March 19, 2001

Page 1

The Chronicle TIP leader Duke rushes Ast Kareem, Mizzou dies after bike crash By EVAN DAVIS The Chronicle

Their 94 GREENSBORO situations could not have Missouri 81 been more different. On one side was Duke, the East region’s seed who had rocked the 16th-seedEd Mo 'vuth Hawks in the opening round, preva 95-52. The Blue Devils’ opponent, No. 9 —‘uri, had barely squeaked out a two-po over eighth-seeded Georgia. Once the game started, however, no that mattered. What did matter were the next 40 minutes, and when the dust settled, the Blue Devils, led by sophomore sensation Jason Williams’ game-high 31 points and senior tri-captain Shane Battier’s floor leadership, had knocked off the Tigers, 94-81. “Duke and Missouri played a hell of a game today” Duke coach Mike Krzyzewski said. ‘Their game plan... put the game at a pace that was tremendous.” Missouri came flying out of the gate, holding the Blue Devils to only eight points in the game’s first eight minutes while opening up a six-point lead. The Tigers’ key players—sophomore Kareem Rush and junior Clarence Gilbert—combined to score 16 oftheir team’s first 19 points. Rush, who finished the day with 29 points, was 11-for-23 from the field and 5-for-8 from threepoint range. “He’s a great player,” Krzyzewski said of Rush, who announced after the game that he would return to Missouri for his junior season. “He’s a beautiful player to watch and I would have loved to coach him.” Duke sophomore Mike Dunleavy joined his coach in praising the Missouri forward. Duke

By GREG PESSIN

"

The Chronicle

Kenneth “Ramon” Griffin, a passionate and Respected Talent Identification Program administrator with a love for athletics and a commitment to community service, died Wednesday evening from injuries he suffered in a motorcycle accident that afternoon. He was 41. Griffin, associate director of TIP, reportedly drove his car to work last Wednesday, but went home at lunch to get his 1991 Honda motorcycle so he could enjoy the good weather. On his way back to work at 1:29 p.m., Griffin was rid-

ing his motorcycle southbound on Guess Road when a northbound Plymouth van suddenly turned left in front of him. The van was turning into a parking lot near Garland Street. The motorcycle struck the passenger side of the van. Griffin suffered upper-body injuries and died later that evening at Duke Hospital. Neither the van’s driver, Javier Sanchez of Durham, nor its passengers were injured. Durham’s Traffic Accident Control team is investigating the crash. In the mid-80s, Griffin worked in Duke’s Public Safety division. He reSee GRIFFIN on page 13 &

ICLE

Judge backs outcome of Mercer case

MISSOURI’S KAREEM RUSH dropped 29 points on the Blue Devils Saturday, but Duke survived the Tigers 94-81 and will head to Philadelphia to play UCLA Thursday.

By AMBIKA KUMAR The Chronicle

Last Monday, Duke lost another legal battle against Heather Sue Mercer, Trinity ’9B, when a federal judge denied the University’s motion to reverse an Oct. 12 decision that ordered Duke to give Mercer $2,000,001 as compensation and punishment for sexual discrimination. The University has 23 days left to file an appeal ifi the Fourth Circuit Court of Appeals btJt officials declined to comment on the natter until Duke’s counsel returns from out o/1 +own a^er thus week, U - S District “I am pleased tha" L 1 Duke’s postJudge James Beatvl d ver trial motions and u aid in a diet in all respects M parstatement last Tue'd sues its appeal to Fourth the Urcmt ft igation expenses will and resolution ofthe wnl be fiirthei delayed.” In his 43 rU Deaty —H Mercer nearly s4uu,uuu iu* In its motion, Duke had asked Beaty tc reverse the court’s October decision, See MERCER on page 5 -

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Battier adds Naismith to resume By CRAIG SAPERSTEIN The Chronicle

The awards keep piling up for senior forward Shane Battier. After being named a first-team Academic All-American, snatching the ACC tournament’s Most Valuable Player award and capturing multiple national honors in recent weeks, Battier garnered the Naismith College Basketball Player of the Year award Tuesday, Battier succeeds last year’s winner Kenyon Martin, a forward from Cincinnati. The honor was bestowed upon Duke’s senior by a panel of prestigious coaches, journalists and administrators organized by the Atlanta Tip-Off Club. As the recipient of this year’s award, Battier becomes the fifth Duke player to be recognized with this distinguished accomplishment, joining such Blue Devil greats as Johnny Dawkins, Danny Ferry, Christian Laettner and Elton Brand. However, Battier is the only Duke player—and for that matter, the only Naismith recipient ever—to have been honored by the Tip-Off Club twice, as he won the high school player of the year accolade as a senior at Detroit Country Day School. “I am very honored to receive the Naismith Award,” Battier in a statement Tuesday. “I am proud of the fact that I hold high standards for myself both on the court and in the classroom, It is a tremendous honor to be mentioned with some of the great P layers who have previously earned this prestigious award, ineluding several from Duke.” News of the award came only hours after he, his teammates and Duke coach Mike Krzyzewski held a pre-NCAA tournament press conference last Tuesday. Battler’s performance in the ACC tournament—where he was named the tourney’s most valuable Xplayer—was among the major topics of discussion for Krzyzewski. iKrzyzewski praised his senior tri-captain for a record-breaking See NAISMITH in SportSWTap, page 11

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SHANE BATTIER blocks a shot at the ACC championship against UNC

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The Chronicle

Newsfile

World

page 2

Macedonia attacks Albanian rebels

Delanoe had won the Paris mayor race, a traditional bastion of the right and President Jacques Chirac’s power base for nearlv 25 years.

Senate campaig finance debate begins .

Debate opens Monday on the proposed campaign finance overhaul. The battle will focus on Sen. John McCain’s (R-Ariz.) bill an opposing o bv Sen 01 ac Hagel (Rwhich is more lenient on soft money.

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U.N. Human Rights Commission opens China’s suppression of the Falun Gong spiritual movement and its continuing actions in Tibet will be one of the top targets for U.S. officials as the Commission opens today,

Macedonia unleashed a sustained heavy artillery and mortar attack on the hills around Tetovo in an effort to flush out ethnic Albanian rebels. The Bush administration and European allies said that they had no interest in NATO-led involving peacekeepers, F Bush reacts to OPEC S intended Oil outs administra-

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TODAY: PARTLY CLOUDY High; 56 Low: 36

Mamas and Papas’ John Phillips, 65, dies Singer and songwriter John Phillips, who as a member of the Mamas and the Papas penned “California Dreamin’” and other hits by the 1960s pop group, died Sunday.

TOMORROW: SHOWERS

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“Monday, Monday, so good to me Monday mornin’, it was all I hoped it would be.” -

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tion by a million barrels a day in an effort to curtail a sharp fall in oil prices.

Weather

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National

MONDAY, MARCH 19, 2001

kills 1 Amtrak train derailment the cause of the crash remains unknown

FROM WIRE REPORTS

Socialist wins Parisian mayoral election Early results released by the City Hall showed that Socialist Bertrand

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Ninety passengers were injured; By GREG SMITH Associated Press An Amtrak NODAWAY, lowa train carrying 210 people from Chicago to California derailed in rural lowa, killing one passenger, injuring about 90 others and leaving a zigzagging trail of silver cars along a muddy embankment. At least seven of the injured passengers were hospitalized, and dozens of others were treated and released from area hospitals after suffering minor injuries. Some crew members sustained minor injuries, an Amtrak spokesperson said. The cause of the crash about 11:40 p.m. Saturday 70 miles southwest of Des Moines was unknown.

Terry Williams, a spokesperson for the National Transportation Safety Board, said investigators were gathering details on the scene. The California Zephyr’s two locomotives and 15 cars were carrying 195 passengers and 15 crew members, Amtrak spokesperson said. Amtrak Debra Hare spokesperson Karen Dunn said company policy forbids it from releasing the victim’s name and a list of passengers.

Charlie Romstad of Colorado

Springs, Colo., said the passenger killed was his mother, Stella Riehl, 69, also of Colorado Springs.

Romstad, 46, said his mother

came to Des Moines last week be-

cause her brother, who was living in a Des Moines nursing home, had died. “We picked up the ashes on Saturday. She was taking them back to Colorado Springs when the accident happened,” Romstad said. Amtrak spokesperson Cheryle Jackson said at an Omaha, Neb., news conference that the victim was a passenger but she could not

immediately confirm the person’s identity. The scene of the wreckage stretched about one-fourth of a mile. Workers began picking up debris near the tipped-over cars, some of which formed a V-shape along the tracks. *

Wall Street looks to Fed for rate cuts

the sell-off of stocks. But other experts argue a halfpoint cut is enough for an economy that, apart from

By LOUIS UCHITELLE

New York Times News Service

After a week of plunging stock prices, the Federal Reserve will meet Tuesday to decide how much to cut interest rates in an effort to revive the economy just when a falling stock market seems to have the power to bring on a recession. No one doubts that Alan Greenspan, the Fed’s chairman, and his fellow policy makers will reduce the federal funds rate from its current level of 5.5 percent when they gather in Washington. The question is can a big enough rate cut keep the 10-year-old expansion rolling. Many on Wall Street are lobbying for a cut of threequarters of a percentage point, or even more, to stop

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the market, still has considerable strengths. “What I am concerned about is that we are heading into the unknown because of the stock market,” said lan Shepherdson, chief domestic economist at High Frequency Economics, who favors a reduction of threequarters of a percentage point. “We have never had so big a decline in stock prices at a time when they were so widely held.” The debate over how far the Fed should go to reduce short-term interest rates —thus influencing what lenders charge for mortgages, home equity loans and other credit—reflects sharply different views of the stock market’s impact on the economy.

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The Chronicle

MONDAY, MARCH 19, 2001

Scientists pursue vaccine for HIV

PAGES

Living with AIDS

At universities across the country—including Duke—researchers continue the quest to find a vaccine that could prevent or contain the virus that causes AIDS. By JULIA CONNORS The Chronicle

In the year 2000, an estimated 5.3 million people were newly infected with HIV, and researchers around the country struggled to find an HIV vaccine. From San Francisco to Boston to Durham, the struggle continues as researchers try to find away to either prevent or contain the virus. At the University of California at San Francisco, Dr. James Kahn, associate clinical professor of medicine and associate director of the AIDS program at San Francisco General Hospital, is currently receiving funding from VaxGen, a private company devoted to the prevention and eradication of the HIV virus. The company says it has the only vaccine that has made it to human testing. The vaccine is called GPI2O, because it consists of a glycoprotein with 120 amino acids. The vaccine mimics the outer envelope of HIV, so when an antibody binds to the vaccine’s coating, it should elicit an immune response as though it were reacting to the virus itself. VaxGen is currently testing the vaccine on 5,400 people in the United States and Canada and 2,500 people in Thailand. Most of the subjects are high-risk for contracting HlV—the. pool consists primarily offemale prostitutes and gay men who regularly engage in unsafe sex. The subjects will be monitored regularly over the next several years to see if the vaccine will prevent them from becoming infected with HIV. VaxGen is using a North American-Thai strain of the virus, and if the vaccine proves effective, the company will begin working on vaccines to prevent other strains. In Boston, Dr. Norman Letvin, professor of medicine at Harvard University, is using funding from the National Institutes of Health to develop another potential vaccine. In studies of both people and monkeys, he has found that a specific type of T-cell lymphocyte is capable of killing HIV-infected cells. “We’ve seen that when these lymphocytes are eliminated from the immune system, there is a masSee HIV VACCINE on page 14

A new documentary exploit the everyday reality of living with AIDS m Africa *

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By FARAN KRENTCIL The Chronicle

This

month, the distance between Africa and

Duke will be a little smaller when Hart Fellows and Duke alumni Craig Cohen, Trinity ’96, and Noah Hendler, Trinity ’95, present a documentary that focuses on Africa and AIDS. The exhibit features Cohen’s interviews and Hendler’s photographs of a Malawi village. The result of more than two years of cumulative work, the exhibit tries to spotlight the more human side of the AIDS crisis. “A lot of what we see in the [mainstream] media tends to focus on calamity—it’s sensational,” Cohen said. “I think that creates more distance.” Citing a recent example of African AIDS coverage in Time magazine, Cohen emphasized the role of the media in portraying infected people as pure victims. “All they saw was the famine,” said Cohen, who now works at the Center for Documentary Studies. “The photos were of very thin people... just focusing completely on the death and the dying. There are people living with AIDS. That’s what our project has tried to focus on all along.” Cohen, a leader of the FOCUS program Human-

itarian Challenges at Home and Abroad, hopes to take the exhibit and transpose the experience into book form. The book is tentatively titled “Shadow of Silence: A Story of AIDS.” “An exhibit comes and goes,” Cohen said. “We want to make something more lasting.” Alex Harris, a professor of the practice at the CDS, is editing the work. “What’s so interesting about this project is that these are two postgraduates that came into their work right out of college,” said Harris, who led the FOCUS program with Cohen. “These students were immediately getting engaged in one of the most important world problems of today, using, in part, the skills they learned as Duke students.” These skills included documentary fieldwork techniques like interviews, photojournalism and an acute awareness of the documentarians’ point of view. This exhibit marks the start of a two-part series focusing on AIDS in Africa. The second installment debuts in April and will center on interSee AIDS DOCUMENTARY on page 5 �

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MONDAY, MARCH 19, 2001

The Chronicle

PAGE 4

cm hmii Career Center Calendar, March 19-30 Tuesday, Mar 20 Finding Opportunities in Publishing, 106 Page, 7pm Please RSVP by sending an email to teri.mills@duke.edu Summer Services Program application deadline--spm

Tuesday, Mar 27 Schlumberger Shared Resources information session, Von Canon C, 7pm

THE BRYAN CENTER POST OFFICE has been the site of several cases in which students’ mail content has gone missing. Police have charged a housekeeping employee with larceny.

Friday, Mar 30 Opportunities for PhDs in Secondary Education, 201 Flowers, 12:30pm

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From staff reports After a month-long investigation, Campus

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it is the Ivy VCF? This online king event is heading into its third ;ar, and for the first time Duke is lining the Ivy League, Stanford, ind the University of Chicago as a •articipating school. In a VCF lal Career Fair) students review listings and submit resumes online ;.com). The employers will contact ly to arrange interviews.

+

From staff reports

http://career.studentaffairs.duke.edu/es-virtualcareerfairs.html

Former director of police Paul Dumas, who worked at Duke for nearly 25 years, died earlier this month following a lengthy illness. He was 67. Dumas, who won the University

What kinds of employers will be participating? The purpose of the Ivy VCF is to reach those employers who typically do not participate in conventional on-campus recruiting activities. For the most part, these employers will be seeking seniors graduating in a few months with a BA or BS degree, or alumni with one or two years experience. Broad industry areas will include: +

CONSULTING START-UPS EDUCATION NONPROFIT NEW MEDIA MARKETING ENGINEERING RESEARCH FINANCIAL SERVICES COMMUNICATIONS

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Car, gun stolen: A visitor reported that between 9 p.m. March 10 and 12:15 See POLICE REPORTS on page 14 �

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Mebane and Brianna Bryant and Sam Carlisle of Raleigh.

The family has asked members of the community to contribute to the Crime Stoppers program of any community in lieu of sending flowers. A memorial service was held last Monday in the Chapel.

Duke snags research center: The International Anesthesia Research Society announced yesterday that it has chosen Duke to host a new research organization geared toward improving U.S. marshal. Friends and colleagues said Dumas surgery outcome. The lARS will partner was a generous man of integrity. with the Duke Clinical Research “Outside of my immediate family, he Institute to form the lARS Academic was one of my biggest supporters,” said Resource Organization. Duke University Police Chief Charles The new organization will conduct Birkhead. “He encouraged me to pursue clinical trials and facilitate research higher education, additional law enprojects that focus on the perioperaforcement training and even to apply tive period of surgery—that is, from a for positions I didn’t think I was ready patient’s hospital admission to his disfor at the time.” charge. Dr. Mark Newman, vice chair During Dumas’ tenure at Duke, he of the anesthesiology department and coordinated security for the several digchief of the division of cardiothoracic nitaries who visited the University; he anesthesiology, will direct the Academalso oversaw security during Duke’s ic Resource Organization. Its co-medback-to-back NCAA men’s basketball ical director will be Dr. Lee Fleisher, championships. Also, the number of Johns Hopkins University’s clinical diwomen and minorities in the departrector of operating rooms for the dement increased significantly under his partment of anesthesiology and critical care medicine. He is also chief of leadership. A native of Maine, Dumas is survived the division of perioperative health by his wife Ann; three daughters— services research. Jeanne Dumas of Durham, Catherine “Recent studies have demonstrated Miller of Mebane and Teresa Bryant of that despite continued improvement in Raleigh; and four grandchildren—Albpatient outcomes, substantial deficits See NEWS BRIEFS on page 6 � Ml!l rf .

