m
Sports ■
LmJ
■ '
1
■
|
|
J
TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 27. 2001
|_|
r\f\ I
I II ill
%
CIRCULATION 16.000
111
■
I
I
W
%
I j
I
Another comeback victory?
I
Maryland again on Senior Night. See page 19
|_J I 1
I
I I
■
I 5 i
J
i
t
i>g=3
Last time, Jason Williams thrilled Duke fans with a trey late in the game. Tonight, Duke battles
THE INDEPENDENT DAILY AT DUKE UNIVERSITY
WWW.CHRONICLE.DUKE.EDU
VOL. 96. NO. 105
Five candidates Lee attacks misguided media hope for top job By MATT BRUMM The Chronicle
Most DSG presidential hopefuls are focusing on financial aid, parking, space and residential life, but other issues—alcohol, course evaluations and DSG’s role —are coming into play. By GREG PESSIN The Chronicle
One of the most successful years in Duke Student Government’s recent history has given this year’s presidential candidates plenty to build on and plenty to reinvent. The five-way race of all junior men boasts candidates of varying DSG experience, varying outside experience and, in some The Chronicle looks at the cases, vastly different ideas, presidential candidates and i n fact, the candidates’ their main initiatives in top three platform initiatives today’s issue. overlap in four areas: fin an-
SKSrasr* initiatives, see 6.
But three other issues—aicohol, the role of DSG and course evaluations—stand at the top of only one platform each. Current Vice President for Community Interaction Sean Young has the most experience of the candidates, followed closely by DSG Chief of Staff Jimmy Carter. initiatiupc
page r
qpo nano
—
Two-year legislator and chief of DSG’s internal audit Vik Devisetty and Internet start-up guru David. Cummings, also a legislator, have tried their hands at DSG executive elections before. Devil’s Delivery Service CEO and Upperclass Residential Life Review Committee member C.J. Walsh is running as the outside candidate.
Wearing an orange-striped cap, Spike Lee emerged onto the stage of the Reynolds Theater to the roar of thunderous applause and a standing ovation before he spoke his first word. It would be the first of many excited audience reactions for Lee as he proceeded to castigate mainstream media for excluding and misrepresenting black Americans for over a hundred years. Lee spoke before a crowd of more than 600 in the packed theater, describing how the powerful influences of television and film “have been used [in the past] to debase African Americans” as “subhumans.” The director of several films including Malcolm X, Summer of Sam and Do the Right Thing, Lee said the international influence of the United States is derived not from its superior military might, but from its enormous film and television resources. “It’s very important to realize the power of images,” he said. “The reason why the United States ofAmerica has become the most powerful country in the his-
tory of civilization is Coca-Cola, Nike... television and music. That
is how the United States domi-
JENNY ROBINSON/THE CHRONICLE
SPIKE LEE, famous filmmaker and social activist, preaches to a sold-out crowd about the disastrous effects of negative portrayals of black Americans in film and television.
nates the world—through film, television and goodies.” Although the United States has a commanding entertainment
culture, Lee said that black
artists are underutilized. They appear regularly on television
and in movies today, but Lee cautioned that this is not indicative of their potential contribution to the industry. “We can’t get tricked just because we have had a lot of black See SPIKE LEE on page 9
Duke squeaks out Senior Night victory over Tar Heels By BRODY GREENWALD The Chronicle
72 After every practice, having just finished off a series of sprints UNC 67 and an overall exhausting workout, Duke’s players saunter over to the sidelines and grab a drink of water or a bag of ice to help quell their aching muscles. But not Alana Beard. Duke
Heel Cherie
SHEANA MOSCH drives the lane late in the second half against Tar over UNC. victory Lea. Mosch scored nine of the team’s last 13points in Duke’s
Adopt-A-Grandparent has
a ball,
When Duke coach Gail Goestenkors blows a whistle on practice, Beard walks over to the freethrow line and begins her own routine. Last night against the visiting Tar Heels (14-13, 7-9 in the ACC), Beard’s extra practice paid off in a big way for No. 4 Duke (25-3,13-3), which closed out its fourth straight 20-win season with a 7267 triumph on senior night and Goestenkors’ 38th birthday. With her team down by two points and 13.7 seconds remaining in the game, North Carolina coach Sylvia Hatchell called timeout in order to ice Beard, who was about to shoot perhaps the biggest one-and-one of her career. As coolly as she does after every practice, Beard buried her free throws and the Tar Heels’ NCAA tournament hopes along with them, barring a surprise run through the ACC tournament by seventhseeded North Carolina. “I was calm; I was in that situation once before this season,” said Beard, who was named national freshman of the year yesterday by Sports Illustrated for Women. “Nothing can put pressure on you in that situation except yourself. It’s just mental.”
page
10 � Essence
editor
Although her 77.8 free-throw percentage, second among Duke’s regulars, speaks for itself, there were more reasons than Beard’s season-long consistency at the charity stripe for all 8,257 fans in attendance to have faith in Duke’s forward. “She’s one of those players that thrive on that
type of situation,” Goestenkors said ofBeard. “We have several people like that on the team, which
makes you comfortable as a coach. I think everybody on the team felt like she would put those two free throws down.” After UNC guard Coretta Brown drove the length of the court to again close the gap to two points, the Tar Heels quickly called another timeout with 7.4 seconds left. During the break, Goestenkors scrapped the initial play she intended to run and opted for one that was slightly more familiar, or at least it should have been. Hatchell saw the exact same play nearly a year ago, but her players fell for it hook-line-andsinker as if Goestenkors had just invented it during the timeout. Early last March, the Blue Devils secured their first ever ACC tournament championship by eliminating the Tar Heels, who bit too hard on an inbound play with 12 seconds left. Team captain Lauren Rice took the ball and hurled it down the court to a streaking Georgia Schweitzer, who hauled in the baseball pass and buried UNC by assisting a game-breaking basket that capped Duke’s three-point victory in the tournament finals. See WOMEN’S BASKETBALL on page 23 �
speaks
in Page today, page
11
.
The Chronicle
Newsfile
•
World
page 2
altering Iraqi sanctions Secretary of State Colin Powell said that he had won agreement from Arab nations on a plan to modify sanctions on Iraq by letting in more civilian
supplies but sharpening on strategic items such as weapons.
controls
Tribunal finds Croat guilty of war crimes In its first trial of a senior Balkan political figure, the U.N. war crimes
tribunal found former Croat leader Dario Kordic guilty of
Bosnian
playing an important role in a campaign against Muslim civilians.
South Carolina abortion regulations upheld The U.S. Supreme Court let stand a 27-page book of regulations for South Carolina abortion clinics that doctors there call a thinly veiled attempt to undermine abortion rights.
Judges’ questioning favorable to Microsoft Federal appeals court judges questioned lawyers By SUSAN SACHS New York Times News Service representing the Justice Department and 19 states TEL AVIV, Israel Despite about last year’s decision warnings that they were selling that found Microsoft had their souls for a scrap of power, repeatedly violated anleaders of the Labor Party agreed titrust law, suggesting Monday to join a unity government that many elements were led by Ariel Sharon, the right-wing vulnerable to reversal. retired general who was overwhelmingly elected prime minister Republicans present three weeks ago. energy bill to Senate The passionately debated deciCalling the nation’s ension gives Sharon the chance to ergy problem a looming national security crisis, form a broad coalition and possibly secure a respite from the political Senate Republicans introduced the first major bill instability that has afflicted most recent governments. in a decade to overhaul enAbout two-thirds of the Labor ergy policy and promote Party’s 1,700-member governing domestic oil exploration. Yugoslavia grants
amnesty to hundreds
The Yugoslav Parliament passed a long-awaited amnesty law that will free several hundred Kosovo Albanians held in Serbian prisons since the war in Kosovo in 1999.
TOMORROW: {
RAIN High: 50 Low: 34
iff 111
“I cried over beauty, I cried over pain, and the other time I cried because I felt nothing. I’m just a cliche of myself.” Keanu Reeves -
O
W
O
o
c
Z
T3
O m T) >
C
w
»
m
20 OFF %
TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 27, 2001
Two-thirds of Israel’s Labor Party voted in favor of Ariel Sharon’s offer
Weather TODAY: PARTLY CLOUDY High: 61 Low: 39
National
Labor Party joins unity government
FROM WIRE REPORTS
Powell moves towards
&
body voted to accept Sharon’s powersharing offer after a rowdy four-hour meeting that divided political comrades and exposed the wounds of a bruising electoral defeat. The enticement to enter into a political marriage with a man long considered Labor’s ideological archenemy are eight Cabinet seats, about a third of the total, including the high-profile ministries of defense and foreign affairs. In a subtle snub to Sharon, however, the Labor Party’s central committee voted to keep for itself the job of deciding who will fill which ministries. The party is to select its
ministers Thursday. Shimon Peres, who is the party’s ’
senior statesperson, its likely interim leader and in line for one of the major ministries, had expected to negotiate the personnel choices directly with Sharon, according to Israeli political analysts. Ehud Barak, the departing prime minister, who was defeated by Sharon, announced last week that he would not join the new government, The coalition agreement, billed by unity partisans as proof that Labor had already softened
Sharon’s hard line, includes a
promise that the new government will not abandon the goal of trading land for a final peace with the Palestinians See ISRAEL on page 17 li-
Bush to address Congress, nation tonight By SUE KIRCHOFF and ANNE KORNBLUT The Boston Globe
WASHINGTON In his first major address to the nation, President George W. Bush mil try to convince the public tonight that the projected budget surplus is large enough to afford a major tax cut, increase domestic spending, protect Social Security and still have about $1 trillion left in reserve. But the budget Bush plans to outline in bold strokes to a joint session of Congress may raise as many questions as it answers. Even his strongest Republican supporters say the Bush plan will have to undergo major changes. The speech, which Bush hinted will be briefer than major addresses by his predecessors, marks the begin-
ning of a long and potentially treacherous stretch for the new president: turning his campaign generalities into law with hard dollars to back them up. Bush has been reluctant to release specifics on his spending plans—Monday he said he would not do so in his speech, or even in releasing the budget blueprint Tuesday. When asked whether he planned to name specific budget targets, the president replied, “No.” The president has a panoply of promises on the table: A $1.6 trillion tax cut, shoring up Medicare and Social Security, increasing funding for education and the Pentagon and finishing a five-year drive to double the budget for the National Institutes of Health. The administration also pledges to attack the $3.4 trillion federal debt.
PAGE 3
The Chronicle
TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 27, 2001
GPSC considers mentoring ideas By JENNIFER WLACH The Chronicle
This week’s Graduate and Professional Student Council meeting covered everything from international mentoring programs and the upcoming elections to the ever-present issue of parking. The meeting opened with an announcement from GPSC Vice President Ryan Opel regarding the establishment of a graduate student-faculty roundtable. Opel, a second-year graduate student in law and psychology, explained that the intention of the group is to “bring together the various presidents of student government organizations to provide network knowledge.” Opel was followed by committee reports from Ombudsperson Tomalei Vess and Attorney General Carol Chancey. Both women discussed the university’s attempts to rectify the parking problem. Vess said the current parking situation will worsen with anticipated building extensions on the Divinity School scheduled to start within the next two years. Vess continued with a review of the University Schedule Committee’s attempts to lengthen the reading period for undergraduates. Vess explained that “a proposal was created giving undergraduate students a third reading period in the middle of exams week.” She added that the committee endorsed this plan because it does not add to the time allotted for exam week or cut into the semester. Maria Park, Commencement Speaker Committee representative, again requested nominations for a guest speaker for the 2002 commencement ceremony. Park said the committee wanted to “avoid political figures, as that is all Duke students see at undergraduate commencement ceremonies.” The meeting continued with guest speaker Jessica Anduiza, a program assistant at the International House. Anduiza asked GPSC for feedback on the possible creation of a mentoring program for international graduate students. The group seemed to support the idea of a group mentoring program, while GPSC President Cybelle McFadden proposed the combination of several forms of mentoring. Opel followed with an announcement of the upcoming Gradhoops, a charity basketball tournament to be held in Cameron Indoor Stadium. McFadden closed with requests for nominations for GPSC elections, scheduled for March 19.
Ash Wednesday Services
U
Mffii
Ash Wednesday w #
iiuke llniumitty Clutpd
Wednesday, February 28 8:00 a.m. & 5:15 p.m. Ecumenical Services of Word & Table with Imposition of Ashes
rHERINGTON/THE CHRONICLE
RANIA MASRI (right) and Simon Harak explain why they defy U.S. sanctions against Iraq and bring contraband such as toys, medicine and pencils to Iraqi children. Masri, a United Nations representative, says more than 500,000 children have died because of the sanctions.
Speakers make plea for Iraqi people film segments of the dying people and destroyed landscapes and narrating the images with powerful stories from his visits. The group he travels with, Voices in the Wilderness, formed about five years ago “in open defiance of the sanctions.” They bring sanctioned materials like toys, medicine and pencils to Iraqi children, an act to which the United States government has responded with threats offines and prison sentences. “If I were to fly planes over Iraq and drop bombs, I would be a hero,” he said. “But when I bring toys and medicine, 1 get threatened.... I would hope that after hearing this that at least one student from this room will join me in my next trip.” . In contrast to Harak’s emotional appeal, Masri gave arguments about every part of the issue, from whether Iraq has weapons of mass destruction to the media’s distribution of “disinformation.” She stressed that Saddam Hussein is not the same as Iraq and that the sanctions are hurting real people. “The media tells us that Iraq equals Saddam equals weapons of mass destruction,” Masri said. “What it
By WHITNEY BECKETT The Chronicle
The Remembering Omran Bus Tour stopped at Duke last night to present its case for lifting sanctions against Iraq. The two-hour talk, led by speakers Rania Masri, a United Nations representative from the Arab Women’s Solidarity Association, and Simon Harak, a Jesuit priest, introduced HIWAR, a new Duke organization focused on political and social injustice in the Middle East and North Africa. Freshman Yousuf Al-Bulushi, co-founder of HIWAR, hoped the organization’s first event would inform students about both the club and the issues regarding U.S.-Iraq relations. “People don’t know the influence our government has in that part of the world,” Al-Bulushi said. “It’s important for students to be informed.” As part of their three-day speaking tour at the Triangle’s universities and churches, Masri and Harak took turns alternating between logical and emotional appeal, making no attempt to conceal that they hoped to persuade the 50-person audience. Harak, who is also a former ethics professor, petitioned the audience to join him on the group’s next trip to Iraq, showing
SOHO SHOES
concept store for men & women
See IRAQ on page
Charles David Kenneth Cole Nine West DKNY BCBG Nalha Studio Camper Via Spiga Coach Donald J. Pliner bebe •
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
11
The Chronicle
PAGE 4
TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 27, 2001
Meet the candidates: Five juniors jockey for position The Chronicle
The Duke Student Government presidential candidates’ experiences vary from DSG vice presidencies to board positions on clubs and independent student corporations. In their three years here, each of these junior men has enjoyed his share of successes and failures.
Jimmy Carter Junior Jimmy Carter is hoping that Thursday’s vote will put him in similar company with his more famous -namesake. Currently DSG’s chief of staff, Carter was charged last fall with making the cabinet a significant part of DSG. A hodgepodge of different officeholders with varied backgrounds, the cabinet was spurred by Carter to attend legislative sessions and complete individual projects. Jimmy Carter The self-proclaimed perfectionist has at times this year put perfection in front of cabinet productivity, becoming too aggressive and unforgiving with cabinet members. At other times, though, he has managed to inspire a handful of the 25 president-appointed officials to complete projects ranging from a Krzyzewskiville community service project to an elections guidebook. As a freshman, the star legislator had his eyes set on the vice presidency for facilities and athletics, but lost by 11.6 points. Through the campaign, though, he earned general praise from his DSG colleagues and ran on a platform promoting his then-legislator project—often repeated but never successful—of building bus shelters on West and East campuses and pushing the administration toward a long-term parking solution.
Two years later, the latter initiative remains on his platform just as it is still a significant issue for the entire University. “I see DSG’s role as a lobbyist of the student body,” Carter said. “We owe it, for any student who comes to us with a problem, to at least be willing to educate and talk about the issues.”
Sometimes there are so many ideas that few can actually be implemented. He hopes to combat that tendency by surrounding himself with associates who will keep him focused. “I hope to have given it 110 percent all the time,” he said. “I would like to leave knowing that I followed through and gave it the best of my ability.”
