The Chronicle DSG rejects appeal, declares Walsh winner By STEVEN WRIGHT The Chronicle
Members of the Duke Student Government Election Commission found themselves on the defensive last night as junior Sean Young challenged
the seven-person board’s Friday decision to cancel planned runoffs and declare junior C.J. Walsh President. In his appeal, which was heard and denied late last night by the DSG Judiciary,
Young argued that the Election Commission had no right to reevaluate its own decision without being prompted to do so by a formal complaint. Additionally, Young alleged that DSG Attorney General
Jessica Budoff told candidates
before the election that the winning candidate would have
to gain more than 50 percent of the vote and win by a margin of 6 percent. The current vice president for community inter-
action argued that by no longer applying that standard, Budoff had essentially changed the rules of election after the vote had taken place. The five-member Judiciary See DSG on page 11
Speedy Duke flies past Tar Heels By RAY HOLLOMAN The Chronicle Duke
93 CHAPEL
HILL
With the Blue Devils’ UNC 81 starting center Carlos Boozer helplessly balancing on crutches on the sideline, Duke reeling from a Senior Night loss to Maryland and UNC set to celebrate its first ACC title since 1995—“the kegs were probably already lined up on Franklin Street,” Shane Battier said—yesterday was supposed to be a night for Carolina to
remember. Jason Williams and Battier made sure that it would be one they would never forget. Williams scored 33 points and handed out nine assists and Battier, playing in his last ACC regular-season game, scored 25 points with 11 rebounds as the No. 2 Blue Devils (26-4,13-3 in the ACC) manhandled archrival No. 4 North Carolina (23-5, 13-3) 95-81 yesterday in Chapel Hill to claim a share of the ACC regular-season title. And this time, the win was not just about rivalry; it was about history, as the Blue Devils became the first team in ACC history to win or share the conference title for five straight seasons. “This is the result of coming to work every single day with the dedication needed to be a champion,” said Battier, who along with J.D. Simpson, Nate James and Ryan Caldbeck became the first Duke players to win three straight in Chapel Hill since the 19605. The seniors have gone 5-1 against the Tar Heels. “We didn’t just do it once, but five times. That will be something to
C
EZ/THE
look back on.”
Duke’s win avenged a two-point loss at home earlier in the season in which a staggering Blue Devil team shot just 13of-27 from the free-throw line. Yesterday, Duke put on one of its most dazzling of-
fensive performances of the season, keeping hope alive for a No. 1 seed in the
upcoming NCAA tournament. Not only did the Blue Devils shoot better from the free-throw line in the second installment of Tobacco Road’s
biggest rivalry, but in a dominating second half, the blistering Duke offense managed to shoot better from beyond the three-point arc (7-of-16) than the 42 percent free-throw clip in the first game. “They caught fire,” said UNC junior Ron Curry, who is now 1-6 against Duke in his career. “They made a lot of shots and they played a heck of a game.... We knew they were going to shoot a lot with See VENGEANCE on SpOftSWTap page 7
Clockwise from left: SHANE BATTIER beats Tar Heels Kris Lang and Jason Capel for two of his 25 points yesterday at the Dean Smith Center; NATE JAMES guards Tar Heel Joseph Forte. Forte was held to 33 percent shooting from the floor; DUKE STUDENTS celebrate after the Blue Devils’ vindication.
Big men sit as Duke’s top 5 surge CHAPEL HILL North Carolina coach Matt Doherty has garnered a considerable amount of praise and even mention as a candidate for conference coach of the year, but yesterday the first-year coach played right into the hands of Mike Krzyzewski and No. 2 Duke. Heading into the season-ending showdown between No. 2 Duke and No. 4 North Carolina at the Dean Smith Center, all the talk focused around how the Blue Devils would fare without center Carlos Boozer against the larger and more physical Tar Heels. But rather than play his one unquestioned trump card to his advantage, Doherty ignored his team’s most dominant inside presences and instead relegated them to bench roles, enabling Duke to pull away midway through the
Four groups flunk annual review,
page
Brody Greenwald Game Commentary second half for a 95-81 victory that snagged a share of the conference title away from Chapel Hill. Forty-one seconds after an irate Doherty picked up a technical foul that put his team down by 13 points with less than 10 minutes remaining, the 31-year-old coach had a chance to let cooler heads prevail when sophomore Casey Sanders, the only active center for the Blue Devils, fouled out of the game. See COMMENTARY on SportSWrap page 11 >
4 � Rare Book Room offers uncommon volumes, page 4
The Chronicle
Newsfile
•
World
page 2
Submarine court of inquiry convenes Nearly every major As the U.S. military prepharmaceutical company pared to convene a court in the world will be in of inquiry today into the court today against collision between a nuSouth Africa’s governclear submarine and a ment in a case viewed as Japanese vessel, Navy ofa landmark in the battle ficials said the sub was at sea only to take a group to get cheap AIDS medicine to many of the of civilians on tour. world’s poorest countries. BBC blast signals Clinton may discuss possible IRA threat pardons with senators A powerful bomb explodFormer president Bill ed in Britain, outside the
Clinton is considering an offer to be questioned in private by senators about his last-minute pardons. The Republican leading the Senate’s pardons investigation said he thinks Clinton “may be inclined” to accept the offer.
Bush dedicates USS Ronald Reagan President George W. Bush joined Nancy Reagan in christening a $4 billion aircraft carrier named after the 40th president.
BBC’s television center, injuring one person. Scotland Yard warned it could signal the start of a terror campaign by Irish Republican Army dissidents opposed to the peace process in Northern Ireland.
Northeast prepares for heavy snow A major winter storm hits the Northeast today and Tuesday, producing prodigious snowfall inland and heavy coastal snow, sleet and rain.
Weather TODAY: SHOWERS High: 49 Low; 29
‘
Mi
TOMORROW: PARTLY CLOUDY High: 46 Low; 25
“Rejoice, we are victorious.” -
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Pheidippides
National
MONDAY, MARCH 5, 2001
Suicide bomber kills 3 Israelis
FROM WIRE REPORTS
Landmark AIDS case begins in South Africa
&
The attack followed the Israeli killing of six Palestinians this weekend By DEBORAH SONTAG
New York Times News Service
A suicide NETANYA, Israel, bomber killed himself and three Israelis Sunday, heightening anxieties that conflict with the Palestinians is moving inside Israel and growing out of control. The attack scattered bodies over a pedestrian crosswalk in Netanya, a town north ofTel Aviv. Many Palestinians, too, were left anxious after a weekend in which six were killed by Israelis—including a 9-year-old boy in his home, a 43-year-old mother leaving a market and a Gaza man that Palestinian officials described as a harmless vagrant. At Palestinian funerals in the West Bank, mourners chanted
their appreciation for the bombing attack, singing, “We took revenge today in Netanya.” The explosion was so forceful that bodies rocketed through the air. Shortly afterward, several irate Israeli men took out their anger on local Arabs in an open-air market near the crosswalk. One Palestinian man was beaten unconscious, and Israelis at the scene said the crowd was preparing to-hitch the man’s body to a truck and drag him through the market when the police intervened. “They beat him senseless and it’s too bad they didn’t kill him,” said Victor Zaituni, 31, the owner of a fruit stand. “Someone wanted to
tie him to a car but the police came. Too bad.” Israeli Prime Minister-elect Ariel Sharon, who is negotiating the composition of his governing coalition, issued a statement from the Likud Party headquarters in Tel Aviv, condemning the bomber’s attack. Sharon later told reporters; “It is an attack that demonstrates that the Palestinian Authority is not taking the necessary measures. We know with certainty that [Yasser] Arafat’s most loyal troops take part in these terror attacks. “However, I object stringently to taking the law into one’s own hands. We need to exhibit maximal
restraint.”
National Guard crash recovery begins By KEVIN SACK
New York Times News Service
Stymied by knee-deep mud, UNADILLA, Ga. military workers struggled Sunday to complete the grim task ofremoving 21 bodies from the wreckage of an Army National Guard transport plane that crashed here Saturday in a sodden field. Though skies had cleared Sunday morning, Saturday’s nearly four-inch rain turned the freshly plowed cotton field into a quagmire. Sunday morning, however, investigators and soldiers involved in the recovery effort stormed the area in a convoy of Humvees and all-terrain vehicles. It was still slow going. A spokesperson for the National Guard Bureau, a coordinating group for the
state-directed National Guard units, said he could not estimate how long the recovery operation would take. “It’s a muddy, slippery site,” said Maj. Randal Noller, the spokesperson. “We certainly don’t want that to cause more accidents on top ofthe tragedy we’ve already had. They’re putting safety ahead of speed.” The plane, a C-23 Sherpa assigned to the 171st Aviation Battalion of the Army National Guard in Lakeland, Fla., crashed about 10 a.m. Saturday, about an hour after taking off from Hurlburt Field near Fort Walton Beach, Fla. It was headed to Oceana Naval Air Station, Va., to drop off 18 Virginia Air National Guardsmen who had been participating in a two-week construction and engineering exercise in Florida.
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Women, Gender, and War Warfare is usually understood exclusively as men’s business. But scholars know that women have played many roles in war. What difference does it make to tell the history of warfare from the perspectives of women and gender?
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Speakers: *Alison Rowley, Soviet and East European Studies Program, Duke ‘Penny Summerfield, University of Manchester ‘Kristen Neuschel, History, Duke ‘Miriam Cooke, Asian andAfrican Languages, Duke ‘Leisa Meyer, College of William and Mary ‘Chair: Claudia Koonz, History, Duke Women’s History Month 2001 is a project of theDuke HistoryDepartment. Planning committee chair: Professor Felicia Kornbluh
Co-sponsors ofWomen’s History Month: History Department, Office of the Dean of College of Arts and Sciences, Women’s Studies Program, Women’s Center, Center for Gay, Lesbian, Bisexual, and Transgender Life, Triangle Institute for Security Studies, Soviet and East European Studies Program *Women Law Students Association The Office of Institutional Equity
The Chronicle
MONDAY, MARCH 5, 2001
PAGE 3
Revelry fans Blue Devils
By STEVEN WRIGHT and KEVIN LEES
9
flames
The Chronicle
It was still light when students flooded the muddy Main West Quadrangle, but by the time night had fallen, nine benches had been sacrificed to one of the largest celebratory bonfires in recent memory. It started slowly. Students watched patiently as a handful of men tried to bring the blaze to life. The humid weekend and light sprinkle of rain did not help their cause. The benches resisted the newspaper kindling until around 5:20 p.m., when the Alpha Epsilon Pi fraternity, Brownstone Dormitory and Mirecourt Dormitory benches began to smolder. While they waited, revelers waved flags and chanted familiar basketball mantras such as “Go to hell, Carolina, go to hell.” And finally, to the delight of onlookers, the bench that Mirecourt residents had “borrowed” from Trent Dormitory was ablaze. At just past six o’clock, the celebration really started to heat up. The fourth, fifth, sixth and seventh benches were added to the enormous fire which also consumed rolls of toilet paper and prop chairs donated by Hoof-N-Hom. Police turned away students who tried to add dorm chairs, signs and foosball tables. More than the bonfire itself, students took pride in enacting revenge on the University of North CarolinaChapel Hill, which defeated Duke 85 to 83 in Cameron Indoor Stadium more than a month ago. “This is the best bonfire since freshman year,” said senior Clint Cheng. “It’s so great. Because we were the underdog this was all the more glorious!” Although some Duke fans had not expected the underdog to triumph, they had been waiting for weeks for the celebration. “I have been here for all of the last five regular season championships and... this [celebrationl had the best setup of any of them,” said fifth-year senior John Burkhardt. “This was nuts. I didn’t expect this at all.” Meanwhile, there were no casualties among East Campus benches despite a large turnout of freshmen, who packed the extra East-West buses brought out for the event. “Some people in my dorm were trying to have ours be the first freshman bench to be burned ever,” said freshman Ben Berchuck. “They were gonna have it hauled to West and everything—l didn’t think that was the best idea.” But not all were so willing to give up their benches. Residents of Nottingham, Wayne Manor and others congregated on their benches, preventing them from being added to the fire. House C residents, too, tried to keep their bench from becoming kindling. But around 7:30 p.m., basketball players Shane Battier and Mike Dunleavy walked over—accompanied by chants of Undergraduate
STUDENTS CELEBRATE on the quadrangle as bench after bench is thrown into the ritual bonfire. After the Blue Devils’ defeat of the Tar Heels in the Dean Dome, nine benches were consumed by the flames. “Shane wants your bench”—and convinced the relucdressed in a referee’s uniform, entertained spectators. tant students to add the ninth bench to the bonfire. Administrators and Durham fire officials were Phi Kappa Psi fraternity also prevented a mob from watching students’ conduct very closely at last night’s seizing its bench. Frustrated hecklers shouted “five festivities. After an unauthorized Jan. 28 bonfire, more days” to the group, alluding to the group’s official Durham officials threatened to suspend the University’s bonfire privileges. But Sue Wasiolek, assistant disbandment March 9. For those who don’t bleed Blue Devil blue, the vice president for student affairs, said she was evening seemed pretty uninspired. The fact that the pleased with student behavior. fire took place in broad daylight left some questioning “I haven’t heard from the fire marshal, but from my the celebratory ritual that has become a mainstay of perspective I think the students were very cooperavictorious Duke-UNC games. “I’m a little disappointtive,” she said. ed. I assumed it would look cooler,” said Steve Administrators reported no injuries at last night’s festivities. Police did, however, respond to a fire alarm set Chrysanthis, a student visiting from Vanderbilt Unioff in House C. Some students had lit a bathroom trash versity. “If it were dark, maybe it would look cooler.” The massive bonfire was not the night’s only source can on fire. There were also reports of minor vandalism. Ambika Kumar, Jennifer Song, Dave Ingram and of entertainment. Students played and wrestled in the mud while a member of Beta Theta Pi fraternity, Tessa Lyons contributed to this story.