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Recruiting Coordinator (full-time) Drop resume by: March 31

to at least five students. Dean said members of the community who have not received expected mail at the Bryan Center Post Office in the last several months should contact investigator John Sheley at 684-4714. Everett’s bond was set at $1,500 and his court date is March 22.

Former police chief dies at age 67 following long illness

When is it? Students can review listings and submit resumes between April 1 and April 14 on the Ivy VCF Web site. You may register as a VCF participant starting Monday, March 26. Check the Career Center Ivy Plus VCF Web site for updates!

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Center Post Office. The housekeeping employee, 32-year-old Ricky Everett, was responsible for cleaning the post office. Maj. Robert Dean of the Duke University Police Department said DUPD has not recovered any of the stolen material and does not have an estimate of

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its value. Dean said the stolen items might include cash, jewelry, airline tickets and candy from packages addressed

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The Chronicle

MONDAY, MARCH 19, 2001

PAGES

Judge supports Photos, interviews comprise exhibit jury’s decision � AIDS DOCUMENTARY from page 3 views and photographs compiled by Marcy Levy, another Hart Fellow, during her time in Ethiopia and Zimbabwe. The Cohen-Hendler project was born in 1996, when the duo learned about the Hart Fellowship from their professors. The Hart program sends budding anthropologists, journalists and documentary filmmakers overseas for humanitarian causes. Cohen and Hendler first traveled to Rwanda, where they began to focus on children orphaned from the genocide of civil war. Because of additional support from Save the Children, Cohen and Hendler stayed for nine months to finish their documentary project. The organization also encouraged the two to explore Malawi’s orphan population, many of whose parents

MERCER from page 1 mandate a new trial or reduce the amount of the $2 million in punitive damages. Beaty denied all three requests. “The Court concludes that the weight of the evidence supports the jury’s verdict and that the actions taken against Plaintiff were motivated because ofher gender and that Defendant’s officials were actually aware of and deliberately indifferent to Plaintiff’s claim that [then-head football coach Fred Goldsmith] was discriminating against her because of her gender,” Beaty wrote. “Moreover, the Court finds that there is no reason to believe that the jury’s verdict was tainted or motivated by passion, sympathy or prejudice, rather than by objective considerations.” Mercer, who first filed suit in 1997, said she was treated differently from male members of the football team. In 1995, she kicked the game-winning field goal in the annual Blue-White scrimmage, and Goldsmith announced she was a part of the team. But in the fall of that year, Goldsmith placed Mercer on the team’s inactive roster, a list created specifically for her. In addition, unlike other team members, Mercer was not invited to play on the scout team, and she was prohibited from dressing out for home games. The University has maintained that it was Mercer’s kicking ability—not her gender—that motivated Goldsmith. Mercer said she hopes to use the award money to create a scholarship for young female athletes. ¥

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AIDS Day. Harris said the exhibit is particularly important to the Duke community. “This exhibit helps us to see AIDS as part of our own lives. These are real people touched by this disease,” Harris said. “The Duke community should see this exhibit to have a better sense of this extraordinarily important issue.” Both Cohen and Hendler hope to devote more time to their book after the exhibit is over. The exhibit, which opened Feb. 27, is on display at the Center for the Study of Medical Ethics and Humanities, which is based in room 108 of the Medical Center Library.

The Duke MBA

B(JY (tip

have died from AIDS After their first trip, the team returned to Malawi on separate journeys for additional research. In 1997, World Bank first featured their exhibit for World

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MONDAY, MARCH 19, 2001

The Chronicle

PAGE 6

Marine Lab receives S3M for endowed professorships � NEWS BRIEFS from page 4 still occur after surgery” Newman said in a statement. “We’re very excited to be able to work with other institutions across the world to improve the operative outcomes for our patients.” The LARS, founded in 1922 to promote anesthesiology research, is based in Cleveland and publishes the journal

Anesthesia and Analgesia.

Marine Lab gets S3M gift: The Duke University Marine Laboratory has received $3 million from the Oak Foundation for two endowed professorships in marine conservation biology and marine affairs and policy, the University announced last week. “[The gift] will provide wonderful support for our new strategic plan,

which targets environmental solutions

as one of Duke’s major initiatives over the next five years,” President NanKeohane said in a statement. The donation was made possible by the recommendation of Kristian Parker, an Oak Foundation board member who studied at the marine lab and received his Ph.D. in environmental sciences at Duke last year. The new gift will be put to use im-

mediately because the foundation agreed to pay for salary costs for professors before the endowment funds fully mature. “Our gift is designed to give the marine lab the flexibility it needs to grow and enrich marine science education and research,” Parker said in a statement. The Oak Foundation, with offices in Boston, Geneva and Zimbabwe, is dedi-

cated to global issues of social and environmental concern.

Duke taps new Fuqua Europe dean: The University has named

Robert Ashton, Martin L. Black Jr. professor of business administration, as the new dean of the Fuqua School of Business Europe. He will begin his term at the Frankfurt campus July 1, succeeding long-time Fuqua dean Thomas Keller. “[Robert Ashton is] a fine scholar and faculty leader whose research and engagement in international business equip him well to lead Duke’s exciting new campus in Frankfurt,” Keohane said in a statement. Ashton’s research focuses on strategic cost management, corporate performance evaluation, shareholder value creation and the measurement of intellectual capital. His appointment comes just months after Fuqua named Douglas Breeden its new dean.

Leydon leaving: Vice Provost for Information Technology Betty Leydon will step down from her post this June to join the Princeton University administration as its next vice president for information technology and chief information officer. Leydon came to Duke in 1994 and helped establish the Office of Information Technology. She has focused on planning efforts for computing, networking and telecommunication on campus.

Hospital names operations chief:

Robert Clapp, who has been at Duke for five years, was appointed chief operating officer of Duke Hospital last week. Clapp has served as associate vice chancellor of the Medical Center, associate vice president of Duke University Health System and interim COO of the

hospital.

The Durham native has also served as a chief executive officer and regional vice president for operations with Tenet Healthcare Corp., a California-based hospital company.

Faculty named finalists: Two

Duke professors—Director of the Center for French and Francophone Studies Alice Kaplan and Professor of History Alexander Keyssar—have been named finalists in the history category for the Los Angeles Times Book Prize. Kaplan, also a professor of romance studies and literature, could receive the prize for her work, “The Collaborator: The Trial and Execution of Robert Braillach.” Keyssar, also a professor of public policy, was nominated for his work, “The Right to Vote: The Contested History of Democracy in the United States.” The announcement of the award winners, who receive $l,OOO for the prestigious prize, will take place April 28. Kaplan and Keyssar were two of 45 finalists announced two weeks ago.

Holloway named to Pratt post:

The University has named Russell Holloway associate dean for corporate and industrial relations at the Pratt School of Engineering.

Holloway was appointed to Duke’s staff in November, but his new title was just established. In this newly created post, Holloway will work to promote industrial awareness among students and faculty. Among other things, he will develop summer internships for undergraduates and cooperative programs for master’s students. In addition, Holloway will help the school generate industrial research and technical interactions and support. He will oversee the creation of an industrial technology transfer program. Before joining Duke, Holloway was director ofinformation processing at the Roses Stores Division of Variety Wholesalers, Inc. He received his master of arts degree from Duke,

Fuqua club hosts forum: The Business Technology Club at the Fuqua School of Business will host “e-vision: Duke Business Technology Forum” for the third year this weekend. The conference will examine new technology and its application to everyday business. It will begin at 7 p.m. Friday in Geneen Auditorium with a speech by Frank Plastina, president of wireless Internet at Nortel Networks. Along with its several seminars, the conference will feature an address by Peter Retiring, president ofthe customer relationship management division of Teradata, a division ofNCR Corp., which is a technology consulting company. In addition, Anthony Perkins, the founder, chair and editor-in-chief of Red Herring Communications, Inc. will speak.

Duke Women’s History Month March 2001 Monday, March 19, 2001 4:30 pm. East Duke Building.

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Tuesday, March 20 Radisson Governors Inn, RTF Law School Fair 7pm

Speakers: *Laura Edwards History, Duke ‘Felicia Kornbluh, History, Duke ‘Katharine Bartlett, Dean, Duke School of Law ‘Carla Hesse, National Humanities Center, UC-Berkeley ‘Chair: Jean O’Barr, Director, Women’s Studies

Admissions Officers from the following Law schools: Duke, UNC-Chapel Hill, Wake Forest, NC Central, Campbell, Stetson, Washington & Lee, Washington, U. of Kentucky, U. of DC, U. of Tennessee, William & Mary, Suffolk U., Vanderbilt, and others

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The Chronicle

MONDAY, MARCH 19, 2001

PAGE 7

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MONDAY, MARCH 19, 2001

The Chronicle

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TIP researcher Vicki Stocking on her colleague Kenneth “Ramon” Griffin who died last Wednesday after a motorcycle accident (see story, page one)

The Chronicle GREG PESSIN, Editor TESSA LYONS, Managing Editor AMBIKA KUMAR, University Editor STEVEN WRIGHT, University Editor MARTIN BARNA, Editorial Page Editor BRODY GREENWALD, Sports Editor JONATHANANGIER, General Manager

JENNIFER ROBINSON, Photography Editor NEAL PATEL, Photography Editor SARAH MCGILL, City & State Editor JAMES HERRIOTT, City & Stale Editor MARKODJURANOVIC, Health & Science Editor ELLEN MIELKE, Features Editor JAIME LEVY, TowerView Editor JONAS BLANK, Recess Editor ROSS MONTANTE, Layout and Design Editor MARY CARMICHAEL, Executive Editor REGAN HSU, Sports Photography Editor KELLY WOO, SeniorEditor DAVE INGRAM, Wire Editor MATT ATWOOD, Wire Editor CHRISTINE PARKINS, Sr. Assoc. City & Stale Editor TREY DAVIS, Sr. Assoc. City & State Editor MEREDITH YOUNG, Sr. Assoc. Health & Science Editor ANDREA BOOKMAN, Sr. Assoc. Sports Editor NORM BRADLEY, Sr. Assoc. Sports Editor ALAN HALACHMI, Online Manager SUE NEWSOME, Advertising Director ALISE EDWARDS, Creative Services Manager MARY WEAVER, Operations Manager ADRIENNE GRANT, Creative Director 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. Ine., 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 theauthors. To reach the Editorial Office (newsroom) at 301 Flowers Building, call 684-2663 or fax 684-46%. To reach the Business Office at 103 West Union Building, call 684-3811. To reach the Advertising Office at 101 West Union Building call 684-3811 or fax 684-8295. Visit The Chronicle Online at http://www.chronicle.dukc.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.

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Letters to the Editor

Chronicle should have covered Taylor’s speech and that The Chronicle had Chronicle did not cover this just done stories on Jesse event, you would not know that. I find it extremely disJackson and Spike Lee. One must realize that The heartening that The HeraldChronicle turned into the Sun of Durham could send gatekeepers that Spike Lee reporters to cover this Duke talked about with such dis- event, which President Nan gust. The Chronicle decided Keohane co-sponsored, but that Taylor was not important our own campus newspaper thought it too trivial and enough to even merit an article, although she has touched unworthy to mention. Nonetheless, I attended the fives of many around the Communications, which country and around the world. the event and was able to benefit from her message. publishes Essence and I can think of at least 400 peoI feel sony for those However, and the and Durham Latina magazines, the ple in Duke who hear The Chronicle has editor Essence came to whom community of publishing her in Page deprived of receiving the speak magazine. She has come to the Auditorium—the night of the inspirational and uplifting Triangle on numerous occa- Duke vs. Maryland game—- words ofTaylor, who bestowed sions to speak. She has even that would speak to this on her wisdom of survival in this spoken at Duke in the past her behalf. She was important fast pace, overbearing and enough for Jesse Jackson to competitive environment we decade. When I called the editorial office of The Chronicle call on in order to provide call higher learning. to inquire about getting an words ofconsolation and guidRobynn Cox article written on this event, I ance to the former president Trinity ’O2 was told that The Chronicle Bill Clinton when he was in The writer is co-chair of the could not do it because she the midst of the Lewinsky scandal. But since The Black History Month Committee. was not well-enough known I would like to express my deepest discontent with The Chronicle and how its editors decide to feature articles. On Feb. 27, Susan Taylor came to campus and gave a very enlightening speech on how to attain selfgratification in the demanding global society in which we live today. Taylor is the vice president of Essence

Duke needs

On the record He loved his students, he knew each how to guide them.

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lescents means a place free from violence, harassment and drugs. For others though, safe schools are also free from commercialism and caffeine. Pressured by criticism that the companies’ business pursuits caused the overcommercialization of schools and contributed to obesity and hyperactivity of students, The Coca-Cola Company, which produces all Coca-Cola products, outlined new policy for distribution in schools last week The initiative that could have the largest impact on schools is a push to discourage the exclusive deals that many schools enter in with soda bottlers—most of which return a share of profits to the schools. Opponents of such contracts claim that a school’s consent to offer only one brand of soft drink serves as a school’s endorsement of a certain brand. But schools already make exclusive contracts with many providers—from milk producers to pencil manufacturers. By doing so, schools can bargain for good prices and acquire services targeted to their needs. And in the case of soft-drink manufacturers, schools can gain millions of dollars to augment their general operating and construction funds. Just this month, the Wake County school system signed a fiveyear contract making Pepsi its sole vendor and making the district a little bit richer. The system’s financial officer says Pepsi will give the system $1 million the first year, $525,000 each of the next four years and the schools will receive a 42 percent commission for each drink sold. In the end, it is more important that schools get the resources they need to provide a good education than to get a school free of advertisements. Besides, by the early teens, most people have already chosen their brand of choice, and worries that in-school advertisements have substantial, long-term effects on consumption are short-sighted. Coca-Cola also presented two other initiatives: the introduction of juices, teas, water and vitamin-enriched drinks to Coke vending machines and the removal of advertisements from the machines. The first of these ideas sounds like a win-win situation—since The Coca-Cola Company already makes these products, sodas can be conveniently replaced, profits can remain consistent and students can be more healthy. The second initiative, however, will do little more than calm parents’ nerves. Students know which brands they like and will not be discouraged from drinking sodas by banning brand emblems. Advertisements do not harm the educational process, and as long as Coca-Cola’s and Pepsi’s involvement in public schools stays on billboards and in the cafeteria, then schools will benefit from these corporate partnerships.

