kind of early treatment. Mark my words, that’s what’s going to hap-

pen,” Renn said. “It’s about saving money. They’re going to put them in a medical model where they’re going to be medically monitored, but there’s not going to be the substance abuse counseling staff therapy.”

Brady admitted that such a move may have other negative consequences, including less confidentiality. Ronald Hunsicker, president and CEO of the National Association of Addiction Treatment Providers, said confidentiality is an important issue for patients. “How do you keep some form of life, insofar as activities for these individuals? I think it continues to be a very

important issue,” Hunsicker said. “We may want to believe we have de-stigmatized the disease of addiction, but it doesn’t take long to discover ways in which we still... discriminate against it.”

Renn worries that the potential closing of Oakleigh is a symptom of a larger problem. He said that even if insurance companies provide coverage for lengthy periods of treatment, managed care companies often prevent it. Compounding the problem is the relatively low number of chemical dependency treatment centers in the Triangle. “It makes it much more difficult Renn said. “There are some people that ”

need longer periods of rehabilitation. The latest research shows that you need at least 30 days before your brain resumes normal functioning.” No decisions about Oakleigh have been made yet. Brady said that although the hospital is seriously examining the facility, it is continually reviewing every program.

“I don’t know of anything that’s not being looked into,” he said. “Medicare has so dramatically cut payments to hospitals all across the country. Hospitals are hurting, and they’re looking at all programs to see if they can be more efficient.”

Brodie reminisces on Duke’s physical, cultural changes � BRODIE from page 1 such as S. H. Kress, the Veteran’s Administration and a housing construction company. But he kept coming

back to his Blue Devil roots. “In the early eighties, I came back to Duke to stay three days to help move stores into the Bryan Center,” he said, “and I’ve been here ever since.” Brodie’s long-standing relationship with the University gives him interesting insight on changes during the past 45 years. “I remember when the road came through the woods where the Bryan Center is now and on around the Chapel,” he said. “Hospital North wasn’t even built yet—just woods.” But the physical campus is not the only thing that

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those who worked with him at Trinity Cafe have felt a similar attachment. “He’s always smiling, and we definitely miss him a more.” lot at the cafe,” said sophomore Paul Lagunes, Trinity Brodie’s close connection with the student body is a Cafe manager. “[His customers] really get to know him. history in itself. Here on East, people would come in and ask about “I got sold with Duke students in 1960, when the where he was.” sit-down movement was being done at the lunch counBrodie’s contagious personality is part of what atters,” he said, “for the support they gave to black comtracts so much loyalty to him. “Every time people walk munities and the comfort they gave to black families. by him, they smile just from seeing him,” said sophoI’ve always had a good relationship with them.” more Vinny Eng. “He’s just that type of person.” And his subsequent on-campus interaction with the After years of building friendships with generations students sealed that bond. For instance, when he lived of students, Brodie is still thriving at the center of the in a dangerous neighborhood, students would often Duke bubble. “I enjoy being a part of it,” Brodie said. come by to check on him at night. And more recently, “The bubble’s not gonna bust any time soon.”

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he has watched develop. “Diversity is one thing [that’s increased],” he said. “And Duke is beginning to involve the community a lot

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FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 16,

The Chronicle

2001

£

Established 1905, Incorporated 1993

Too hungry for donations

-O

o

Sometimes,

well-intentioned efforts go a bit too far—and the Arts and Sciences development office’s idea to use FOCUS professors to identify students whose parents might donate stepped over the line. In an e-mail earlier this month, FOCUS professors were asked to come to one of a series of meetings to discuss endowing the FOCUS program. Spurred by a large matching gift donated earlier this semester, development officers originally hoped to circulate a list of FOCUS students from which professors could identify potential donor families based upon their student’s enthusiasm for the program. By the time the meetings rolled around, development officials backed away from distributing an internal list and explicitly asked professors to submit their own lists of enthusiastic potential student-donors. Like media outlets, universities provide a public service whose administration and operations must remain entirely separate from the institution’s business operations. This separation is there for a reason. For example, even if certain departments boast low class enrollments and offer majors little chance of financial success, it is important that they be taught. But most prized of these principles is that a matriculated student should never be treated differently by the University based on his or her family’s wealth. Professors have rightly raised the concern that if a teacher knows that Duke is counting on a student’s family for a large gift, it compromises academic integrity. Even if Duke never explicitly or even implicitly pressures the professor to favor the student, there will always be a perceived pressure that demolishes one ofthe most important values in the classroom—trust. It is one thing to ask faculty to attend fundraisers or to hobnob with potential donors, but faculty should never be asked to single out students for donations. Development officials themselves could just as easily have called each wealthy FOCUS parent from this year. Administrators seem to know that this was a bad idea, and it is certainly respectable that the vice provost of undergraduate education, whether or not he was really responsible for the original e-mail and meetings, admitted it was an error. Senior administrators, especially from the academic side, should meet immediately with development officers to hammer out concrete guidelines for faculty involvement in these efforts. It seems a bit silly that these sorts of ground rules were not drafted at the beginning of the campaign, but they certainly need to be circulated now. It is appalling that such conversations have not already taken place. Furthermore, administrators should examine the other practices of the development office to see whether other projects may have gone too far.

On the record I helped build the golf course. It was the first job I had—digging up trees, digging up stumps. Arthur Brodie, the Breyers Ice Cream guy, on his first job at Duke (see story, page one

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 JONATHAN ANGIER, General Manager

JENNIFER ROBINSON, Photography Editor NEAL PATEL, Photography Editor SARAH MCGILL, City & State Editor JAMES HERRIOTT, City & Slate Editor MARKO DJURANOVIC, Health & Science Editor ELLEN MEELKE, Features Editor JAIME LEVY, 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 & Slate Editor TREY DAVIS, Sr Assoc. City & State Editor MEREDITH YOUNG, Sr. Assoc. Health & ScienceEditor ANDREA BOOKMAN, Sr. Assoc. Sports Editor NORM BRADLEY, Sr. Assoc. Sports Editor ALAN HALACHMI, Online Manager ALISE EDWARDS, Creative Services Manager SUE NEWSOME, Advertising Director MARY WEAVER, Operations Manager ADRIENNE GRANT, Creative Director CATHERINE MARTIN, Production Manager NALINI MILNE, Advertising Office Manager NICOLE GORHAM, Classifieds Manager STEPHANIE CXI IDAN, Advertising Manager The Chronicle is published by the Duke Student Publishing Company, Inc., a non-profit corporation independent of Duke University. The opinions expressed in this newspaper are not necessarily those of Duke University, its students, workers, administration or trustees. Unsigned editorials represent the majority view of the editorial board. Columns, letters and cartoons represent the views of the authors. To reach the Editorial Office (newsroom) at 301 Rowers Building, call 684-2663 or fax 684-46%. Toreach the Business Office at 103 West Union Building, call 684-3811. Toreach the Advertising Office at 101 West Union Building call 684-3811 or fax 684-8295. Visit The Chronicle Online at http://www.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 theBusiness Office. Each individual is entitled to one free copy.

CoMSTRUCT\orA SITE.

Letters to

the

Editor

Line monitor sets policy for final men’s home games have Undergraduates only two more opportunities to see the men’s basketball team play at home this season: Wednesday night against Georgia Tech and Feb. 27 against Maryland. Both of these games involve special admissions procedures, so please familiarize yourselves with the rules governing each game. The Maryland game is a tenting game, with white registration taking place Saturday, Feb. 17, at 9:30 a.m. The Duke Student Government web server has been upgraded to handle the increased density of hits that goes along with white registration. If we do not reach

100 tents Saturday morning,

a new tent can be added to the tenting queue at any tent check before the third per-

sonal check. The Georgia Tech game will be Senior Day for the undergraduate section. The senior day policy is slightly different than the policies of the past. At 7:45 a.m. on the day of the game, 200 wristbands will be distributed outside of Cameron Indoor Stadium. These bands will be given to undergraduates regardless of class, and these students will receive highest-priority admission to the game. Senior wristbands will be passed out from 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. Up to

1,200 of these bands will be distributed, and these students will get second priority for admission to the game. A walk-up line will form on the sidewalk north of the Cameron parking lot for those underclassmen who did not get a wristband either. These students will get in after the seniors on a space-available basis. If you have any questions, please e-mail me at line-monitor@duke.edu. I hope to see many of you in line. Norm Bradley Pratt ’Ol The writer is head line monitor and senior associate sports editor for The Chronicle.

Reparations for slavery would damage race relations There as been a great deal written in The Chronicle lately on reparations to African Americans for slavery. The arguments have primarily been about whether or not reparations are deserved. I personally disagree with any attempt to legislate equality of outcome, which is ultimately what reparations come down to. I have enough trouble with the inequality of opportunity provided by programs like affirmative action. However, I think that ultimately this part of the argument is extraneous. The real question we must face is whether the payment of reparations will improve the

tenuous race relationships that plague this country, a goal that I hope that we will reach. I cannot fathom such a situation. The simple truth is that taking money from those who have worked to earn it—namely whites and giving it to the descendants of slaves, is not going to do anything to make the race relations better. Instead, it would only make them more bitter. Reparations would breed resentment, distrust and dislike. Ultimately, racism will only be eliminated once individuals accept each other as equal; federal legislation can only bring us so far. —

I readily admit that there is much, much more that

still needs to be done before

we can claim to have abol-

ished racism and achieved equality. At the same time, we have made great strides in the last decades. Paying reparations would be one of the most effective modes of on these going back improvements. We should be encouraging healthy positive relationships between African Americans and whites, not providing new sources of resentment and antagonism.

Andrew Van Kirk Trinity ’O4

for referenced letter, see http:llwww.chronicle.duke.edu story.php?articlelD=2o3BB /

Correction In a Feb. 14 column, the opinions of Edward Benson were printed incorrectly. The fourth to final paragraph should have read: “There are thus numerous precedents in favor of reparations to be paid to the immediate survivors, or even the descendants, of a great wrong by the legal descendants of those who carried out—or simply profited from—the wrong.”

Letters

Policy

The Chronicle welcomes submissions in the form of letters to the editor or guest columns. Submissions must include the author’s name, signature, department or class, and for purposes of identification, phone number and local address. Letters should not exceed 325 words; contact the editorial department for information regarding guest columns. The Chronicle will not publish anonymous or form letters or letters that are promotional in nature. The Chronicle reserves the right to edit letters and guest columns for length, clarity and style and the right to withhold letters based on the discretion of the editorial page editor.

Direct submissions to: Editorial Page Department The Chronicle Box 90858, Durham, NC 27708 Phone: (919) 684-2663 Fax: (919) 684-4696

E-mail: letters@chronicle.duke.edu


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We know, we know: V-Day isn't so special for a lot of folks. Here are a few films that will help you forget the hangover from the cheesiest holiday aro id.

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The Oscars have really been peddling some smut this year.

4*MUSIC

B»PE©PLE Recess Associate Film Editor Greg Bloom chats it up one of the men from moe.

smarts Who said nothing good comes out of Canada? Some folksters from Quebec prove everyone wrong Hannibal can't hack it, and Saving Silverman isn't wo 1

11 •CALENDAR ’ll h.

Certainly, 2000 was no 1999. Last year, a dozen films deserved a crack at Best Picture, and it was hard for critics to agree on their top ten lists. Still, 2000 was not such a bad year that Gladiator, Erin Brockovich and Chocolat deserved Best Picture nominations. Two of these are enjoyable films: Gladiator is like a live action cartoon, and Erin Brockovich is a featherweight drama about saving the environment. If the category were Best Picture with Appeal to the Brainless, these two pedestrian offerings would deserve their nominations. But let's face it Gladiatoris no deeper than 1996's The Rock. The dialogue is campy, there are plot holes large enough to push a doublewide through and Russell Crowe's performance is no more than a series of choreographed grimaces and grunts. It's porn with swords. That's more than one can say for Chocolat—a movie that almost no critic liked and almost no one saw. Miramax's Weinstein brothers—who already successfully stole Best Picture-Oscars from Fargo and Saving Private Ryan—deserved to finally get their comeuppance this year. But here they are with another undeserved nomination under their belts to recognize Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon. The acting nominees didn't fare any better. Chocolat hottie Juliette Binoche beat out Nurse Betty's Renee Zellweger, while Jeff Bridges’ wandering performance as the president in The Contender edged out Michael Douglas (Traffic), Morgan Freeman (Nurse Betty) and Bruce Greenwood (Thirteen Days). In the Best Director category, Michael Almereyda—who exercised smart audacity in his modern Hamlet—and Darren Aronofsky, who took us on a strange trip in Requiem for a Dream were replaced with Stephen Daldry, who gave us The Full Monty Part 111, also known as the middling Billy Elliot. The critics also offered a double helping of Stephen Soderbergh, nominated both for the hard-hitting Traffic and featherweight Brockovich. The Academy has a long history of letting the best pictures lose out to crowd-pleasers. In 1976, Rocky beat out Network and Taxi Driver. In 1981, Chariots of Fire edged Reds. The year 1990 saw Dances with Wolves blank Goodfellas. And need we mention Titanic? In fact, the state of American film is strong—but you wouldn't know it from this year's Oscar nominees. —By Martin Barna —

Pavement's lead singer goes solo. Death Cab for Cutie and Low may b storming Chapel Hill, but Lake Trout are swimming close to campus.