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The Chronicle
MONDAY, MARCH 5, 2001
Annual review puts 4 selective groups on probation By AMBIKA KUMAR The Chronicle
jamin Ward said he was pleased with how the process went this year. He added that the committee will continue to consult with groups over the coming months. Five groups received outstanding ratings this year. Two of them—Alpha Phi Alpha Fraternity, Inc. and Kappa Alpha Order—had been put on probation through the annual review process
Four selective living groups—Beta Theta Pi fraternity, Kappa Sigma fraternity, Mirecourt and Wayne Manor—have been put on probation by the Annual Review Committee, as a result of failure to complete at least four out of the review’s seven requirements. All four groups have negotiated contracts with the ARC and will be taken off probation next year in the past. “Both of them have turned around ifthey, honor their commitments. Officers from several selective livvery substantially, and we’re very ing groups could not be reached for pleased to see that kind of progress,” comment Sunday, but ARC Chair Ben- said Ward, associate dean of student
development. “These groups have really risen to the highest echelon. We’re very proud of them.” This year, Sigma Chi fraternity and Phi Delta Theta fraternity were put on warning, meaning that they will be closely monitored this semester and put on probation in the fall if they do not meet certain standards. Ward said the full results of the annual review will be made available on the Office of Student Development’s website later this month. Groups have complained in the past about the annual review’s lack of clar-
ity, particularly in the case of Phi
Kappa Psi fraternity’s residential dissolution last month, when members of the group said Ward had not effectively informed them of their situation.
Ward disagreed and said he felt the ARC was accessible to groups “The committee really goes out of its way to indicate to the presidents [thatl they’re available,” Ward said. “Whenever I meet with them, I go out of my way to ask [if] there [is] anything that’s not clear, that they don’t understand and often make suggestions if they find themselves at a dead end.”
of ti)t Bast The Rare Book Room, located near the entrance ofPerkins Library, holds some ofDuke’s
most fascinating items
By Becky Young The Chronicle
SENIORS SHEKINAH LAMPKIN (left) and Keona Ervin examines items in the Rare Book Room’s collection. The rare book division of the library was created by an early-1990s merger of the manuscript department and the rare book department.
7fn a world of computer clusters and Duke Cards, the Rare Book Room seems to be a relic of ages past, when mysterious mansions housed rooms full of leather-jacketed volumes, when ornately bound books covered the entrances to secret passageways. “I think the architecture of the room itselfdraws people in,” said Tim West, director of collection development for the Rare Book, Manuscript and Special Collections Library. “It has an atmosphere that affects people when they come in. It is almost a sense of reverence.” The Rare Book Room’s striking aura matches its striking contents: The room contains such treasures as a book written in a Polish concentration camp and bound in a prisoner’s uniform; an original first-edition copy ofAdam Smith’s Wealth ofNations, once owned by a Russian prince; one of only about 100 known sets of John James Audobon’s original prints; and a first-edition copy of the Book of Mormon. '
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“We have lots of Mormons that come in... it’s asacred object to them,” West said. “They like to have their
pictures taken with it and hold it.” Duke’s collection of rare books has accumulated over many decades. The manuscript department was founded in 1931 and the rare book department was formally organized in 1942. Between 1989 and 1992, the two merged to form today’s Rare Book, Manuscript and Special Collections Library. The rare book branch of the library comprises four sections: the Mary Duke Biddle room, the Dalton-Brand research room, the Flowers room and the Trent room. The elegant Mary Duke Biddle room, built in 1948, was constructed specifically to house the Universitys growing collection of rare books. The room is frequented by visitors who wish to take a look at some of the more unique items in the University’s collection. Designed to have dim light and low humidity to keep the
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books in good condition, the room is modeled after an 18th-century British manor house library. The Dalton-Brand research room is used for material research purposes. Visitors often express amazement at the room’s collection of books in miniature format, said Peg Lewis, a volunteer docent for the Rare
Book Room. One of the remarkably tiny treasures is a leatherbound book about the size of a small fingernail—the miniature contains seven versions of The Lord’s Prayer in six different languages. The library displays the Gutenberg-printed book in a small Lucite case about the size of a nickel. “Originally these small books were useful because they allowed people to carry them around wherever they went,” Lewis said. The Dalton-Brand room also houses a copy of William the Conqueror’s Domesday Book —a tome See RARE BOOKS on page 11
MONDAY, MARCH 5, 2001
The Chronicle
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CREDIT SUISSE
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DARWIN WAS WRONG ABOUT EVOLUTION IN ONE REGARD. IT ISN’T ALWAYS SLOW.
We would like to congratulate the
Duke University Class of 2001 and welcome the following people to our team: Andrew Hananei Jack Newhouse
David Bermeo David Cheong Jeff Foster
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Speaking at graduation
The
fact that most students will not know her name and will have never seen her before does not make Charlayne HunterGault a bad or uninteresting commencement speaker. In her decision, the president chose someone whom she knows to be a good speaker, but someone who no one else knows. Administrators say that they were tired offamous but uneloquent commencement speakers. But their belief in this trade-off is as silly and foolish as bringing in a commencement speaker who could just as easily have been speaking today somewhere on campus. Hunter-Gault has built a respectable career in journalism and life outside it. The choices she has made and the struggles that she has gone through are worthy of respect and honor. As the first black woman to graduate from the University of Georgia, Hunter-Gault boasts the courage and strength Duke should hope to instill in its graduates. As a journalist in South Africa, she has an amazing track record of valued and honest reporting. She has won Emmys and Peabodys and has reported on some ofthe most controversial and important events of our time. In some ways, Hunter-Gault’s selection is a bold move by the administration of a top-10 school. Administrators may have opted for message over name. But there’s no reason to believe that you cannot get both. Simply put, the fact that our graduates and their parents and most everyone knows nothing about this year’s commencement speaker is disconcerting. Last year, the University could get none ofits top choices for graduation speaker, and President Nan Keohane was forced to reconvene her advisory committee to draw up a new speaker list. Apparently, administrators are so disheartened by their failure to get top-notch top-name speakers that they have convinced themselves that there are no bigname, good speakers out there. At least that’s what they say. How absurd. Many highly accomplished people got to where they are by speaking well. And handfuls of other colleges, from Harvard to Haverford, manage to secure major speakers each year. With all due respect to Hunter-Gault, she seems no different from any of the speakers whoroll through campus any day ofthe week. Few people attend their lectures in small rooms in academic buildings, This poor attendance says nothing for these events. More people should be at these valuable talks. But the commencement ceremony—Duke’s final send-off to its seniors and graduate and professional students—should be a real gift; the speech should be memorable not only for its message, but doubly so for its deliverer. Meanwhile, in the last month alone, Duke has managed to attract to campus Spike Lee and Rev. Jesse Jackson, both accomplished individuals with top-quality speaking styles. Hunter-Gault might be a nice treat as away to change things up, but bringing a no-name speaker to commencement should be a once-in-a-decade event. If the issue is money, then start raising it. If the issue is prestige, then start hyping the school. But either way, kick the inferiority complex and start getting speakers who stack up. Duke owes it to its graduates and their parents.
The Chronicle GREG PESSIN, Editor TESSA LYONS, Managing Editor AMBIKA KUMAR, University Editor STEVEN WRIGHT, University Editor MARTIN BARNA, Editorial Page Editor BRODY GREENWALD, Sports Editor JONATHAN ANGIER, General Manager
JENNIFER ROBINSON, Photography Editor NEAL PATEL, Photography Editor SARAH MCGILL, City & State Editor JAMES HERRIOTT, City & Slate Editor MARKO DJURANOVIC, Health & Science Editor ELLEN MIELKE, Features Editor JAIME LEVY, TowerView Editor JONAS BLANK, Recess Editor MARY CARMICHAEL, Executive Editor ROSS MONTANTE.Layout and Design Editor REGAN HSU, Sports Photography Editor KELLY WOO, Senior Editor DAVE INGRAM, Wire Editor MATT ATWOOD, Wire Editor CHRISTINE PARKINS, Sr. Assoc. City & Slate Editor TREY DAVIS, Sr. Assoc. City & State Editor MEREDITH YOUNG, Sr. Assoc. Health & 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 NICOLE GORHAM, Classifieds Manager STEPHANIE OGIDAN, Advertising Manager The Chronicle is published by the Duke Student Publishing Company, Inc., a non-profit corporation independent of Duke University. The opinions expressed in this newspaper are not necessarily those of Duke University, its students, workers, administration or trustees. Unsigned editorials represent the majority view of the editorial board. Columns, letters and cartoons represent the views of the authors. To reach the Editorial Office (newsroom) at 301 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.duke.edu. © 2001 The Chronicle, Box 90858, Durham, N.C. 27708. All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced in any form without the prior, written permission of the Business Office. Each individual is entitled to one free copy.
Letters to
the
Editor
Griffith hecklers disgrace entire fraternity system I left Griffith Film Theater on Feb. 28 offended and disgusted. I went to listen to Leigh Cohn talk about body image disorders for “Celebrating our Bodies” week and when I saw a group of men in the back, I was pleasantly surprised. I was even more excited when I heard that the Interfraternity Council was one of the many groups that had sponsored the speaker. My surprise swiftly
silent theater. Some people got up to leave. It seemed surreal, like a bad television movie from the ’Bos. Nobody at Duke could feel comfortable being that blatantly homophobic, could they? The nightmare only got worse.
As
the
speaker
showed an anorexic, fullbreasted woman in a bikini, one boy yelled, “I’d like to take some of that!” and the rest of them cat-called. Later, when they showed turned to revulsion. The first shock came slides of larger women models when Cohn talked about to offset the anorexic ones, male body image, using gay pointing out that these magazines as an example. women had the confidence to The group of men actually display their natural bodies, booed. The sound of their not starve themselves or derisive jeers echoed in the insert silicon, the boys
groaned at the sight and laughed mockingly. At a presentation meant to lift up women and encourage them to celebrate their bodies, these boys left me feeling deflated and discouraged. I don’t know who they were, which fraternity they came from or why they were there, but I have never been more disgusted with fraternity life than during those moments. I know that these boys (I call them boys, not men) are not fully representative of fraternity life; however, their immaturity, disrespect and homophobia are a disgrace to all fraternities at Duke.
Natalie Phillips Trinity ’O2
Employees who stay home for snow must get paid On the morning of Feb. 22, without garnering a supervithe assistant to the director of sor’s scrutiny are those very the linguistics program was people who are paid salary on her way to work at Duke rather than wages (supervifrom her home in Raleigh sors themselves in many when she was hit by a woman cases), and thus get paid anywho lost control of her car on way; the wage-earning folks 1-40. Luckily, she was not are pressured both by obligainjured, but her car was tion to their bosses (whether explicit or implicit) and by totaled. Personally, I am gunfinancial exigency to be here, shy from last year’s icy conditions; while driving from even when getting here could Chapel Hill to my job at Duke, spell serious danger—perhaps I hit an icy patch and spun even death. Last year, prompted by around a couple times in the middle of 15-501, to end up the unprecedented snowfall, facing traffic while cars the University changed polidodged me right and left. cy so that an employee who considers it too dangerous to escaped Fortunately, I unharmed, but vowed never come in to work has the to risk my life for my job option of staying out and again. I realize, though, that using vacation time to cover on Feb. 22 my feeling of the lost hours. This change was marketresponsibility to my job and as a magnanimous gesneed for ed my true my paycheck had pressured me to ture on the part of the drive to work even when I administration. knew it was possibly unsafe. Improvement it may be, but How many employees it is still terribly inequitable, will brave such conditions since administrators and just trying to get to work other salary-earners would before calamity results? not seem to be compelled to Duke needs to address this make such sacrificial choices; they are far less likely to be urgent safety issue. Unfortunately, the people reprimanded or resented for at Duke who are able to take being absent, and presumoff an inclement day’s work ably need not plunder their
vacation time to stay clear of adverse driving conditions. Is their safety more valuable to the Duke community than that of the wage-earners? Must there be a death
toll before Duke corrects this injustice? The current policy of passivity in this matter is placing the lives of your most conscientious employees in peril. The administration must demonstrate its humanity by encouraging proactively wage-earning employees to stay home under adverse conditions, whether or not the school itself is closed. It is shameful to force wage-earners to choose between safety and their livelihood. On the very rare occasion of icy roads or hurricanes here in our usually fair city, declare an “adverse road conditions” day so that superviquestion sors will not absences, and pay your employees to stay home and protect their safety, so that they may live to work for Duke another day. Paula Cook Assistant to the chair,
Department of English
On
the record This was pretty much a baptism by fire. You cant play in
many bigger games
than this. Sophomore Casey Sanders, commenting on his start at center for the men’s basketball team against The University ofNorth Carolina at Chapel Hill (see story, page one)
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 formletters or letters that are promotional in nature. The Chronicle reserves the right to edit letters and guest columns for length, clarity and style and the right to withhold letters based on the discretion of the editorial page editor.
Direct submissions to: Editorial Page Department The Chronicle Box 90858, Durham, NC 27708 Phone: (919) 684-2663 Fax: (919) 684-4696 E-mail: letters@chronicle.duke.edu
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In Sunday's other ACC men's basketball game, No. 23 Wake Forest defeated IM.C. State 76-58 in Raleigh. The victory marks the Demon Deacons third straight road win, as well as Wake’s first game since a last-second loss to Duke a week ago. The Demon Deacons finish out the season with an 8-8 conference record, their first .500 ACC season in four years. Meanwhile, N.C. State continued its end-of-season slide, dropping its fourth of five games. •
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No. 2 Duke avenged its earlier loss to No. 4 North Carolina yesterday, besting the Tar Heels in Chapel Hill, 95-81. Shane Battier had an All-America afternoon, scoring 25 points and adding 11 rebounds, five blocks and four steals. Not as exciting as the February matchup, this game was more thrilling for Duke fans.
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In the SEC, No. 6 Florida beat No. 15
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Tiger Woods for the Dubai Desert Classic title yesterday. Tied with Bjorn going into the 18th hole, Woods double-bogeyed 18 to remain winless this season.
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The No. 3 men's tennis team shut out No. 10 Florida, winning
all seven points in the teams' match yesterday.
