The Chronicle
Sports ■'
•*
A look back
'
Find out how the men's basketball team won its national championship in The Chronicle's Commemorative Edition. See supplement
Durham schools trying to stop violence in advance By RUTH CARLITZ The Chronicle Gary, Indiana. El Cajon, California.
Williamsport, Pennsylvania. Recent school shootings in these cities have once again brought school violence to the forefront. How can school violence be prevented? The Durham Public Schools system is asking itself this question and coming up with a variety of answers. One promising new initiative centers on student-based programs like
Students Against Violence Everywhere, a nationwide club that works to prevent violence in schools. Another initiative supplies high schools with student resource officers who serve as peacemakers and informal counselors. At the same time, the school board includes character education programs in its curriculum. Boasting over 100 members, the SAVE program at Northern High School boasts comprehensive mediation and conflict resolution programs. The national organization, based at North Carolina State University, re-
cently named Northern’s club Chapter
of the Year. “A lot of people want to solve [school violence] but don’t want to ’fess up and say it’s a problem,” said Wes Blalock, a Northern sophomore and vice president of SAVE. “[The key] is using positive pressure rather than negative peer pressure.... It can work for you rather than against you.” The atmosphere created at Northern has provided senior Roba Ghanayem, who is co-president of SAVE, with a feeling of safety, even in light of recent school shootings. “It was really scary,” Ghanayem said in reaction to the recent school shootings, “but in away it made me happy because at our school we’re doing so much to prevent it. I feel like our school is not even close to that point because of the atmosphere and the influence of SAVE.” No Northern student has been arrested for bringing a firearm to school this year, said Principal Isaac Thomas. However, other local high schools have had to deal with this problem. See SCHOOL VIOLENCE on page 4
JOHN
CHAPPLE/ONLINEUSA
SOME STUDENTS IN CALIFORNIA have to be checked with metal detectors before they enter school. Durham schools are hoping an ounce of prevention will keep them from having to resort to such tactics.
Slavery reparations teach-in scheduled for 8 p.m. today Fourteen professors from various departments participate ByAMBIKA KUMAR
members from several departincluding English, The history department African and African-American will sponsor a teach-in about Studies and Literature. slavery reparations at 8 p.m. Senior Kelly Black, one of today in an attempt to foster the leaders of the protests and dialogue about issues raised president of the Duke chapter in a March 19 advertisement of the National Association for opposing reparations. The ad, the Advancement of Colored written by conservative auPeople, said she was pleased thor David Horowitz, has that faculty members had sparked debate about free come together to discuss repaspeech nationwide but has not rations and other issues. “It’s definitely good, and it’s yet elicited much discussion about reparations, either here going to be healthy for the at the University or in the nacommunity to have a real distional media. cussion about reparations,” “We feel like a lot of faculty she said. “People are talking members here could conabout it, but not in a constructribute to moving the debate tive way, so this will be an opto another level, not so much portunity for a constructive being driven by the controverdialogue.” sy,” said Greg Grandin, assisThe participating profestant professor of history. “[We sors offer a variety of experwant] a more substantial detise and will consequently probate regarding what slavery vide a number of different meant to this country, what it viewpoints. currently means, what the Department of History legacy of it means, how it conChair John Thompson, who tinues to impact the [United studies Canadian history, sees States] in various ways.” parallels to government repaThe teach-in, which will rations for Japanese Canaditake place in the first floor ans interned in camps during commons room of Trent Hall, World War 11. will feature at least 14 faculty See REPARATIONS on page 12 The Chronicle
NEAL PATEL/THE CHRONICLE
STUDENTS PROTESTED THE ANTI-REPARATIONS AD that appeared in The Chronicle, but discussion largely focused on the decision to run the ad rather than the issue of reparations. Professors hope to focus on that issue at tonight’s teach-in.
Div School’s black enrollment drops, page 3 � NSOE creates Christensen
ments,
scholarship, page
4
The Chronicle
Newsfile
•
World
page 2
FROM WIRE REPORTS
Judge: Internet twins must return to America A British judge ruled the Internet twins should be returned from Britain to their birth parents immediately. The baby girls who had been the object of a transatlantic tug-of-war were ordered to be returned to their birthplace in Missouri.
California to buy power transmission lines California Governor Gray Davis and Southern California Edison reached an agreement on the state’s bid to buy the util-
ity firm’s transmission lines for $2.76 billion. The purchase will help keep the company solvent.
American completes purchase of TWA American Airlines’ parent company officially bought bankrupt Trans World Airlines, completing a deal that will offer travel to over 300 cities.
Midwesterners prepare for Red River flooding Hundreds of residents and volunteers in Minnesota worked to build a wall of sandbags around the city of Breckenridge, as the Red River and its tributaries continued to rise along the MinnesotaNorth Dakota border. Bush appoints first gay to his administration The White House announced that Scott Evertz, a homosexual, will take the helm of the Office of National AIDS Policy. Evertz will become the first gay man to serve in the Bush Administration. Muslims protest U.S. influence in Pakistan Hundreds of thousands of radical Muslim men poured into a Peshawar suburb to celebrate hardline Islam and shout slogans against the “corrupting influence” of the United States.
Weather TODAY: CLOUDY
TOMORROW: T-STORMS
t
High: 85 Low: 62
*
High: 78 Low: 55
Jgto*
“If women didn’t exist, all the money in the world would have no meaning.” Aristotle Onassis
&
National
Bush submits budget to Congress
The $1.96 trillion plan includes cuts to police forces and the environment By ROBERT PEAR
New York Times News Service
WASHINGTON President George W. Bush unveiled his first budget Monday, describing his plans to increase federal spending on education and biomedical research while curtailing what he described as “recent explosive growth” in other federal programs. Under the proposal, spending would rise by $lO5 billion, or 6 percent, to a total of $1.96 trillion in the fiscal year that begins Oct. 1. By contrast, in the last eight years, under President Bill Clinton, federal spending grew an average of 3.5 percent a year, as military spending was held down, the
growth of health spending slowed and the treasury reaped the fruits of deficit-reduction efforts begun under Bush’s father. Two-thirds of the entire increase
next year would go to six programs: Social Security, Medicare, Medicaid, education, the National Institutes of Health and national defense. “This budget offers a new vision of governing for our nation,” Bush told Congress. After a brief meeting with his Cabinet Monday morning, he added: “It’s a budget that protects taxpayers, protects children, protects our surplus. It represents compassionate conservatism.” The shape of the budget was heavily influenced by Bush’s top pri-
By DAVID SANGER
The official acknowledged that the administration
New York Times News Service
WASHINGTON President George W. Bush’s senior advisers have concluded for now that the most severe acts of retaliation they can threaten in the spyplane standoff with China will not speed the release of the 24 American crew members and may harm longerterm interests in Asia, administration officials said. One official involved in the first review of those options said Monday that “it became clear how little room for maneuver either side has” in a relationship that is “this interdependent and complex.” The retaliatory options include selling advanced arms to Taiwan, restricting trade and derailing Beijing’s bid for the Olympics.
DUKE CHAPEL HOLY WEEK
•
Worship Service 10:50 am beginning on Chapel steps Catholic Palm Sunday Services n am in York Chapel. Duke Divinity School 9 pm Duke Chapel Black Campus Ministries Worship 7 pm Mary Lou Williams Center
April 9,10, n, and 12
12,
Holy Week Services
noon Duke Chape!
April 12, Maudy Thursday Services •
•
Service of the Lord's Supper, Stripping of the Altar 7:30 pm Duke Chapel Catholic Liturgy of Holy Thursday 9 pm Duke Chapel
April 13, Procession of the Stations of the Cross •
11:30 am beginning on Chapel steps University Service of Good Friday Duke Chapel i2 Catholic Liturgy of Good Friday 5 pm Duke Chapel Solemn Service of Tenebrae 7:30 pm Duke Chapel
noon
•
•
April 14, Catholic Easter Vigil •
7:30 pm Duke Chapel University Easter Vigil 10 pm Duke Chapel
April 15, Easter Sunrise Service •
•
•
6:30 am, Duke Gardens Easter Sunday University Service 9 it am Duke Chapel Catholic Mass for Easter n am Page Auditorium Black Campus Ministries Worship 7 pm Mary Lou Williams Center
was under growing pressure from conservatives in Congress to threaten stronger action, but had also been warned by some business leaders to assess all the boomerang effects on the American economy before
threatening trade sanctions. The absence ofpalatable options explains why Bush has issued only the blandest warnings to the Chinese about the diplomatic and economic risks they run in continuing to hold the Americans, officials said. The president issued two general warnings early last week, followed by far more conciliatory expressions of regret for the loss of their fighter pilot in the collision over the South China Sea. The American See CHINA on page 6 P-
Kosher-For-Passover Meals At the Freeman Center
April 8, Palm Sunday •
ority, a commitment to reduce taxes by $1.6 trillion over the next decade. Democrats asserted that Bush had cut worthy programs to accommodate the tax cut. They cited, as examples, his plans to cut aid for the hiring of local police officers, the training of doctors at children’s hospitals and energy conservation. But Mitchell Daniels, the president’s budget director, scoffed at such criticism. “It’s completely fallacious,” he said. “I think ‘fatuous’ might be a better word.” Daniels said the new budget would achieve substantial savings just by canceling appropriations that had not been requested by See BUDGET on page 6 P-
U.S. tries to prevent China standoff
-
•
TUESDAY, APRIL 10, 2001
Meal/Time
Day
Meal/Time
Mon, April 9
Lunch: 11:30-1:30PM Dinner 5:30 8 PM
Tues, April 10
Lunch: 11:30-1:30PM Dinner 5:30 8 PM Lunch: 11:30-1:30PM Dinner 5:30 8 PM
-
-
Wed, April 11 Thurs, April 12 Lunch: 11:30-1:30PM Fri, April 13 Lunch: 11:30-1:30 PM Sat, April 14 Brunch: 12- 2PM Sun, April 15 Brunch: 12- 2PM
-
Dinner 5:30 8 PM* -
Dinner 7:30 PM Dinner 5:30 8 PM -
See Note
Points/Flex/Cash/Checks accepted. Thursday's dinner will be a matzah brie social, free for students. Come with your friends for good food and fun. NOTE: For dinner on Sunday, April 15, to-go items will be available at Sunday's brunch. Come and pack a dinner to-go. *
Freeman Center for Jewish Life Comer of Campus Drive and Swift Avenue 684-6422
http:
jewishlife@duke.edu fql.studentaffairs.duke.edu
//
for
FREEMAN CENTER |EWISH LIFE
at DUKE UNIVERSITY
TUESDAY, APRIL 10, 2001
The Chronicle
PAGE 3
Divinity School still seeking to boost black enrollment By MELISSA SOUCY The Chronicle
The report released by President Nan Keohane last month on the state of minority representation on campus showed recent declines in the numbers of black students and professors in the Divinity School. School officials credited the decline to a short-term fluctuation rather than a long-term trend and cited ongoing efforts to attract more minorities. According to the report, the number of black Divinity students reached a peak of 68 in 1998 before falling to 55 in 2000. But Gregory Jones, dean of the Divinity School, said that long-term representation has grown. “About 10 years ago 8 to 9 percent of the students were black,” said Jones, noting that currently 13 percent of Divinity students are black. He added that while the number of black faculty members has dropped from six to five in the last year, there again has been an overall increase from three-in 1997. In addition, the school currently has a black African scholar, Emmanuel Katongole, as a visiting assistant professor. “All students and faculty want to see more minority representation,” said Willie Jennings, associate dean for academic programs in the Divinity School. “But there is a significant appreciation for those we do have.” Jones credits Jennings with helping to significantly enhance the black presence in the Divinity School. Facing historical as well as financial aid dial-
lenges, the ability of the two to work together has been essential, Jones said. Also, Divinity faculty members such as Deotis Roberts—a pioneer ofblack theology and author of 15 books—helps to attract more minorities, Jones added. Still, not all minority students are totally content. When asked about her experience at the Divinity School, firstsemester student Anna Sayeh from Liberia simply said it was “frustrating.” She explained that the small size of the black population is disappointing, but that she is “still hopeful that a change can be made.” Sayeh added that in what she believes to be “an inclusive program,” her professors—though they are all white—have been “understanding and concerned about my education.” One of the goals of the Divinity School’s strategic plan is to increase the numbers of black faculty members
and students, specifically increasing black student enrollment to about 20 percent. Jennings said the school is taking a proactive role in trying to do so, particularly by identifying bright young scholars early and supporting their work, he said. Also, events such as the Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. lectures, which took place April 1 through 4 in celebration of the Black Seminarians Union’s 30th anniversary, increase visibility of the school’s commitment to black student and faculty recruitment. “Duke compares favorably to other universities’ divinity schools, except those in major urban centers where
many students attend part-time,” Jones said. The Divinity School faces competition from predominantly black local seminaries including the Shaw Divinity School in Raleigh and the Hood Theological Seminary in Salisbury. “They offer weekend and night courses for students who work fulltime,” Jennings said. “We’re more traditional and generally require a full-day
commitment.” Jennings added, however, that the Divinity School does have a real strength in the Office of Black Church
Studies, which supports aspiring black seminarians. “It is a vibrant intellectual center that will play a leading role in
curricular development,” he said. Jennings added that the Divinity School has many ties with pastors in the Durham and Raleigh communities who serve as mentors to students. “A difference in perspective is important in any education,” Jones said. “Diversity engages one another in conversation, if it is to be genuine diversity and not a collection of strangers inhabiting separate spheres.”
Hospital employee snatches bag full of cash and flees From staff reports An employee at the Hardee’s in the Duke Clinic reported that at 6:28 p.m. April 6, as she placed the restaurant’s night-time deposit in a deposit bag, another employee stole the bag, containing $2,690 cash,
and fled the restaurant. Maj. Robert Dean of Duke University Police Department said Campus Police have not yet located the employee, 18-year-old Gregory White of 115 South Fargo Street in Durham.
White could not be reached for comment. Dean asked anyone with inforReports mation about his location to contact Sgt. Davis Trimmer at 6845263 or Durham CrimeStoppers at 683-1200.
Rolex wrist watch and $5 cash, Dean said. There were no signs of forced entry.
Rolex taken: An employee reported that between 7 and 7:30 a.m. April 5, someone entered his secured locker in 3447 Duke North and stole his $3,000 silver
Palm Pilot pilfered: Someone stole a student’s $5OO Palm Pilot—3C model with color screen and hard
Police
Laptop swiped: Between 11:15 and 11:48 a.m. April
8, someone stole a student’s unprotected $2,500 Dell laptop computer and black canvas case from a work station in the lobby area of Lilly Library, Dean said.
See
TRAVEL
Opal Palmer Lecture and Discussion
Edited by William J. Harris
Adsia
•
Guaranteed Lowest Fares
International Travel
•
*
Group Tour Programs •
Vacation Specialist •
•
Cruises
Airline Tickets
Hours: Mon-FH B:3oam
-
spm
on page 12
It All Begins With Tears
Tuesday, April 10 TRIANGLE
CRIME
Opal Palmer Adisa
w
Writer as Ethnographer: Culling from the ‘Folk’ Noon Women’s Center
� �
hen the seductive Monica returns to her village, she wants to make a new start. But Kristoff village, set in the heart ofrural Jamaica, is about to become a whirlpool of emotion. Every encounter
<A?
Reading Culture, Politics, and Creative Sensibilities: The Writings of . Opal Palmer Adisa 8:00 pm Williams Center Lou Mary 02 WestUnion Building
Heinmann
sif*5 Sponsored by the Mary Lou Williams Center for Black Culture, the Department of African & African-American Studies, the Department of English, the Duke Center for Latin American & Caribbean Studies, Graduate Student Affairs, Women’s Studies, and other offices at Duke.
booWhcip
'
—w
Duke University 684-3986 Upper Level Bryan Center •
www.gothicbookshop.duke.edu e-mail: gothic@informer.duke.edu Student Flex Cards, Visa, MasterCard
&
American Express
with Monica stirs up women’s dissatisfactions and men’s desires. When those emotions develop into hatred and jealousy, Monica is made to pay for what she has done. In this novel Opal Palmer Adisa brings to life a whole community and writes with understanding and compassion about the frailties ofits inhabitants. Drawing on Jamaican folklore, she shows what is at the heart of village life, and how that life can be sustained.
20% off Hardcovers 10% off Paperbacks Excludes already discounted books and some special orders.
The Chronicle
PAGE 4
TUESDAY, APRIL 10, 2001
NSOE names scholarship in honor of founding dean By STEVEN WRIGHT The Chronicle
Dean of the Nicholas School of the Environment and Earth Sciences Norm Christensen received a pleasant surprise at his goodbye gala Sunday night: the announcement of a scholarship named in his honor and the renaming of the school’s first reading room as the Norman L. Christensen, Jr. Reading Room. The endowed scholarship will help fund students in the Nicholas School’s
master of environmental management
and master of forestry programs. Officials will begin distributing the money as soon as the scholarship begins to generate revenue. Four members of the Nicholas School’s board of visitors began the drive to create the Christensen scholarship, making initial donations of
$lOO,OOO each.
PRATIK PATEL/THE CHRONICLE
NORM CHRISTENSEN, founding dean of the Nicholas School of the Environment and Earth Sciences, now has a scholarship and a reading room in the Levine Science Research Center named in his honor.
The remainder of the scholarship funds was provided by members of the faculty and staff, as well as friends and colleagues of Christensen. “It is common for departing deans to be honored with a named professorship;
however, the board of visitors felt so strongly about Norm’s devotion to the students that we decided a scholarship endowment would be a more meaning-
ful way to honor him,” said Douglass F. Rohrman, chair of the board of visitors. Christensen will step down at the end of June after serving 10 years as dean. He will be replaced by William L. Schlesinger, James B. Duke Professor of Biochemistry. The School of the Environment was formed in 1991 to merge Duke's on-campus School ofForestry and Environmental Studies and the Duke Marine LaboBeaufort. in During ratory Christensen’s time as dean, the school developed an undergraduate program,, grew its endowment by nearly $9O million, relocated to theLevine Science Research Center, procured a $2O million name-changing gift and became renowned for its commitment to interdisciplinary study and research.
Christensen, the school’s first dean,
will spearhead the school’s distance
learning initiatives. He also hopes to return to teaching and research.
New Horizons school hopes to curb violent tendencies SCHOOL VIOLENCE from page 1 L.W. Cox, a student resource officer at Jordan High School, has had to deal with two incidents of students bringing loaded weapons to school during this school year. He described the concern and fear that surrounded each incident but explained that the students were bringing weapons for protection in their own neighborhoods after school. “There should never be a weapon on campus,” Cox said, “but I’d rather have them bring it because they were fearing for their own life than trying to take the >
life of another.” Working from inside the classroom, the character education component of Durham Public Schools is based on a particular set of traits including honesty, citizenship and self-discipline. The schools integrate those ideas within the existing curriculum. If a student brings a firearm into school, state law
rCAROLINA BEST
requires the student be suspended for a full year. While other long-term suspended students have the option of attending Lakeview, Durham Public Schools’ alternative school, students who have brought firearms to school may not attend. Their only option, if they wish to stay in school, is the New Horizons program at the Edgemont Community Center. The New Horizons program, in its third year, currently serves 16 suspended students. “Our main goal is that kids will be transferred back into the regular system with a changed mindset, behavior and all the things that got them where they are,” said Martina Dunford, the program’s director. New Horizons offers a structured school day as well as vocational classes and group and individual-
ized counseling. The Durham Public Schools provide one teacher and one teacher’s aide to the program, but no addi-
tional public funding is provided for New Horizons. “We are running off of a hair,” Dunford said. “It’s a vital part of the community. Without it you can see where those kids would be.” The program has seen no repeat offenders but does not have the capacity or personnel for comprehensive long-term follow up. But by her own efforts, Dunford estimated that 70 percent of students who have completed the program “are doing pretty well.” Meanwhile, the efforts of SAVE and school board initiatives also look encouraging. No numbers have been released so far this year, but last year’s annual school violence report released in January indicated that numbers for school violence decreased during that school year. The total number ofviolent acts was 5.98 acts per 1,000 students, down from 6.237 in the 1998-99 school year and 6.343 in 1997-98.
THEATRE
MOVIE THEATRE CITYSEARCH 309 W. Morgan Steel Downtown Durham
The Asian/Pacific Studies Institute and The Chinese* Populations and Socioeconomic Studies Center Duke University -
•
# •
FILM SCHEDULE FOR: Tuesday, April 10 Thursday, April 12,2001
•
-
jointly announce the
BEST FOREIGN PICTURE WINNER!