R id it,

O Academy, Where Art Thou?

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,

Take Biochemistry this summer! CHEMISTRY 175 Molecular Basis of Biological Processes Professor Michael Montague-Smith, Instructor offered only during the summer consistent with BIOCHEM 227

www.learnmore.duke.edu/SummerSession summer@duke.edu 684-2621

:ravag Break, a joyous salute to urban street dance, is coming to Page Auditorium Monday, February 26 at 8:00 p.m. The dance ensemble brings together some of the top performers who have appearei in live shows and music video; with Puff daddy, Ringo Starr, J Jackson, Whitney Houston, Luthor Vandross and others.General ticket prices are $l9, $l6, $l3 and Duke student ticket prices are $l5, $l2, $9. They can be


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Misogynistic lyrics, masterful hip-hop mixing—and a midget. It's all here on the Smut Peddlers' debut CD, Porn Again. Porn Again marks the reincarnation of Philadelphia hip-hop duo The High and Mighty, rapper Mr. Eon and DJ Mighty Mi. The group's acclaimed 1999 debut, Home Field Advantage, included cameos from Eminem, Mos Def, Kool ith and others. After curing the past two years with Eminem and Run-DMC,The High and Mighty % have now formed

,

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SANDBOX We're afraid either.

the Smut Peddlers, a pop-culture com-

mentary on all things smutty—think Jerry Springer meets Internet kiddie porn. And yes, the group indulges itself, rapping on everything from politicians in limousines sniffing coke to "double D's trapped in baby tees." It's not the hip-hop you'd want your eight-year-old sister to listen to, but it's pretty damn clever. DJ Mighty Mi is skilled in mixing vocal samples with compelling beats, especially on "Beats, Boxes and Boobtube," which combines beatboxing with the rhythm of scenes from COPS and "Skin"-emax Joining Mr. Eon and DJ Mighty Mi is the young rapper Cage. Institutionalized as a teenager, Cage (and his A Clockwork Orange-inspired alter ego,

unleashes his rapping ability and continues his ongoing lyrical battle with Eminem. Beetlejuice, the midget from the Howard Stern show, serves as an honorary member of the group—adding, of course to the overall smuttiness. This would probably be the most disgusting hiphop CD ever if it weren't so ridiculously effective. Smut Peddlers are true to their name, and they peddle well, with clever lyrics, skilled delivery and slick production. The group's trademark seems to be offen-

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sive yet humorous social commentary references similes that shock as well as make you smile. These bizarre one-liners are intelligent, although completely twisted. Match them up for yourself and squirm; —

1."A walking contradiction like..." 2. "Out of work like..." 3. "I've got more dizzy spells than..." 4. "My appeal spans from..." 5. "Hanging on my balls, teabagging like..." 6. "Chewing on her nipples like..." 7. "Freestyles with her mouth full / A pornographic..."

A. Rhodes Scholars B. JFK Jr's Flight C. Jews for Jesus D. Reginald Denny E. Serena Altschul F. Nicorette G. Tetley —By Beth lams

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On His Own

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GRADE:

After leaving the best-loved indie act of the ‘9os, former Pavement frontman Stephen Malkmus proves that he was the creative force behind the band with a new solo album. If you like Pavement, you’ll like this.

ABy Jonas Blank

s Tl i -Mi ■ ■ ey Mr. Malkmus, put a record on —I wanna dance with 1

,

m my baby." Will Stephen Malkmus be the next Madonna? The next John Lennon? Nah. Truth is, going solo won't put former Pavement frontman Stephen Malkmus any farther down the road to true pop icondom He has his niche, and he's sticking to it. And that's just fine. By copping some attitude from underground legends like The Fall and melding it with the dispassionate cool of the Velvet Pavement charmed the pants off almost

oul It

hon

■fi 1999 sayonara, iddle finger in With A Twist.

inches with ;s of Terror added dash of id a vicious out't only does it off in high style, it could have been a fave in the days of Pave.

In fact, most of this album recalls the glory of the Pavement days. "Church On White" sizzles as Malkmus drops his science, offering lyrical carrots like, "You will always be too awake to be famous / too white to be saved / but all you ever wanted was everything," as the song strolls up to its wailing guitar solo. The first single, "Discretion Grove," doesn't boldly go anywhere, but it should hold its own at college radio. The sub-2 minute slasher "Troubble" is the type of idicine the Malkster needs to make it in the rorld, with its defiant guitar skreeing over *y dashes of synth. It's short, sweet and to •tuse point—and it's the type of song that it have been out of bounds in Paveland. And high-pitched squeal that crescendoes in the piano-pounding "Jenny and the Ess-Dog," ;uld even do Axl Rose proud. Malkmus is also on point with "Pink India," which starts like a loopy cowboy tune before 'old-kickin' it extended jam style. It's such bliss Imost forget that The Jicks aren't the Malkmus iany a "Best of the '9os" list. (For you historians, Pavement's Slanted and Enchanted hit number two on ours.) Still, Malkmus has misses. "Phantasies" is too fluffy to be taken seriously—its "oh, oh, oh" falsetto chorus would be better left to the Pet Shop Boys. Blues-rocker "The Hook" serves up chunka-chunka Stones riffs that skate dangerously close to Sheryl Crow. Malkmus also tries to have fun with the whispery drifter, "Trojan Curfew," but it ends up going nowhere. Thus, Stephen Malkmus is a typical solo album story—if you like the guy's old band, you'll probably like the solo effort. You might like the new twists, but you could find that not having a real band backing a guy up means that he occasionally drops the ball. As for Stephen himself, the son of a gun might be more smug than a librarian with a purple dye job, but we can't help but show him the love.Q

watch out Death Cab for Cutie like to consider their music, “mellow west coast indie rock that breeds its own light and life," and they embrace that description as much as possible, even sprawling it across their homepage. And as utterly vague as this description may sound, it somehow seems to fit when listening to their newly released Forbidden Love ER Their music is high pitched and harmonic. It seems to float, and almost—though not quite—reaches a stylistic level of spaciness best embodied by bands like Blur. But Blur are British, after all, and Death Cab For Cutie are not, which may explain why they stay closer to the stratosphere. When compared to other independent rock groups, Death Cab for Cutie blend right in. They're a bit richer than Pavement, somewhat happi\

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The Forbidden Love EP—which recently climbed to 7th on the pulse of indiedom known otherwise as the CMJ charts—is Death Cab For Cutie's quick followup to 2000's full-length We Have the Facts and We're Voting Yes. Mellowed out and breeding their own light and life, they’ll be playing tunes from both of last year's records Monday at Go! Studios in Chapel Hill. —By Jesse Hicks '

<V

-


Friday, febmary sixteen, two thousand one

RECESS

page five

The Kingsbury Manx are

one of the best bands to come out of Chapel Hill in years. Recess Music Editor Robert Kelley attempts to tell the definitive history of the Manx.

By Robert Kelley crp hey're the next big

thing. The Chicago hipsters dig their groove. The music press fawn over their every guitar strum. They're about to British J go on tour with one of the biggest names in indie rock. And they had to take time off from their temp jobs at the UNC hospital to do it. Such is life for The Kingsbury Manx, a Chapel Hill band caught success and the vast oblivion of obscurity. With their meteoric rise to international critical acclaim behind them, the band will know within the next few months on which side of that great divide they will fall. The Kingsbury Manx are Kenneth Stevenson, Bill Taylor, Ryan Richardson and Scott Myers, four recent college graduates living Chapel Hill. All four went to high school in Wilson, North Carolina sleepy town in the eastern part of the state. Each played guitar throughout high school, but never together. When they graduated Stevenson and Taylor headed to UNC-Chapel Hill, while Richardso Myers made the trek south to UNC-Wilmington. Their college days were filled with music, with the quartet frequently assembling at one of the two schools. However, the jam sessions were purely for pleasure—never once did the band play a coffeehouse or frat party. But years of playing together and taping on their four-track gave The Kingsbury Manx a wealth of songs—or at least enough to send demo tapes out to record companies. When their record deal on fledgling Overcoat Recordings came through, they were elated. "We just wanted to make a record," says Taylor. "We didn't expect anything from it."

But those that heard it, loved it Before too long, the Manx were opening for acts like Elliot Smith and touring across Europe. The reviews for their new album were glowing. But what is it about their eponymous debut that vaulted them to quasi-stardom? To begin with, The Kingsbury Manx manages to exhale the aura of end—the members are thoughtful and sincere, and the record tirely devoid of pretension. The gentle folk songs feature interning guitar parts and soothing organs that lift and embellish the ee-part harmonies. All members play guitar, and they swap truments in the studio. The result is a hypnotic Southadelica jat is at once progressive and nostalgic. But life has not changed a great deal for the members of the Manx. Their day jobs remind them that they're hardly rock stars yet. "I kinda feel like a superhero," says Myers. "During the day have to go to work, but every once in a while I get to go out parade as a rock and roller." Tonight at King's in Raleigh, The Kingsbury Manx will commence a nationwide tour that will later see them opening for Stephen Malkmus, the legendary former leader of Pavement. The tour comes on the heels of the completion of the band's second album, tentatively titled Let You Down. "We're really excited about the new record," says Taylor. Myers agrees. "The songs are shorter, there are lots of harmonies. It sounds thicker, it sounds better." And if they win over enough fans with the new record and the upcoming tour, maybe they'll start to feel like rock stars with more regularity. If things don't work out, they'll always have the temp agency. □ !

Low Take It Slow Silence is golden, so the saying goes. Nobody knows this better than Low, the Duluth, Minn, trio playing at the Cat's Cradle next Wednesday night. Although a lot of modern music tries to cram as much sound as possible into your ears, Low focus as much on the space between notes as they do on the notes themselves. The band takes a gentle, plodding pace in their songs, rarely rising above the speed of a heartbeat. As a result, their haunting music breathes, letting the subtle interplay between the vocals and the instruments rises to the surface. Low's music is fragile and brutal and beautiful ail at once. The band features the husband and wife team of Alan Sparhawk and Mimi Parker, on guitar and percussion respectively, along with Zak Sally on bass and keyboards. But the highlight of the music is surely the gorgeous harmonies from the perfectly matched voices of Sparhawk and Parker. Hearing them sing, you understand exactly why they are married. Evidence of that intimacy is infused throughout the band's fifth and latest record, Things We Lost in the Fire. It is an album of tension and release, ugliness and grace. The album expands the band's palette a little, with the regular instruments accompanied by strings, trumpet and xylophone. Still, the additions never overwhelm the space within the music. The new songs will translate well into live performance, which is sure to make Low's show on Wednesday one of the best local shows of the serhester, —By John Royall

lake trout The Duke community: has been in dire need of a |itranscendental, cross-cultural, hard-grooving funk S-: ,. band with a little jungle rock on the side for quite

awhile now, even if it didn't know it

And what do you know? Lake Trout will be sneaking.

