The Chronicle
Sports The Loyola opposition The Greyhounds sent the Blue Devils packing in Koskinen Stadium last Sunday as Loyola defeated Duke 7-6 in the NCAAs. See page 21
Cultural space group releases final report Keohane issues initial response By DAVE INGRAM
and nine students—many of whom are past or present leaders of cul-
The Chronicle
THAD PARSONS/THE CHRONICLE
Pretty in
tural groups.
The University committee studying the state of cultural space on campus released its highly anticipated report Tuesday, which recommended the expansion of the Mary Lou Williams Center for Black Culture and the establishment of a multicultural center nearby in the Bryan Center. Citing “a lack of belonging and inclusion” on campus, especially among racial and ethnic minorities, the Cultural Space Committee suggested that allocating more space would place a higher value on cultural identity. Interest in the possible construction of a multicultural center has heightened in recent months, with discussion taking place in such forums as Duke Student Government campaigns and the Duke Student Movement protests. The recommen-
Their report says defined space is a prerequisite for improving cultural interaction. Contrasting the current locations of fraternities and the Mary Lou Williams Center, the committee’s report suggests creating more cultural space in buildings will lead to easy access and greater campus presence. “Designating permanent space for institutions on campus not only provides its validation, but also represents it as an ideology that the University is consistently committed to pursuing,” the report reads, citing the Chapel as an example of the power of visibility. Specifically, the report proposes utilizing the planned expansion of the Bryan Center as space for all cultures to interact on a daily basis. A multicultural center, according
dations released this week could clear the way for final plans for such a center. The committee was composed of two professors, four administrators
periwinkle
Provost Peter Lange introduced President Nan Keohane before she conferred degrees on about 3,500 graduating students at Wallace Wade Stadium Sunday (see story, page 7).
to the report, should include office space and commons rooms similar to those of living groups, totaling
MULTICULTURAL on page 19 �
See
Master’s student Trustees OK residential changes drowns at beach By AMBIKA KUMAR The Chronicle
The Board of Trustees approved three key changes to residential life last weekend at a meeting that also addressed the new budget, the men’s NCAA basketball championship and recent math team wins. The residential changes include moving all sophomores to West Campus by 2006, initiating links between East and West Campus dormitories and creating an independent corridor
Timothy “Russ” Allen died tragically just days before he was scheduled to receive his graduate degree in public policy and months before he was to attend law school at Duke. By AMBIKA KUMAR The Chronicle
Timothy “Russ” Allen, a public policy master’s student scheduled to graduate last
Sunday and enter the School of Law this fall, drowned May 8 while vacationing on the Outer Banks. He was 24. Allen’s Mends and teachers described him as fun-loving, giving and passionate about his work. “Russ was a person who was of many interests and full of life,” said Kevin Corcoran, Allen’s classmate and Mend. Timothy “Russ” Allen “He was always willing to help out people and always looking to help out people.” Corcoran, Allen and several other graduate students took an end-of-exams trip to the North Carolina coast last week. The afternoon that Allen arrived in Kill Devil Hills, he went for a swim in the ocean, where he struggled against high waves and a strong current. Helen Ladd, director of graduate studies in public policy, spoke to several students there who said they heard Allen cry for help shortly after he entered the See ALLEN
on Main West Campus. “I was very gratified by their action,” said William Chafe, vice provost for undergraduate education. “I think it means well have very significant changes on West Campus and that this will provide the structural foundation for building a better campus community.” Chafe chaired a task force that recommended the changes in a late
February report. The suggestions were triggered by fragmentation of upperclass residential life. The report cited demographic segregation along racial and ethnic lines; Thirty-one percent of students on East Campus are minorities, but that number See TRUSTEES on page 9 Py
MAIN WEST QUADRANGLE will eventually be home to only independents, following approval of a plan to make West Campus more representative of the student body.
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Newsfile
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FROM WIRE REPORTS
Britain proposes plan to end sanctions on Iraq Britain, backed by the United States, will propose next week that the United Nations lift the 11year ban on international trade with Iraq, while still prohibiting the sale of arms and related items, British officials said. Fears of violence grow in Macedonia Foreign diplomats scram-
bled to avert a clash between Macedonia’s new unity government and ethnic Albanian rebels as today—the governmentimposed deadline for the rebels to withdraw or face a major attack—drew near. Kidnappers hold 190 hostage in Colombia Kidnappers seized some 190 captives while returning from work in eastern Colombia, in the country’s biggest mass kidnapping, armed forces chief Gen.
Fernando Tapias said.
World
page 2
Stocks jump after Fed cuts interest rates Stocks posted strong gains one day after the Federal Reserve lowered short-term interest rates for the fifth time this year. The Dow Jones Industrial Average surged above 11,000 for the first time since last September. Jury convicts teen of murder of teacher A jury convicted 14-yearold Nathaniel Brazill of second-degree murder for fatally shooting his favorite teacher. But the jury did not find him guilty of first-degree mur-
der. Brazill will serve a
25-year prison term.
Former FBI agent faces espionage indictment A federal grand jury indicted Robert Hanssen, a former FBI agent, on charges that he betrayed his country by spying for the Russians for more than 15 years.
Weather TODAY:
SHOWERS High: 73 Low: 60
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National
THURSDAY, MAY 17, 2001
White House outlines energy policy
The president said the U.S. is facing its worst energy shortage since the 1970s By RON FOURNIER Associated Press
President much-awaitin Bush, his George W. ed energy plan, will warn today that the United States faces “the most serious energy shortage since the oil embargo of the 19705.” Bush will order federal agencies to dismantle regulatory barriers that slow gas, electrical, coal and nuclear power production and propose opening federal lands for oil drilling. He also will encourage conservation, setting aside most of the $5 billion in new tax incentives for people who buy energy-efficient cars or use alternative energies. The 163page policy, developed by a task
WASHINGTON
force headed by Vice President Dick Cheney, also orders a review of fuel economy standards with an eye toward possibly requiring them to be more fuel-efficient. “A fundamental imbalance between supply and demand defines our nation’s energy crisis,” says the report, a portion ofwhich the White House released Wednesday night. “This imbalance, if allowed to con-
tinue, will inevitably undermine our economy, our standard of living, and our national security.” While Bush compared today’s problems to the 19705, energy experts have noted that there are plenty of supplies of crude oil and gasoline. In the 19705, a disruption
of oil imports caused long gas lines and fuel rationing. The White House planned to release the report today in connection with Bush’s speech on the topic in St. Paul, Minn. To sell his plan, Bush must navigate among hundreds of issue groups, governors and local officials
with competing concerns. Even before it was released, Democrats said the policy would endanger the environment and do nothing to lower prices now. Some Republicans demanded quick fixes not found in the report, fearing the public will blame them in 2002 congressional elections if energy prices soar.