CROUCHING TIGER, HIDDEN DRAGON (Rfi-13) Nightly at 7:lopm 9:35pm Weekend Matinees at 2:oopm 4:35pm •
&
&
Distinguished Lecture Series 2001 Chinese Institutions: Historicaland SociologicalAnalysis
OSCAR WINNER MARCIA GAY HARDEN
POLLOCK (R) Nightly at 7:oopm 9:3opm Weekend Matinees at I:4spm 4:2opm &
&
•
Professor Gary Hamilton
NO SCREENINGS TUESDAY APRIL 10
Department of Sociology and The Jackson School of International Studies University of Washington-Seattle
CHUNKYANG (R) Nightly at 7:2opm 9:45pm Weekend Matinees at 2:lspm 4:45pm &
&
•
SAVE THE DATE: MAY 3-6
The Merchant Foundation of Chinas Late ImperialEconomy
DPUBLETAKE DOCUMENTARY FILM FEST www.ddff.org for more information Student Discount $5 Sun-Thurs
Wednesday, April 11,2001 3:00 p.m.
“Where the weird videos are!” Catalog Titles $2 for 3 nights New Releases $3.50 for 3 nights •
Gift Certificates Available!
143 E. Franklin St.
B’Mtbavel
Carpenter Board Room (223 Perkins Library) Duke University West Campus For
more information, contact Paula Evans at (919) 684-2604 or paula@duke.edu
TUESDAY, APRIL 10, 2001
The Chronicle
PAGES
CREDIT FIRST SUISSE BOSTON
DARWIN WAS WRONG ABOUT EVOLUTION IN ONE REGARD. IT ISN’T ALWAYS SLOW.
In a world that changes by the hour, entrepreneurialism and innovation are no longer
simply advantages. They're mandatories. They also happen to be the same qualities we nurture in our summer internship program. At Credit Suisse First Boston there's never been a
better time to develop these skills and gain the exposure, experience and credentials to be ready for the future. If your interests are in investment banking, equity, fixed income, private
client services or IT, we invite you to come and get to know us. Spend this summer at CSFB and you
won't simply learn about the world of finance. You’ll help redefine it
CSFB
EMPOWERING CHANGE!"
©Copyright 2001 Credit Suisse First Boston Corp. All rights reserved.
The Chronicle
PAGES
TUESDAY, APRIL 10, 2001
Both political parties criticize budget, large tax-cut BUDGET from page 2 next year, from $29 billion this year. The port for some of the “bewildering, curiClinton—money earmarked by Congress budget of the Commodity Credit Corp. ous cuts in this budget.” for specific projects, including roads and would be reduced to $8.3 billion, from The president’s budget continues $21.6 billion, and it would decline in many programs, with modest cutbacks bridges and other public works. Bush said his budget would produce subsequent years, to $6 billion in 2006. or small increases, providing less than a surplus of $231 billion in 2002, down The Bush administration said that required to keep up with inflation. from a projected surplus of $2Bl billion “farm conditions are improving,” an asThe narrative explanation of the this year and an actual surplus of $236 sertion disputed by lawmakers from president’s proposals has little of the billion last year. farm states, who will strenuously resist fiery language in which Republicans In keeping with Bush’s proposal to the proposed cuts. used to attack the federal government “leave no child behind,” the Education Congressional aides said they were and its role. Such language was characDepartment would get one of the largest perplexed by the budget request for farm teristic of budget documents issued by budget increases: $4.6 billion, or 11.5 programs. Administration officials are President Ronald Reagan and his budpercent, raising its total to $44.5 billion apparently counting on Congress to proget director, David Stockman, and by next year. That follows an increase of vide emergency aid to farmers, as ConRichard Darman, the budget director for $lO billion approved by Congress in Degress has done in each of the last three Bush’s father. cember for the current year. For the first time in nearly two years, to compensate for falling commodBy contrast, Bush would sharply reity prices and crops lost to bad weather. decades, the president’s budget does not duce farm programs, especially those Rep. John Spratt of South Carolina, seek cuts in Medicare payments to hosthat supplement the income of farmers. the senior Democrat on the House Budpitals. Richard Pollack, executive vice The overall budget for agriculture activget Committee, said he doubted that president of the American Hospital Asities would be chopped to $15.8 billion Bush could win even Republican supsociation, praised Bush for refraining
from such cuts, at a time when he said “more than half of America’s hospitals are in financial distress.” The budget for the National Institutes of Health would rise by $2.75 billion, or 13.5 percent, to $23.1 billion next year. This is the fourth installment of a fiveyear plan to double the budget of the institutes from 1998 to 2003. Congress devised the plan, and Bush has embraced it. Bush’s budget for 2002 provides the first detailed look at his priorities. In some respects, it may already have been overtaken by events on Capitol Hill.
Bush seeks $153 billion for prescrip-
tion drug benefits and other, unspecified changes in Medicare over the next decade. But Republicans and Democrats alike say that twice that amount is the minimum that will be required for drug benefits, at a time when drug spending is rising more than 15 percent a year. ’
Powell: Congress to push for harsher China sanctions CHINA from page 2 plane landed on Hainan Island after the collision, which occurred on April 1. Monday Bush issued only the briefest of comments, saying that each additional day the crew was held would “increase the potential that our relations with China could be damaged.” But his spokesperson, Ari Fleischer, was pressed on how relations might be damaged. He retreated into ambiguity, and noted that two weeks ago, before the collision, Bush had met in the Oval Office with Deputy Prime Minister Qian Qichen and had discussed ways !
the countries could work together. “Much of the good they talked about can go wrong, or will go wrong,” if the standoff continues, Fleischer said.
U.S. officials acknowledge that neither side has much room to inflict harm on the other, unless they are will-
ing to make major diplomatic and economic sacrifices. “The reality is that the Chinese hold the short-term tactical cards, because they have the crew, and we hold the long-term strategic cards,” said one senior diplomat. “And both sides are using those to circle the other.”
Secretary of State Colin Powell put in play the mildest of sanctions Sunday, when he seemed to suggest that Bush might cancel a state visit to Beijing after attending the annual summit meeting of AsianPacific leaders in October. The state visit was scheduled long ago for Shanghai. “The whole environment is at some risk right now,” he said.
Monday afternoon, Sen. Robert Torricelli, D-N.J., a supporter of selling arms to Taiwan, said, “Soon it will become questionable whether it is appropriate to have both an ambassador and hostages in the same country.” Torricelli and Senate Foreign Relations Committee members had been quiet until now, after Powell asked them last week to let the administration seek diplomatic solutions. But Powell conceded then that if the crew remained in China a second week, it would be harder to keep members of Congress from publicly pressing for harsher steps. Experts on Chinese trade, including Nicholas Lardy ofthe Brookings Institution, have noted that a delay in the opening of China’s market may be welcomed by many Chinese officials.
,x’.
'.
New York's newest import.
AUSTRALIA DIRECT
J. "I
2OOl Qvicnialien Session lues., Apr. 10, 7 p.m. 130 Sociology Psychology If unable to attend, orientation sessions will be: Apr. Mon., 16, 4 p.m., 139 Social Sciences general
or
Tues., Apr. 17, 6 p.m., 139 Social Sciences
NYC Opens in Late April
3rd Ave. 13th Street
101 1
Block from Union Square
Subway lines N, R, L,
4, 5,
6
at
(212) 420-0975
Office of Study Abroad 121 Allen, 684-2174 abroad@asdean.duke.edu www.aas.duke.edu/study_abroad
TUESDAY, APRIL 10, 2001
The Chronicle
Commemorative
PAGE?
TUESDAY, APRIL 10, 2001
The Chronicle Established 1905, Incorporated 1993
Televise McVeigh’s death
On
April 19,1995,168 people died in the mid-moming bombing of Oklahoma City’s Alfred P. Murrah Federal Building. The nation watched as rescuers encountered body after body in their search efforts. Media organizations rushed to the scene to be a source ofinformation to a shocked nation. Next month, the media will be able to provide another source of information: a description of the execution of Timothy McVeigh, chief culprit in the massacre. Allowing witnesses at an execution is a long-accepted privilege granted to victims and the media. Given the vengeful nature ofthe death penalty, letting victims see the death of those who have injured them seems appropriate. At the other end, the media is the public’s window into the display. However, up until now, the media has only been allowed to retell the event’s details in words to the public. Why not allow the general populace to see this governmental action directly? Although McVeigh has requested that his execution be televised, this is not the real issue. The effects from showing the execution will be similar to those whenever information is allowed in the open—the public learns the truth about what is taking place. As a whole, the media will always attempt to gather as much information as possible about any event. However, restrictions on the forms through which the media can relate this information impair the free dissemination ofinformation. At a certain point, such restrictions cause the entire picture—the public’s understanding of an issue—to remain clouded. If the death penalty is a legitimate way to treat people, then the public should be able to see what the government is doing. Free and open societies cease to be so when the government’s actions take place without sufficient public record. Hopefully, a public more aware of the cruel and unusual nature of the death penalty would result from this new information. Actually watching a convicted criminal die—or at the very least seeing pictures of the action—could have a powerful effect. The public would see a civilized society perform a brutal act. With this fresh perspective, the death penalty may finally be eliminated. Information is a powerful tool that travels hand-in-hand with liberty. It holds citizens and the government accountable for their actions. It also provides a catalyst that can dramatically change minds. Media outlets do not necessarily have to broadcast the execution. The decision to broadcast is a decision for each network to make. However, those outlets who want to cover it should have access to a general video feed, much as what is used for the presidential debates or on C-SPAN. A potential broadcast ofthe execution has evoked fears in some that the product of such a telecast will result in a mob bloodlust where people encourage an increased use of the death penalty. Such fears are elitist. Members of the populace must be trusted to make decisions. Furthermore, some suggest that people will be desensitized to death. This argument is awkward as well. Brutal things happen every day in the world, but a school shooting or another violent event still evokes tears and emotion from the most casual ofobservers In addition, precedent exists for an on-air death. On the CBS program 60 Minutes Dr. Jack Kevorkian performed a euthanasia. As a result, the public was able to see the issue in away that it had not before. Kevorkian, who had been acquitted at previous murder trials, was convicted by a jury that was able to see the practice in a new light. ,
The Chronicle GREG PESSIN, Editor TESSA LYONS, Managing Editor AMBIKA KUMAR, University Editor STEVEN WRIGHT, University Editor MARTIN BARNA, Editorial Page Editor BRODY GREENWALD, Sports Editor JONATHAN ANGIER, GeneralManager
NEAL PATEL, Photography Editor JENNIFER ROBINSON, Photography Editor JAMES HERRIOTT, City & Stale Editor SARAH MCGILL, City & Slate Editor ELLEN MIELKE, Features Editor MARKO DJURANOVIC, Health & Science Editor JONAS BLANK, Recess Editor JAIME LEVY, TowerView Editor ROSS MONTANTE, layout and Design Editor MARY CARMICHAEL, Executive Editor KELLY WOO, SeniorEditor MATT ATWOOD, Wire Editor DAVE INGRAM, Wire Editor ANDREA BOOKMAN, Sr Assoc. Sports Editor NORM BRADLEY, Sr. Assoc. Sports Editor CHRISTINE PARKINS, Sr. Assoc. City & State Editor MEREDITH YOUNG, Sr. Assoc. Health & Science Editor TREY DAVIS, Sr. Assoc. City <6 State Editor ALAN HALACHMI, Online Manager ALISEEDWARDS, Creative Services Manager SUE NEWSOME, Advertising Director ADRIENNE GRANT, Creative Director MARY WEAVER, Operations Manager CATHERINE MARTIN, Production Manager NALINI MILNE, Advertising Office Manager STEPHANIE OGIDAN, Advertising Manager NICOLE GORHAM, Classifieds Manager -
The Chronicle is published by the Duke Student Publishing Company, Inc., a non-profitcorporation independent ot 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 eartoons-rcprcsent the views of the authors. Toreach the Editorial Office (newsroom) at 301 Flowers Building, call 684-2663 or fax Toreach 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.
Letters to the Editor
Duke’s increased commitment I was pleased to see your April 5 photo of Durham high school students on campus for “School Days 2001.” This program, which welcomes local students and encourages them to pursue higher education, is just one of many run by the Duke Office of Community Affairs.
As a member of the Duke faculty for more than 30 years, I am very glad to see that Duke’s constructive engagement in Durham is now significantly greater than ever before, and increasing. It is especially encouraging that the Duke-
Durham
Partnership
Neighborhood is focusing
to Durham pays
Duke’s efforts to be a good neighbor with such projects as affordable housing initiatives in Walltown, a new teen center in West End, tutoring and arts programming in the schools and community centers, and a new science lab at E.K. Poe Elementary. The Board of Trustees in February reconfirmed the University’s commitment to the Partnership because it is palpably improving the quality of life in the 12 neighborhoods near Duke’s campus and boosting student achievement in the seven public schools that serve them
I would like to encourage
off
all Duke employees—and particularly Duke faculty—to involved the get in Neighborhood Partnership and other programs of the Community Affairs Office. An easy way to start, for those who patronize Wellspring Grocery on Ninth Street, is to go shopping there on Tuesday, April 10. The store is generously donating 5 percent of its sales to the DukeNeighborhood Durham Partnership.
Peter Burian Professor, Department of Classical Studies
Chair, Academic Council
Other minorities Christians should condemn ad ,
On behalf of our family, we apologize to African-
We passively accept the discrimination and lack of rights we receive in this country. We take the jobs we are offered—just because they allow us to participate in another lie,
American employees, students, faculty and administration, and their families and communities for the unfortunate publication of the David Horowitz adver“the American Dream.” tisement. Too often in this On the other hand, we country people take cover actively and dutifully parunder the fiction called ticipate in racism. We often “freedom of speech” in order believe that because we are to give credence to their a favored minority, we racist pathologies. We, as an somehow have attained the Asian-American family, right to subjugate our have only begun to recogAfrican-American and nize our complicity in the Hispanic-American brothsorry state of race relations ers and sisters. in America. We are also saddened by Though our contrition is the striking silence of the only a “scratching of the Christian community at surface” we see that our Duke University. Where are discrimination toward all the voices on the side of other ethnic minorities and “truth” that spoke up during against ourselves has been the “homosexual marriage profoundly lamentable. On at the Chapel” discussion? the one hand, Asian Is racism not also an issue American’s of “truth?” Those who like to have succumbed to the lie of the ostracize relativism in favor “model-minority,” which is of absolute truth ought to simply racism on a stick: recognize the absolute truth
that God abhors racism and that God stands on the side of the oppressed. Because Christianity has such a disgusting history of racism, Christians should now be the first to smell the übiquitous stink. To the extent that as Asian Americans we have been oppressors, we ask African Americans to accept our apology. To the extent that we are Christians, we call the racism and silence proliferated by Christians on this campus an affront to the Gospel especially in this season of and Cross Resurrection. Thankfully, the Cross and Resurrection always means one thing: It is never too late to repent, apologize and live differently. Carrie Tran Staff Assistant, Office of International Studies
Jonathan Tran Divinity ’O2
On the record There should never be a weapon on campus, hut Fd rather have them bring it because they were fearing for their own life than trying to take the life ofanother. L.W Cox, student resource officer at Jordan High School, on students who bring weapons to school but use them to protect themselves in their own neighborhoods after class (see story, page one)
Announcement Interested in writing for The Chronicle next year? Applications for Fall 2001 Monday, Monday and columnist positions are available outside of 301 Flowers Building or at http://www.dspconline.org/apps.php. The deadline for applying is April 16. Contactjcb6@duke.edu for more information.
Letters
Policy
The Chronicle welcomes submissions in the form of letters to the editor or guest columns. Submissions must include the author’s name, signature, department or class, and for purposes of identification, phone number and local address. Letters should not exceed 325 words; contact the editorial department for information regarding guest columns. The Chronicle will not publish anonymous or formletters or letters that are promotional in nature. The Chronicle reserves the right to edit letters and guest columns for length, clarity and style and the right to withhold letters based on the discretion of the editorial page editor.
Direct submissions to: Editorial Page Department The Chronicle Box 90858, Durham, NC 27708 Phone: (919) 684-2663 Fax: (919) 684-4696 E-mail: letters@chronicle.duke.edu
Commentary
PAGE
9
TUESDAY, APRIL 10, 2001
That’s our Bush
President George W. Bush’s short-term ‘solution’ to the energy crisis will hurt us in the long run ly oil and gas. Not to use less of these too—and besides, lam sick to death of symptom, a harbinger of a wider shortm^ y°u but dig P more here costs and benefits. That argument is age that could turn into a severe world On the brink ’
mu*
Eva Dubuisson Summer has made its first overtures in North Carolina this weekend, bringing us suddenly into the middle of July (and serving as a rude reminder to some of us that our days at Duke are numbered). As per tradition, our apartment air conditioner took its semiannual strike, leaving me plenty of time to sit still in the small patch ofbreeze generated by my fan and contemplate our dependence on energy. The heat left my roommates and I facing a small-scale energy shortage of our own, as we draped lethargically across the furniture, but at least we still had our computers and televisions and plenty of ice. The newspapers are predicting a full summer of rolling blackouts on the West Coast, combined with higher electricity prices elsewhere and continued high gas prices. Still, there has been little or no demonstrated interest among consumers in, say, consuming less in order to conserve
these resources. We aren’t driving less or turning off our appliances, even as utilities become more and more expensive. In a brave attempt to reassure the American public, Energy Secretary Spencer Abraham is proclaiming America’s worst energy crisis since the ’7os. Not surprisingly, this underscores the Bush administration’s desire to drill for oil in the Alaskan National Wildlife Refuge and other sites. According to President George W. Bush’s experts, in order for America to emerge from this crisis it needs to develop more domestic energy resources, main-
10
U
•
The United States currently imports more than half of its oil—and uses much more per capita than any other nation, Even if new domestic sources were tapped, the federal Energy Information Administration says that our import percentage will continue to grow in the next 10 years, as demand is expected to grow faster than supply. Not only is this plan an environmental nightmare for the Alaskan refuge and other potential drilling sites, but it is barely a solution, a band-aid at best, My father recently related an interesting statistic: Even if the Alaskan refuge provides the amount of oil the Bush administration says it will, that same amount of oil could be saved if the gas mileage of all the sport utility vehicles in America was raised by just three miles per gallon. Just three! I am quite sure that the technology exists. So why don’t we use it? I am no expert, having skipped natural sciences altogether at Duke, but even I know that we can make electric and electric-hybrid cars. We know how to get energy from wind and water and methane and even atoms, for goodness sake! And we’re talking about destroying a valuable reserve of natural beauty and biodiversity in order to pump out a few billion more gallons of oil? If left alone, the Alaskan refuge will be a valuable resource forever; if drilled full of holes, it will produce enough oil to replace a small percentage of our imports for a few !
starting to sound more and more pathetic, especially to those citizens of California who always pay their electric. bills on time and yet are sitting in the dark right now. We have known for a very long time that the energy resources we use are not renewable and that we are on the way to using them up, within my lifetime by some projections. I was going to write my column this week on how it is time to stop making fun of the president and try to maintain some respect for the office. I watched the first episode of That’s My Bush on Comedy Central, and it was absolutely awful. However, the fact that he responds to the energy shortage with “drill more oil” is the most pathetic, short-sighted idea I’ve ever heard. Let the pundits go at him. This isn’t a short crisis to be weathered. It is a
crisis ifsomething is not done to address
the root
causes,
If you think the gap between the haves and have-nots in our world is extreme now, just wait until there isn’t enough oil to go around, and see to what lengths we will go to preserve our lifestyle. Knowing that my air conditioner will be fixed tomorrow is small comfort in the face of the global warming that is irrevocably heating up our entire planet. I just can’t understand it—we know how to make energy from a myriad of other cleaner, kinder, renewable sources. Why don’t we use that knowledge? Bush’s generation may have the luxury of insisting on economic efficiency (by their own definition) first, but it is our generation that will suffer the consequences of their short-sightednesi Eva Dubuisson is a Trinity senior.