Iljthrough the doors of the Duke Coffeehouse tomorrow night With the help of new leadership In Major IJ&ttractions {which has scarcely put on a show all year),

11the campus musical deficiency will be temporarily a He-

ll vtated-—and at no cost to the

student body.

sti riding high on the success of their latest live 'album. Atone At Last Lake Trout come to Duke fresh _

off an outrageously energetic tour with Galactic, a stapie jazz-fusion act at the Cat's Cradle. While the || Baltimore-based group originally started as a jazz-rock % project over four years ago, their sound has evolved into a perpetually growing conglomerate of nearly || every facet of modern music's progressive scene, . ijlnctuding funk, electronics, trip hop and acid jazz;. Powered drum bass beats from by deep n' percussionU ist Mike Lowry, Lake Trout force even the stodgiest of onlookers to take their hands off their laptops and cel! phones and get down on the dance-floor. Bavers and rockers, jammers and groovers alike wit! delight in the eclectic fanfare this Saturday night at HI \ the Coffeehouse on East, And best of all, it’s free. • • —By Patrick Finan

ll

..


page

RECESS

si:

Friday, febmary sixteen, two thousand one

In the wake of Valentine’s Day, Recess says goodbye to gushy romance with a list of films that will separate true love from the chaff.

By Dan Mallory ow, that was when people knew how to be in love," Meg Ryan sighs in Sleepless In Seattle, referencing 1957's saccharine Cary Grant tearjerker An Affair to Remember (itself a remake of 1939's even more lachrymose Love Affair). Plainly, she's right; Tracking firm ConsumerData ranks all three films as top Valentine's rentals this year. And don't discount the glut of mid-February froth currently playing in theaters; The Wedding Planner, in which Jennifer Lopez relieves an Adonis statue of its penis; Hannibal, with its Beauty-and-the-Beast-on-ch\anX\ vision of romance; and the horror entry Valentine, featuring a crazed slasher and Denise Richards getting nailed—literally—in a hot tub. See, Meg? Romance ain't dead! But such traditional fare won't tempt you bolder couples —the ones too jaded for Wings of Desire and Moonstruck, too modern for Casablanca and

UCK IT, UCK IT, BEFORE I STICK IT; Elizabeth Berkeley made a pretty ugly splash in Showgirls, possibly the nadir of an already inauspicious career. Brief Encounter —to whom all love stories become the fearsomely titled While My Best Friend's Pretty Woman Was Sleeping on Notting Hill, the English Patient and Shakespeare French Kissed. For these steelier souls, Recess has collected a cache of less-obvious V-Day candidates —titles which, while certainly straying from the beaten and sweetened path, aren't without their charms. Below, the ten least likely Valentine's movies of recent history. Each of these films provides at least one line sure to score you points... and, on the off-chance the evening goes awry, we've also included some alternative dialogue samples to bail you out. Either way, the subsequent selections are guaranteed to test the tenacity of your union: If you can make it through Showgirls together, love and marriage will be cake.

SUPER-DUPER STRIP TEASE: This scene is one of the many sleazy moments in Showgirls, the most horrific mishap ofSaved by the Bell star Elizabeth Berkeley's career.


RECESS

Friday, february sixteen, two thousand one

O yUMt*

page seven

Tt

(1999)

Romantic premise: Private dick Nic Cage investigates the events shown in a snuff film: Was that comely coed really brutally raped and murdered, or was it all a big joke? The requisite descent into LA's seedy S&M underworld ensues. Swoon-inducing climax: Cage becomes the star of a second porn flick, this one involving a crossbow. Aww... it's like Cupid! Dialogue to try on your mate: "Hey! It's like a gas station—you pay before you pump." If the evening goes sour: "I'll never get tired of hurting you." TALKING PORN, NO DOUBT: Joaquin Phoenix and Nicolas Cage star in this S&M-obsessed thriller.

(1990)

Romantic premise: Best-selling novelist Paul Sheldon (James Caan) survives a horrific car crash in the snow-choked Rockies, only to be "rescued" by an obsessed fan (Kathy Bates, in an Oscar-winning performance) who annoys him by referring to Michelangelo as a "dago" and by re-breaking his legs with a sledgehammer. Swoon-inducing climax: What about "re-breaking his legs with a sledgehammer" doesn't melt your heart? Dialogue to try on your mate: "You think I can just whip one out?" If the evening goes sour: "Now the time has come. 1 put two bullets in my gun: one for me, and one for you. Oh, darling, it will be so beautiful."

(1998)

Romantic premise: Three sisters and their families grapple with.dysfunction, pedophilia, troubled marriages and roofies in Todd Solondz's penetrating panorama of suburban depravity. Set in New Jersey, no less. Swoon-inducing climax: Dylan Baker ejaculates horizontally, then affixes a postcard to the bespattered wall. Like refrigerator magnets, only not. Dialogue to try on your mate: "Pussy... need pussy..." If the evening goes sour: "How come no matter how much you treat me like shit, I can't help loving you more?"

(1995)

Romantic premise: As they ready for a day on the town, a host of Manattan teens contract venereal diseases, and LIKE, SO HE DID WHAT?: Pretty much all the Kids mistreat one another like YO. love to talk dirty. true miscreants. Swoon-inducing climax: In a touching gesture, one of the sexaddled kiddies presents a little girl with a ripe, unblemished peach See, a cherry would be too obvious. Dialogue to try on your mate: "Virgins —1 love 'em! No skank, no disease, just pure pussy!" If the evening goes sour: "I love to f men, but you know what? I'm not gay. I just do it for the hell of it." —

(1997)

(1970)

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Romantic premise: In Love Story, possibly the very worst film ever made, A1 Gore (Ryan O'Neal) falls in love with the Anti-Tipper; an ethnic girl (Ali McGraw, slightly less ethnic than white bread). Nauseating saccharine dialogue propels this flimsy melodrama to its ridiculous swoon-inducing climax, in which McGraw dies of some horrible but beautifying disease that is not, alas, contagious. Dialogue to try on your mate: "Love means never having to say you're sorry." If the evening goes sour: Well, don't apologize.

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(1989)

Romantic premise: In this satire on Reagan-era materialism and baby boomer me-culture, Michael Douglas and Kathleen Turner play would-be divorcees Oliver and Barbara Rose, who feud with food and spar with cars en route to a finale that literally brings the house down. Swoon-inducing climax: As a precursor to lovemaking, Turner starts to floss... with Douglas' penis. Dialogue to try on your mate: "If we end up together, this will have been the most romantic day of my life. If we don't, then I'm a complete slut." If the evening goes sour: "You weren't even multiorgasmic before you met me, were you?"

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Romantic premise: Genetically engineered, seven-foot-tall cockroaches chase entomologist Mira Sorvino through Manhattan's sewer system. It's like Kafka on crack. Swoon-inducing climax: A roach vivisects the honest, God-fearing immigrant father of a little autistic Italian lad... in front of the kid! Down, boy! Dialogue to try on your mate; "My God, this organ! It's perfectly formed." If the evening goes sour: Come on: hulk-sized household pests skulking around fetid subterranean labyrinths and gorging themselves on policemen and street brats? How can you miss?

(1989)

Romantic premise: As they prepare their gala television extravaganza, a host of puppets snort coke, film orgies, contract venereal diseases and murder one another in gruesome, felt-swathed fashion. If . John Waters were to meet, greet, beat, eat and excrete Jim Henson, this Day-Glo shock-schlock would be the steaming result—though New Zealand director Peter Jackson managed to Meet the Feebles all by himself. Swoon-inducing climax: The Peebles' showstopping production number is a glittery, lavishly orchestrated ditty called "Sodomy."Sample lyrics are fond of getting rimmed / We're not a pentecostal / more "Thousands And everybody's got an assful / Sodomy!" Dialogue to try on your mate: "Nasal sex is the next big thing." If the evening goes sour: "Eat lead, you man-stealing slut!"

Sex

(1998)

Romantic premise: Christina Ricci plays post-Goth delinquent Dedee, who seduces her gay half-brother's lover and arouses the ire of his former lover's sister... and all that's before Lyle Lovett enters the picture. "Romantic comedies" don't come more confusing—or tediously misanthropic. Swoon-inducing climax: Wrenching the nipple-ring of his lover's former boy toy, one character fumes, "Listen to me, you little grunge faggot, or you're going to be looking down a long road at your nipple in the dirt." Dialogue to try on your mate: "Rule one of sex: A person can do anything for 10 minutes if they don't breathe in." If the evening goes sour: "You're probably a blessing in disguise. F—ing RAVISHING RICCI: By the time she did this flick, good disguise." she'd come a long way from Wednesday Addams.

(1995)

Romantic premise: Elizabeth Berkeley wants nothing more than to erupt from a papier-mache volcano while twining tongues with Gina Gershon and uncoiling around Kyle MacLachlan's oil-slicked torso, so she—oh, hell, it doesn't matter. Swoon-inducing climax: Berkley and Gershon discover they're fond of the same pet food ("1 love Doggie Chow!" they gush). Dialogue to tr Oh, there are lots of lap dances, too. Dialogue to try on your mate: "I'm,erect. Why aren't you?" Or, "It must be weird, not having anybody cum on you." Or, "You got something wrong with your nipples?" If the evening goes sour: "See, dartin'? You are a whore." —


Legendary jam masters moe. are taking their act to the Ritz in Raleigh next Friday showcasing their new selfreleased album, Dither. Recess Associate Film Editor Greg Bloom sat down with percussionist and acoustic guitar player Jim Loughlin to talk about how a live band today and what makes a studio album, the music feels to

OK

[Laughs] We figured the best way we could pull it off was to show the movie and actually listen to the CD on headphones as we were playing it, to make sure that it was synced up with the flick. It actually came off really good. We got the opportunity to run through it about twice before we actually did it live and we were a little nervous [laughs], but it came out great the night of the show. Phish does stuff like that for their live shows, but nothing that ambitious. Do you do other stuff like that onstage? Well, for the bigger shows like Halloween or New Year's, we try to have a theme and represent that theme either in the stage set or costumes or the set list. The 2000 New Year's Eve, we had this whole Armaggedon theme: We played "Hell's Bells," we were all wearing costumes, and the whole set was designed in flames. I also heard that you added on a keyboard player [Kirk Juhas]. He's played a lot with us on the Northeast shows, plays in a band called Free Beer and Chicken, and he's a really good friend of ours... awesome keyboard player. He's on the album, but he doesn't do the big tours with us right now.

You guys are often labeled a "jam" band. What do you think about that? Yeah, that happens very often. When we first started out, we just looked at it as a Northeast music scene. It stuck with us in the beginning and won't go away. You don't sound too enthusiastic about it. Well, it's such an all-encompassing term these days, it's so generic that it doesn't really give you an idea of what a group is about. There are so many kinds of bands out there that are considered jam bands now, it's almost a lost term already because it has been used so much. It seems as if the new album is trying to distance moe. from that perception It's always been our goal as we go into the studio to use it to the fullest We've known from the beginning that it's extremely difficult to capture the spirit of what we do live in a sterile environment with no audiHe's a great addition to ence. So we try to go another way the sound. with it: When we’re in the studio, What have you been listhat's a whole other tool that we tening to from last year? use—a completely different instruI listen to a lot of everyment. We always try to get as much thing. Chronic 2001 was out of it as we can. A lot of the one of my favorite albums songs on this album are definitely released last year. I'm so shorter than past ones. We kind of busy trying to listen to all built them in a more vertical fashion the stuff I couldn't afford than linear. five years ago that it's Has the band itself been more into tough. As far as music the production process on this one? styles go, 1 generally lisYeah, the personal involvement has ten to the heavier veins of been way higher. When we first did music. I grew up listening the studio, we didn't have the experito Metallica and Slayer, ence and didn't really know what we [and I'm a] big speed were doing, and then when we were with Sony it was their money, so metal fan. And I'm also a very large jazz fanatic. [l] they had to put who they felt was a try to play both sides of good watchdog producer person so the spectrum. that they felt they got the album they THE MEN OF MOE.; Well, Rob Derhak, Chuck Garvey, Al Schnier and Vinnie Amico, anyway. Our guy didn't manage to make this fine promo shot. Speaking of Metallica wanted. This time it was just us; The and cheap music, we production process, recording process, engineering process, all the ideas were ours. It feels a lot better just heard that Napster is being shut down. What's your take on that? Have you been dissatisfied with past albums? I have mixed feelings about it as an artist, just because I'd like to see the we technology to used because I feel that everyone should get the opportunity get definitely wanted I don't know if you'd call it not satisfied, but more out of them than we did. When you work on something for so long, to hear the music. But there has to be away for the artist to recoup. The aspect that a lot of people don't understand is that when the artist records you become very nearsighted to it and can't really see it till it's done. And an album, they're in debt to the record company. The only way they can now, final with album hearing the we're definitely way happier this product repay that debt is through record sales. They can't take the touring money than previous attempts. How do you feel about being a mostly guitar-based band in a music and pay off the album. scene that as a whole is moving away from the guitar? But record sales were up this year. Yeah, which is... weird. I also hate record companies, as an artist.They It's strange because I've been a drummer and percussionist and bass player as well, and I've always had my issues with that guitar-rock scene. 1 don't represent as they should, and they don't back the artist the way they should. don't like the idea that pop music has been focused mainly on one instruHave you guys had trouble with record companies? ment for such a long time, but now that it's moving away from it, it defiWhen Tin Cans [the band's 1998 album on Sony] was released, there was nitely changes everything. From my point of view and my instrument, I kind of enjoy it, because it's not something that's gonna hold us back. We stuff that we were told was gonna happen. They didn't push it the way we would have liked, didn't get behind the album the way they said they would have two incredibly inventive and creative guitar sections and then an excellent rhythm section so we're not really at a loss if we need to turn Your live album was on your own record company, though, and that the focus of certain songs to other instruments, the more the better, and it did pretty well. It's continuing to do pretty well, thank God, and Dither is also released on gives us the chance to diversify and really grow. our own company, with our own distribution. I heard that you covered Pink Floyd's Dark Side of the Moon for Do you feel more confident with it under your own label? Halloween with Wizard of Oz synced up. Is that true? This is true. It's awesome. It's a great feeling—the record's been getting excellent That's pretty ballsy. reviews and selling well already, and it's all us. You can't beat that. □ -