Lacrosse
Double trouble Both the men's and women's lacrosse teams had unhappy trips to College Park this weekend, as both groups of Blue Devils lost to perennial power Maryland.
Women's Basketball
Back in the finals
Pages
Sports in Brief •
Dominance
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Meanwhile, the No. 21 IM.C. State women's basketball team beat No. 25 Clemson 65-52 in yesterday's other ACC tournament semifinal. The third-seeded Wolfpack managed to sink the secondseeded Tigers behind a double-double from Carisse Moody. The win puts N.C. State in the tournament final for the first time since 1991.
Kentucky 94-86 to win a piece of the conference regular-season championship. It was a sweet victory for the Gators, who one month ago were discouraged by a 1-3 league record. Florida was led by Teddy Dupay's 28 points. A championship atmosphere ensued in Gainesville, as the Gators cut down their own nets.
Men's Tennis
Revenge
A look at the ACC
issue
11
Top-seeded Duke is defending its ACC tournament title tonight against N.C. State. This weekend, the Blue Devils bested Wake Forest and Florida State.
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Men's Lacrosse Tuesday vs. Sacred Heart, 3 p.m., Koskinen Stadium
Baseball Wednesday vs. Old Dominion, 3 p.m., Jack Coombs Field
Thomas Bjom, the Danish beneficiary of Tiger Woods’ collapse on the 18th hole in the final round of the Dubai Desert Classic, which Bjom won
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Editor: Brody Greenwald Photography Editor: Regan Hsu General Manager: Jonathan Angier Special thanks to Chronicle editor Greg Pessin and managing editor Tessa Lyons
Sportswrap Associate Editors:
Andrea Bookman, Norm Bradley, Paul Doran, Kevin Lees, Craig Saperstein Graphics Editors: Ross Montante and Brian Morray Writers: Fozail Alvi, Nick Christie, Elizabeth Colucci, Evan Davis, Gabe Githens, Andrew Greenfield, Harold Gutmann, Ray Holloman, Michael Jacobson, Kevin Lloyd, Clinton McHugh Adrienne Mercer, Christina Petersen, Tyler Rosen, Thomas Steinberger, Catherine Sullivan, Sarah Unger, GregVeis, WilYork Sportswrap is the weekly sports supplement published by The Chronicle. It can be read online at
www.chronicle.duke.edu To reach the sports department at 301 Flowers Building, call 684-2663 or e-mail sports@chronicle.duke.edu
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Greensboro Coliseum Duke has won some important games in Greensboro Coliseum, and tonight it tries its luck again. The No. 4 Blue Devils take on the No. 21 Wolfpack, who beat Duke when the teams met in February.
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SPORTSWRAP
PAGE 3
Men’s tennis avenges NCAA loss against Florida By PAUL DORAN The Chronicle
After two 4-3 losses to Florida last season, one of which knocked Duke out of last year’s NCAA tournament, the third-ranked men’s tennis team did not want to show an ounce of mercy. Unfortunately for the lOth-ranked Gators, they did not have to. Instead, in a match so lopsided they did not drop a single set, the Blue Devils demolished last year’s NCAA semifinalist 7-0 yesterday in the Sheffield Tennis Center. It also marked the 10th straight match Duke has won at home. “It was great to win 7-0, especially after we lost twice last year,” senior Marko Cerenko said. “I thought it was one of the best matches we played all year.” The match began with the Blue Devils (7-1) taking the doubles point by sweeping all three matches over Florida (5-5). With the Gators experiencing some recent problems in doubles and using their 11th and 12th different pairings of the season, Duke tried to take them out early Playing at No. 1 doubles for the Blue Devils was the nation s 16th-ranked pair of Ramsey Smith and Michael Yani. They demolished the Gators’ Nathan Overholser and JeremyWurtzman 8-3, while Cerenko, who has been battling a minor injury, and Phillip King looked equally impressive in their 8-2 victory over Troy Hahn and Olivier Levant. “Phillip and I kept switching it up between the deuce and the ad courts,” Cerenko said.“I thought that worked out well. They may have been a little weaker at doubles than when we played them last year, but I also thought we played great.” After that it was up to Andres Pedroso and Ted Rueger, the 41st-ranked team in the nation, to pull off the hardest match of the day for Duke. They took out Florida’s Matt Behrmann and Ross Greenstein, 9-8 (5), in a tiebreaker. After being down a break at 5-3, the pair was able to rally to put the Gators away and take all three doubles matches, shifting the tide of the
match to the Blue Devils. “Whether you win two of three or three of three in doubles is not important because you still get the
point,” coach Jay Lapidus said. “But I thought it was good for Andres and Ted, who had lost some close matches lately, to win. It also probably helped Andres’ confidence in singles.” Since Overholser, the normal No. 1 singles player for the Gators, sat out with a minor back injury, these spots on both teams’ ladders were left for freshmen However, it was King who prevailed, knocking off Wurtzman 6-3, 6-4 and ending a nine-match winning
streak for the Gator. “I thought the team did well,” King said. “I was not
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PHOTOS BY MATT KLEIN/THE CHRONICLE
PHILLIP KING (left) serves during Duke’s romp yesterday; RAMSEY SMITH stabs at a backhand volley during doubles play. upset at all with fny performance either.” Gator was forced to retire. Lastly, Yorke Allen also deAt the second singles spot, No. 5 Smith beat No. 46 feated West Nott 6-3, 6-4, to give Duke the sweep. Levant 6-3, 6-4. Since Overholser was not playing, “It was one of our stronger performances of the year,”
Lapidus decided to sit out Cerenko and let him rest his foot, bumping up Pedroso to the third spot. Pedroso proceeded to trounce Hahn 6-1, 6-4, clinching the match for the Blue Devils. “It’s a day-to-day injury,” Cerenko said. “It turned out that their No. 1 singles player was out so we balanced each other out. If they had needed me, I would have played because I felt about 80 percent, but I was fine to sit out and let other people who may not get to play as much gain experience.” Joel Spicher finished off Behrmann 6-4, 7-5, and Alex Bose was beating Greenstein 6-3, 4-0 before the
Lapidus said. “It’s pretty impressive to beat the No. 10 team in the country that badly. Usually you have four or five guys playing good matches, but to see all our guys come together on the same day and play well was great.” The Blue Devils, whose only loss of the year came against top-ranked Stanford, have a week off before going up against the Texas Longhorns. Florida, on the other hand, will be riding a two-match losing streak into Wednesday’s conference matchup with Vanderbilt, “I wasn’t here last year, but I think it felt real good for the rest of the guys and Jay to [beat Florida],” King said. “It always feels good to win.”
PAGE 4
SPORTSWRAP
Conquered in College Park
MONDAY, MARCH 5,
2001
No. 1 Terps supply women's lax Ist loss By ELIZABETH COLUCCI The Chronicle
REGAN HSU/THE CHRONICLE
THE BLUE DEVILS converge on Denver during a preseason scrimmage. Duke lost to Maryland yesterday in both teams’ ACC opener.
Men’s lacrosse falls by 8 goals to UMd The Terrapins dominated yesterday’s matchup in College Park, handing the Blue Devils their most lopsided defeat in the rivalry since 1984. By GABE GITHENS The Chronicle
13 Yesterday the Duke men’s lacrosse Maryland team (2-1, 0-1 in the ACC) lost to the 5 Maryland Terrapins (3-0, 1-0) by a Puke margin of 13-5 at Byrd Stadium in College Park, Md. The eighth-ranked Terps used stellar defense to shut down Duke, which had many opportunities near the goal but could not convert. This was the seventh-ranked Blue Devils’ worst loss to Maryland since 1984, when Duke lost 16-4. The greatest letdown for the Blue Devils was the lack of scoring despite outplaying their eighth-ranked opponents. On a rainy and muddy field, the Blue Devils managed to outshoot Maryland 39-29 in the game and 2914 in the second half. To add to the Duke domination, the Blue Devils had 16 extra-man opportunities compared to the Terrapins’ five. Maryland, however, converted when it counted and had two goals on extraman plays while the Blue Devils only had one on a dismal afternoon.
“We didn’t get the ball around,” junior attacker Alex Lieske said. “One guy would go to the goal and stand there.” Senior goalie Matt Breslin managed only nine saves on Maryland’s 29 shots while Terrapin goalie Pat McGinnis, a first-team All-America candidate, anchored Maryland’s stingy defense with 19 saves on 39 shots. In credit to both goalies, the slippery surfaces
caused the ball to skip quickly and ricochet in many different directions. “They have a great goalie that made some great saves, but our shot selection was not the best, Lieske said. “The weather worked for or against both teams.” Among other defensemen to help the Terrapins was freshman Chris Passavia, who has high school AllAmerica accolades. The leader of the Maryland defense, however, was Michael Howley, who was the ACC rookie of the year last season and made several key stops for the Terps. “I think it was really us against us,” said Lieske, who had three of Duke’s assists. “No one played great today.” During the first quarter, Maryland quickly jumped out to a 4-0 advantage on two extra-man goals by Andrew Combs, who finished with a career-high five goals on the day. Maryland’s Dan LaMonica had two goals in the second quarter to make the score 5-0 and teammates Combs and Mike Mollot helped the cause to put the Terrapins ahead 7-1 at halftime. As the Blue Devils tried to contemplate what happened yesterday, the word discipline came to mind as a key problem. “I think we played hard for the most part, Lieske said. “We had no discipline [on offense] and mentally we weren’t there.” Duke was led by midfielder Kevin Brennan, who had two goals in the fourth quarter. The Duke sophomore helped his team outscore Maryland 5-4 in the final 15 minutes ofaction, but it came too little and too late. Duke senior Greg Patchak was held in check by the Terrapin defense; he tallied only one assist. Duke next takes on Sacred Heart at Koskinen Stadium tomorrow afternoon at 3 p.m. ”
18 A somewhat disappointing trip to Maryland Maryland this weekend was cut Duke 11 short, leaving No. 4 Duke with only a loss to open its conference season. Falling first to the top-ranked Maryland Terrapins by a score of 18-11, Duke was then forced to return home, postponing its game against Johns Hopkins due to impending bad weather. Although Duke (1-1, 0-1 in the ACC) produced several strong offensive attacks, the back-and-forth battle seemed to favor Maryland (1-0,1-0) throughout both halves. The Terrapins produced two quick goals in the first five minutes, throwing the Blue Devils off guard and setting the pace of the game. “Maryland was on a roll,” Duke coach Kristen Kimel said. “They made very few mistakes and were simply more ready to play.” Lauren Gallagher was the first to respond to the Maryland threat, putting Duke on the scoreboard nine minutes into the first half. Gallagher’s unassisted goal was the first ofthree that she contributed to Duke’s attack. Although Kate Kaiser and Kate Soulier also mixed in a few goals for Duke before the half, the Blue Devils still trailed 8-4 at halftime. The gap widened, however, in-ihe first 10 minutes of the second half as Maryland quickly tallied six more goals, claiming a 14-6 lead with 20 minutes left to play. All-America candidate Courtney Hobbs and two-time player of the year Jen Adams were among the leaders of the Terrapins’ scoring force. Kimel targeted her team’s man-down defense as Duke’s weakness of the game. “Goalie Kristen Foster saw a number of uncontested shots,” she said. “We need to take our next 10 days off to really concentrate on our defensive strategy.” Leading the second half attack for Duke was Kaiser, who tallied an impressive five goals for the Blue Devils. Individual efforts, unfortunately, were not enough for Duke to overtake the Terrapins’ sharp defensive strategy. Trailing by 10 in the last seven minutes, Kaiser and Courtney Rodgers finally produced the comeback Duke had been waiting for all game, netting three consecutive goals. But their efforts were cut short as time ran out, leaving Maryland victorious. “We are really a much better team then the one that showed up to play on Friday,” Kimel said. “We will just have to take the hard lessons we learned and turn them into positives.” The disappointment continued for the Blue Devils when they lost the chance to compensate for their defeat. Due to possible winter storm conditions in Baltimore yesterday, their contest against 17th-ranked Johns Hopkins, which was originally scheduled for 1 p.m., has been postponed to an undetermined date.
”
MEG BARNET scored an unassisted goal Friday for Duke
SPORTSWRAP
MONDAY. MARCH 5. 2001
PAGE 5
Women’s tennis overcomes deficit to defeat Longhorns After falling behind 1-0 following doubles play, Duke rallied for four singles victories against Texas By CATHERINE SULLIVAN The Chronicle
For the second time this season, the No. 3 women’s tennis team (8-1) lost two of three doubles matches and found itself down 1-0. Yesterday, it was at No. 6 Texas (8-1). The last time the Blue Devils headed into singles play with this deficit, they eventually fell to Georgia, 5-2. But against the Longhorns, Duke managed to recover, winning four of six singles matches for a 4-3 victory. “We played absolutely awful doubles,” coach Jamie Ashworth said. “We weren’t closing, we weren’t communicating.... Pretty much anything we could do wrong, we did it.” During the 10-minute break between doubles and singles, the Blue Devils got a much-needed lift from an unlikely source: sophomore Hillary Adams. “I was really disappointed with how everyone played in doubles,” Adams said. “I just got everyone together in a team meeting and helped fire everyone up.” Co-captain Megan Miller praised her teammate’s leadership. “Hillary really showed her spirit and pride and got us ready for singles,” Miller said. “It was important that we refocused and got our heads on straight because the first few games for everyone were so critical after we lost the doubles point.” The Blue Devils quickly evened the match at 11, as freshman Amanda Johnson, who is ranked 14th nationally and played No. 3 singles, defeated Longhorn junior Rebecca Forney 6-2,6-4 to remain undefeated in dual-match play. Johnson’s victory was followed by that offellow freshman Ansley Cargill, who is ranked second nationally. Cargill easily defeated ninth-ranked began hsu/the chronicle T exas senior Janet Walker 6-1, 6-1. Cargill imKATHY SELL returns a ball against Virginia Commonwealtha week ago Sunday, proved her dual-match record to 8-1.