decades at most. You can talk to me about economic efficiency and cost-benefit analyses until you are blue in the face. I am a public policy major, I can speak that language,
Learning from your mistakes —the easy way Memories of moderation Jonas Blank It’s always the most disturbing thing when you scare yourself. The story begins on a luxury cruiseliner with 1,000 passengers. Shortly into the voyage, the ship is overrun by a band of killers. They’re a scary bunch: a well-endowed naked man, a quivering college student and technical mastermind, a one-legged pedophile sea captain, a cannibalistic cook, a homicidal doctor (“El Gigante”), a bible-thumping minister, a crazy German and a fellow known only as “The Assassin.” The group’s scheme is to take the ship to Madagascar, where it will meet aliens and exchange all 700 or so passengers that remain for lemurs, who will “restore the ecological balance.” In the meantime, they process some ofthe captive passengers for food—sick ones first. Along with the cannibalism and rape that goes on regularly, one character makes “people pancakes,” piling a group of folks on top of one another and dumping hot butter and syrup on them. There’s also a choice scene where dying people are sprayed with soda, and a number of assorted musings on God made throughout. The story ends with the killers meeting the aliens, getting the lemurs, putting them in charge of the ship and locking themselves in the ship’s hold to rot. They leave one guy up top to drive the thing back to America. The End. That such a story, under my name, was aired to
an 11-person public, shocks and disturbs me to this day. I wrote it for a fiction writing class sophomore year. Thanks to that story, I suspect there are a good 11 people around campus now who think I’m a
detachment lent by a year or even a few months gives an upsetting lucidity to my analysis of whatever dreck I’ve foisted on an unsuspecting public. After a few more rereads of my story, I happened psychopath. on a more important lesson. I know that I will reread What I was really guilty of was, most succinctly, other old stories five years from now and realize how bad writing. I intended the story to be some sort of weak they were. But as long as I have the same feelmock-satiric allegorical perspective on the irraing five years from now as I do today—that my curtionality ofreligion and mankind in general, perhaps rent output is better than my earlier stuff, that I can in the vein of Kurt Vonnegut. Almost nobody in the always improve—l won’t be disappointed. Sometimes we all make mistakes, in writing and elsewhere, that are so stupid and horrible that we can’t imagine having made them. But that’s what sort to college is for. In college, especially at one like Duke, even bad ideas get their chance to be heard. In college, I’ve done things that I could never get away with in the real world—not without getting fired, at least. During this great short span of time, things just don’t count as much as they do everywhere else. A few failures won’t ruin you, and second chances abound. It isn’t fair that we have it as easy as most to to of us do. But once here, the chance to fail somehow at, to becomes a birthright. This is the perfect time to you run achieve your dreams, but it’s also the perfect time to
This of thing is prone happen. Every half-formed idea, every fossil of prejudice, every meaningless, stupid frenzy ends up recorded somewhere for others read, laugh remind you of when for office. ...
fail fantastically. I still keep that story on my hard drive, and I class understood what I was trying to do (see the enjoy laughing at it from time to time. If I run across part about the bad writing) and the response was any ofthose people from my class, I hope they’ll give me the time to convince them I’m alright in the head. universally negative. Unfortunately, when you’re a writer, this sort of It certainly wasn’t their fault for criticizing it—l’d thing is prone to happen. Every half-formed idea, have been much better off taking their advice. every fossil of prejudice, every meaningless, stupid But in the end, that story is no more than a typifrenzy ends up recorded somewhere for others to cal college failure—a learning experience and little read, to laugh at, to remind you of when you run for more. I even got an A in that writing class. Maybe I office. When I read over old work, my knee-jerk reacscared the professor, too. tion is usually to wonder what the hell I was thinking. Hindsight really is 20/20, and the emotional Jonas Blank is a Trinity senior and editor of Recess.
Comics
PAGE 10
Blazing Sea Nugg its/ David Logan
&
Eric Bramley
THE Daily Crossword f OK, CLASS... NOD]
HE'fl DON'T Voo HAVE AN EXAtt NOW?
If
>S )
/ -
ll
am \Moduue?
I
l\
W 3a*e
xi
\
1
©Y/|0|OI
T5H
SAVE A SAMPLE OF THE ANirAAL'S DNA SO WE CAN CLONE A NEW ONE.
rrA SAD TO REPORT THAT OUR OIL DRILLING HAS CAUSED THE EXTINCTION OF THE ELBONIAN
\
"
/
/
-a®
22 23 24 26
Final Four org Defeat Questioners
Gathered
together 30 Egyptian
Gilbert/ Scott Adams
UNICORN.
Gay" 14 15 Workplace safety grp. 16 Corridor 17 Conspicuous success 18 Mimic 19 Contribution to the pot 20 Neighborhood of makeshift dwellings
>r
X
Edited by Wayne Robert Williams
ACROSS 'Carmen’ composer 6 Guitarist Jeff 10 Open-handed
*AAN EECrlN. jj J*T
WHAT'S WRONG >mth the
\ /
*
TUESDAY, APRIL 10, 2001
DON'T FINISH THAT.
crosses 32 Part of TVA 33 Different 35 Stomachs of" ruminants 39 Cloyingly sweet 41 Leaping antelopes
43 Barbara's partner in cartoons 44 One-billionth pref.
|
V
46 Disorderly retreat 47 Cary or Hugh 49 Phony 51 Poet Langston 54 Seven days 56 VOA group 57 Beer-lemonade drink 63 Wise Men 64 Small amount 65 Downgrade 66 Chills and fever 67 European barracuda 68 Tropical lizard 69 Require 70 Grow weary of the ball 71
E
Doonesbury/ Garry Trudeau ME THAT HE LOVEPME NOTONLYA9 HIE EMPLOY-
_
ER ANPAE THE HUEBANP
DOWN 1 Hive group 2 Foot part
.
CY7 imi, I wauromz WHY? -TOMe&rYoueeoYHB'B FRIBHP, WHO UiABNT OUB THBBB, SOI S7ART366T BP TALKING TO CY. 6UV:
BEFORE LONG, HE- TOLP
3 Writer Emile 4 Verve 5 Reveal by gossip
6 Watercraft 7 Monterrey mates 8 Masticate 9 Thebes, today 10 By foot 11 Judge Ito 12 Church table 13 Legal arguments 21 Mountain air? 25 Boutique 26 SAT section 27 Nimbus 28 *Nana‘ star Anna 29 Kidnapped 31 Nuremberg negative
34 Actress
Redgrave
36 Moises or Felipe 37 King Ibn 38 Concerning 40 Show concern
42 Sulked 45 California city near Merced 48 Help out 50 U.S. space station 51 To err is 52 Accepted practice
53 Lively dance var.
55 Related on mother’s side 58 Pueblo dweller 59 Departed 60 Mil. truant 61 Plummeted 62 Complimentary
The Chronicle: Reasons we love Adrienne She brings us pound cake .Mary She annoys the hell out of Brody Vicki Marla Brody annoys the hell out of her:.. She makes our ads more creative: .Craig & Brody She’s a Duke and Chronicle alumna ~Neal She’s an adult: .Brian She has Advil when we get headaches: Whitney & Dean She has a Superman shirt: Neal, Pratik, some online guy She and Roily are a sweet team: Mr. Miller
bxTrot/ Bill Amend WE HAVE SCHOOL Tomorrow. I'm Not GoiNG To USE something that Doesn't wash off
I EASILY.
I
vA
"
PETER, LAUNDRY MARKERS
are
like totally permanent.'
Account Representatives:
.Monica Franklin, Dawn Hall, Yu-hsien Huang, Lars Johnson Account Assistant: Anna Carollo, Constance Lindsay Sallyann Bergh, Kate Burgess, Sales Representatives: Julianna Dudas, Chris Graber, Richard Jones, Margaret Ng, Seth Strickland National Account Representative: Jordana Joffe Creative Services: Dallas Baker, Jonathan Blackwell, Laura Durity, Lina Fenequito, Megan Harris, Dan Librot Business Assistant; Preeti Garg, Ellen Mielke,
WHERE ON EARTH WOULD YOU 6ET THE IDEA THAT THIS INK C W WASHES
J*
r-
K{<
J
Veronica Puente-Duany
Classifieds
Cristina Mestre
Www foxtrot.com
TUESDAY, April 10
Community
Calendar |||
Mind-Body Skills Weekly Group is held every Tuesday from 12 noon-1:30 p.m. at Cornucopia House Cancer Support Center, which moved to the Overlook Bldg., The Biological Conservation Group preSte 220, 111 Cloister Court, Chapel Hill. sents Dan Simberloff, University of TenFor information call 401-9333 or visit nessee: “Management of Introduced www.cornucopiahouse.org. Species; Why Not Eradicate Them?” 111 Holy Week service; Sermon by Michael A. Biological Sciences, 4:00 p.m. Walrond Jr., Black Campus Ministries The Durham Newcomers Club will hold 12:00 noon. For information, call 684their Annual Installation Ceremony today. 2572. Duke Chapel, West Campus. Newcomers to the area are invited to call The English Department, Film and Video 402-9429 or 572-0084 for further details Program, and Literature Program present concerning this meeting and other upcoming events. “Nostalgia and 1890s Homosexuality”, a talk by Martha Vicinus, of the English Department at the University of Michigan and Acclaimed Jamaican poet Opal Palmer will give a presentation of her work in current Fellow at the National Humanities Adisa “It Begins With Tears," 7:00 p.m., Mary Lou Center. The talk will be at 4:00 p.m., TuesWilliams Center, West Union Building, day, April 10th in the Carpenter Board- West Campus. For information, call 684room on the second floor of Perkins Li3814. brary.
John Hope Franklin Research Center at Perkins Library: Race Reels Series of early black films: “Sepia Cinderella,” directed by Arthur Leonard, 7:00 p.m., 103 Carr Building, East Campus. Free. Freewater Films: “Blood Simple” with Frances McDormand. 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. Chapel Hill Breast Cancer Support Group meets on the second Tuesday of every month from 7:30 to 9:00 p.m. at Cornucopia House Cancer Support Centerthe Overlook Bldg., Ste 220, 111 Cloister Court. Chapel Hill. Call 401-9333
Department of Music Student Recital: Alexander Topala, piano. For information, call 660-3300. 8:00 p.m. Nelson Music Room, East Duke Building, East Campus. First Annual Row Wow at Duke Saturday, April 14, Baldwin Quad, 1:00 p.m. Come celebrate Native American Heritage. Free and open to the public. -
WEDNESDAY Holy Week service: Sermon by Albert Mosley. For information, call 684-2572. 12 noon. Duke Chapel. EEOB Seminar. Anne Pringle, Duke University: ‘The Ecology of Mutualism; A Study of Arbuscular Mycorrhizal Fungi and Plants.” 111 Biological Sciences, 4:00 p.m.
The Chronicle
•
page
Classifieds
n Child care needed for a charming (really) four year old girl. Help with later afternoon/evening care: preschool pick-up, playing, dinner, bath time... Flexible hours/days. Near Duke. Day: 319-2482; Evening 490-5571.
Announcements HOUSE COURSES FALL 2001****
****
APPLICATIONS AVAILABLE NOW in 04 Allen Building or on-line at
Help Wanted
http://www.aas.duke.edu/trinity.housecrs/hc.html for people wishing to teach a House Course in Fall 2001. DEADFOR SUBMISSION LINE Monday April 16, 2001.
ADMINISTRATIVE INTERN NEEDED
Taking a year off before going to Graduate School? Why not work for the Office of Student Development as an administrative intern? Gain valuable work experience while working in a fun environment. Duties include providing first-line customer service for the Office of Student Development and working on special projects. Job begins July 1, 2001 and will end June 30, 2002. Prefer Duke graduate with good customer service and computer skills. If interested, to: please send resume Administrative Intern Search, Office of Student Development, Box 90946.
ATTENTION SENIORS!! Please note: The CORRECT publication date of this year’s Graduation Issue is FRIDAY, MAY 11, 2001. In a mailer sent to parents regarding baby pictures/congratulations, the date was incorrectly printed as Friday, May 12. Please convey the correct date and our apologies to your parents. Deadline for baby pictures is April 12.
CIVITAN
DUKE: FULL-TIME OR PART-TIME
Leaders Wanted. Needed motivated students interested in community service to start a Campus Civitan Club Reply to at Duke.
Friendly office on East Campus seeks a person that enjoys data entry, telephone and customer service. We are looking for someone with excellent keyboarding skills, good judgment, people skills, and an interest in lifelong learning. Handle registrations for noncredit classes, workshops and camps. Year-round job. OK to start after graduation. Office of Continuing Education and Summer Session. Please e-mail resume and cover letter with “RIM-C” in e-mail subject line to jblinder@duke.edu. Or call Janice Blinder at (919)-684-3095. DUKE UNIVERSITY is An Equal Action Opportunity/Affirmative
CampusCivitan@Yahoo.com
Autos For Sale www.PerfectCollegeCar.com. Your parents never had it this good!!!
Do You Love KIDS?
Employer.
Nanny Needed starting May after
school then 3-4 days per week in summer. 4,5,9 year old Junior Blue Devils. Play, swim, read, outings. Some Driving-vehicle provided. Must be non-smoker, good driver, with own ride to/from. 489-4843.
Needed
student preferably work-study funded, to do light typing, errands, copying, filing, etc. Hours: Flexible, Rate: $7.00, Contact: Janet Wilkerson @ 6845711
The Chronicle classified advertising
$6.00 for first 15 words private party/N.P. $4.50 for first 15 words all ads 100 (per day) additional per word 3or 4 consecutive insertions -10 % off 5 or more consecutive insertions 20 % off special features (Combinations accepted.) $l.OO extra per day for all Bold Words $1.50 extra per day for a Bold Heading (maximum 15 spaces) $2.50 for 2 line heading $2.00 extra per day for Boxed Ad deadline 1 business day prior to publication by 12:00 noon payment Prepayment is required Cash, Check, Duke IR, MC/VISA or Flex accepted (We cannot make change for cash payments.) 24 hour drop off location •101 W. Union Building or mail to: Chronicle Classifieds Box 90855, Durham, NC 27708 0858 fax to: 684-8295 phone orders: call (919) 684-3811 to place your ad. Visit the Classifieds Online! business rate
TUESDAY, APRIL 10, 2001
LIFEGUARD
Needed for 10-15 hours per week at the Lenox Baker Hospital therapeutic pool to guard for children and adults with special needs. Must be at least 18 years old and hold current lifeguard certification. Hours available immediately and through the summer. Rate of pat i $9.00/hr. If interested contact Catie Shaffer at 684-4315, 3000 Erwin Road.
Student Groups
Houses For Rent
Real Estate Sales
2BR 2 BA House. North Durham. 6 miles to Duke. Fenced and safe, inlaw suite. $750/month. 477-2911
FSBO unique historic home. 817 Lancaster, next to East Campus. 1 BR/1 BA 1400 sqft. Upstairs apt 1200 sqft. Live in downstairs, rent upstairs for $6OO/month. Tenant ready to sign lease. Call 286-5916 for appointment. $164,000.
SEEKING RESEARCH ASSISTANT BRAIN IMAGING/ALZHEIMER’S DISEASE. Wanted: Full-Time Research Assistant at Duke Hospital. Ideal for recent grads interested in medical school, psychology or neuroscience, gain clinical exposure, learn MR imaging and analysis techniques. Start date: Flexible (April thru June 2001). Benefits; good pay, publirecommendations. cations, Computer skills needed. Minimum 1 year commitment. Send CV and references to jeffrey.petrella@duke.edu
BARTENDERS NEEDED!!! Earn $l5-30/hr. assistance is
Job placement top priority. Raleigh’s Bartending School. Call now for information about our half-priced tuition special. HAVE FUN! MAKE MONEY! MEET PEOPLE!!! (919)676-0774. www.cocktailmixer.com
STUDENT ASSISTANTS NEEDED
The Rare Book, Manuscript and Special Collections Library seeks student assistants for the summer. Several available. positions Opportunity to work with rare and unique materials. Contact Stacey 660-5822 Tompkins or stacey.tompkins ©duke.edu Wait staff, bus and bartenders needed for new Italian restaurant in Durham. Flexible hours and some experience necessary. Call 286-9600 or apply at 716 Ninth St., Durham.
Meeting April 9th, 6:30 Wilßec. Clinic April 10th, 6:30-8:15 Wilßec. Tryouts April 11th, 8:15 Wilßec.
House for lease-Great Location House available for sublet, MayAug, 2001. Very close to East Campus, very reasonable price. 6BR, A/C, DSL, furnished. Call 6131855 or 613-0497. •
AUSTRALIA DIRECT ORIENTATION
Fall 2001 orientation session will be held Tues., April 10 at 7 p.m. in 130 Soc Psych. If you are unable to attend, general orientation sessions will be held Mon., April 16 at 4 p.m. in 139 Soc Sci, or Tues., April 17 at 6 p.m. in 139 Soc. Sci. Questions? Contact Office of Study Abroad, 121 Allen, 684-2174.
BRITAIN DIRECT ORIENTATION
Fall 2001 orientation session is Thurs., April 12, 5:30 p.m. in 139 Social Sciences. If you are unable to attend, general orientation sessions are Mon., April 16, 4 p.m. in 139 Social Sciences or Tues., April 17, 6 p.m. in 139 Social Sciences. Questions? Contact Office of Study Abroad, 121 Allen, 684-2174.
McGraw Tree Service Complete tree removal and stump grinding. Pruning, trimming and brush removal at competitive rates. Darren McCraw. 969 7327 Referrals Available.
Fall 2001 DIF Orientation is Wed., April 11 at 5:30 p.m. in 111 Social Sciences. If you are unable to attend, general study abroad orientation sessions will be held Mon., April 16 at 4 p.m. in 139 Social Sciences or Tues., April 17 at 6 p.m. in Social Sciences. Questions? Contact Office of Study Abroad, 121 Allen, 684-2174.
STRUCTURE HOUSE
•
PART-TIME GREETER/FACILITATOR We are Structure House, a highly successful and nationally recognized residential weight control treatment center in Durham, NC.
Summer sublet at The Forest starting the third week in May, Call Kate, 383-7340.
Looking for Summer Sublets: The American Dance Festival compiles a list of sublets for June and July for its students, staff and faculty. Also looking for a few special houses/apartments for our Dean and certain faculty. Call 684-6402 to receive our listing form. You may also fax us at 684-5459 or e-mail us at school@americandancefestival.org or write to: ADF PO BOX 90772 DURHAM, NC 27708
WHEN SMOKERS QUIT Within 20 minutes of smoking that last cigarette, the body begins a series of changes that continue for years.
DUKE IN FRANCE ORIENTATION
m •
Dancing Devils Tryouts
20 MINUTES *
*
*
Blood pressure drops to normal Pulse rate drops to normal Body temperature of hands ami feet increases to normal
1 YEAR •
smoker 5 YEARS
average former smoker
*
Carbon monoxide level in blood drops to normal Oxygen level in Wood increases to normal
24 HOURS
almost half •Stroke risk is reduced to that of a nonsmoker 5-15 years after quitting Risk of cancer of the mouth, throat and esophagus is half that of a smoker's •
•Chance of heart attack decreases
48 HOURS *
-
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’slicense, and the ability to lift 50 pounds.
10 YEARS
Nerve endings start
I,ting cancer death rate
•
regrowing •Ability to smell and taste
•
is enhanced
-
GET HO
Risk of cancer of the mouth, throat, esophagus, bladder. kidney and pancreas decreases
•
15 YEARS Risk of coronary
I to 9 MONTHS Coughing, sinus congestion, fatigue,
heart
disease is that of a nonsmoker
shortness of breath decrease ■Ciliaregrow in
lungs, increasing ability to handle mucus, clean
�
the, Jungs, reduce infection Body's overall energy
increases
Source Amo«c«n Cancer Socariy; Centers for Owo«so Control and Prevent**)
Keep recycling working Buy recycled.
-
Call 684-3811 if you have any questions about classifieds No refunds or cancellations after first insertion deadline.
Walking becomes easier •Lung function increases up to 30 percent
*
www.campustlo
-
http://www.chronicle.duke.edu/classifiedsAoday.html
•Circulation improves
Interested candidates should forward resume via e-mail to info@structurehouse.com. No phone calls please. EOE.
sinu
lar to that of nonsmokers Precancerous cells are replaced
2 WEEKS to 3 MONTHS
*
(one
pack a day) decreases by
-
-
Lung cancer death rate for
•
8 HOURS *
Excess risk of coronary heart disease is half that of a
700 Ninth Stree 286-5640 286-1802 Monday Friday: 9-6pm Saturday: 9-4pm -
For a free brochure, please caH 1-800-2-RECYCLE or visit www. environmentaldefense. org
e ©NVIRONMeHTAL DSFCNSe finding tho ways that work
The Chronicle
PAGE 12
TUESDAY, APRIL
10. 2001
$250 stolen from Professors hope for further debate West dorm room P REPARATIONS from page 1
� CRIME from page 3 plastic Jet Pak holder—from a restroom in 6100 Duke North between 2:30 and 5:30 p.m. April 6, Dean said.