Freeh admits FBI erred in McVeigh case By DAVID
JOHNSTON
New York Times News Service
FBI Director Louis Freeh acWASHINGTON knowledged at a congressional hearing Wednesday that his agency had committed a “serious error” when it failed to turn over thousands of pages of interview reports in the Oklahoma City bombing case to lawyers for Timothy McVeigh, who was sentenced to death for the crime. Freeh announced at the House hearing that he had ordered immediate corrective steps, among them a one-day agency-wide suspension of Ml routine FBI functions to retrain employees in records management. In addition, he said he had launched a search to hire a “world-class records expert.” In his first public comments on the FBl’s records
lapse, Freeh offered a detailed account of how the breakdown occurred. But even as he acknowledged the mishandling of documents, he echoed comments by Attorney General John Ashcroft that none of the material would undercut the guilty verdict against McVeigh. “The FBI committed a serious error by not ensuring that every piece of informationwas properly accounted for and when appropriate provided to the prosecutors so that they could fulfill their discovery obligations,” Freeh said. The lapse last week forced Ashcroft to delay the execution of McVeigh until June 11. The death sentence
had been scheduled to be carried out yesterday. McVeigh’s lawyers have received copies of the documents and have said they are reviewing their legal options, including seeking a further delay of the execution.
The Chronicle
THURSDAY, MAY 17, 2001
PAGES
Baker to depart Duke, go to MIT � Dean of Student Development Barbara Baker announced last week that she will leave Durham to take a similar position at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. By KEVIN LEES The Chronicle
One of Dean of Student Development Barbara Baker’s first tasks when she arrived at Duke in 1995 was to implement a plan smoothing the transition to an all-freshmen East Campus. It turned out to be one of her most gratifying experiences at Duke. But as the University gears up for more major res-
idential changes—this time for will upperclassmen—Baker leave Durham June 15 to become the associate dean for student life programs at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. “It was a personal decision to move to the Boston area, where family is located,” Baker said. “My husband is up there as well, which makes [the MIT po- Barbara Baker sition] a little more convenient.” Clack praised Baker’s work at Duke and leadership within her office and said he would miss her dearly. “[We’ll missl her competence, her kindness [andl her warmth. She’s a great colleague and a great friend.”
Baker’s responsibilities at MIT will be similar to those she had at Duke and will include oversight of student activities, residential life and programs, greek life, independent living groups and the community service center. “Her name came up at the top of the list,” said MIT Dean of Student Life Larry Benedict, who began MlT’s search two months ago. “She went through the review process with flying c010r5.... She has a wealth of experience and completely understands the field of student leadership.” The University has not yet announced Baker’s interim replacement—she announced her departure just last week—and it is likely that incoming Vice President for Student Affairs Larry Moneta will choose her permanent successor. Moneta, who until August remains vice president See BAKER on page 19 «*■
ALLISON HILL/THE CHRONICLE
STUDENTS filled out the newly developed course evaluations at the end of the semester. Soon, information from the machinereadable forms will be available for online viewing.
Council OKs online evaluations By DAVE INGRAM The Chronicle
Undergraduate access to course evaluation data became a reality at the May 3 Arts and Sciences Council meeting, when faculty members approved a plan from the administration and student leaders to post the informationfrom the new evaluation forms online. “What we’re trying to do is make the best use of the information that we have here,” said Matt Serra, assistant professor of psychology. He and Abhijit Prabhu, incoming Duke Student Government vice president for academic affairs, presented the council with the preliminary design of the web page that will be known as the Student Accessible Course Evaluations System. The web page will only include answers to the machine-readable questions from the form, bypassing the long-time debate over how to provide registering students with written comments about a particular course. Instead, the written evaluations will be used
mainly by professors and departments. In addition, Serra said the system will provide professors the opportunity to post online responses to data from their classes, allowing them a chance to offer explanations for some of the ratings. Prabhu, a senior, said the evaluation data will be linked from each course on the bookbag section of ACES, allowing students to view opinions of a course while registering. “It makes it easier and more secure when ACES already has all this other information, from your grades to art history courses, to have evaluations there too,” Prabhu said. He added that SAGES will likely be online by November and possibly as soon as August, depending on the development of online software. SAGES will attempt to give undergraduates as much information as possible, Prabhu said, including the full texts of questions and the means and medians for majors and non-majors. Eventually, he said, students will be able to search an See A&S MEETING on page 20 P
Health PAGE 4
INSIDE THE UNIVERSITY
»Angioplasty drug reduces complications A clot-blocking drug given to patients during angioplasty appears to reduce the risk of heart attack and death in the six months after the procedure by about 37 percent, according to a study conducted in the Medical Center and published in the Journal of the American Medical Association. Previous research showed that eptifibatide, sold as Integrilin, significantly reduces complications in the 48 hours after angioplasty. The Duke researchers said the findings suggest that doctors should consider using drugs like Integrilin for all angioplasty patients. •
Racial differences narrow progressively
With improved immune system-suppressing regimens, black patients can fare just as well with a kidney transplant as whites, according to a study presented to the American Society of Transplantation and the American Society of Transplant Surgeons. Duke nephrologists Dr. Stephen Smith and Dr. David Butterly changed their focus after their results showed decreases in racebased differences. But the researchers stress that the findings need to be confirmed by other centers.