Vik Devisetty
David Cummings
After developing a sour taste for DSG and many An entrepreneur in the truest sense, junior David Cummings started his own software programming student governance organizations during his freshman year, Vik Devisetty decided he firm when he was in eighth his wanted to effect change. Since then-signasold grade. He then, the aggressive, straightture program—which offered forward junior has thrown himusers a pop-up quote or word of America self into serving students, Online the day—on whether by planning last year’s and won national awards. It is Day of Classes concert or Last this innovation that Cummings by pushing to extend the fall hopes to add to the DSG presireading period dency. “I go after issues that are Cummings made a run at the tangible to students, relevant mid-year election for a replaceto student organizations and Vik Devisetty ment executive vice president, David Cummings important to student life,” Dehoping to gain valuable manshould be agerial experience, but failed. He has never led a DSG visetty said. “At the end of the year, students I think some and way,’ me in to ‘DSG affected committee or task force. Still, he thinks he can over- able say, last two years in my for the me ideas. can that about you say his to good commitment come the weakness with roles on DSG and Campus Council.” In his time at Duke, Cummings has built a reputaLast year, the Board of Trustees solicited studenttion as an idea man. He owns a web consulting firm solutions for social life on campus. Devisetstudentgenerated has a proposed housed on Ninth Street and transportation, dining run laundry pick-up and delivery service and an online ty’s plan to improve after-hours reading periods was the during library options acand interface for the points system to facilitate easier idea that was carried to fruition. The only notice: have taken cess for vendors. And people Devisetty ran for DSG president last year on a platFuqua School of Business asked him to teach a short form of reforming the financial aid office, evaluating he has a full house led course and for three semesters, the use of Trent Dormitory as,swing space and allowentrepreneurship. and capital course on venture advanced placement credits to count for distribuBut all this commitment—which includes a spot on ing He carried just 9 percent ofthe vote requirements. directors a seat tion and the Duke Business Club’s board of lost 7.6 From that experience, Devisetty by points. and with his rapid-fire Legislature—combined in the DSG See PROFILES on page 9 idea generation has often spread Cummings too thin. >
WEIGHING YOUR
OPTIONS ■
By GREG PESSIN
gj **
»>W
*3 ****>v 3f»
PhD Career Symposium Friday, March 2 9:00 am -1:30 pm
Doctoral candidates in all departments are invited to attend this event which will take place at the Freeman Center on the corner of Campus Swift Drives (on the East-West Campus bus line) &
•
•
•
Get insider info from Duke alumni who use their PhDs in non-traditional careers. Get advice on finding employment in the government, business, and non-profit sectors. Please register in advance for the luncheon by logging on to the Career Center Web site http://cdc.stuaff.duke.edu Click on the “Grad Student” icon on the right of the screen.
The event will feature panel sessions, a luncheon, plenary speaker, and exhibits Sponsored by the Duke University Career Center & the Graduate School
The Chronicle
TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 27, 2001
RDER www.canipustlopiBt.coni 1.800.952.6297
CHHPUS fIOHISI 700 Ninth Street � 280-5040 Monday Friday: 9-6pm -
�
*
200-1802
Saturday: 9-4pm
The Asian/Paciflc Studies Institute and The Chinese Populations and Socioeconomic Studies Center Duke University
#
9 • §
jointly announce the
"Distinguished Lecture Series 2001* • •
• •
• •
• •
9 • • •
• •
Chinese Institutions: Historical and Sociological Analysis
Professor Dwight Perkins Department of Economics and John F. Kennedy School of Government Harvard University China's Commercial Prowess in Historical Perspective Thursday, March 1, 2001 3:00 p.m. Carpenter Board Room (223 Perkins Library) Duke University West Campus For more information, contact Paula Evans at (919) 684-2604 or paula@duke.edu
• •
• *
• •
• •
9 9 • •
• •
PAGES
The Chronicle
PAGE 6
TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 27, 2001
Space, parking, aid figure prominently in platforms has control over the Von Canon rooms, all auditoriums and many dining areas. In fact, he said, Catotti will soon have control over almost every social space on campus. The Duke Student Government presidential candidates’ top platform items overlap on four key issues, and Young approaches the matter quite differently, seeing three other issues are addressed in one platform each. as the main issue cultural organizations’ need for office and programmable social space. He champions the establishment of a multicultural center with permanent Social space and diversity program funding, so that groups do not have to spend The most often mentioned priority, social space, is a time fundraising every year. In his vision, the funding top issue for Jimmy Carter, Vik Devisetty, C.J. Walsh and would be flexible enough that new cultural organizations Sean Young. But even on this issue, the candidates differ could share the pie without worrying about how much funding other groups would get. Young would also fight on the best solutions for fostering an equitable, convestrongly for more recruitment of Native American stufor social And of programming. many nient atmosphere the issues of security costs and space assignment that dents and push the University to follow through on its the candidates attempt to tackle will likely be addressed commitment to diversity. and settled in an administrative report on social space to
By GREG PESSIN The Chronicle
be released later this week. Carter supports creating subsidies for organizations with no assigned West Campus space so they can hold on-campus programs. He would also like to establish a fund to help pay for transportation to off-campus events. Devisetty would also focus on making social space available to all student groups, but he would do so by making the Devil’s Den cheaper to rent, helping build a deck outside the back of the Tap Room and empowering students in discussions about Bryan Center renovations. He would also move to raise money to subsidize security costs for groups with no on-campus space. Associate Vice President for Auxiliary Services Joe Pietrantoni said the-Devil’s Den bears basic costs that must be paid in order for anyone to use the building. In order to offer the facility free to students, he said, senior administrators would have to offer a funding source. Walsh believes there is “too much and too little” usable on-campus space. He cites the need to book Von Canon up to a year in advance and the confusion associated with figuring out which department can assign out different spaces. He would propose giving all responsibility for social space assignments to the Event Advising Center and would support a fund for security costs. But Pietrantoni said most of that is taken care of already. Event Management Director Chuck Catotti now
Parking
Parking enforcement and allocation has spread from
a campus-wide source offrustration to three candidates’ agendas. While Carter and Young agree that Auxiliary Services should open gated lots more often, Young, Carter and David Cummings agree that revenues from tickets and towing should go into a parking fund. Cummings would target these funds at increasing the number of campus parking spaces or lowering ticket penalties. He would also ask Duke to re-examine its outsourcing of towing services to determine whether a Duke-operated system could be more cost-efficient and whether these savings could be passed on to students. Young would prefer to use these funds for a long-term parking expansion. More importantly, he sees the primary problem as one of arbitrary enforcement. Some meters, he says, will go unchecked for a semester and then will be checked several days in a row. Young also says he would try to make administrators more sensitive to times when they must allow exceptions to parking rules, like during men’s basketball wristband distribution. He would ask that all lots be opened on weekends. All three candidates cite using the ticket money to boost parking spaces and to eventually build a parking garage—a $lO,OOO-per-space endeavor the University
ANNOUNCING A GRADUATION SERVICES EVENT
GET SQUARED AWAY
Take care of all your graduation needs at once. SENIOR SALUTE! March 2 (Wednesday-Friday ONLY!) 10:00 am 4:00 pm Bryan Center Von Canon 'C
February 28
-
-
-
•
•
‘
•
Take Cap
&
Gown Portraits
Order Graduation Announcements Order Class Rings Receive other graduation information Sponsored by Duke University Stores
TOCTTJKTQ* I JUu ®
will not undertake for several years. And money for new parking solutions, like better lots or increased security, hardly seems to be an issue. This summer, for example, Duke spent $598,000 renovating West Campus lots alone, by repaving them and adding new gates, fences, cameras, monitoring booths and security vehicles, Pietrantoni, who ultimately oversees parking and shares responsibility for enforcement, would not support the ticketing money going to him and Campus Police because the fund goes toward general infrastructure like sidewalk and road repair and to Duke’s lingering needs. “It would no doubt cause a new revenue stream for the deck to appear,” he said, “but it would take away from the general hind. It’s just a matter of moving money from one bank account to another. I don’t see that Duke gains by it. It would have to be a new source that doesn’t take away from something else.” Carter would take his request further by lobbying for all gates to be raised after 5 p.m. on weekdays. He would also push for more policing of all lots. But Pietrantoni said that raising the gates on weekends or evenings would tread on the security administrators were trying to create by gating lots. “A large investment was made in the Blue Zone to secure it and add police protection,” Pietrantoni said. “The gates were put down for safety reasons, too. Duke has been reluctant to open them and let anyone come in, because then the fences shouldnt even be there. There would be a loss of security.”
Financial aid Appearing as the number-one priority of both Carter and Cummings and the number-three priority of Devisetty, financial aid was also a major concern for former DSG President Lisa Zeidner, Trinity ’OO. But this twoyear DSG staple has not yet been fully tackled, these candidates say. While Carter would focus on making the financial aid office more accessible, Cummings and Devisetty propose more sweeping reforms. All three agree that the car policy—'which the University will likely make more lenient—needs to be tweaked or eliminated. See
ISSUES
on page
7 �
TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 27, 2001
The Chronicle
PAGE?
Alcohol, residential life are peripheral issues to some � ISSUES from page 6 Carter believes the policy should be removed altogether, even though the University has remained steadfast in its commitment to maintain the policy in some form. He would also like to continue his work on the financial aid guidebook, an all-encompassing resource containing information on everything from how to find loans and grants to how to manage credit and debt. He would continue to push for more accessibility in the office by adding an 800 number, for example. Cummings thinks the office’s award structure may be inefficient. For example, because students’ financial aid packages are discounted for every outside grant they receive, Cummings believes the University has created a disincentive for students to seek outside scholarships. Furthermore, he thinks Duke should begin awarding money beyond students’ demonstrated need. He said Princeton University currently awards $3,000 extra. Cummings thinks that given Duke’s relative financial position, it should give out a bit less than this. But Director of Undergraduate Financial Aid Jim Belvin said Cummings has his facts wrong and that his proposal is illegal. Federal law, he said, requires that schools not distribute any more money than demonstrated need. Furthermore, as a school that meets 100 percent demonstrated need, Duke is legally required to make a dollar-for-dollar reduction to aid award when a student receives an outside scholarship. Duke already makes outside scholarship money replace the loans and work-study portion of the awards first. “I believe the student does benefit from receiving outside awards,” Belvin said. “Most important is the fact that outside awards re-
duce loan debt at graduation. I believe that lower loan debt at graduation is a very real value.” Devisetty would commit to following up on DSG’s summer 2000 financial aid report. Although administrators have promised that 95 percent of the report’s recommendations will be implemented, Devisetty would push for the rest. Specifically, he would ask that rather than using the age of undergraduates’ cars, the financial aid office base its award on the cars’ financial value. But Belvin says that because the blue book—which dictates standard vehicle values—includes both values and years, basing the penalty solely on value could be impossible. “As you can imagine, the values vary based on the year the vehicle was manufactured,” he said. “I am not sure how values could be established without using the year the vehicle was manufactured.”
Residential life Devisetty and Young both identified upperclass residential life as top platform issues, with Devisetty focusing solely on giving students more voice in the development of the new housing assignments plan. Young has a broader view that tackles both long- and short-term issues. He would encourage the administration to foster an identity for independents over the next few years. He would push for an allocation system like the Main West corridor plan that solidifies independents’ place in a legitimate community. He would also push administrators to set a specific timeline for Central Campus renovations and to keep Trent Dormitory’s swing space allocation sensitive to independents’ needs.
Alcohol
jTjp
Perhaps the most dangerous and lingering issue of student health and culture, alcohol appears as only one candidate’s top platform initiative. Walsh, a member of Pi Kappa Alpha fraternity, said administrators need to clean up the amnesty clause by clarifying the circumstances that allow students who have overconsumed alcohol to evade punishment. He said students spend far too much time speculating about the terms of the
amnesty clause rather than helping others. The alcohol policy, he says, should hold accountable the individuals who put the drink to their lips rather than groups who host parties. As a result, he would encourage students to drink responsibly and would lobby administrators to establish a policy that does not push alcohol off campus. He hopes these changes would bridge the divide between drinkers and nondrinkers.
fi
Course evaluations
Cummings, a member ofDSG’s academic affairs committee, holds student access to course evaluations as a top concern. Faculty have been wary, if not violently re-
sistant, of releasing the information to students, arguing that students could slander professors with unfairly negative reviews. These reviews, they argue, could affect their course enrollments and departmental funding. Cummings, though, believes that DSG must publish students’ opinions of courses and said that if the faculty is unbending, he will implement an independent course evaluation web site he has already designed. But even this could run up against legal challenges, as DSG’s connection to Duke could make the University liable for libelous comments.Last year, DSG was stopped from implementing a similar plan for legal reasons.
DSG’s role While Walsh is the only candidate who explicitly prioritizes altering DSG’s mood, Young, Cummings and De-
visetty each push the issue. Walsh says that DSG must be as accountable to the students as his company is to its
shareholders. As a result, he would push legislators, executives and cabinet members to talk to people face-to-face to solicit feedback and opinions. For bis part, Young says he would attempt to infuse DSG with the same sense of accountability, especially by using DSG’s constituency e-mail system. Devisetty, through his work on the audit, would advocate several smaller initiatives toward this goal. Cummings, though, would take a stronger stance, slashing the size of the organization in order to increase productivity. By reducing the number of legislators, he said, executives would better be able to manage the work of the whole organization.
If you don’t have all the answers, make sure you have all the questions. I
I
JOIN US
FOR AN FOR
INFORMATION
INSIGHT
SESSION FOR
BUSINESS
JUNIORS
ANALYST
When: Thursday, March 1 Time: 7:30 p.m. Location: Bryan Center, Von Canon B Deciding what to do with your future after you graduate is one of the biggest decisions you will ever have to make.
Do you know enough about your options to make that choice? To introduce you to the phenomenal range of possibilities that a career in management consulting can offer, McKinsey Company is hosting Insight Business Analyst, a unique event for highly-talented college juniors from diverse academic backgrounds. During a weekend away as our guest, you will capture an insider’s view of McKinsey, learn about the work we do and experience our method of problem solving. The program also includes an evaluation process that will serve as the first step in discussions with McKinsey regarding a business analyst position. Most important, you will have an opportunity to talk with McKinsey consultants to find out if management consulting is right for you. &
Please contact sissy_bennett@mckinsey.com for more information on Insight Business Analyst or to apply, visit our web site at www.mckinsey.com/insightba starting March 2. Applications must be received by March 26.
I
The Chronicle
PAGES ■■ ■
TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 27, 2001 ■■ ■
Elec PRESIDENT
•
PRESIDENT
PRESIDENT
•
•
PRESIDENT
w
PRESIDENT
•
PRESIDENT
PRESIDENT
•
Jimmy Carter
David Cummings
Dedication, Experience, and Innovation
Looking at Duke University, I see an incredible college environment rich with history, intellect, and beauty. Our school, while being prestigious, still has much room for improvement. The most necessary changes need to come directly from within the student body and are not easily perceived by the administration. Herein lies the role of Duke Student Government the intermediary between students and administrators. Through DSG, the President has the unique opportunity to bring together a diverse group of people in the pursuit of making Duke a better place. I believe the president should be very visible and active on campus. With open dialogue, clear goals, and strong determination, the President will influence and shape the short term and long term future of Duke. As president, 1 will bring a variety of talents and assets to the position. With my leadership skills, 1 will motivate and guide team members to make positive changes at Duke. I want to bring the very essence of an entrepreneur passion, vision, motivation, and teamwork to DSG.