CDs stolen: Between 7 p.m. March 28 and 2:36 p.m. April 1, someone broke out the $3OO rear driver’s side window of a student’s car and stole eight CDs worth $l2O, a $lO HBO CD case and a $4O Sears roadside emergency kit. The vehicle was parked in the alumni lot.
Dorm room entered: Two Camelot Dormitory roommates reported that someone entered their unsecured room and stole $250 sometime between 6:20 p.m. April 7 and 11:30 a.m. April 8, Dean said.
Grandin, whose research concentrates on Latin America, likens the reparations debate to discussion about truth commissions in Latin American
countries. “If we did have a truth commission in the United States and there was public acknowledgment of slavery as an oppressive system, there’s another way to tell the story that the US, in large part was built on slavery,” Grandin said. “[lt’s] not just residue from the past, that wealth and racism to a large degree was created out of slavery.” Grandin said he has found that many ofhis students are not well-educated about the history of Reconstruction and the importance of slavery in
American life.
Other professors echoed Grandin’s concerns. “We have a mistaken sense that we have dug deeply into Afro-American history and that once we were blind, but now we see. I don’t think that’s the case at all,” said Peter Wood, professor of history. “I think once we were blind, and now we see a little bit out ofthe corner of one eye.” Thompson said he hopes these types of discussions will occur on a more regular basis. He pointed to last semester’s discussions, forums and debates addressing the presidential election as a good example.
“We don’t do this often enough. I feel as if we should be doing something like this once a month,” he said. “I hope my colleagues will do it more. It’s important for us to engage in these things.”
Speaker stolen: Between 10:20 and 10:56 p.m. April 6, someone stole a visitor’s $250 15-inch CLS model speaker from Clocktower Quadrangle, Dean said. The speaker, carpeted in black, was stolen as the
A MAN.A MOVIE. A PURPOSE.
victim packed up following the viewing of a film.
Purse thieved: A student reported
that around 6 April 6, $l5 someone stole her p.m. purse containing a $l5 wallet, $5O in cash, a $lOO traveler’s check, a key, a Duke Card and driver’s license, Dean said. The purse was on a table inside the University retail store.
Phone taken: Around 12:30 a.m. April 3, someone removed a student’s $lOO Qualcomm/QCP2O3SA cellular phone from her back pocket while she was at a party at Sigma Nu fraternity, Dean said. The student could not identify who was responsible for taking the phone.
Wallet swiped:
A visitor reported that between 3:30 and 4 p.m. April 4, someone stole her $5O wallet, containing credit cards and a check for $lO, from her jacket while she was in the University retail store dressing room, Dean said.
Watch the fascinating movie “MEN OF HONOR” for FREE
Cash, checkbook taken: An employee reported that around 1:59 p.m. April 6, someone ransacked her purse and stole $l5 in cash and her checkbook. The items were in her unlocked office at the Herndon Road Clinic.
...and then
Truck entered: Someone entered an employee’s unsecured truck camper between 8 a.m. and 7:50 p.m. April 5 and stole her $l5 AM/FM cassette radio, Dean said. The vehicle was parked in Parking Garage 2. Students treated: At 2:34 a.m. April 7, Duke Police, Duke EMS and Durham EMT responded to Few Quad in reference to an intoxicated 19-year-old student, Dean said. The student was transported to the Emergency Department. Duke EMT and Durham EMS responded to Wannamaker Dormitory at 1:47 a.m. April 4 in reference to a 20-year-old intoxicated student, who had justreturned from a party in House 88. She was transported to the
Come see the man who inspired it: CARL BRASHEAR, the first African-American Navy Master Diver
Emergency Department.
Movie: Wednesday, April 11, 7PM in the Griffith Film Theater (Bryan Center) Carl Brashear talk: Thursday, April 12, BPM in the Love Auditorium (LSRC)
**
th'l 1
Presented by the Duke Honor Council as part !
t;
of the Ethics and Integrity
Series
**
Hpi v
;
Sports
After being released by the Cowboys last month, quarterback Troy r. Aikman retired yesterday. See page 14 W
*~
r
� More on the men’s tennis match.
See page 15 PAGE 13
_
TUESDAY, APRIL 10, 2001
Duke men’s tennis dispatches UNC on Senior Day By THOMAS STEINBERGER The Chronicle
Senior Ramsey Smith won his 111th singles
match and teamed with Phillip King for an easy doubles victory as No. 3 Duke rolled 5-2 over North Carolina yesterday afternoon in Chapel Hill. Spoiling senior day for three Tar Heels, the Blue
survived plus-90 degree heat on their way to finishing the ACC regular season undefeated at 8-0. “I feel like whenever we play UNC, it's going to be a tough match just because of the rivalry,” coach Jay Lapidus said. “It was a good, match. tough Ramsey and Phillip continued to play very well for us, and we won [our] onetwo-three singles [matchDevils
es] fairly handily.” Playing at the No. 1 slot, Smith routed freshman
Nicolas Monroe 6-1,6-2. The
victory puts him just two wins away from setting the all-time Duke record. He was complimented by fellow senior Marko Cerenko, who completed a 6-1, 6-4 demolishing of David Cheatwood
in the final ACC match of his career. The win gives Cerenko a career mark of 31-0 in ACC regular season play and a 23-6 record on the year. Although the Tar Heels’ Senior Day made for a pressure atmosphere, the afternoon was most shaped by the warmest tempera-
tures of the season.
Despite playing their second match in three days, the Blue Devils used the tough conditions as an advantage, Lapidus and King said. “It was definitely difficult out there, and wearing black shirts didn't help,” King said. "But I felt like we were fitter.” Lapidus agreed, though he felt that fatigue may have been a factor in the two singles matches the Blue Devils dropped. No. Pedroso 37 Andres appeared to have the momentum in his match against unranked Trystan Meniane, winning the second set 7-6. But Lapidus said the heat seemed to catch up with the senior, See TENNIS on page 15 �
MATT KLEIN/THE CHRONICLE
PHILLIP KING smashes a forehand April 1 versus Tennessee, The freshman and his team beat North Carolina 5-2 yesterday.
Blue Devil rowing finishes in 7th in San Diego Crew Classic
weekend, THE DUKE ROWING TEAM raced in the highly competitive San Diego Crew Classic last
Kaiser rules Blue Devil midfielder Kate
Kaiser was named ACC player of the week yesterday after five goals and two assists in Duke’s 14-10 victory over ACC.toe and.... ninth-ranked Virginia.
it the ‘Wright’ time? ining his Arizona teamlate Richard Jefferson, tio declared Sunday tor te NBA Draft,
Michael
right announced his vision to.forego his final 'ear of college yesterday.
By CRAIG SAPERSTEIN The Chronicle Competing in one of the nation’s premier rowing events, the San Diego Crew Classic on Mission Bay, the Duke rowing team finished in seventh place with a time of 6:46.51. The Blue Devils competed in the Jessop-Whittier Cup Heat A against some of the best crew teams in the country, including the classic’s eventual winner, Washington. The Huskies dominated the field, winning the event by eight seconds over its closest competition with a time of 6:26.03. The second-place finisher, California concluded the race in 6:34.26, while Notre Dame finished in third only moments after the Golden Bears, registering a time of 6:34.70. Texas, Stanford, and Oregon State were among the other teams that finished ahead of the Blue Devils. Despite her team’s seventh-place finish, Blue Devil coach Robyn Horner was pleased with Duke’s performance, especially because it signified a marked improvement from the team’s last-place finish last year in San Diego.
SC pursues Calhoun The Journal Inquirer of Manchester reported yesterday that South Carolina hotly pursued Connecticut coach Jim Calhoun to be the Gamecocks’ next basketball coach.
“We see the San Diego Crew Classic as a chance to race against a lot of the teams that are in the top 30,” Horner said. “Last year, we entered the same events and pretty much finished up last in all of the events. This year, we stepped up a little bit and beat a couple more teams. “We’re still at a stage where we’re continuing to develop and trying to go after some of those top-ranked teams. I think [the San Diego event] gives us a good opportunity to see where we stand.” However, the San Diego Crew Classic is hardly the last of the Blue Devils’ championship-level races. After a weekend of rest, Duke returns to action at the Southern Intercollegiate race, where it will face a number of schools with tradi-
tionally comparable teams, including North Carolina, Tulsa and Kansas State. Then, after this race, the Blue Devils will prepare for the all-important ACC rowing race. “I think our team is going to have to step up and race hard,” Homer said. “Looking at Southerns, there’s a number of teams that are all in the same ballpark.... It’s going to be a real dogfight.”
Stargell passes away Hall of Famer Willie Stargell died yesterday after a long bout with a kidney disorder. He will be honored in the coming
weeks at PNC Park, the new home of the Pirates.
Major League Baseball Mets 9, Braves 4 Reds 8, Pirates 2 Cardinals 3, Rockies 2 Expos 7, Cubs 5 Phillies 5, Marlins 4 Blue Jays 8, Devil Rays 1 White Sox 9, Indians 2
The Chronicle
PAGE 14
TUESDAY, APRIL 10, 2001
Aikman retires from football, broadcasting career likely By JAIME ARON
Associated Press IRVING, Texas Troy Aikman’s NFL career ended with the Dallas Cowboys after all. The three-time Super Bowl champion announced his retirement at a news conference yesterday at Texas Stadium, where he starred for 12 seasons. “You watch and you think that your time will never come,” said Aikman, fighting back tears as he announced his plans. “And, my time’s come.” Aikman suffered four concussions in his last 20 starts —giving him 10 in his career—and has a degenerative back problem. “I know it’s the right thing. I know it’s the right thing for me because of my health, concussions, the back problems I’ve had. It took its toll,” he said. Aikman said the competitor in him wanted to continue, but he said his family weighed in his decision. “I think when all things are considered it was the right thing for me and my family,” Aikman said. “I just can’t do it anymore. If it was just me, then I think it would be a little easier to try to go on.” Aikman regained his composure as he talked about the 12 years he played for the Cowboys in a news conference that lasted almost an hour and a half as he went point by point thanking people. “It was 12 of the best years of my life, professionally speaking,” Aikman said. “We had some great fun.” “I’m going to miss the camaraderie with my teammates,” he said. “I’m going to miss the locker room after a big game.” “I’m not going to miss being in that locker room explaining to the press how it was that we lost that game,” Aikman said. “This man has touched us all and for that we’re grateful,” Cowboys owner Jerry Jones said in introducing Aikman. “He restored or embellished our belief that we want that our athletes can be heroes.” Aikman spoke after a film clip that covered Aikman from a young child to the Super Bowl. Aikman said there are talks about a possible broadcasting career.
“It looks like something that will take place,” he said, adding that something could be announced in the next
few days. He didn’t mention any specific networks, but Fox is expected to be the frontrunner to hire him. Fox is looking for a game analyst to replace Matt Millen, who joined the Detroit Lions as president and CEO. The 34-year-old Aikman’s future has been in limbo since he was waived by the Cowboys on March 7, a day before he was due a $7 million bonus and seven-year contract extension. Aikman set nearly every team passing record and was among the best postseason quarterbacks in NFL history. But he missed five games last season because of injuries and was knocked out of three more, all in the first quarter. When he played, Aikman lacked his trademark arm strength and accuracy, sinking him to the worst QB rating among NFC starters. Aikman said last week that his back was his greatest concern. Some fans have wantedAikman to walk away since his concussions began adding up. While they feared the longterm implications of the head injuries, Aikman never flinched. He went out believing he could remain healthy and productive. Aikman has been a marquee name since the Cowboys made him the No. 1 pick in the 1989 draft. After losing his first 11 games, he led Dallas to Super Bowl titles after the 1992, ’93 and ’95 seasons. Only Joe Montana and Terry Bradshaw have won as many Super Bowls. Rather than joining Montana, Joe Namath and Johnny Unitas as quarterbacks who ended their careers in seemingly foreign uniforms, Aikman will forever be a Cowboy. Aikman joins the list of NFL stars who have retired at least in part because of concussions. Other notables include Steve Young, another Steinberg client, who reluctantly quit last summer, and Roger Staubach, who led Dallas to two Super Bowl JILL JOHNSON/FORT WORTH STAR-TELEGRAM titles before retiring in March 1980 at age 38. TROY AIKMAN fights back tears at his retirement news conference
All Interested Duke Students Are Welcome to Attend
JVlarkets QLlyianagemen t n
U
D
IBS
An Interdisciplinary Certificate Program at Duke University
Markets & Management Information Session and Pizza Party Tuesday, April 10th 7pm Room 111 Social Sciences Building ,
This meeting will be a wonderful opportunity for freshmen and sophomores thinking about enrolling in the Markets & Management Certificate to learn more about the program!
TUESDAY, APRIL 10, 2001
The Chronicle
PAGE 1 5
No. 1 seed King thrives in heat, defeats Petrone 6-1, 6-4 TENNIS from page 13 as he faltered to lose a third set
tie-break. “It was pretty uncomfortable out there,” Lapidus said. “It was definitely tough to deal with; going from 60 to 90 in such a short time is hard to adjust to. Andres was probably tired in the third set, but our players are pretty fit.” Pedroso did team with Alex Bose for an 8-5 doubles win, as the Blue Devils gained the opening point with a 2-1 edge in the doubles matches. Lapidus said the Blue Devils endurance has benefited from playing a lot of matches, but he still plans to step up their conditioning in the 10 days between now and the ACC championships. One player who may not need such conditioning is No. 14 freshman phenom Phillip King. The southern California native said he enjoys playing in the heat, and it showed yesterday as he easily beat junior Marcio Petrone 6-1, 6-4. “I just knew if I stayed out there long enough, he was going to get tired before me,” King said, “Definitely, a lot of us got tired. You just have to be in shape, and I think I am.” As for the pressure of the Duke-UNC rivalry, King said he knew it was a big day for the seniors, but he treated it like any
other match. “I haven't been here that long," he said. "I knew if I played tennis the way I know how, that I would
be fine.”
MATT KLEIN/THE CHRONICLE
Left to right: RAMSEY SMITH prepares to hit a forehand against Tennessee April
1. MARKO CERENKO hits a backhand,
also against the Volunteers
COME VOICE OPINIONS ON RESIDENTIAI LIFE A panel of speakers from
When? Tues., April 10 from 2:30 to 4 p.m.
Where? Alpine Atrium in the BC
around campus will be present to both inform students as well as listen to student concerns regarding the upcoming resedential life changes (West-Edens Link, and others)
Let Penske Truck Rental Take You Where You Want To Go.
15 ft. Vans 2-3 Rooms
Government Office at 684-6403 with questions
•
fe~~ha vfm
wg
=
20 ft. Vans 4-5 Rooms
L SPONSORED BY DUKE STUDENT GOVERNMENT
Low Rates Free Unlimited Mileage on One-Way Rentals AC and Automatic Transmission New, Clean, Top-Maintained Models 24-Hour Emergency Road Service, 7 Days a Week Full Line of Moving Accessories, Including: Tow Equipment, Hand
•
•
•
•
| •
Truck, Pads, Cartons Boxes
I'te
25 ft. Vans 6-8 Rooms
Please contact the Duke Student
Truck Rental
10 ft. Vans 1-2 Rooms
&
Packing Supplies Available
10% DISCOUNT WITH STUDENT ID.
One-Way Reservations:
1 -800-222-0277 OR visit us at Penske.com
The Chronicle
PAGE 16
TUESDAY, APRIL 10, 2001
SENIOR VISUAL ART EXHIBITION
NATHAN AND THE ZYDECO CHA CHAS
Thursday, April 12 from 5:00-7:00 p.m Institute of the Arts Gallery, 107 Bivins Building, East Campus
Tuesday, April 17 at 8 p.m. Page Auditorium While the rest of the Zydeco nation wrestles over who will be crowned the next “king” of Zydeco, Nathan Williams has given himself a decidedly un-royal moniker, “The Zydeco Hog.” His mix of playful lyrics and bouncing rhythms are infused with contemporary arrangements that still manage to reflect the traditions of this South Louisiana musical style. $22, 19, 15 General Public $l5, 12, 9 Duke Students.
The Senior Visual Art Exhibition, entitled “Translocation,” is an exhibition of artworks by seven graduating seniors. It
opens in the gallery of the Institute of the Arts with a party for the artists on
Thursday, April 12 from 5-7 pm. Come admire the work of your peers: Elaine Chen, Julie Doty, Kristin Posehn, Novia Taylor, Jamie Kellety, Francine Chip, and Jonathan Blackwell.
ARK DANCES, 2001 Friday Saturday, April 13 at 8:00 p.m. The Ark &
&
A FUNNY THING HAPPENED ON THE WAY TO THE FORUM
14
•
showcase of dance that celebrates the eclectic dance energy generated from the diversity of Duke University. Modem, ballet, tap, jazz, African, Chinese folk, Irish stepping, bharatanatyam...you’ll see it all here during Ark Dances! Space is limited. 1 Please call (919) 660-3354 for reservations and information. *
:
rin
Ark Dances is the annual student-produced
'
Ml ammmzk Bm^^ ,
i
;
ARTS EVENTS ON CAMPUS This Week: April 10-16,2001 ON TAP! is coordinated by the Duke University Institute of the Arts. Other participating campus arts presenters include: Art Museum, Dance Program, Drama Program, Film & Video Program, Hoof n’ Horn, Mary Lou Williams Center for Black Culture, Music Department, University Union, University Life, and Documentary Studies.
LEAHY Thursday, April 12 at Bp.m. Page Auditorium
MADE IN ASIA? STUDENT CURATED EXHIBITION XII Continues through June 10 Duke University Museum of Art This year’s student-curated exhibition, organized by Randi Reiner ‘Ol and Philip Tinari ‘Ol, addresses the theme of transnationalism in contemporary Asian art. In drawing together works by contemporary artists who are viewed as “Asian,” this show will look at artists who for the most part live in the west, and examine the need for these artists to address their Asian-ness aesthetically.
Heavily Celtic-influenced, yet melded and blended with folk, country, rock, jazz and a delivery that is as lightning sharp and pulsating as their step-dancing, Leahy’s music is an international explosion of new directions. The group toured with Shania Twain and produced an album that climbed to Billboard’s international Top Ten. Tickets are $2B, 22, 18 for the general public and $24, 18, 14 for Duke students.
ADISA Tuesday, April 10 at 12 Noon and 8 p.m. Women’s Center and Mary Lou Williams Center Center for Black Culture presents internationally acclaimed Jamaican poet, critic, and storyteller Opal Palmer Adisa. She will give a lecture on “Writer as Ethnographer: Culling from the Folk?” at noon in the Women’s Center. At 8 p.m. in the Mary Lou Williams Center, Opal Palmer Adisa will read from “Culture, Politics, and Creative Sensibilities: The Writings of Opal Palmer Adisa.” Opal Palmer Adisa holds a doctorate in Ethnic Studies and Literature from University of California, Berkeley, and currently is a professor at California College of Arts & Crafts. s
01, acrylic, fitephss, mn.
U"i7?xW
Courtesy ol Madsrme hzsky Solitfy Mew Ysik, NY
April 14 & 19 at 2:00 p.m.; May 11 at 8:00 p.m. and May 12 at 9:00 p.m. Reynolds Theater
Hoof ‘n’ Horn, Duke’s student-run musical theater group, concludes its highly successful 2000-2001 season with the farcical comedy, A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum. Forum gives us a taste of what once convulsed ancient Roman audiences as it draws directly from the plays of the Roman writer, Plautus. Forum’s contagious energy and vivacious characterizations will keep the audience constantly laughing. All tickets for these shows are $lO and are reserved seating.
FILMS: “DREAMING RIVERS”
AND “THE OPAL PALMER COUPLE IN
The Mary Lou Williams
Msslu Mi&elim Miss KO2
.
April 12-14, 19-21 at 8:00 p.m.;
THE CAGE”
Monday, April 16 at 8:00 p.m East Duke Building Part of the Black British Film Series at Duke, two
short films will be shown Monday evening. Over the last five hundred years, non-westem human beings have been exhibited in taverns, theaters, gardens, museums, circuses and world’s fairs of Europe. Filmmakers Martina Attille and Coco Fusco, presenting themselves as aboriginal inhabitants, document their three days living in a gilded cage in Columbus Plaza in Madrid to commemorate this practice.