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solve the parking problem quickly

less-than-cordial or helpful students and a horde of towing trucks that patrol the clerks, I got my car back. lem. This is probably a comI was not surprised by the University, I have not heard of mon scene on campus: I was nearly $2OO fine, but by the a constructive solution offered making dinner for friends wasted hours, dead battery by the University to help the and had parked in the fire and bumed-up rear parking parking problem. I guess lane with my emergency breaks from the towing. maybe it is not a parking lights on, in front of Also, I was embarrassed problem until President Nan Women’s Center to unload to explain the parking situ- Keohane has to carry tons of my groceries. Preoccupied ation to a parent at the groceries and walk 15 minwith cooking, I forgot to police station—a parent utes to her home. Or, maybe a move my car for a while. who had driven a long way couple of $2OO fines will do. Then I suddenly rememto see his daughter perform Or, maybe what students say bered, but when I dashed in a play for charity. Duke does not matter; it has to come out ofthe door, sure enough, towed his car. from parents who donated car was am ashamed of I my gone. the way millions. Duke needs to prove I got a ride from a sympaour university handles the me wrong and come up with a parking solution, not more thetic policeman who said he parking problem. would rather spend the time is an issue Parking that ticketing and towing. policing. When I was at the affects many students’ lives. I Jerry Huang police station, I was not alone. made a mistake; I accept it. Trinity ’O2 After paying the fine to some But spare complaints from I will make one more appeal for the parking prob-

Letters

Policy

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

Direct submissions to: Editorial Page Department The Chronicle Box 90858, Durham, NC 27708 Phone;

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Fax: (919) 684-4696 E-mail: letters @ chronicle.duke.edu



SPORTS WRAP

PAGE 2

MONDAY. MARCH

Editor: Brody Greenwald Photography Editor: Matt Klein General Manager: Jonathan Angier

Weekend WISAIP=IUIP§

Special thanks to Chronicle editor Greg Pessin and managing editor Tessa Lyons

March Madness

Sportswrap

Men's Basketball Sunday scoreboard Round 2 games

Associate Editors: Andrea Bookman, Norm Bradley, Paul Doran, Evan Davis, Kevin Lees, Craig Saperstein Graphics Editors: Ross Montante, Brian Morray Writers: Fozail Alvi, Nick Christie, Elizabeth Colucci, 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, Greg Veis, Wil York

South Region 12 Gonzaga 85, 13 Indiana State 68 11 Temple 75, 3 Florida 54 1 Michigan State 81, 9 Fresno State 65 7 Penn State 82, 2 North Carolina 74 •

4 2 1 3

Midwest Region Kansas 87, 5 Syracuse 58 Arizona 73, 10 Butler 52 Illinois 79, 9 Charlotte 61 Mississippi 59, 6 Notre Dame 56

Women's Basketball Sunday scoreboard Round 2 games

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

West Region 6 Washington 86, 3 Florida 75 •

Mideast Region 1 Tennessee 92, 9 St. Mary's (Calif.) 75 2 Texas Tech 73, 7 Virginia Tech 52 •

3 Purdue 73, 6 LSU 70 4 Xavier 77, 5 Clemson 62 •

Midwest Region

2 lowa State 85, 7 Florida State 70 East Region 10 Missouri 78, 2 Georgia 65 4 N.C. State 68, 5 Villanova 64 •

Sports in Brief After a nine-tournament drought, Tiger Woods recorded a victory yesterday at the $3.5 million Bay Hill •

Invitational in Orlando, Fla. Woods defeated Phil Mickelson by one stroke.

19, 2001

sports@chronicle.duke.edu

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"How many people do Women's Basketball you know go out there Monday vs. Arkansas, 7:30 p.m., Cameron Indoor Stadium and jeer a 19-year-old? I'm Women's Lacrosse just a kid.” Wednesday vs. Princeton, 3 p.m., Koskinen Stadium Serena Williams, who Men's Tennis was booed before, during Thursday vs. Maryland, 2:30 p.m., Duke Tennis Stadium and after her victory in Baseball the Master Series final. vs. Princeton: Thursday 3 p.m., Friday 3 p.m, Saturday noon; vs. The crowd reacted to the Brown: Saturday 7 p.m., Sunday 1 p.m. Hosted at Jack Coombs Field withdrawal of her sister, Venus, from a semifinal Women's Tennis match against Serena. Thursday vs. William & Mary, 1:30 p.m., Duke Tennis Stadium

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SPORTSWRAP

MONDAY. MARCH 19. 2001

PAGE 3

Women’s basketball hosts Arkansas in 2nd round The ninth-seeded Razorbacks and top-seeded Duke will play tonight for a spot in the Sweet 16

NCAA 2nd Round Monday, March 19 7:37 p.m. •

Cameron Indoor Stadium

#1 Duke vs. #9 Arkansas No. 9 Arkansas (20-12) Coach Gary Blair Guard Wendi Wiliits, Sr. (13.3 ppg) Guard Dana Cherry, So. (10.2 ppg) Guard Amy Wright, Jr. (6.9 ppg) Forward Shameka Christon, Fr. (10.3 ppg) Forward Lonniya Bragg, Sr, (10.9 ppg)

No. 1 Duke (29-3) Coach Gail Goestenkors Guard Georgia Schweitzer, Sr. (14.3 ppg) Guard Sheana Mosch, So. (11.0 ppg) Guard Aiana Beard, Fr. (16.7 ppg) Forward Rochelle Parent, Sr. (5.2 ppg) Forward Michele Matyasovsky, So. (5.8 ppg)

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ANALYSIS

THE NOD

Both Duke and Arkansas are small inside, but while the Lady Razorback players are smaller than most of the Blue Devils, they play very physically in the post. Arkansas is led inside by the duo of all-SEC freshman Shameka Christon and senior Lonniya Bragg, but the pair’s offense should be quelled by Duke’s defense.

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Guards Wendi Willits, Amy Wright and Dana Cherry are good, but Duke’s Georgia Schweitzer and Alana Beard are both playing exceptional basketball of late. Beard will not have as easy a time with Wright as she had with Wisconsin-Milwaukee’s Teri Stoltenberg, but expect a few robberies to take place tonight. Both teams go eight and even 10 players deep at times, but while the Razorbacks’ reserves are experienced and fit, they do not offer much in the way of offense. In fact, only one non-starter, senior Celia Anderson, scored in Arkansas’ first-round win Saturday over Baylor. Schweitzer pointed out the comfort level the Blue Devils feel in playing at home, but the Lady ’Backs are confident and remember beating Duke in the 1998 NCAA tournament to get to the Final Four. Then as now, Arkansas was the ninth-seeded team in the West region—an improbable Final Four participant.

MATT KLEIN/THE CHRONICLE

Ready to Rumble With the opening round out of the way, the Blue Devils are set to battle Arkansas, which upended eighth-seeded Baylor Saturday in Cameron Indoor Stadium. Despite their losing conference record, the Razorbacks are one of the more dangerous teams in the nation, especially for a nine seed. For complete coverage of Duke’s win over 16th-seeded Milwaukee-Wisconsin, see page 7

m EVEN

In the press room after Arkansas’ win over Baylor, Wright answered a reporter doubting the Lady Razorbacks’ excitement by saying that she and her teammates would be excited “after we beat Duke.” Arkansas will give Duke a regional-final caliber game but will ultimately come up short as Schweitzer and Beard continue their honor-worthy play. Duke wins and moves on to Spokane, 84-79 Compiled by Andrea Bookman

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SPORTSWRAP

PAGE 4

MONDAY. MARCH 19, 2001

disappointing sth finishes golf Men’s for

Duke rallies another victory By BRODY GREENWALD The Chronicle

Gone are the days of a superstar for the Blue Devils. For the past two years, Duke was fueled by top-heavy lineups that included former greats Jenny Chuasiriporn and Beth Bauer. Their respective departures in 1999 and 2000 changed everything about the women’s golf team everything except its remarkable knack for winning. No. 1 Duke no longer has a dominant player consistently at the top of the leaderboard, but it has nonetheless steamrolled its competition this season with one of the most pared lineups in college golf. In its latest display of team talent, Duke erased a two-stroke deficit on the final day of play to storm back for a five-stroke victory over Georgia yesterday at the Lady Gamecock Classic. More remarkable than the comeback, however, was that no Blue Devil finished more than eight strokes apart from any teammate after three days ofintense golf. “The thing I liked most about this [weekend] was that we moved our pack of scores closer together,” said coach Dan Brooks, whose players ranged from a team-low 220 by sophomore Kristina Engstrom to 228 by freshman Leigh Anne Hardin. “We need to think in terms of a pack. That’s the neatest thing about our team—we can talk about any person on this team winning any given tournament.” The Blue Devils overpowered Georgia by seven strokes in the final round of golf, soaring to the tournament title behind Engstrom’s team-best score of 71. Duke finished the par-72 course at the University Club in Blythewood, S.C. with a three-day total of 887. All five Blue Devils placed in the tournament’s top 14, but only Engstrom challenged for the individual title. Engstrom fired her best round of the tournament yesterday to shoot her up to third in the final standings. She has yet to win an individual championship this season, but Engstrom’s coach said that may change in the near future. “Kristina is really starting to reap some of the benefits of her hard work on her short game,” Brooks said. “She almost won this weekend, and I think we’ll see a win from her soon.” Duke trailed by four strokes after the first day, but the Blue Devils gradually trimmed Georgia’s advantage. Behind terrific second rounds from junior Candy Hannemann and senior Kalen Anderson, Duke cut Georgia’s lead in half heading into the final round. The Blue Devils then demonstrated why they still hold the nation’s top ranking as they finished with the second-lowest total in the history of the Lady Gamecock Classic. —

By ANDREW GREENFIELD The Chronicle

It is just a matter of time That’s all men’s golf coach Myers had to say about his team’s slow start to the spring season. This past week the Blue Devils competed in the Seminole Intercollegiate where they finished in fifth place, 27 strokes behind tournament winner and ACC rival Virginia. Individual honors were captured by Virginia’s Steve Marino. The tournament was played at the par-72, 6,869-yard Golden Eagle Country Club, where considerable rain on the eve of day one made the course play much longer. “We are having trouble putting a finger on what our problem is,” Myers said. “This tournament was a good indication of where we’re at. We still have a lot of improving to do, but we are not far from it. “We were the highest nationally ranked team in the field, so we are obviously disappointed with our fifth-place finish.” One of the troubles for Duke this spring has been the inconsistent play of its top golfer, Matt Krauss. The junior continued his struggles in Tallahassee, shooting two mediocre rounds 75-76 before firing a final-round even-par 72 to finish tied for 23rd.

Duke was led by sophomore Leif Olson, but like Krauss, Olson struggled through his second round, which was plagued by large numbers—something uncharacteristic of both golfers. Olson fired rounds of 71-76-73 to finish at 4-over-par 220 and tie for 12th. Myers realizes that for theBlue Devils to improve and contend in future tournaments, both Krauss and Olson must find their form from a season ago. “If we want to have a chance to win golf tournaments we need to have individuals in position to win golf tournaments,” Myers said. “Matt and Leif are both outstanding players. It will come.” Seniors Kevin Streehnan and Paul Tucker both showed flashes of great play over the three rounds, but were also unable to evade high scores. Tucker had a tough first round of 78, but the senior rebounded to play his last two rounds at 1-under to finish in a tie for 15that 5-over. Streehnan shot rounds of 73-76-73 to also finish in a tie for 15th. “This is a five-man team and we need everyone to be in sync,” Myers said. “We will spend the next few days trying to find someone to take the fifth spot and preparing for the next event.” This weekend the Blue Devils travel to Statesboro, GA for the Schenkel Invitational.

A LONG TIME HAS since Duke hosted the NCAA Fall Preview last semester. Since the beginning of the spring season, the men’s golf team has encountered some difficult outings. This past weekend, the Blue Devils finished fifth at the Seminole Intercollegiate despite entering with the highest national ranking of any team in the field.

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SPORTSWRAP

PAGES

Duke romps Brown by 6 goals at home By NICK CHRISTIE The Chronicle

Behind the outstanding play of starting attackmen Greg Patchak, Alex Lieske and Mack Hardaker, the No. 11 Duke lacrosse team soundly defeated 12th-ranked Brown 16-10 Saturday, improving to 5-2 on the season. In leading Duke to its first victory over a nationally ranked opponent this season, the attack triumvirate combined to score 12 goals, including five each from Patchak and Hardaker. “Our attack really came through today,” head coach Mike Pressler said. “We were starving for a win around here. We were 42, but I told the guys we were 0-2 [because! we didn’t have a win

MATT KLEIN/THE CHRONICLE

IN A NAIL-BITING CONTEST, Duke’s women’s lacrosse team edged past the Tar Heels Saturday at Koskinen Stadium.

Women’s lax beats UNC By ELIZABETH COLUCCI The Chronicle

All of Koskinen Stadium held its breath Saturday. An intense 60-minute battle between the fourth-ranked women’s lacrosse team (3-1, 1-1 in the ACC) and the eighthranked Tar Heels (3-3, 0-2) was decided in the last 30 seconds of play. A stroke of luck and a sneaky shot would seal the victory for Duke, however. After capitalizing on a Carolina crease violation, Duke sophomore Lauren Gallagher weaved her way through a defensive blockade and slipped the ball into the top corner of the net, finalizing Duke’s 10-9 win. Though head coach Kristen Kimel was very happy with the improvement in the teams play, especially defensively, she stressed the importance of learning from mistakes. “It was a hard fought, tough played game,” Kimel said. “We have to learn from our breakdowns. We play a very tight schedule this season and can’t afford to make some of the errors we made today.” Although the Tar Heels opened the game by quickly racking up two goals, their luck ran out after the first two minutes of play. Duke’s Kelly

JUNIOR ASHLEY WICK advances the ball for Duke

Dirks responded to Carolina’s two-goal wakeup call at the 27-minute mark, finding the net after a breakaway pass from Gallagher. Dirks claimed her second goal two minutes later on a free-position shot. The Tar Heels did not see the lead the rest of the game. A streak of four goals contributed by Gallagher, Claire Sullivan, Franny Gordon and Meghan Miller widened the scoring gap to 6-2

against a ranked opponent.” Duke’s previous two contests against ranked foes resulted in bitterly disappointing losses to Maryland and Loyola, the nation’s third and fifth-ranked teams, respectively. Last weekend’s loss to Loyola proved especially disappointing, as the Blue Devils squandered a multitude of scoring opportunities and lost 10-8 to the visiting Greyhounds. The defeat prompted a team meeting and a renewed focus towards the basics of lacrosse, a mindset that led to Duke’s impressive victory Saturday. “I think we just played fundamentally sound today,” said Kevin Cassesse, a midfielder who contributed two goals to Duke’s scoring onslaught. “The coaches brought us together after the Loyola game, showed us the film, and showed us exactly what we have to do [to win]. We went out in practice and concentrated on stick work and shooting, on all the fundamentals, and used [last week] to get better.” Hardaker concurred with his teammate. “This week we had our best offensive practice,” he said. “When you practice well, you win. It’s as simple as that.” The team’s hard work produced clear dividends Saturday, as the Blue Devils blew Brown away early with an awesome offensive display. After allowing an opening goal to the Bears’ Christopher Muccioli, the Blue Devils scored the game’s next 11 goals to seize an 111 halftime advantage. Duke talked eight goals in the second quarter alone, including seven in a dizzying seven-minute stretch that saw Patchak score three goals in 63 seconds. Perhaps the key element to the Blue Devils’ offensive explosion was the performance of Hardaker, a sophomore whose five goals gave him a team-leading 15 for the season. “The nature of my position is to score goals, that’s why I’m on the field,” he said. “My goals are the end result of a long play that begins on the defensive end. Everyone on this team has a role, and mine is to catch the ball and shoot.” As a freshman last season, Hardaker could only watch from the sidelines as senior All-American T. J. Durnan scored 42 goals in the position Hardaker now occupies. Yet despite not registering a single point last year, Hardaker is not at all surprised with his success

in the first half. North Carolina’s Christine McPike finally broke the Duke defense with 3:45 left in the half, claiming the first of her four goals. Carolina still struggled as Duke goalie Kristen Foster came up with six big saves in the first half, one of which denied the Tar Heels a free-position shot with one second left. Foster tallied 13 saves for the game. this season. North Carolina continued to rally in the sec“When you step into a spot like this you can’t be surprised to be ond half as both teams traded presses and there. We were all brought in here by coach Pressler because we shots in the first seven minutes. Dirks claimed can play, and you have to be confident that when you get your shot her third goal of the day at the 23-minute that you can play, you can do it.” mark, only to be avenged by Carolina’s McPike four minutes later, who snuck in her second goal of the day. Determined to maintain the lead, Duke sophomore Jessica Bennett weaved through several defenders to score her first goal of the season, putting Duke up 8-4.. With 15 minutes left to play and a four-goal lead, it seemed as though Duke’s consistent domination over Carolina would lead the Blue Devils comfortably to victory. However, a series of Duke defensive fouls commenced a Carolina comeback. The Tar Heels grabbed three consecutive goals in the next three minutes, two of which resulted from free-position shots. Stuck in their own defensive end with a mere one goal lead, the Blue Devils struggled to recharge their offense. McPike’s fourth goal, the result of an end-to-end breakaway at the five-minute mark, was the final straw. After patiently passing and cutting in front of the Carolina goal, Duke sophomore Meg Barnet took a pass from Gallagher and fired a shot past keeper Melissa Coyne. Less than a minute later, Lindsay Stone of the Tar Heels evened the score again. The last frantic two minutes of play saw numerous turnovers, as both teams scrambled for a final victory-sealing goal. Gallagher, who now leads the team in goals (10), assists (5) and MATT KLEIN/THE CHRONICLE points (16), claimed the game for Duke, with 14 seconds remaining on the clock. THE MEN’S LACROSSE TEAM smashed visiting Brown early in the contest.