These three words describe me, my work at Duke, and will shape my presidency. No candidate is more dedicated to reforming financial aid, providing equitable social space for all student organizations, and restructuring parking on campus. While at Duke, 1 have been a proactive student, participating in DSG as an East Campus Legislator, President Pro Tempore and, most recently as DSG Chief of Staff. In these positions, 1 have played an active role in developing student initiatives, from advocating the construction of bus shelters and kiosks as a freshman to working with DSG Cabinet and executive members on improving DSG student relations. 1 currently serve as co-chair of the DSG Task Force on Financial Aid, working tirelessly to improve resources for students and parents in the financial aid system. As DSG Chief of Staff, I worked diligently on a voter registration initiative, bringing together a multitude of cultural groups in an effort to encourage students to “Rock the Vote”. As president, I will continue to work on expanding student and parent resources to financial aid, including the development of a comprehensive Financial Aid Guidebook. To aid those organizations without affordable access to social space, 1 will push for the institutionalization of subsidies to lower the cost of social space rentals, housekeeping, and security. To address parking issues, I will fight for student access to all parking lots after 5:00 PM weekdays and advocate open access on the weekends. Additionally, 1 will lobby for monies collected from ticketing and towing be set aside to develop long term parking goals. As president, I will work to ensure that fraternities and selective living groups have secured housing on West Campus. I will also work to publicize and revamp various DSG services; establishing standardized hours for Check Gashing, increasing student access to the DSG lawyer, institutionalizing a DSG Student Academic Loan program and improving student utilization features on the DSG web page. Give me the opportunity to fight for you! Elect Jimmy Carter DSG President on Thursday, March Ist! -
Vik
•
fS -
-
•
•
Areas I want to target specifically: social space on campus
multi-cultural interaction
As a member of Duke Student Government and Campus Council, I’ve been intricately involved in formulating policies and programming events that directly impacted the lives of nearly every Duke student. As DSG President, 1 will use my experience, personality, and passion to make the organization more productive, more accountable, and more visible. Most importantly, 1 will pursue issues that are tangible to student needs, relevant to student groups, and important to student life. One of my priorities will be to keep Duke’s social life on campus. I will advocate an alcohol policy that encourages safe and responsible drinking, rather than a policy that unrealistically tries to rid alcohol from the campus culture. 1 believe programming space like commons rooms should remain available for student organizations and selective living groups to use, but new space must also be constructed or made available. This includes making the Devil’s Den affordable to use, allowing the Armadillo Grill to build a porch outside of the Taproom, and renovating the entire Bryan Center to make it the hub of student life on campus. 1 think it’s a disgrace that the University does not have adequate space for multicultural groups to meet and hold events. The building of a new multicultural center is an important step in facilitating interaction between different student groups and improving diversity at Duke 1 also plan to work with other student groups to devise a swing space plan that is fair and equitable to all parties, develop a better advising system for Curriculum 2000, and continue the work done on financial aid reform. From lengthening the reading period to bringing the Indigo Girls to Duke, 1 have shown that 1 don’t just promise results, but rather 1 deliver them. On March 1, please vote Vik Devisetty for DSG President.
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
on campus
professor accountability through course evaluations information access through technology (e.g. more computers on campus, a web interface to distribution requirements and curriculum 2000) these I encourage you to visit my campaign web site to understand how I’ll go about achieving others; http://www.duke.edu/~ddc6/ and goals If you have any questions or comments please email me immediately at ddc6@duke.edu. Respectfully yours, David Cummings •
•
C.J. Walsh
Devisetty
Drew
-
Sean Young
but I’ve been working for Duke students I’ve never attended a DSG meeting nevertheless. I am the CEO of Devil’s Delivery Service, INC., spearheading the efforts of over 100 students who bring you George’s, Bull City and Cattleman’s on points. I’ve been on Campus Council for the last two years: first as Quad Rep and now cochairing the Last Day of Classes concert. Having just signed “Guster,” we’re working on “Run DMC.” I have experience with the Annual Review Committe and I now sit on the Upperclass Residential Life Committee, planning the next Duke upperclass experience. I’m also a brother of Pi Kappa Alpha fraternity, but you can see that I’m not your average frat guy. Yes, I’m the outside candidate. But I bring an efficient and no-nonsense perspective to Duke Student Government. As a businessman and programmer, I enjoy digging into my work. I’ve worked in many aspects ofDuke life, but my DSG Presidency will be a synthesis of all my issues as the ultimate student liason to the administration. 1 support an alcohol policy that encourages school-wide responsible drinking and clarifies the amnesty clause. 1 support an increase in the availability of and decrease in the cost of social space for nonresidential organizations. I support separating automobiles from financial-aid concerns. 1 support a parking plan that speeds the discovery of a parking spot. I support the creation of opportunities for increased faculty-student interaction. Finally, I support a DSG that runs itself like a business. DDS and I are responsible to our shareholders. DSG is not responsible to its students. That will change in my term as DSG President. If you seek a dynamic DSG that takes input from the students and brings change from them, I’d appreciate your vote for me, Thursday, March Ist. ...
Ensign
Experience is perhaps the most important quality in selecting an effective Vice President. The Executive Vice President must insure the smooth operation of DSG and manage all internal issues that may hinder DSG from carrying out its responsibility to the student body. To do this the Executive VP must have a complete understanding of DSG, its rules, its procedures, its members, and its goals. After serving this semester as Executive VP, last year as Vice President for Academic Affairs, and as a legislator, I have the experience and knowledge it takes to he effective as Executive VP.
Next year 1 hope to increase DSG’s interaction with student groups and allow students that are interested in particular issues to participate in DSG’s discussions and decisions. While most students don t have the time to serve on DSG full-time, DSG should allow students to participate on issues they are interested in. Similarly, I want to include representatives from major groups on the Legislature, so the Legislature can be a more representative body and consider the issues affecting these groups on campus. Additionally, 1 will form committees to study the issues of alcohol policy, financial aid, annual review, programming space, and other major issues facing students at Duke. The Executive Vice President is the number two officer in DSG who is often responsible for the day-today operation of DSG. An ineffective Executive VP usually means chaos for the organization, so it is vitally important the officer have extensive DSG experience to make sure DSG operates smoothly. The student body and its representatives have elected me several times to positions that ideally prepare me to be Executive Vice President, including Executive Vice President. 1 believe these experiences will prepare me for continuing as Executive VP next year.
When you cast your vote for DSG President, you need be certain that the candidate will carry out the immense responsibility that you have entrusted him with. The DSG President must have the knowledge and the experience to carry out that responsibility. As Vice President for Community Interaction, I have had a proven track record of leadership and effectiveness leading a group of active Legislators on my committee, meeting with administrators on issues of space, launching a series of discussions on gender, building permanent contacts with the Durham community, and collaborating with prominent student groups for the Race Perspectives forums in April. This type of extensive experience has given me a clear vision of what I want to see Duke University become. I see a Duke where students feel empowered. When there are arbitrary changes in parking enforcement, a lack of information about progress in financial aid, or an inadequate advising system, it is the DSG President’s responsibility to raise these issues with the administration and directly take them to the student body. I see a West Campus that is enjoyable for all students. When the face of West Campus begins to change from moving selective groups to altering living requirements of sophomores, you need a DSG President who will bring all voices to the discussion table. I see an environment that is safe and responsible. When the alcohol policy changes take effect, you need a DSG President who understands the dangers of pushing drinking behind closed doors or off campus, and who understands the need for an increase in other social options on West, especially on weekends. As a candidate with the requisite knowledge, track record, and vision, 1 ask you to give me the opportunity to serve and represent you as DSG President. to
-
-
Webpage: www.duke.edu/~sjy
Henry
Ho
Fellow Duke Students, I believe that the Duke Student Government should be more representative and accountable to the student body. Recent discourse on social legislation has demonstrated that most students question the legitimacy of DSG, arguing that there has not been enough effort in assessing student opinion and accurately promoting undergraduate interests. Other students really have no interest in DSG affairs because experience has shown them that our organization is generally unmotivated and unproductive. Unfortunately, most criticism of DSC has been justified. And while it is not comforting to admit, our organizationrequires internal reform in order to function as a viable, representativebody. Toward that end, I am proposing bylaw amendments that will make voting records and legislative projects publicized and accessible. I hope that students will hold their representatives accountable according to their accomplishments and positions on substantive issues. Moreover, I am working to establish a polling system on the DSG website that will post pending legislation and allow students to register opinions and comments before voting occurs. I hope that this measure will force representatives to seriously consider voter opinion. One of the things that I have tried to improve during my DSG career is making our organization more responsible to the student body. Thus, I rewrote the house rules that govern legislative procedure and worked toward implementing referendum questions for elections. In short, I have spent my time trying to develop a system that would ultimately satisfy student demand for a true student government. I believe that with the while promoting proper leadership and vision, an individual can change attitudes inside and outside DSG progress. A real form of representation, characterized by meaningful student input, will contribute gready to the of work of DSG for undergraduates. Therefore, 1 urge you to vote in the election and help shape the future your government and campus.
The Chronicle
TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 27, 2001
PAGE 9
Candidates lay out leadership styles Lee: TV miscasts blacks in sitcoms
P* PROFILES from page 4
said, he has learned humility—and how to effect a lot of change in other DSG positions. But as president, he hopes to solve the problems
he noticed as a freshman. Using his experience leading DSG’s internal audit this year, he would like to make DSG accountable and responsive to students.
C.J. Walsh A strong front-of-the-lines leader, junior C.J. Walsh wants to bring his corporate organizing strategy and fresh face to DSG. Now the CEO of
Devil’s Delivery Service and one of two students on the Upperclass Residential Life Review Committee, Walsh said he has built success in his corporation by surrounding himself with strong “lieutenants “I lead from the front Walsh said. “I lead like C.J. Walsh Napoleon, at the front of the battle. I don’t expect anything of anyone else that I won’t do myself, but I expect dedication and enthusiasm out of my troops.” Walsh would like to bring a CEO’s sense of corporate responsibility to DSG. But his lack of government experience may prove to be his biggest weakness. Walsh is the only presidential candidate who has never served on DSG in any capacity. And not since 1997 has a president entered office with no DSG experience. But institutional memory on that election and the internal conflict that followed is disappearing, and Walsh believes that his new take on issues makes him right for the job. For example, as leader of this year’s Last Day of Classes, Walsh has kept the event under budget for the first time in years and promises to draw acts that appeal to every student, regardless of race or gender. ”
“When I visited Duke as a prospective freshman, everyone was smiling,” he said. “As I’ve worked through my time at Duke, less and less people are smiling. If I came back to Duke and more people were smiling, that would make my work feel loved.”
Sean Young A collaborator who has learned to lead, junior Sean Young has spent his year as DSG’s community interaction vice president refining his leadership style. He hopes to use a combination of listening, delegating and understanding to boost the organization’s interaction with students But at times this year, Young has waited too long to gamer consensus on an idea before taking action. He said he has worked hard to balance consensus with leadership and now realizes that students Sean Young want stronger visionary leadership. “DSG is still struggling with how much it engages the student body. I want to have more interaction with the student body” he said. “I feel like I’m most qualified to represent the student body.” Throughout his Duke career, Young has pushed this cause. He designed an e-mail-based constituency system that assigned each elected legislator to a section of campus to facilitate better communication between elected representatives and students. The system has been inconsistent, failing sometimes because of crashed e-mail servers and at other times because of disinterested legislators. Either way, though, Young is proud that his freshman project has become a DSG institution. “I feel that if students have noticed a significant improvement in the way DSG interacts with them, I will consider that a success,” he said.
SPIKE LEE from page
1
stars in front of the camera,” he said. “They’re playing
the same roles.” To emphasize this trend, Lee pointed to recent films such as The Green Mile and The Legend of Bagger Vance, which he termed “The Legend of Nigger Vance.” Laughing and applauding in agreement, the audience sympathized with Lee’s assessment. In these films, Lee identified a character who has special, mysterious powers. “These black males have supernatural powers, but they can’t use these powers on their own people... only on the white characters,” Lee said. He used The Legend ofBagger Vance to illustrate this trend. The film, which takes place in Depression-era Georgia, features a caddy, played by black actor Will Smith, teaching a white character, played by Matt Damon, how to improve his golf game. “Blackie wasn’t even allowed on golf courses back then,” Lee said. “He has magical mystery powers, but his number one concern is to teach... Matt Damon a golf swing? Black people are being hanged left and right.” Calling the problem more widespread than just the film industry, the filmmaker indicted television for mischaracterizing blacks. Pointing to the emergence of such sitcoms as The Secret Diary of Desmond Pfeiffer —which focused on a black butler during the Civil War—Lee explained that black artists are frequently excluded from decisions concerning programming. He decried this particular program as a sitcom about slavery. “Someone said ‘this is funny,’ [but black directors and producers were] not in the room.” Lee said. “At the same time, there is not going to be a sitcom that takes place in Auschwitz, but a holocaust is a holocaust, any way we look at it.” Lee said he hoped to bring attention to the ramifications of images seen in the media. “We are not one monolithic group,” Lee said of black Americans. “We don’t all think alike, act alike, talk alike. I’d like to see a more diverse look at the African-American experience.”
POLLS OPEN THURSDAY Marketplace on East Campus
•
Outside the C.I.
9am Bpm
•
-
Outside McDonald’s
•
VICE PRESIDENT
VICE PRESIDENT FOR STUDENT AFFAIRS
FOR FACILITIES & ATHLETICS
Joshua Jean Baptiste
Matthew
Duke University is one of the world’s most prestigious universities. We have a collection of the most intelligent, talented, and fun-loving students that the world has to offer. As with any other university, Duke has some areas that need improvement. For this reason, 1 have been dedicated to the university and Duke Student Government (DSC) for the past two years. In my tenure, have worked from social space inequalities, to long term philosophies on on numerous projectsranging B , • idi n j Marlpf ltalian dressing in oc introducing Italian in rliP the Market the Cfuture Residential Plans, to projects ne as simple as Place. Thus showcasing my long-term and short-term intellectual scope and leadership abilities. My main concern when developing philosophies, advising administrators, or planning social is, to be in tuned with and represent student interest. As a result, this year I have been events . o„orlrcir,m,lQr c ‘nvo ve ore t Just Wlt p rA L lnr hive had a chance to leam fkst extracurricular endeavors have provided me with the yy .i . . u/ifK i i fo hl nf Affojrc cKonlrl opportunity to realize the three mam .ssues the V.ce President of Student Affairs should deal with in the upcoming years. , r of living - pace , Residential Life, which encompasses the development of the the old living spaces and t e resu tant c ange in e is n u spaces. ill. -i The alcoholic and noiva co oic socia atmosp uere o r+u am Pus * , The implementation of a true partnership between the DSG representatives and const.tuentsf _ We have come to a turning point m the htstory of Duke University. Our school as we currently know it is going through drastic changes. For this reason it is especially important that an experienced and visionary Vice President of Student Affairs that is abreast with the student voice serve my is elected. 1, Joshua Jean Baptiste, am the man for this job. lam ready and willing to
I
..
™
studenTissues
1 ha'nd M° other'
I
„
j.
A
newr
•
...
•
•
university.
r--.
ALLEN J. HOMPSON
Slovik .
f
Carrie
M Slo ,k 15 Matth .H Y and lam a Ashman legislature for “
w
°
,s running
or
f*
eposi
~
ion
of V* ce President of Facilities and , . AtWet.cs (e ° . ne of the areas that about take a careful look at this coming year *s tbe P arkin g situation. On one hand we nccd to co inuc alternatives to the readily apparent a,so trying to increase the capabilities of what we This jncludes thc rjght opening of the blue zones and the Cameron lot on weekends, as well as the re-designing of the blue zone lots whenever it rains. of you def sca ,Ci as m a Duke is in the process of reCenter well desj as as the Bryan restr cU rmg West Campus. I want to make it known that 1 am prepared to work tirelessly with the architects and administrators on this program in order to ensure that the new Bryan Center wiH become a true student center with ample meeting space, and that Perkins library will be student friendly and ready for the twenty-first century. In see more addition, 1 would
1 f.