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Quebecois folk group La Bottine Souriante make high energy modern music for Francophiles. By Cary Hughes

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past Tuesday night, had the pleasure of seeing La Bottine Souriante perform in Duke's Reynolds Theatre. Those of you who are not Quebecois are probably just as unfamiliar with this renowned Canadian folk band as I was. La Bottine Souriante, translated The Smiling Boot, came to Duke with the help of The Triangle Music Society, goingbarefoot.inc and the Duke Institute of the Arts. Stephen Barefoot of goingbarefoot.inc was especially instrumental in bringing the group to Duke. He told me that "the energy [the band] produced is utterly unbelievable" and he is absolutely right. La Bottine Souriante's music is classified as folk, but there are hints of jazz and soul that make it come alive. The nine-person band consists of brass instruments, a piano, string instruments and drums which all work in unison to produce a unique sound. Throughout the show, the band's music kept the crowd absolutely mesmerized. Not a minute into the performance, one woman in the audience got the entire audience clapping along in unison. Each of the band members had a special energy and talent that he brought to the stage. Multi-instrumentalist Michel Bordeleau not only played four instruments—not all at the same time, mind you—and sang, but he also is talented in the art of foottapping. Foottapping is tap dancing sitting down, and Monsieur Bordeleau managed to simultaneously play either the drum, mandolin, guitar or the fiddle and sing while doing it. The kind of concentration the man must have to be able to keep two beats at once and sing as well is truly unimaginable.

One particular number, called "The Beggar Song," featured dueling fiddles and foottapping, then a dueling fiddle and mandolin. By the time the sax was added, the entire audience was clapping and bobbing their heads with the beat. If the energy generated by La Bottine Souriante can be measured through the number of yelps or "yee-haws" uttered throughout the performance, then the show was a success. Band member Andre Brunet's flamboyant fiddle antics were responsible for causing most of the response from the audience. He was all over the stage, doing rock star-esque tricks and jumps with his fiddle, and challenging the other members all the while. One of La Bottine Souriante's best qualities was the variety of their music. From the fiddle to the accordion, these nine men flip traditional folk music on its head and heat it up to make great entertainment. If you missed the band on Tuesday night, you should consider making a road trip to catch them at their other Carolina shows, either tonight in Morganton at CoMMA or tomorrow night in Wilkesboro at the Walker Center. After that, it's back to Quebec for these Canadian wunderkinds—for a while. Luckily, they'll be back at Duke on April 12th, playing then in Page Auditorium Be sure not to miss it.D

Community Dance Day! The Ark, East Campus Saturday, Febuary 17, 2001 Noon-Midnight For

12 Hour Performance Event...join us at any time to enjoy performances, participatory event and master classes non-stop throughout the day! Free refreshments will be provided.

a complete schedule, see below or visit our website at www.duke.edu/web/dance. For more information, call 919-660-3354.

Performances are scheduled throughout the day, as well as other open classes. These include: Take an African Class at noon Learn English Country Dancing at 3 pm, ballroom at 10pm Salsa Workshop for everyone from 11:00 midnight Bring a 5-7 year old and take a class with Betsy Blair at 4:15 pm In between, watch performances of African, Jazz, Tap, Ballet, Modern, Hip Hop, Native American and Bellydance! •

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The Silence of the Lambs sequel not only falls short of its predecessor—it falls flat on its face.

GRADE:

D-

By Dan Mallory

pyj he many insurmountable problems of —3

begin with its

title: Hannibal Lecter is more interesting as a threat than a reality. The Silence of the Lambs, the movie's much-loved prequel, based on another novel of the series by author

Thomas Harris, confined Anthony Hopkins to both jail cell and supporting status for 90 minutes. He stalked his cage like a tiger—but what, we wondered, would happen if the tiger were unleashed? Nothing of note, as it turns out. Lecter on the loose —in Florence, to be precise—is little other than a pedestrian bogeyman. And in Hannibal, Ridley Scott's appallingly shallow and hazy follow-up, his demonic mystery is dispelled by rote slasher tedium and his overplayed indulgence in effete luxury (garden opera, Renaissance art, parfumeries). Lecter's a snob with a very bad temper. A temper that's infected FBI agent Clarice Starling, as it happens. Played here by Julianne Moore, pinch-hitting for Silence of the Lambs star Jodie Foster, Starling's been disgraced by a botched drug raid, and now ranks as the most lethal female agent in the world. That doesn't thrill her boorish superior, Peter Krendler (Ray Liotta, in an unimaginably one-note performance). But when Lecter, identified by the curious Florentine Inspector Pazzi (Giancarlo Giannini), stages a very public disembowelment, Starling snaps to attention. The mutually obsessed beauty and her beast don't share the screen for almost two hours, during which time David Mamet and Steven Zaillian's talky screenplay bludgeons us with yin-yang metaphor. That dynamic was explored more subtly in Lambs, which harnessed Lecter and Starling to an engaging, propulsive plot that characterized them by actions rather than words. Conversely, Hannibal steeps itself in dull monologues that strap the characters to a languid, unfocused philosophical discourse. Moore, in particular, is cruelly underserved: The listless narrative of Hannibal damns her Clarice to professional drudgery and passive victimhood. Julianne can probably relate. The movie casts about for a plot, but the best it can do is sic various nasties on the doctor—all courtesy of Mason Verger (Gary Oldman), Lecter's only surviving victim and twisted sister, who hopes to feed his

assailant to a menagerie of giant boars. Of these, only the Pazzi character is of interest, maintaining his dignity even as he loses his intestines. Still, even the novel could not resist facile metaphor: the word pazzi translates as "crazy." wonder if "Harris" means "pretentious." And whether "Scott" means "hack." A brazenly commercial director who fancies himself an artist, Scott is given to imposing belletristic flourishes on projects which don't need them: With Gladiator, he unsuccessfully attempted to wed MTV kinesis—a hyperreal palette, frenzied fast-forwards—with an old-fashioned swords-and-sandals epic, and concocted last year's ugliest, most bloated drama. Emboldened by that movie's commercial take, he now lards Hannibal with the same baroque visuals and lazy, affected symbolism. Contrast this shiftless, limp movie with the spare force of The Silence ofJhe Lambs: That film found, in its taut editing and clean camera work, a visual focus that complemented its no-frills storyline. In Scott's defense, not even Lambs director Jonathan Demme could have wrought much from Harris' source material. The author knows how to tap our primal fears: A costume sewn from human skin—the grisly trump card of The Silence of the Lambs— certainly makes for a terrifying sartorial possibility, but mutant boars trained to devour people? Too contrived, too self-consciously bizarre, too ridiculous —too much. 1 watched a lot of this movie through my sleeve, especially the gruesome dinner party scene, in which Lecter spoon-feeds a lobotomized Krendler his own brain. It's not the gore that's gratuitous—it's the scene itself, which does not conclude the plot, since there is no plot, and since the ineptly assembled events preceding it might have led anywhere else. And Liotta's character, for that matter, hasn't impacted the action in the slightest; He's an impossibly crude caricature who spouts chauvinistic dreck even while nibbling on grey matter. The guy is, from scene one, slated for comeuppance—and nothing else. The story has drafted him only to sacrifice him in an unspeakable manner, and that's far sicker than any crime committed by Lecter. Hannibal is as boring, hollow and slack as its predecessor was bracing, rich and breathless. □

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ilverman Probably Not Worth Saving :

tginning there was God, and He created md, who unleashed great classics like ;oline," "Shiloh" and "Solitary Man." •ecame our 20th century God (for Eric is bigger than Jesus). Thus, a movie cenid a Sir Diamond cover band could only right? fire. Saving Silverman, in which Mr. itures prominently, is a warped buddy flick iports the age-old adage that men need to wary of women. Darren Silverman, J.D McNugent and Wayne Le Fessier (Jason Biggs, Jack Black and Steve Zahn, respectively) are old pals who are unlucky in love and rock out in a Neil Diamond tribute band called, appropriately enough, Diamonds in the Rough. Darren meets Judith (Feet) after a concert. She's Yoko to

their Beatles: She controls Darren, forcing him to have butt injections, burn his Diamond albums and drop out of the band. J.D. and Wayne respond by trying to break up the relationship, kidnapping Judith and faking her death. Then they try to set up grieving Darren with his old high school crush Sandy (Amanda Detmer)... who is about to take her vows as a nun! What's a boy to do? While the movie starts out strong, after thirty minutes the audience wants to be saved also. The female characters are too sexy, and Biggs looks too young next to Black (best known as the Belle and Sebastian basher of High Fidelity) and hilarious-in-a-white-trash-convict way Steve Zahn (who actually played a white trash convict in Happy, Texas). Furthermore, director Dennis Dugan (he of Big Daddy and Happy Gilmore fame) can't decide if he wants to make a biting black comedy a la Fargo or go on an excellent Hoad Trip with Bill and Ted, so Silverman falls short of both marks. Zahn and Black are excellent and funny as always, but the rest of the cast is weak. Still, the tunes can't be faulted, because Neil Diamond is the man. If you are a Diamond fan, stay home and listen to his albums. Otherwise, it could be worth it to have a few beers and then see this film. —By Liz Simons


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Entropy may just force us to change our minds about Duke bands —which haven't impressed us much—forever. Hey, they're good enough to play the Cat’s Cradle, along with seven other bands. Sunday, 9pm. Cat's Cradle, 300 E. Main St., Carrboro. $2. For info: www.catscradle.com

MUSIC

Freewater Films Griffith Film Theater, Bryan Center, West Campus Free to students with ID, $3 all others. Dancer In the Dark. Tonight, 7 & 9;3opm The Lost Boys. Tuesday,7 & 9:3opm

Cat's Cradle 300 E. Main St., Carrboro. (919) 967-9053. Mayflies USA w/The Comas, Tonight CJ. Chenier w/ Bio Ritmo, Saturday Sunday Showcase feat. Entropy, Sunday Good Charlotte w/ Sum 41, Tuesday Low w/ Labradford, Wednesday Cheryl Wheeler, Thursday

Lake Trout (see story, p. 5) A jam band playing dance music? A show actually being put on by Major Attractions? Support our embattled friends over at the Union and check out what will surely be a bizarre free show. Saturday, 10pm. Duke Coffeehouse, East Campus. No tickets—show up quick. For info: www.union.duke.edu

Quad Flix Griffith Film Theater, Bryan Center, West Campus. S3 cash/flex. For info: (919) 684-2911 or www.union.duke.edu The Exorcist, Saturday, 7 and 10pm; Sunday, Bpm

Go! Studios 100F Brewer Lane, Carrboro. (919) 969-1400. Cherry Valence w/ Ghost of Rock & Cold Sides, Tonight The Gossip w/ Des Ark, Saturday Holiday Matinee Winter Tour 2001 feat. Death Cab for Cutie, The Jealous Sound & The And/Ors, Monday Longwave w/ Jolene & The Buttons, Tuesday Milo w/ Phantom FM & Roman Candles, Thursday

Entropy

Forbidden Broadway Broadway at Duke drops the bomb again with this scandalously exciting production. Sunday, Bpm. Page Auditorium, West Campus. $l2-18 students, $l7-23 general public. For tickets: (919) 684-4444 or tickets.duke.edu •

Wizard of Oz

You're not in Kansas anymore, kid. But if you really wanna run off to see the proverbial wizard, you can still make it —sort of. Check out the musical version of this classic this weekend in Raleigh. Thru Sunday. Raleigh Memorial Auditorium, 1 East South St., Raleigh. Tickets $l6-$5l. For info: (919) 831-6061 •

Kingsbury Manx (see story, p. 5) They are one of Chapel Hill's best bands. They play dreamy, understated rock and roll that doesn't involve white rappers. Tonight, 9pm. Kings, 424 S. McDowell St., Raleigh. For info: (919) 831-1005 •

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For true love, meet someone who won’t leave in the morning. '*

Tired of unfaithful relationships? Meet someone who promises never to leave you. God can satisfy your deepest desires and meet needs that sex cannot.. .needs that another human cannot. God is the greatest lover of all time. If you want true love, why not go for the best that life has to offer? Because love, sex and relationships are so central to our lives, we're offering a free article on these important topics. For more information or to request a copy of the article "Sex and the Search for Intimacy," email us at the address below.