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ACROSS THE NATION
Doctors urge cholesterol management
Impressed by mounting evidence that deaths from heart disease could be significantly reduced with aggressive treatments, a national panel recommended that millions more Americans take powerful cholesterol-lowering drugs or immediately alter their diets. The group, sponsored by the federal government, proposes nearly tripling the number qf adults who should be taking cholesterol-lowering drugs and raising by 25 percent the number who should be on cholesterol-lowering diets. •
Scientists infer cosmic structure origin
Researchers in Australia have observed what appears to be the faint imprint of waves, much like sound waves, that may have rippled through the gases of the young universe. Scientists have long theorized that such waves were the seeds for all structures glittering in the heavens today. The imprints were revealed within the clumps and filamentary patterns formed by tens of thousands of galaxies that the telescope observed in Earth's cosmic neighborhood. These results have emerged from the largest and most detailed mapping of galaxies ever made. •
Common cold tied to transplant rejection
According to a report published in the New England Journal of Medicine, a common cold virus apparently can cause organ transplants to fail. A new study shows that children whose heart transplants show signs of viral attack are about six times more likely to suffer organ rejection than those whose grafts are free of infection
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THIS WEEK’S HEALTH TIP
Drugs may not be Insomniacs’ best bet
Insomniacs may fare better by trading medications for sleeping-habit modifications. Research conducted at the Duke and Durham Veterans Affairs medical centers found that training patients to limit naps during the day, nighttime television viewing and time spent in bed decreased episodes of sleep interruption. Study group patients averaged a 50 percent decrease in the time spent awake after initially falling asleep. The form of insomnia examined in the study—called persistent primary insomnia—affects an estimated 14 million Americans, most over 40. Researchers reported their results in the Journal of the American Medical Association.
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The Chronicle
THURSDAY,
MAY 17, 2001
Nurses finish online degree program By
JOHN BUSH
The Chronicle
Although Sunday’s commencement ceremony was just another stepping stone for the graduates, for rural hospitals across the state it may make the difference between life and death. As part of the School of Nursing’s new Partnerships for Training program, 13 graduates who took their courses online will soon take their expertise where it is most needed—to relatively undeveloped areas of the state. “The focus is to provide medical care to underserved communities, and as long as that need is there, [some form of] the program will be as well,” said School of Nursing Dean Mary Champagne. “These were people trying to work full-time and take on additional
responsibilities.” Although the program does not require its students to stay in their communities, it selects candidates based on their commitment to do so, Champagne said. That commitment could help fill the nationwide nursing shortage, which can be particularly frustrating for rural communities. “They’re having a hard time recruiting mid-level people,” said recent PFT graduate Linda Heath. “If you’re not from here, you’re not going to stay here.” Heath, who graduated from the University of North Carolina at Pembroke, currently works at the Clinton Medical Center in Clinton, N.C. Some health care facilities, like Alleghany Memorial Hospital in Sparta, have already begun hiring graduates of distance-learning programs. “We’re fairly remote in the mountains of North Carolina,” said Wes Wood, the hospital’s compliance officer and risk manager. “It is difficult and expensive to send nurses out [here].”
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NURSES IN THE DISTANCE-LEARNING PROGRAM take their classes through a website sponsored by Duke and East Carolina University. The first class to complete the program graduated last week. Because many students in the Duke come nurses practitioners, midwives and physician’s assistants. program have responsibilities that prePFT has its roots in a 1994 call for vent them from attending college, PFT better rural health care from the enables them to listen to lectures, perRobert Wood Johnson Foundation. That form course work and access personalInternet. group helped fund eight distance-learnized information on the Students come to Durham several times a ing initiatives across the country; at semester, and faculty members visit Duke, it assisted in funding PFT, matching funds from the Duke Endowrural communities to check on their stument and the North Carolina Area dents’ clinical work. “We’re providing access to a great Health Education Center. The program does not admit stuprogram and a rigorous education,” dents annually; rather, it selects a new Champagne said. Program implementation began in class about every two years. The group 1997 and 1998. Three years later, the admitted in 2000 will graduate in 2003. first class containing PFT participants Matt Brumm and Ambika Kumar has graduated. PFT students can becontributed to this story.
New systems to change music experience Multichannel digital surround sound puts high-quality music recordings on the market By ERIC TAUB
New York Times News Service
The recording industry is giving you the opportunity to replace your music collection all over again, thanks to the introduction of two new digital
ated a markedly different listening experience compared with regular two-channel stereo. The six speakers enveloped the listener, turning the room into one large sound source, as if the music had taken on an added spatial dimension. “The whole musical experience changes with surround sound,” said Leo Rossi, president of business development for the 5.1 Entertainment Group
audio formats. The systems, SACD (Super Audio Compact Disc) and DVD-Audio, are based on incompatible technologies. Although they both use discs that look in West Los Angeles, a company that like CDs, that is where the similarity produces DVD-Audio discs. “With sixends. Both formats record music at a channel surround sound, you can hear much higher quality than ordinary the air and feel the presence of the room. Every type of recording benefits CDs, which audiophiles have long lambasted as having a cold, clinical sound. from a multichannel soundtrack.” The more important difference is To achieve the higher quality of DVDAudio, the audio waveform is sampled that these new formats offer six-channel surround sound, but with much 96,000 times per second (when recording greater fidelity than the current crop in six-channel mode), compared with 44,100 times for a CD. In DVD-Audio, of video DVD players. The multichannel mix gives the listener a sense of that information is encoded in 24-bit bibeing in a recording studio. nary numbers, compared with 16-bit Can a listener hear the difference? numbers for CDs, so much more comDefinitely. During an evaluation of the plexity of sound is captured. SACD uses technology, both classical music and cona different technology, called Direct temporary jazz vocals played in the Stream Digital. Here, the music is samDVD-Audio surround-sound format crepled 2,822,400 times per second. Having
all those data points, proponents say, means that SACD more accurately refleets the original analog waveform. To play these new discs at their highest fidelity, you will need a new player. SACDs also contain standard two-channel recordings for lower-fidelity playback on regular CD players. Several massmarket models that play regular video DVDs, as well as either SACD or DVDAudio, will be available this year. Panasonic will introduce a $299 unit this summer that combines DVD-Audio and video DVD with progressive scan, a formerly expensive technology that improves picture quality when connected to a digital television. Even if the price tempts you, you may still not have the right ancillary gear to do the job. DVD-Audio and SACD decks must be hooked up to receivers thathave six distinct analog inputs, rather than the one digital jack that video DVD players use. While a number of low-priced models will soon hit the market, a recent trip to a Costco store showed not one receiver for sale that was compatible with DVD-Audio or SAC.