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“1 was really focused the entire match and played very well,” Cargill said. “The crowd could have been a big factor, but 1 went up 3-0 and quieted them for the whole match .” The win was especially sweet for Cargill, who fell to Walker in a close match last summer. “Last time I played her, we had a ridiculously long match and I lost a couple ofmatch points,” she said. “I think I’ve gotten a lot stronger since then, and I was more willing to hit to her forehand so that I could attack her backhand.” Cargill’s victory put Duke ahead for the first time, but the Longhorns evened the score when junior Kaysie Smashy defeated Duke sophomore Katie Granson 6-1, 6-4. Adams then put theBlue Devils ahead for good, defeating freshman Michelle Krinke 6-2, 6-3. This win was also special for Adams, who grew up competing against Krinke in the juniors. “I’ve played Michelle many times and I lost to her in the finals of a national championship,” she said. “But I came out and played really well today.” With two matches remaining, Ashworth was happy to have his two senior captains left out on the court. “The match came down to Megan or Kathy [Sell] getting a win,” he said. “I couldn’t ask for more than having two seniors with over 200 combined wins out on the court with the match on the line.” Miller, playing No. 2 singles for Duke for only the second time this year, clinched the victory with a 6-3, 6-4 win against Texas junior Vladka Uhlirova, while Sell fell in a tough 4-6, 6-2, 6-4 contest against junior Joanne Masonsong. “Overall, this was one of the best singles matches we’ve played as a team all year,” Ashworth said. “I think it was good for us to see that we could come back and win after a tough doubles loss. This experience will definitely help our team in the future if we lose the doubles point again.”
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MONDAY. MARCH 5. 2001
Blue Devils take out Seminoles in ACC semifinals By ANDREA BOOKMAN The Chronicle
GREENSBORO At halftime yesterday afternoon, it looked like it might go down to the wire. But then Duke opened the second half with a 141 run that lasted 10 minutes. Aided by several such second-half runs and tenacious defense, the topseeded Blue Devils (27-3) beat fourth-seeded Florida State (18-11), 72-56. “I’m very proud of our team and the way they defended,” coach Gail Goestenkors said. “I thought we played great defense and rebounded very well.” The win puts Duke in position to defend its conference tournament title tonight against N.C. State. Although the Blue Devils won by a decisive margin, the Seminoles, who beat Duke in Cameron Indoor Stadium last month, posed a significant challenge as they led for much of the first half. But after a halftime pep talk from Goestenkors, theBlue Devils came out to play the second half with a mission. The 38-36 halftime lead left a lot to be desired for Duke, and for the first 10 minutes of the half, theBlue Devils sought successfully to put more points between themselves and their opponents. In addition to scoring, though, Duke put emphasis on its defense and rebounding in the second half, nagging Seminole ball-handlers and fronting Florida State’s shooters. “We were not pleased with the way we played against Wake Forest,” said senior Rochelle Parent, referring to Duke’s 75-68 overtime win against the conference’s last-place team Friday. “It was not a good showing of Duke basketball. We wanted to improve in all aspects of the game. Today we really focused on playing great quarter-court defense, boxing out, doing the little things.” Sophomore Michele Matyasovsky, having just earned her starting position with only two games remaining in the regular season, opened the second period with a three-pointer. In the next 10 minutes, Florida State missed eight shots—exactly the number of shots it took and grabbed no offensive rebounds. The Seminoles’ only production during this time was one made free throw by Levys Torres. Duke, meanwhile, was also missing shots, but the Blue Devils countered thenmisses with makes, scoring 11 more points off layups and jumpers. Torres finally ended Florida State’s drought with a jumper, but by then Duke had already opened a 13-point lead. See WOMEN’S BASKETBALL on page 10 'P —
36 38
Florida State Duke FSU Vujas Wyckoff
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Springle Traylor Whiting Hofman Brown Beai Team Totals
FG 4-9 3-10 1-3. 2-6 5-11 4-9 0-0 0-0 1-4
3PT 0-0 1-3 0-0 1-1 2-5 1-5 0-0 0-0 1-4
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PF PIS 9 2 3 8 17 3 5 4 12 3 12 0 0 0 0 3 3
A TO 2 3 1 4 2 1 3 1 4 3 11
MP 31 34 30 28 28 19 11 15 0 0 3 0 0 12
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20-52 6-18 10-16 33 3PT Duke FG FT R Parent 1-3 0-0 5-9 13 1-2 Matyasovsky 4-8 0-0 4 3-7 Mosch 0-0 38 5-14 Beard 1-4 0-0 1 Schweitzer 10-19 5-10 0-0 5 2-5 1-3 4Craig Krapohl 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 Gingrich 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 Gebisa 0-0 1 0-0 0-0 West 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 Tillis 1-6 0-1 0-0 4 White 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 5 Team Totals 26-62 8-20 12-1.8 42 Officiate: Cunningham, Newton, Stroud
19 56 14 14 200 PF PTS A TO MP 4 2 34 2 7 9 0 3 22 2 0 9 2 0 23 2 11 4 2 35 4
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PHOTOS BY LILY-HAYES KAUFMAN/THE CHRONICLE
CLOCKWISE FROM UPPER-
LEFT: Florida State’s Lakesha Springle looks for an open teammate as Rometra Craig swarms her; Sheana Mosch floats a onehanded jumper over Springle; and Gail Goestenkors crouches in her traditional pose on the Blue Devils’ sideline. Goestenkors had a lot to smile about yesterday, as seniors Georgia Schweitzer and Rochelle Parent inched Duke closer to repeating as conference tournament champions. Duke has never won both the ACC regular-season and tournament titles in the same season.
MONDAY. MARCH 5. 2001
SPORTSWRAP
PAGE?
VENGEANCE Early 2nd-half run stuns UNC VENGEANCE from page 1, The Chronicle
Boozer out. We knew if they could get going, they would have five guys on the court sometimes that can hit threes.” Although the Tar Heels were able to keep the Blue Devils in check in the first half— Duke led 42-40 at the break—a revved-up Blue Devil offense exploded for 30 points in the first eight minutes of the second half and sent first-year Carolina coach Matt Doherty scrambling to his X’s and O’s Williams, who combined with Battier to score 32 of Duke’s 42 first-half points, immediately picked off a pass from Curry and dashed downcourt for a fast-break layup to start the half. And the Blue Devils did not stop running. “The key stretch was the beginning of the second half,” Doherty said. “They seemed quicker out of the locker room and for whatever reason we came out flat. It’s tough to play catch up against Duke.” A Mike Dunleavy layup with 11:54 to play pushed the Duke advantage to 15 and forced Doherty to change his team’s strategy, benching center Brendan Haywood and power forward Kris Lang in favor of a smaller lineup. “Our half-court offense was not where it needed to be,” Doherty said. “We never really got into a rhythm, and credit that to the Duke defense.... [When we fell behind] we had to go with a smaller lineup to try and catch them and we couldn’t exploit our size advantage.” The Tar Heels cut the deficit down to 10 three minutes later one play after a technical foul on an animated Doherty, but the slower Tar Heels could not keep up with Duke’s track-meet pace. And without a dominant inside presence, UNC was not able to keep Duke off the glass, something it had done masterfully in the first meeting. “The key to moving the ball down the court is to rebound,” Duke coach Mike Krzyzewski said. “The key today was that we didn’t give up many offensive rebounds, so we could grab the ball and push it down the court. We were able to push our advantage.” A 15-6 run spearheaded by freshman
Chris Duhon and backcourt mate Williams
pushed the advantage to 19 points and sent most of the sellout crowd of 21,750 heading to the exits. “It was a great game,” Krzyzewski said. “We had two amazing games with UNC this year. That it was a split is appropriate; I think both teams are terrific.... Tonight, we played winning basketball.” ACC leading scorer Joseph Forte paced the Tar Heels with 21 points, but shot just 7-of-21 from the floor. Forte was harassed and frustrated by a tenacious Duke defense, led by two-time defensive player of the year Battier. The Blue Devils’ defense held the Tar Heels to a meager 40 percent from the floor and just 35 percent during the critical sec-
ond half. Battier, meanwhile, posted five
blocks and four steals to go along with his 25 points and 11 rebounds. “Battier was Battier,” Krzyzewski said. “The things we were able to do on defense were all based on the things he did.” A win would have guaranteed the Tar Heels their first outright championship since 1993, although they will still enter this weekend’s conference tournament as the top seed thanks to the ACC’s tie-breaking system. The Blue Devils will enter at No. 2.
PHOTOS BY JAMIE SQUIRE/ALLSPORT
JASON WILLIAMS (left) splits a double-team by Joseph Forte and Jason Capel (not pictured) during Duke’s 14-point victory to end the regular season yesterday; CARLOS BOOZER (above) watches from the sideline as he supports himself on crutches. Despite the absence of Boozer, the Blue Devils dominated the Tar Heels, especially in the second half. Much of Duke’s scoring came courtesy of Williams, who dished out nine assists and scored 33 points from all over the court. Shane Battier added 25 points, 11 rebounds, five blocks and four steals as he, Nate James, Ryan Caldbeck and J.D. Simpson won for the third straight season in Chapel Hill.
Freshman starts in place of James By RAY HOLLOMAN The Chronicle
CHAPEL HILL Baptism by tobacco juice. Hmm After all the talk in the media of Casey Sanders’ second start panned out to exactly 11 minutes and two points, maybe it is fitting that Mike Krzyzewski said the only thing that could be said of Chris Duhon’s first career start when he slammed down his foot, pumped his fist like a piston on double-time and growled down his bench with three minutes left, “Yes.” Score one for Duhon. Score one for Krzyzewski. Starting the freshman Duhon was not a surprising move—he had long been more of a sixth starter than sixth man, especially after an awkward floater in the fading seconds of the Wake Forest game made him another resident ACC story—but starting him over senior Nate James and
in the shadow of the Boozer melee was, in the least, unexpected.
Sanders’ start meant 11 minutes. Duhon’s might have meant the game. “Duhon had an amazing game,” the proud coach said afterward, the growl replaced by the usual calm demeanor. “He had a couple of steals, he kept [UNC] from coming back.” While teammates Shane Battier and Jason Williams filled up the stat sheets, it was Duhon who made all the second-half filler plays to keep theBlue Devils streaking. During the intermission of Williams’ scoring show, Duhon shined, putting up all 15 of his points in the second half (including a three-pointer when the Tar Heels crept to within 10), taking pressure off Duke’s starting point guard and keeping the offense up-tempo even as the game’s frenetic pace wore Williams down.
Which is, of course, exactly why Krzyzewski started him. “It wasn’t a knock against Nate,” said Krzyzewski, who added that he will start Duhon or James according to the opponent from now on. “I thought we needed to move the ball up the court quicker; I felt we needed a little more speed in the lineup. Some teams have been denying Jason the ball so we wanted to have two point guards in the lineup.” And the two point guards allowed the Blue Devils to keep the pressure on. There were no comebacks. There were no leads lost. There was just Duke rolling to an unprecedented fifth ACC title—literally running the Tar Heels out of the gym. And on the biggest stage in college basketball, there was Chris Duhon, proving that he could move from the wings to center stage—tobacco juice optional.
SPORTSWRAP
PAGE 8
MONDAY, MARCH 5,
200 1
Varsity-8 boat triumphs at UNC’s University Lake By CHRISTINA PETERSEN The Chronicle
JS/THE CHRONICLE
TOM CASS (right) will wrestle for Duke at the NCAA Championships in lowa
Two wrestlers qualify for NCAAs after ACC meet By MICHAEL JACOBSON The Chronicle
CHAPEL HILL In almost every sport, there are places that are considered hallowed. In baseball there is Cooperstown, in horseracing there is Kentucky and in wrestling there is lowa City, lowa. This year’s NCAA championships will be held March 1517 at the University of lowa, the site where legendary coach Dan Gable put college wrestling on the map. After not having any qualifiers last year, the Blue Devils will be represented on the national level this
season. Juniors Tommy Hoang (125 pounds) and Tom Cass (184) both found out that they were national qualifiers after the conclusion of Saturday’s ACC championships. “Wrestling in lowa, there’s no better place in the world,” Hoang said prior to hearing the outcome of the coaches’ meeting that decided who qualified. “Just walking into that stadium would be a dream that I’ve had my entire life.” The ACC receives 18 bids for the national tournament. Ten bids go to the winners of each weight class and eight bids go to wild-card wrestlers who are chosen by the
coaches following the tournament. Two Duke wrestlers, Hoang and Tim Marcantonio (165), had opportunities to guarantee themselves trips to lowa, but neither could use the finals to avenge losses from earlier this season. Hoang had little trouble reaching the finals, easily beating Virginia’s Ryan Stewart 15-2 in the first round and North Carolina’s Chris Collins 14-4 in the semifinals. Hoang continued to wrestle well through the finals against N.C. State’s George Cintron, to whom Hoang lost 7-3 last week in
Raleigh. Each wrestler gave up only an escape duringregulation time, but in overtime Cintron shot a deep single-leg and took Hoang down, winning the match 3-1. “Cintron’s a very defensive
wrestler, so I made him wrestle me,” Hoang said of the difference between his two meetings with the Wolfpack’s 125-pounder. “Tommy looked fantastic tonight,” Duke coach Clar Anderson added. “I’m pretty sure he’ll get [a bid].” Marcantonio’s journey to the finals went a bit differently. The weight class’s fifth seed, Duke’s 165-pound freshman avenged two regular-season losses before dropping a third in the finals. In the first round, Marcantonio squared off against Maryland’s Josh Weidman, a returning ACC runner-up and NCAA qualifier who won 3-0 in their first meeting. With two takedowns and a reversal, Marcantonio withstood a late charge by Weidman, winning 7-5. Marcantonio beat UNC’s Jason Wilson in the second round to face Virginia’s George Francesca in the finals. After a scoreless first, the stronger Francesca stalled Marcantonio’s offense and scored three takedowns of his own, taking a 9-2 victory. “I was a little reluctant, he shut my offense down,” Marcantonio said. “I tried to go in loose, but I tensed up right before the match.” Despite his second-place finish, Marcantonio did not qualify for lowa. But the same policy that excluded Marcantonio helped an extremely surprised Tom Cass get to lowa, and nearly did the same for Daegan Smith (197). Cass lost only to the eventual champion, and he won 9-6 in the third-place bout.