SPORISWRAP

PAGE 6

MONDAY. MARCH 19, 2001

THAD PARSONS/THE CHRONICLE

MISSOURI’S KAREEM RUSH sprawls across Shane Battier as they vie for a loose ball. Rush almost single-handedly kept the game competitive, but the Tigers fell to Duke Saturday, 94-81.

Adrenaline Rush Kareem Rush poured in 29 points to keep Mizzou close SWEET 16 from page 1, The Chronicle “He’s sweet,” Dunleavy said. “I’ve played with a lot of NBA guys and he is right there with all of them. He is going to be a heck of a pro. He’s slippery and hard to guard. He’s got everything in his arsenal and is just real smooth and fun to watch. I got a view of his backside a lot today.” Rush’s efforts, though, were not enough to overcome the tenacity of -

Duke’s two All-Americans, Williams

and Battier. Battier struggled from three-point range, shooting only l-for-8 from behind the arc, but he still found away to shine. The Naismith Award winner went 12for-13 from the line, scoring 27 points and pulling down 11 rebounds. Playing all 40 minutes, Battier provided invaluable leadership for the Blue Devils. After a three-pointer by Rush brought the Tigers to within one point with 10:42 left to play, Battier took over. He tallied seven points in two minutes as the Blue Devils scored on 12 of their next 14 possessions and put the game out of reach. “What I’ve found with this team is times when people would normally call timeouts, I have not called timeouts,” Krzyzewski said. “When it got 63-62, the insecure part of me was saying ‘timeout’ and the one that believed in my team said, ‘Shut up.’ Thank goodness that part won.” Krzyzewski’s faith in his players paid

off, as Battier recognized and exploited his mismatch against Missouri’s lessagile center, Tajudeen Soyoye. “We were pretty small and I was the center, so Soyoye had to guard me and we tried to take advantage ofit,” Battier said. “I didn’t shoot a very great percentage from the three-point line, but I think I made up for it from the free-

throw line today.” Battier’s performance was complemented by Williams’ strong outing. The sophomore’s aggressive defense helped limit Missouri point guards Brian Grawer and Wesley Stokes to a combined 12 points on 4-for-ll shooting. Although he committed a game-high five turnovers, Wiliams’ five three-pointers and nine assists were key factors in Duke’s offensive outbursts throughout the game.

“Jason is talented,” Battier said. “After this year, you sort of lose track of great games and you come to expect greatness from him every time he steps on the court and handles the ball. “I thought we had great execution the whole game. Jason really played a great floor game.... That was really the difference today—our offensive execution was very sharp.” Although he started out slow, Williams was firing on all cylinders by the end of the game. He had six assists in the game’s final nine minutes, helping to seal Missouri’s defeat. “They were really pressuring the

ball, and every time I was going into the lane I really didn’t know what to do with the basketball,” Williams said. “As the game progressed, I started doing a better job of getting to the rim and finishing, pulling up for a little jump shot or finding my teammates.” After watching Duke’s two superstars end his team’s season, nobody was happier to hear the final buzzer than Missouri coach Quin Snyder. “[Duke is] a great team,” Snyder said. “When they went 5ma11..., Jason just took the game over—so did Shane. I’m glad this game is over.”


MONDAY. MARCH 19. 2001

SPORTSWRAP

PAGE 7

Duke drops Milwaukee-Wisconsin in Ist round By ANDREA BOOKMAN The Chronicle

96 Playing for the first time as a No. 1 seed, UMAVisc. 6 Duke did what topseeded squads should do to 16 seeds. The Blue Devils (29-3) beat Wiscon-

Duke

>

sin-Milwaukee (19-11) Saturday, ending the Panthers’ season with a 96-63 defeat. The game was not the total whalloping indicated by the final score, as it left neither the Panthers, their proud coach, nor a fairly large contingency of Milwaukee fans hanging their heads. “This was our first chance to dance,” Milwaukee coach Sandy Botham said. “I’m really proud of our team. Our fans were with us until the very end, too.” While the Midwestern Collegiate Conference champions never truly challenged Duke for the lead in the contest, they scrapped for the loose balls and played intensely throughout. In fact, it was the Panthers’ constant intensity that made this game feel less like a blowout and more like the NCAA tournament. The Blue Devils established themselves early, however, by scoring 20 points to Milwaukee’s five in the first eight minutes of the game. Six of Duke’s points during that stretch came off of Alana Beard steals, as the freshman made a habit Saturday of picking off Panther guard Teri Stoltenberg and beating her downcourt for layups. “Getting* those steals and layups really fuels our defense,” Duke coach Gail Goestenkors said. “We feed off those tips and steals.” Milwaukee finally broke the nickel mark when All-MCC guard Jessica Wilhite hit a jumper, and the lead closed to 10 after Stoltenberg’s three-pointer moments later. Milwaukee never got closer, as Duke freshman Rometra Craig came off the bench to hit two straight treys. Craig hit another long-range shot in the second half and was perfect from beyond the arc in the game. She said extra work last week in practice gave her confidence to take the three. “Rometra asked me to work with her after practice on her three-pointer,” Goestenkors said. “She’d been struggling with her shot in practice, but after practice yesterday, she hit about 20 straight threes. I said, ‘Give me something to help you out with.’” While Craig and Georgia Schweitzer found their range, Milwaukee’s shooters struggled. Wilhite, who hit 89 treys this season, airballed twice before hitting a

PHOTOS BY MATT KLEIN/THE CHRONICLE

From left to right: ALANA BEARD swipes away one of her seven steals against a frustrated Milwaukee-Wisconsin squad; ROMETRA CRAIG scored a career-high 20 points.

three-pointer with about four minutes remaining in the first half. And the Panthers’ third-leading scorer, freshman center Maria Viall, was rendered useless in the post by Rochelle Parent’s defense. Duke went to the locker room with a 45-28 halftime lead, after Milwaukee’s Stefanie Kaufinann hit a bucket at the buzzer. Although the lead was fairly decisive by that point, the Blue Devils still were unsatisfied with their performance. “I thought we were a bit rusty,”

Goestenkors said. r ‘l was much more pleased with our intensity in the second half.”

Duke’s defense was tighter in the second frame, as the Panthers were forced to bum a timeout less than two minutes in when they could not inbound the ball. Milwaukee scored its first seven points of the half within three minutes—four points came from the free-throw line, while Stoltenberg knocked down another trey. Down by 14, the Panthers did not score again for over four minutes when Wilhite hit a long three. By then, Milwaukee was down by 20. Duke’s freshmen bore the scoring bur-

den, as Beard, Craig, Iciss Tillis and Crystal White took care of all of the team’s offense for the next six minutes. Meanwhile, Duke’s defense handled everyone except Wilhite. The diminutive, ruddy-cheeked sophomore made three treys in the final 13 minutes, and Nicole Luchsinger and Holly Tamm backed her up with free throws and layups. In the end, however, all of Duke’s five freshmen got to taste an NCAA tournament game, and four freshmen scored. Beard led the Blue Devils with 22, while Craig added a career-high 20. Wilhite was the only Panther to score in doublefigures, as she recorded 24 points. “I wasn’t nervous,” Beard said. “I was ready to play. The jitters are out.” The Blue Devils will face ninth-seeded Arkansas (20-12) tonight at 7:30 p.m.The Razorbacks last played Duke in the 1998 NCAA tournament, when they upset the Blue Devils in the Elite Eight. “Arkansas is so physical inside,” Goestenkors said. “We’re not going to get as many steals or easy layups. We got away with some stuff today that we’re not going to get away with on Monday.”

28 45

35 51

63 96

PF PTS ATO 3 8 0 1 4 1 2 11 0 2 9 1 5 3 0 24 2 2 5 2 9 1 5 3 2 2 11 0 0 0 0 0 0 4 0 2 2 2 2 4 0 3 4 0 0 3 1 0 0 2 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 2 1 0

MP 24 15 22 37 19 18 0+ 21 13 17 3 3 8

Mifwaukee-Wisconsin Duke Mil.-Wisc.

FG 3-6 1-6 StoHenberg 3-4 Wilhite 8-18 Tamm 0-3 Klaas 1-5 Buer 0-0 Smith 0-9 Kaufmann 2-4 Retcher 0-2 Gregory 1-2 Wenzel 0-1 Jonason 1-3 Team Totals 20-63

3PT 0-1 0-0 3-4 4-12 0-0 1-4 0-0 0-0 0-1 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0

Duke Parent

3PT 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-1 1-4 3-3 0-0 0-0 0-0 1-2 0-1 0-0

Luchsinger

Viall

FG 4-4 Matyasovsky 2-4 2-5 Mosch Beard 9-12 Schweitzer 7-11 8-9 Craig Krapohl 0-0 Gingrich 0-0 Gebisa 2-4 West 2-5 Tillis 2-6 White 2-2 Team Totals 40-62

FT 2-2 0-0 0-0 4-5 9-10 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-2 0-0 0-0 0-0

R

4

8-22 15-19 29 15

5-11

63

12 23 200

R PF PTS A TO MP 0 0 24 4 3 8 4 2 4 3 4 22 4 2 6 4 2 28 4 1 22 4 1 26 5 3 17 3 2 29 1 20 0 3 16 1 0 0 0 3 3 3 0 0 2 1 6 4 4 0 1 0 9 2 2 5 2 2 12 6 2 1 18 2 2 3 0 4 0 17 2 11-14 15 15 96 21 20 200 FT 0-0 02-2 4-5 2-3 11 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 20-0

Officials: Campbell, Pardue, Brooks

Attendance-4,438


SPORTSWRAP

PAGE 8

MONDAY, MARCH 19,

2001

Sweet 3-peat

Despite Williams’ sprained ankle, Duke rolled over UNC By BRODY GREENWALD The Chronicle

One 79 ATLANTA week, four games, no UNC S* more skeptics. When the Blue Devils lost center

Duke

Carlos Boozer to a fractured third metatarsal nearly three weeks ago, they were supposed to be too short, too thin, too shallow and all too incapable of defending their back-to-back ACC tournament championships. Now those same Blue Devils are the No. 1 seed in the East region and heavy favorites to return to the Final Four in

Minneapolis. Exactly seven days after running North Carolina out of its own building, Duke demolished the Tar Heels March 11 in a championship game that was only a game for about 11 minutes. The first triumph over their archrivals snared the Blue Devils a share of their fifth straight regular-season conference title. The second, a 79-53 massacre in front of a divided crowd in Atlanta’s Georgia Dome, earned Duke a third consecutive ACC banner in the second-most lopsided championship game in the history of the ACC tournament. “When this tournament started, coming here a man down with Carlos being out, I don’t really know how many people gave us a chance to win it,” tournament MVP Shane Battier said. “No one really gave us a chance, so I’m very proud of our guys.” Battier and his teammates did everything right last Sunday. They outrebounded, outmuscled and outhustled the Tar Heels, who played an uninspired second half after getting blown away 50-30 in the first half. Carolina’s 19-for-65 performance from the floor—an abominable 29.2 percent—was the second lowest in the history of the ACC finals, dating back to N.C. State’s 1955 squad. The victory was also the 600th in the legendary coaching career of Mike Krzyzewski. “This last week has been as gratifying for me as I have had as a coach,” said Krzyzewski, who emphasized that the decisive factor was the defensive rebounding of forward Mike Dunleavy and point guard Jason Williams. Dunleavy led Duke with gamehighs in both points (24) and rebounds (13). He also had the only sound shooting game on an afternoon in which both teams struggled from the field. Williams only grabbed five rebounds, but he scored 15 points and held superstar Joseph Forte in check before rolling his ankle seven minutes into the second half. Williams’ injury appeared somewhat serious when he hobbled off the court with the assistance of trainer Dave Engelhardt and guard Andre Buckner. The sophomore sat in anguish on Duke’s bench while Engelhardt examined his ankle, but he had the brightest smile on his face when the celebration began. After gingerly lifting himself up the ladder, Williams sliced one of the net’s four remaining strands and waived it about with a series of rapid-fire pumps of his right arm that were as electrifying to the Duke cheering section as one

PHOTOS BY MAH KLEIN/THE CHRONICLE

Clockwise from top left: JASON WILLIAMS despairs on the sideline after spraining his ankle against UNC; NOT LONG AFTER, Williams cuts down the net; SHANE BATTIER wrestles for a loose ball in a grueling semifinal against Maryland; MIKE DUNLEAVY slams home the Tar

Heels; MARYLAND’S CHRIS WILCOX loses the handle on the ball while teammate Danny Miller (#l5) and Dunleavy look on; AFTER FIVE DUKE THREE-POINTERS to open the second half, Chris Duhon caps an explosion against the Terps with an emphatic dunk.

of his trademark slaps of the hardwood. Both Dunleavy and Williams joined Battier on the tournament’s first team, along with Forte and Maryland’s Juan Dixon. Nate James was named to the second team. “I take my hat off to Duke and Coach Krzyzewski. They’re a great team and they performed really well,” said UNC coach Matt Doherty, whose team lost for the fourth consecutive Sunday. “You have to admire what they’ve done.” Doherty’s postgame admiration

masked a sickly feeling of frustration that overtook the first-year coach when the Blue Devils turned a 23-20 game into a 42-21 laugher in a matter of four-and-a-half minutes. Duke’s run was highlighted by Williams’ lob pass to center Casey Sanders, who caught the ball in traffic and elevated over Julius Peppers for a layup and foul that represented the way Duke dominated the paint against Carolina. Sanders recorded three blocks and united with reserves Matt Christensen and Reggie Love to hold all of UNC’s

post players to single-digit scoring totals. Despite a significant advantage in size over each of Duke’s three interior players, Tar Heel center Brendan Haywood made little impact, particularly in the second half when he took only three shots. “I think it got to a point where a lot of people wrote off each of these guys and didn’t really expect them to contribute to our team this season,” Battier said of Sanders, Love and Christensen. “We had seen flashes from each of them, but not the sustained level we saw this weekend.”

*


MONDAY. MARCH 19. 2001

SPORTSWRAP

PAGE 9

Sunday mourning: UNC bows out By RAFAEL HERMOSO

New York Times News Service

Penn St.

UNC

82 NEW ORLEANS For Jerry Dunn, the 74 games appeared on a

Dunn said. The Nittany Lions had reason to be elated. It was perhaps the biggest basketball victory for a university known for its football success. Penn State is playing in the Sweet 16 for the first time since 1955. It won two NCAA tournament games for the first time since appearing in the 1954 Final Four. The victory by Penn State (21-11) capped an afternoon of upsets. Temple, the llth-seeded team in the

From staff reports

CHRISTOPHER RECORD/CHARLOTTE OBSERVER

IN THE TAR HEELS’ LOCKER ROOM, Michael Brooker, Jim Everett and Adam Boone sit in disgust. South Regional, beat No. 3-seeded Florida earlier in the day, setting up the improbable Sweet 16 matchup between Temple and Penn State on Friday in Atlanta. With a roster only seven deep, Temple continued its remarkable run from midseason obscurity to reclaim its role as tournament tormentor. Owls guards Lynn Greer and Quincy Wadley combined for 44 points and 12 assists. That game was only a precursor to

The Office of Student Development

DUKS

for tickets to regionals

grainy black-and-white television set while he was growing up in Raleigh, N.C. He called himself an ACC fan more so than a North Carolina fan, but the images were burned into his memory. Titus Ivory was certain about his allegiances. He grew up stuck on Carolina blue and wanted nothing more than to play for the state’s team. “I wanted to go there, but you can’t go somewhere you’re not wanted,” Ivory said. So, yesterday, when the final buzzer sounded at the Superdome, Ivory, the Penn State guard, took the basketball and flung it in the air. Soon, he hugged Dunn, his coach, and received a congratulatory handshake from North Carolina coach Matt Doherty. Seventh-seeded Penn State did the nearly unthinkable yesterday, toppling the second-seeded Tar Heels, 82-74, in

the second round of the NCAA tournament’s South Regional. “We’re entering uncharted waters right now and I tell you, it feels great,”

Lotto begins

Salutes the following houses For their overall ranking UmVBRSITT of OUTSTANDING in the most recent Annual Review of Selective Houses:

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more stunning developments. Led by Ivory, Pemi otate beat North Carolina to nearly every loose ball and brought the Tar Heels’ record 27th appearance in the NCAA tournament to an abrupt end. North Carolina (26-7) had been 5-0 in this building, including two championship games. Now, it is the site of one of North Carolina’s most wrenching defeats. Doherty, the first-year coach, began crying during a halting postgame news conference.