The Chronicle
THURSDAY, MAY 17, 2001
PAGES
Nearly half of A.B. Duke recipients choose Duke Marlyn Lewis, director of Harvard’s undergraduate financial aid office, said the increase in Mylavarapu’s “Never look a gift horse in the package is not inconsistent with its mouth,” the saying goes. But upon being policy of offering no merit-based scholoffered the prestigious Angier B. Duke arships; Harvard frequently increase Scholarship, several of the University’s top applicants were bold enough to do cally Harvard’s biophysics program—- packages after re-evaluating students’ financial positions. made it his best option. just that. But academics are not the only reaBut Harvard did not woo away all poThis year, 11 of the 20 students origtential A.B. Duke winners. Some who inally offered the full-tuition scholarson A.B. Duke winners decline the scholship accepted it. However, nine said “No, arship. “There are different reasons they were offered admission to—and large thanks,” and chose to pursue their edugo [elsewhere] —sometimes it is more scholarships from—top universities, secation elsewhere. money, sometimes it is mom or dad,” lected Duke. Albert Chu of Buffalo Grove, 111., But Melissa Malouf, director of Malouf said. turned down Harvard, the MassachuDuke’s Office of Undergraduate ScholFor example, Amy Sexauer of Wadars and Fellows, said that she was malaw Island, S.C.—who will attend the setts Institute of Technology and the University of North Carolina at Chapel pleased with the A.B. Duke matricula- University of Georgia under the Fountion rate, given the caliber of programs dation Fellowship—said the A.B. Duke Hill, which offered him their Morehead and the scholarships that many of these actually would have put her in a worse Scholarship. Chu, who will study biomedical engistudents were offered elsewhere. financial position. “I thought we did fine.... We got just In addition to tuition, the UGa felneering at Duke, s£id the A.B. Duke seover 50 percent,” Malouf said. “We are lowship covers other expenses, including lection weekend, when the finalists for not sad that we are losing kids to Harroom and board and two international the scholarship visit campus, confirmed his decision to choose Duke. trips each year. vard [University].” to try colleges the students who some other Thea Sircar of Charlotte agreed. AlIn addition to 11 In cases, originally accepted the scholarship, four one-up Duke when students report their though the money did affect her deciwere added from a substitute fist—a A.B. Duke offer. Swati Mylavarapu of sion, the weekend made her want to come to Duke. Gainesville, Fla., said Harvard innumber similar to those in past years. “I really enjoyed the other scholars I Andrew Chi is one scholar Duke lost creased its financial aid package after hearing about Duke’s offer. “Basically, met there,” she said. “There were a lot of to Harvard. “It was definitely a long time before Harvard took all loan money away and conversations going on that were intelmaking that decision, because it was put them under grant money after I told lectually vibrant—more so than at other universities, even prestigious ones.” quite a bit of money” said Chi, a Terre them about Duke,” she said. By JAMES HERRIOTT The Chronicle
Haute, Ind., resident. “I was asking, ‘ls the difference between Duke and Harvard worth $130,000?’ It’s hard to say..., but I had to go with my gut feeling.” In the end, he thought the resources available in Cambridge, Mass.—specifi-
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ROSALYN TANG/THE CHRONICLE
Pratt convicted, sentenced for 1995 Duke Forest rape Three vehicles stolen: A student reported that between 9:30 p.m. May 2 and 5 p.m. May 3 someone stole his $20,000 1992 four-door white Dodge
Caravan with North Carolina license plate ARY-6497 from the Zone N parking lot behind Trent Drive Hall, said Maj. Robert Dean of the Duke University Police Department. The perpetrator also stole a $5OO set of golf clubs, $2OO in baseball equipment and a $5O tennis racket which were inside the vehicle. An employee reported that between 8:20 a.m. and 5:02 p.m. May 14, someone stole her $B,OOO dark green 1994 Dodge Caravan with black luggage rack and North Carolina license plate EMD-755 from the lower Allen Building parking lot.
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From staff reports A man accused of raping a woman in the Duke Forest in September 1995 was convicted May 2 and sentenced to 87 to 108 years in prison. Robert Pratt, formerly of Mebane, was found guilty on two counts of first-degree kidnapping, one count of second-degree kidnapping, two counts of first-degree sexual offense and one count of first-degree rape. Pratt is already serving 21 to 26 years for previous convictions. In 1998, investigators began to suspect Pratt after finding similarities to a case concerning the attempted rape of a Cary woman. DNA evidence subsequently confirmed Pratt’s involvement in the 1995 incident.
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An employee reported that between 10 p.m. May 14 and 12:25 a.m. May 15, someone stole her $6,000 gray, four-door 1990 Chrysler New Yorker with North
Carolina license plate LRE-8956, Dean said. The vehicle was parked on Flowers Drive in a reserved spot near the intersection of Yearby Street. Dean said there was no way to tell if the vehicle thefts were related.