PAGE 2
2001 NCAA CHAMPIONSHIP COMMEMORATIVE EDITION
TUESDAY. APRIL 10, 2001
TUESDAY, APRIL 10, 2001
2001 NCAA CHAMPIONSHIP COMMEMORATIVE EDITION
PAGE 3
The Chronicle commemorates the 2000-01 season of the
Mxxke plmfrcrsttu
NATIONAL CHAMPION Feinstein: Heart leads K's team to title One question I am often asked in my travels is this: What is Mike Krzyzewski really like? My answer is pretty simple: He’s a better person than he is a coach. Beyond that, I will explain, his strength of character is one of his great strengths as a coach. He is fiercely loyal to friends; he has never lost his ability to LISTEN and he is better at facing up to his failures and learning from them than any person I’ve ever met. Most coaches who reach icon status become inflexible. THEIR way has always worked and if you question THEIR way something is wrong with YOU. There’s no better example than Krzyzewski’s college coach, the heavyset parody of himself currently working in Lubbock, Texas. Krzyzewski learned long ago that he could take the basketball teachings ofhis old coach and apply them without carrying the emotional baggage that comes with that package. It can be argued that no great coach in the history ofthe game has changed more as he has evolved, both as a coach and as a person, than Krzyzewski. He makes technical changes in the way his team plays every year based on what he thinks suits the talents ofhis players best. This year he
took that philosophy another step, changing the way his team played 29 games into the season aftef Carlos Boozer’s injury. All that change did was win Duke a national championship. Five weeks ago, after Boozer had gone down, I said categorically on a national TV show that Duke was finished, that the Blue Devils would be fortunate to reach the Sweet 16 of the NCAA tournament. I did that in part for effect, since I’m constantly taunted by colleagues because of my Duke connections. But I also did it because I just didn’t see how a team that appeared to have no inside presence could get to The Final Four. Somewhere, someplace a bad shooting night—like Florida last year—would do the team in. Johnny Dawkins, Chris Collins and Steve Wojciechowski railed at me for making such a statement—clearly, with good reason. Krzyzewski kept telling me that I had underestimated this team’s heart. He was right, of course. But he wasn’t completely right. The worst thing I did was underestimate this team’s coach. There are times when I forget just how good Krzyzewski has become. He was a good basketball coach when he first got here from Army in 1980. He was a great basketball coach by the time he won the school’s first national title in 1991. He’s better now. He learned from 1995 that he couldn’t be all things to all people. He figured out after the debacle of 1999 that you have to be careful about the kind of PERSON you recruit, that not every kid is a Duke kid. He’s learned to give his assis-
tant coaches more freedom the same way he has always given his players freedom. I should be forgiven this transgression, though, because I still occasionally have trouble remembering that Mike Krzyzewski, the guy I sat with in a Denny’s at 3 a.m. the morning after a 109-66 loss to Virginia in 1983, is now Coach K, America’s Coach, the man people point to as proof that you can win big and still be someone who can be universally admired (his political lean-
ings notwithstanding). It is difficult now to put in perspective how far Duke and Krzyzewski have come since I was an undergraduate. Understand a couple of things; During my four years at Duke (Class of ’77) when we talked about The Final Four, we were discussing the ACC tournament since the Blue Devils failed to reach the semifinals every year I was in school. Our record against North Carolina: 1-8. Highest finish in the ACC? Tie for sixth—in a seven-team league. Bill Foster put the program back on its feet during his last three seasons but when he left in 1980, the consensus was that those three years had been a blip, that this Polish kid Tom Butters had hired would be overmatched. Remember this: In 1982, Krzyzewski’s second year, Duke was 10-17. North Carolina was the national champion. A year later the record was 10-17. This time, N.C. State won the national title. Krzyzewski was surrounded by Dean Smith—an icon—and Jim Valvano—a rock star. While Butters was receiving death
threats for
extending his contract,
Krzyzewski never flinched. On that memorable night in the Denny’s in Atlanta, someone held up a water glass and said, “Here’s to forgetting tonight.” Krzyzewski picked up his water glass and said, “Here’s to NEVER forgetting tonight.” Duke beat Virginia the next 16 times they played. johnny Dawkins was the break-through recruit in 1982 and Krzyzewski kept right on going from there. Now, it is 2001 and the fans at Carolina and State—not to mention the poor, tortured souls at Maryland—can’t stand the fact that Duke and Krzyzewski keep on winning. Remember the glee two summer ago—most notably in ESPN-thealleged-magazine in a piece written by a
Carolina grad with the morals of an amoeba—when all those players left? The glee is gone. As the chant will surely go next winter in Cameron, “Mike’s got three; Dean got two.” And the three is subject to change
John Feinstein, Trinity ’77 John Feinstein is the author of the bestselling sports novels A Civil War, A Good Walk Spoiled, A Season on the Brink and Hard Courts. He served as sports editor of The Chronicle during his senior year at Duke University.
nside this issue Won
4
Dun
&
Mike Dunleavy propelled the Blue Devils to their third national championship with clutch three-point shooting and 18 secondhalf points. Originally published Tuesday, April 3, 2001
Resilient Duke drowns Turtles
6
•
After falling behind by 22 points, Duke advanced to the national championship game with a stunning comeback that marked the largest in national semifinals history. Originally published Monday, April 2, 2001
Deja blue y J
The Chronicle reprints its victory edition, which was distributed to celebrating students at the bonfire two hours after Duke won the national title. Specidal edition originally published Tuesday, April 3, 2001
Sweet 3-peat A
y (JL
One week after losing Carlos Boozer, Duke defied its doubters by sweeping through the ACC tournament for its third consecutive ACC championship. Originally published Monday, March 19, 2001
Player profiles Shane Battier Mike Dunleavy Chris Duhon Casey Sanders
...
...
Carlos Boozer. ...
Matt Christensen Ryan Caldbeck Dahntay Jones Andre Sweet
Jason Williams Nate James
...
...
J.D. Simpson . Reggie Love Nick Horvath... Andre Buckner Andy Borman . ...
Game-by-game recaps
26
Commemorative edition staff Editors
Brody Greenwald Greg Pessin Assistant Editor Paul Doran Graphics Editor Brian Morray Photography Editor Matt Klein Designed by Bill Gerba, Matt Rosen, Jeremy Zaretzky Cover Photos by Matt Klein Advertising Alise Edwards, Monica Franklin, Dawn Hall, Yu-Hsien Huang, Lars Johnson, Anna Caroilo, Constance Lindsay, Sallyann Bergh, Kate Burgess, Julianna Dudas, Chris Graber, Richard Jones, Margaret Ng, Seth Strickland, Jordana Joffe, Dallas Baker, Jonathan Blackwell, Laura Durity, Lina Fenequito, Megan Harris Dan Librot, Preeti Garg, Ellen Mielke, Veronica Puente-Duany, Cristina Mestre Advertising Director Operations Manager Creative Director Facilitator Production Manager General Manager
Sue Newsome Mary Weaver Adrienne Grant Roily Miller Catherine Martin Jonathan Angier
2001 NCAA CHAMPIONSHIP COMMEMORATIVE EDITION
PAGE 4
The Chronicle TUESDAY, APRIL 3, 2001
CIRCULATION 16,000
THE INDEPENDENT DAILY AT DUKE UNIVERSITY
WWW.CHRONICLE.DUKE.EDU
The Chronicle
82 MINNEAPOLIS, Minn
Duke’s
Arizona 72 starting five made itself a perfect 10 last night, again finding away to win in an unusual fashion. Despite having both of their AllAmericans essentially shut down for much of the night, the topranked Blue Devils (35-4) capitalized on 18 second-half points from forward Mike Dunieavy to win their third-ever national championship. Dunieavy pushed Duke comfortably ahead with three consecutive threepointers early in the second half, and after several mini-runs by Arizona (28-8), the Blue Devils eventually held on for an 82-72 victory last night in the NCAA finals. Still, as atypical as it was for AllAmericans Jason Williams and Shane Battier to combine for 3-for-16 from three-point range, the Blue Devils battled to victory exactly the same way they have in 34 previous games this season. They scrapped, they fought, they dove to the floor, they even made behind-the-back passes to save balls as they were flying out of bounds. “It seemed like the loose ball ended up in their hands instead of in our hands,” Arizona coach Lute Olson said. Olson witnessed first-hand what opposing coaches have seen when facing the Blue Devils all season. It was simply Duke playing Duke
MINNEAPOLIS, Minn. Ever since he arrived at Duke, Mike Dunleavy has been overshadowed. Whether it has been living in the limelight of his NBA
championship-winning father, being considered only the third best in his talented sophomore class, or being known as the lesser of two roommates in comparison to his co-inhabitant Shane Battier, Dunleavy has never received the attention of those who surround him.
Craig Saperstein Game Commentary And while Battier and his teammates weje a key component of Duke’s 82-72 victory over Arizona, it was Dunleavy who carried the Blue Devils in the second half, as they worked
steadily toward Duke’s third national championship ring. The sophomore poured in 18 second-half points, including three straight three-pointers midway through the half, which gave the Blue Devils
basketball, the type of hard-nosed,
rugged play that propelled this starting lineup to a perfect 10-0 to end the season. “They’ve given me their hearts, their minds, and not only that, they’ve given it to each other,” Duke coach Mike Krzyzewski said. “I think you can see it, the courage they show game after game. But they’re just a beautiful group of guys. They’re like old-fashioned guys. They really want to be on a team, and they share things.” Last night, the Blue Devils needed a double-double from Carlos Boozer, a career-high five threepointers by Dunleavy and 40 exhausting minutes from Battier, the Final Four’s Most Outstanding Player. But together they found away, and the national championship trophy will be carried back to Durham for the third time in 11 seasons. “I’m speechless,” said fifth-year senior Nate James, who relinquished his starting spot to freshman Chris Duhon. “All year long we’ve been See CHAMPIONS on page 36
VOL. 96, NO. 125
Dunleavy steps up, leads Duke to 3rd title
By BRODY GREENWALD
Duke
TUESDAY, APRIL 10, 2001
enough breathing room to survive the ever-present Wildcat onslaught. The high-octane
PHOTOS BY MAH KLEIN/THE CHRONICLE
Top to bottom: MIKE DUNLEAVY, the unlikely star of last night’s championship game, hugs Final Four MVP Shane Battier and is swarmed by guards Chris Duhon and Jason Williams as the final buzzer sounds and Duke prepares to be crowned king. COACH MIKE KRZYZEWSKI and the Duke men’s basketball team hoist the NCAA basketball championship trophy.
performance by Dunleavy was extremely gratifying for the Oregon native, who had played a much lesser role throughout most of the NCAA tournament. “It’s about time,” Dunleavy said ofhis shooting streak. “I finally made my shots in the second half and was able to give us a little boost.”
A little boost? Scoring 18 points, including 15 of his team’s 16 points during a sixminute stretch, is hardly a small contribution. Dunleavy gave his team its first doubledigit lead at 49-39 with 16:16 remaining in the contest, and when Arizona attempted to make a run of its own, Duke’s swing man responded with a dunk, followed by a layup with nine minutes left. Those two See DUNLEAVY on page 36 �
2001 NCAA CHAMPIONSHIP COMMEMORATIVE EDITION
TUESDAY, APRIL 10, 2001
Jff*
Buke ®ntbEi‘g!itP Federal Credit Union
~Xe,c\v\
PAGES
E>Jia€ Devils
WovV P<nys o-P-P!
SLTradition ofStezvardsfiip & Support
Since
(919) 684-6704
receiving a federal charter in 1968, the Duke Federal Credit Union has been helping its members save money and obtain credit by offering high-quality financial programs and services tailored to meet the needs of the Duke community.
24-Hour Automated Service Line (919) 660-6000
As a non-profit member-owned financial organization, earnings from loans and investments are returned to members in the form of dividends and services.
Main Office
Membership is open to employees, graduate students paid by Duke University, retirees and alumni of Duke University and their family members.
It is easy to begin receiving the benefits of Duke Federal Credit Union membership. For more information, just call, stop by or check our website.
Way t'O Go, E3lua Pavilsl
Web Site www.dukefcu.duke.edu
1400 Morreene Rd, Durham, NC 27705
Office Hours:
M-Th, 8 am-5 pm; Fri, 8 am-6 pm Drive-Thru Hours: M-Fri, 7:30 am-6 pm
Duke South Office
DURHAM
Lower Level Orange Zone, Rm. 0251
Harriott
Hours: M-Th, 7:30 am-4 pm Fri, 7:30 am-5 pm
AT THE CIVIC CENTER Durham, NC 27701 201 Foster Street fax:9l9-768-6037 phone: 919-768-6000 •
•
Great Job Blue Devils!
2001 NCAA Champions!
Congratulations Duke, on your
CHAMPIONSHIP v
i
s
o
i
n
Duke Students, Employees, and Family Members
Save 20% on a complete pair of
Eyeglasses
The
Melting Pot
Payroll Deduction Available for Duke Employees Duke Eye Center Location Only
a fondue restaurant
SuperOptics www.meltmgpot.net f
*
)l soiiq tiC YVAJ J>ua
«£
y
,
k
■
3100 Wake Forest Road gh, nc 2 7609
Duke Eye Center
EYE CARE
Dip into something different.
c
1-
Main Lobby
6844012
•
M-F 9-5
14 Consultant Place
Homestead Market
Northgate Mall
493-3668 M-Th 9-7, F 9-6, Sat 9-4
544-3937 M-F 9-6, Sat 9-5
286-7732 M-Th 9-8, F-Sat 9-6
*4; it ilt »»S it i ijtlift ■tJ'i i.A a x i i i
«
i
* ±
'»■
\
4 i i sit
'c suq,cr»
3rtOJr iVi-U'J
2001 NCAA CHAMPIONSHIP COMMEMORATIVE EDITION
PAGE 6
The Chronicle MONDAY, APRIL 2, 2001
CIRCULATION 16,000
THE INDEPENDENT DAILY AT DUKE UNIVERSITY
TUESDAY, APRIL 10, 2001
VOL. 96, NO. 124
WWW.CHRONICLE.DUKE.EDU
Resilient Duke drowns Turtles
Blue Devils mount incredible comeback in second half, bounce back from 22-point deficit By BRODY GREENWALD The Chronicle
95 MINNEAPOLIS, Unlike the Minn 84 first meeting between Duke and Maryland, there was no surprise comeback Saturday—only a
Puke Maryland
comeback. For the first 13 minutes of the day’s second national semifinal game, the West
Regional champion Terrapins competed with the furor and excitement of a team playing in its first-ever Final Four. The rest ofthe evening, the Terps (25-11) still
MAH KLEIN/THE CHRONICLE
MARYLAND FRESHMAN CHRIS WILCOX mourns Saturday’s loss to the Blue Devils in the semifinals of the NCAA tournament. Although the Terrapins jumped out to a 22-point lead, Duke came back to win 95-84.
East meets West in tonight’s final By BRODY GREENWALD The Chronicle
MINNEAPOLIS, Minn. The matchup everyone dreamed of in the preseason has arrived at last. Before the season began, it seemed clear that Duke (34-4) and Arizona (287) were a cut above the rest of the field. They were both deep, talented and their rosters were almost entirely intact from
last season. Some polls picked the Wildcats on top, others went with the Blue Devils. But everyone had them No. 1 and No. 2 and everyone, even the players, wanted to see them square off head-to-head. “We’ve always wanted to play Duke, especially when, going into the season, we knew who was going to be No. 1 and No. 2,” Arizona forward Richard Jefferson said. “We asked our coaches why couldn’t we just get a one-game scrimmage with them just to have some fun with it.” With tonight’s NCAA tournament finals set for 9:18 p.m. in the Hubert H. Humphrey Metrodome, the one-game scrimmage between Arizona and Duke is finally here, and the stakes are a national championship. “It’s going to be a special night,” Duke forward Shane Battier said. “I don’t MATT KLEIN/THE CHRONICLE think you could have two better teams, ARIZONA FORWARD RICHARD JEFFERSON lifts the ball from the hands of Michigan State senior See Sportswrap, Monday, April 2, 2001 David Thomas. The Wildcats won 80-61 and will face Duke tonight in the NCAA championship game.
STUDENTS CELEBRATE MARYLAND WIN.*.PR(MiFB
looked like they had never been to the Final Four, but only because of their anxious stagnation and stilted offense. After mounting a 22-point advantage during am incredible opening stretch against conference rival Duke (34-4), Maryland tightened noticeably and let the Blue Devils rally for a 95-84 victory Saturday night in the Hubert H. Humphrey Metrodome. Maryland’s collapse marked the largest halftime lead (11) ever relinquished in an NCAA tournament semifinal game. Although Duke’s tremendous turnaround shattered the morale of a oncebrash Maryland squad, it did not amaze any of the East Regional champions, who said that even down 22 they be-' lieved they would claw their way back. Duke’s come-from-behind win was the team’s third this season—all by doubledigits—against the Terps. “We are Duke and as long as we keep playing, we know we can come back,” fifth-year senior Nate James said. “We were just thinking about settling down. I think we just lost our composure. Once we regrouped, we got ourselves back together.” Duke trailed the entire game until Jason Williams canned a three-pointer with just under seven minutes remaining to put his team up 73-72. Williams’ three came one possession subsequent to the return of Maryland star Terence Morris, who sat out the half’s first 13 minutes with four fouls. The bomb from near the top of the key was the only one of nine three-point attempts made by Duke’s AllAmerica guard, but it was a shot from which Maryland, despite the reappearance of Morris, never recovered. One play after the final official timeout, the game turned dramatically in Duke’s favor. With the Blue Devils ahead by three, point guard Chris Duhon lunged for a steal near halfcourt and came down flat on his back after a brutal collision with Maryland’s Steve Blake. While Duhon was dizzied and laying on the floor for several minutes, player See FINAL FOUR, page 38 I*
D£BAT£
)
»4* t I I 1
«
M
Mat!
,
<
J
,
TUESDAY, APRIL 10, 2001
2001 NCAA CHAMPIONSHIP COMMEMORATIVE EDITION
PAGE?
RHJCiirn jaf
Hie 'Mangle's Premier
"||pSolM£
Shopping and Dining Experience Across the Street Hair Design Brightleaf 905 Restaurant Brinson’s Classic Clothiers Casey & Company Stationers City Lights
Congrats, Congratufations Bfue Devils Duke
ECLECTIC CUISINE
Collections Fashions Color de Mexico El Rodeo Mexican Restaurant
Evans Jewelers
MEDITERRANEAN
Jacks Express Cafe
from all
SOUTHWESTERN
Goldworks Horizon Gallery
NATURAL FOODS
James Kennedy Antiques, Ltd. Mie Gallery
your
TAKEOUTS AVAIL-
Millennium Music Perfect Impression Nail Salon Taverna Nikos Restaurant Satisfaction Restaurant and Bar Simply Hip Boutique Simply the Best Men’s Salon
ABLE
Another Thyme
RESTAURANT
AVAILABLE FOR
fans!
PRIVATE PARTIES,
The Travel Center IVndall Galleries Wentworth & Leggett
AFTER DINNER
“THIS IS A PLACE THAT WALKS LIKE IT TALKS.”
���
■
Rare Books Corner of W. Main and Gregson
N&O FOOD CRITIC
Dinner 7 Nights Reservations Accepted 682-5225 109 N Gregson St Durham Brightleaf Square District 2 Blocks from East Campus •
•
FREEWiDMED PARKING
MANAGED BY
HP West Village 604 Morgan Street, Durham 27701 Features include: Hardwood Floors •
•
•
From theDurham Freeway (NC 147), take the Duke St. exit north. Go right on Morgan St, West Village office is on the left.
919-682-3690
•
Large Terraces and Sun Porches
Extensive Business Center Fully Equipped Fitness Center Restaurant/Caffi and Coffee Shop to open this spring/summer
Five
•
historic
buildings
feature
brand
new
apartments adjacent to Brightleaf Square. 11' to 18' ceilings with
loft
style
exposed brick and
heavy timber columns. High speed Internet access. Over 40 different floorplans Sat 10-5:30, Sun 1-5.
ranging in size from 600-1,860 sq ft. Hours: Mon-Fri 9-6,
www. bluedevilventures. com.
\
BfIKHUEAf Sou«
I «te; ST Viutt .