™
“
“
■
J f
have also In my three years at Duke, I have seen a decline in social opportunities for students. I or consent. an administration forcing its agenda upon students, often without warning cultural integration, In the coming year, our university will tackle such issues as the alcohol policy, and dining options, among others. The DSG Vice President for Student Affairs will serve as the student body’s representative in these debates. The new alcohol policy will greatly affect social understand the life on campus. For this reason, it is imperative that groups and individuals college life for many students, 1 believe \ d want to worl( with repercussions of their actions. Because drinking is a part of 1 * penalties for minor offenses. that drinking should not be prohibited. also do not believe tn strict head Ljne Monjtor tQ icy. po thatstudents know the However, the administration and DSG must be certain create a walk-in policy for tenting life. Because the.administration games tkat w jU be both efficient and The multicultural center will play an important role in student space that the the at important is fair envisions more integration and diversity on campus, it would of and facilities use space the ln c osingi J would like to make sure multicultural center be available to all students. To restrict that it is known that simply because contradict the aims of the Duke administration. notably privatization and am the only one running for this As we have seen recently, dining is undergoing many changes, of privatization, lam wary that position, I am not a second rate expansion of the merchants-on-points system. While lam in favor fought this past year also in favor of candidate. produce limited options and 1 will approach thesediscussions carefully. lam expanding merchants-on-points to include dme-m and more restaurants. (which shelters M are on their way), and area, the Annual Rev e , y on any issue that ddj 1 also believe that SAFE rides should grow in size and service and visible important remain an should files, living groups th e lives of Duke Committee should open and archive its roVL students work hard and be where to a place be and that Duke should not afraid part of campus life, play hard!
witnessed
1
i
VICE PRESIDENT FOR COMMUNITY INTERACTION
1
Johnson
Experience with DSC; Experience with race and gender issues; Experience with leadership, are the three areas that make me the most qualified candidate for Vice President of Community Interaction. During my three years here at 1 Me, Ive involved myself in almost every corner of the campus, and this hands-onknow-how is crucial to being effective and getting things
Jhe.se
one. . . ~ , , that m interested in generating some « *real*, honest,’ campus-wide dialogues on topics concern . ‘ . . . . i iv u i race relations, gender .ssues andita interaction: diversity, the proposed multi-cu tural Duke-Durham these assault, disorders, service. Doing space, sexual programming eating community center, means w th other student poups on campus. Collaborating CCtS thc "*ht ' efforts isn t always the easiest thing to do, but my role on DSG Cabinet as Co-Coordinator of Student Leadership and as Co-President of thc Women’s Studies Dorm has given me lots of
I
P^
experience with bringing different student groups together for programs and forums. Also, the Vice President for Community Interaction can use the vast number of committees the Community ]nteraction Committee, the Inter-Community Council, the Union Board, the Martin Luther King, Jr. Student Planning Committee she/he sits on to accomplish these goals. overall) the rok . of thjs office is to facilitate positive change within the University and among the student body. It focuses on and strives to improve thc way students sec each other and those in the surrounding University and Durham communities. To do this, you have to he an effective leader, you have to know the issues, and you have to get things done. Basically, you need the right woman for the job don’t forget to vote on March Ist. --
-
-
-
-
-
-
Bunia Parker Parker is Prepared, Proactive, Proven! Bunia does not just talk, he takes action! As a member of the Community Interaction Committee, Bunia responds to his constituents on Central Campus with vigor. Bunia was successful in getting a FLEX Deposit machine on Central Campus; and is working with the administration and the Duke Police to increase the amount of Emergency Blue lights, to re-pave roads, and to increase the frequency of buses and number of bus shelters on Central. Bunia has a deep commitment to Dukc-Durham relations, and has outlined two strategies to move toward a more service-oriented campus. First, Bunia will work with the administration on instituting a Community Service Leave Policy. This policy provides employees paid time off for participation in community service volunteer activities for non-profit organizations. Second, Bunia will fight for the increased funding for the Community Service Center’s Student Budget, which provides funds to service-oriented student groups. Bunia has a long-standing commitment to intercultural interaction. While many students were just talking about the inadequate programming and organizational space for cultural groups, Bunia not only drafted a proposal for the administration last year, he actively met with administrators, including the President. His effort helped lead to the establishment of a committee, on which he sits, that will present a recommendation to improve cultural space on campus. Bunia will also work to foster more collaboration between IFC, PANHEL, and NPHC on community service projects. Bunia Parker has built relationships with the administration, student leaders, the Duke Police, the Community Service Center, and Durham officials. Because of his relationships, he was able to bring the Durham Mayor and a City Councilman to discuss Duke-Durham relations with the Community Interaction Committee last semester. Bunia will use these relationships to work toward progress. Bunia Parker...experience is thedifference!
The Chronicle
PAGE 10
TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 27, 2001
Students, ‘grandparents’ get dolled up for Mardi Gras Now, she is getting ready for the ball, which marks Adopt-a-GrandparLast Friday, Pat Smith, a blind resient’s first large-scale event. The Mardi dent at Integrated Health Services of Gras festivities are co-sponsored by Durham rehabilitation and nursing Adopt-a-Grandparent and Alpha center, made a fancy mask with the Kappa Alpha sorority, and will include help of members of Cleland selective games, food, music and an acapella living group in preparation for Adoptperformance by Lady Blue. “One of the goals ofthe event was to a-Grandparent’s upcoming March 2 Mardi Gras ball. create an opportunity for different stu“It’s nice to have interaction from outdent groups to work together,” said side,” Smith said while knitting in the Adopt-a-Grandparent president and nursing home. “You need to have friends founder Julie Linton. of different ages for some variety.” Leading up to the ball, members of Smith has been living at IHS of the Fellowship of Christian Athletes Durham since she went blind in Auwill make and deliver invitations to all IHS of Durham residents, while memgust 1997. With her closest relative living in Atlanta, she looks forward to the bers of the Kappa Alpha Theta sorority weekly visits that Duke students make pledge class will give manicures to the to her room. female residents. Alpha Omicron Pi Smith, who has not been visited by sorority sisters will help hang decoraher mother since December 1996 and tions on the morning of the ball. by her sister since August 1997, conLinton founded Adopt-a-Grandparent siders the students who visit her as a as part of her Learning through Education, Action, Partnership and Service sort of second family. By VICTORIA KAPLAN The Chronicle
Aging and Health class last April, but the service component did not begin until September. The course was taught by Deborah Gold, a psychology and behavioral sciences associate research professor, who is now the faculty advisor for
Adopt-a-Grandparent.
Linton said she started the program
because “there was nothing on campus related to geriatric service. There was just a huge need in the community.” Linton said there are currently 30 active members who volunteer at IHS of Durham at least twice a month to build relationships with the residents through one-on-one and group activities. Along with providing joy and support for the elderly, the organization aims to teach Duke students about senior citizens and to involve a diverse group of students in community interaction.
“Julie has put her passion into action. The students in the group come with a constant enthusiasm,” said se-
nior Travis Gayles, co-director of the Community Service Center, who called the new program a success. Allyson Kane, director of the therapeutic recreation department at IHS of Durham, noted the powerful emotional effect the students sometimes have on the residents. “Older people are often put on the back burner. These are people taking the time to spend with them,” Kane said. “Oftentimes improved emotions help to improve health.” Although he has family members in Durham who visit him at the nursing home, William Young, a former New Jersey cop and now an IHS resident, says that in away he sometimes looks forward to seeing his “student granddaughter” even more than his biological family because she gives him a different perspective on the world. “She’s a nice girl and I like her attitude. I like everything about her. I’ve been very fortunate,” Young said.
Three taken to hospital for alcohol overconsumption From staff reports At 3:20 a.m. Feb. 23, Campus Police, Duke EMT and Durham EMS responded to Blackwell Dormitory in reference to an intoxicated 19-year-old student, said Maj. Robert Dean of the Duke University Police Department. The student was taken to the Emergency Department. Three and a half hours later, DUPD responded to Aycock Dormitory in reference to an intoxicated 21year-old man who had followed a student into the dorm, Dean said. He was transported to the Emergency Department. At 2:10 a.m. Feb. 25, Campus Police and Duke EMT found a 17-year-old intoxicated visitor in the Sigma Alpha Epsilon fraternity section, Dean said. The visitor’s 20-year-old brother, a student, was also intoxicated. The visitor was taken to the Emergency Department.
DUPD located the suspects at about 12:54 a.m. Feb. 25 when one of them tossed a garbage cover to the ground near Nottingham Dormitory. One subject fled the police and was apprehended in the Hideaway bar. Police -p/M T rULILL charged 19-year-old Stephen Griffin Wang, a University of IVJI/r (JKII3 Richmond student, of 207 Barker Ave. in Wilmington, Del., with damage to property; possession of stolen goods;resist, delay or obstruct; and assault on a law enforcement officer. His court date is Apr. 4, and he has a $1,500 secured bond.
Students report solicitation: Several students on East Campus have reported that someone claiming
to be “Jeff” from Florida State University has repeatedly attempted to conduct a survey or sell magazines Police arrest vandalism suspect: After receiv- in dormitories, Dean said. At 1 p.m. Feb. 23, the susing reports of vandalism in Sigma Chi fraternity, pect entered rooms in Randolph Dormitory and told Campus Police responded to the dormitory at 11:47 residents—mostly women —that he worked for American Marketing Services. Students reported that p.m. Feb. 24 and arrested one of the suspects. the suspect enters rooms, closes the door behind him The vandalism, reportedly done by four men, included $l5O damage to a mirror. and attempts to force students to buy magazines.
Campus Police learned that between Nov. 20 and Feb. 22, students kept encountering the suspect in Alspaugh Dormitory, at the bus stop and in the Bryan Center. The suspect is described as a 5’6” college-aged man with a dark complexion and dark hair. Campus Police encourages students to report unauthorized solicitation.
Car entered, cash taken: A visitor reported that between 6:10 and 9:20 p.m. Feb. 22, someone broke out the $l3O left door vent glass ofhis vehicle while it was parked on Science Drive, Dean said. The perpetrator also stole the visitor’s $35 briefcase and $2OO in cash, caused $3O in damage to his dash molding and caused $5O in damage to the face of his radio while attempting to steal it. Car damaged: Between 7:40 a.m. and 4:39 p.m. Feb. 23, someone broke an employee’s $3OO passenger side window, stole $3 and caused $3OO in damage to the vinyl on the driver’s side door and $5O in damage to the middle console cup holder, Dean said. The vehicle was parked in the H parking lot at Anderson and Erwin. See
CRIME on page 17 �
Ash Wednesday Mass Noon Duke Chapel All are welcome Or we encourage your participation at Ecumenical Ash Wednesday services in Duke at
Sam or s:lspm
NEWMAN
Catholic
Student
AT DUKE
UNIVERSITY
Chapel
Father Joe Vetter 684-1882 joev@duke.edu
Sister Joanna Walsh, FCJ 684-3354
sr.joanna@duke.edu
www.catholic.duke.edu
TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 27, 2001
The Chronicle
HAGEII
Professor remembered for elegance, wit Masri: Iraqis, From staff reports
Professor Emeritus of the Practice
ofEducation Lucy Davis died Friday in her Chapel Hill home after a brief illness. Davis, a child psychologist who specialized in training students to teach and counsel youngsters with learning disabilities, chaired the education program from 1982 to 1994. Colleagues remembered Davis for her style, elegance, wit and warmth. Davis earned degrees from Erskine College and Columbia University. She wrote or edited more than 50 chapters, books and articles on education and
psychology. She is survived by three children, a brother and seven grandchildren. In lieu of flowers, the family requests that memorials be sent to the Hill Center at Durham Academy, 3200 Pickett Road, Durham 27705.
Reich to speak at Duke: Former Secretary of Labor Robert Reich will speak at the Terry Sanford Institute of Public Policy Friday, March 2. The speech, which is free and open to the public, will explore the future of the Democratic Party. The lecture will begin at 4 p.m. in the Fleischman
Commons. Reich will also be promoting his new book The Future of Success. He served as Secretary ofLabor underformer President Bill Clinton until 1994. Currently, he is the Maurice B. Hexter Professor of Social and Economic Policy at the Heller Graduate School at Brandeis University.
Essence editor speaks today: Clinical Bioethics at Susan Taylor, former editor-in-chief of Essence magazine, will speak at 7 p.m. Feb. 27 in Page Auditorium. She will be promoting her new book, Lessons in Living. Her speech is sponsored by the Black History Month committee.
NSOE sponsors series: The Nicholas School of the Environment and Earth Sciences will be hosting a series of seminars exploring North Carolina water quality. A seminar entitled “Murky Waters” will bring over 150 educators and activists, teachers, students and journalists, A group of panelists will lead a dialogue on the science, policy and public opinion surrounding North Carolina’s quality, water from 4:30 to 6 it p.m. in the Levine
Science Research Center’s Love Auditonum.
JSRIEFS
The
seminar, free and open to the public, will feature such speakers as Don Butler, president, N.C. Pork Council; Rick Dove, board member, Water Keeper Alliance and former Neuse River Keeper; and Bill Holman, executive director, Clean Water Management Trust Fund.
Doctor to lecture:
Dr. Edmund Pellegrino will speak Tuesday at 5 p.m. about the practice of medicine as an art. Pellegrino serves as the John Carroll Professor Medicine and Medical Ethics at the Center for
Duke in Berlin Fall 2001
Application Deadline: Friday, March 2 For applications, contact: Office of Study Abroad, 121 Allen, 684-2174
abroad@asdean. duke.edu www.aas. duke. edu/study_abroad
Georgetown University Medical Center. His lecture, entitled, “Balancing Head, Heart, and Hand: The Integration of the Liberal Arts and Humanities in Medicine,” will be held at the Duke Center for the study of Medical Ethics and Humanities.
Honor Council sponsors contest: The Honor Council and Duke Blue are sponsoring an essay contest for undergraduates. Students wishing to participate should submit an essay of 2000 words or less to Box 94965 via campus mail by March 8, 2001. This year’s prompt is “Dean’s Excuses and the Honor Code: Contradiction or Necessary Coexistence?” The selected winner will receive $250 and free publication in Duke Blue and the Duke Undergraduate Journal of Ethics.
Junior drops egg, wins money:
Pratt junior Ben Colgrove beat over 100 entrants in a regional egg drop contest held last week at North Carolina State University. Colgrove won $2OO for his design.
Children to perform:
The young
students of the R.N. Harris Suzuki
Violin Players will open for the Duke Symphony Orchestra in Baldwin Auditorium on Duke University’s East Campus at 8 p.m. Wednesday, Feb. 28. The children will perform a minuet by Johann Sebastian Bach, “Orange Blossom Special” and “Amazing Grace.”
not Hussein, suffer hunger IRAQ from page 3
doesn’t tell us is that sanctions themselves have killed half a million children under the age of five.” According to Masri and Harak, sanctions do not hurt Hussein, nor do they protect the security of the region. They argued that sanctions have built an Iraqi citizenry that thinks even Hussein is too lenient and that the U.S. is the aggressor in the situation. “The sanctions don’t make sense at all unless their objective is the destruction of Iraq as a nation and the killing of the Iraqi people, so that we—l mean Shell and Chevron—can control their oil,” Masri said. The speakers challenged the audience to think about these issues, get involved with HIWAR and rival the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill’s political activism. “In Arabic, Hiwar means a serious dialogue, which I am hoping its members will engage in,” Masri said. “UNC is definitely the most progressive school in the area, but Duke University has the intellectual ability to rival them. HIWAR
will hopefully will lead to that.” Now that HIWAR’s first sponsored event is completed, Al-Bulushi says that he and the other members will refocus their energies on advancing the new group. “We put the advancement of the club aside for a while to get this event scheduled,” he said. “We’re about 20 now, but we would like to grow to as many people as are interested.”
TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 27, 2001
The Chronicle Established 1905, Incorporated 1993
Elect Ensign
The
position of executive vice president has two prongs—to organize Duke Student Government meetings effectively and to manage legislators’ projects. Junior Drew Ensign, who took over the position this semester, seems to be able to balance both well. During his time as vice president, he has met with nearly every legislator in an attempt to better organize the council and keep its many young members on task. At the same time, he has nearly halved legislature meeting times. Furthermore, his new ideas for the position are encouraging and could help enfranchise many more Duke students. First, his promises to allow students to sign up for issues that interest them and then keep those constituents abreast of DSG’s progress on the issues is fantastic. And his promise to loosen the house rules to aUow interested non-DSG members to talk is also a great change. And the logic behind his belief that DSG serves more of a trustee role than a representative one is solid—students vote for representatives not as much on the issues but because ofwho they trust to deal with all the issues that could face the legislature. Henry Ho is a very thoughtful candidate who seems well versed in the house rules. But his opposition to unanimous consent motions as silencing the minority is illogical, and his ability to motivate legislators to do their projects is less compelling than Ensign’s. His idea, however, for tabulating and publishing individual legislator’s votes into an online voting record, is a tremendous one that is long-needed Ensign would do well to take up this idea if he is elected. The Chronicle formally endorses Drew Ensign for DSG executive vice president.
Support Jean-Baptiste
Next
year, the Duke Student Government vice president for student affairs will face a multitude of challenging issues including the alcohol policy debate, the residential life plan, social programming changes and the possible creation of a multicultural center. Ideally, the race for this influential position would be between two very experienced students who are well prepared to handle the upcoming challenges. This election has not given students two such candidates. However, Joshua Jean-Baptiste is the better choice. Among his most notable qualities, Jean-Baptiste demonstrates an honest and fair assessment ofthe Annual Review Committee —understanding that there are both positive and negative aspects to the process. And while he should reconsider his opposition to portions of the residential life program that pertain to moving selective living groups to the peripheral quadrangles, there is no doubt that he can contribute to a debate on the issue. Also, Jean-Baptiste should study the alcohol issue further and develop a more nuanced position. His opponent, junior Allen Thompson, presents a narrowly focused vision for the student affairs position that overly emphasizes greek life and pays too little attention to independents. His position on the ARC—that their proceedings and decisions should be open and archived—is a step in the right direction. However, he is ill-suited for the position and does not have the background or knowledge ofthe issues necessary to serve in this position. The Chronicle formally endorses Joshua Jean-Baptiste for vice president for student affairs.