Water balloon assault: At 1:33 a.m. May 12, two students reported they were hit by water balloons while sitting on a bench in Kilgo Quadrangle, Dean said. While one of the victims reported no injury, the See
CRIME
on page 9
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THURSDAY, MAY 17, 2001
The Chronicle
PAGE 6
Malone’s lawyer requests SunTrust makes $13.6 change in venue of trial billion bid for Wachovia � Shannon Tucker, the lawyer for David Patrick Malone, says a Nov. 28 article ensures her client will not receive a fair trial in Durham. From staff reports The lawyer for accused gunman David Patrick Malone filed a motion earlier this month to change the location of his upcoming trial from Durham County, citing a
potentially tainted jury pool. Malone, 46, allegedly entered President Nan Keohane’s office last Sept. 6 with a loaded gun and threatened to kill himself if he could not speak David Patrick Malone to her. He has pled not guilty in Superior Court to three counts of first-degree kidnapping and one count of having a weapon on
campus. Attorney Shannon Tucker cited an interview with Malone published in the Herald-Sun of Durham and jurors’
possible “deep-seeded loyalties to Duke University.” These potential biases, she wrote in the motion, constitute “so great a prejudice against the defendant that he cannot obtain a fair and impartial trial” in Durham County. The motion will be heard the week of June 11, Assistant District Attorney Mitchell Garrell said. He added that he has not yet formally decided whether to oppose the motion, but he said he will likely argue against a change of venue. The specific article cited by Tucker was published Nov. 28 and was based on a Herald-Sun interview with Malone. In the interview he admitted to entering Keohane’s office with a gun, but said he did not point the weapon at anyone. The former Duke employee also described an incident from 1990 or 1991 in which a supervisor allegedly turned on him after Malone tried to bring to light inaccuracies in medical testing.
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From staff and wire reports
SunTrust Banks, Inc. made an unsolicited $13.6 billion bid Monday to purchase Wachovia Corp., the Winston-Salem-based bank that First Union Corp. had planned to acquire for $12.7 billion. If Wachovia were to accept the offer, which has been approved by SunTrust’s board of direc\TI7AX7C ii H/ VY □
retail customers throughout the Southeast, according to a statement by the Atlanta-based Sun Trust.
Durham draws new ward lines: The Durham City Council approved new ward boundaries for the city in a 9-3 vote last week, paving the way for the reduction of the council’s size from 13 members to seven in November. The new lines divide the city into three wards of slightly more than tors, the move 1 1 •V/ 62,000 people each. One resident of prevent would rpuyn 1171717 if each ward will be elected to the council the proposed Imfl WJkftlV every two years, along with three atFirst Unionlarge members and a mayor. Wachovia had Wachovia merger. The racial balance of the wards is agreed to the First Union merger, but it has not yet announced a deci- not perfectly even; black residents make up a majority in two ofthe three sion on the new offer. First Union chair Ken Thompson wards, but the other ward is almost said Tuesday that First Union would two-thirds white. The number of regisnot make a higher counteroffer. He tered voters in each ward also varies called SunTrust’s offer a hostile bid, between 39,003 and 47,506. However, saying a First Union-Wachovia these discrepancies are less significant merger would be more profitable for than they could otherwise be because Wachovia shareholders. the boundaries limit only where a canSunTrust, the lOth-largest bank in didate for a ward seat can live, not who can vote: All Durham voters can cast the United States, tried unsuccessfulballots Wachovia, the for all seven council seats. buy late last to ly year The boundaries, which divide the 17th-largest bank in the country and city into western, northeastern and the bank of choice for many Duke stuis based southeastern wards, were drawn by a in Union, which First dents. computer and approved 26-1 by a citCharlotte, is currently the sixthizens’ committee appointed by the largest hank in the nation. council. The redrawing will reduce SunTrust-Wachovia merged A would serve more than 7.5 million See N.C. NEWS on page 20 •
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The Chronicle
THURSDAY, MAY 17, 2001
PAGE 7
Speakers share thoughts with graduates Duke loses request for By KEVIN LEES The Chronicle
Some things are constant at Duke graduations—the colorful and arcane flowing robes of academia, the conferring of degrees upon newly minted “educated men and women” and, without fail, the Eruditio et Religio et Basketbalho joke. What made last Sunday different was the commencement address’ global perspective. Patching together several anecdotes from her experiences as a reporter and CNN bureau chief in South Africa, Charlayne Hunter-Gault urged the Class of 2001 to go beyond the nightly news to learn about other cultures and ideas. “As you move out from this place to your space in a century that is new, you have the unique opportunity to shape it and establish its
arbitration
legacy,” she said.
Hunter-Gault encouraged the 3,500 Duke undergraduates, graduate and professional students, including a recordhigh 15 black Ph.D. students, to challenge racial and cultural boundaries. Breaking the norm is exactly what Hunter-Gault did when she became one ofthe first black students admitted to the University of Georgia. “I believed I knew most of what I needed to know ever in the world, and that I was ready to take on the world,” Hunter-Gault said of her time in Atlanta. “In the intervening years, I have learned to harness the unbridled hubris of my 21-year-old self.” As a journalist, Hunter-Gault went on to apply her own perspective on race, winning two Emmy awards and two George Foster Peabody awards—one for her work on the 1986 PBS series focusing on South African life under apartheid.
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THAD PARSONS/THE CHRONICLE
DAN MALLORY, Trinity ’Ol, entertained the Class of 2001 with a whimsical speech about life and finding your own way. And when civil rights leader Nelson Mandela was released from prison in 1990, Hunter-Gault was one of two journalists to interview the future president of an apartheid-free South Africa Hunter-Gault calls herself a child of Africa and shared with graduates the
lessons she has learned there. She told them the story of Wendy, a 12-year-old South African with AIDS and spoke about the 24 million African lives claimed by AIDS and death and civil war in northern Uganda. But she stressed that Africa is not just about death, disease, war and turmoil. She spoke of the land’s beauty and the hope of a continent “pregnant with the dreams of millions of people,”
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while chiding a global “ethos of superiority” that still clings to old attitudes about Africa. The University awarded Hunter-Gault and political advisor David Gergen honorary degrees in humane letters and also gave musical composer Patrick Williams, Trinity ’6l, a degree in fine arts. Prior to Hunter-Gault’s address, Dan Mallory, Trinity ’Ol, used humor to convey some of the lessons he learned during his time at Duke. “An attitude will get you somewhere, if not anywhere,” Mallory quipped in his speech, outlining the path he had taken and the sense of individualism he had gained over his undergraduate career.
From staff reports Last week, Duke lost its first pretrial battle in a medical malpractice suit, filed last January, which alleges that doctors failed to diagnose a 3year-old with pneumonia in 1999, resulting in her death. Judge Evelyn Hill rejected Duke’s request to move to an arbitration system. Duke attorney John Simpson declined to comment on the case but said the University plans to appeal. Lawyers for Amber Pettus’ estate said the child’s parents want a jury to determine the verdict and fear that Duke wants to keep the case private. “Once it goes to arbitration, it’s out of the public’s eye, and there won’t be any press coverage,” said Carlos Mahoney, one of Pettus’ attorneys. “There won’t be any record of it at the
court house.”