CHAPEL HILL A sizable number of sodden Duke rowers and fans focused on their own rivalry with the Tar Heels Saturday morning at North Carolina’s University Lake. North Carolina’s own Carolina Dash opened up the spring season for Duke and marked the first meeting of these two teams since the Nov. 12 Rivanna Romp. The Blue Devils split the regatta, losing all three 1,000-meter heats in the novice 8+ and the junior varsity 8+ boats, but sweeping the novice-four and the coveted varsity-eight races. “It was really exciting to beat them at home,” sophomore varsity-eight rower Amelia Booth said. “[The Tar Heels] specialize in the 1,000 meters, and last year we were able to beat them in the fall [but not in the spring]. This year we beat them all over the place.” As the rain poured down on the Blue Devils, Duke adjusted well to the nowfamiliar 1,000-meter format of University Lake, which is half the length of a normal race. To compensate for the location’s size restrictions, the two teams competed in a best-two-out-of-three format to equal a full 2,000-meter race. The Blue Devils’ varsity had formerly struggled with the shortened race format, since Duke’s emphasis on endurance often came up short on the faster sprint course. But Saturday morning, the Blue Devils changed all that as the team’s premier squad poured on the speed to beat the Tar Heels by more than seven seconds in their first heat of the day. The first varsity-8 heat also proved to be the fastest of the day, which at 3:20.44 was only challenged by the
same squad’s later times of 3:24.11 and 3:25.35. The Blue Devils then staved off continued attacks by the hard-pulling North Carolina scull to win the next two heats by over five seconds each time. “Certainly we’re disappointed not to win the varsity eight,” North Carolina coach Joel Furtek said. “In the varsity eight, we didn’t have the explosive power off the start that we needed to have to beat a very strong crew like Duke.” The Blue Devils began the day strongly with a quick novice 4+ win over the Tar Heels; Duke was the only team in that race to finish in under four minutes. It was all or nothing Saturday as the team that won the first heat went on to win them all as Duke dominated the novice fours and the varsity B+, but fell short in all three of the novice and junior varsity-8 heats. “I feel mixed about the results,” coach Robyn Horner said. “The varsity showed the most composure and poise overall, while the junior varsity’s last race was their best of the day. The freshman and junior varsity needed to get solid power application in their races and they were just outpowered by Carolina.” No matter how sweet it was to beat Carolina, Homer saw the regatta not just as a long-awaited varsity-8 victory. She also viewed it as an indicator of what the team needs to improve on to continually compete on the same level as the rest ofits competition. “[This regatta] was so early that it’s not only good competition but also a good way to take a look at where we’re at,” Homer said. The Blue Devils will continue regatta action against Louisville and Wisconsin March 17 at Lake Melton in Oak Ridge, Term.
REGAN HSU/THE CHRONICLE
DUKE’S VARSITY-8 ROWERS (top) defeated the Tar Heels by five seconds Saturday moming;other members of the rowing team carry their boat along the docks.
SPORTSWRAP
MONDAY. MARCH 5. 2001
PAGE 9
Baseball splits 2-game weekend series against Radford By KEVIN LLOYD
come out and give you a good outing, it gives you a chance to win.” Has else noticed anyone Despite Caradonna’s work, things got Radford 2 a theme developing interesting as Radford scored one run in Duke I here? the seventh and three in the ninth, but For the second consecutive weekend, Jeff Alieva held on for Duke, and the Blue Mother Nature decided to wreak havoc on Devils escaped with the victory. the Duke baseball team (6-9), this time “It’s good to see our guys not panic and cutting a three-game series against the hold on for the win,” coach Bill Hillier Radford Highlanders at Jack Coombs said. “I think Ryan pitched very well and Stadium down to two. put us in a position to win this game.” The rainout again left the Blue Devils Given the miserable conditions Frifrustrated, and denied them a chance to day and the worsening weekend foretake a 2-1 series win. cast, Radford and Duke agreed to play a “I don’t think we were pleased,” second double-header Saturday rather than baseman Scott Grossi said. “I think we play yesterday. had the attitude that we had a good The second game of the weekend did chance to take all three games, and we not go nearly as well for the Blue Devils. fell short.” For the second consecutive weekend, Although the Blue Devils were not Kevin Thompson pitched well, giving up pleased with the end result, the weekend only one run in six innings of work. But Duke managed to score only one run on opened rather well. In the series opener Friday, Radford three hits, dropping the seven-inning drew first blood with a two-out single in game 2-1. “Our bats just weren’t going,” Grossi the fourth inning, but Duke quickly rebounded in the bottom half of the inning. said. “They just weren’t working with us. David Mason walked to lead off the We had a lot of opportunities; we just inning and third baseman J.D. Alieva couldn’t convert on them.” The second game of the double-headfollowed with a single. Then, first baseman Larry Broadway hit a two-run er was not played, as rain again forced a triple to put the Blue Devils ahead 2-1. cancellation. “We were disappointed,” Grossi said. “We Shortstop Kevin Kelly closed out the scoring for Duke with a double that really thought we could have come back in the third game and taken the series.” brought Broadway home. The Blue Devils scored another run The offensive struggle, and a disapin the fifth and went up 6-1 in the pointing split placed a cloud over the eighth on a two-run Wes Goodner home weekend, but Duke gained confidence for a run to leftfield. Meanwhile, starting second-straight weekend off good pitching. “Our pitchers are really coming along,” pitcher Ryan Caradonna had a strong showing, going 6.1 innings and giving Grossi said. “They are giving us a chance to win every single time, and we’re playup only one run. “[His performance] was huge,” Grossi ing good defense behind them. If we get said. “Any time you can have a pitcher our bats going, we’ll do all right this year.” The Chronicle
ANDYSTAMP/THE CHRONICLE
KEVIN THOMPSON pitched six innings and gave up only one run Saturday against Radford.
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SPORTSWRAP
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N.C. State stands between season, as the Blue Devils crumbled CSSS in the last five minutes of what had regular-season series, and tonight’s been a tight game. N.C. State, meanwhile, returns after rubber match will decide the toura roller-coaster season. Opening the nament championship. conference season 2-6, including a 75-35 win over Wake Forest and an overtime By KEVIN LEES loss at North Carolina, the Wolfpack The Chronicle turned it around in the second half of GREENSBORO GeorgiaSchweitzer conference play. N.C. State went on a 7likes the vibe in Greensboro Coliseum. 0 sweep through the conference before “I love this gym,” the Duke senior said dropping its last regular-season game after defeating Florida State yesterday at Maryland. in the semifinals of the ACC tournament. “That chokes me up,” said an emoAfter scoring 52 points in two games tional N.C. State coach Kay Yow. “It’s to make it to the championship game, something I got used to and it hasn’t Schweitzer is pumped about getting one been here for a while. To be back in the more win in Greensboro. championship, with this team, is really “I’m not really sure,” she said. “I special. They believe that together, we know when you play ball here, you get can go above and beyond. So I’m just thrilled to be back.” confident. When you shoot with confidence, it’s a different story. Sometimes Yow, who notched her 600th win in you’re not hitting your shots and in Raleigh last month, would know how some particular gyms, it gets in your special a return to the finals are. Having head. It can also be positive.” not won a tournament game in five Schweitzer has won an ACC tournayears, she last saw the Wolfpack win the ment championship already, and tonight championship in 1991. she will lead the Blue Devils one last “We didn’t want to play anyone else time, hopefully, to defend that tournabut Duke,” forward Talisha Scates said. ment title. “I mean, Durham and Raleigh right After Duke’s (27-3) win over Florida next to each other, and in Greensboro, it State Sunday afternoon, second-seeded doesn’t get any better than that.” Clemson fell 65-52 to third-seeded N.C. N.C. State leads the conference in State (20-9), ensuring an ACC final scoring defense, allowing an average of that everyone believes might vie with only 57.4 points per game. Predictably, the Orange Bowl as this year’s top de- Duke follows as a close second in the fensive showdown. ACC, allowing 61 points per game. “N.C. State, their defense is phenomeDuke has the offensive edge, however, nal,” Duke coach Gail Goestenkors said. with 75.4 points per game, dwarfing the “They put great pressure on the ball, Wolfpack’s seventh-place mark of only they get up in the passing lane, really try 66. Even worse is N.C. State’s perimeter to keep you from executing your offense.” shooting—the Wolfpack is only 26.3 perThe two teams split during the regucent from behind the three-point arc. lar season. Duke won 62-59 in a close But while Duke might have more exmatch in Cameron earlier in the sea- perience in the ACC finals lately, Kay son. It was in that game that Alana Yow has another advantage. Beard dislocated her thumb. By the “I love tournaments. I love this time time she had returned and the Blue of the year. The Lord must have known. Devils faced the Wolfpack in Raleigh, My birthday comes in March. That’s like the tables turned and N.C. State handan indication. March madness, that just ed Duke its third and final loss of the fits me perfectly.”
MONDAY, MARCH 5,
2001
uke, repeat championship
� Duke and N.C. State split the
ACC Tourney Finals Monday, March 5, 2001
•
7:30 p.m.
•
Greensboro Coliseum
#1 Duke vs. #3 N.C. State No. 4 Duke 26-3 (15-3) Coach Gail Goestenkors Guard Georgia Schweitzer, Sr. (13.5 ppg) Guard Sheana Mosch, So. (11.4 ppg) Guard Aiana Beard, Fr. <16.4 ppg) Forward Rochelle Parent, Sr. (5.1 ppg) Forward Michele Matyasovsky, So. (5.3 ppg)
N.C. State 18-9 (11-7) Coach Kay Yow Guard Tynesha Lewis, Sr. (13.6 ppg) Guard Ivy Gardner, So. (7.7 ppg) Forward Talisha Scales, Jr. (5.9 ppg) Forward Monica Bates, Sr. <3.6ppg) Center- Carisse Moody, So. (14.4 ppg)
ANALYSIS
THE NOD
Carisse Moody has been, predictably, her team’s leading scorer and rebounder in both the Wolfpack’s wins over Maryland and Clemson. Meanwhile, Duke’s Iciss Tillis has been relegated to the bench; although Michele Matyasovsky has done well in the post, she is still no match for Moody.
m
This is all Duke. Although Tynesha Lewis and Ivy Gardner are consistent scorers, so are Sheana Mosch and Alana Beard. That would be an equal matchup. But the Blue Devils also have Georgia Schweitzer, who has easily been the MVP of the tournament, averaging 26 points in two games. £
O
c
0
CD
Intagibles
Tillis is still recovering from sickness, but Rometra Craig has played very well in the tournament and gives the Blue Devils even more defensive protection outside, as might Krista Gingrich. But the Wolfpack has Amy Simpson, who scores more than all but two of her teammates and is like a sixth starter.
EVEN
After Friday night’s close call, Duke is not likely to take anything for granted, nullifying the underdog effect for N.C. State, which has not seen the finals since 1991. Furthermore, Duke is defending champion. and so far, it has been The Georgia Schweitzer Show in Greensboro. Don’t change the channel.
Friday’s overtime with ninth-seeded Wake Forest was the motivation Duke needed before FSU. Although the Wolfpack is the last team to beat Duke, the Blue Devils beat them earlier, so they know what they can and cannot do. Both Gail Goestenkors and Kay Yow are first-rate coaches; as long as Schweitzer and Parent keep up their offensive and defensive Compiled by Kevin Lees domination, Duke repeats as ACC champs, 66-55 —
Duke tries to wear down FS ’s stars with uptempo pace
LILY-HAYES KAUFMAN/THE CHRONICLE
GEORGIA SCHWEITZER dribbles around April Traylor of Florida State yesterday.
.� WOMEN’S BASKETBALL from page 6 Some may have thought there was no way Duke would allow Florida State to come back after a near-miss overtime battle with Wake Forest Friday night. But after a missed jumper by Duke’s Rometra Craig, the Seminoles rebounded and on the other end of the court, Iciss Tillis fouled Florida State’s Shinikki Whiting. The senior guard made one of two free throws. Whiting then stole the ball from Alana Beard as she drove and passed to the rarely used Molly Beal. Making the most of her minutes, Beal knocked down a three-pointer for the Seminoles. Whiting scored two quick buckets, and all of a sudden, Duke was the victim of a 10-1 run, during which the Blue Devils’ only point came from the foul line. “We started taking quick shots,” Goestenkors said. “One thing we showed today was great patience. In that stretch, we started shooting after one pass. We talked about getting back to what was working for us, which was patience on offense.” With the lead cut to six, Georgia Schweitzer simultaneously hit a trey and stole the momentum. A minute later, Schweitzer stepped to the arc again for a triple and dropped in a two for good measure with 5:35 remaining in the game. Schweitzer’s personal run gave the Blue Devils a double-digit lead
that swelled and ebbed in the game’s final minutes, but the margin never dipped below 11.