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 & State Editor MARKO DJURANOVIC, Health & Science Editor ELLEN MIELKE, Features Editor JONAS BLANK. Recess Editor JAIMELEVY, TowerView Editor MARY CARMICHAEL, Executive Editor ROSS MONTANTE, Layout and Design Editor REGAN HSU, Sports Photography Editor KELLY WOO, Senior Editor DAVE INGRAM, Wire Editor MATT ATW(X)D, Wire Editor CHRISTINE PARKINS, Sr. Assoc. City & State Editor TREY DAVIS, Sr. Assoc. City & Slate Editor MEREDITH YOUNG, Sr. Assoc. Health & Science Editor ANDREA BOOKMAN, Sr. Assoc. Sports Editor ALAN HALACHMI, Online Manager NORM BRADLEY, Sr. Assoc. Sports Editor SUE NEWSOME, Advertising Director ALISE EDWARDS, Creative Services Manager MARY WEAVER, Operations Manager ADRIENNE GRANT, Creative Director NALINI MILNE, Advertising Office Manager CATHERINE MARTIN, Production Manager STEPHANIE OGIDAN, Advertising Manager NICOLE GORHAM, Classifieds Manager The Chronicle is published by'the Duke Student Publishing Company, lne„ 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 Flowers Building, call 684-2663 or fax 684-4696. To reach the Business Office at 103 West Union Building, call 684-3811. To reach the Advertising Office at 101 West Union Building call 684-3811 or fax 684-8295. Visit The Chronicle Online at http://www.chronicle.dukc.edu. © 2001 The Chronicle, Box 90858, Durham, N.C. 27708. Ail 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.
Letters to
the
Editor
Black Student Alliance endorses DSG candidates Seeing as a variety of pertinent to the African-American community have surfaced this academic year, it will be the responsibility of Duke Student Government and the University to remain aware of these concerns and of African-American students’ interests. This year, the Black Student Alliance sought to endorse those candidates issues
who familiarized themselves
not only with these issues but also with the goals of our organization. We were able to gain a unique perspective of
the candidates via a joint question and answer session with other campus cultural
groups. Those candidates who were successfully able to reach out to all cultural groups had a profound influence on our decision. There were many qualified candidates, and therefore the endorsement choices were difficult to make. The BSA endorses Sean Young for president, Drew Ensign for executive vice president, Joshua Jean-Baptiste for vice president for student affairs and Bunia Parker for vice president for community interaction. Although Abhijit Prabhu is unopposed for VP of Academic Affairs, we encourage him to become more aware of the important minority issues
surrounding the Duke academic experience. These issues include; minority representation in the faculty and administration and the academic performance gap between certain minorities and the majority of students. Both are issues that the BSA focused on this year and should be addressed by this position. In all, we feel that this slate of candidates will best tackle campus issues, and we would like to wish them well on March 1. Denis Antoine Trinity ’Ol
The writer is president of the Black Student Alliance.
Vik Devisetty has a consistent record of results already produced has results for the student body. Devisetty worked with Devisetty for Duke Student Government President. He administrators to extend the has many characteristics reading period by making a that will help him to achieve more efficient use of the exam all his goals as the head of schedule. Next fall we will get the organization. He brings Friday, Saturday and Sunday to the committees he sits on to study, in addition to most great charisma, leadership students getting, for the first and outside-of-the-box time, Wednesday off to work, The True and Blue thinking. Devisetty has dedicated himself to making Cameron Crazies campaign Duke a better place for stu- gave most in attendance blue The dents. difference hairspray, Blue Devil decals between Devisetty and the and “Our House” T-shirts other candidates is that he during the annual Duke-
lam writing to express for Vik support my
UNC game. basketball Devisetty created and organ-
ized this tremendous event with typical Vik flare. Devisetty has continually shown his dedication, determination and outgoing personality in all his work with DSG and the larger Duke community. Devisetty has
set, reached and exceeded his
goals for the entire student body. I urge you to vote for Vik Devisetty on Thursday.
Chris Brandaleone Trinity ’O3
Wayne Manor supports Cummings for president As president of Wayne Manor selective house, I am writing to encourage the student body to vote for David Cummings for Duke Student
ership. As our elected treasurer and also a community has Cummings leader, proven that he has the charisma it takes to serve as the chief student liaison to
President. Government Throughout his three-year the administration. affiliation with our house, With his involvement Cummings has upheld the and leadership in an array integrity of our institution of ventures, we have no and brought a vision of doubt that Cummings is the best candidate to tackle the excellence to our house lead-
multifaceted issues of student race relations, an evolving alcohol policy, financial aid and academic affairs, to name a few. We hope that you, the student body, will also put your confidence in David Cummings for DSG President.
Mihir Gandhi Trinity ’Ol
On the record “\Older people are often put on the back burner. These are people taking the time to spend with them.... Oftentimes improved emotions help to improve health.” Allyson Kane, director of the therapeutic recreation department at Integrated Health Services of Durham, on the Adopt-a-Grandparentprogram (see story, page ten)
Announcement Do you have an opinion on an issue facing Duke? Write a guest column. The Chronicle is looking for guest columns on University issues from all members of the Duke community. E-mail mfbs@duke.edu for more information.
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
Co:
TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 27, 2001
'ARY
PAGE
13
The trouble with sanctions Why does the United States continually attack Iraq if it supports a policy of economic sanctions?
t
_
i I
On Friday, Feb. 16, in a fearless act of self-defense, the United States sent 18 fighter jets into Iraqi territory to destroy dangerous military installations and radar sites just outside Baghdad. Over the past 10 years, British and American planes have engaged in daily bombings on Iraqi soil, but this was the first bombing to bypass the no-fly zone, since former president Bill Clinton did so on the eve of his impeachment. This particular mission, authorized by President George W. Bush, was set to defend American presence in the region against targets that “threaten our forces,” according to the President. Officials in Washington have failed to expand on the nature of that threat, but attempted to depict the recent attacks as simply “a routine mission to enforce the no-fly zone,” despite it being anything but routine. Surprisingly, recent information suggests that the mission did not even its desired objectives. achieve According to the Pentagon, less than half of the 22 Iraqi radar sites near Baghdad were hit with the technologically advanced AGM-154 Joint StandOff Weapon (J-SOW), a bomb with a supposedly high accuracy rating. In fact, the aftermath of the attack revealed that some of these bombs missed their targets by at least a couple of hundred yards. Iraq has shown instead that many civilian sites have
,
.
Abdullah AhArian
been hit, killing three and injuring Iraqi threat, in an attempt to tell decade-long soap opera? While this is more than two dozen civilians. These skeptical Arab neighbors what is good probably not a possibility at this stage, recent events have left many people for them. The chief UN. weapons the Bush administration is considering within the United States questioning inspector Scott Ritter acknowledged, a change in policy nonetheless. the effectiveness of economic sanctions “Iraq today possesses no meaningful Secretary of State Colin Powell is curimposed on Iraq by the United Nations weapons of mass destruction and [it] rently in the Middle East discussing since 1991. does not currently possess the capathe prospect of changing the sanctions The sanctions regime came under bility to produce or deploy chemical, regime into what he terms “smart scrutiny on an international level long biological or nuclear weapons.” And sanctions.” These smart sanctions ago, when the effects were being wideeven if one were to assume that Iraq would replace the less-than-intelligent ly publicized worldwide. did possess these means, it is evident ones currently in place, directing them The ban on virtually all Iraqi that these economic sanctions are no more toward Saddam Hussein and not imports and exports has crippled the solution. the people of Iraq. Although this is cerOne of the chief objectives of ecoIraqi population. Large amounts of tainly a welcomed step in the right depleted uranium left by the allies nomic sanctions is that military action direction, it comes after a decade of after the GulfWar have multiplied the will not be necessary to achieve the what one Congressman has called occurrence of cancer in children. And desired outcomes. From what we have “infanticide masquerading as policy.” The key will be to give into presbecause hospitals are not allowed to observed in Iraq in recent times, milibuy any equipment or medication, now tary action on a regular basis has been sures for change without giving an impression of American weakness, treatable diseases are responsible for used, despite the existence of sancthe deaths of thousands. tions. If this has become such a readily admitting fault while maintaining This is particularly disturbing constrength—perhaps a more accurate available option, why not simply abansidering that Iraq was one of the don the sanctions regime and enter description of the events of Feb. 16. wealthier countries in the region with Iraq full-force to secure our mission a top-notch infrastructure prior to the objectives and end once and for all this Abdullah Al-Arian is a Trinity junior. imposition of sanctions. Dennis Mom, nt m ifeffcsr ME Halliday, who resigned in protest from OF THE last supper his position as coordinator of the UN. Giuuan NKiITM TtSUS Oil for Food program said of the sancREPLACED BV DECENCY A NAKED tions, “we are in the process of destroyCOMMISSION \ Black HOW Will COtfE an entire is as ing society—it simple woaaan; TO ORDE and as terrifying as that.” The opposition to the sanctions has been led by the remaining UN. Security Council —France, China and Russia. The Arab nations, along with (fAfcjSiWE How THIS Turkey and Iran, have also voiced OFFENSIVE IT ART their desire to remove this suffocating IS \WOUU?B6MF swipe -Faced with such staunch policy. objecW THIS. tion, the US. government now has to SWW justify the continuation of an ineffective policy whose only real effect is the decimation of a people. Thus far, however, this has involved S'y&Arr nothing more than exaggerating the
1
The pen and the sword
Ahrr^Awr
A bigot in sheep’s clothing Massachusetts, Gov. Paul Cellucci, as U.S. ambassador to Canada. On Feb. 13, the Boston Herald reports that “an explicit sex workshop for kids conducted by state health and education counselors last year could haunt” the governor’s confirmation. The Herald reports that Camenker, upset that Cellucci refused to meet with Lucas Schaefer PRC representatives after “Fistgate,” has started lobbying North Carolina senator Jesse Helms to block Cellucci’s nomination. Jesse Helms. The U.S. ambassador to Canada The Herald is quick to point out that “children as Hard-core sex. This is the story of what happens when a bigot puts young as 14” attended the workshop and that kids on a suit and tie and starts to walk around like he were encouraged “to discuss anal sex... with much of experimentation.” knows what he’s talking about. It’s the story of what the program devoted to homosexual happens when a media-hungry citizen gets smart and The Herald fails to mention that the workshop was when the press corps gets lazy. It’s the story of Brian specifically designed for gay kids, or that Camenker, who is threatening to send the tapes to all 100 U.S. Camenker, and it’s a story that says something dissenators responsible for confirming Cellucci, has been turbing about how easy it is to get a little press coverlegally banned by a Massachusetts Superior Court at a workage nowadays. It starts almost a year back, shop for gay and lesbian youth at Tufts University in judge from doing so. I may not like Camenker, but I’ll give him this: He’s Medford, Massachusetts. of savvy. The guy knows how to get his name in the media Department At the workshop, Massachusetts paper. Search the archives of The New York Times or Public Health and Department of Education counand you’ll find him, calmly criticizselors asked students to write down questions about The Boston Globe teacher who came out to his class, first-grade a in ing ask were too afraid to homosexuality that they sex education should not be on why public. The counselors then answered the questions, waxing eloquent In major publications schools. taught' public in the counsome in explicit detail. At the time, neither across as an extremist, he’s comes rarely Camenker being were they knew that selors nor the students than most. He stays away secretly recorded by a member of the Parents Rights just a bit more conservative “sinful,” rarely mentions “gay” like and from words by run Coalition, a conservative lobbying group is referred to as “a concerned paroften Camenker. After the PRC released the tapes to the religion and director organization.” A of parents’ “a ent” or the public, two of the state workers who participated in never quote a member of The Herald would like paper press the workshop were fired. The conservative Ku Klux Klan or a neo-Nazi on why Paul Cellucci snidely dubbed the so-called scandal “Fistgate,” in the be confirmed, but they’ll quote Camenker, shouldn’t reference to one particular sexual practice that the over and over and over again. Tufts group discussed. That’s because Camenker knows how to tone down George W. Fast forward to February, 2001. President his rhetoric when the big newspapers come knocking. most Bush, in a move sure to win the support of all oi He understands that if he rants and raves, if he comes Bostonians, nominates the one Republican in
Dirty water
across as overtly homophobic, he’ll become less quotable. His stock will go down. I’ve met Camenker before. We’re from the same city, and in high school a friend and I did a number of stories on him for our school newspaper. That was way back before “Fistgate,” before Camenker thought anything of his “stock.” At the time, Camenker told us that any information on homosexuality we got from the Newton Public Schools was “scientific quackery and lunacy.” He said that English teachers overemphasized the Holocaust—“[l’m Jewish but] I want my little girl to learn English in English class.” He also said that history teachers should stop teaching students about the contribution of women to industrialism—“ln a lot of people’s opinions, women in [mills] are reasonably trivial.” When I called him a few days ago to tell him I was writing about the “Fistgate” incident, Camenker initially offered me a few benign comments. But once he realized that I wasn’t writing for national publication and that his remarks would probably not get re-published in The New York Times, old angry Camenker once again reared his ugly head. “Y’know, Lucas, it flips me out,” he told me. “It’s like dealing with Nazis. Everything the [gays] do is at least partially a lie. If you talk normally, they just stomp you. Y’know, these gays are, these people are vicious, nasty people.” It makes no sense to ignore Camenker—he’s there, he’s a reality, and if he ever does anything newsworthy the press has a responsibility to cover it. But to make Camenker look like your run-of-the-mill conservative is deceptive. The only thing that separates him from a “real” bigot is his clothing, his zip code and his ability to tone down the rancorous rhetoric when he wants a little media attention.
Lucas
Schaefer is a Trinity freshman and associate
torial page editor of The Chronicle.
edi-
PAGE 14
The Chronicle
TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 27, 2001
Comics
TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 27, 2001
Blazing Sea Nuggets/ David Logan AT
CHRISTY'S DOOR..
OH, SO RON LEFT
flowers fo in
I :
HAVE HEWS FOR i AMO TAKE THATi 1 SHE YOU, RON. \'A\ SORRY, loves ] ANO THAT BUT THEN ACFKTt /laivi/ You N0T1 she loves you you Mot s MAKE IT TO HER! v 1 1 Not 1 she loves
WELL,
1
She loves yooooou
...
HOST BE RON.
RoH\
rf
’Mj jy^
€ u.
Id!
in 0 1mm y
B
1
<
J
1
1
t
b-J
r» r*
*
If
®
(/
%eA s
a
V
1
THE Daily Crossword
Edited by Wayne Robert
Williams
ACROSS
1 Poke
i
yi >
h —
1
tun at
5 Weepy gasps 9 Series of eight 14 Lotion Ingredient 15 October
I
,
■
yv\
Eric Bramley .
nets, c.n
FUTURES i ST UP1D
&
PAGE 15
t
r MJ
Gilbert/ Scott Adams
birthstone 16 Daughter of Tantalus
17 Actress Rogers IB Queue 19 Cherub 20 Three houses 23 Bauxite
bonanza
24 Apiary resident 28 Mistake free 33 Wore 34 Manipulates
35 Feathery scarf 36 Three houses 40 Gorcey or Durocher
41 Sorrowful
exclamation
TRAINING
42 Calkin
WHAT UOU DO IF YOl HUG
sft
I WOULD TRY TO LEARN FROtt IT
RN ROrA R?
(eardrum)
46 Gazes fixedly 47 Memorable
period 48 Prayer wind-up
49 Three houses 57 Dig deeply? 58 Make sound
59 Greek letter 60 St.
11 Lome's land 12 Cain's brother 13 Compaq rival 21 Summer or
Douglas
22 Past plump 25 'Thou not...' 26 Fork _
(Tennessee
_
Cardinals
O G
61 Besides 62 Toe tip 63 Cover the tab 64 Mimics 65 Gaelic tongue
oo U
DOWN
1 Side ola doorway 2 Melange
Doonesbury/ Garry Trudeau
3 Cell body
4 Valued hand-
me-down
5 Cubes and spheres, e.g.
IMAGINE MYSURPRISE TO HEAR KX/P BEEN BUSTEPONA'
6 7 8 9 10
river) 27 Local lingo 28 Hayes or Stern
29 New Jersey team
30 Mr. Doubleday 31 Nary a soul 32 Small pies 34 Jamaican citrus fruit 37 One of the Hawaiian Islands 38 Alma 39 Garnished with
Speculate Slam loudly
almonds 44 City on the Illinois 45 Take into
Ashy fragment
46
Winter coaster Wild ass
custody
Grins
54 Sound of an enthusiastic crowd 55 ■(Siltin' on) The Dock of the
Humiliate 49 Weapons reduction talks, 48
briefly
50 Olfactory stimulant 51 Black sheep 52 Actress Vidal
Bay’ singer Redding 56 Corduroy
characteristic
53 Kennel call
The Chronicle: If we were famous We’d have our clothes custom-made: ....Mary “J, Blige" Carmichael And frolic topless on yachts: Matt “Damon" Brumm We’d go to the Oscars; Marla “Maples" Zimmerman
And Emmys: Craig T. Nelson" Sapperstein & Kevin “Spike” Lees And Grammys; Jenny “Jones” Robinson & Robert “DeNiro” Tai And star in big-studio movies: Brian “Dennehy” Morray We’d smile: Vicki “Vale” Kaplan & “James” Dean Chapman And pose: ...JJR, Susan “Sharon” Stone, Jane “Fonda” Hetherington But we’d never let it go to our heads: ...Roily “Penelope Ann” Miller
FoxTrot/ Bill Amend
Account Representatives
Monica Franklin, Dawn Hall, Yu-hsien Huang, Lars Johnson Account Assistant: Anna Carollo, Ann Marie Smith Sales Representatives: Sallyann Bergh, Kate Burgess, Chris Graber, Richard Jones, Constance Lindsay,
AND YET YOU CAN'T HIT A CATCHER'S MITT To SAVE YOUR SOUL.
e?