Mahoney said Pettus had Down Syndrome and severe congenital heart defects—a condition that makes patients more susceptible to infection. He said Pettus was treated for upper respiratory infections at Duke Hospital during the month of January 1999, but that Duke did not perform a blood test or take a chest Xray—procedures that could have determined that Pettus had pneumonia. Pettus died the night of Jan. 31.
THURSDAY, MAY 17, 2001
The Chronicle
PAGES
Council hears report on Academic Priorities Committee By STEVEN WRIGHT The Chronicle In the last and shortest meeting of the school year, the Academic Council heard a series ofupdates from university leaders about a number of projects and initiatives. John Simon, chair of the Academic Priorities Committee, spoke about the
committee’s work over the last two years. During his time as chair, Simon said, the committee has evolved from a provost advisory group into a stronger voice that has helped set important university priorities during the strategic planning period. Simon, who also chairs the Department of Chemistry, said during the past two years meetings have
been filled with lively debate with the provost over issues lie strategic planning and administrative responses to departmental issues.
The council also received reports from two senior administrators. The first was from William Chafe, dean of the faculty of arts and sciences, who updated the council on the progress of residential life changes. The presentation, which stressed the residential plan’s efforts to confront segregation on West Campus, met with only a handful of faculty comments and questions. President Nan Keohane also briefly attended the meeting to update the faculty on the administrative response to demands by members of Duke Student
not given them a proper education.” Several council members, however, argued that the advertisement controversy served only as an indicator of much larger troubles on campus. Council Chair Peter Burian, a professor of classical studies, also announced thatVice Provost for Academics and Administrative Services Judith Ruderman will head a search committee to find a successor for William King, the University archivist. King, the University’s first archivist, will step down after thirty years in December. The council also approved the nominations of candidates for various degrees from each of the University’s eight schools.
Movement. Keohane explained that a
number of task forces and committees will begin to investigate issues such as student social space, black faculty recruitment and campus climate. John Staddon, James B. Duke professor of experimental psychology, suggested that administrators might be addressing the wrong set of problems. Instead, Staddon said administrators should consider why protesters did not transform the debate over the publications of an anti-reparations advertisement in The Chronicle into an academic discussion. “What is wrong with their education that they would react this way?” he asked. “This could signal that we have
Georgiade, former plastic surgery chief, dies at home Dr. Nicholas Georgiade, professor emeritus and for-
mer chief of plastic, maxillofacial and reconstructive surgery, died at his Durham home May 13. He was 82. Georgiade, a World War II veteran and Lowell, Mass., native, joined the Duke faculty in 1954 after graduating from the Columbia University School ofDental and Oral Surgery in 1944 and the Duke School ofMedicine in 1950. Following a long VTuii/d IILWa Duke career, he retired in 1989. Professionally, Georgiade was Dnirrc known for the impact he made in maxillofacial and breast reconstruction surgery. He contributed to over 25 textbooks on plastic surgery and served as president of the American Association of Plastic Surgeons. Georgiade is survived by his wife Ruth, three children—Dr. Gregory Georgiade, Robert Georgiade and Nancy Riefkohl—and four grandchildren. Memorial services will be private. The family requests that in lieu of flowers, contributions be made to charity or to Duke’s Plastic Surgery Research Fund. ______
Duke contributed over $2 billion to Durham in olina at Chapel Hill, is funded by a $24 million gift from Half the students will ma1999-2000: The University released a report May 3 Julian and Josie Robertson. the rest matriculate at Duke.
estimating the institution’s 1999-2000 economic impact on the city and county of Durham to be approximately $2.23 billion. A 1997 report estimated
the amount to be $1.9 billion. The report states that Duke, the fourth-largest nongovernmental employer in the state, contributed $1.22 billion to Durham in employment. Its 34,979-person workforce included 18,599Durham residents. The report says Duke’s $340 million in research funding during the year created 13,294 Durham jobs.
Robertson Scholars announced: The Robertson Scholars Program announced the selection of its first class May 7. Fourteen of the 30 scholars hail from the Carolinas, and the remaining students come from nine other states, Washington, D.C., Norway and Hong Kong. The initiative, a joint full-tuition merit scholarship program between Duke and the University of North Car-
will triculate at UNC, and Participants will also spend a semester at the institution to which they did not matriculate and will receive credit for education at both UNC and Duke.
Duke professor wins book award: Alice Kaplan, professor of romance studies and literature, won the Los Angeles Times Book Awards for history for her book, The Collaborator: The Trial and Execution of Robert Brasillach. The book traces the life of Robert Brasillach, a French writer and editor of a pro-fascist publication who was arrested as a Nazi collaborator after the fall ofFrance’s Vichy government. Judges said that Kaplan “writes with a rare beauty and striking control over her material.... This is history as it should be written.” The prize, established in 1980, carries both prestige and a $l,OOO award.
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THURSDAY, MAY 17, 2001
PAGE 9
$4,000 data projector stolen from business school � CRIME from page 5 other victim said her contacts were
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lawyer. Whorton declined to comment Leins could not be reached for comment
Projector stolen: Someone stole a $4,000 EIKI MB 1 data projector from Fuqua Seminar Room B between 3 p.m. May 1 and 1 p.m. May 4, Dean said.
She was transported to the Emergency Watch swiped: A student reported Department for treatment. that between 4:10 and 5:15 p.m. May Campus Police charged recent grad13, someone broke out the $l5O left uates and 22-year-olds Jacob Bauer, front window of his vehicle and stole Michael Leins and Matthew Whorton his $lOO wallet containing credit with assault with a deadly weapon and cards, a $2,500 Omega wristwatch, a placed them under a $l,OOO unsecured $lOO Spring cellular phone and keys, bond. The court date is set for July 26. Dean said. The vehicle was parked at Bauer said he was consulting his Duke Forest’s Gate No. 3.