While Florida State starters Brooke
Wyckoff and April Traylor denied feeling winded during the game’s late moments, Goestenkors hoped Duke would be able to wear down the Seminoles, especially since they had played Saturday while the Blue Devils enjoyed a bye. “We realized that pressure defense might not pay off in the first half, but it
would in the second,” Goestenkors said. “We wanted to wear them down. We knew we would be the fresher team.” And while Schweitzer once again led offensive campaign with a playerof-the-year-buzzworthy showing, her classmate Parent continued to boost Duke defensively with 13 rebounds and three drawn charges. Parent had left Friday’s game late with a strained hamstring, but after icing the hamstring and resting during Saturday’s practice, she was able to start yesterday and play 34 minutes. Although both of their first two ACC tournament games have featured deficits and leads, the Blue Devils seem to have found a rare offensive and defensive sync thanks to the leadership of their two seniors. Tonight, Duke will attempt to repeat as conference champions in what has been, to the Blue Devils, a most venerable host arena.
rmu: x i
UNC big men sit for much of game � COMMENTARY from page 1, The Chronicle When Max Owens converted the three-point play, the Tar Heels only trailed by 10 and were once again in striking distance, despite the fact that both their starting center and power forward had been sitting on the bench. But Doherty did not reinsert either Brendan Haywood or Kris Lang when Sanders exited, and Krzyzewski was able to capitalize on Doherty’s decision by keeping his five best players on the floor, with 220-pound Shane Battier tipping the scales as Duke’s biggest player. In the decisive final 12 minutes, Lang never came back onto the floor, and Haywood played only 2:36 during the stretch. The pair that helped the Tar Heels upset Duke in Cameron Indoor Stadium earlier in the season combined for only 15 minutes of second-half action as Haywood spent his Senior Night sitting idly on the bench while his teammates floundered. “I don’t know that I put the guys in the position they should have been in,” Doherty said of his decision to keep his star players out of the game. Although he received little credit heading into yesterday’s contest, Sanders played a sur-
prisingly significant role in minimizing the effectiveness of Haywood even when UNO’s 7-foot center was in the game. Sanders could have retreated less than a minute into the game, when Haywood electrified the capacity crowd at the Smith Center with a thundering two-handed jam and a powerful rejection on the first two possessions of the game. By the end of the game, however, those early highlight reels must have seemed like a distant memory. Having been acclimated to the world ofACC basketball in what he called his “baptism by fire,” Sanders regrouped and played the most aggressive 11 minutes of his career to help limit Haywood to only 12 points. Spelled by the assistance of forwards Matt Christensen and Reggie Love, Sanders went toe-to-toe against Haywood, a likely member of the All-ACC first team. Frequently rapped as too thin, Sanders held his own and even surprised Haywood by recording two rejections and stonewalling him on another play a couple feet away from the basket. “A lot of weaker programs would hide behind the fact that their starting center went down,” Battier said. “Nothing was going to stop us today; size, whatever,” Chris Duhon said. Along with the 27 minutes Sanders, Christensen and Love were able to contribute to Duke’s cause, the Blue Devils utilized a trapping defense to limit UNC guards’ vision into the post. UNC point guard Ronald Curry matched his seven points with seven turnovers, mainly because Battier’s rotating help-defense on the perimeter enabled Duhon, Jason Williams and Nate James to confuse the Tar
Heels’ two-sport player. “We knew if they could see inside, they’d see a 7-foot, 260-pound man against Reggie Love or somebody,” Krzyzewski said. But that was not always the case yesterday, as Haywood wasted away on the bench with the game on the line, giving Krzyzewski the option to only play Love, Sanders and Christensen a combined seven minutes in the second half. Lang and Haywood both rationalized their lack of playing time by saying North Carolina did not feel it could erase Duke’s advantage against the quicker Blue Devils. Lang, in fact, said he and Haywood were both told by Doherty that they would only get back in the game if Carolina was able to trim Duke’s lead. With players like Owens, Brian Morrison and Adam Boone playing in Lang’s and Haywood’s stead, though, there was never a chance of that happening.
42 40
Duke North Carolina Duke Battier
FG 9-15 Dunleavy 5-13 Sanders 1-1 Williams 13-27 Duhon 5-11 James 2-5 Love 0-0 Christensen 0-0 Team Totals 35-72 UNC Brooker Everett
FG 0-0 0-1 5-12 3-4 3-11 4-10 7-21 3-6 1-2 0-0 2-2
3PT 4-10 1-8 0-0 7-13 2-6 0-1 0-0 0-0
FT 3-4 5-6 0-0 0-3 3-4 0-0 0-0 0-0
53
95
41
R PF PTS ATO MR 11 2 26 0 4 39 9 2 16 2 1 34 2 5 2 0 11 4 2 33 9 5 37 15 2 1 4 0 36 7 4 4 11 27 1 0 0 0 0 4 2 3 0 0 0 12 3
14-38 11-17 41 19 95 3PT 0-0 0-0 0-0 1-2 1-6 2-5 2-4 0-0 0-0 0-0 1-1
16 11 200
PF PTS ATO MP 0 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 1 Haywood 1 12 0 1 25 Owens 2 8 1 2 23 17 Curry 5 7 31 Capel 2 11 3 1 37 Forte 4 3 21 4 3 3 5 17 3 1 17 Lang Peppers 2 17 0 0 16 Boone 0 1 0 0 0 4 Morrison 11 8 0 0 9 Team 3 Totals 28-69 7-18 18-25 43 14 81 16 15 200 Officials: Hess, Scagliotta, Patillo Attendance—2l,7so FT 0-0 0-0 2-3 1-1 0-0 1-2 5-6 1-2 5-7 0-0 3-4
R 0 0 8 2 5 11
REEM HAFEZ/THE CHRONICLE
CHRIS DUHON races upcourt against UNO’s Ronald Curry.
Duke Transit Free Airport Shuttle for Spring Break Departures to RDU Airport Friday, March 9,2001 WEST 12:00 noon
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AIRPORT
12:10pm 2:lopm 4:lopm 6:lopm
12:20pm 2:2opm 4:2opm 6:2opm
12:45pm 2;45pm 4:45pm 6:45pm
Return from RDU Airport Sunday, March 18,2001 12:00 noon
•
2;oopm 4:oopm 6:oopm •
•
The bus will make a stop at each terminal (baggage claim area)
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MONDAY, MARCH 5,
COMMENTARY
2001
PAGE?
Calculus of terror As a nation, we must be better prepared for the possibility of nuclear, chemical or biological attack days when all members of the nuclear club were permanent members of the
Diplomatic
U.N. Security Council are over. Eleven countries possess atomic arms, and four others—including several that are suspected of promoting international terPavel Molchanov rorism—are strongly believed to have a nuclear development program. Thus, “No sane citizen, political leader or control over strategic weaponry is no nation wants thermonuclear war. But longer limited to prominent—though merely not wanting it is not enough,” not necessarily democratic—leaders in said Robert McNamara, U.S. secretary the forefront of global governance. Some of defense, in 1967. of the world’s worst dictators—Saddam Right now, more than at any time Hussein, among others—have their butsince these words were spoken, an ton on the trigger. attack upon the United States that utiWhen the Communist bloc disintelizes nuclear, chemical or biological grated, so did the tight control that weapons seems if not probable, then at Moscow had over nuclear programs in least distinctly possible. The threat of Soviet client states, such as Iraq and nonconventional arms to the national North Korea. These countries have lost security of this country is much more their lucrative subsidies, but they now real than most Americans believe. The have complete control over their federal government, even its traditionstrategic arms. ally paranoid intelligence sector, simThe Soviet Union, though not known ply has not made this threat a priority. for its respect for human rights, would The potential consequences of this never allow its puppet states to use nuclear weapons for nonmilitary (i.e., deeply misguided policy are unimaginably horrific. It is a fact, for example, terrorist) purposes. The principle of that a relatively small tactical bomb bipolarity, enunciated by President John with a nuclear trigger, if detonated durF. Kennedy, meant thatthe U.S.S.R., not ing the day in a downtown area of a just the actual perpetrator, would face mid-sized city, would immediately retaliation for an attack against the result in upwards of several hundred Western allies. It is not hard to see how somebody thousand dead, in addition to thousands who would perish within days with the motive and the required finanfrom radioactive exposure. It is also a cial resources would have an opportunity fact that to acquire such a device and to carry out an attack against the people transport it into the United States is of this country. It is not easy by any means, but it can be done. It is, unfortufar easier than one would imagine. We do not live in a safe or stable nately, a matter of time, until at least an attempt to do so will be made. However, world. In fact, it has become significantly less safe since the Cuban Missile Washington can take a number of steps to Crisis. Two developments are chiefly to reduce therisk of this happening, or if the blame for this; nuclear proliferation and tragedy does occur, then at least minimize the collapse of the Soviet Union. The the harm done to people and property.
passport
First, the United States should ensure a speedy and appropriate strengthen its border protection signifiresponse to the crisis. cantly, which includes, of course, a sizThird, American diplomats should able budget increase. play a larger role in promoting The demilitarized Canadian frontier, America’s security. A two-pronged while a historical milestone and an approach is needed here. It must be important economic advantage, allows made clear that a nonconventional individuals to enter the country with attack against U.S. interests would hindrance. result in proportional retaliation very little, if any, Checkpoints at airports, seaports, and against the aggressor. Weakness and U.S. installations abroad should also be uncertainty are the surest ways to expanded and enhanced. invite war, and a posture of strength—Second, it is necessary for the nation’s backed by adequate resources—is the military to assume a role in protecting best deterrent. On the other hand, forinternal security. This requires a statu- eign aid funds should be liberally used tory modification ofthe ancient principle to strengthen fledgling democracies of posse comitatus. and regimes that are taking their first Coordination between the armed servsteps towards an open society. ices and both local and federal law America’s position of global leadership will not last unless the above enforcement agencies should be-expanded, and in case of a national security steps are taken immediately. emergency, the resources of the Department of Defense* must be used to Pavel Molchanov is a Trinity sophomore.
THE ARTFUL DODGER has a macLlib for you Monday, Monday THE ARTFUL DODGER is (noun). (Same
The biggest problem with Duke noun) is really dangerous and terrible because it is not only (adjective) but also quite (adjective). Because of all of this, (same noun) threatens to (verb) the entire Duke campus. This would normally not be a big deal, but owing largely to (name of STD), (same
really wreak havoc! Where would we be penicillin? without It all comes down to (name of a sophomore girl). She brought (name of STD) back with her from spring break at (name of Caribbean resort). Ironically, she then hooked up with (name of student research) you know who is very involved in science it on to all his friends. passed and he then Where and when the Triple X store became involved is a matter of intense debate. (Name of a famous Duke professor) wrote a paper entitled, “Why The Triple X Store Is Responsible for My (same name of STD).” But can we really trust the work of such a person? Especially when (name of same Duke professor) was so involved in that whole literary relativism sham a few years back. (Expletive), no! So it comes down to a personal decision. (Your name) has to look out for (your name). Even if Duke did beat Chapel Hill yesterday. Besides, half of STD) Chapel Hill already has (name of sameResort). from Ihis same Caribbean their trip to (name of Dean Smith. (noun) and (adjective) is because of become But when did (name of a U.S. president) historical of a U.S. (name involved in this? After the noun) can
period) things were (adjective). (Name of an American Indian tribe) had lost all of their (noun). This made their leader, (adverb) (name of animal) a very perturbed fellow. So he turned to President Nan Keohane. Keohane was (verb) her (name of an animal). Keohane’s (name of same animal) was a (adjective) animal. Often times, he would (bodily function) all over her (home furnishing). This caused Keohane great consternation. Especially when she was raising (currency) from (plural noun). But worse, it irritated Duke Student Government President Jordan
Bazinsky was the most funny looking president of any organization since (U.S. President, preferably Grover Cleveland). Bazinsky. Bazinsky was the most funny looking president of any organization since (U.S. president, preferably Grover Cleveland). Moreover, he was a part of DSG. DSG almost (verb that denotes screwing around with the results of an election to try to make sure that a patsy who will not rock the boat is elected) the elections and at one point tried to rob C.J. Walsh of his (adverb) earned job as DSG president. Thankfully, DSG came to the right decision and will not make us vote for Walsh again in a (expletive) runoff. It is nice that DSG decided not to (verb that means the same thing as steal) the elections in their final analysis. Either way, it is clear that (name of an Egyptian pharaoh) enjoyed his (noun). Whether or not this
had any effect on Duke today is (adjective). What is clear, is that (same noun) was (adjective) and caused (name of earlier STD) to spread. How (name of one of Charlemagne’s sons, I chose Pippen) got (name of STD) is anybody’s guess. It all relies on the Duke fraternity scene, particularly (name of a fraternity
at Duke).
(Name of same fraternity at Duke) were (adjective) guys who liked to (synonym for sex in the active sense) (a type of livestock). This was no joke. Initially many were concerned that they would contract (mad
cow or hoof and mouth disease —take your pick), but in the end it was (name of the same currency raised by Keohane) that got them. When Bazinsky tried to get false endorsements from (names of members of the ’99-’OO Duke men’s basketball team) these (name of microorganisms) were on the pen he gave them. This is how (noun) became so very (adjective). But back to Walsh. You should (name for a participatory action taken by members of a democracy) for him. Moreover, (name of a major drug company) has promised that by voting for him you will make (name of a major Duke sorority) vaccinated against (name of STD). This is because Walsh has magical powers from his days playing the role of (proper name) in (movie).
Now that he is DSG president, the good old boys of (name of a major Duke fraternity) will not be all that (adjective). Moreover, (name of a political party active in 1930’s Germany and lead by Rosa Luxemburg and Karl Leibnitz) will be deactivated, as (name of STD) will no longer be a big issue. It is best that DSG did not steal this election like a truckload of (name of STD). It is too (adjective). Also, do not (verb) the (noun).
THE ARTFUL DODGER (verb) (noun) by the (noun) (preposition) his (adjective) (noun).
The Chronicle
•
Comics
page 8
Blazing Sea Nuggets/ David Logan
&
MONDAY, MARCH 5, 2001
Eric Bramley
THIRTY- EIGHT PIECES OF W00D...
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35 Bowling game 36 Tender toucher 38 Drive back 39 Woman saved by Daniel 41 Trail behind 42 Lima's land 43 Thresher's waste
44 Of hearing 45 Titled ladies 47 Capital of Phoenicia 50 Grouped merchandise 51 A pair 52 Double curve 53 Deli bread
The Chronicle: Because Duke won, the naysayers must Traverse the quad in their birthday suits: .Graime ..Grohn Engage in battle with George the fighting fish Grartin Scrape poop off Greg’s shoe: Challenge Don Hill to a duel: ..Grody Clean 301 Flowers, including windows and floors: Gratt Gross, Groslyn Do all of my reading and summarize for me: Write a DSG story that doesn’t come in ’til 2 a.m.:....Gralex, Gruth Stop saying ‘sweat’ when they mean ‘sweet’: ..Greem, Gratt, Gratik Grolly Refrain from touching Roily’s boobies. Now that’s tough:
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The Chronicle
MONDAY, MARCH 5, 2001
PAGE 9
A The English Department at Duke University presents a symposium by Denis Donoghue, Henry James Professor of Arts and Letters at New York University, entitled, “The Politics of Beauty” on Tuesday, March 6th at 4:00 p.m. in the Carpenter Boardroom (on the second floor of Perkins Library.)