// /#/*
2001 NCAA CHAMPIONSHIP COMMEMORATIVE EDITION
PAGES
TUESDAY, APRIL 10, 2001
AAR o • When Shane Battier announced he would be returning for his senior season a little more than one year ago, the rising senior emphasized that one of the reasons he decided to stay in college was that he still had “a lot of things to accomplish.” After being selected national player of the year, serving as the chair of the NCAA’s Student Basketball Committee, getting named the Final Four’s Most Outstanding Player and winning a national championship, it is safe to say Battier has been able to cross out everything on his “To Do” list. And of course, his final conquest—which gave Duke its second national championship in the Twin Cities and its third overall—caps a college career that can be described only as a masterpiece. “It’s so good to coach him,” Duke coach Mike Krzyzewski said. “In his career, our team won 133 games and lost 15. Are you kidding me?” Even Arizona coach Lute Olson, who lost to Battier and the Blue Devils in this year’s national championship game, eagerly reminisced about how he was impressed with Battier the first time he set eyes on him. “I remember when I saw him in high school, there was no comparison between him and anyone else you wanted to mention that year,” Olson said. “And the great thing with Shane is that he’s gotten better every year.” Krzyzewski views his senior tri-captain as sort of an on-court coach, a responsibility that he has only delegated to the best players that have entered his program.
pn [QJ r
Li U Vr7 L
forward
Birmingham Mick
It’s complete. All that’s left for me is to ride off into the sunset on a white horse.
“I trust his leadership so much and what he’s going to say, that at the start of every practice, I allow him to be the guy speaking,” Krzyzewski said. “Usually, as a coach, I would get in their huddle and say something to them before each practice. After about three days in October, I just stopped doing that and I allowed Shane to talk to the team. I’ve never done that with a kid.” Battier’s leadership qualities and on-court achievements were enough to make him one of college basketball’s all-time great players. But apparently, they were not enough for the man himself, as he solidified his special place, in NCAA history by taking over in the final minutes of the Duke-Arizona game for his school’s third national championship. While the senior never got his jump shot going, he found other ways to contribute. Battier registered 11 rebounds, six assists and two blocks. But his biggest moments came in the clutch, when he scored on three straight possessions, the first of which was a dunk following a Carlos Boozer miss. Battier then tipped in a shot by Mike Dunleavy, and he capped his run with a thunderous baseline jam which put Duke up by two possessions with three minutes remaining. “All that’s left for me is to ride off into the sunset on a white horse,” Battier said. “I love my guys. We fought, we fought. It was a great year, and this is just the perfect way to end it.” By Craig Saperstein
Congratulations on Duke’s Third National Championship “On the court and off, Krzyzewski is a family man first, a
teacher second, a basketball coach third and a winner at all three. He is what’s right about sports.” -The Sporting News
In Leading with the Heart, Coach K talks about leadership
-
how you
it, how you practice it, and how you use it to move your organization to the top. From the importance of trust, communication, and pride, to the commitment a leader must make to his team, this inspiring book is a must-read for anyone who loves college basketball or who simply wants to win in any competitive environment today. earn
-
sense”
3 ottuc
booW'ho'p
Paperback Regular Price $13.95
Gothic Price $12.56 ardback Regular Price $24 9:
Gothic Price $19.96
Duke University Level Upper Bryan Center (919) 684-3986 e-mail: gothic@informer.duke.edu Monday Friday 8:30 am-5 pm Saturday 10 am-4 pm Student Flex and Major Credit Cards Accepted •
-
Also available in Time Warner Audioßook™
•
Independent
Minds
20% off Hardcovers 10% off Paperbacks Excludes already discounted books and some special orders
Visit our website at www.gothicboohshop duke.edu .
TUESDAY, APRIL 10, 2001
2001 NCAA CHAMPIONSHIP COMMEMORATIVE EDITION
Best Basketball Team on the Planet:
PAGE 9
Congratulations Blue Devils on a 3rd National Title! from your friends at:
Best Burritos on the Planet:
BROOKWOOD INN 2306 Elba Street Durham, NC 27705 919-286-3111 •
•
£Q| Phone 286-1875
Address 1920 Perry st. at Ninth st.
thß
APARTMENTS
CONGRATULATIONS BLUE DEVILS FOR BRINGING HOME ANOTHER CHAMPIONSHIP!
I!® 1000 McQueen Street (Just North of Erwin Road) Durham, NC 27705 Phone: (919) 383-0801 Fax: (919) 383-1283 www.hncolnapts.com email: thebelmont@mindspring.com
t=r EQUAL HOUSING OPPORTUNITY
2001 NCAA CHAMPIONSHIP COMMEMORATIVE EDITION
PAGE 10
/.
sophomore
•
q 4, I
Plainfield, 11J.
TUESDAY, APRIL 10, 2001
Ifc imfltMWPg)*™*' sophomore
All eyes were on Mike Dunleavy as he stepped up to the free throw line Dec. 21. Duke led Stanford 83-82. Dunleavy missed both shots and on the other end of the court, Casey Jacobsen put up a jumper with 3.6
•
Lake Oswego, Ore.
member of the all-star sophomore class, often underrated by the media and opponents alike, who made the difference in the end. For a teen who was still growing when he arrived on campus, Dunleavy lived up to his reputation as a player
seconds remain-
ing. Dunleavy had no choice but to watch the as
with versatility. This season, he was the third-most accurate shooter from the threepoint line, but Dunleavy also demonstrated a
Stanford sophomore’s basket handed the Blue Devils their first When Jason Williams came to Duke, people expected greatness from the McDonald’s All-American. But nobody knew just how great the 6-foot-2 guard would be. In his freshman year, Williams initially showed flashes of brilliance
mixed with rookie mistakes. His drives to the hoop were often Sports Center highlights, but his propensity to commit unnecessary fouls and turn the ball over sometimes overshadowed his talents. He entered his sophomore year de-
termined to show the world what he was capable of. One national championship later, Williams, a first-team AllAmerican, has left no doubt that he is the nation’s premier point guard. “Jason is talented,” fellow All-
American Shane Battier said. “After this year, you sort of lose track of great games and you come to expect great-
ness from him every time he steps on the court and handles the ball.” Williams, whose 21.6 points per game ranked first in the ACC, over-
joyed his coach and teammates when he announced he will return next year for his junior season. After breaking Duke’s single-season scoring record this year, he will try to lead the Blue Devils toward a second consecutive national championship, just as another native of New Jersey—whose No. 11 hangs from the rafters in
Cameron Indoor Stadium—did a decade ago. “The thing I liked about Bobby Hurley the most is that he never quit,” Williams said. “I think we are similar in our ways. He’d put his life on the line for somebody, and I have that same mentality where I’ll do whatever it takes.”
By Evan Davis
loss of the season All eyes—including his fa-
growing presence on the interior. , After his gamebreaking performance in the sec-
ther’s, Portland Trailblazers coach Mike Dunleavy, Sr.—were again
ond half of the championship
the
on
sophomore in the national champi-
game, Dunleavy will forever remain etched in Duke
onship game, eswhen pecially hit Dunleavy
three consecutive three-pointers in 46 seconds to single-handedly deliver Duke its first discernible lead in the game against Arizona. Jason Williams’ back-to-back 30point games inspired “oohs” in the beginning of the tournament and Carlos Boozer’s emphatic return midway through the tournament inspired “ahhs.” Nonetheless, it was the other
a
VP
basketball lore. And he still has two more seasons left. “I think I’ve had a past of playing big in pretty big games, most recently in the NCAA championship game,” he said. “Growing up, going through high school, I always felt pretty comfortable in the spotlight and in big-game situations. And needless to say, in the second half I found that spot again.” By Kevin Lees
°
vvc
up the right place, right now. Dillard's, Hudson Belk and JC Penney Durham/Chapel Hill Boulevard and 15-501 1-40 East to Exit #270
•
919-493-2451
•
www.southsquaremall.com
TUESDAY, APRIL 10, 2001
2001 NCAA CHAMPIONSHIP COMMEMORATIVE EDITION
PAGE 11
irrieat
Summit Square
11
f\ %WaC
*4
i*6t
Apartment Ho m e s
Congratulations,
w
(fA/X (jy
Blue Devils! 2001 NCAA Champions! Summit ORPORAI 614 Snowcrest Trail Off University Dr. Near South Square Mall Durham, NC 27707 www.rent.net/direct/summitsquare/durham Email: smt_square@summitproperties.com
(919) 490-1400 Fax: (919) 493-2376
fe-
E.H.O.
K^TKKKhJ
Kaplan:
Congratulates and
The difference between having dreams and fulfilling them.
thanks the Blue Devils for representing Durham with class and dignity.
There’s simply no question about it. When you take the LSAT, GMAT, GRE, MOAT, DAT, or OAT, no one can prepare you better than Kaplan, With 60 years of proven success getting students into the schools of their choice, we’re the chosen leader in test prep. Just ask anyone who’s taken Kaplan. They can easily be found at a grad school near you
Congratulations Blue Devils! 2001 NCAA Champs! Call today to enroll!
<i32D> 1-800-KAP-TEST www.kaptest.com
�Test names are registered trademarks of their respective owners
4139 Chapel Hill Blvd. (in front of South Square Mall) 489-2848
2001 NCAA CHAMPIONSHIP COMMEMORATIVE EDITION
PAGE 12
JM© JtefflDdi senior
•
Mi ©dill
***
Washington D.C.
Nate James, a fifth-year senior and tri-captain for the Blue Devils, started in 29 of Duke’s 39 games this season. Despite ranking second among the team’s starters with a shooting percentage of .494, James found himself overlooked by the media, being named the ACC’s most underrated player by Athlon magazine. “It doesn’t matter what everybody else thinks,” the two-time captain said earlier in the season. “With the media, I’m the unsung hero and all that garbage. I have to go out there and play because my team needs me. “If I don’t play well, we’re not going to win.” James’ attitude was reflected in his play this season. For example, his effort against Clemson’s Will Solomon—holding the second-team All-ACC guard to 11 points on 4-for-16 shooting—was remarkable, as were his career-high 27 points that very same evening. “Nate is a great all-around player,” fellow tri-captain Shane Battier said. “He gives us a lift.... We have faith in him.” The 6-foot-6 guard had an additional year to hone his game after an ankle injury forced James to redshirt his second season. The extra time had its benefits, however, as the Washington D.C. native became the only player in ACC history to win or share five regular-season conference titles.
James’ play earned him leaguewide respect, but his reputation as a
TUESDAY, APRIL 10, 2001
freshman Expectations for freshman Chris
Duhon were soaring before he even set foot in a Duke classroom. The 6-foot-1 guard brought with him a litany of accolades. Duhon received the 2000 Morgan Wooten Award, given
annually to the nation’s top high
•
>«'"
Slidell, La. that my coach has a lot of confidence in what I do and my teammates do. I just go out and play with a lot of passion.” That confidence was clearly expressed in Duke’s next game, a win over Villanova, in which Duhon put up 17 while points 6-for-8 going from the field. And from
school player. As McDonald’s All-American, Duhon won the a
there, he never looked back. All-America teammate Jason Williams,
three-point
shooting contest and was honored with the game’s
a
Blue clutch performer was cemented in
the ACC tournament semifinals, when his tip-in with 1.3 seconds remaining gave the Blue Devils a two-
point victory over Maryland. “You don’t just fall into those types of plays, you make those plays happen,” Battier said. “That’s the result of a five-year player making a big play in a big game.” By Evan Davis
sophomore,
said Duhon was more solid as a freshman this
Naismith Sportsmanship Award. Despite beginning the season on the bench, he was expected to contribute just as much as the
year
than
Williams was a
Devils’
starting five But in Duke’s regular first season game, an 87-50 drubbing of the Princeton Tigers, Duhon seemed reluctant to shoot, taking only three shots while leading the Blue Devils in turnovers and personal fouls. Some questioned Duhon’s abilities, but the freshman remained confident. “I have a lot of confidence in what I do,” he said later that weekend. “I know
year ago. Duhon’s dependability proved vital in a late-season contest against Wake Forest, in which his buzzer-beating floater gave Duke a twopoint win over the Demon Deacons. A week later, Duhon found himself in a new role, replacing Nate James in the starting five. “Duhon is awesome,” senior Shane Battier said after beating Wake. “He is no longer a freshman in my book.” By Evan Davis
The Washington Duke Inn
%
Golf Club
Congratulates
The Duke
University
Blue Devils on
Winning Their Third National Championship
to the Duke Blue Devils 2001 National Champions! -
Duke Basketball and t(je Washington Duke Inn... Two Winning Teams Bringing
Excellence to Duke University
Dillard’s Monday-Saturday 10am 9pm Sunday 12:00pm 6pm South Square Mall 493-0511
3100 CAMERON BLVD. DURHAM, NORTH CAROLINA
-
-
•
WSLW
919-490-0999 WWW.WASHINGTONDUKEINN.COM *
TUESDAY, APRIL 10, 2001
2001 NCAA CHAMPIONSHIP COMMEMORATIVE EDITION
PAGE 13
Congratulations to Duke Men’s Basketball 2001 National Champions 15 LOCATIONS TO CALL HOME Full Size Washer and Dryer Included
Furnished Units Available
Hawks Nest Tow 2 Bedroom, 11/2 baths, 8-10 minutes from Duke, easy access to 15-501 (1 year lease only). $695-$715
>x East & W( 2 & 3 Bedroom, 21/2 baths, located off Neal Rd. 11/2 mi from West Campus (1 year lease only). $760-$960
Birchwood Located off Chapel Hill Rd, 5 min from Campus. $540-$595
ite Townho 2 Bedroom, 21/2 baths, includes W/D 1,025- 1,162 Sq. Ft.
Forest Pointe
$765-$795
2 miles from East Campus. Walking distance to Northgate Mall.
Lochrid
$490-$565
;e Townhomi 2 & 3 Bedroom, 21/2 baths, located in Woodcraft 15-20 min. from Duke (1 year lease only)
Dupont Circle
Woodcroft
$760-$960
Fox
!hase Ai
Located off Morreene Rd, 3 miles from West Campus. (3 month lease available) $345-$490
utmem
4ii* m
Bradford Ridge
Woodcraft, 15 minutes from Duke
1 mile from West Campus on S. LaSalle St. $560-$615
$570-$625
Audubon Lake A
Lenox East
Conveniently located near Woodcroft
1 Bedroom, Located off Neal Rd., 4.5 miles from West Campus. $560-$615
TICON PROPERTIES
$5BO-$635
501 Audubon Lake Durham, NC
udub >n Lake Towi
(919) 361-9616
2 & 3 Bedroom, conveniently located near Woodcroft 15 min. from Duke (1 year lease only).
Open:
TICON PROPERTIES
Mon-Fri 8:30 am spm Sat 10 am 4 pm -
$760-$970
-
Features:
B II B
Dishwasher Disposal Full size WASHER AND DRYER (optional) Ceiling fans Security System Attic storage (2 br only) Swimming pool, clubhouse and weight room privileges •
•
•
•
•
•
Durham, NC 27707
•
1 Bedroom 1 Bath $520-$590 includes W/D 2 Bedroom 2 Vi Bath
Pine Ridge
;
$790-$BlO includes W/D
3 Bedroom 2 Vi Bath $970-$990 includes W/D
;
i; eatures •
Sutton Place II
Frost free refrigerator with icemaker Stove
Off Fayetteville Rd. near Woodcroft
•
•
Vaulted ceiling (2 br only) Outside storage •
•
•
Patio/Balcony
Small pets conditional •
Dishwasher •
•
Disposal
Full size WASHER AND DRYER (optional) Ceiling fans
TICON PROPERTIES 1 Swiftstone Court Durham, NC 27713
(919) 484-1000 1 Bedroom Apartments and 2 & 3 Bedroom Townhomes
•
Security System Attic storage (2 br only) Swimming pool, clubhouse and •
•
•
Open: Mon-Fri 8:30 am spm Sat 10 am 4 pm -
-
Sutton Place To 2 Bedroom, 21/2 baths, 20 minutes from Duke. Easy access 1-40 & RTF (1 year lease only)
Villa; ;e of Corn 2 Bedroom, 21/2 baths, located off Cornwallis Rd. 10 minutes from Duke, (short term leases available) $750-$770
•
1 Bedroom 1 Bath $535-$650 includes W/D 2 Bedroom 2 or 2 1/2bath $785 $Bl5
3 Bedroom 2 1/2 Bath
$9754995
to
$750-$770
•
New Haven
$560-
$615
•
•
•
Wood-burning fireplaces Built-in bookshelves
•
Security system Ceiling Fans
•
•
Washer/dryer optiona
II p
•
Attic space/outdoor storage Dishwasher Disposal Swimming pool, clubhouse, and
weight room privileges
Model Open Monday-Friday 8:30-5:00, Saturday 10:00-4:00 Located in RTF only minutes from Duke!
TICON PROPERTIES
:J
2001 NCAA CHAMPIONSHIP COMMEMORATIVE EDITION
PAGE 14
TUESDAY, APRIL 10, 2001
CONGRATULATIONS 2001 National Champions!
a
Great
Value!
BLUE PEVIL9
Manor 383-6683 Veteran's Hospital
.
'Duke Medical
Duke
WAY TO GO,
CefXef
University
Duke
Location!
■Pett=l O-
Short-term leases now available.
cilapeL
Duk& Villa
J)uke Manor
TOWEIi
APARTMENTS
APARTMENTS
311 LaSalle Street
1505 Duke University Road
APARTMENTS
1315 Morreene Road
383-6683 493-4509 383-6677 1-800-433-2801
1-800-550-0282
Affordable rent levels Laundry facilities Six tennis courts Two swimming pools
•
•
•
•
•
•
Volleyball courts
•
•
4§f
''
two bedroom
plans
•
Air conditioning
•
Separate dining area Carpeting
•
•
•
•
Laundry Swimming pool
•
Swimming pool Laundry Access to fitness center, sauna, and tennis
Cable television available
wmW
courts
/
'miW
Wott§>
SAUmU ®_MFE_A -7
& two bedroom plans Carpeting Si air conditioning Dishwasher, disposal
One
•»!%
(/;
\i r
&
•
•
*k%
One
•
•
Fitness center & sauna Fantastic clubhouse
•
i (h
/
v/nJills
i
p
""
; ”■
'SN I -
\
*
(gaMHMiiwii
Mediterranean Cuisine
/ /
4-201 University Drive Durham 499-5770 www.aaladelia.com •
•
_
o
■
Great
7
m
Congratulations on the NCAA Basketball
Championship!
o
2001 NCAA CHAMPIONSHIP COMMEMORATIVE EDITION
TUESDAY, APRIL 10, 2001
Caste S®®» sophomore
•
ifiiitteri) ceniw
center
Juneau, flk.
sophomore
When a fractured third metatarsal rendered Carlos Boozer useless, it looked like the beginning of the end for the Blue Devils, “The loss of Carlos Boozer is unbelievable this late in the season,” Dick Vitale said at the time. “The one guy the Blue Devils couldn’t afford to lose was Boozer on the interior.” Obviously, it was not the end. An amazing series of games in the NCAA tournament, crowned by a national championship, later proved that fateful break
and foreshadowed
However, it was the initial injury to the Juneau, Ak. native that put Duke in its championship position in the first place. When he went down against Maryland, Duke had to restructure its entire offense.
3aa\wjMpv
CON
■:
|yN;:i
!
%
Upon his return, the Blue Devils were more lethal than ever before, incorporating a rejuvenated Boozer into their new, quick offense for a combination that led them to the national championship. “I worked very hard to get back, extra stuff in practice, going before and after practice trying to get into game speed,” Boozer said. “I just needed to get my instincts back and it paid offthe last two games.” By Paul Doran :
-10 shooting.
Haywood. But Sanders stuffed Haywood twice in the first 10 minutes and
ers haven’t seen a player like me on the team,” Sanders said last January.
should have been at all
great things to come. In the title game, Boozer put up 12 points and grabbed 12 boards to help neutralize Arizona star Loren Woods. In the national semifinals against Maryland, he scored 19 while holding a surging Lonny Baxter, who had been playing better than anyone in the country, to 10 points on 2-for-
Tampa, Fla.