Photography equipment stolen:
the 1905 and 1913 Erwin Road apartAn employee reported that between ments looking through a bedroom win7:45 p.m. May 9 and 2:30 p.m. May 10, dow at her roommate, Dean said. She described the man as white, someone entered his office in the Duke about 25 to 30 years old, of medium Hospital radiology photography with short blond curly hair, 5’6” build, and stole department $1,325 in photo 5’7” tall and wearing a dark jacket tography equipment, including a and blue jeans. $l,OOO Olympus C-3030 digital camera As she called the police from her with serial number 111310732, a $159 apartment, she saw the man adjusting Master 64 MB smart media memory his crotch and walking toward the incard and a $9O Camera Mate USB card tersection of Anderson and Erwin reader, Dean said. There were no signs roads. Campus Police could not locate of forced entry. the perpetrator. The students had also reported that Peeping Tom spotted: A student at 6:46 p.m. April 15, they observed a reported that at 2:30 a.m. May 3 she white man masturbating outside their saw a man in the parking lot between
windows.
Trustees approve budget for fiscal year 2001-2002 P TRUSTEES from page 1 drops to 25 percent on Main West. Figures are even lower for residential fraternities, which occupy much of Main West. The Board agreed with much of the report, calling the changes “consistent with the goals... of promoting diversity in all aspects of university life and nurturing the personal and intellectual growth of students by building community in social, civic and academic realms.” When the report was released, administrators were still debating the requirement that all sophomores live on West, but Chafe said it is the only way to create a representative community. Outgoing Interfratemity Council President Chris Dieterich, Trinity ’Ol, said he worried about potentially pushing seniors off West. “The more you tilt your population toward your youngest members numerically, the more youlose the aspect of mentorship,.,. That’s bad for Duke. That’s bad for the students.”
Regarding the independent corridor, Dieterich said he was ambivalent. But incoming IFC President Mike Wick, a senior, said he felt it was a step in the wrong direction. “It’s unfortunate someone could walk through Duke’s campus and not see one selective living group or fraternity” Wick said, adding that selective living groups provide valuable programming. IN OTHER BUSINESS: The Trustees also approved a $678 million operating budget for the fiscal year beginning July 1, up 4.4 percent over the current year. Including funds restricted for special purposes and sponsored research funding, the overall budget will total
$1,183 billion. The budget takes into account a 4.2 percent increase in undergraduate tuition, fees, room and board and over $BO million in financial aid. The Board also heard reports from President Nan Keohane, Academic Council Chair Peter Burian, outgoing Duke Student Government President Jordan Bazinsky, outgoing Graduate and Professional Student Coun-
cil President Cybelle McFadden and The Campaign for Duke Chair Peter Nicholas.
Nicholas reported that the University remains on track to hit its $2 billion goal, despite fears that a slowing economy might substantially reduce contributions. The Board also heard from incoming Vice President for Student Affairs Larry Moneta and incoming Dean of the Medical School Sandy Williams. Durham Public Schools Superintendent Ann Denlinger made a presentation to the Board, thanking Duke for its efforts on the Neighborhood Partnership Initiative, which seeks to make connections between the University and surrounding neighborhoods. The Board also celebrated honors earned by Duke students in the past several months. It officially congratulated the mathematics team for winning the William Lowell Putnam Mathematical Competition and Matthew Baugh, Trinity ’Ol, for his Rhodes and Truman scholarships and the men’s basketball team on its NCAA championship.
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THURSDAY, MAY 17, 2001
The Chronicle
PAGE 10
®The
Duke University Union Budget 2001 -2002 Budget Summary as approved by the University Union Board
INCOME
Description Advertising / Playbill Concessions Union Subsidy Ticket Sales Season Ticket Sales Single -
-
Patron Drive TOTAL INCOME
Fall 1,000 250
24,000 48,929 16,310 2,600 $93,089
EXPENSES Copying Services Publication Expense (Playbills) Advertising & Publicity Contract Work Public Relations & Social Expenses Equipment Rentals Freight, Express & Postage Telephone Toll Charges Spec Events/Conf Svcs Box Office Labor Box Office 5% of Sales Flex / Credit Card % Bulk Mail Room TOTAL EXPENSES
Total 1,000 2,000 250 500 24,000 48,000 48,928 97,857 16,310 32,620 2,600 5,200 $93,088 $186,177 Spring
4,200
20 4,200
4.000
4.000
61,657
1.000
61,656
1.000
40 8,400 8,000 123,313 2,000 500 500 60 30,000 320 6,524 2,020 4,500
15,000 160 3,262 1,010 2,250
250 250 30 15,000 160 3,262 1,010 2,250
$93,089
$93,088 $186,177
250
INCOME Description Fund Equity (Balance from Prev Yr.) Investment Income Pools Union Subsidy Sundry Revenue Tuition Resale Supplies Darkroom Rental Studio Passes/Lab Fees TOTAL INCOME -