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FRIDAY, FEBRUARY

16/2001

*

OMMENTARY

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PAGE 9

Lacking courage and conviction

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In recent testimony, Alan Greenspan refused to correct his earlier statements on taxes pressed on the crucial question of Corzine should have shouted, “What As Corzine pointed out, there are whether the huge tax cuts that now assets?” The direct implication of ways (such as investing in index funds) Reckonings seem inevitable are too large, he said it was inappropriate for him to comment on particular proposals.

In short, Greenspan defined the rules of the game in away that allows him to intervene as he likes in the political debate, but to retreat behind the veil of his office whenever anyone tries to hold him accountable for the results of those

Paul Krugman

Three weeks ago, Alan Greenspan, in his now-famous testimony to the Senate Budget Committee, gave decisive aid and comfort to the advocates of huge, interventions. irresponsible tax cuts. Rumor has it that Meanwhile, he dug himself deeper Greenspan himself was taken aback by into an intellectual hole. Greenspan’s the feeding frenzy argument for tax unleashed by that cuts goes like this: j T testimony and in snort, Ureenspan if you believe the that he is now projecsurplus r. i i j 7 r 1 engaged in a backtions, within about dCpTlCCi tllC rules OJ the door campaign to six years the fedJ7 7 limit the damage. game in (X WCVy that allows eral government (Damage to the pay off all its 7 7 nation, or to him- him to intervene as he likes debt to the public. self? Good quesThereafter it will iji i• .1 tion.) The Medley in the political debate. have to accumuReport, a newsletlate claims on the ter on economic private sector—affairs, says that “many congressional and that could lead to a politicization of Democrats have heard Greenspan—or the financial markets. So we must cut his aides—tell them that he actually taxes soon to dissipate much of the profavors something like $1 trillion in total jected surplus. tax cuts rather than $1.6 trillion.” But does Greenspan even believe his But if those rumors are true, own argument? Sen. Jon Corzine, DGreenspan’s performance Tuesday, in N.J., asked the Fed chair whether we his first official testimony since he let ought not to take a longer view. As the genie out of the bottle, was a profile Corzine pointed out, just beyond that in cowardice. Again and again he was magic 10-year horizon the baby offered the opportunity to say someboomers will start to place immense thing that would help rein in runaway demands on Social Security and tax-cutting; each time he evaded the Medicare, eventually requiring either question, often replying by reading from large tax increases or large cuts in benhis own previous testimony. He declared efits. Greenspan’s reply was not to .

.

*

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Greenspan’s argument is that the U.S. government, whose domestic spending consists mainly of programs aimed at retirees, should not make the kind of provision for the future that would be legally required of any corporate pension ftmd. If the federal government as a whole is not supposed to own private assets, then the assets accumulated by the Social Security and Medicare trust funds must be matched by equal or larger debts on the part of the rest of the government, so the interest that Greenspan claimed would cushion the burden of supporting the baby boomers would in fact be purely fictitious, a matter of moving money between government accounts. And so the ultimate burden of dealing with an aging population would still fall on future taxpayers, who would have been shortchanged for the sake of a short-run tax cut.

that public entities can buy private assets without politicizing markets. Greenspan said, correctly, that such solutions are imperfect; but are they worse than a solution that involves requiring the government to stay deeply in debt in order to provide the trust funds with assets to buy? Greenspan faced a test of character earlier this week. He didn’t have to admit to a mistake; to do the right thing, all he had to do was “clarify” his previous remarks. Yes, the headlines would have said “Greenspan Makes UTurn.” But isn’t it worth accepting some brief personal embarrassment in order to head off a looming policy disaster that you yourself have helped create? Apparently not. Paul Krugman’s column is syndicated by The New York Times News Service.

..

once again that he was speaking only for

himself, thus granting himself leeway to pronounce on subjects far afield of his role as Federal Reserve chair. But when

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worry, that by the time the boomers started reaching 65, the Social Security system would be earning lots of interest on its accumulated assets.

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Falling in 10ve,., with the right job Inside out Mary Carmichael

lines—which are passing me by even as I write this column. I have applied to several magazines, but I won’t hear back from them until April. By then, I’ll practically have graduated. To top it all off, at some point last month, I realized I didn’t know if I wanted to be a journalist for the rest of my life. I could see myself practicing the trade for the next three or so years, and I could see myself writing books at age 50. But there was this huge gap

I used to laugh at the insipid columns The Chronicle always runs this time of year, the ones that feature overeducated Duke students whining that no one will hire them. But I’m not laughing anymore. I not getting have now resigned myself to three facts (drum roll, please): I’m graduating in May, I don’t yet have a job, to my and I’m writing one of those columns about the fact that I don’t have a job yet. it It’s all my own fault, of course. I could have had a job by now if I’d followed up on a single one of the it may pamphlets I picked up at the Career Fair. just a summer Consulting, PR, diplomacy—l could have cashed in on any of those. But I didn’t. Every job I considered was the equivalent of a one-night stand. Public relations was slick in between, 25 years of my future that I just couldn’t but not honest enough to spend several years with. visualize. I wanted to write; I knew that. But what on Diplomacy seemed glamorous until I realized it earth was I qualified to write about without more entailed stamping passports in Bhutan rather than education? After several weeks of hand-wringing, webattending parties in Gay Paree. And Andersen (it was still Andersen back then) made my eyes dance searching and neurotic, drawn-out dialogues with and my head spin. But I knew that if I “hooked up” Mom, I decided I’d eventually go back to grad school with a consulting firm, I’d wake up after my two and become a hominid paleontologist. (Not as ranyears feeling a little guilty and not being able to dom as it seems.) And I’d write about it—long, languid articles for Scientific American, op-eds on creexplain why. for The New York Times, tightly packed ationism I had enough journalism experience to snag a hot job at a major newspaper. But I didn’t like the daily textbooks with brilliant illustrations and even more grind, and being rejected by The Washington Post brilliant prose. Who said I had to be a professional didn’t exactly fire me up (no pun intended) either. So writer in order to write? It’s nice to have the rest of my life figured out, I decided to wait for the February magazine dead-

I’m know “married” first job. I hope will be the beginning of something beautiful, but fling. be

albeit for the 17th time. But this doesn’t help much with the next three years, which I want to spend at a magazine—and not at a grad school. So I’m stuck where I started, with a great long-term plan but no clue as to the short term. A friend told me last week that her roommate has a similar dilemma. She’s got plenty of job offers, good ones, but she keeps turning them down. Right now her master plan is to go to New York and “see what happens.” She’s afraid of commitment—a player who schedules interviews instead of dates. I’ve been doing the same thing in advance—l don’t even let it get to the interview stage. I am, to continue the dating analogy, a flirt. And I think I’ve figured out why. I know I’m not getting “married” to my first job. I hope it will be the beginning of something beautiful, but it may be just a summer fling. Regardless, it will go on my Permanent Record—a concept I never even believed in until now. I am terrible at making decisions, and this is a big one. So I’ve inadvertently avoided the decision altogether by limiting my choices. I am picky, picky, picky. It’s not a smart strategy, but it’s easy. How do I live with all those missed deadlines, those one-night stands, those unfollowed leads? The same way I’ve learned to deal with wanting anything so badly I can taste it. I’ve convinced myself that in May, I may walk down the aisle committed to The One, the career I’ll have, hold, love and cherish for the rest of my life. But even ifI don’t, I know that someday, my job will come. In the meantime, I’ll be waiting by the phone, just in case some dreamy employer wants to give me a... ring. Mary Carmichael is a Trinity senior and executive editor of The Chronicle.


Comics

PAGE 10

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FRIDAY. FEBRUARY 16. 2001

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Edited by Wayne Robert Williams

ACROSS 1 Decline to bid 5 Middle East sultanate 9 Artist Picasso vera 14 15 Heavy cord 16 Walt Disney's middle name 17 Flimflammer's assurance 20 Org. of Jets Paulo 21 22 Conductor Ormandy

23 Dupe's dream of comfort 27 Jason's galley r* 28 Fujairah, Dubai 0 et al. .—j 29 Mr. Arafat 31 Run smoothly 34 Slangy refusal 35 Spherical 5

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42 Small viper 43 Company images 44 Charles Lamb 45 Change to fit 46 That woman 48 Rotary-phone feature 51 Dupe's words of woe 56 Unpigmented 58 Ventilate 59 Period 60 Flimflammer's parting words 64 Caper 65 Observe 66 Mr. Knievel 67 Twangy 68 Fling 69 Gainsay DOWN 1 Golfer Stewart Hilo 2 hi 3 Spiritual natures 4 Stitch up 5 Flowery 6 Word before oil or pool 7 4 of dates 8 French bom

9 Lima’s country 10 Sour mash 11 Mosquito or flea, at times 12 'Knots' author 13 Start of a path? 18 Greek mount 19 Influences adversely 24 Mongol tent 25 Blight on the landscape

26 Works for 30 Shakespearean contraction 31 Sch. grp. 32 Sounds of uncertainty 33 GOP member 34 Israeli desert 35 D.C. old-timer 36 Actor Wallach 37 Nabokov book Saints' Day 39 40 Medicated liquid 41 Young adult 45 Actress Silverstone 46 Fishing nets

47 Roll-call call 48 Israeli hero Moshe 49 Entertainer Massey 50 Touchesup against 52 Lures 53 Lift and toss

54 ’Over the Rainbow" composer 55 Wasfe time 57 Salty letters? 61 Explosive letters 62 Court 63 Eur. sea

The Chronicle: It’s my fourth and final editor election. Great memories: WooK Ed’s toast, freshman year: Elizabeth Drinking beer with AMW, sophomore year: John the Jon Huntley song, sophomore year; Kevin Coming home after sunrise, freshman year: Andrea Norm and M&Ms, junior year: Regan The shotglass chessboard, sophomore year: Melissa Being designated driver, all three years: Pratik, Erin Sitting on the balcony with a drink, junior year: Roily Spilling all the gossip to Roily. Timeless.:

FoxTrot/ Bill Amend AND DAD SAY THEY'RE HUNGRY ENOUGH To EAT A

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OWN.

Account Representatives: Account Assistant:

Sales Representatives:

Monica Franklin, Dawn Hall, Yu-hsien Huang, Lars Johnson Anna Carollo, Ann Marie Smith Sallyann Bergh, Kate Burgess,

Richard Jones, Constance Lindsay, Margaret Ng, Seth Strickland Jordana Joffe National Account Representative: Dallas Baker, Jonathan Blackwell, Creative Services: Laura Durity, Lina Fenequito, Megan Harris, Dan Librot Business Assistant: Preeti Garg, Ellen Mielke, Chris Graber,

Veronica Puente-Duany Cristina Mestre

Classifieds:

FRIDAY ;

February 18

The Graduate Program in Ecology presents Michelle Holbrook, Harvard University: “The dynamics of ‘dead wood’: cavand embolism repair, itation, ion-mediated changes in the resistance to water movement through plant stems,” Room 144 Bio Sci Bldg., 12:45pm.