The student lottery for tickets to the East Regionals will take place today only. Students who wish to attend the Sweet 16 and the Elite Eight in Philadelphia this weekend must show up in 209 Flowers between 10 a.m. and 4 p.m. with either cash or check and their DukeCards. The cost of the three games, which include Duke vs. UCLA and Kentucky vs. Southern Cal, is $llO. The East regional championship game will take Saturday place between the two victors. Vice President for Student Affairs Sue Wasiolek said she did not know how many tickets would be available to Duke students in the lottery, although Duke had an excess of tickets last weekend for the games in Greensboro. Wasiolek added that the results ofthe lottery will be posted in her office tomorrow morning. As always, these tickets are for students only. They can not be reserved for anyone unable to make it to Wasiolek’s office. Students who gain tickets through the lottery will have to present their IDs at Philadelphia’s First Union Center, the site of this weekend’s games.

Concerned? Worried? Interested?

Learn More About

ARAMARK Student Information Session

Tuesday, March 20, 8:30 p.m. DSG Office Sponsoredby Duke University Student DiningAdvisory Committee


MONDAY, MARCH

SPORTSWRAP

PAGE 10

19. 2001

Virginia rocks Duke baseball to conclude road trip By FOZAIL ALVI The Chronicle

rocky 14 After a road trip, the Duke 5 Duke baseball team will be looking forward to returning home. The Blue Devils struggled through seven close games over the course of spring break. The team went an overall 2-5 during the 10day stretch, but almost all the losses were either one or two-run affairs. Virginia

Part of the reason for Duke’s early struggles could be attributed to the scheduling; Both of Duke’s opening ACC series were on the road, first in WinstonSalem versus Wake Forest and then another three-game series at Charlottesville versus Virginia. The Blue Devils are 7-5 this season at home, but a meager 2-10 on the road. “We are, definitely more comfort-

able at home,” head coach Bill Hillier said. “For me, it’s very good to fi-

nally be home. It makes you appreciate guys who play pro baseball in the big leagues. We have been gone now for about 10 days. It feels really good for us to be home.” The Blue Devils started off spring break March 9 against a tough Wake Forest team. The team

battled hard, but dropped the first two games by just one run apiece. However, it rebounded and pounded the Demon Deacons 14-6 for its first ACC win of the season to bring its record to 8-11. Shortstop Kevin Kelly provided the firepower for the Blue Devils in the three-game series, going 8-12 while scoring six runs. Kelly helped the Blue Devils get off to quick starts by reaching base in the first

inning in each of the three games. “He was just awesome,” Hillier said. “Twelve consecutive times he reached base in one stretch. He is healthy for the first time in his career, and it’s made a huge difference for him. He is showing why he was drafted so high out of high school and is drawing a lot of attention.” After a shutout loss 7-0 to Campbell March 13, the team lost a close game to Old Dominion the next day. Starting pitcher Drew Jerdan and reliever Kevin Perry combined to give up 8 runs in 3 1/3 innings, although only one of those eight was earned. The Blue Devils committed three costly errors, which Hillier attributed to the absences of shortstop Kevin Kelly and second-baseman Larry Broadway up the middle. They were both out of town due to deaths in the family.

“When you lose a couple guys like that, you lose continuity,” Hillier said. “Guys that are used to serving as role players were being forced into action. That affects not only them, but the guys around them get out of sync.” The Blue Devils continued their road trip, traveling north to Charlottesville to take on the Virginia Cavaliers March 16. The first contest was yet another close loss for Duke, which had a late rally cut short when Kelly grounded out with two runners on base to end the game 4-3 in favor of Virginia. The Blue Devils then won in a

high-scoring affair, 12-11, before

dropping Sunday’s rubber game 14-5. The loss dropped Duke to 915 overall and 2-4 in ACC play, though the team just as easily could be 5-1 if it turned around the three one-run losses it suffered in the past week alone. “After the Wake Forest losses, we rebounded very well and beat them solidly,” Hillier said, “and after the one-run loss versus Virginia, we came back and beat them pretty good. We have responded very well [to the close losses]. Now, we have three days off, and we can get ready for the next six games in four days.”

KEVIN KELLY throws toward first base against Campbell in Durham

Men’s tennis falls twice to Texas foes Rowing narrows gap between it, Wisconsin By ADRIENNE MERCER The Chronicle

The keyword for the men’s tennis team last week was upset. The No. 3 Blue Devils (8-3) dropped two games in four days against top-10 teams in their tour of Texas schools last week. Duke came into the week 7-1, having only lost to Stanford at the National Team Indoor Championships last February. Duke added its second loss of the season when it played No. 5 Texas A&M and fell 4-2. After a blowout win over Baylor 7-0, Duke lost to Texas Christian 4-3. The game versus Texas was canceled because of rain. “We knew going into the trip that it was going to be a tough schedule, and we kind of prefer it that way,” Duke coach Jay CHRONICLE FILE PHOTO Lapidus said. “I was a little disappointed; I wanted to win at MARKO CERENKO prepares for a backhand in practice least one of those matches. We knew that those were top-five In doubles play, the Aggies Shuon Madden 6-4, 6-1. Playing teams and if we had come back to swept all three matches and No. 2 versus Mark Williams of Duke having won all ofthem, we gained the point as the 12th- Baylor, King won easily in two probably would have been ranked duo ofSmith and Michael sets 6-4, 6-1. It took three sets ranked No. 1.” Yani lost to 19th-ranked Caradiagainst TCU’s Trace Fielding, but King prevailed 6-2, 5-7, 6-3. ma and Madden 8-3. Duke’s tanIn the week’s matchups, severJoel Spicher had a similar al of Duke’s key players did not dem of Cerenko and Phillip King win. Seniors Ramsey Smith and fell to 40th-ranked Davis and week playing at No. 5 singles. Marko Cerenko both took hard Newport 8-6, and Pedroso and Spicher wiped out Baylor’s Malosses to A&M players Ryan NewTed Rueger lost to Hubbell and tias Marin 6-2, 6-3 and did the same to Daniel Wajnberg of TCU. port (7-5, 6-3) and Keith Fromm Skube 8-3. Against Baylor, the team fared His match at A&M versus Cody (6-4, 6-1), respectively. Duke swept all of the singles matches better in doubles play, except for Hubbell was not finished. “Joel has been doing great all against Baylor, but Smith, Smith and Yani, who fell to NeuCerenko and Andres Pedroso all rohr and Williams 8-6. year; he hasn’t lost a match for us suffered losses against TCU. TCU almost swept Duke in yet,” Lapidus said. “I know the and guy he played against at TCU “There were a few upsets; we doubles, but Pedroso had a couple situations where... Rueger won over lannariello was very tough and he beat him pretty badly.” [some of the players] might not and Eddins 8-4. King, Duke’s No. 1 singles have been matched up correctly,” Another sophomore, Yorke Lapidus said. “If you put the player, was the only Blue Devil Allen, received rare playing time same lineup in there day after to win all three singles matches last week. At No. 6 singles, Allen defeated both his opponents: day, other teams can adjust to it, last week. Tuesday against the Aggies, Baylor’s Cory Ross and TCU’s so maybe I need to change the King defeated 22nd-ranked Jimmy Haney. lineup some.”

By CLINTON McHUGH The Chronicle

The Duke rowing team took part in the Tom White Invitational Spring Training Regatta in Oak Ridge, Tennessee Saturday, competing against Wisconsin and Louisville. Wisconsin swept the Blue Devils early in the day, winning all four races of the morning session. Duke fared better against Louisville in the afternoon, capturing all three races and posting a 1-23 finish in the Varsity 4 at the end ofthe day. The crew remained in Durham over most of the break, training for the spring season in which flatwater sprints replace the longer whitewater courses of the fall. Coach Robyn Homer granted a brief, three-day respite from the workouts to allow the crew a short vacation before heading up to scrimmage in Tennessee. Despite the losses to Wisconsin, the team was pleased with its use of the break for training. “Each year the finishing margin between the Wisconsin boats and ours decreases,” said freshman Crystal.Wakulich, seven-seat on the junior varsity 8+ boat. “This year we heard that the Wisconsin coach was worried about us, because we’ve been improving so much each time we race them.” This year’s varsity 8+ boat finished a mere 9.2 seconds behind the Badgers, a perennially successful team that has an impressive history of finishes at the National Championship Regatta. The second Varsity 8+ boat finished 12.8 seconds behind Wisconsin. This closing gap must have been satisfying for Duke assistant coach Shannon Daley, who crewed with the Badgers as an undergraduate. The wins over Louisville were also significant for Duke, as the Blue Devils demolished a team that they barely edged out at the Central Regional Sprints last year. This time around Louisville’s closest finish was over 15 seconds behind as Duke cruised to victory in the Varsity 8. The 1-2-3 finish in the Varsity 4 proved Duke’s continuing improvement more than any other event ofthe day, as Louisville’s boat finished more than 30 seconds behind Duke’s third-place finisher. “For me, the most exciting race was the Varsity 4,” said Wakulich. “Louisville was so far behind, we stopped worrying about them and were racing each other.” Although the A boat finished about 10 seconds ahead of them, the B and C boats remained close the entire race. In the end, the C boat finished with a time of 7:51.8, a mere half of a second ahead of the B boat’s time of 7:52.3. The rowing crew travels to Lake Hartwell in South Carolina this Saturday to race with Clemson and Tennessee. The competition should be a good testing ground for the Blue Devils, as Clemson will host this year’s ACC Championships at Lake Hartwell in late April.


MONDAY. MARCH 19. 2001

SPORTSWRAP

PAGE 11

Rush intends to return to Snyder’s squad Underclassmen COMMENTARY from page 6 Snyder tried to match Duke’s smaller, speedier lineup with a small lineup of his own, the similarities of the two programs are undeniable. Of course, that should not really be surprising. It helps explain why the No. 9 seed hung with big, bad Duke for so long. But there is more to Snyder than just the way his team plays. Beyond the boyish grin and the curly locks, beyond the M.B.A. and the J.D., beyond even the emotional dynamics of Saturday’s game, Snyder has the respect of his players. “I believe we gave Coach Q all we had,” junior Clarence Gilbert said. ‘We i*

fight for him, he fights for us. We’ve got his back, he’s got ours.” His kids like him, his kids listen to him, his kids trust him—it is obvious why he is a rising star. Watch the eyeballs. They all come back to Snyder. “He has passion, heart and the ability to communicate with his players,” Krzyzewski said. “His players believe in him. He’s terrific.” Perhaps that’s why the Big 12’sleading scorer, Kareem Rush, does not hesitate to say that he looks forward to next season with Snyder ratner than the NBA draft, despite facing the reality of a dislocated thumb earlier this season. Snyder already has the type of respect that Krzyzewski commands.

But make no mistake, Snyder is not a Krzyzewski clone. He’s new school, more Billy Donovan than Bob Knight. Even so, there remains something special about Snyder, and it showed Saturday. Most coaches come out of a game against Duke humiliated. Snyder came out of it unscathed after only two years as a head coach. But for both men, Saturday’s game could not have turned out better. Sure, Duke advanced as expected, but Snyder deserves a lot ofcredit for the intensity of his Tiger squad. Still, both coaches are likely relieved to leave the second round behind; Duke will go on through the tournament and Missouri will look back on a very decent season and plan for an even better one next year. And Krzyzewski will be rooting for Snyder every step of the way. Missouri Duke FG 11-23 3-4 2-8 6-14 1-5 3-6 0-0 0-2 3-9 0-0

44

43

51

94

R PF PTS A TO MP 8 3 29 2 3 35 4 3 11 0 0 24 6 2 6 0 1 16 3 1 16 5 1 36 3 3 1 25 2 2 9 3 3 28 2 1 0 2 0 0 0 3 0 0 17 1 4 4 4 7 0 1 22 11 0 0 0 4 0 29-71 11-21 12-14 31 23 81 13 11 200 Duke Battier

Dunleavy Sanders Duhon Williams James Love Team Totals PATRICK SCHNEIDER/CHARLOTTE OBSERVER

All Interested Duke Students Are

11-20

4-5 2-2 32-59

3PT 1-8 3-4 0-0 0-2 5-12 0-0 0-0

FT 12-13 2-2 0-0 3-4 4-6 0-0 0-0

R 11 9 4 3 2 8 3

>

guard Joseph Forte and Michigan State

forward Jason Richardson. Although the Naismith Award is generally considered among the most prestigious

PF PTS ATO MP 2 27 1 2 40 3 15 1 4 27 3 2 0 3 11 3 1 37 17 1 31 9 5 39 8 11 30 2 2 4 0 0 16

9-26 21-25 42 14

94

individual accolades that college basketball players can receive, the Wooden Award has yet to be handed out. The Wooden Award, voted on by sportswriters from across the country, will be issued after the conclusion of the NCAA tournament.

15 16 200

Health Awareness Week

Welcome to Attend

Monday March 19:

Cultural

;

Kathy Knight

Anthropology

and Katherine Whetten-Goldstein speak about AIDS outreach in rural areas. 6:00 p.m. Von Canon

Pre-Registration Pizza Party 5:30 7:00 pm

FG 7-16 5-9 12-

FT 25-6 2-2 0-0 0-0 30-0 0-0 0-0 0-0

NAISMITH from page I, The Chronicle Duke career, which has included more than 1,500 points, 500 rebounds, 200 blocks, 200 assists and 200 total steals. “When a player comes into the league, he has an opportunity to win 76 ACC games, if he wins every regular season and every tournament game. Shane just finished his ACC career and he’s won 69,” Krzyzewski said. “He’s been the consummate winner and he does what he needs to do to help us win in every way. That’s why he’s already won a lot of national player of the year awards, and nobody deserves that more.” As one of 15 finalists for the Naismith Award, Battier had some very stiff competition. However, the Duke senior was one of only a handful of fourth-year players up for the honor; Battier was accompanied on the ballot by veterans Brendan Haywood of North Carolina, Troy Murphy of Notre Dame and Terence Morris of Maryland. In fact, a majority of the finalists were underclassmen, highlighted by an impressive trio of sophomores in Duke’s Jason Williams, North Carolina

Officials: Libbey, Connolly, Rios

QUIN SNYDER (RIGHT) embraces Mike Krzyzewski prior to their teams’ duel Saturday.

Wednesday, March 21, 2000

3PT 5-8 0-0 0-0 4-8 1-4 0-0 0-0 0-0 1-1 0-0

37

join Battier on final balloting

-

Tuesday, March 20:

James martin lii

-

111

and a friend speak of the little known yet devastating dangers of smoking, like losing your voice. Q&A to follow. 7:00 p.m. 111 Social Sciences -

Cultural Anthropology Lounge (just outside room 108 Social Sciences)

This is an excellent opportunity to meet with the Cultural Anthropology faculty to discuss the exciting courses being offered during Fall Semester 2001 and the curriculum in general. Please plan to attend. Pizza and drinks will be served. Call 684-5012 if you have any questions.