The Chronicle publishes several public service calendars through the week as detailed below: Duke Bulletin Board Monday
Community Calendar Sports Events
The Department of Music presents a Student String Recital, 7:00 p.m., Nelson Music Room, East Duke
Tuesday-Friday Monday Tuesday & Friday Thursday
free and open to the public or for which proceeds benefit a public/not-for-profit cause. Deadline for the Bulletin Board is noon Thursday.
To submit a notice for the Sports, Arts or Entertainment calendars, send it to the attention of the Sports Editor, Arts Editor, or Recess Editor, respectively, at the address below:
The Chronicle, Box 90858, Durham, NC 27708. Fax: (919) 684-4696. Phone: (919) 684-2663 (Notices may not be taken over the phone). E-mail: calendar@chronicle.duke.edufor community calendar and bulletin board notices only.
Presbyterian/UCC Campus Ministry Bible Study meets at 12:15-1:00 p.m. in the Chapel basement, Room 036. We will be studying Genesis. Bring your
Wesley Fellowship Food for Thought Faith Issues over Lunch 12:00 noon in the Wesley Office located in the basement of the Chapel. For more informacall tion 684-6735 or e-mail jenny.copeland@duke.edu. Coordinating Council will meet at 9:45 p.m. -
-
The exhibition of photographs “From the Evelyn Series” will open with a reception for the artist, Louanne Watley, and a poetry reading by Kathryn Stripling Byer today from 5:30 to 8:00 p.m. in the Duke Institute of the Arts Gallery, located in the Bivens Building on East Campus. For more information, call 660-3356.
lunch and your Bible.
DUMA and Duke Dance: “A Moving Experience,”
6:00 p.m. Duke dance students perform works inspired by art at the Duke University Museum of Art. Performance is in Duke University Museum of Art. For information, call 684-5135. The Center for Documentary Studies announces the Durham residency of Whitfield Lovell, a New Yorkbased African Americanartist. Join Lovell at CDS for a slide presentation and discussion ofhis art and his work in the Durham public schools today at 7:00 p.m. For more information, call 660-3663, send email to docstudies @duke.edu, or visit http://cds.aas.duke.edu. The Duke Institute of the Arts presents Patricia Williams and Oliver Lake in “Skin,” a performance with music and poetry, 8:00 p.m., Reynolds Theater. Free tickets will be available at the door, or may be picked up in advance at the Box Office in the Bryan Center; call 684-4444. The Department of Music presents the Djembe Ensemble, directed by Bradley Simmons, 8:00 p.m.. Nelson Music Room. Free admission.
TV£SPAY
p.m.
Wesley Fellowship Freshman Small Group 10:00 East. For more information: on 684-6735; jenny.copeland@duke.edu; www.duke.edu/web/wesley. Wesley campus minister Jenny Copeland. -
Center for LGBT Life; Working with Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and Transgendered Employees, directed by Robin Buhrke, CAPS, 12:00 p.m. For more information, call 684-6607. Carpenter Board Room, Perkins Library, 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. For more information, call their new number at 401-9333 or visit www.comucopiahouse.org. The Biological Conservation Group presents a seminar by Cecil Frost, NC Plant Conservation Program;
“Conservation of species, communities, and process-
es in the Southern Appalachians.” LSRC, 4:00 p.m.
Room A247
-
mKSPAr Teer House Healthy Happenings; AARP 55 Alive Mature Driving Course, directed by Janet Robinson and Catherine Taylor, 10:00 a.m. To register, call 416-3853. 4019 N. Roxboro Road, Durham.
Presbyterian/UCC Campus Ministry Drop-In Lunch is held in the Chapel Basement Kitchen, 12 noon-1:00 p.m. Cost in $1.50. Come join us! The Biology department presents a Systematics seminar by Thomas Buckley, Duke University: “Molecular phylogenetics of the New Zealand cicada.” Room 144 Biological Sciences, 12:40 p.m.
Come and enjoy “Tying It All Together: Musical Traditions ofField and Factory,” a special classroom presentation by North Carolina blues musicians Algia Mae Hinton and John Dee Holeman, 3:50 to 6:20 p.m.
Auditorium. The Graduate Program in Ecology presents an seminar by Jason Lynch, Duke University: “Long-term fire his-
tories from
The Biology department presents an EEOB seminar by Mike Gilchrist, Duke University: “Transmission, Virulence, and Resistance: Trade-offs Underlying Host-Parasite Coevoliition.” Room 1 11 Biological Sciences, 4:00 p.m.
Westminster Presbyterian/UCC Fellowship meets 910:00 p.m. in the Chapel Basement Lounge. “Haphour,” an informal time ofrefreshments and fellowship, begins at 8:30 p.m. All are welcome.
Department of History and Center for LGBT Life: Leisa Meyer is the Director, Associate Professor, women’s studies and history at the College of William and Mary. “Xena: Warrior Princess: Lesbian Tease,” 12:00 p.m. For more information, call 6846607. 201 Flowers Building, West Campus.
AY
Spanish and Latin American Film Series: “Buena Vista Social Club” by Wim Wenders, 6:00 p.m. For information, call 684-2823. 116 Old Chemistry Building, West Campus.
-
“Table Talk!” A drop-in lunch sponsored by the Westminster Presbyterian/UCC Fellowship, the Baptist Student Union, and the Newman Catholic Student Center. At the Chapel Basement Kitchen, 12 noon-1:00 p.m. Come join us!
http://www.duke.edu/web/blackbum.
,
W£PN£SPAY
MONPAY, MARttt S
Blackburn Literary Festival; Reynolds Price, James B. Duke Professor of English, will read from his award-winning work, which spans the genres of fiction and poetry, 5:30 p.m. Rare Book Room (Perkins Library). A reception and book signing will follow. For 613-0973 or visit information, call
Chamber Arts Society; Members of the Paris Trio. Regis Pasquier, violin; Roland Pidoux, ce and Jean-Claude Pennetier, piano, 8:00 p.. Reynolds Theater, West Campus. For ticket information call 684-4444.
Concerts at St. Stephen’s presents Calvert Shenk, organist, in the third annual Harriet Dußose Gray Building. organ recital. Works by Bach, Lebegue, Clerambault, Freewater Films; “L.A. Confidential.” Tickets are “Personal Histories” Film Series at The Center for Boely, Sejan and improvisations by the recitalist. For free to Duke students, $3 for the public. For infor- Documentary Studies continues with “The Devil Never more information, call 493-5451 or visit www.stmation, call 684-2911. 7:00 p.m., 9:30 p.m. Griffith Sleeps” and “Real Indian”, 7:00 p.m. For more infor- stephens-episcopal.org. Film Theater. call send email mation, to 660-3663, Longleaf Opera presents “A Taste of Ireland”, 2:00 http://cds.aas.duke.edu. or visit docstudies@duke.edu, Teer House Healthy Happenings: Building Self p.m., PSI Theatre, Durham Arts Council Building. Esteem in the Family, directed by Roxanne Freewater Films: “Psycho.” Tickets are free to Duke For ticket information call 530-7339. Barksdale, 7:00 p.m. To register, call 416-3853. 4019 students, $3 for the public. For information, call 684Choral Department from both Chapel Hill High N. Roxboro Road, Durham. 2911. 7:00 p.m., 9:30 p.m. Griffith Film Theater. Schools will present the 16th annual “Voices On The The Wesley Fellowship (United Methodist Campus Blackburn Literary Festival and The Blue Roach Series; Hill” choral workshop. 3:00 p.m., Robert C. Hanes Ministry) Freshman Small Group will meet at 10:00 A tribute to Gwendolyn Brooks. The reading will Theater at the Chapel Hill High School. For ticket p.m. on East. All freshmen are welcome. For more include performances by The. Blue Roach Arts information call 969-2461. call 684-6735 or e-mail Collective and will be followed by a live band and an information, The Carolina Theatre presents The 2nd Annual jenny.copeland@duke.edu. open mic, 8:00 p.m. Coffeehouse (East Campus). For Nevermore Horrorand Gothic Film Festival: movies, call or visit information, 613-0973 classic horror trailers, door prizes, costumes, and lots http://www.duke.edu/web/blackburn. more. Prepare yourself for a shrieking good time. House Healthy Happenings: AARP 55 Alive Teer Methodist Campus Call 560-3030 forschedule. Wesley Fellowship (United The Mature Driving Course, directed by Janet Robinson and Catherine Taylor, 10:00 a.m. To register, call Ministry) Senior Class Small Group. 8:00 p.m. at Episcopal Center of Duke University Worship Jenny’s. Spiritual Formation at 9:00 p.m. in the Wesley 416-3853. 4019 N. Roxboro Road, Durham. Services are held weekly at 5:00 p.m. on Sundays at Office. For more information, call 684-6735 or e-mail the Center in Central Campus followed by dinner. The Duke Center for Integrative Medicine Education jenny.copeland@duke.edu. Please join us for worship and fun, all are welcome. Series presents a discussion on the herb cayenne (capiscum) by Ted Perry, BA, 12:00 noon to T.OO mp*r The Wesley Fellowship (United Methodist Campus p.m.. Room 2993 Duke Clinic (Duke South near the The Department of Music presents Colloquium with Ministry) will meet at 6:30 p.m. for our weekly prosecond floor garage walkway.) All are welcome. Andrew Rangell, piano, 12:15 p.m., Baldwin gram and worship. Divinity School Lounge. All are
Arts Events Entertainment To submit a notice for our Duke Bulletin Board and Community Calendars, send it to the attention of "Calendar Coordinator” at the address below, fax or e-mail. Submissionsfor these calendars are published on a space-available basis with priority given to Duke events. Notices must be for events which are
The Biology department presents a seminar by Organismal faculty search candidate Rick Blob, Field Museum of Natural History, Chicago: “Integrating biomechanics and paleontology: the evolution of limb posture in the ancestors of mammals.” Room 111 Biological Sciences, 4:00 p.m.
The Wesley Fellowship (United Methodist Campus Ministry) will celebrate Eucharist at 5:30 p.m. in the Wesley Office, basement of Duke Chapel. All are welcome. For more information, call 684-6735 or e-mail jenny.copeland@duke.edu.
the North American boreal forest: Room 144
Implication to past climate change.” Biological Sciences, 12:45 p.m.
welcome. For more information, call 684-6735 or email Jenny.copeland@duke.edu.
ANNOUN6£M£NTS
DoubleTake Documentary Film Festival, an international annual event, will be held at the Carolina Living with Advanced/Metastatic Cancer Support Theatre, Durham, NC May 3-6, 2001. Documentary
Group is held every Friday from 3-4:30 p.m. at Cornucopia House Cancer Support Center, which moved to the Overlook Bldg., Ste 220, 111 Cloister Court, Chapel Hill. For information, call their new number at 401-9333. www.comucopiahouse.org. The Department of Music presents a guest recital with
Andrew Ranged, piano, 12:15 p.m., Nelson Music Room.
Longleaf Opera presents “A Taste of Ireland”, 8:00 p.m., PSI Theatre, Durham Arts Council Building. For ticket information call 530-7339. The Carolina Theatre presents The 2nd Annual Nevermore Horror and Gothic Film Festival: movies, classic horror trailers, door prizes, costumes, and lots more. Prepare yourself for a shrieking good time. Call 560-3030 for schedule.
SATUKPAY The public is invited to join descendants of Erwin Mill workers and volunteers from the neighborhood for a third clean-up of the Erwin Mills Cemetery, 9:00 a.m.
filmmakers from the United States and abroad will be attending. Volunteers are needed in many areas during the 4 day event and prior to the Festival. There will be training sessions and opportunities to preview the films that will be shown during the Festival. Please call Jillian Weiss, Volunteer Coordinator at 919-660-3699 or e-mail jillianw@mindspring.com.
The Eno River Association is sponsoring a series of spring wildflower walks every Sunday at 2:00 p.m. from March 11 through May 6. Hikes are free but limited to 20 participants. To register call 919-4892795. To commemorate the 100th anniversary of the enrollment of the first female student at North Carolina State University, the NCSU libraries is presenting the exhibit, “Celebrating 100 Years of Women at NC State University.” The exhibit will be on display at the D. H. Hill Library through June 2. For information call 919-515-2273.