Living with Advanced/Metastatlc Cancer Support Group is held every Friday from 3-4:30 p.m. at Cornucopia House Cancer Support Center, which moved to the Overlook Bldg., Ste 220, 111 Cloister Court, Chapel Hill. Call their new number

at 401-9333, www.comucopiahouse.org.

Center for French and Francophone Studies: Phillip Watts, University of Pittsburgh, wljl examine essays by Jean Paul Sartre in the wake Of France’s liberation. Part of the "Paris; 1945” class. For information, call 684-2765. 3:50 p.m. 028 Franklin Center. 2204 Erwin Road.

Community

reewater Films: “Dancer in the Dark” with jjork. Tickets are free to Duke students, $3 for the public. For information, call 684« 2911. 7:00, 9:30 p.m., Griffith Film The-

Calendar

ater.

Socially Queer You have experienced SQ before. Don't miss it this Friday. 4:00*6:00 p.m., Center for LGBT Life. 202 Flowers Bldg, (next to the chapel) Join LGBTA students, staff, and faculty in a safe, supportive, and non-judgemental social atmosphere. Make plans for the weekend! Light snacks provided. 684-6607 or Igbtcen-

ter@duke.edu

Oceans Connect: Elora Foundation, “The Fo. ounaeu... Crossing Borders Initiative,” For information, call 684-2765.4:00 p.m. 240 Franklin Center, 2204 Erwin Road. .

,

'ROJECT WILD will hold Its second annual fund-raiser Contra Dance from 8:0011:00 p.m. at the Ark on East Campus. Contra is EASY to learn, lots of fun, and beginners are welcome! LIVE MUSIC. $5.00 Come and enjoy— a good time is

Shabbat services (reform, conservative, guaranteed! orthodox) followed by kosher dinner. 6:00 p.m. Reservations required for dinner, $lO. Theater 2001: New Works in Process or Call e-mail “Little Women, the musical.” Six genera684-6422 jewishlife@duke.edu. Freeman Center for tions have read this story, the seventh will Jewish Life, 1724 Campus Drive, at Swift sing it. This workshop production features Avenue. a professional cast preparing for a 20012002 Broadway run. Be part of a new muSpanish and Latin American Rim Series: see the show besical in development “El verdugoby Luis G. Berlanga (90 min.) fore it heads to New York! 8:00 p.m., 6:00 p.m., 116 Old Chemistry Building, Sheafer Theater, Bryan Center, Duke UniWest Campus. versity. -

I

Second Annual Seminar Series in Honor of Black History Month: “Race and Medicine: Historical Perspectives.” Topic: “Civil War and Reconstruction.” Facilitator: Thavolia Qlymph, assistant professor of history and African and African-American Studies.Call 684-5882, 4:00 p.m. to 6:00 p.m. Breedlove Room, 204 Perkins Library.


Classifieds

FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 16,2001

Announcements $$ $$

Birthdays

Get Paid For Your Opinions! Earn $l5-$125 and more

per survey! www.money4opinions.com

Blue Devils LOVE the Writing great help with my writing, and it’s free!” “Helped me brainstorm.” “Came away with a better sense of my own ideas and how they fit together.” “Now I don't feel so overwhelmed.” “I will definitely come back often.” Check us out

To One Of Those Ice Cold Brothers Of AphiA...HAPPY 21st JASON PORTER. You will always be our Sixth Sense. From -The Aftermath.

Studio!! “Such

Child Care Mom of 10-month old twins seeking childcare 1 or 2 days/week for 3-4 hours/day. Time of day flexible. Prior childcare experience, references, own transportation, nonsmoker required. Call 403-6154.

at www.ctlw.duke.edu/wstudio or call 668-0901.

PT/FT job caring for two adorable children weekdays from 3ish to Bish and some weekend evenings. Must have reliable car, be kid-friendly and knowledgeable. Pis contact Joanne Kagan at 286-0200 or email

:

OUND: 2000 High School Men’s ling. Please call Sandra at 660 000. Must Know Inscription.

WANT $50???

Enter the T-shirt design contest for springternational. Applications due February 23 at the BC Info Desk.

joanne@ adessence.com Wanted:

Nanny/ Household Manager. $2l, 000/yr. starting salary $2,400/yr. for benefits. +

Mon-Fri. approx. 30hrs./wk.

Apts. For Rent

Half day off each week, 6wks paid holidays/ vacation, care for two girls ages 13 and 11, errands, light housekeeping, and meal prep. Car provided for use at work. Call Claire at 732-4577.

DUPLEX

Duplex, one bedroom apt. 5

minutes to Duke. 2101 Chapel Hill Road. $575.00 per month. Private parking, available March Ist. Washer and Dryer included. Please call. 403-0289

Americorps VISTA member needed for Technology Assisted Learning in Literacy project. Member will serve as mentor, trainer, and resource provider for community technology project in Durham, working to bridge the digital divide for the disadvantaged. Focus is on education rather than advanced tech skills. Training at U-Mass, Boston as well as on-site. Send letter and resume to durhamlit@aol.com or fax: (919) 489-1456/ Deadline: Feb 16. Associate in Research/Research Technician: Two positions available in a Duke neurobiology lab investigating genes controlling regeneration of axons in the brain and spinal cord. Ongoing efforts are focused on application of viralmediated gene therapy to promote axon regeneration, and on the use of large-scale microarray and proteomics screening to identify additional genes involved in axon growth. Experimental responsibili-

ties will include preparation of viral and plasmid DNA constructs, isolation of RNA and genomic DNA from animal tissues, and PCR. Experience with histological procedures and biochemistry are also valuable. Please send resume and references to skene@neuro.duke.edu or

Business

Manager. Dept. Neurobiology. Box 3209 Duke University Medical Center, Durham, NC 27710. Duke is an equal opportunity employer.

BARTENDERS

Make $lOO-$250 per night. No experience necesary, call 1-800981-8168 ext. 9032.

The Chronicle

BARTENDERS NEEDED!!! Earn $l5-30/hr. Job placement assistance is top priority. Raleigh’s Bartending School. Call now for information about our half-priced tuition special. HAVE FUN! MAKE MONEY! PEOPLE!!! MEET

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Campus Managers now needed for National Student Storage Company, 5-10 hours per week will earn you a great base pay plus bonuses! We service over 20 major colleges and our company looks great on a resume. Call us toll free at 1-877-932-6948. ext. 220 or email us to jobs @ aboutboxit.com.

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 visits required. Compensation. Contact Cheryl Yetsko (919) 6683135.

HELP WANTED

The Chronicle Business Office needs office assistant for Summer, 15-20 hours per week, May to August. Can start immediately. a few hours per week for training. Contact Mary Weaver 684-3811 Programmer with experience in

FileMaker Pro needed to add features to a manuscript tracking database written in FileMaker Pro 4.1. Please call 919-681-6770.

Help Wanted

We need a work-study student for a research tech position in the Dept, of Psychiatry. Max weekly hours 20. Work involves data entry, and assisting with current and new studies on drugs of abuse. Please call Robyn at 6858785 for details. =

STUDENT HELP WANTED! Devils’ Duplicates is accepting applications for a Copy Attendant Monday-Friday from 10,00 a.m-12:30 p.m., and Monday from 2:00-5:00 p.m. Cash register and/or copy machine experience helpful. Work study preferred, but not required. Position available thru Spring semester. If interested, call 684-8383 or stop by Devils’ Duplicates and ask forRon Cates.

Research Associate, opportunities for involvement with exciting,

cutting-edge cardiology research will be available. Possibilities exist for being included in publications, and working closely with our Research Director and physician staff. This could be a strong resume builder and career boost for the right candidate interested in a career in the health care field. Please call Dr. Royal or Dr. Michel week days at Southeastern Regional Medical Center, (910) 671-5255.

WANTED: Artist’s model female $l5/hour weekends/evenings. Chapel Hill painter seeks female model. Call Paul 933-9868 http://www.paulewally.com

SCHOOL OFFICE

Houses For Rent

COORDINATOR

Judea Reform Religious School. 25-28hr/wk. General office duties, maintain student database, can work independently, flexible environment, knows Mac computer, assist with programs. Word and Excel experience preferred. Call 489-7062 or fax resume 489-0611.

Live off-campus w/friends! 4-7 BR homes avail, in June/Aug. Conv. to Duke. All appls.

Volvo Wagon 940, 1993. 130,000 miles, one owner, meticulous maintenance, third seat, sunroof. $6,800. Day # 684-7366, evening # 967-1261.

www.PerfectCollegeCar.com. Your parents never had it this

Eileen Brand, Duke Addictions Program. 684-3850.

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The Chronicle

F O R

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+

0393.

w/d 416-

Historic country house available

TEACHERS NEEDED

HELP WANTED

Help market the Duke Stop Smoking Clinic: Develop an email marketing list of area health professionals, visit/call health-professionals at their offices to market the clinic, explain the clinic to individual smokers who express interest in the program, contact local companies who offer onsite stop-smoking clinics. We prefer a self-starter who can work 10 hours a week forabout Salary: $lO/hour. 4 months.

page h

RESEARCH TECH

RESEARCH ASSOCIATE with a current driving license and a good driving record is needed to drive a cardiologist from the Triangle area in Durham (we provide the car) to Lumberton, N.C. (about an hour and forty minute drive) and to work as a Research Associate in the offices of Southeastern Research Institute in Lumberton, and then drive back to the Triangle area, three or four days a week. Most days would be about eleven hours long, and the days of the week will vary, but will not include weekends. The salary is thirteen to fifteen dollars per hour, and will not include any weekend, holiday or night work. As a

March 1. Roomy 1 bedroom with large living room, fireplace, central heat/ac, terrace, yard service, running-hiking trails, 15 mins, to Duke. No pets. $BOO per month. For appt. call 620-0137.

For

Autos For Sale

Religious and/or Hebrew School and Community Midrasha (Tue 4-5;30p.m. and/or Sun mornGood wages. ings). Call-4897062.

Private, Quiet, Natural Setting, 4 miles to Duke, 8 traffic free miles to RTF, 7to UNC, $167,000 818-7151 Undeveloped adjacent lot also for sale

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business rate $6.00 for first 15 words private party/N.P. $4.50 for first 15 words all ads 100 (per day) additional per word 3 or 4 consecutive insertions -10 % off 5 or more consecutive insertions 20 % off

Specializing in charming homes,duplexes,and

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apartments Signing leases NOW for summer and next school year!!

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Wmk

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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 -

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:

ScAmctf 'P'uxfi€ntce& Available for next school year; 405 Gattis St.: 6BR, 4BA, 2 blks from E. Campus, approx. 1600 sq. ft. very roomy!! 409 Gregson St SBR, 2BA, Near E. Campus, off street parking, lots of space 2237 sq, ft!! 823 Burch St 6BR, 4BA, charming and spacious, large back and front porches, nice yard!! 902 Vickers Ave 7BR, 2.58A, near E. Campus, historic home, large yard, wonderful neighborhood, VERY spacious 3500 sq. ft. SBR, 2BA, newly remodeled, 1.5 blks to 917 Lancaster St E. Campus, fireplace, sunny rooms, front -

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porch w/swing, spacious!

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Chronicle Classifieds Box 90858, Durham, NC 27708 0858 fax to: 684-8295 phone orders: call (919) 684-3811 to place your ad. Visit the Classifieds Online! http://www.chronicle.duke.edu/classifieds/today.html -

1001 N. Gregson St 1026 W. Trinity

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Call 684-3811 if you have any questions about classifieds No refunds or cancellations after first insertion deadline.

www.bobschmitzproperties.com


The Chronicle

PAGE 12

Artifical blood vessels may help hemodialysis patients in the spaces.” Once an artificial human artery is successfully created—which may not happen for another 10 to 20 years—it can be used for implementation in the heart, obviating the need to remove a vein in the leg for this purpose. Veins are used generally because there are more spare veins than arteries. The problem with using veins, however, is that they are not as capable of withstanding the high pressures exerted by blood exiting the heart. Additionally, removal of leg veins is not a simple procedure. The surgeon must remove a larger segment that will eventually be implanted in the heart because of the vein’s uneven arrangement. “[The vein is] ah uneven, unruly biological structure,” Niklason said. “They

336-774-1336.

NEED B-BALL TIX

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NEED B-BALL TIX

Need 2-4 tix for Ga. Tech Game on Feb. 21, Call Adam 613-1034.