Brown Bag Lunch with Audrey Hardy speaking about her experience as a rural R.N. 12:00 noon Women's Center -

For more information, contact Eric Gold elg2@duke.edu or call 684-4377 -

rtXth.. community service center DUKE

UNIVERSITY


SPORTSWRAP

PAGE 12

MONDAY, MARCH

19. 2001

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Commentary

MONDAY, MARCH 19, 2001

PAGE 9

The money pit

President George W. Bush is not being honest about who will benefit from his new tax plan trillion. They also warned that under to allay suspicions about such a raid by administration officials claim that tax Bush’s plan a hitherto obscure aspect of offering his personal assurance that the cuts this year don’t affect their arithmetic Reckonings has accumulating because their budget is for 2002 through

the tax code, the alternative minimum money Medicare been tax, would become a major issue—and to care for the baby boomers will not be resolving that issue would sharply diverted into other uses—even though increase the cost of the plan. Bush includes that money in his “conearlier this enough, tingency fund.” But Thompson admitted Sure month the Paul Krugman bipartisan Congressional Joint Tax that it isn’t really up to him—and the So this contractor is renovating your Committee estimated that Bush’s proposadministration’s allies in the Senate house. Funny how he got the job: You al would reduce revenues over the next blocked a measure that would have checked the wrong box on a confusing decade by $2.2 trillion. And the JTC also made Thompson’s promise binding. form, and the judge—a close friend of produced some shocking estimates about Somehow I’m not reassured. the contractor—ruled that you were the alternative minimum tax. The latest news is that Bush wants stuck. Anyway, though you told him that Most people have never heard of this additional tax cuts this year to stimulate your priority was tax, which was sup- the economy; he has apparently just realyour replacing posed to prevent ized that cuts that will take 10 years to the wealthy from phase in won’t do anything to increase leaky roof, he avoiding taxes but spending today. This will add hundreds of that first insists he wants to put in ends up mainly billions to the budget cost of his plan. You start was misaffecting uppermight think thathe would admit that this a luxurious powder room. middle-income increases the cost of his tax cut and perfamilies with lots of haps that he would offer to scale back Back when he deductions. When those future tax cuts. Not a chance; was trying to get impact tax kicks in, it’s the the your business, you’ve infuriating; contractor said tax carefully calculatthat he could put ed everything, then in th(Ie powder room for only $lO,OOO, though others you discover that you have to do another insisted that estimate was way too low. calculation, and you end up owing a lot Now it turns out, sure enough, that it more. But right now this happens to only will cost at least $25,000. But he claims 1.5 percent of taxpayers. The JTC conthat he can save enough money on other cluded, however, that under the Bush parts of the job to make up the differ- plan this number would rise to one-third ence. And one of his employees has of taxpayers. Without question the law offered his personal assurance that the will be changed so that this doesn’t haproof won’t be neglected—though he pen—but the fix will add at least $3OO biladmits that in the end it’s not his deci- lion to the cost of the plan. So the “trillion-dollar tax cut” has sion, and his boss refuses to put anybecome $2.5 trillion and counting—-which thing in writing. Last May, when George W. Bush was means that Bush can pay for initiatives like missile defense and prescription drug claiming that he planned only a trilhon—remember routine coverage only by raiding Social Security the dollar tax cut

Bush knew from the that he leading the public about the budget of his proposals

with the

dollar bills?—independent

experts estimated the actual 10-year budget cost of his tax plan at close to $2

2011, so what happens this year doesn’t count. I am not making this up. The important point is that the estimated cost of the tax cut hasn’t exploded because of new information; it has

exploded because the original estimates were simply dishonest. Bush knew from the start that he was misleading the public about the budget impact of his proposals, just as he knows that he is misleading people now about whose taxes will be cut and by how much. This contractor didn’t make an honest error;

he deliberately deceived the homeowner. And as long as he keeps getting away with it, he sees no reason to change the way he does business. Paul Krugmaris column is syndicated by The New York Times News Service. -

\

and Medicare. Last week Tommy Thompson, secretary of health and human services, tried

THE ARTFUL DODGER visits ‘Duke-nolia’ Monday, Monday THE ARTFUL DODGER Partly cloudy. Five percent chance of rain. Nov. 12, 2000 A man is seen by a Duke student masturbating in Perkins Library. The student asks the man to please stop masturbating. He responds, “I can’t.” The student observes that the man is reading The Strife of the Natural Faculties by Immanuel Kant. I. Kant. Is this just a coincidence? Nov. 20, 2000 —A student runs into a second floor room in Gilbert-Addoms Dormitory and proceeds to urinate all over the window sill. The occupant of the room asks him, “What are you doing?” The student responds, “This isn’t Will’s room?” The mysterious urinator then leaves the room. Police investigating the scene find drops of a liquid substance lead out into the hallway. Twenty-thousand dollars of analysis and testing confirms suspicions that the fluid is, in fact, urine. When photographs of the urine drops are later analyzed, they make the formation of the Greek letter pi. Investigators decide that the incident is simply a strange coincidence, a twist of probability and fate. Dec. 14, 2000 Germanic studies major and Duke senior Erik Ericson hands in the first draft of his senior thesis, entitled “Demographic Curves of the Body Politic in Weimar Germany.” Shocked professors read the paper, only to find crude sketchings of a nude Maurice Chevalier. When confronted, Ericson cannot explain what he has done, only to say that he had Chevalier in the back of his head for a while. The sketches show Chevalier urinating on the window sill

of what appears to be a dorm room. Written on the door in what appears to be perfect Greek is the message, “Will’s Room.” The Honor Council passes over the incident as a sheer necessity of probability. For every million papers turned in, X percent will have nude sketches of Chevalier, posits Vice Provost for Undergraduate Education William Chafe. He reassures the committee that, because it happened now, it can reasonably be

The Duke University Police Department chooses not to explore the possibility of Chevalier having been the GA urinator as he is dead. ,

expected to not occur again for another 4,000 years. The Duke University Police Department chooses not to explore the possibility of Chevalier having been the GA urinator, as he is dead. The entire matter is passed off as coincidence. Andrew Scott is a Duke biology professor who breeds populations of the bacteria responsible for foot odor. As a teenager growing up in suburban Detroit, he had exactly one date with a Ms. Patty Carlysle. Carlysle rebuffed his advances at the end of the date and never returned his subsequent calls. Scott blamed the incident on the odors emanating from his pair of 1965 Chuck Taylor All Star sneakers. They were his gym shoes. They smelled. He lost what scant confidence he had and became one of Duke’s least inspiring lecturers.

Carlysle i& happily married to Wade Knight, a successful venture capitalist who works in Manhattan. The two live in suburban Westchester County, New York. They met while at college, at Colgate. There, Knight played football. Patty tells confidants that she was secretly attracted to him by the odor ofhis shoes after football games. It was something of an aphrodisiac. She had something of a (forgive the alliteration) funky foot fungus fetish. Knight is contemplating the investment of $400,000 in a venture, headed by one Andrew Scott ofDuke University, that promises to cure foot odors forever. Is this a coincidence? Samantha Neil is a member of a top Duke sorority. She sat behind Ericson in Professor Scott’s seminar, “Microbial Inhibition and Your Libido.” It is not a popular course. Both are taking it to graduate. Her attention span is so short that she cannot even remember to refill her own Ritalin prescription, and she filled the first semester at Duke with longing stares at Ericson’s notebook, filled with sketches of the nude Maurice Chevalier. Neil cannot remember why, but she decided to take the spring semester abroad in France. Here, she has developed a taste for Black Perigord Truffles, a fungus. If she could pay attention long enough, this fact would alarm her. To get a passing grade in Scott’s course, she tried to seduce him. Though attracted to Neil, and without regard for the seeming impropriety of teacher-student relations, Scott rebuffed her. He could not explain why. This was prior to her ever eating a truffle. Chevalier. Neil. Ericson. Carlysle. Knight. Scott. The Perkins Library masturbator. The GilbertAddoms urinator. Immanuel Kant.

Coincidence?

It does not seem like it.

THE ARTFUL DODGER spent spring break watching the movie Magnolia a few dozen times.


Comics

page 10

Blazing Sea Nuggets/ David Logan SO, JAKE, HOW WAS VOOR

Aahh, WES. I

CANCUH?

REttENBEI BREAK.

BREAK IN

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OF COURSE

THE Daily Crossword

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Edited by Wayne Robert Williams

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DIDN'T SAV ANYTHING.

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IT! V/HAT’S TOUR PROBLEM, HUBERT?! IT'S NOT LI KE I SPENT THE WHOLE BREAK IN A STUPOR!

I

MONDAY, MARCH 19, 2001

Eric Bramley 1

The Chronicle

I

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Doonesbury/ Garry Trudeau Wearing a domino Violent outburst Inter

42

47 48

49

(among others)

Fen "Phaedo" writer Sweet potato Average

Moral misdeed Actor Wallach Half of a fly? “Mila 18“ writer Ron Howard role Hammer heads “Kiss of the Spider Woman” star Sonia Pope who

liberty

negotiated with

Scott Adams

37 Weirdo 39 $ dispenser 43 Tributes 44 Part of Q.E.D.

Attila

Sidling

HERE'S A LIST OF THE PEOPLE YOU'VE A-L- h-0-5-T WORKED TO DEATH.

WE NEED TO REDUCE STAFF BY TWENTY.

DOWN Listens to

I HAVE ANOTHER PROJECT FOR YOU ...UH...TED.

attentively

Furnish Bite at 12

crustacean? R. Reagan's Star Wars

32 Deathly pale 33 Tanklike animal 34 Tin or iron 36 Bridal vow

45 Knapsacks 46 Lead player

50 Serengeti predators

53 Constrained

54 Beach 56 Sierra 57 Ultraviolet filter 58 Coty and Clair 59 Cause of ruin 60 Son of Seth 61 Dish edge 62 Period 63 Bo's number

The Chronicle:

Other things Shane Battier should win:

J n’ J A date with Jaime (or Jim, for that matter): .another J A national championship: Best haircut award: Lucas An Oscar for his performance in Shane Takes Charge. Brody Matt The retirement of his socks;. Ross The retirement of Billy Packer .Ruth and Alex Number one draft pick .Thad and Matt Four more years Roily He should definitely get to touch Roily’s boobies

1 FoxTrot/ Bill Amend HEY, JASON, WANNA COME OVER TO MY HOUSE AFTER SCHOOL

EILEEN, GET RE/ A GIRL, I'M A f COULD WE Po'

TODAY?

together

REALLY?? PSST PSST PSST.

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Account Representatives:

Monica Franklin, Dawn Hall, Yu-hsien Huang, Lars Johnson Anna Carollo, Constance Lindsay Account Assistant: Sallyann Bergh, Kate Burgess, Sales Representatives: Julianna Dudas, Chris Graber, Richard Jones, Margaret Ng, Seth Strickland

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Jordana Joffe National Account Representative: Dallas Baker, Jonathan Blackwell, Creative Services; Laura Durity, Lina Fenequito, Megan Harris, Dan Librot Preeti Garg, Ellen Mielke, Business Assistant: Veronica Puente-Duany Cristina Mestre Classifieds:

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MONDAY, MARCH 19, 2001

The Chronicle

The Chronicle publishes several public service calendars through the week as detailed below: Monday Duke Bulletin Board Community Calendar Tuesday-Friday Sports Events Monday Tuesday Friday Arts Events Thursday 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. Submissions for these calendars are published on a space-available basis with priority given to Duke events. Notices must be for events which are free and open to the public or for which proceeds benefit a public/not-for-profit cause. Deadline for the Bulletin Board is noon Thursday. &

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: To submit

The Chronicle, Box 90858, Durham, NC 27708. Fax: (919) 684-4696. Phone: (919) 684-2663 (Notices may not be taken over the phone). E-mail: calendar@chronicle.duke.edufor community calendar and bulletin board notices only.

MONPAY)

MA*£H-19, 2001 "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! 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 information call 684-6735. Wesley campus minister: Jenny Copeland. -

-

Women's Health Seminar Series: "Osteoporosis in Minority Populations." For information, call 6814514. 12 noon to 1:00 p.m. 2002 Duke Hospital. Department of History and Women's Studies: Panel chaired by Jean O'Barr, Margaret Taylor Smith Director ofWomen's Studies, "Women and the Law." For information, call 684-5683. 4:30 p.m. East Duke Parlor, East Duke Building, East Campus.

Family counseling Service is offering a weekly "Women's Recovery Group." The program is designed for women who are coping with addictions to drugs and/or alcohol. The first session offered is today from 5:00 to 6:00 p.m., and will continue for the next 12 weeks. For more information call 4033534 ext. 110. Department of English: Reading by poet Yusef Komunyakaa, winner of the 1994 Pulitzer Prize for poetry. For information, call 684-2741. 7:30 p.m. Rare Book Room, Perkins Library, West Campus.

Westminster Presbyterian/UCC Fellowship meets 910:00 p.m. in the Chapel Basement Lounge. "Haphour," an informal time of refreshments and fellowship, begins at 8:30 p.m. All are welcome.

TV£SPAX

Freewater Films; "Red Rock West." Tickets are free to Duke students, $3 for the public. For information, call 684-2911. 7:00 p.m., 9:30 p.m. Griffith Film

Theater. Duke Unitarian Universalists at their Open Forum, 8:00 p.m. to 9:00 p.m., 110 Divinity. All are welcome. For more information, contact Maggie Ostdahl at 613-3212 or mlo@duke.edu. The Wesley Fellowship (United Methodist Campus Ministry) Freshman Small Group will meet at 10:00 p.m. on East. All freshmen are welcome. For more call .684-6735 or e-mail information, jenny.copeland@ duke.edu.

Sigma

The Literature Program's Spring 2001 Lecture Series presents Susan Buck-Morss, author of "Dreamworld and Catastrophe: The Passing of Mass Utopia in East and West," speaking on "Hegel and Haiti: Beyond Postcoloniality," Time and Room TBA. Tau

Nursing Society: Spring Theta Conference, "Creating Community in Today's Workplace: The Professional Nurse's Role.” For information, call 681 4514. 1:00 p.m. to 5:00 p.m. Durham Regional Hospital Auditorium. Duke Gardens' Educational Programs: "Gardening for the Birds." Alice Le Due, and Edna Gaston. Fee is $7 for Friends of Duke Gardens and $l2 for the pub-

lic. For information, call 684-3698. 2:00 p.m to p.m. Meet at the Horticulture Service Area.

4:00

Meredith and Kip Frey Lecture in Intellectual Property Friday, March 23 at 12:15 p.m. in room 3037 of the law school. Cyberlaw expert and author Professor Lawrence Lessig of Stanford Law School will give the lecture, titled "Architecting Innovation," which will cover how the changes in the architecture of the Internet are affecting creativity and innovation. The public is invited.

Intersted in Unitarian Universalism at Duke? Join the

Theta

Conference,

Tau

Nursing Society: Spring "Creating Community in Today's

Workplace: The Professional Nurse's Role." For information, call 681 4514. 8:00 a.m. to 12 noon. Durham Regional Hospital Auditorium. Orange County Dispute Settlement Center Training Schedule: "Conflict Management in the Workplace," 9:00 a.m.-4:30 p.m. To register or for more information call 919-929-8800. The Duke Center for Integrative Medicine is pleased to present a lecture by Rebecca Wellborn, RN, BSN, and herbalist of Meadowsweet Gardens in Durham, entitled "Home Medicinal Gardens: A Practical Approach." The lecture will take place from 12:15 to 1:00 p.m., in the Duke Clinic Amphitheater (Duke South near basement food court.) The previously scheduled "A History of Women Healers" lecture by Pali Delevitt will be rescheduled for the fall when Pali is fully recovered from her recent surgery.

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

lunch and your Bible. French and Francophone Film Series; "La Nuit du Destin," directed by Abdelkrim Bahloul. For information, call 684-2911. 7:00 p.m. Griffith Film Theater, Bryan Center, West Campus.

Living with Advanced/Metastatic Cancer Support Group is held every Friday from 3-4:30 p.m. at Cornucopia House Cancer Support Center, 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 Literature Program's Spring 2001 Lecture Series presents Anne Garreta, author of "La decomposition," speaking on "Down With the Symbolic Order!" 3:30 p.m., North Gallery, Art Museum.

Department of Music; Aaron Fox, Columbia University, "Global Country: Class and Indigeneity in an 'Anti-World' Music." For information, call 6603300. 4:00 p.m. 104 Biddle Music Building, East Campus. Duke University Union Visual Arts Committee and the Institute of Arts present "Bottle cap Mandala." Reception for artist Bryant Holsenbeck at 5:00 p.m. Brown Gallery, Bryan Center, West Campus. The artist will be on residence installing the exhibit March 19-22. For more information, call 684-2323.