•
Midway through the season, few because we’re really going to need him,” lieved Casey Sanders would give Duke Mike Dunleavy said after that game. the depth inside that it needed for a Boozer’s injury put Sanders in the championship run. But the former Mc- starting lineup the next week at North Donald’s All-American believed in his Carolina, where many expected the lanky sophomore game and, for most of the seato be dominated by the more expeson, quietly waitrienced 7-foot-l ed his turn senior Brendan “A lot of play-
against Maryland was only a catalyst. The injury took Boozer to the level he year
PAGE 15
seemed to demoralize the Tar Heel center all after-
“Being able to make plays on defense and blocking shots and stuff like that. When I come into my own, I’ll be something new to the team.” Sanders at last got the opportunity to play substantial minutes when
noon. He was one of the keys to the game, and he earned a starting spot for the rest of the season. He carried this
momentum all the way to Min-
neapolis, helping contain Maryland big man Lonny Baxter, center Carlos one of the hottest Boozer broke his players in the against foot Maryland in Duke’s final home game tournament at the time, and then helping control Loren Woods in the finals. of the season. The Blue Devils suddenIt was a long road for the Florida naneeded and ly help in the frontcourt, they knew where it had to come from. tive, but Sanders had finally arrived. By Thomas Steinberger “I hope Casey is ready to step up be-
/
B§tBPH
mb
jgPffin |otH|h
fHf nil B9| MB|
»S0
JHni
AjH fl EBH| BHRtj fljlgliN^^w v
1
SB
Hi
2001 NCAA CHAMPIONSHIP COMMEMORATIVE EDITION
PAGE 16
JJo ilpli senior
J
I
HUM
guard
junior
During his four years at Duke, J.D. Simpson was never a name to appear in
the midst of heated basketball discussions. The four-year player was referred to by fans more often as the basket-
ball team’s pretty boy than as a legitimate player, but last semester, Simpson earned a new title by which he is called—team captain. Unlike the obvious choices of fifth-year seniors Nate James and Shane Battier, Simpson’s ascension to captain last January surprised everyone from loyalists of the basketball program to J.D. himself. “I was really honored and it has been a dream come true for me,” Simpson said. “Being captain of Duke basketball is amazing.” The who, what, when and where were easy enough to grasp. The why, however, was a little bit trickier for outsiders, especially considering Simpson only scored a total of 41 points in his career. Still, his peers tell of a different side to Simpson, one that may not be evident from the stadium seating in Cameron. “J.D. has earned it just as much as any captain before him,” said assistant coach Steve Wojciechowski, who, as a captain three years ago, watched Simpson progress during his freshman season. “Just because he’s a walk-on, nothing was given to him.... This is something J.D. has earned and he deserves.” By Brody Greenwald
ate
Qji®
4-
| forward
freshman
Belmont, Mass.
Woodside, Calif.
or t
TUESDAY, APRIL 10, 2001
•
Charlotte, R.C.
Few people have had as unique a role on a championship team as Matt Christensen. After coming to Duke for the 1995-96 season, Christensen took the next three seasons off after two Mormon missions and a redshirt during the 1998-99 Final Four campaign. He came back the following season and started his first two games, only to be replaced by the more atheltic Carlos Boozer. At the beginning of this year, he seemed lost as the only junior on a team focused around its senior leadership and sophomore ath-
When freshman Reggie Love first stepped on the court last Decem-
ber, he was undoubtedly physically
innately talent-
enough
Christensen said. Tm excited to be with a coaching staff that has a high regard for me.” That potential Christensen talked about first showed itself when he began to work himself into the rotation as the seventh man. Then, with Boozer’s injury, Christensen became a part of the center-by-committee group that led Duke through the ACC tournament and into the NCAAs. And now, six years after stepping foot onto campus, he finally has his ring. By Paul Doran
r a
tree
enter
can only envy.
to
gather signifigant minutes. “I feel like I’ve got terrific potential,”
capable.
After spending the fall playing wide receiver for the football team, Love made the transition to the poshardcourt, sessing a level of strength that many Division I basketball players
leticism. Christensen was not old enough to assume a leadership role, yet not ed
forward
H
Despite being used rarely during the regular season, Love nonetheless showed enough ability to let fans believe that he could contribute some time in the future. But then, seemingly out of nowhere, he gave the Blue Devils key minutes in their first-round ACC tournament game against N.C. State. “When Reggie came in, he gave us a big boost,” coach Mike Krzyzewski said after Duke defeated the Wolfpack. “His play was unbelievably instrumental in the win, and it’s good to see that people are coming off the bench and doing that for us. For Reggie to give us those minutes in front of 40,000 people, that’s the best experience you can have.” Assuming he can avoid an injury on the football field, Love will definitely be in Krzyzewski’s plans for
next season.
By Thomas Steinberger
a r
TUESDAY, APRIL 10, 2001
2001 NCAA CHAMPIONSHIP COMMEMORATIVE EDITION
PAGE 17
We Would like To
Congratulate The Duke Blue Devils For Winning The 2001 NCAA Championship
m) -A X.
'
■
Congratulations on your championship and thanks for your support throughout the season!
...and invite you to visit Cameron Woods, a winning neighborhood just minutes from Duke University.
3211 Shannon Road, Suite 106 � Durham, NC 27707
(919)493-7797
We'd like to introduce you to some of our well-known advisers. What’s in a name? Depends on the names. Take the companies you see below. They’re investment advisers for the 64 variable investment options offered by VALIC’s Portfolio Director® Fixed and Variable Annuity (Portfolio Director) for retirement plan investors. With Portfolio Director you can invest in one or more fixed options and/or a wide array of variable options*.
T American
ARIEL MUTUAL FUNDS
TRoweßicelk
*
Century.
JANUS
**»»*«■* tinm MANAetMiMi
NtUBERGER
Oreyius I Founder*Funds’
BERMAN
ITlx
Ureyfus
Sd MutualFundi
JPMorgan
I
HSI
1
American
General Group
MORGAN STANLEYDEANWITTER INVESTMENT MANACEMENT MILLS* ANDEtSON*SUEEEEED
SSgA.
0 INVESCO
State Street
PART
FRANKLIN.TEMPLETON. INVESTMENTS
When you select Portfolio Director variable options,* you have access
Spediluu
PUTNAMINVESTMENT
Financial
Evergreen Funds*
Growth
not
only
to
OF CREDIT SUISSE
I
Tliompson, Siegel &Walnule# Inc
the specialized
knowledge and experience of some of America’s best-known investment managementcompanies, but VALIC’s more than 45 years as a retirement plan provider.
to
So, if you’d like help with a program that can help you live your retirement dream, visit www.vaiic.com or call
David Ward at 1-800-892-5558 ext. 89039
Annuity contracts typically include limitations, surrender charges, exclusions and expense charges. For more completeinformation about Portfolio Director, including fees, charges, expenses and contract limitations, please log on to www.valic.com or call 1-800-448-2542 to obtain a prospectus. Please read the prospectuses) carefully before investing or sending money. Portfolio Director is offered by The Variable Annuity Marketing Company (VAMCO).
Homes From The Mid s2oos For More Information Call 489-8617
RICAN
I I
Investment return and principal value in the variable options will fluctuate so that an investor's units, when withdrawn, may be worth more or less than their original cost.
Located midway between Durham and Chapel Hill, Cameron Woods offers convenient access to all the local hot spots. Duke University, UNC Chapel Hill, Brightleaf Square and Franklin Street are all only minutes away Plus 15/501 provides quick and easy access to RIP and RDU International Airport A combination of master-crafted homes, beautiful homesites and a terrific location make Cameron Woods a perfect place to call home. Call or visit Cameron Woods today and discover for yourself the convenience of Durham’s most desirable neighborhood.
General
Financial
Group
VALIC is a member of American General Financial Group,
the marketing name and service mark owned and used by American General Corporationand its subsidiaries.
O 2000 VAUC (The Vwlable Annuity Life Insurance Company) Houston. Texas
www.vafic.com
l=J
Developed By W&W Partners, Inc. Sales by Coldwell Banker Advantage New Homes
OMERONK! VJWOODSfc7i Directions:Take Garrett Road North to right on Pickett Road. Cameron Woods is located on Pickett Road justbehind the Durham Herald Sun.
2001 NCAA CHAMPIONSHIP COMMEMORATIVE EDITION
PAGE 18
CSpi MflWfe
MA sophomore
A
forward
senior
TUESDAY, APRIL 10, 2001
irate
guard %»«ii
f
guard
*
Men Hills, film. It would have been a dream for Nick Horvath to play and win the national championship in front of a friendly crowd in his home state of Minnesota. Unfortunately for the sophomore, a compressed stress fracture left him sidelined for most of the season. He was granted a medical redshirt, and will return to the lineup next season with three years of eligibility remaining. By Paul Doran
®iir® teter sophomore
guard
Senior Ryan Caldbeck only tallied one field goal the past two
years—but it was a memorable one. In the 2000 ACC tournament opener against Clemson, Caldbeck drained a three-pointer to break the record for most threes in an ACC tournament game. The Vermont native rounds out the winningest class in the history of college basketball. By Thomas Steinberger
guard
Chris Duhon, but nonetheless contributed to the team. Providing stifling on-the-ball defense in practice against Duhon and Jason Williams, the younger brother of former AllACC honoree Greg Buckner played 83 minutes in 23 games for the Blue Devils this season. By Craig Saperstein
tonam
sophomore
guard
IRorrisuHle, M.
Hopkinsville, Andre Buckner, a 5-foot-9 point guard, saw little playing time this year because of the emergence of
backcourt sensation Chris Duhon. Sweet showed signs of steady improvement in the first half of the season, averaging 4.1 points per game. But the freshman was suspended for the remainder of the season over winter break due to academic difficulties. By Kevin Lees
(Mi
[Mot®® junior
Out of Manhattan, N.Y., Andre Sweet was only one of two freshman recruits this season, joining
For Dahntay Jones, it might have seemed like an inferno watching every home game from the Cameron sidelines this year. When the Rutgers transfer, who flew on his own to every away game, takes the court next season, he will likely make an immediate impact. This season, however, Jones was forced, per NCAA rules, to participate only in practices. By Kevin Lees
Andy Borman, one ofDuke’s rare two-sport athletes, made his way onto the basketball team midway through the 1999-2000 season in large part because ofhis bloodlines. After the soccer season concluded, the nephew of Mike Krzyzewski joined the Blue Devils but only saw 12 minutes of action. This season, Borman played little again, scoring six points in 17 minutes. By Brody Greenwald
Congratulations Duke NCAA Champions!! From everyone at Campus Florist
700 9th Street 286-5640
TUESDAY, APRIL 10, 2001
2001 NCAA CHAMPIONSHIP COMMEMORATIVE EDITION
PAGE 19
TM
2001 NCAA
NaU-emi Cfumpim merckmdiM waiMk •
CfatfUnfr
*
HuU
•
Gtfjtfr
PAGE 20
2001 NCAA CHAMPIONSHIP COMMEMORATIVE EDITION
TUESDAY, APRIL 10, 2001
East Regional #1 Duke Duke 95-52 #l6 Monmouth
Duke 94-81
#8 Georgia Missouri 70-68
#9 Missouri
Duke 76-63
Greensboro, N.C.
#5 Ohio State Utah State 77-68 #l2 Utah State
UCLA 75-50
#4 UCLA UCLA 61-48
#l3 Hofstra
Philadelphia, Penn.
Duke 76-69
#6 Southern Cal Southern Cal 69-54
#ll Oklahoma
2001 Fi
Southern Cal 74-71
#3 Boston College Boston Colie! Ie 68-65 #l4 Southern Utah Uniondale, N. Y.
Southern Cal 80-76
#7 lowa lowa 69-56
Saturday March 31
#lO Creighton Kentucky 92-79
#2 Kentucky
Hubert H. Humphrey Me
Kentucky 72-68 #l5 Holy Cross
jjgf
Champic '
Tip-on I
Duk
West Regional #1 Stanford Stanford 89-60
%%
#l6 UNC-Greensboro St. Josei hs 66-62
Stanford 78-65
San Diego, Calif.
#5 Cincinnati Cincinnati 84-59
#l2
Brigham Young
Cincinnati 66-43
#4 Indiana Kent State 77-73 #l3 Kent State
Anaheim, Calif.
#6 Wisconsin Geon lia St; ite 50-49
#ll Geon lia State
Maryland 79-60
#3 Maryland land 83-80 #l4 George Mason Boise, Idaho
land 76-66
#7 Arkansas Geon letown #lO Geon letown
63-61 Georgetown 76-57
#2 lowa State Hampton 58-57
#l5 Ham
*
Arizo
Stanford 90-83
#8 Georgia Tech #9 St. Josei
â&#x2013;
Maryland 87-73
TUESDAY, APRIL 10, 2001
2001 NCAA CHAMPIONSHIP COMMEMORATIVE EDITION
South Regional
im
#1 Michigan State Michigan State 69-35
ÂŤL.J
#l6 Alabama State
Michigan State 81-65
#8 California Fresno State 82-70 Michigan State 77-62
Memphis, Tenn.
#9 Fresno State #5 Virginia
Gonzaga 86-85
#l2 Gonzaga Gonzaga 85-68
#4 Oklahoma Indiana State 70-68
Michigan State 69-62
Indiana
Atlanta, Ga.
#6 Texas Temple 79-65
al Pour
Temple 75-54
#3 Florida Florida 69-56
'estern ientuc
Lome; Minneapolis, Minn.
Temple 84-72
New Orleans, La
#7 Penn State Penn State 69-59
Saturday March 31
#lO Providence
Penn State 82-74
#2 North Carolina North Carolina 70-48
iiiiiif
#l5 Princeton
nal ii* d wtJ9 p.m* v
QO
Midwest Regional
oc
#1 Illinois Illinois 96-54 #l6 Northwestern State
70 / /
Illinois 79-61
lt
#8 Tennessee
~
Charlotte 70-63
ss^P Illinois 80-64
Dayton, Ohio Syracuse 79-69
mmmm m
mhmh
mm*k
â&#x2013; mmm
_
.
Kansas 87-58
Jj
mb
Arizona 87-81
ennessee #5 Syracuse #l2 Hawaii
#4 Kansas Kansas 99-75 #l3 Cal-State Northridge
San Antonio, Texas
#6 Notre Dame Notre Dame
83-71 [avier
Mississippi 59-56
#3 Mississippi
Mississippi 72-70 Arizona 66-56
Kansas City, Mo.
#7 Wake Forest Butler 79-63 #lO Butler
Arizona 73-52
#2 Arizona Arizona 101-76 #l5 Eastern Illinois
PAGE 21
2001 NCAA CHAMPIONSHIP COMMEMORATIVE EDITION
PAGE 22
TUESDAY, APRIL 10, 2001
� EXTRA � NCAA VICTORY EDITION � EXTRA �
The Chronicle TUESDAY, APRIL 3,2001
CIRCULATION 5,000
THE INDEPENDENT DAILY AT DUKE UNIVERSITY
Special Edition Bringing it home The Blue Devils will return to campus to celebrate their victoryTuesday at 2:15 p.m. in Cameron Indoor Stadium. WWW.CHRONICLE.DUKE.EDU
Dei a blue
SJ VOL. 96, NO. 125A
Duke completes magical season with national title The Blue Devils repeated their 1992 run through Greensboro, Philadelphia and Minneapolis By BRODY GREENWALD The Chronicle
82 MINNEAPOLIS, Minn. Mike Krzyzewski and 72 his Blue Devils will hang a twin banner from the Twin Cities. In last night’s matchup between the East’s elite school and the best from the West, Krzyzewski’s Blue Devils (35-4) slipped past the Arizona Wildcats (28-8), 82-72, to claim Duke’s first men’s basketball national championship since 1992. Duke triumphed despite uncharacteristically poor shooting nights by All-Americans Jason Williams and Shane Battier, but there was nothing out of the ordinary about the win itself. The Blue Devils pulled out the victory the same way they have all season, by scrapping for loose balls and out-hustling, out-fighting and out-willing their opponent. “It’s complete. All that’s left for me is to ride off into the sunset on a white horse,” Battier said. “I love my guys. We fought, we fought. It was a great year, and this is just the perfect way for us to end it.” Trailing by eight points with a minute left, the Wildcats came up with the defensive stop they needed when center Loren Woods stripped Williams. But Duke’s point guard stuck with the play and forced the ball out of bounds off Woods. Williams then went to the line for two shots, and after he missed the second free throw, Final Four MVP Battier beat a pack ofWildcats to the loose ball and all but sealed the Blue Devils’ national title. As the seconds ticked off the clock and the celebration began for the Blue Devils, a tearful Battier bear-hugged teammate, roommate and unsung hero Mike Dunleavy, who talked a team-high 21 points, including three straight three-pointers early in the second half. “The effort has been there. The togetherness has been there,” Arizona coach Lute Olson said. “Everything I think they could do has been done. I told them in the locker room that I don’t want to see anyone come out of the locker room with their heads hanging.” Duke’s 2001 title banner will be raised to the rafters of Cameron Indoor Stadium alongside the ’92 banner. The Blue Devils became the first team ever to net two national titles with the same itinerary. In what seemed destined as soon as the pairings were released, Duke finished in Minneapolis’ Hubert H. Humphrey Metrodome after marching through Greensboro and Philadelphia to win the East Regional, just as they did in the ’92 title season.
Duke Arizona
MAH KLEIN/THE CHRONICLE
THE GAME’S STAR MIKE DUNLEAVY is mobbed by teammates Chris Duhon and Jason Williams after Duke closes out its third national championship in 11 seasons.
TUESDAY, APRIL 10, 2001
2001 NCAA CHAMPIONSHIP COMMEMORATIVE EDITION
Harris Teeter
The Best Is What We're All About
Congratulates the Duke Blue Devils on winning the 2001 NCAA Championship
«&/in
ol,s
CONGRATULATIONS 2001 NATIONAL CHAMPIONS!
INTERNATIONAL
HIOHWAY 54 JUST OFF 1-40, EXIT 273, CHAPEL HILL (919)493-6311
PAGE 23
TUESDAY, APRIL 10, 2001
2001 NCAA CHAMPIONSHIP COMMEMORATIVE EDITION
PAGE 24
Sweet 3-peat Duke rolls over Carolina despite Williams’ sprained ankle By BRODY GREENWALD The Chronicle
One 79 ATLANTA week, four games, no
Puke .
53 more skeptics. When the Blue Devils lost center 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.
UNC
“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 ofrapid-fire pumps •of his right arm that were as electrifying to the Duke cheering section as one
PHOTOS BY MATT 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.
ofhis 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.”
TUESDAY, APRIL 10, 2001
2001 NCAA CHAMPIONSHIP COMMEMORATIVE EDITION
PAGE 25
4® ÜBS Warburg W?"
'"'
%
“
■
,
%
r
i
I ;. /
V-
3
*»"-
fiNi** »*■ ui .
~%
y»V'
o
;l
...
J“
fpu
■•-,■„
.
§
•
d
Unlimited congratulations to the Blue Devils on their championship season.
www.ubswarburg.com ÜBS Warburg is a business group of ÜBS AG. In theU.S., securities underwriting, trading and brokerage activities and M&A advisory activities are conducted by ÜBS Warburg LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of ÜBS AG thatis a registered broker-dealerand a memberof the New York Stock Exchange and other principal exchanges and SI PC, In the U.K., theseservices are provided by ÜBS Warburg Ltd., a wholly owned subsidiary of ÜBS AG thatis regulated in the U.K. by theSFA, to persons who are not private customers in theU.K.
unlimited Global careers in
investment banking
PAGE 26
2001 NCAA CHAMPIONSHIP COMMEMORATIVE EDITION
TUESDAY, APRIL 10, 2001
ion
out
'ip.
to ;on
o o JZ
0) £
CD
TUESDAY, APRIL 10, 2001
2001 NCAA CHAMPIONSHIP COMMEMORATIVE EDITION
PAGE 27
Congratulations Duke on being Congratulations National Champions!
NCAA 2001 National
Champions! From your neighbors.
Stravberr Xg&BBSM
471-8474 1321 New Castle Road Mon-Fri 8-5
WHOLE FOODS [MAR
621 Broad Street
Congratulations! To Graduating Sociology Majors
Nate James and J.D. Simpson and the rest of the
2001 National Champions
Wat TO GO
Buie Devils! Department of Sociology Duke University
www-soc.dukc.edu email: socdept@socduke.edu
•
K
E
Durham, N C
T
•
"
286-2290
2001 NCAA CHAMPIONSHIP COMMEMORATIVE EDITION
PAGE 28
TUESDAY, APRIL 10, 2001
S3
w 104-1 There were many tougt season. This was not c Duke opened with a 3459-18 at intermission. K 5-of-23 and had 20 turn halftime. Shane Battle; points, while Jason Wit 20 or more for the fo game. By Har
January —
@
Florida S
Ciiiir Cpntpr Talla
Duke Men’s Basketball Team you Are McMagical
Congratulations from your friends at MCDONALD’S on Campus You MadeUsSmile!