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HOUSE FOR SALE

AMERICAN VILLAGE 3-BR, 2 1/2BA. 4 minutes to Duke. $171,000. By appt. 4427 Talcott Dr. 3837433.

Misc. For Sale Car sound system. 2 ten-inch subs and 300 watt amp. All wiring, ready for installation. Contact

NEED BBALL TICKETS ANY HOME GAME Sarah, Please call/ email asap. 949-6206/ seb3@duke.edu.

NEED TWO B-BALL TICKETS Alum seeks two tickets to Georgia Tech game. Please contact Michael at mjk7x@virginia.edu or 804-244-7983.

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have to cherry-pick good segments, and they take more than they use.” With artificial vessels, however, not only can the stronger arteries be used instead of veins, but the procedure requires just one to two centimeters of vascular tissue, significantly less tissue than is currently required. Others who would potentially benefit from artificial blood vessel engineering include those requiring hemodialysis, a process by which the blood is filtered and cleaned using an external machine. “The hemodialysis population needs medum-caliber blood vessels frequently,” Niklason said. Although vessels-on-demand will not exist in the immediate future, Lawson said they are on the horizon. “The problems are within the domain of current twentieth century science when you have time, kinetic energy and good people working for you,” Lawson said.

Houses For Sale 3 bedroom/2 bath, brick. Bike to Duke, convenient to UNC and RTF. Large fence, yard, $155,500. 1009 Archdale Dr.

Looking in on on Kangaroo Drive

\

� ARTERY from page 4 cells on the scaffolding, and they adhere to the individual fibers and grow to fill

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Clockwise from top left: BOBBY LAWS, who has been working for Postal Operations for three and a half years, sorts interdepartmental mail early in the morning. DANIEL WALKER, goes through crates and crates of magazines, arranging them on different shelves to be distributed in the afternoon. BOXES UPON BOXES of mail are delivered to the main Duke post office around 6 a.m. WORKERS SORT THROUGH regular mail, dividing it into piles for the Medical Center and Duke’s East and West Campuses. THE WORK IS NEVER OVER as more boxes of mail await the workers

MYRTLE BEACH HOUSES 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 Cove! MYRTLEBEACHTOURS.COM 800-714-8687.

Duke University Medical Center is currently looking for participants in a research study for a new treatment for the most common vaginal infection in the US, bacterial vaginosis (BY). •

Are you a female between the ages of 18 and 50? Have you previously had symptoms that were diagnosed as bacterial vaginosis (BV) and are experiencing those symptoms now? Or do you have vaginal discharge, odor or irritation? •

If you answer yes to these questions, you may qualify for this study. Participants will make up to 4 trips to the GYN Center of Duke University Medical Center, will receive free medical care related to the study, and will be compensated for their time and travel In addition conventional treatment will be provided free of charge if necessary.

Please make a contribution to medicine and call Nadine Richardson at 1-800-548-2414.

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You are NOT alone. 1 out of 5 women of reproductive age suffer from bacterial vaginosis. .

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Duke travels to the Garden to face St. John’s, hoping to avenge last year’s loss in Cameron. See preview, page 14

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� UNC takes a two-game lead in the ACC. See Hoops Notes, page 14 � The women’s team faces No. 21 N.C. State. See preview, page 15 PAGE 13

FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 16, 2001

Beard leads second-half rally against Terrapins By CHRISTINA PETERSEN The Chronicle

Puke

75 Last night a

not-so-

Maryland 54 new program aired at Cameron Indoor Stadium as the nearly 4,000-strong crowd witnessed what is quickly becoming known as The Alana Beard Show. ACC rookie of the year front-runner Beard and No. 4 Duke (23-2,11-2 in the ACC) downed Maryland, 75-54, winning the Blue Devils’ first home game since narrowly falling to unranked Florida State last Wednesday, 71-69. Beard scored 16 points in the second stanza, as Duke came roaring out of the locker room to a 14-3 run in the first three-and-a-half minutes in the second half. “I was very pleased with our second-half effort,” coach said. Gail Goestenkors “Offensively we had more of the attack mindset we were lacking in the first half and

[wel understand that, from here on out, it’s going to take 40 minutes offocused basketball to win.” The Blue Devils dominated the second half, going 19for-35 from the field. offense, the Typifying Georgia Schweitzer took advantage of an unobser-

vant Maryland defense to

send a pass through the key

Another lopsided win for the Blue Devils. Another highlight-filled performance by Alana Beard. Yet last night’s 21-point victory was hardly about a return to form, especially for a team expected to contend for a national championship.

to a patiently waiting Sheana Mosch. She was fouled on the shot and sank both free throws to improve Duke’s abysmal 25 percent first-half foul shooting to over 50 percent. The Blue Devils played lackluster basketball in the first half, never gaining greater than a four-point lead on the Terrapins. Duke strug-

Thomas Steinberger

Game Commentary

gled with Maryland’s 3-2 zone defense throughout the first half, since the guardheavy zone cut off the Blue Devils’ open looks from the top of the key and the elbow. Also struggling was a flustricken Iciss Tillis, who shot 3-for-6 from the field for eight points, six ofwhich came from treys. Tillis, leading Duke with 6.3 boards per game, only contributed one defensive board, personifying Duke’s 20-11 first-

half rebound deficit. Both teams were plagued by turnovers, but with 27, Maryland finished with nearly double the Blue Devils’ 14. Maryland players passed the ball out of bounds unmolestEd five times in the first half, but Duke was unable to capitalize and went into the locker room tied at 26. REGAN HSU/THE CHRONICLE Along with her 23 total points and five rebounds, GEORGIA SCHWEITZER accepts a ball commemorating her record for most See TERPS on page 15P* career three-pointers made before last night’s game.

Consistency has been the problem of late. Since blowing away Clemson by 50 points Jan. 28, Duke struggled against lowly Wake Forest and was stunned by Florida State a week ago. After shredding Georgia Tech Monday, how the Blue Devils would come out last night against the Terrapins was anyone’s guess. When her team entered the break tied 26-26 after a 34 percent shooting performance, coach Gail Goestenkors found her answer. “I’m disappointed with our first half effort,” Goestenkors said. “We kind of fell into Maryland’s trap. They played their 32 zone and we took quick shots.” With starters Iciss Tillis and Sheana Mosch on the bench for most of the opening 20 minutes, the halfcourt offense stumbled.The Terrapins’ zone was able to prevent entry passes into the lane, resulting in a barrage of contested perimeter shots from the Blue Devils’ backcourt. Duke did force 15 turnovers in the period, but also failed to convert those into fast-break baskets and did not capitalize on Maryland’s missed shots, See COMMENTARY on page 15 �

National Indoors loom large for tennis By THOMAS STEINBERGER The Chronicle

The men’s and women’s tennis teams face their toughest competition until the NCAA tournament this weekend, as the two Duke squads participate in the National Indoor Championships. The tournament pits 16 of the top teams in single elimination dual match play. The No. 3 women are playing in Madison, Wise., where they advanced yesterday to the second round with a 7-0 rout over No. 15 Tennessee. The fifth-ranked men are in Seattle and they also got through the first round with a 4-1 win over 12thranked Pepperdine yesterday afternoon. The women will put their undefeated record on the line in a tournament where they have finished runnerup two of the past three years, but have never won in the National Indoors’ 13-year history. “We were inexperienced last year at this tournament,” coach Jamie Ashworth said. “Our seniors were part of that, so hopefully they can take that experience to the team.” In addition to facing a possible clash with top-ranked Stanford, the Blue Devils have to play on indoor courts, conditions in which they are less comfortable, despite the addition of Sheffield IndoorTennis Center last year.

TSSB Swimming starts ACCs

UI

||

After the first day of the ACC Championships, Duke is in last place with 38 points. North Carolina, defending champions, led the pack with 247, followed by host Virginia at 210.

Freshman star Ansley Cargill, who recently rose to No. 1 in the country, dropped her first match of the year in an indoor faceoff at Notre Dame. She attributed part of that loss to unfamiliarity with the surface, although Ashworth downplayed the significance of that. “We’re a better outdoor team, but the other [top teams] are as well,” Ashworth said. “A lot will fall on our seniors’ desire to let people know how much it means to win here.” Ashworth refers to the fourth-year duo of No. 7 Kathy Sell and Megan Miller. The two have witnessed their team rise to possibly its strongest ever, but Duke still must prove it can topple the three perennial powers who have dominated the sport “Stanford, Florida, Georgia and us are on paper the best four teams in the country,” Ashworth said. “Georgia’s the defending national champion so until someone knocks them off, they’re the favorite.” The men came into Seattle off a 4-3 victory at No. 8 Illinois, and go into the weekend undefeated as well. Coach Jay Lapidus brings three players ranked in the top 15, including senior Ramsey Smith, who captured his 100th career singles victory yesterday after RAMSEY SMITH and Duke are at National Indoors this weekend defeating Pepperdine’s Stefan Suter 5-7, 6-3, 6-3.

Horvath to apply for medical redshirt

After months of remaining on the sidelines following a foot injury, Nick Horvath announced yesterday he will seek a medical hardship for the season.

Yanks Grab H-Rod New York announced yesterday the signing of outfielder Henry Rodriguez for a $1.5 million, oneyear contract, pushing the Yankees’ payroll over the century mark.

Crum-my season leaves Louisville AD in jam Lousiville athletic director Tom Jurich is seeking to oust Denny Crum from his job as men’s basketball coach. Crum won two titles in 1980 and 1986.

Men’s Basketball TCU 102, No. 20 Fresno St. 88 No. 24 UCLA 79, No. 8 Arizona 77

Women’s Basketball No. 5 Georgia 91, Kentucky 58 No. 9 Florida 71, Ole Miss 65 No. 17 Penn St. 101, Illinois 80 No. 21 N.C. State 74, Ga. Tech 68


The Chronicle

PAGE 14

Duke

@

FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 16,

2001

St. John’s

Madison Square Garden Noon Sunday CBS •

Duke leads the series 5-4; the Red Storm won 83-82 last season in Cameron St. John’s 13-10 No. 3 DUKE 22-3 Coach Mike Jarvis Coach Mike Krzyzewski Guard Jason Williams, So. (20.7 ppg) Guard Omar Cook, Fr. (16.3 ppg) Guard Willie Shaw, Fr. (14.3 ppg) Guard Nate James, Sr. (14,7 ppg) Forward Anthony Glover, Jr. (12.6 ppg) Forward Mike Dunleavy, So. (12.8 ppg) Reggie Jessie, Sr. (7.0 ppg) Forward Shane Battier, Sr. (19.1 ppg) Forward Center Donald Emanuel. Jr. (4.0 ppg) Center —■ Carlos Boozer, So. (14.3 ppg)

Inside

ANALYSIS

THE NOD

With Mike Dunleavy in foul trouble, Duke learned just how much the sophomore’s interior game has improved. the Red Storm's frontcourt has a lot of experience, it is only ninth in Big East rebounding and proved ineffective last year against Duke at Cameron as the backcourt took off.

U H

More experienced Jason Williams has not played his best recently, but Cook is on fire, scoring 22.5 points per game last week; he is also a four-time Big East rookie of the week. Expect this to be a great matchup. Cook and Willie Shaw are the team’s top scorers—but this duo is just not Bootsy Thornton and Erick Barkley.

Outside

Chris Duhon had his best game of the season against Virginia, and the Red Storm has two players who contribute more points than starters Kyle Cuffe and Alpha Bangura. St. John’s may be deeper, but Duke has more talent, making depth a non-issue as long as the Blue Devil principles stay out ol foul trouble.

EVEN

St. John’s, which has won only two of its last six, including a 64-53 loss to Providence, is playing at the Garden, where it lost to Duke two years ago in overtime. Duke, meanwhile, will be reeling after a loss in Charlottesville. But the Blue Devils are a big target—don’t doubt that the Red Storm will be raging. -

OMAR QUINTERO/THE CHRONICLE

With quality wins against Boston College and Connecticut but weird losses to Virginia Tech and Fordham, inconsistency is the rule at St. John’s this year.Yet the Red Storm has provided Mike Krzyzewski’s team with a late-season tournament-quality game in a big venue, a pop quiz of sorts. Two years ago, Duke passed the quiz in overtime. Last year, Duke lost. This year, Duke passes with flying colors 89-79. Compiled by Kevin Lees

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# ©

ACC STANDINGS

m

Duhon

in command

Coming off his most dominant showing yet, Chris Duhon and the Blue Devils will go to Madison Square Garden Sunday at noon for a showdown with the Big East’s Red Storm.