SEVENTH ANNUAL EMPOWERMENT PROJECT ACADEMY AWARD CELEBRATION Why until 11:00 a.m. This historic graveyard in Old West sit at home to watch this year’s Oscars? The Durham is one of few in the South where African- Empowerment Project and its founders, 1993 Oscar Americans and whites are buried together. For more winners David Kasper and Barbara Trent, in conjunction with the Independent Weekly Newspaper, will information, visit http://www.owdna.org/mill, or conAward Screening tact John Schelp at 541-5723 or john@owdna.org. host a “Hollywood Academy and local filmmakers friends, Party.” neighbors Join the Old West Durham Sponsored by Neighborhood to find out and celebrate this year’s winners. From Association. 7:30 to midnight on Sunday, March 25 at Aurora on The Carolina Theatre presents The 2nd Annual Hwy. 54 East in Chapel Hill; ceremony begins at Nevermore Horror and Gothic Film Festival; movies, 8:30. Food from a variety of area restaurants will be classic horror trailers, door prizes, costumes, and lots provided. For individuals, tickets are $25 in advance more. Prepare yourself for a shrieking good time. Call and $3O at the door, and for couples, they are $4O in 560-3030 for schedule. advance and $5O at the door. To RSVP, call (919) 967-1968. All proceeds benefit the community work Duke University String School Mid-Winter Festival of of the Empowerment Project, a non-profit media Music. With guest artists the Borromeo Quaret. Works resource and education center. and works inlcude Elgar’s “Introduction” and “Allegro” by Beethoven and Viotti, 3:00 p.m., 4:00 p.m., and 7:00 THE FCJL KITCHEN IS OPEN to all students, facp.m. Baldwin Auditorium, East Campus. Free. ulty and staff. 5:30 p.m. to 8:00 p.m. Monday through Thursday. Points/Flex/Cash/Check/IRs. Choral Department from both Chapel Hill High Schools Check our website (http://fcjl.stuaff.duke.edu) ■ for the 16th “Voices On The annual will present Hill” menu. choral workshop. 7:30 p.m., Robert C. Hanes Theater at the Chapel Hill High School. For ticket information call Registration is now open for the 23rd Annual Bryan 969-2461. Adrian Basketball Camp. Boys and Girls ages 5-19 eligible. For a free brochure call 704-568-0048 Longleaf Opera presents “A Taste of Ireland”, 8:00 are anytime Durham Arts Council For Building. p.m., PSI Theatre, ticket information call 530-7339. -
The Chronicle
•
Classifieds
page io
Announcements
1993 Honda Civic DX, 4DR, excellent condition, 52K miles, air-condition, automatic, new fires, $6500 489-9234.
Duke University does not discriminate on the basis of race, color, national and ethnic origin, disability, sexual orientation or or age in the administration of educational policies, admission policies, financial aid, employment, or any other university program or activity. It admits qualified students to all the rights, privileges, programs, and activities generally accorded or made available to students. The university also does not tolerate harassment of any kind. Questions, comments or complaints of discrimination or harassment should be directed to the Office for Institutional Equity, (919)-684-8222. Further information, as well as the complete text of the harassment policy, may be found at
89 Buick LeSabre, 142K, excellent condition, extremely reliable, mostly garage kept, $2lOO, negotiable. Contact 572-1659.
www.PerfectCollegeCar.com. Your parents never had it this
Internship for college senior (f.t. after grad) or recent graduate. Bright, energetic person interested in real estate career for Ig, pvt owner in Boca Raton, FL; commercial Isg, prop mgt, acquisitions, financing, dispositions, salary bonus, fax resume: 561-392-3561. +
BABYSITTING $B/HR Seeking gentle, responsible individual for occasional eves and (if you can) afternoons in our home, 5 min. from campus. Two delightful children; toddler and baby. References and transportation needed. 489-4392.
physical therapist, psychologist, a boutique, or a hair salon. Call 286-7529., ext. 227.
STUDENTS! Register at Devils’ Duplicates starting Thursday, March 1, for a men’s
Childcare provider needed in my home for delightful 3 and 6 year-old boys. 3-spm, 5 afternoons per month and other times as needed. Call 660-6681.
and women’s Duke
basketball autographed by team members. One entry per person. Entries accepted until Friday, March 30 at 9 p.m. Drawing Tuesday, April 3 at Noon. Win a wonderful NCAA Tournament souvenir!
Childcare provider needed in my home for delightful 3 and 6 year-old boys. 3-spm, 5 afternoons per month and other times as needed. Call 660-6681.
Apts. For Rent
Parenting Assistant
Needed
Apartment for sublet May 15December or just summer or fall. Just off East Campus. 34 bedrooms. $1175/month. First month rent special. Furnished if needed. Contact 613-2959 or vjf@duke.edu.
BARTENDERS NEEDED!!! Job placement priority. top Raleigh’s Bartending School. Call now for information about our half-priced tuition special. HAVE FUN! MAKE MONEY! MEET (919)676-0774. PEOPLE!!! www.cocktailmixer.com
Healthy adults (16 to 72) who are non-smokers are asked to participate in an investigation of the effect of endotoxin on lung func-
ence. Reliable/Committed, physically active, with car/good drivingrecord to work 10-20 hrs./week with one infant/one preschooler. Call between 8 a.m.-8 p.m. Durham, 490-8679. Refs, required.
Rd. Durham, 27705, or e-mail Friedoo2 @ mc.duke.edu.
www.duke.edu/web/skills.
The Chronicle advertising office is hiring Duke Undergrads for summer positions to continue throughout the next school year. Requirements: 30 hrs/ wk in summer, 10-12 hrs/wk during school year, reliable transportation, excellent communications skills, and professional appearance. Apply at The Chronicle, 101 W. Union Bldg., 684-3811.
Part-time administrative assistant evaluation. for educational Microsoft Excel and Word. $l5/hour. david@edstar.org. Call 544-7909. Research
$l2/hr.
Marketing. Flexible hours, good pay. Position starting in May and continuing through following year. Grad or undergrad. Send resume to Prof. Christine Moorman (moor-
Gain Psychology Experience
Assistant; Research position available at Fuqua in
man@duke.edu).
Student needed 10 approx hrs/week to help with general office work and research project for the LifeSkills Direct Workshop. inquiries to Sharon Brenner at Williams Life Skills, Inc., 286-4566.
Lost
Needed in Cardiology lab to perform general lab duties, such as
stocking, autoclaving, assisting Researchers and Lab Manager. 10-20 hrs. per week. Flexible. 6682520.
Occoneechee Golf Club needs
part-time help. Weekday afternoons and weekend shifts needed. 15-20+ hr/week. Benefits include golf discounts. Call 919-732-3435.
&
Found
Blue “Nomad II” Portable MP3 Player lost on West Campus. If found, e-mail sap4@duke.edu.
sRewards
Misc. For Sale
Staff Assistant Level 7 Full-time
help needed
in
the
Department of Classical Studies.
Perform administrative and secretarial duties of a complex and confidential nature in support of departmental or divisional activities to relieve supervisor of clerical and administrative responsibilities. If interested e-mail classics@duke.edu or call Jenna at 684-6008.
TUTORING OPPORTUNITIES your own hours. Instructors provides young community members a resource to help them develop the skills, attitudes and vision to accomplish their dreams and aspirations. We match tutors & coaches with students (K-12) in all subjects and sports. $9-11 dollars per hours
University
(transportation not required/extra
$
for home visits). Applications available at the campus Career Center. Log on at www.universityinstructors.com or call (919)403-6358 for more information.
Undergraduates with child care experience for counselor position on preschool project in the Duke Attention Deficit Program. 3-5 with some evenings hrs/wk Saturdays required, through the summer. Responsibilities include leading child social skills activity group and assisting in analogue classroom. Contact Dr. Desiree Murray at 416-2083. WANTED;
Occoneechee Golf Club needs part-time help. Weekday afternoons and weekend shifts needed. 15-20+ hr/week. Benefits include golf discounts. Call 919-732-3435.
Undergraduate tutors earn $B/hr graduate students earn
and
RESEARCH LAB ASSISTANT
Fiexible/Set
NOW HIRING FOR SUMMER POSITIONS
model-
Help your fellow students by tutoring Physics 51L or 54L. The Peer Tutoring Program needs more tutors for this semester. Pick up an application in 217 Academic Advising Center, East Campus or off the website at
required.
Housekeeper/Cook for Durham
EARN EXTRA CASH!
ENGINEERS
visits
professional family. Transportation required Fridays 3:30-7:45 and 2 other weekdays 3-6. $l2/hr. Write “Housekeeper.” 1955 W. Cornwallis
Earn Extra Cash. Part-time female models wanted. srus2ool ©yahoo.com.
Two
Compensation. Contact Cheryl Yetsko (919) 668-3135.
DURHAM law firm seeks a parttime courier/office services clerk. Must be responsible, have dependable auto with proof of insurance, valid driver’s license and good driving record. Tuesdays and Thursdays; 15 hrs. weekly. Familiarity with office equipment a plus. Competitive salary with mileage reimbursement. Fax your resume to 419-1600, attention: M. Miller or call 490-0500 for a telephone interview.
Wanted; Female with infant experi-
The Chronicle
Illustrator, Adobe Photoshop, and Quark. Please email dawn@resor call onanceproject.com 919-848-8606.
Earn $l5-30/hr. assistance is
tion.
Business Opportunities
Rental Space Available in the lobby of Metrosport, a high traffic (500-700 members daily) sports center. Excellent location for a
Graphic Artist needed for new Major Chapel Hill business. responsibilities will be designing flyers and web development. Must have experience with Adobe
C.J. Woodmaster, a quality wood furniture retailer, has FT and PT sales team member positions available in its Durham location near Brightleaf square. Flexible hours and great compensation package. Call Brad at 919-682-3436.
good!!!
http://www.duke.edu/web/equity/.
GRAPHIC ARTIST
Help Wanted
Autos For Sale
MONDAY, MARCH 5, 2001
For Sale; Western saddle, 17 inches, some tooling on skirt. Excellent condition, cinch included. $3OO. Saddle blanket, therapeutic saddle pad, stall gate and blankets also available.
TUXEDO SALE Formalwear outlet. Thousands of designer tuxedos and dresses. Student special. Own your own tux for $BO. This includes tux jacket, pants, tie, vest, shirt, studs and cufflinks. Open Thurs- Sat, 10am-s:3opm. Daniel Boone Village, Hillsborough 644-8243.
Services Offered Professional, confidential counseling for all age groups, Main Street Clinical Associates serving the Duke Community since 1984. Conveniently located right off Ninth Street. Visit our web site www.mainstreetclinical.com or call 286-3453 xl5O.
Travel/Vacation retreatmyrtlebeach.com Spring Break/Grad Week
1-800-645-3618 WE HAVE WHAT YOU’RE LOOKING FOR!
Houses For Rent 2 BR BA House. North Durham. 6 miles to Duke, fenced safe. INLAW suite. $750/month. 477-2911 +
FOR RENT-Remodeled Home 914 Hale St. Near East Campus. 3BRS 2B New Appliances. 286-3426. Sabbatical House! Duke/UNC/RTP 5116 Greyfield, 6 yo 4BR/2.58A, 2 car/bonus. 2850 sq. ft! Avail 7/017/02. $1950/moFum. sl7soUnfum. 401-1875. massar@duke.edu.
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The Chronicle
MONDAY, MARCH 5, 2001
PAGE 11
Chief justice criticizes officials for initial ruling P DSG from page 1
took only about an hour to come to its unanimous decision, finding Young’s arguments without merit and clearing the way for Walsh to become the next student government president. “The panel felt that there existed many ambiguities in the testimonies heard,” Chief Justice Alexis Highsmith, a senior, wrote in the panel’s decision. “In addressing the specific concerns that Sean articulated, the panel ruled that there were no valid circumstances for a runoff.” The Judiciary also took the opportunity to express its concern about the Election Commission’s performance, which came under fire when the group contradicted previous applications of the
relevant DSG bylaw. The bylaw states that to win an election, a candidate must garner either a simple majority or a 6 percent margin; this year’s officials interpreted the section to mean that a candidate must receive both to win. “The panel felt that the Election Commission acted irresponsibly in its efforts regarding the election results,” Highsmith wrote in the ruling. “It is the hope of the panel that future members of the Election Commission will adhere to procedure and have all members present to tabulate theresults. It is also the hope of the panel that Commission members will maintain an accurate understanding of the bylaw and campaign rules and procedures.” Young expressed disappointment
Rare Book Room boasts tiny tomes
intervention. Last Thursday evening,
president-elect said he will resign from
Budoff stunned students and candihis position as CEO of Devil’s Delivery dates when she ordered a runoff beService, but will continue his work plancause Walsh, the leading candidate by ning the Last Day of Classes. 6.8 percent, had not captured 50 per“It excites me that Election Commiscent of the vote. sion took it upon themselves to correct However, after consultation with their own mistake,” said Walsh, who reother student government officials ceived 32.4 percent of the vote. “I’m exand members of the election commiscited and honored to serve the interest sion, Budoff reversed her position in of the 6,000 Duke students.”
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RARE BOOKS from page 4 printed in 1085 that chronicles the land he obtained during his rule—and a set of Charles Dickens’ publications, including some of the original series pamphlets that were later published as single texts. The library’s extensive collection of Southern history is based in the Flowers room and includes publications printed during the Confederacy. In addition, the room has publications from esteemed Duke graduates Reynolds Price, Ann Tyler, William Styron and others. The Trent room is home to the nation’s third-best collection ofworks by Walt Whitman. Here, the library displays actual parts of manuscripts written by Whitman, a signed Whitman photograph from 1871 and multiple editions and copies of his works. The library, although sometimes intimidating to students because of its strict security regulations, encourages undergraduates to come in and utilize its extensive set of primary sources. “I have to admit when I first walked in, it was slightly intimidating,” said freshman Andy Abernathy. “They point out that the cameras are watching you and you have to leave your backpack somewhere else and you have to sign a bunch of papers.” The Rare Book Room’s books are stored in closed stacks, but individuals can examine them by lodging a request in the Dalton-Brand research rooms. The Rare Book Room is open during the week and staffed by volunteer docents. “We’re unique among special collections libraries because we’re quite open,” West said. “We like to think people feel they can come in whenever they want.” Still, the Rare Book Room uses extensive security equipment to ensure the preservation of the collection. “Obviously we have a concern for security because these materials are either irreplaceable or very difficult to replace,” said Robert Byrd, director of the Rare Book, Manuscript and Special Collections Library.
with the last night’s outcome, but said Friday night’s meeting of the Election that he would offer no further chal- Commission. “In our discussions we had lenges to the election. “I filed the compeople argue both points of view,” she plaint because I wanted justice to be said. “As I began to hear more of the ardone,” said Young. “I disagree with the guments that were being made, I was ruling, but I’ll accept it.” swayed to the other side.” The ruling officially brought to a Walsh, like many ofhis predecessors, close the third consecutive DSG execusaid he will make running smooth elective election that has required judicial tions a priority. In the meantime, the
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The Chronicle
PAGE 12
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Items & Prices Good Through March 10, 2001 in Durham. Copyright 2001 Kroger Mid-Atlantic. We reserve the right to limit quantities. None sold to dealers.
MONDAY, MARCH 5, 2001
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