Go figure.
Margaret Ng, Seth Strickland
National Account Representative: Jordana Jofte Creative Services: Dallas Baker, Jonathan Blackwell, Laura Durity, Lina Fenequito, Megan Harris, Dan Librot Business Assistant: Preeti Garg, Ellen Mielke, Veronica Puente-Duany Classifieds Cristina Mestre
TUESDAYf February 27
Gothic Bookshop: Informal discussion and book signing with John Drescher, author of “Triumph of Good Will: How Terry Sanford Beat a Champion of Segregation.” For information, call 684-3986. 11:00 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. Gothic Bookshop, Bryan Center, West Campus. ]
Mind-Body Skills Weekly Group Is held every Tuesday from 12 noon-1:30 p.m. at Cornucopia House Cancer Support Center, which moved to the Overlook Bldg., Ste 220, 111 Cloister Court, Chapel Hill. Today’s topic will be Coping with Strong Emotion. For information, call 401-9333 or visit www.comucopiahouse.org. ESTEEM and CAPS presents “When you are Never Ideal: Body Image and Women of Color”, 12 noon at the Women’s Center. Bring your lunch and join in on the conversation. For more information call The Healthy Devil at 684-5610.
Community
Calendar
The North Carolina Museum of Natural Sciences presents Grow Your Own Wildflower Garden, 7:30 to 9:00 p.m. Attract hummingbirds, finches, butterflies, and compliments to your yard just fill your garden with native wildflowers! Call the scheduling coordinator at 733-7450 x 555. -
Duke Law School: Discussion of civil unions In Vermont with Beth Robinson, a co-counsel to the plaintiffs In Vermont's groundbreaking same-sex marriage case, Baker v. State. Bring your lunch. For information, call 684-6607. 12:15 p.m. Lower level lounge, Law School, West Campus. David A. Bailey and Deborah Willis “A Transatlantic Dialogue on Black Photographic Practices.” Join us for a discussion between two international figures in the field of photography. This event is sponsored by the Center for Documentary Studies, the Department ofArt and Art History, and the John Hope Franklin Center for Interdisciplinary and International Studies. Call 919-6842224 or 919-660-3663. 4:00 p.m. -
Freewater Films: “Dark City." Tickets are free to Duke students, $3 for the public. For information, call 684-2911. 7:00 p.m., 9:30 p.m. Griffith Film Theater.
The Wesley Fellowship (United Methodist Campus Ministry) Freshman Small Group will meet at 10:00 p.m. on East. All freshDeWitt Wallace Center for Communica- men are welcome. For more information, tions and Journalism: Susan Taylor, the call or 684-6735 e-mail senior vice president of Essence Commu@ duke.edu. jenny.copeland nications (which publishes Essence and Latina magazines) will speak. For informa- Students for the Ethical Treatment of Anition, call 613-7344. 7:00 p.m. Page Auditomals will be showing the film “Diet for a rium, West Campus. New America" which addresses the health, environmental,and ethical conseThe Cornucopia House presents a free lecquences of the American diet. Showings ture: “Essential Edibles” Nutrition Forum will be in 232 Soc. Sci. on Feb. 27 and 28, Antioxidants: What, When, and How Much, and in 204 West Duke on March 1. All with Sam Yanuck, D.C., F.1.C.A., 7:00 to are at 8:00 pm and are free and 9:00 p.m. For information call 401-9333 or showings to the open public. visit www.comucopiahouse.orq.
mm -
The Chronicle
•
Classifieds
page is MAY 2001 GRADUATES. All graduation information is available at
Announcements
Please access for all due dates and apparel orders.
1 TICKET NEEDED
Need 1 ticket for 2-27 basketball game against Maryland. Please call Kelly at 613-1748.
SUMMER STUDY ABROAD Want to study abroad this summer? Reopening the following programs: Duke summer Australia, China (see APSI to apply), Costa Rica- Tropical Ecology. Erlangen, Flanders, Greece, India, London- Religion, Morocco, Oxford, Paris, Russia, South Africa, Spain & Venice. Questions? Contact the Office of Study Abroad, 121 Allen, 6842813.
CASTING CALL Banzai is seeking actors and actresses to audition for roles in feature films to be shot in May or June. Contact Justin via e-mail at banzaaii@aol.com or by phone 969-6909.
DUKE IN BERLIN FALL 2001
Want to study in Germany’s town? largest university Application deadline is Fri., March 2. As Europe’s gateway to the East, Berlin is rapidly becoming a geopolitical and arts center. Applications are available in the Office of Study Abroad, 121 Allen, 684-2174.
Sub-lease a spacious, 2 bedroom apartment within walking distance of West Campus. $567/month. Call Julie @ 309-7657.
Autos For Sale Honda Accord Sedan 1993. 2 door. Excellent condition. 106 kilomiles. 919-383-9197 or $4,900. nilssOOl ©mc.duke.edu
www.PerfectCollegeCar.com. Your parents never had it this good!!!
Tenting, K’Ville Virus, Stress, Greek life...got you behind? Schedule a session with an academic coach. Call the Academic Resource Center (684-5917).
Child Care
Time Share for Sale PepperTree Resort, Atlantic Beach, $2500. Cali 544-2076.
Childcare needed in Woodcroft starting mid-March, 2 area days/week. 8:30 a.m*- 5:30 p.m. Must have reliable car. Call Anne 401-9566.
-
INTERN IN DC!
Vivaßebates!
Want a great experience this summer? Work with alumni in DC to help inner-city youth. Develop your own program to serve Ludlow Taylor school. Learn education policy first-hand! (Internship meets PPS criteria.) Full-time $2OOO, parttime $lOOO. Applications at Community Service Center. For contact details,
#1 FREE Referral Program, Period! Company Launched DEC 27th, 2000. GOAL: Become Largest Issuer Of Major Credit Card! HOW; Recruiting YOU as an “ASSOCIATE”. MOTTO: “Earning sss At The Speed Of E-mail”. REFERRAL COMM: $lO.OO A per referral, $2.00 Downline referral, 10 Level Deep, “Do The Math”. Your Ship in here, It! Sail www.vivarebates.com/lndex.cfm7R eferallD=saltandlight
heather.sapp@alumni.duke.edu Deadline: March 1, 2001
■
MID-TERM GRADES make you unhappy?! What you're doing now NOT working? Want to explore an alternative learning Call the Academic path? Resource Center and make an appointment to learn more about “STRATEGIC LEARNING” (684-
WHAT ABOUT THOSE MID-TERM GRADES?! Need to do SOMETHING about them? Call the Academic Resource Center (6845917)
5917).
WORKING IN DC THIS SUMMER?
Need Extra Money?
The Life Stress study is recruiting healthy men and women ages 1860 to participate in a study on physiological responses to stressful life events. Qualified participants will attend one 3-hour lab session and will be paid $5O for their time and effort. If interested, please call 6848667 for more information.
We would like to exchange private living quarters in upper NW home for camp transportation and some childcare for our 11year old. Additional child care for pay available. Please call 4898121.
The Chronicle classified advertising
business rate $6.00 for first 15 words private party/N.P. $4.50 for first 15 words all ads 100 (per day) additional per word 3or 4 consecutive insertions -10 % off 5 or more consecutive insertions 20 % off special features (Combinations accepted.) $l.OO extra per day for all Bold Words $1.50 extra per day for a Bold Heading (maximum 15 spaces) $2.50 for 2 line heading $2.00 extra per day for Boxed Ad deadline 1 business day prior to publication by 12:00 noon -
-
-
Needed part-time child care from 92, Monday-Friday for a 1 yr old. Call 643-1202.
Help Wanted BARTENDERS
Make $lOO-$250 per night. No experience necesary, call 1-800981-8168 ext. 9032.
Seeks part-time assistant for our purchasing dept. Flexible schedule. Call manager at 596-1396 to schedule an interview.
Needed in Cardiology lab to perform general lab duties, such as
stocking, autoclaving, assisting
Campus Managers now needed for Storage Student 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.
GRAPHIC ARTIST Graphic Artist needed for new Chapel Hill business. Major responsibilities will be designing flyers and web development. Must have experience with Adobe Illustrator, Adobe Photoshop, and
If you are a certified diver or experienced sky-diver, you may be eligible to participate in the Military Free-fall After Diving study being held in the Hyper/Hypobaric chambers at the Center for Hyperbaric Environmental Medicine and Physiology at Duke University Medical Center. Two days of experiments with up to 6 subjects per experiment are conducted weekly. For more information, please call Eric Schinazi at 919.668.0030 or send email to Eschinazi@dan.duke.edu.
Compensations Up to $l5O
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
WANTED: Artist’s model female weekends/evenings. $l5/hour Chapel Hill painter seeks female model. Call Paul 933-9868 http://www. pau le wally. com
Houses For Rent
311 Swift Avenue. Furnished, 2 bedrooms, 2 baths. Appls: DW, W/D, available 6/1. $925. Broker. 489-1777. Historic Homes. Walk to Duke. Hardwood, fireplace, central heat and air. 2/3/4 Bedrooms. 286-5146. Sabbatical House! Duke/UNC/RTP 5116 Greyfield, 6 yo 4BR/2.58A, 2 car/bonus. 2850 sq. ft! Avail 7/01$1950/mo Furn. $1750 7/02. Unfurn. 401-1875. massar@duke.edu
Houses For Sale HOUSE FOR SALE
AMERICAN VILLAGE 3-BR, 2 1/2BA. 4 minutes to Duke. $171,000. By appt. 4427 Talcott Dr. 383-7433.
Student Groups
Please email dawn@resonanceproject.com or call 919-8488606.
Hey! Student Org.
Leaders Announce upcoming events or meetings here! For $5, you get up to 20 words, bold headline, and boxed ad. 684-3811.
-
or mail to: Chronicle Classifieds Box 90858, Durham, NC 27708 0858 fax to: 684-8295 phone orders: call (919) 684-3811 to place your ad Visit the Classifieds Online! -
http://www.chronicle.duke.edu/classifieds/today.html Call 684-3811 if you have any questions about classifieds, No refunds or cancellations after first insertion deadline.
The Duke Center for Integrative Medicine is pleased to offer
Mindfulness-Based Stress Reduction An
eight-week class beginning
the week of April 2,2001
Using meditation and yoga, our class teaches participants to cultivate awareness and reduce stress Pre-registration is required. Registration deadline is Friday, March 23, 2001.
For more information,
li
+
Meals.
-
payment
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.
SUBJECTS FOR RESEARCH NEEDED
Quark.
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.
MYRTLE BEACH HOUSES
Researchers and Lab Manager. 10-20 hrs. per week. Flexible. 668-2520.
CAMPUS OAKS
National
GO DIRECT!
#1 Internet-based company offering WHOLESALE Spring Break packages! Lowest price guarantee! 1800-367-1252 www.springbreakdirect.com
RESEARCH LAB ASSISTANT
BARTENDERS NEEDED!!! Job placement Earn $l5-30/hr. assistance is top priority. Raleigh’s Bartending School. Call now for information about our half-priced tuition special. HAVE FUN! MAKE PEOPLE!!! MONEY! MEET (919)676-0774. www.cocktailmixer.com
GO DIRECT! #1 Internet-based company offering WHOLESALE Spring Break packages! Lowest price guarantee! 1-800-367-1252.
LOCAL DISTRIBUTOR
Apts. For Rent
www.duke.edu/web/graduation.
TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 27, 2001
please
call
416-DUKE.
DUKE UNIVERSITY MEDICAL CENTER
m
the premier club venue in north Carolina
NOW STAFFING
Experienced bartenders . cocktail waitresses . floormen/security
Unusual Performance Artists
sword swallowers . dancers . fire eaters . gymnasts . etc.
for more info, call NV Entertainment
919.960.0070
The Chronicle
TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 27, 2001
PAGE 17
Vandal paints over handicapped signs, wall in Edens lot � CRIME from page 10
Car windows broken:
Sometime between 4 p.m. Feb. 23 and 6:30 a.m. Feb. 24, someone broke the $5OO left-side and right-side passenger’s windows of a student’s vehicle, which was parked in the lot on Duke University Road across from Chapel Drive, Dean said.
Car window smashed: A student reported
that between 11:30 p.m. Feb. 23 and 7 a.m. Feb. 24, someone smashed out the $4OO right rear window of her vehicle, which was parked at Towerview and Duke University Road, Dean said.
Cell phone, CD player taken: An employee reported that between 8 a.m. and 4 p.m. Feb. 23, someone broke the $250 driver’s side window ofher vehicle and stole her $35 wallet containing $25 in cash, credit cards and a driver’s license, Dean said. The perpe-
Peres: Country in need of unity now ISRAEL from page 2 It also commits the new government to abide by any agreements with Israel’s Arab neighbors and the Palestinians that were endorsed by the Knesset. Thus, the 1993 Oslo accord recognizing the principle of land-forpeace would be honored, but not Barak’s offers of territorial concessions. Palestinian leaders have said they expect the Sharon government to respect the proposals made by Barak’s negotiators in the last few months. Sharon has refused, saying he will restart talks on his own terms and only when Palestinians stop attacking Israelis. The agreement also enshrines Sharon’s campaign promise to put aside the painful decisions of a final settlement and concentrate on further interim accords. “Should we be in opposition?” demanded Peres in a rousing speech. “Will we sit and wait? And wait for what? To make some speeches in opposition?” The country, he added, wants a unity government in order to feel secure in the face of external dangers from enemies like Iraq and the internal crisis of a bloody five-month-old Palestinian uprising. “Sharon has a very severe diplomatic situation,” Peres said. “And in terms of ideology, he has already
trator also stole the employee’s $BO CD player and $l5O cellular phone. The vehicle was parked in the H parking lot at Erwin and Anderson Street.
Two cars damaged: At 4:34 a.m. Feb. 26, Campus Police found that the passenger-side windows of two vehicles parked at the Washington Duke Inn had been broken, Dean said. In one ofthe vehicles, the perpetrator had stolen the radio from the center console and damaged a door lock. The victims could not be contacted. Parking signs painted over: At 6.42 a.m. Feb. 21, Campus Police discovered that someone had paint-
ed over six handicapped symbols on handicapped parking signs in the parking lot on Edens Drive with gray paint, Dean said. The perpetrator had also written “F— YOU PARKING PEOPLE WELCOME TO THE REVOLUTION” on the retainer wall.
CDs swiped: Between 7:40 and 8 p.m. Feb. 24, someone stole 25 of an employee’s CDs worth $2OO from the open area of the Levine Science Research Center while the employee was disc jockeying a party, Dean said. Cash taken from locker: Between 3.05 and 4:50 p.m. Feb. 23, someone stole $5O cash from a student’s secured locker in the Wilson Recreation Center, Dean said. There were no signs of forced entry. Student reports suspicious man: At 12:37 p.m. Feb. 25, a student reported someone with a set of keys but no tools knocked on her Anderson Street apartment door and asked if she needed her bathroom fixed. When the student said “no,” the perpetrator responded “Oh, crap” and left. Campus Police said there were no pending calls in the apartments’ office that day.