TUESDAY, APRIL 10, 2001
2001 NCAA CHAMPIONSHIP COMMEMORATIVE EDITION
PAGE 29
Trinity Properties Congratulations Duke!
C.C. WOODS
2001 NCAA Champions
CONSTRUCTION COMPANY, INC
May we all aspire to live up to your standards.
DURHAM, NX.
COMMERCIAL, INDUSTRIAL AND INSTITUTIONAL BUILDERS FOR 67 YEARS
Congratulations 2001 NCAA Basketball Champions “Building For And Growing With The Triangle Area” Please call (919) 309-9765 e-mail trinprop@aol.com website: WeßentApts.com
RO. Box 569 Durham, NC 27702 919/489-9116
lw|
Ask your friends about us!
ASSOCIATE MEMBER
Thanks for the „
#l ■
.
-t*
fS
'
Mm jfg. 'vrp
“
■
memories. v i;
•.
1
■’ ;'!•:>''
:;
*oo ■ m ;
B*’ 8
g*
**’
y-
''"s
Congratulations to the 2001 NCAA Men's Basketball Champions
The Chronicle The Duke Community’s Daily Newspaper
PAGE 30
2001 NCAA CHAMPIONSHIP COMMEMORATIVE EDITION
TUESDAY, APRIL 10, 2001
February 11,2001 vs. N.C. State
Cameron Indoor Stadium
w ion-:
In what Shane Battier described as Ms
ut
17-0 me ':
Congratulations to Coach K and the Team!
We're mighty
proud of the Blue Devils!
Congratulations 2001 NCAA Champs!
Retirement Community 2701 Pickett Road, Durham, NC 27705
Telephone 919-490-8000 Facsimile 919-490-0887 www.forestduke.com
TUESDAY, APRIL 10, 2001
2001 NCAA CHAMPIONSHIP COMMEMORATIVE EDITION
PAGE 31
Becker Automotive
Congratulations Blue Devils
3 Championships in lO pears
Congratulations, Blue Devils!
IM Mll \3
1 \j
Only
Volvo Service VOLVO
\j
� Our Experience � Our Honesty
Our Integrity � Our Quality
�
Neil Becker, Owner 123 Years Combined Volvo Experience Located four doors from the China Inn Restaurant 271 l-B Hillsborough Road, Durham 286-3442 Mon Fri Bam-s:3opm www.beckerautovolvo.citysearch.com •
-
1350 Raleigh Road (Hwy 54) Chapel Hill (919) 942-2400 www.Auroraßestaurant.com •
2001 NCAA CHAMPIONSHIP COMMEMORATIVE EDITION
PAGE 32
@
TUESDAY, APRIL 10, 2001
St. Joh
ipiPiiiiii ,n S!
the
Adam Hall's basket w ends left capped an am for Virginia, which had I the Blue Devils earlier Chris Duhon had a bre shooting 5-for-6 from arc and scoring 20 | playing in place of a B Mike Dunleavy.
hapless Red Storn scored 26 points, gr? rebounds and dished o as Duke made this gar early. By Broc
February 27
march 4
Blue Devils hammere 91-59, taking out mi
>
vs. Marylc
@
Cameron Indoor S
'OW
>ert 7.5 and no who eeees
•
nd
Chapel
fam Smith Centpr. I
m
Nate James broke out of his slump his Jfless the the :o the urney iwald
Congratulations from our whole team.
Harris Incorporated of Durham, your local Anheuser-Busch distributor, salutes Coach Krzyzewski and the whole 2001 NCAA National Championship basketball team! The team with the Heart to win, The Duke Blue Devils.
hup;//www. Anhueser-Busch.com hup://www.Budweiser.com (02000
Anheuser-Busch Inc., Brewers ol
Budweiser® Beer
St. Louis, Mo
TUESDAY, APRIL 10, 2001 S*
;
2001 NCAA CHAMPIONSHIP COMMEMORATIVE EDITION
,
Great Job, Devils! 2001 NCAA Champions
WE BUY CARS Craige Motor Company 493-2342
PAGE 33
call's BLUE DEVILS!
1102 South Duke St., Durham across from the Forest Hills Shopping Center Darryl Hidden
Walt Winfrey 490-5527 Pre-Owned Cars
2918 Chapel Hill Blvd., Durham beside Hardees Walt Winfrey
Washer & Dryer
Fireplaces
•
Walk-in Closets French Doors Terraces
WE'LL BUY YOURS! Call for a free estimate.
We Salute Coach K and all the Blue Devils on a Championship Season.
INGOLD TIRE
COMPANY
amuaesnne
1002 W. Chapel Hill St., Durham 682-5461 •
•
•
•
Pool & Tennis Sand Volleyball Free YMCA Access Pets Welcome
Stocked Pond
Office Hours: M-F B:3oam-s:3opm, Sat 10am-spm 5639 Chapel Hill Rd Durham, NC 27707 (919) 493-6361 Fax: (919) 403-7701 •
•
Congratulations Duke!
•
EQUITY residential
properties
2001 NCAA CHAMPIONSHIP COMMEMORATIVE EDITION
PAGE 34
TUESDAY, APRIL 10, 2001
KflflflWKflWWWWflWMWWflK
j Congratulations Blue Devils on Your 3rd
National Title!
Way to go Duke Blue Devils! Mountain Bikes Starting at $l9995
From Your Friends at
���
•
•
•
Sunday-Thursday: 6:30 am-10;00 pm
•
Friday and Saturday: 6:30 am-11:00 pm
Best Prices in Town Accessories
Clothing JL Helmets
Duke’s Full Service Bike Shop 639 Broad Street Durham (next to the Welfspring) 2453 Across the Street from East Campus DII/C LUU~UiIVL lO-7 Mon-Sat 12-5 Sun *
Durham, NC (919) 416-3823 Historic Carr Mill Carrboro, NC (919) 929-2909 Ninth Street
•
•
•
•
*
Congratulations
Duke Blue Devils j\
rv
t\
2001 NCAA Champions ftl r,
f TVAWI
/
*
I
f)Y\ n IC /It* AIA4 I II IV I TV7 111 11/ ill Jill, \lTV/ 111,. 11 Li ILI Li v»* I vWJ Illt I V/l I v Vf/MI rH Il»v � ifilllf
)
|
a
J
)
WMf:
MM
Mggk\&Durham
%
Auto Center I
WM
Three Locations 2504 Hillsborough Rd. (at Anderson St.) 286-3332
813 Holloway St. (at Alston Ave.) 688-6065
2839 N. Roxboro Rd.
220-8473
(TIRE)
|
I I
TUESDAY, APRIL 10, 2001
2001 NCAA CHAMPIONSHIP COMMEMORATIVE EDITION
PAGE 35
march 22,2001 vs. UCLA
First Union Center, PMlddetphid
w
7C-63■
NCAA Tournament Sweet 16 Jason Williams scored 19 straight points in seven minutes to lift Duke, 76-63, past UCLA, Although Carlos Boozer returned to play 22 minutes off the bench, Duke had a lackluster performance. Still, Williams' 34 points were enough for Duke to survive and advance. —By Paul Doran
The Department of Religion
Congratulates Two Senior Religion Majors BATTIER
AND
PARENT
and the Rest of the Men's and Women's Basketball teams on an outstanding season.
PAGE 36
2001 NCAA CHAMPIONSHIP COMMEMORATIVE EDITION
TUESDAY, APRIL 10,
2001
Foul trouble nags Williams through game � CHAMPIONS from page 4
MAH KLEIN/THE CHRONICLE
SHANE BATTIER versus Loren Woods turned out to be one of the key matchups of the game
playing as a fist. Through adversity, through whatever, we stuck together and [were] a total team. Today is a great day, and I’m glad to bring it back to Durham—a national championship.” Arizona nipped at Duke’s heels the entire second half, 20 minutes of basketball that saw the Wildcats come within two several times but never draw even. The Wildcats’ final push came with four minutes left as an 11-5 run cut Duke’s advantage to 73-70. But then Battier, who had been overmatched offensively by Arizona’s Loren Woods for much of the game, put the Blue Devils on his back and carried them to the national championship. Following a rare miss by Dunleavy, Battier soared for an off-balance tipin; Duke’s senior then elevated from the baseline for a thundering twohanded slam after hauling in a rifle cross-court pass from Williams. Williams’ back-breaking three-pointer with a minute-and-a-half left was all but the icing on the cake. In a season that saw doubters abound and adversity challenge a Duke squad more than any in Battier’s career, the Naismith player of the year celebrated in style as the clock ticked down, lifting up teammate, roommate and unsung hero Dunleavy in an emotional on-court embrace. “I was trying to take it in,” Battier said of the game’s final moments. “I said a quick prayer, just thanking the Lord for the opportunity. After all our hard work, to be at that point, looking up at the clock, 10 seconds to go—words can’t do justice to what I felt at that moment.”
Early in the game, with Arizona clinging to a slim lead midway through the half, Krzyzewski took the first significant gamble when he reinserted Williams into the lineup despite the point guard’s foul problems. Williams had picked up his second foul less than five minutes into the game on a careless hand-check, but his return five minutes later was promptly followed by two layups by fellow
sophomore Carlos Boozer. Duke never trailed the rest of the game, taking a two-point lead into halftime after Williams’ lightning-quick drive to the basket produced a goaltending call against Arizona forward Richard Jefferson with six seconds left. “I love being on the court, especially in games and in situations where it’s critical,” said Williams, who in the sec* ond half came close to getting whistled for his fifth foul on a couple of bumps with Arizona players. “When you play with great players, it just makes it that much easier to play the game.” The title-clincher in the Hubert H. Humphrey Metrodome repeated Duke’s march through the NCAA tournament in 1992, with both championship runs going from Greensboro to Philadelphia to Minneapolis. In contrast to when Duke stomped Michigan by 20 points in the ’92 final, though, the Blue Devils survived a dogfight with Arizona, the nation’s preseason No. 1 team. The two teams comprised all five of the All-Final Four team, which included Woods and Jefferson from Arizona along with Dunleavy, Williams and
Battier from Duke,
Cat’s meow: Dunleavy turns up big in second half DUNLEAVY from page 4
buckets allowed the Blue Devils maintain a multiple-possession lead and seemed to take the wind out of a stillconfident Wildcat team. “Coming into the second half, I was just thinking, ‘Stay aggressive,’” Dunleavy said. “Coach [Chris] Collins and I had a long talk yesterday about being aggressive on offense. Shots didn’t go for me in the first half, but that didn’t change my mindset. “I was really feeling it [in the second half]. It was good timing, too, to do it at the national championship game.” Dunleavy believes his great timing has been a staple of his basketball upbringing. While going through poor shooting spells and looking out-of-sync at some moments, the sophomore asserts that he generally thrives when the game is on the line. And for that reason, Dunleavy is more than comfortable when he receives the opportunity to make a crucial play for his team. “I think I’ve had a past of playing big in pretty big games, most recently in the NCAA championship game,” he said. “Growing up, going through high school, I always felt pretty comfortable in the spotlight and in big-game situations. And needless to say, in the second half I found that spot again.” Clearly, one reason that Dunleavy was able to shine so brightly in the second half was the attention that Arizona gave to Duke’s duo of AllAmericans, Battier and sophomore Jason Williams.
In large part, this extra attention paid off for the Wildcats, as Williams shot poorly throughout the evening,
going 5-for-15 from the field and 3-for-11 from behind the arc. Battier, meanwhile, was also unable to consistently connect from outside, hitting only 1-of-5 threes. But as Williams acknowledged, Duke is not a two-man team—no matter how much hype its All-Americans receive—and Arizona paid the penalty for this strategic error last night. “So many times, people are saying that if you stop Shane and I, you can beat Duke,” Williams said. “We’re so much bigger than that.... Like Mike said, he was due. For the past few games, our shots haven’t been falling. I could tell by the way Mike was shooting in the couple practices before that he was going to have a great game, and he did.” Whether or not Dunleavy’s performance—both surprising and impressive—was an omen of things to come or merely an aberration remains to be seen. But one thing is for sure—his roommate Battier has passed the torch
to Dunleavy, Williams and Carlos Boozer, all sophomores who will have a chance to duplicate the euphoric feeling they felt last night. And Battier feels good about the prospect of Dunleavy succeeding in the way that he did throughout his four-year Duke career. “Mike Dunleavy is not a great basketball player, he’s a phenomenal basketball player,” Battier said. “It was great to show what he could do. I think he’s overshadowed on this team. People talk about Jason and myself, but we believe Mike is just as good as us, so it’s no surprise to us that he came up huge in this game.”
MATT KLEIN/THE CHRONICLE
MIKE DUNLEAVY drives to the basket for Duke during its triumph over Arizona in the NCAA finals.
TUESDAY, APRIL 10, 2001
2001 NCAA CHAMPIONSHIP COMMEMORATIVE EDITION
Nikon
PAGE 37
«
A better look at your world.
Truck Rental
Bring all of next years games into sharper focus. Expert help available
Congratulations NCAA Champions! Go Blue Devils!
Congratulations 2001 NCAA Champs! The Nikon Action Series Binocular •
•
•
•
BAK-4 high-index prisms Quick, smooth central focusing Sleek new rubbercoated design 25-year limited warranty
Wild Bird Center
National Reservations Call 1 -800-222-0277 or visit us at Penske.com
Everything for bird feeding and bird watching™
Eastgate Chapel Hill 933-2030 Mon-Sat 10-6 Sun 1-5 •
•
•
Come see a large selection
ofbinocidars.
Congratulations to
The 2001 NCAA Champion Duke Blue Devils and The 2001 Kevin Deford Gorter Memorial Award Nominees Student Award: Josh Witten, Rugby James Ruth, Waterski Paul Klenk, Men’s Ultimate Recipient: James Ruth, Waterski
Special Mention: Melanie Oberman, Women’s Tennis Mike Fliss, Tae Kwon Do Chris McHugh, Ice Hockey Valentino Confalone, Water Polo Recipient of Coach’s Award: Christian Schwoerke. Women’s Ultimate
from the 1500 Participants in Club Sports at Duke Badminton Ballroom Dance Baseball Men’s Crew Dancing Devils DUET Field Hockey Football Golf Hapkido Ice Hockey Judo
Women’s Lacrosse Mountain Biking Racqeutball Roadrunners Roller Hockey Men’s Rugby Women’s Rugby Sailing Shooting Ski Squash Men’s Soccer
Softball Swim Table Tennis Women’s Soccer Tae Kwon Do Men’s Tennis Women’s Tennis Men’s Ultimate Women’s Ultimate Men’s Volleyball Women’s Volleyball Water Polo Water Ski
sMj)
2001 NCAA CHAMPIONSHIP COMMEMORATIVE EDITION
PAGE 38
TUESDAY, APRIL 10, 2001
Battier: ‘The time is now’ � FINAL FOUR from page 6 of the year Shane Battier rallied his teammates together and delivered a
ing of guard Juan Dixon to do anything disruptive to Maryland’s attack. Dixon scored 16 points in the first half—compared to only three in the second—while stretching Duke’s defense across the perimeter with four three-pointers.
passionate, floor-slapping address that contained one simple message. “That’s just our little way of saying, ‘The time is now,”’ said Battier, who led all scorers with 25 points in addition to Backcourt mate Blake also buried a eight rebounds and four blocked shots. pair of first-half three-pointers, the “We thought if we could get a defensive second of which put Maryland ahead 39-17 with 6:55 left in the half. With stop, we could crack the game open.” The defensive stops came in succeshis team in a tailspin and its motion sion for Duke, as the Terps turned the offense going nowhere, coach Mike Krzyzewski reminded his Blue Devils ball over on each of their next two posto relax and stop trying to inhibit the sessions, the latter coming on an offensive violation that fouled out center freedom of movement that had carried Lonny Baxter with less than three them all season long. minutes remaining. Maryland’s sullen “I said, Tou’re losing by so much, 260-pound big man departed with his you can’t play any worse, so what are team still down by only five points, but you worried about—that we’re going to with him left the Terps’ scoring attack. lose by 40? We’re already losing by 20, While the Blue Devils’ motion ofso will you just play?’” Krzyzewski said. Slowly but surely, the Blue Devils fense went crazy, producing points on all of the team’s remaining possesresponded to their coach’s words, espesions, Maryland tallied only one more cially on the defensive end. After scorfield goal until the game was all but ing 39 points in only 13 minutes, Marywrapped up with 25 seconds left. land took twice as long to put up the “They did a great job of coming out same total. Krzyzewski singled out the play of and denying the passing lanes, which disrupted our offense,” said Terps coach James, who grabbed six offensive reGary Williams, who has only defeated bounds but also played stifling defense Duke four times in his 12-year Maryon Dixon in the second half. Along with land career. “We had a chance to put the Jason Williams’ dominant 19-point perball in the basket a couple times and we formance in the second half, James’ dedidn’t do it. When it gets close like that, fensive effort helped propel Krzyzewski into his seventh national championship you have to take advantage of opportugame in 21 years at Duke. nities, and we didn’t do that.” “We weren’t able to score.... We didEarly on, however, the Blue Devils were too dazed by the blistering shootn’t score consistently in the second half
CHRIS DUHON slaps the floor to pump up his teammates during theBlue Devils’ 95-84 victory Saturday. like we had the first half, and I thought that hurt us as much as anything,” Maryland’s Williams said. Note: When he collided with Blake, Duhon sustained a mild concussion,
his second in the last month. Krzyzewski said yesterday the freshman had responded well to initial tests and is expected to play tonight against Arizona.
“We try to create a legacy tljat bints tlje past to tlje present.” Coach K from Leading With The Heart
Wg
Enough mmsmk
Wm mmSm *»»■ w
Ikr
V>? a-
-
r
IC^lijf:Jiilillliii®ii
Congratulations to Coach Mike Krzyzewski and the 2001 NCAA Champion Duke University Blue Devils %.***
*.
''
•: .
,';r*
Greater Durham CHAMBER
OF
COMMERCE
919-682-2133
www.durhamchamber.org
TUESDAY, APRIL 10, 2001
2001 NCAA CHAMPIONSHIP COMMEMORATIVE EDITION
PAGE 39
The Chronicle The Duke Community’s Daily Newspaper
2001 NCAA Basketball Championship Commemorative Issue In honor of the Blue Devils’ 2001 championship Chronicle is season,
publishing a special Commemorative Issue following the team on its historic run to Duke’s third NCAA basketball title. There will be 3,000 copies of this keepsake SOUVENIR EDITION, bound in a glossy cover, available for sale.
Reserve your copy today! Yes, I want a SOUVENIR EDITION of the Commemorative Issue!! •
uantit Shipping
Name;
Mailing Address:
x SI 0.00 &
Handling
+
=
2.50
(every 2 copies)
=
Total Amount Due PAYMENT
I
□ Check enclosed Credit Card: □ MC or □ Visa
Ci
State
Cardholder Name:
Zip Code
Card
I Phone;
#:
Expiration (MM/YY): mm-mmmmmmmmmmmmm
—————————
mmmmmm—immmmmmA
To order: Fax or mail the above order form, or stop by The Chronicle Advertising Department. Phone:(9l9) 684-3811 Fax:(9l9) 684-8295 101 West Union Building, PO Box 90858, Duke University, Durham, NC 27708. •
20% discount on first copy for Duke students and employees pick up only. -
2001 NCAA CHAMPIONSHIP COMMEMORATIVE EDITION
PAGE 40
TUESDAY, APRIL 10, 2001
were awed by your were amazed at you were dazzled by you 5
.-.;.■;
*
:•
Vs i *
;
>
:
,
;;
111 COUPS6,
=
?
so were your opponents. An unbelievable season. An outstanding NCAA triumph. The Blue Devils always demonstrate a stunning combination of talent, ability, and dedication.
And,
Duke
found out it’s a dynamic level of commitment and dedication few other teams can match as many
opponents
the hard way
That’s why TIAA-CREF is honored to salute the Blue Devils on this impressive victory.
TIAA-CREF salutes the Duke University Blue Devils on winning their third NCAA Men’s Basketball Championship. TIAA-CREF is privileged to provide high-quality financial services to Duke University coaches, faculty, administrators and staff. For more information, call us at 1-919-465-5800.
2001 Teachers Insurance and Annuity Association College Retirement Equities Fund New York, New York Visit us on the Web at www.tiaa-cref.org. ©
-