HOOPS NOTES 4 Sfr

ACC LEADERS

NEWS

&

NOTES

# & QUOTABLE

Through Tuesday

North Carolina Duke Georgia Tech Maryland Virginia

Wake Forest N.C. State' Florida State Clemson

ACC 11-0 9-2 6-6 6-6 6-6 6-6

Overall

4-7 2-9 1-10

21-2 22-3

14-9 15-9 17-6 17-7

12-11 7-17 10-14

Yesterday; Saturday, Feb. 17: Maryland @ Wake Forest, 1:30 p.m., RJ/ESPN2 Virginia @ Florida State, 4 p.m., RJ N.C. State @ Georgia Tech, 4 p.m., RJ

Sunday, Feb. 18: Duke @ St. John’s, noon, CBS UNC @ Clemson, 4 p.m., RJ

Tuesday, Feb. 20; N.C. State @ Maryland, 8 p.m., RJ Wednesday, Feb. 21: Georgia Tech @ Duke, 7 p.m., ESPN Wake Forest @ Clemson, 7 p.m. ACC Game of the Week

Maryland at Wake Forest Saturday, 1:30 p.m, Maryland has still been unable to

SCORING AVERAGE Games W. Solomon, Clem 24 J. Forte, UNC J. Williams, Duke 25 S. Battier, Duke J. Dixon, UMd 24 REBOUNDING G No. 229 23 A. Jones, Tech 213 23 T. Watson, UVa J. Shoemaker, Wake 24 189 187 T. Morris, UMd 24 23 K. Inge, NCSU 171 ASSISTS Games S. Blake, UMd J. Williams, Duke Hand, UVa D. Arrington, FSU C. Duhon, Duke

24 25

� Can’t wait to win on the road again... PPG 21.3 21.2 20.4 19.3

17.4 RPG 10.0 9.3 7.9 7.8

7.4 APG 6.9 6.5

23

6.3

24 25

4.9 4.8

FREE THROW PERCENTAGE FTM FTA Pet. J. Dixon, UMd 88 99 .889 .866 97 R. Mason, UVa 112 J. Forte, UNC 100 118 .847 103 .831 124 Donald Hand, UVa .824 74 Jason Capel, UNC 61

,

right the ship after its painful home loss to Duke. Wake Forest has struggled of late, too, losing six of nine. Both teams need this game to get back on track.

FIELD GOAL PERCENTAGE FGM EGA Pet. C. Boozer,| 124 209 .593 .564 K. Lang, UNC 128 227 L. Baxter, UM 120 230 .522 C. Williams, UVa 229 J. Howard, Wake 118 .515

Duke came into its game Wednesday night at Virginia riding a record 24-game ACC road win streak, dating all the way back to 1998. However, the Cavaliers came to play and sent the Blue Devils packing with a 91-89 defeat.The loss gave UNC a comfortable 2-game lead in the ACC standings.

� Logjam in the middle

The middle of the ACC pack is very tightly bunched following Wednesday's play. A pair of upsets, combined with Wake Forest’s payback home win against Georgia Tech, mean that there is a 4-way tie for third in the conference at 6-6. Since only 4 games remain, not much time is left to sort things out. The season’s final two weeks should be interesting, with only two head-to-head matchups between the four teams. Any team wishing to seize the No. 3 seed in the ACC tourney will need to run the table.

� Maryland still reeling from Duke loss—Part Three A common theme ot recent discussions concerning ACC basketball has been the nosedive Maryland has taken since its crushing overtime loss to Duke the night before the Super Bowl. Another chapter was added to the painful saga Wednesday Night. Florida State entered Cole Field House in College Park with just one ACC win and only six total wins under its belt. However, someone forgot to tell the Seminoles they were supposed to get crushed, and FSU pulled off the shocking upset, 74-71, leaving Maryland in bad shape for the postseason at just 6-6 in the conference and 15-9 overall.

“We take our lead from Jason, and when we see him not being Jason

Williams, the hesitancy brings us down. When we’re attacking, we’re Lancelot, slaying the monster.” Duke senior captain Shane Battier, on the point guard’s RECENT STRUGGLES

“Our defense has been as good as necessary since the Duke game. Defense has to be played with heart and emotion. Hopefully we can get those things back into our game.” Maryland coach Gary

Williams, commenting on his team’s recent poor play

“It was a real inferno in there. They gave usa 10to-12-point edge tonight” Pete Gillen,, on UVA FANS ON WEDNESDAY NIGHT’S GAME against Duke, a 91-89 upset

Virginia coach

THE IMPACT OF

win for Virginia


FRIDAY, FEBRUARY

The Chronicle

16, 2001

PAGE 15

Duke clinches share of ACC season title Terrapins utilize zone to slow Duke >

TERPS from page 13

Beard broke a school record for single-season steals, adding her seven

on the night for a season-tally of 77. Even though Beard missed four games this season due to a dislocated thumb, the Frierson, La., native ranks 15th in the ACC with 3.5 steals per game. The freshman broke the 16-yearold mark of 75 formerly held by current assistant coach Joanne Boyle with 16:29 remaining in the second

half. The freshman’s 76th steal capped Duke’s early second-halfrun as Beard stripped a Maryland player and dribbled the length of the court for an easy deuce. “It’s a great honor and I surpassed a great player and a great record,” Beard said of breaking her assistant coach’s record. Terrapin starters Deedee Warley and Marche Strickland combined for 31 of Maryland’s 54 points, but their efforts were not

enough to stifle Duke’s second-half exuberance and Beard’s offensive explosion. Rometra Craig also added her usual scrappiness, as the Blue Devil who scored closest to Beard with nine points and six rebounds. Last night’s matchup with Maryland marked the eighth game Beard has scored 20 or more points this season, and Goestenkors recorded win No. 199 at Duke. The win clinched at least part of the ACC regular-season title as Duke is in first place in the conference with a threegame lead over Florida State (16-8,8-5). “If we come out focused and intense and play our style of basketball for 40 minutes, we should win every game,” Goestenkors said. “That’s the mentality that I think we should have.” Duke

26 26

Maryland Duke FG 3PT Parent 2-3 0-0 Tils 3-6 2-4 Mosch 2-8 0-2 Beard 11-18 1-4 Schweitzer 2-8 2-5 4-12 0-3 Craig 1-3 1-2 Gingrich Gebisa 0-0 .1-1 Gvozdenovic 0-1 0-0 West 0-0 0-0 Brown 0-0 0-0 Matyasovksy 2-4 0-1 White 2-3 0-0 Team Totals 13-47 6-21

Agba

FG 5-10 3-7 6-12 1-1 1-6 1-1 0-5 2-5 0-0

Team Totals

19-47

Maryland

Wartey

Melbourne Strickland Razor Wimbush Daniels Jenkins Harrell

REGAN HSU/THE CHRONICLE

3PT 0-0 0-0 1-4 0-0 0-1 0-0 0-1 0-0 0-0

FT 0-3 0-0 4-5 0-1 0-0 1-3 0-0 0-0 0-0 2-2 2-2 0-0 0-1

@

1

6 0 1 2 0 2 0 2

75 54

PF PTS ATO 3 4 3 0 8 0 0 4 0 8 1 3 3 23 2 2 2 '6 8 5 9 2 3 4 0 3 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 2 0 2 0 0 0 2 0 0 4 4 0 0 1 4 11

MP 34 15 24 33 32 21 11 3 3 3

1 11 9

1

9-17 32 23

75

17 14 200

RPF PTS ATO MP 4 4 15 2 3 23 8 0 1 27 7 2 1 4 16 3 2 32 6 1 2 4 7 25 3 17 32 2 2 3 3 2 1 3 14 0 1 2 0 1 19 8 4 6 0 2 21 0 0 17 1 0 6 0 1-6 15-22 38 21 54 11 20 200

Officials: Stroud, Lewis,

FT 5-8 2-2 3-4 0-1 1-1 0-0 2-4 2-2 0-0

Pickett

SHEANA MOSCH grabs for the ball against Maryland last night in Cameron,

Duke

R 6 1 5 5

49 28

Attendance —3,823

� COMMENTARY from page 13 as the Terps held a 20-11 edge on the boards going into halftime. Goestenkors cited both a lack of patience and intensity as reasons for theBlue Devils’ inability to penetrate the zone. “We’re getting good energy from our seniors, I think they’re great leaders,” she said. “Some of our younger players need to step up a little bit, kiss and Sheana, and really there’s no excuse for it. [kiss] has been sick, but I told her to give two hours of intensity and focus... She got winded very early and I think she mentally gave in to feeling sick.” Duke’s talent managed to break down the zone in the second half, as Beard helped boost the tempo with her steals.Beard also found her way inside the Maryland defense, scoring multiple times over the

Terps’ larger frontcourt. “We just looked to attack more,” Beard said. “They justhad us back on our heels and we attacked with greater intensity [in the second half].” Beard’s analysis was accurate, but the critical question is why Duke suddenly turned on this intensity. Opening the second-half with a 14-3 run, the Blue Devils played a long stretch of near flawless basketball. The turnaround was hardly surprising. The Blue Devils have the physical ability to dominate almost every team in the country. Beard is perhaps the best example of this superiority; it was evident in the frustration Maryland coach Chris Weller showed talking about her team’s inability to stop the freshman. “[The only] way to defend her is to get her on the bench [with fouls],” Weller said. Beard’s second-half performance on both ends of the court seemingly inspired the rest of her team. But Goestenkors has pointed to the team’s youth as a concern, and emphasized that Duke will have to play better over all 40 minutes if it expects to become a championship team.

N.C. State

Reynolds Coliseum 2 p.m. Sunday ESPN2 •

N.C. State leads the series 36-16; the Blue Devils won 72-69 last month in Cameron No. 20 N.C. State 16-8 (7-6) No. 4 DUKE 23-2 (11-2) Coach Kay Yow Coach Gail Goestenkors Guard Ivy Gardner, So. (6.8 ppg) Guard Georgia Schweitzer, Sr. (13.4 ppg) Guard Sheana Mosch, So. (11.1 ppg) Guard Tynesha Lewis, Sr. (13.0 ppg) Forward Carisse Moody, So. (14.3 ppg) Forward Atana Beard, Fr. (17.4 ppg) Forward Rochelle Parent, Sr. (5.2 ppg) Forward Talisha Scales, Jr. (6.0 ppg) Forward Monica Bates, Sr. (4.0 ppg) Center Iciss Tillis, Fr. (10.2 ppg)

ANALYSIS Carisse Moody is one of the premier players in the ACC. She should be able to play close to even with Duke’s super freshman Alana Beard. State, however, has no answer to Iciss Tillis, Duke’s monster post presence. Additionally, Rochelle Parent will help give Duke an edge on the glass with her tough rebounding game.

Outside Bench

Tynesha Lewis is a good scorer, but neither of State s guards can hold a candle to Duke’s starters. Georgia Schweitzer is closing out one of the most storied careers in the history of Duke women’s basketball. Sheana Mosch has kept her scoring average up even now that Beard has returned from injury.

Duke is eight deep, with Rometra Craig and Michele Matyasovsky contributing regularly, and Krista Gingrich beginning to break into the rotation. N.C. State, on the other hand, is deeper; all 12 players on the roster average over 10 minutes per game. The most notable sub is Amy Grant, who averages 8.0 points per game.

THE NOD

M XI

In a game between two of the ACC’s top teams, a State’s home-court advantage gives the Wolfpack the considerable advantage. State also comes into still is streak. Duke winning game with a six-game losing trying to regain the momentum that it lost by at home to Florida State. past State 62 59a In the first game between the two this season, Duke slipped Beard was injured in the first half. This time Duke a but State will have an enthusiastic crowd. This theduW to make Duke Look for real treat for the ESPN2 audience. Tyler Rosen stretch; Duke ekes out a victory, 61-60. iffsu

——————

REGAN HSU/THE CHRONICLE

Duke

hustles to conference title

Alana Beard and the Blue Devils go to Raleigh Sunday to face No. 21 N.C. State. The Wolfpack lost a narrow 72-69 game in Cameron last month.


The Chronicle

PAGE 16

FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 16, 2001

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