DUKE UNIVERSITY BLACK HISTORY MONTH COMMITTEE presents
�
Susan Ta lor Considered a symbol ofthe award winning Essence magazine and the positive aspects
of the African
inspiration for millions ofpeople.
made significant concessions.” Without the Labor Party, the prime minister-elect would have been obliged to cobble together a decidedly less moderate coalition between his Likud Party and several small right-wing and ultra-religious parties. As several Israeli prime ministers before Sharon have
learned, those groupings often prove too brittle to survive. Historically, the smaller and more ideologically rigid parties tend to bolt or threaten to bolt over issues of domestic policy or money for their pet projects. The government Sharon can now assemble will most likely have the centrist factions of Likud and Labor as its ballast, leaving the more thoroughly left-wing and secular parties as the opposition. Labor has the largest bloc of seats in the 120-member parliament, with 22, and Likud has 19. The rest are split among several religious, Russian immigrant, secular, leftist, extreme right-wing and Israeli Arab parties. The decision to participate in a Sharon government took a heavy toll on Labor, which has been floundering in self-recriminations and back-biting since Barak’s trouncing in the Feb. 6 elections. Colette Avital, a former Israeli consul general in New York and a Labor legislator, warned: “We may become a fig leaf for policies in which we don’t believe. Some people really believe that by going into the government, they can diminish some of the extreme decisions. I just don’t believe it.” But such views were drowned out by the more popular idea that Labor ministers in a Sharon government could moderate its otherwise tough line toward the peace talks and international relations. “There is only one reason to do this, and that is the to a chance to influence the course of said policy, moderate responsible, reasonable, moral, Ephraim Sneh, the deputy defense minister in Baraks cabinet. “The Israeli people are terribly concerned about the possibility of adventurism of a right-wmg government and would expect us to counterbalance it.
Editor-in-chief and Publication Director, Essence Magazine Senior Vice President, Essence Communication Incorporated (ECI)
author of
February 27, 2001
IN THE SPIRIT
7 pm Page Auditorium Duke West Campus
LESSONS IN LTVINCWm
CONFIRMATION: The Spiritual Wisdom
That Elas Shaped Our Lives
at
A reception and book signing, sponsored by Zeta Phi Beta Sorority, lnc„ willfollow in Von Canon Hall, Bryan Center. Free and open to the public Doors open at 6:30 (space is limited) For more information, call Mecca at (919) 613-2798.
CO-SPONSORED BY: African and African American Studies Department, liogram Committee 2000. Vice President of Student Affairs Dewitt Wallace Center, President's Office, Duke Student Government, SOFC, University Fund, Women's Center Women's Studies Department, Office of Inter,tiliural Affairs, Campus Council, Central Campus Council, East Campus Council Craven Quad, Edens (fund. Mater Speakers, Cbcktower Quad, Prism and Zeia Phi Beta Sorority, Inc.
The Chronicle
PAGE 18
TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 27, 2001
FROM RALEIGH-DURHAM TO: (Each way with roundtrip purchase)
Albany .. Albuquerque (Just an
fcf]
H
hour away from Santa
Fe)
Austin Baltimore/Washington (BWI)
$155 .$46
Birmingham Boise Boston (See Manchester or Providence) Buffalo, NY
.$64 $205
Burbank Chicago (Midway)
$195 .$BO .$74 . $74 .$7B $175 .$BO
'
(29 miles to downtown Washington, D.C.)
*
.$7O $175
(25
miles to Niagara
Cleveland Columbus
Falls)
...,
Detroit El Paso Ft. Lauderdale
$7O
(22 miles to downtown Miami)
Hartford/Springfield Houston (Hobby) Indianapolis
Jackson
Jacksonville
Your mom is going to hate our low fares. Starting At
Kansas City Las Vegas Little Rock Long Island/lslip Los Angeles (LAX)
Louisville Manchester, NH (A
better way to Boston) (See Ft. Lauderdale)
Miami
Oakland
.$63 $lOO $195
Oklahoma City Omaha Ontario
$135 $125 $195
Orlando
.$66 $195 $195 .$77
Nashville New Orleans (18 miles to downtown San Francisco)
(Easy access to Southern California)
Phoenix
'
Portland Providence Each way with 7- day advance roundtrip purchase. You can now fly home anytime you want, even if it’s just to do laundry. Be sure to purchase your tickets at least seven days in advance and within one day of making reservations. Seats are limited and won’t be available on some flights that operate during very busy travel times and holiday periods. For reservations, call your travel agent or Southwest Airlines or log on for lowfares 54’ at southwest.com. And don’t forget to warn Mbm.
Click n Save Fares Starting At $3O One-Way Sign up for our weekly Click 'n Save specials at southwest.com. Our lowest one-way fares start at $3O with a 21-day advance purchase when you travel by May 23, 2001.
Fly Four, Get One Free. Right now you can receive double credit as a Rapid Rewards Member when you purchase Ticketless Travel on our web site and travel by )une 30, 2001. After just four roundtrips, you’ll have a free ticket. To become a Member, sign up on southwest.com after purchasing.
southwest.com
(A
better way to Boston)
$l9O Reno/Tahoe $192 Sacramento $lOO St. Louis $lB5 Salt Lake City $155 San Antonio.. $195 San Diego $195 San lose $195 Seattle South Padre Island (Harlingen).... $155 $64 Tampa Bay $135 Tulsa Washington, D.C. (See Baltimore/Washington) $7B West Palm Beach Fares do not include federal excise tax of $2.75 that will be imposed on each flight segment of your itinerary. A flight segment is defined as a takeoff and a landing. Offer applies to published, scheduled service and includes nonstop, direct (same plane), and connecting service.
Fares do not include airport taxes of up to $lB roundtrip.Your plans must include a stayover of at least one night. Tickets are nonrefundable but (except for tickets purchased through our Group Tickets
ARUNES'
A Symbol Of freedom 1-800-I-FLY-SWA* (1-800-435-9792)
Program) may be applied toward future travel on Southwest Airlines. Travel through August 4, 2001. Fares are subject to change until ticketed. Any change in itinerary may result in an increase in fare. FREE TICKET OFFER: Changes to your itinerary may eliminate the double credit offer. After enrolling online, your plastic membership card will be mailed within 14-21 days and you must present it at the gate upon check-in each time you fly to receive credit toward a free ticket. All Rapid Rewards rules apply.
A matchup-by-matchup rundown of the Duke-Maryland game tomorrow in Cameron. See page 22
Sports
� Columnist argues for Schweitzer’s jersey retirement. See page 20 � NASCAR runs its first post-Earnhardt race. See page 21
PAGE 19
TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 27, 2001
Duke prepares for Senior Night tussle with Terps By HAROLD GUTMANN The Chronicle
Chris Carrawell won more conference games than any player in league history. But if there was one time that his emotions got the best of him on the court, it was on his Senior Day. “It was very emotional” Carrawell said after beating UNC last year. “I was nervous—l was nervous even before coming to the gym. I woke up earlier than I usually do, anticipating coming here for the last time. I kept on taking deep breaths so I wouldn’t lose it out there and start crying and not be able to play the game.” . Emotions always run high at Cameron, but never higher than when Duke says goodbye to its seniors. Two years ago, Clemson did the unthinkable to Trajan Langdon on his Senior Day. Seven-foot-one center Allan Allenspach elbowed the senior in the head with the game tied at 30. While Langdon controlled his bleeding lip, the Blue Devils let out their anger with a 26-0 run that was more payback than a hundred retaliatory punches. “We played at an incredibly high level of emotion,” Krzyzewski said after the game. “It was just amazing basketball the last eight minutes [after the elbow].” Of course, the Blue Devil coach could have been just repeating his words from Senior Game the year before, when Duke came back from 17 down with 11:30 to go to beat UNC 77-75.
“The last 11-and-a-half minutes of the game were the best,” Krzyzewski said after the win and “The Hug” with senior Steve Wojciechowski. “I mean, I don’t know how you get any better.” Chances are, if it could get any better it would have to be on another Senior Day. The women’s NCAA tournament still holds its first round games in college gyms, but for the men there is no such policy. Tonight will be the last game in Cameron for Shane Battier, Nate James, J.D. Simpson and Ryan Caldbeck. “It’s going to be a great night,” Battier said. “It’s the last time I’ll get to play in this historic place.... I think I’ll get nostalgic. I’m looking forward to the game.” But there will be no time for such sentiments once the game starts. Duke is out for revenge after Maryland gave the Blue Devils their only conference loss last season in Cameron. In addition, Duke is looking for revenge for a more recent crime—the Blue Devils played the part of the Harlem Globetrotters to the Terps’ Washington Generals, overcoming a 10point deficit in 54 seconds and escaping Cole Field House with an overtime win. Maryland lost four ofits next five games before recovering with three straight wins heading into today’s game. Two head-to-head matchups to watch for are the battle at point guard between sophomores Jason Williams See MEN’S BASKETBALL on page 22
RYAN CHENEY/THE CHRONICLE
CARLOS BOOZER shoots over Maryland’s Lonny Baxter in Duke’s win last month
Senior Schweitzer sets tone despite shooting struggles Georgia Schweitzer’s senior night was almost over. It had not been pretty. In fact, underclassmen were dominating most of the evening, as both Duke sophomore Michele Matyasovsky and Tar Heel freshman Candace Scott had already set career highs.
Thomas Steinberger Game Commentary
night against UNC’s defense, GEORGIA SCHWEITZER commands the team from the top of the key last
Soccer recruits sign Four players signed their national letters of intent to play women’s soccer at Duke yesterday. The Class of 2005 consists of two forwards, one goalkeeper and a defender.
Beard honored by SI Following up her teammate Georgia Schweitzer’s recent honor by Sports
Illustrated for Women, freshman Alana Beard was named freshman of the year by the publication.
And when Duke found itself down four with just over two minutes to play, Schweitzer deferred to sophomore Sheana Mosch, whose eight quick points gave the Blue Devils their first real momentum of the game, coach Gail Goestenkors said. But with seven seconds left, Mosch’s baseball pass left the senior all by herself on a fast break. And after the ensuing intentional foul, the senior was able to seal the game by shooting a pair of free throws. It had taken a while, but the more than 30 family and friends who made the trip from her native Ohio saw possibly her greatest moment at Cameron.
“You kind of think about that the
whole game,” she said, referring to the emotions of senior night. “I was definitely glad to be the one shooting the free throws.” The crowd of over 8,000 had been loud the entire evening and erupted during Mosch’s late outburst. But when Schweitzer caught the pass and began driving alone toward the basket, there was a different kind of noise. It was loud, too, but there was also a murmuring as if everyone in the building recognized both how fitting and unbelievable it was that the senior was on her own in the last seconds. Even the steady Schweitzer had to enjoy the setting. “You can’t ask to go out any better way than against a big rival, on senior night, in front of my friends with such a great crowd,” she said. North Carolina star LaQuanda Barksdale said the team was caught completely off guard by Mosch’s pass, but the Tar Heels are not alone when it comes to being shocked by Schweitzer. N.C. State was the victim of a last-second backdoor alley-oop by the senior See SCHWEITZER on page 23 �
Duhon wins again
Women’s iax starts up
For the second straight week and for the third time this season, Blue Devil guard Chris Duhon was named conference rookie of the week by ACC sportswriters.
The fourth-ranked Duke women’s lacrosse team starts its season today at Koskinen Stadium, facing off against the Virginia Tech Hokies, whom the Blue Devils beat 17-6 last year.
Men’s Basketball
No. 11 B.C. 84, Morris Brown 63 UConn 75, No. 13 Notre Dame 59 No. 24 Texas 76, Missouri 61
The Chronicle
PAGE 20
No. 23 belongs in Cameron’s rafters Duke’s best women’s players should be considered for jersey retirement and joint in between, Schweitzer has (yet) live up to the department’s standard. But it would have been a travesty has persevered, the ultimate survivor. Oh, yeah, she led Duke to the not to give him the chance to bask in the son, senior Georgia Schweitzer Sweet 16 last year in what people recognition as No. 31 was retired. received a basketball commemorating thought would be a rebuilding year. Schweitzer is too oriented on her her achievement. She was also East Regional MVP on team to even comment on it. But her It was a nice ceremony and the the 1999 team that went to the coach, Gail Goestenkors, said she would medical school hopeful clearly national championship game. love to retire her point guard’s jersey. deserved it. More points than Penn State’s “I’d love to retire all of them,” And the good folks at Duke have Helen Darling. Goestenkors said. really been pumping her for player of But versatility is her specialty. Historically, there are others who the year, despite that nasty row over She is only the fifth player in ACC could also boast the skills and leaderwhether to call the campaign history and the first in Duke history ship of Schweitzer. They were pio“Schweitzer, I Presume,” or “Georgia to tally 1,500 points, 500 rebounds, neers, too. Three, in particular, come on your Mind.” 400 assists and 150 steals. to mind; Oh, yeah, her team wins too. A Chris Moreland, 1985-88. The alllot. That is also important. time leading scorer and rebounder for not er “She’s the key to their whole the Blue Devils, she was ballin’ even team,” Virginia Cavalier coach before the men’s basketball program Debbie Ryan said. “Everyone talks gained K-level respect and attention. about Beard’s scoring and defense, She was the only other player besides but I think it’s Georgia Schweitzer Schweitzer to win conference player Kevin Lees who makes this team go. There’s no of the year (1987). Michele VanGorp, 1998-99. question in my mind. She’s a very, Louis Armstrong fans will be happy very special player to me.” Transferring from Purdue along with to know the latter slogan prevailed. Ryan would know a special player Nicole Erickson, she was Duke’s inteNow, along with Alana Beard, when she sees one. In her 24th year rior in the season that ended in San Schweitzer has her own oversized with the Cavaliers, she has compiled Jose, earning the Associated Press promotional handout. It’s like a huge a 526-183 record, and her assistants All-America third-team nod. She baseball card. There is a picture on have included the likes of spent a summer with the U.S. the front and a bunch of stats on the Connecticut’s Geno Auriemma. women’s select team and now plays in back. In two years of covering sports Joe Alieva, director of athletics at the WNBA. at Duke, it’s probably the coolest pubKira Orr, 1994-97. Duke’s allDuke, explained the criteria for the time assist leader, Orr was three lic relations tactic I’ve seen from our prestigious honor. friends at promotions in two years of “[lt would require] the same thing as times on the All-tournament first covering sports at Duke. it would take for a men’s player,” he team and a valuable leader. They were passed up—and tonight So now she has her own ball and said. “You have to be a national player of Schweitzer was passed up as well. her own card. the year and first-team All-American.” She also deserves something else: No. Alieva said that if she were indeed Duke also passed up a perfect oppor23 hanging from the rafters at Cameron. national player ofthe year, her jersey tunity to promote its candidate in the national spotlight. If the administraLet’s look at the case for Georgia; would be retired.
Wow. They gave her a ball. After breaking Duke’s all-time three-point record earlier in the sea-
•
•
•
•
trash
•
man’s
•
•
But there are problems Currently, Schweitzer is one of We all love Shane Battier. He’s a only 15 players in the country still in the running for Naismith Player of great player, a great student and he the Year. deserved the same honor last week She is the reigning ACC player before the Georgia Tech game. Yet he of the year and is undoubtedly a leadhas not been player of the year, only ing candidate to repeat that honor defensive player of the year. And last this year. year he was a consensus second-team Despite injuries to her shoulder, All-American, not first-team. Technically, Battier’s honors do not knee and just about every other limb •
•
•
tion was really serious about making
her case for the Naismith award, it would have proved it last night. When the Naismith award is announced Final Four weekend in St. Louis, Duke could very well be one of the four teams that has not had its season come to an end. If the Blue Devils are, the reason will likely be Georgia Schweitzer.
TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 27, 2001
TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 27, 2001
The Chronicle
PAGE 21
Drivers commemorate Earnhardt’s death By MIKE HARRIS Associated Press
ROCKINGHAM, N.C. With tears in his eyes, Steve Park honored his late boss by driving a Dale Earnhardt car to victory yesterday in the Dura Lube 400. Park held off Winston Cup champion Bobby Labonte by two car-lengths in the rain-delayed race at the North Carolina Speedway. “Fm just glad it was Bobby behind me,” Park said after the second win of his career. “If it wasn’t him, we’d probably both have wrecked. It’s been a tough week, and this is just a dream finish.” Park, who started next to polesitter Jeff Gordon, was a contender throughout the race, which began Sunday and was postponed by rain after just 52 of the 393 laps. It was a fitting end to a race that began with a frightening first-lap crash by Park’s teammate, Dale Earnhardt Jr. Three turns after the race started, a battered car and a hushed crowd provided a reminder of the previous week’s tragedy in Daytona. Earnhardt Jr. was tapped from behind and slammed into the wall between turns 3 and 4 at about 150 mph—just seven days after his father died in an eerily similar crash on the last lap of the Daytona 500. The younger Earnhardt was bruised but escaped serious injury, limping away from the accident. “I hate it for Junior because this would have really took his mind off it for quite a while, just getting one race behind him,” said Tony Eury Jr., a cousin and a member of Earnhardt Jr.’s crew. “But when he came in the garage area, we all just grabbed him and told him, ’Don’t worry about it. We always got next week.”’ The 26-year-old Earnhardt appeared to shrug off the mishap, even though it occurred on the first lap of racing since his father was killed. “Somebody got into me,” Earnhardt Jr. told his team over the radio. “I was really ready to go racing. We’ll be all right, guys.” Asked ifhe was hurt, he smiled and said, “The lap belt was a little too tight. I’m a little bruised up. I’ll be OK”
Earnhardt Jr., in his second full season of driving on the Winston Cup circuit, started 25th in the 43-car field. The start of the race was delayed 1 hour, 33 minutes by rain, and later was postponed until yesterday because of the weather. The race resumed with the sun shining brightly—but without Earnhardt Jr. The cars were restarted in single file with the Dodge of Stacy Compton in front of the Chevrolets of Gordon and Park. Moments before he crashed, Earnhardt Jr. was in a tightly bunched pack of cars heading into the third turn on the 1.017-mile speedway. Robby Gordon swerved down the banked track in front of Earnhardt Jr., who slowed slightly. Rookie Ron Hornaday Jr. then bumped the rear of Earnhardt’s Chevrolet, sending it into the car driven by Kenny Wallace and then into the concrete wall at an angle. In all, six drivers were involved in Sunday’s wreck, including Jimmy Spencer, Mike Wallace and Hut Stricklin. Only Earnhardt Jr. and Kenny Wallace were unable to return to the race. “It was just like a traffic jam,”Kenny Wallace said. “Everybody was wanting the bottom of the race track and somebody got into the back of Earnhardt and got it starting. It was a bad deal.” In the crash that killed the elder Earnhardt, the seven-time champion bumped with Sterling Marlin, bounced into Kenny Schrader and hit the wall at 180 mph. Earnhardt died instantly of head injuries. A NASCAR physician said Earnhardt might have survived if one of his two lap belts hadn’t broken. NASCAR is investigating what caused the belt to come apart. Before Sunday’s crash, tributes honored Earnhardt as one ofthe greatest stock car racers in history. Most of the drivers and crewmen wore black, red and silver caps with Earnhardt’s No. 3 on the front. The members of the Dale Earnhardt Inc. team, which fields cars for Earnhardt Jr., Park and Daytona winner Michael Waltrip, stood on the pit wall during the national anthem holding the caps aloft in a salute to their former boss.
Associated Press Mens' Basketball Poll
Others receiving votes: Providence 116, Ohio St. 101, Tennessee 98, Fresno St. 84, Creighton 57, Cincinnati 35, Gonzaga 30, GeorgiaSt. 22, Indiana 21, UC Irvine 15, Utah 10, California 9, Hofstra 8, Georgia Tech 6, Western Ky. 5, Arkansas 4, West Virginia 3, Missouri 2, USC 2
FREE CAREER FORUM Join our legal experts for advice on admissions, the law school experience and career opportunities. Tuesday, March 20 Radisson Governors Inn, RTP Law School Fair 7pm Admissions Officers from the following Law schools: Duke, UNC-Chapel Hill, Wake Forest, NC Central, Campbell, Stetson, Washington & Lee, Washington, U. of Kentucky, U. of DC, U.‘ of Tennessee, William & Mary, Suffolk U., Vanderbilt, and others
Law Forum Panel Bpm Area Attorneys and Educators discuss career opportunities in law.
1 -800-KAP-TEST kaptest.com
The Chronicle
PAGE 22
Blue Devils hope Boozer will continue recent inside strength MEN’S BASKETBALL from page 19
and Steve Blake, and at the center position between Duke sophomore Carlos Boozer and Terrapin junior Lonny Baxter. “We’re still hitting from outside,” Williams said. “So to have a great inside presence like [Boozer] is what
we’re going to need to win the whole thing. Some guys are 7-foot, or 6-11, but Carlos has the body of a man. I can’t really explain it unless you look at it. It’s just fierce. “He’s so big, there should be nobody that can stop Carlos. The only person that can is Carlos himself.”
TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 27, 2001
Duke vs. Maryland Cameron Indoor Stadium
•
8 p.m. RJP •
Duke leads the series 92-52; the Blue Devils won 98-96 last month in College Park
Guard Guard Forward Forward Center
o c o CD
No. 2 DUKE 25-3 (12-2) Coach Mike Krzyzewski Jason Williams, So. (21.0 ppg) Nate James, Sr. (14.0 ppg) Mike Dunleavy, So. (12.7 ppg) Shane Battier, Sr. (19.0 ppg) Carlos Boozer, So. (13.9 ppg)
No. 16 Maryland 18-9 (8-6) Coach Gary Williams Guard Steven Blake, So. (6.4 ppg) Guard —Juan Dixon, Jr. (18.1 ppg) Forward Byron Mouton, Jr. (10.5 ppg) Forward Terence Morris, Sr. (12.9 ppg) Center Lonny Baxter, So. (15.6 ppg)
ANALYSIS
THE NOD
While Maryland center Lonnie Baxter has frequently outplayed his Duke counterpart Carlos Boozer, the strong play of Boozer against Wake Forest makes this matchup a draw. The duel at power forward will also be heavily contested, but Shane Battier is more versatile than the All-ACC performer Terence Morris.
S9
This contest features arguably the two most talented backcourts in the ACC. Jason Williams will be pestered by consistent point guard Steven Blake, and Nate James will give All-ACC candidate Juan DixOn all he can handle. Whomever wins the Mike DunleavyByron Mouton duel could come out victorious.
EVEN
Despite the recently productive minutes from by guard Chris Duhon and center Casey Sanders, the Blue Devils simply cannot go as deep as the Terps. Maryland has a former starter, Danny Miller, and Drew Nicholas provide solid perimeter shooting, while Tahj Holden and Mike Mardesich are tough in the paint.
There is no question that Maryland will be looking for revenge after its last-minute collapse at Cole Field House last month. However, this is Senior Night at Cameron Indoor Stadium, meaning Nate James, Shane Battier, and Duke’s all important “sixth man” will be jacked to knock out the Terrapins.
JASON WILLIAMS pulls up for a three-pointer against Maryland’s Juan Dixon
WANTED: Innovative Faculty to Include Service-Learning in Courses for Fall 2001 The Kenan Institute for Ethics and the Dean of the Faculty of Arts and Sciences are pleased to announce the availability of three awards of $l5OO each to assist members of the faculty to incorporate the pedagogy of Service-Learning into their undergraduate teaching in the Fall 2001 semester. Potential applicants will find information about the application process on the Kenan Institue for Ethics website at <http://kemn.ethics.duke.edu> and are encouraged to consult Betsy Alden alden@duke.edu), Coordinator for Service-Leaming, about their interest in these awards. Deadline for application is March 30.
TU C l/"OXT A XT
1 nc RJSINArN
INSTITUTE FOR ETHICS Box 90432 102 West Duke Building (919) 660-3033 (919) 660-3049 Fax •
Very few contests each season provide as many intriguing matchups at every position as this year’s Duke-Maryland game.This game has so many subplots: the Terrapins win last year at Cameron, Duke’s come-from-behind victory at Cole Field House in January, and of course, the emotion that comes with Senior Night. Duke’s seniors carry their team to victory. Duke wins 84-80 —Compiled by Craig Saperstein
The Chronicle
TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 27, 2001
PAGE 23
Mosch comes up big at crucial moments � WOMEN’S BASKETBALL from page 1 Last night, guard Sheana Mosch stepped to the baseline to re-enact the home-run play, which again worked like clockwork. When Schweitzer suddenly sprinted downcourt, Mosch lofted a pass over the entire UNC defense, hit Schweitzer directly on the numbers and forced a napping Brown to commit a decisive intentional foul with five seconds left. “Sheana throws it better,” said Schweitzer, referring to since-departed Rice, who is an assistant coach at South Alabama this season. While the Tar Heels hurried off the court after their second heart-breaking defeat to the Blue Devils this season, Duke’s seniors led a mad dash to center court, where they were quickly surrounded by hundreds of screaming students who were part of the second-largest home crowd in
Duke women’s basketball history. UNC star LaQuanda Barksdale, who had an off shooting night but still scored 14 points and grabbed 15 rebounds, said the Tar Heels were surprised by the deep pass, but her coach insisted that Brown should not have been assessed an intentional foul. “No, no, no; you need to talk to the ACC people about that,” Hatched said. “I would like an explanation myself, but no.” Before hammering home the nail in UNO’s coffin with her perfect pass, Mosch rallied the Blue Devils from a 6359 deficit late in the game. After the Blue Devils chalked up only two successful treys in their first 14 attempts against the Tar Heels’ zone defense, Mosch took over with slightly more than two minutes remaining. Mosch, who was the hero of Duke’s victory over UNC last month in Chapel Hill, awakened after a slow start by grabbing a critical offensive rebound and nailing back-to-
35
North Carolina
36
Duke
North Carolina LaOuanda Barksdale Candace Sutton ' Coretta Brown Leah Sharp Cherie Lea LaShonda Alien Juana Brown Chrystal Baptist Jackie Myers
Team Totals
FG 5-16 7-15 7-16 1-5 0-1 0-0 4-10 2-4 0-0
3PT 2-5 0-0 3-6 0-3 0-1 0-0 2-5 0-0 0-0
26-67 7-20 3PT 0-0 1-2 2-3 1-3 0-7 0-0 0-0 0-1 0-0
FG Duke 4-5 Rochelle Parent Micheie Matyasovsky 5-9 6-14 Sheana Mosch 5-15 Aiana Beard Georgia Schweitzer 5-13 1-6 Rometra Craig 0-1 Missy West 0-3 Iciss Tillis 1-1 Crystal White Team 27-67 4-16 Totals Officials;
Broderick. Newton, Watt
32 36
67 72
R PF PIS ATO 15 1 14 2 2 10 2 19 11 4 3 18 4 3 1 2 2 0 2 0 3 0 11 0 1 0 0 1 10 2 3 4 1 6 4 4 1 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 8-13 42 15 67 13 14 FT 2-2 5-9 1-2 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0
FT 0-0 2-2 5-6 4-5 2-2 0-0 017 0-0
R PF 5 1 5 5 6 0 8 1 6 1 11 0 0 2 0 1
PIS 8 13 19 15 12 2 0 1 2
back three-pointers, the second of which put the Blue Devils up by two for the first time since the 6:10 mark. “I was missing all game long; it was about time I hit something,” said Mosch, who scored her eighth straight point on Duke’s next possession when she banked in an awkward floater. Although Duke had its sophomore star to thank for its thrilling comeback, it had its lucky stars to thank for even being in the game midway through the first half. Schweitzer came out with an extra bounce in her step early in the game, scoring on three consecutive possessions in the game’s opening three minutes and propelling Duke to a 16-10 lead at the first official timeout. By the next official timeout, however, the Blue Devils were still stuck on 16 points as the Tar Heels used a 12-0 run to open up a sixpoint lead of their own. Schweitzer’s early hot shooting turned ice cold as the senior missed four consecutive three-pointers before Beard threw a pass well over her teammates’ heads and prompted the third official timeout, this time with Duke down seven, 29-22. The mental mistake by Beard let Carolina take its biggest lead of the game on its next possession, but the Tar Heels never ran away from the struggling and outof-sync Blue Devils. Instead, Beard came back out of the timeout and scored six consecutive points off two of her game-high four steals. Her personal mini-run re-energized her teammates and led Duke on a 15-2 run that made the game a back-andforth battle until its climax. “I don’t really have much to say; I thought we played hard and I’m proud of my team,” Hatchell said. “A few breaks here or there down the stretch and it would have been a different thing.”
A TO 0 1 1 0 2 1 71 5 2 2 1 0 0 2 5 0 1
MP 4036 39 13 18 3 37 13 1 200 MR 27 28 27 38 37 17 3 21 2
14-18 43 12 72 19 12 200 Attendance—B,2s7
PHOTOS BY REGAN HSU/THE CHRONICLE
Schweitzer and Rochelle Parent sport “Superwoman” T-shirts on Senior Night; CLOCKWISE FROM UPPER shot Tar Heel Coretta Brown; Georgia Schweitzer bums two Tar Heel defenders. attempt three-point by Beard blocks a Alana Duke freshman LEFT; Seniors Missy West, Georgia
The Chronicle
PAGE 24
FREE STUDENT MUSICAL EVENTS DUKE SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA Wednesday, February 28 at 8:00 p.m. Baldwin Auditorium Harry Davidson will conduct the Duke Symphony Orchestra with Student Concerto Competition Winners this Wednesday evening in Baldwin Auditorium.
DUKE WIND SYMPHONY Thursday, March 1 at 8:00 p.m. Baldwin Auditorium The Duke Wind Symphony, conducted by Kraig Williams, will perform Music for Dance.
COLLEGIUM MUSICUM Saturday, March 3 at 8:00 p.m. Duke Chapel Antony John directs the Collegium Musicum this Saturday evening. They will be performing Purcell’s Dido and Aeneas.
TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 27, 2001
SHIRLEY CAESAR AND THE CAESAR SINGERS An Evening of Gospel Music Saturday, March 3 at 8 pm Weaver Auditorium, Durham School of the Arts 400 N. Duke Street in Downtown Durham Shirley Caesar is North Carolina’s greatest gospel treasure. An eleven-time Grammy Award winner, Pastor Shirley Caesar is a native of Durham, NC, spiritual leader of a growing church in Raleigh, founder and president of the Shirley Caesar Outreach Ministry to the needy, and a veteran of the Broadway stage. Her straightforward, traditional style of gospel music draws on deep wells of faith and experience through four decades of professional performing. Tickets $2O/$ 15/$ 10. A portion of the proceeds of this concert will
benefit the Durham School of the Arts.
Co-sponsored by the
Department ofMusic, The Duke Divinity School, the Department of Religion, the Les Brown Endowment Fund, and Duke Institute of the Arts.
Lunch with Shirley Caesar Friday, March 2 from 12 Noon until 1:30p.m. Mary Lou Williams Center for Black Culture
Join Shirley Caesar, who will be performing this Saturday evening at Weaver Auditorium, for lunch and discussion. The topic: Is gospel music becoming too secular? Lunch is on the house.
or II
tap! ■ fHI
■
ARTS EVENTS ON CAMPUS This Week: February 27-March 5, 2001
HUELGAS ENSEMBLE co v^ Sunday, March 4 at 4:00 pm Duke University Chapel The Huelgas Ensemble brings to life longforgotten music that has all too often lain in dark comers of archives and libraries across continental Europe. Directed by Paul van Nevel, choirmaster, musicologist, and cultural historian, the Huelgas Ensemble specializes in music from the Middle Ages and the Renaissance. Their program at Duke, to be presented in the Duke Chapel, will center around the thirteen isorhythmic motets by the 15th-century composer Guillaume DuFay. Tickets $2O/$ 15/$ 10.
ON TAP! is coordinated by the Duke University Institute of the Arts. Other participating campus arts presenters include: Art Museum, Dance Program, Drama Program, Film & Video Program, Hoof n’ Horn, Mary Lou Williams Center for Black Culture, Music Department, University Union, University Life, and Documentary Studies.
NC INTERNATION JAZZ FESTIVA Friday, March 2 at 8:00 p.m. Baldwin Auditorium Under the direction of Pa. ffrey, the NC rnational Jazz Festival igs together guest artisf mpet and the Duke Jaz: dmission $l5; Senior -
FILM SCREENING AND DISCUSSION: FOREST OF BLISS Sunday, March 4 at 6:00 p.m. 103 Carr Building
MASTERS OF PERSIAN CLASSICAL MUSIC Friday, March 2 at 8:00 pm Reynolds Theater
gj
Take advantage of this rare opportunity to hear a brilliant program featuring three of the most important figures in classical Persian music performing together for the first time: Iran’s greatest vocalist, Mohammad Reza Shajarian; tar (lute) maestro Hossein Alizadeh; and the young kamancheh (spike fiddle) virtuoso Kayhan Kalhor. They will be accompanied on tombak (goblet drum) and vocals by Homayoun Shajarian. These esteemed artists will perform new pieces composed especially for this tour combining the rich, classical Persian repertoire with contemporary and ancient influences. Tickets $25/$2O/$l2 (Duke students) in advance; all tickets $25 Night of Show. Co-presented with the Persian Art Center of North Carolina. Duke Program in Film and Video Presents Lucien Taylor, Professor of Anthropology, University of Colorado, Boulder for a screening of Forest of Bliss, directed by Robert A. Gardner. Forest of Bliss is an unsparing yet redemptive account of the inevitable grief, religious passions and frequent happiness that punctuate daily life in Benares, India’s most holy city. The film unfolds from one sunrise to the next without commentary, subtitles or dialogue. It is an attempt to give the viewer a wholly authentic though greatly magnified and concentrated sense of participation in the experiences examined by the film.