Department of Music Student Recital: Timothy Sehoon Chung, violin. For information, call 6603300. 3:00 p.m. Bone Hall, Biddle Music Building, East Campus. Department of Romance Studies; "A Place in the World," (1991) by Adolfo Aristarain. For information, call 660-3100. 6:00 p.m. 116 Old Chemistry Building, West Campus. The Duke Artists Series presents Andre Watts, piano, 8:00 p.m. Page Auditorium, West Campus. Since his now legendary televised appearance at the age of 6 with Leonard Bernstein and the New York Philharmonic, Andre Watts has become one of today's most sought-after and beloved superstars. For ticket information call the Page Box Office at 684-

1

4444. The Duke Institute of the Arts and the Duke Dance

Wesley Fellowship Freshman Small Group 10:00 p.m. on East. For more information call 684-6735. Wesley campus minister: Jenny Copeland. -

THVKSPAr 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 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. information: For more

684-6735;

jenny.copeland@duke.edu;

www.duke.edu/web/wesley. Wesley campus minister Jenny Copeland -

every Mind-Body Skills Weekly Group 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.

Sigma

The Carolina Theatre presents "The Quiet Man," directed by John Ford, 7:00 p.m. Visit www.carolinatheatre.org for more information.

PAGE 11

"Personal Histories" Film Series at The Center for Documentary Studies continues with Osaka Story" "

and "Fighting Grandpa", 7:00 p.m. For more information, call 660-3663. Center for Documentary Studies, Lyndhurst House, 1317 W. Pettigrew St.

Teer House Healthy Happenings: Choosing and Using Quality Childcare. To register, call 416-3853. 7:00 p.m. 4019 N. Roxboro Road, Durham. Freewater Films: "One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest." Tickets are free to Duke students, $3 for the public. For information, call 684-2911. 7:00 p.m., 9:30 p.m. Griffith Film Theater.

Duke Chorale: Conducted by Rodney Wynkoop, the chorale will present its Tour Concert. For information, call 660-3300. 8:00 p.m. Baldwin Auditorium, East Campus. Free.

Wesley Fellowship Spiritual Formation 9:00 p.m. in the Wesley Office located in the basement of the Chapel. For more information call 684-6735. Wesley campus minister: Jenny Copeland. -

Program presents "Flamenco Vivo! Carlota Santana Spanish Dance," 8:00 p.m., Reynolds Theater. Tickets are $2l/$ 17, and $lO for students. For more information and tickets call 684-4444.

SATVKPAV Free Homebuying Seminar 9:15 a.m.-12 noon. Held at the Academy of Trial Lawyers, 1312 Annapolis Drive, cross streets of Oberlin Roadd and Wade Avenue. Reservations are needed, call 919-505-3082. -

The Carrboro Farmers' Market opens today and each Saturday until late December from 7:00 a.m. and 12:00 p.m. The market is located on Carrboro Town Commons, next to Town Hall near the intersection of Weaver Street and West Main Street.

Wesley Fellowship Social Justice Triple Play. For more information call 684-6735. Wesley campus minister; Jenny Copeland. -

-

Quadrangle Pictures: "Quills," with Geoffrey Rush. Tickets are $3. For information, call 684-2911. 7:00 p.m., 10:00 p.m. Griffith Film Theater, Bryan Center. The Carolina Theatre presents the Triangle Brass Band and Triangle Youth Ballet in "Ballet and Brass," 7:30 p.m. Visit www.carolinatheatre.org for more information. The Duke Institute of the Arts and the Duke Dance

Program presents "Flamenco Vivo! Carlota Santana Spanish Dance," 8:00 p.m., Reynolds Theater. Tickets are $2l/$ 17, and $lO for students. For more information and tickets call

684-4444.

The Department of Music presents the Encounters With The Music of Our Time Duke/UNC Festival of New Music. Tonight's concert features The Ciompi Quartet and guest artist Allan Ware, clarinet, 8:00 p.m., Nelson Music Room. General admission is $8 and free for students.

SUNPAY Wesley Fellowship

-

Sunday School and Worship at

Duke Memorial United Methodist Church a.m. For more information call 684-6735.

-

9:45

Seagrove Pottery Invites you to our Spring Open House, 11:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. A great selection from over 45 artists, door prizes, and refreshments. Located in Downtown Seagrove. For more information, call (336)873-7280.

The Durham Branch of the NAACP will host its regular monthly meeting at 4:00 p.m. at Saint Joseph's AME Church, 2521 Fayetteville Street, Durham. Topic No Justice for Rape Victims in the Black -

Community. The Duke Chapel's Organ Recital Series continues with James Kibbie, Associate Professor of Organ at the University of Michigan, who will present a recital today at 5:00 p.m. in the Duke University Chapel. Admission is free.

Worship Episcopal Center of Duke University Services are held weekly at 5:00 p.m. on Sundays at the Center in Central Campus followed by dinner'. Please join us for worship and fun, all are welcome. -

Prayer Flags: Finding Your Symbol of Healing, 6:009:00 p.m. Cancer patients, survivors, family and friends are invited to leant to access their own unique healing symbols and translate them to a prayer flag. Cornucopia House Cancer Support Center, Overlook Bldg., Ste. 220, 111 Cloister Court, Chapel Hill. For more information and directions, call 401-9333 or visit www.comucopiahouse.org The Wesley Fellowship (United Methodist Campus Ministry) will meet at 6:30 p.m. for our weekly program and worship, Divinity School Lounge. All are welcome. For more information call 684-6735.

Duke's Department of Music presents a student recital with Chris Boemer, jazz guitar, 8:00 p.m.. Nelson Music Room, East Duke Bldg.

Charlotte's ninth annual Hoop-It-Up basketball tournament presented by the Charlotte Hornets returns to Knights Stadium today and tomorrow. Hoop-It-Up, the official 3-on-3 basketball tour of NBA and NBC Sports, offers divisional competition for players ages 8 and older and all skill levels. Teams can register online at www.hoopitup.com or call (704) 552-0103.

The Department of Music presents the Encounters With The Music of Our Time Duke/UNC Festival of New Music. Tonight's concert features Music for Chamber Orchestra, 8:00 p.m., UNC’s Hill Hall. Admission is free. For more information, contact or Susan Wilson at 660-3333

Seagrove Pottery Invites you to our Spring Open House, 9:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. A great selection of over 45 artists to choose from, door prizes, and refreshments. Conveniently located in Downtown Seagrove. For more information, call (336)873-7280.

Quadrangle Pictures: "Quills," with Geoffrey Rush. Tickets are $3. For information, call 684-2911. 8:00 p.m. Griffith Film Theater, Bryan Center, West

Celebrate Native American Culture at the Great Aunt Stella Center. Attend stimulating lectures all day. Experience live performances of traditional Native American dancing and storytelling. Join a workshop to leant Native American skills. See beautiful crafts, clothing, art, and jewelry. Sample savory Native American foods. Opening ceremonies begin at 11:00 a.m. Visit www.stellacenter.org for more information.

sawilson@acpub.duke.edu.

Campus

ANNCVN££M£NTS Do you enjoy reading to children? Become a volunteer reader for "Reach Out and Read," an early literacy program sponsored by the Duke Children's Clinic. Volunteer readers commit 30 minutes to one hour reading books to children in the pediatric clinic wailing room. If you are interested and would like please contact the Volunteer more information Coordinator at 668-4107.


Classifieds

MONDAY, MARCH 19, 2001

Announcements

STUDENT SPACE AVAILABLE

EARLY CHILDHOOD STUDIES

Applications for student organization office and display case space are available at the Bryan Center Info Desk. Deadline is Friday, March 23rd @ spm. Call 684-2911

(An interdisciplinary certificafe)The spring application period is in progress. All who plan to apply should submit applications to 02 Allen. If questions, come by or call 684-2075.

w/questions.

WANT TO TAKE A YEAR OFF GRADUATE BEFORE SCHOOL? Come travel and ps! with have fun

THE WRITING STUDIO FIVE WEEKS LEFT! -

NANNY/MOTHER’S

Want to write a more effective academic essay? Want help with your personal statement or resume? Want to become a better writer? Schedule an appointment with a tutor at the Writing Studio by using our on-line cale d a n r www.ctlw.duke.edu/wstudio

GRE and GMAT Courses $595 Franklin Educational Services has GRE and GMAT courses beginning April 4th. We offer more than test prep, we help our students with the entire application process. Our program offers the most hours of live teaching from our team of expert instructors. Our internally developed materials provide an excellent combination of proven strategies, as well as comprehensive content review. Demand a higher level of service: we provide responses to all e-mail questions within 24 hours, 7 days a week, along with 2 hours of one-onone application counseling. Before you spend over $lOOO with another company call us at 919-489-8410 or e-mail us at franklineducation@hotmail.com and learn more about our courses and our guarantee.

Full-time nanny needed for adorable 8 month old in Durham. 45-50 hours per week. Extensive experience with infants/toddlers, references, high reliability. Flexible start date. Must commit for 1 year or longer. 401-8790.

ASSIS-

TANT. 40 hours per week. 2 weeks paid vaca$lO/hour tion holidays. Call Suma Jones at 490-0965 or email to directly sumarjones@nc.rr.com. +

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Help Wanted Apts. For Rent $lO/hr GUARANTEED 2415 W. Club Blvd. Apt. B. Large sunny 2BR/2BA apt., available April Ist in quiet residential neighborhood close to Duke. Hardwood floors, W/D, extra storage. $675 utilities per month. Call 286-3302 or 684-8931.

Work on campus F/T or P/T for as little as 5-10 hrs/wk or as many as 40 hrs/wk. Be your own boss. Create your own schedule. Limited positions. Call 1-800-808-7442 ext.Bo.

Autos For Sale

seeks interested students to be camp counselors for summer residential camp. Internship credit possible. Needed May 2-August 3. Contact Becky Cable @ (919)5421033 or bcable@autismsocietync.org.

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

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Employment

Woodcraft Swim and Tennis Club and Falls River Club have jobs waiting for you!! We are looking to fill the following positions for Spring/Summer 2001: Lifeguards -we offer on site certifications. WSl's -we pay Swim Team instructors well. Coaches -competitive swim team. Snack Bar -excellent start to food service. Bartenders -Falls River in Raleigh only. Check In -perfect for firemen/EMT’s/Nurses. If you have a great work ethic and you are interested in a rewarding position in a great working environment and flexible scheduling, call Kelly at 489-7705 for our Durham Woodcraft location or Stacey at 919-848-0776 for our North Raleigh Falls River location!

Opportunities!

(adjacent to Brightleaf Square) to clean labwares, autoclave, and assist lab manager with routine tasks. $lO/hr., 15-20 hrs. per week. Flexible. 683-8993

Day Camp and Resident Camp near Chapel Hill seeks energetic and highly qualified camp staff. Program specialists needed in the areas of canoeing, lifeguarding, WSI, Environmental Ed., Arts & Crafts, and sports. General counselors needed with skills in cooking, campcraft/outdoorskills, drama and singing. On site housing is available. Call Camp New Hope at (919) 942-4716 for application.

m

STRUCTURE HOUSE PART-TIME GREETER/FACILITATOR We are seeking an energetic candidate who maintains a sense of urgency and understanding, along with the ability to deal confidently with multiple tasks at a time. Individuals will serve as a greeter/facilitator on Saturdays and Sundays (12 hours per week). Excellent interpersonal, customer relations, communication and organizational skills are essential. Candidate will need to be able to speak to groups and present information in a clear and understandable manner, and should also be familiar with Microsoft Office, have a valid driver’s license, and the ability to lift 50 pounds.

beth.dunn@duke.edu.

Energetic, loving child care provider needed for 4 and 10 year old boys. Hours 11;30AM-6:00PM Monday through Friday. $lO/hr. Must have transportation and be a non-smoker. Call 967-4959.

Interested candidates should forward resume via-email to info@structurehouse.com. No phone calls please. EOE.

Becker Automotive

The Chronics

Service

rates

payment Prepayment is required Cash, Check, Duke IR, MC/VISAor Flex accepted (We cannot make change for cash payments.) 24 hour drop off location •101 W. Union Building or mail to: Chronicle Classifieds Box 90858, Durham, NC 27708 0858 -

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fax to: 684-8295 phone orders: call (919) 684-3811 to place your ad Visit the Classifieds Online!

http://www.chronicle.duke.edu/dassifieds/today.html Call 684-3811 if you have any questions about classifieds No refunds or cancellations after first insertion deadline.

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business rate $6.00 for first 15 words private party/N.P. $4.50 for first 15 words all ads 100 (per day) additional per word 3or 4 consecutive insertions -10 % off 5 or more consecutive insertions 20 % off special features (Combinations accepted.) $l.OO extra per day for all Bold Words $1.50 extra per day for a Bold Heading (maximum 15 spaces) $2.50 for 2 line heading $2.00 extra per day for Boxed Ad deadline business 1 day prior to publication by 12:00 noon

We are Structure House, a highly successful and nationally recognized residential weight control treatment center in Durham, NC.

Relive your childhood this summer! Care for my daughters, 9 and 11 1/2. Enjoy picnics, pool, sports, games, and crafts. Must have own dependable transportation, childcare experience, and references. Please call Elizabeth 5:30-10:00 p.m., 490-5364, or e-mail eliza-

Three Pastors willing to house-sit for you while they attend classes at Duke July 1-27, 2001. Call 715842-2201 ask for Cathy or email aacath @ hotmail.com.

PAID SUMMER INTERNSHIP. Interested in being a part of recruitment efforts? The office of Undergraduate Admissions has several openings for a paid summer internship. Interns primary responsibilities will include conducting interviews and campus tours. Applicants must be rising Seniors or members of the Class of 2001 and possess the following: excellent communication skills, a knowledgeable enthusiasm for Duke, and thirty hours per week availability. To apply, please submit a resume and cover letter to the attention of Allison Sevan, Undergraduate Admissions, Box 90586. Application deadline: April 4, 2001. Questions: 684-0175.

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Rental Space Available in the lobby of Metrosport, a high traffic (500700 members daily) sports center. Excellent location for a physical therapist, psychologist, a boutique, or a hair salon. Call 286-7529., ext. 227.

UNDERGRADUATE ADMISSIONS

Needed in the Genetics Research Lab at Vector Tobacco (USA) Ltd.

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MAY GRADUATES. Apparel cards for Commencement are due NOW. Office of the University Marshal. 215 Allen Building.

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Healthy adults (16 to 72) who are non-smokers are asked to participate in an investigation of the effect of endotoxin on lung function. Two visits required. Compensation. Contact Cheryl Yetsko (919) 668SI 35.

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page 12

Housekeeper/Cook for Durham professional family. Transportation required Fridays 3:30-7:45 and 2 other weekdays 3-6. $l2/hr. Write “Housekeeper.” 1955 W. Cornwallis Rd. Durham, 27705, or e-mail

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MONDAY, MARCH 19, 2001

The Chronicle

KAUh 1b

Colleagues remember Griffin as devoted, caring

P

GRIFFIN from page 1

turned to Duke after working in the Maryland House of Delegates and had, for the last 12 years, worked for TIP. “He was genuine. There was nothing fake about him; he didn’t put on any airs,” said Vicki Stocking, a TIP researcher. “He was humble. He wanted to learn about people, and people wanted to know him.” Co-workers remembered Griffin as a sensitive administrator who was devoted to working with the program’s students. “He was very passionate and dedicated, and he quickly became a friend and trusted colleague of mine,” said TIP Executive Director Steven Pfeiffer. “He certainly was a champion of the rights of the gifted.... Ramon was always extremely sensitive that we could serve any gifted child who was interested in coming to TIP no matter what their economic circumstances were.” Griffin was in charge of overseeing all day-to-day TIP Houses For Rent 2BR, 2BA House. North Durham, 6miles to Duke. Fenced & safe inlaw suite. $750/ mo. 477-2911 Sabbatical House! Duke/UNC/RTP 5116 Greyfield, 1994 4BR/2.58A, 2 car/bonus. 2850 sq. ft! Avail 7/017/02. $1750/mo Furn. $l5OO Unfurn. 401-1875.

operations and consulting on all TIP decisions. Colleagues say his commitment to TlP’s mission—to foster the talents of America’s brightest middle and high school students—was unending and that his attention to the details of the program made him a critical piece of the program’s foundation. In his deliberations on financial aid rewards, for example, Griffin worked diligently to make sure all gifted children could participate in TIP. “Ramon was so dedicated to the well-being of young people and students,” said Stocking, also an adjunct assistant professor of psychology. “He was a pre-major adviser. He loved his students, he knew each of them personally, he knew how to guide them.... He knew every work-study student in both offices. He knew them personally, where everyone was from.” Griffin graduated from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill in 1981 with a degree in psychol-

Room For Rent

Health Awareness © .a Week March 19th 23rd

SUMMER HOUSING! 5 rooms for rent in nice, new house, 1 block from East Campus. June Ist until mid-August. Excellent price, great for group rental. Call Kate, 613-2061 for details, or email ktb2@duke.edu.

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Houses For Sale Very clean ranch. Pinewood subdivison. 3 BR, FP, large lot. Great location near campus. 401-7614.

Misc. For Sale

~

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.

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. 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.

Pair of Final Four tickets, $Bl5. Upper-level. 520-296-5830. Tickets for NCAA East Regional Finals Philadelphia. 302-479704. -

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ogy and political science and received his law degree three years later from Ohio State University. Outside the office, Griffin was a dedicated athlete who pursued martial arts and ran, climbed and cycled. As a member of local service boards engaged in overseeing mediation and day care services in Durham, he played a key role in several community initiatives. He also mentored local black children and volunteered for the United Way and the US. Olympic Festival. He is survived by his father, John Coppage of Parmele, N.C., his sister Elaine Davis and his brother Geoffrey Taylor, both of Brooklyn, N.Y. His funeral is being held in Parmele today, and members of the TIP staff are now considering how best to memorialize him. “Pm hopeful that... the spirit of Ramon will live on in renewing commitment to championing rights of the gifted,” Pfeiffer sa'id.

1-800-645-3618 WE HAVE WHAT YOU’RE LOOKING FOR!

Monday, March 19: Kathy Knight and Katherine Whetten-Goldstein speak about AIDS outreach in rural areas 6 p.m., Von Canon ~

Tuesday, March 20: Losing Your Voice to Smoking: Two Survivors Speak Out, Jim Martin and a friend speak of the little known yet devastating dangers of smoking, like losing your voice. Q & A to follow. 7 p.m., Room 111 Social Sciences Building ~

Brown Bag Lunch with Audry Hardy on her experience as a rural R.N 12 noon, Mary Lou Williams Center ~

Wednesday March 21: ,

Relaxation Techniques and Stress Relieffor Dukies: CAPS’ John Barrow gives a workshop on ways to manage stress for the everyday student. 4 p.m., Women’s Center ~

Panel discussion with local leaders of the Rural Health Movement and Black Farmers’ Rights. Leaders will discuss improving health care for people in rural areas. 7 p.m., Sanford 04 ~

Thursday March 22: ,

Dr. Benjamin Carson world renowndd neurosurgeon at Johns Hopkins and prolific writer in the field of neuroscience, talks about overcoming the odds and the power of medicine. Carson built a brilliant career after overcoming his humble beginnings growing up in poverty and relates his experience in the medical profession to making a difference in people’s lives and Serving as a role model for youth. 7 p.m., Page Auditorium ,

~

American Red Cross holds an education and prevention workshop on HIV/AIDS 7:30 p.m., 130 Social Psychology Building ~

The Healthy Devil on HIV/AIDS in the Durham and Duke communities 8:30 p.m., 130 Social Psychology Building ~

Friday, March 23:

<oa-SW2aO AA A A A

Join us for an afternoon offun and games. Duke students can volunteer to be paired with members of the NC Autism T jT Society and children from the ARC of Durham for an A afternoon of games and relays. ir*l it-* 2 p.m., East Campus Quad Service center (Rain site: Blackwell Commons) DUKE UNIVERSITY (Sign-ups on BC walkway and at Marketplace)

UD I

~

few mwwiiw wmmm*


MONDAY, MARCH 19, 2001

The Chronicle

PAGE 14

UCSF, Harvard, Duke scientists race toward vaccine HIV VACCINE from page 3

sive increase in the replication of the HIV virus,” Letvin said. “The reverse

happens when more lymphocytes were

present in the system.” Letvin’s vaccine consists of inoculated DNA and peptides of HIV. In developing this type of vaccine, Letvin says he is trying to contain HlV—not to prevent infection from occurring. “Right now, if a person has the HIV virus, there will be a high level of viral replication, but with this drug the replication itself could be dramatically contained,” he said. “If you can’t prevent the infection, you can at least try to control it and allow the infected

person to live a longer, more productive life. Back at Duke, Dr. Bart Haynes, rre eric M. Hanes professor of medicine, has been researching an HIV vaccine at Duke for 15 years. For the last 10 years, be and his team have received grants from the National Institute of Allergies and Infectious Diseases. Haynes team which includes Dr. Herman Staats, an assistant research professor in the division of rheumatology and immunology—is focusmg on developing a vaccine administered via nasal spray. Their work is based on a earher report, which showed that many sub-baharan African prostitutes had become im,

to HIV. Building on the results of that study, the team is trying to create a vaccine that will induce both mucosal and systemic responses to block HIV. Both Haynes and Staats said the potential vaccine, which also mimics HlV’s envelope, will stimulate antibodies and cytotoxic T-cells to fight at the mucosal surface. It will also enhance a generalized immune system response to the virus. By exposing the mucosal surfaces in the nose to the vaccine, researchers hope that the response at the mucosal surface of the genital region—the area most likely to first come into contact with the virus—will also be stimulated to fight the infection. Acting as a second mime

line of defense, the systemic response should kill the infection if the mucosal response fails to contain it. The vaccine’s biological structure mimics the outer envelope of the virus, so when an antibody binds to the envelope, it should elicit an immune response as though it were reacting to the virus itself. “We have gotten outstanding results from our mouse studies,” said Staats. “In the next few months we’ll be moving onto the next step, which is testing the vaccine on primates.” The team is also beginning to establish connections with investigators in sub-Saharan Africa and Zambia, so that they can begin working on vaccines for strains specific to those regions.

Several cars entered while parked near jogging trail

tered an unsecured vehicle and stole two $4O wallets, $2Bl in cash aiid a driver’s license. Between 9:30 and 9:55 a.m. March 15, someone broke the $l5O front passenger’s window of a visitor’s vehicle and stole her $25 purse containing $3 cash, keys, credit cards, driver’s license and other miscellaneous items, Dean said. Police believe the perpetrator is a 20- to 30-year-old 5’11” black man, weighing 200 to 220 pounds of heavy build, with facial hair and cornrows and wearing gray sweat pants and a gray T-shirt. He is reported to drive an early model hatchback-style Cars vandalized: Between March 8 and March Mazda RX-7, and he had a black Rotweiler with him. 15, several cars in the parking lot between Erwin Road and Science Drive near the jogging trail on N.C. 751 Mirror taken: Someone ripped off the $3OO driwere vandalized, Dean said. ver’s side mirror of a student’s car between 12 p.m. Between 8:20 and 9 a.m. March 8, someone broke Feb. 26 and 12:30 p.m. March 2, Dean said. The vehicle out the $3OO driver’s side window of a visitor’s vehicle was parked in the Blue Zone. and stole her $l5O purse and wallet containing $3O cash, checkbook, credit cards, a $3OO PSION compact computGas, hydraulic cylinder swiped: An employee er with a black case and a $lOO cellular phone. reported that between 3 p.m. March 10 and 8:25 a.m. Between 12 and 1 p.m. March 11, someone enPOLICE REPORTS from page 4 a.m. March 11, someone stole her $7,000 1993 burgundy Dodge Caravan with North Carolina license plate EZX-3313 from parking garage 2, Dean said. The vehicle also contained a .22 revolver locked in the glove compartment. The victim’s sister reported that at about 11:30 p.m. March 11, she saw someone driving the vehicle on Main Street. Campus Police could not find the vehicle.

Duke University Chorale

SpringTour Concert

March 11, someone stole an unknown amount of gasoline from a gasoline pump and a $6OO black hydraulic cylinder with a three-foot piston from the Primate Center area, Dean said.

Benches vandalized:

At 3:44 a.m. March 9, two freshmen with four counts of DUPD charged injury to personal property after someone used yellow paint to vandalize the benches belonging to Randolph, Southgate, Gilbert-Addoms and Blackwell dormitories, Dean said. The students, 18-year-olds Benjamin Logan Lampson and Janos Istvan Nadas, have court dates April 11. Neither could be reached for comment.

Bike taken: Between sometime March 8 and 12 p.m. March 17, someone stole a student’s $lOO 21speed mountain bike with a red frame and neon yellow-taped handle bars and a $2O Kryptonite cable lock from the bike rack at the south end of Brown Dormitory, Dean said.

Mark Your Calendars: The DeWitt Wallace Center for Communications and Journalism presents

THE JOHN FISHER ZEIDMAN MEMORIAL COLLOQUIUM ON COMMUNICATIONS

“Thee M/mh

JP

with Richard Berke The New York Times

David Gergen

Professor ofPublic Service, Kennedy School of Government,

Harvard University

Chuck Roberts Anchor, CNN Headline News

PevjtrHtuuj Pieces

Kackmutinoff, Lauridsm, Mechem, VaUstrinn, and more* Tavtnw, Hogan,

Friday, March 22, S:OOPM

Baldm*v Auditorium, East Campus http://www.duke.edu/web/chorale

Jim Yardley

Houston Bureau Chief, The New York Times

Moderated by

Ellen Mickiewicz James R. Shepley Professor ofPublic Policy Studies, Director, DeWitt Wallace Center for Communications and Journalism

Saturday, March 31,2001 Noon-2:00 P.M. Fleishman Commons The Terry Sanford Institute of Public Policy


The Chronicle

MONDAY, MARCH 19, 2001

PAGE 15

PAID ADVERTISEMENT

Ten Reasons

Why Reparations for Slavery is

a Bad Idea

and Racist Too.

By David Horowitz i There Is No Single Group Responsible For The Crime Of Slavery. While white Europeans conducted the trans-Atlantic slave trade, Arabs and black Africans were responsible for enslaving the ancestors ofAfricanAmericans. There were 3,000 black slave-owners in the ante-bellum United States. Are reparations to be paid by fheir descendants too? There were white slaves in colonial America, Are theirdecendents going to receive payments? ate

VII The Reparations Claim Is One More Attempt To Turn African Americans Into Victims. It Sends A Damaging Message To The African-American Community And To Others.

The renewed sense of grievance—which is what theclaim for reparations will inevitably creis not a constructive or helpful message for black leaders to send to their communities and to others. To focus the social passions ofAfrican Americans on what some other Americans may have il done to their ancestors fifty or a hundred-and-fTty years ago is to burden them with a crippling There Is No Single Group That Benefited Exclusively From Slavery. sense of victim-hood. How are the millions of non-black refugees from tyranny and genocide who are now living in America going to receive these claims, moreover, except as demands for special The claim tor reparations is premised on die false assumption that only whites have benefited from treatment—an extravagant new handout that is only necessary' because some blacks can't seem to slavery. If slave labor has created wealth for Americans, then obviously it has created wealth for black locate the ladder of opportunity within reach of others, many of whom are less privileged than Americans as well, including the descendants of slaves. The GNP of black America makes the African- themselves? American community the 10th most prosperous “nation5 in the world. American blacks on average enjoy per capita incomes in the range of twenty to fifty limes that of blacks living in any of the African VIII nations from which they were kidnapped. Reparations To African Americans Have Already Been Paid. '

Ml Of White Americans Owned Slaves, While Others Gave Their Lives To Free Them.

Since the passage of the Civil Rights Acts and the advent of the Great Society in 1965, trillions of dollars in transfer payments have been made to African-Americans in the form of welfare

Only A Minority

benefits and racial preferences (in contracts, job placements and educational admissions) —all under the rationale of redressing historic racial grievances. It is said that reparations are necessary Only a tiny minority ofAmericans ever owned slaves. This is true even for those who lived in the to achieve a healing between African Americans and other Americans. If trillion-dollar restitutions ante-bellum South where only one white in five was a slaveholder. Why should their descendants owe a and a wholesale rewriting of American law (in order to accommodate racial preferences) is not debt? What about the descendants of the 350,000 Union soldiers who died to free the slaves? They gave enough to achieve a ‘'healing,"' what is? their lives. What morality would ask their descendants to pay again? If paying reparations on the basis of skin color is not racism, what isl IX What About The Debt Blacks Owe To America?

IV

Most Living Americans Have No Connection (Direct Or Indirect) To

Slaver}' existed for thousands of years before the Atlantic slave trade, and i n all societies. But in the thousand years of slavery’s existence, there never was an anti-slavery movement until white Anglo-Saxon Christians created one. If not for the anti-slavery beliefs and military The two great waves ofAmerican immigration occurredafter 1880 and then after 1960. What logic power of white Englishmen and Americans, the slave trade, would not have been brought to an would require Vietnamese boat people. Russian refuseniks. Iranian refugees, Armenian victims of the end. IT not for the sacrifices of white soldiers and a white American president who gave his life Turkish persecution, Jews, Mexicans Greeks, or Polish, Hungarian, Cambodian and Korean victims of to sign the Emancipation Proclamation, blacks in America would still be slaves. If not for the Communism, to pay reparations to American blacks? dedication ofAmericans of all ethnicities and colors to a society based on the principle that all men are created equal, blacks in America would not enjoy the highest standard of living of blacks anywhere in the world, and indeed one of the highest standards of living of any people The Historical Precedents Used To Justify The Reparations Claim the world. They would not enjoy the greatest freedoms and the most thoroughly protected in Do Not Apply, And The Claim Itself Is Based On Race Not Injury. individual rights anywhere. Where is the acknowledgment of black America and its leaders for The historical precedents generally invoked to justify the reparations claim are payments to Jewish (hose gifts? survivors ofthe Holocaust, Japanese-Americans and African-American victims ofracial experiments in Tuskegee. or racial outrages in Rosewood and Oklahoma City, But in each case, the recipients ofreparaThe Reparations Claim Is A Separatist Idea tions were the direct victims of the injustice or their immediate families. This would lie the only case of That Sets African-Americans Against reparations to people who were not immediately affected and whose sole qualification to receive reparaThe Nation That Gave Them Freedom. tions would be racial. During the slavery era, many blacks were free men of slave-owners themselves, yet the reparations -claimants make no attempt to take this fact into account. If this is not racism, what is? Blacks were here before the Mayflower. Who is more American than the descendants- of African slaves? For the African-American community to isolate itself from America is to embark VI on a course whose implications are troubling. Yet the African-American commodity has had a The Reparations Argument Is Based On The Unsubstantiated long-running flirtation with separatists, nationalists and the political left, who want AfricanClaim That All African Americans Suffer From The Economic Americans to be no part of America’s social contract. African Americans should reject this tempConsequences Of Slavery And Discrimination. tation. For all America's faults, African Americans have an enormous slake in this country- and its No scientific attempt has been made to prove that living individuals have been adversely affected It is this heritage that is really under attack by the reparations movement. The reparaheritage. by a slave system that was ended nearly 150years ago. But there is plenty of evidence that the hardships tions claim is one more assault on America, conducted by racial separatists and the political left. did The black middle-class America in were that individuals could and overcome. hardships of slavery not only on white Americans, but on all Americans—especially African It is an attack is a prosperous community that is now larger in absolute terms than the black underclass. Its existence suggests that present economic adversity is the result of failures of individual character rather than the Americans. America’s African-American citizens are the richest and most privileged black people alive; lingering after-effects ofracial discrimination or a slave system that ceased to exist well over a century bounty a that is a direct result of the heritage that is under assault. The American idea needs the ago. West Indian blacks in America are also descended from slaves but their average incomes are equivits African-American citizens. But African Americans also need the support of the of support alent to the average incomes of whiles (and nearly 25% higher than the average incomes ofAmericanborn blacks). How is it that slavery adversely affected one large group of descendants but not the other? American idea. For it is the American idea that led to the principles and created the institutions that have set African Americans—and ail of us—free. How can government be expected to decide an issue that is so subjective? Slavery.

kelp us place (Ills ad in ot her venues, Account Number please complete this form and mail or fax to: Signature Center for the Study of Popular Culture P.O. Box 67398, Los Angeles, CA 90035 (310) 843*3692 fax Name www.firontpagemagazine.com If you would like

to

Address

Contributions of $lOO or more will receive a copy of Death of the Civil Rights Movement signed by the author, i Enclosed please find a donation of; | □ $l,OOO Q $5OO Q $250 □|loo □ S5O □ $25 CjVISA uJ MasterCard —1 AMEX —) Discover I Please charge o ray:

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The Chronicle

PAGE 16

MONDAY, MARCH 19, 2001

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