EXPENSES Staff and Work Study Salary Teacher Honoraria Studio Advisors Instructional/Classroom S&M Copying Services Office Supplies & Materials Office Subscriptions, Periodicals, & Books Publications Expense Computer S&M Reserve for Betterment Minor Mach & Equipment Building Security Maint (Keys, Locks, etc) M & R Mach & Equip Advertising & Publicity Cont. Education/Training Expenses Public Relations & Social Expenses Freight, Express & Postage Telephone Toll Charges Communications Local Telephone Travel & Living Expenses Publications Group Bulk Mail Room Computer Repair TOTAL EXPENSE
<ssooo
-
CABLE 13 INCOME
Description Investment Income Pools Union Subsidy TOTAL INCOME -
EXPENSES Work Study-Undergraduates Professional Services (Individuals) Computer Supplies & Materials Studio Supplies & Materials Copying Services Office Supplies & Materials Production Supplies P & E Agency Personal Prop (Depreciation) Building Security Maint (Keys, Locks, etc) M & R Mach & Equip -
Advertising
&
Publicity
Public Relations & Social Expenses Equipment Rentals
Freight, Express
&
Postage
Insurance Parking Expense Telephone Toll Charges Communications Local Telephone SpecEvents/Conf Svcs TOTAL EXPENSES -
Fall 150 22,435 $22,585
Spring 150
22,435
Total
300 44,870
$22,585 $45,170
1,750 2,000 125 4,375 60 75
1,750 2,000 125 4,375 60 75
3,500
767
767
1,534
8,080
8,080
60 2,000 500 125 125 25 1,250 39 60 1,044 125
60 2,000 500 125 125 25 1,250 39 60 1,044 125
$22,585
$22,585
-
250 8,750
16,160
INCOME Description Union Subsidy TOTAL INCOME EXPENSES Publications Expense Homecoming Invitations Newsletter Public Relations & Social Expenses Homecoming Alumni
120 2,088
250 $45,170
INCOME
Fall 1,218 375
Spring 1,218 375
Total 2,436 750
16,500
16,500
33,000
12,000 1,500
12,000 1,500
75
75
24,000 3,000 150 800
400
400
$32,068
$32,068
6,825 7,500 5,150 3,000 150
$64,136
6,825 7,500 5,150 3,000 150 650
13,650 15,000 10,300 6,000 300 1,300 550
1,000
275 900 50 1,000 1,000
50 750 1,500 150 250 300 50 1,518 250 50 600 100
50 750 1,500 150 250 300 50 1,518 250 50 600 100
$32,068
$32,068
650
Freight, Express & Postage Telephone Toll Charges Travel & Living Expenses TOTAL EXPENSES
1,800
100 2,000 2,000
2,000
Spring 2,000
$2,000
$2,000
100 1,200
200 $64,136
Total 4,000 $4,000
150 1,200
75 500 350 50 350
75 500 350 50 350
$2,000
$2,000
150 1,000 700 100 700 $4,000
INCOME
COMMUNICATIONS/ PUBLICITY INCOME Description Union Subsidy TOTAL INCOME EXPENSES Copying Services Office Supplies & Materials Advertising & Publicity “Freight, Express & Postage' Telephone Toll Charges TOTAL EXPENSES
Fall 3,785 $3,785
Spring 3,785 $3,785
200200 30 30 3,500 3,500 50 50 5 5 $3,785
$3,785
Total 7,570 $7,570
400 60 7,000 100 10 $7,570
Fall 500 24,495 850 $25,845
Cosponsorships Union Subsidy Sales Tickets -
TOTAL INCOME
Spring 500 24,495 850
$25,845
Fall 11,100 $ll,lOO
TOTAL INCOME EXPENSES Professional Services (Individuals) Instructional Materials Maintenance & Shop Supplies & Materials Copying Services Office Supplies & Materials Office Subscriptions, Periodicals, & Books Photographic Supplies & Materials
Total 1,000 48,990 1,700 $51,690
30 1,450
1,450 13
Freight, Express Postage Telephone Toll Charges Spec Events/Conf Svcs
300 225 17,000 200 3,350 28 3,250
300 225 17,000 200 3,350 28 3,250
TOTALEXPENSES
$25,845
$25,845
-
&
$6O 2,900 25
6,700
6,500 $51,690
$ll,lOO
$22,200
100 50 50
100 50 50
200 100
1,000 2,863
1,000 2,863
100 2,000 5,725
Audiovisual Education Spec Events/Conf Svcs
1,000 400 500 150 100 75 395 3,290 75 430 50 100 50 75
1,000 400 500 150 100 75 395 3,290 75 430 50 100 50 75
2,000 800 1,000 300 200 150 790 6,580 150 860 100 200 100 150
TOTAL EXPENSES
$ll,lOO
(Film processing archival) E Agency Personal Prop (Depreciation) Minor Mach Equipment <ssooo M R Mach Equip Advertising Publicity Public Relations Social Expenses -
P
100
&
&
&
-
&
&
Equipment Rentals Freight, Express & Postage Grants Telephone Toll Charges Communications Local Telephone Transportation Travel/Mileage
.
$ll,lOO
$22,200
MAJOR ATTRACTIONS INCOME Description
Cosponsorships Sundry Revenue Union Subsidy
Fall 300 16,500 500
TOTAL INCOME
$17,300 $17,300
EXPENSES Professional Services (Individuals) Copying Services Office Subscriptions, Periodicals, & Books Uniforms, Ciothing(T-Shirts) Advertising & Publicity (General) Advertising & Publicity (Chronicle) Contract Work Public Relations & Social Expenses Equipment Rentals
Spring 300 16,500 500
600
1,200 30
Spec Events/Conf Svcs
50 150 500 350 10,000 150 75 50 250 150 4,960
TOTAL EXPENSES
$17,300
$17,300
Freight, Express Postage Groundskeeping Telephone Toll Charges &
Total 600 33,000 1,000 $34,600
15
50 150 500 350 10,000 150 75 50 250 150 4,960
1,000 700 20,000 300 150 100 500
9,920 $34,600
MAJOR SPEAKERS INCOME Description
Cosponsorships Union Subsidy Sundry Revenue Peter Block Fund
EXPENSES Copying Services Advertising & Publicity Contract Work Film Rentals Public Relations & Social Expenses Freight, Express & Postage Telephone Toll Charges Travel & Living Expenses Univ Subsidies-Agencies SpecEvents/Conf Svcs/Tickets TOTAL EXPENSES -
450 34,000 400
Total 22,200
500 95
TOTAL INCOME EXPENSES Copying Services Publication Expense Production Supp (Ticket Printing) Uniforms, Clothing(T-Shirts) Advertising & Publicity Contract Work Film Rentals Public Relations & Social Expenses
Spring 11,100
250 48
-
FREEWATER PRESENTATIONS Description
Description Union Subsidy
&
275 900 50 1,000
DEVELOPMENT
4,000
150
FREEWATER PRODUCTIONS
CRAFT CENTER
BROADWAY AT DUKE
Fall 2,750 23,000 250 500 $26,500
15 1,800
19.000
650 25 50 2,160
Spring 2,750 23,000 250 500 $26,500
Total 5,500 46,000
1,000 $53,000
30 1,800 19,000 650 25
2.000
800
2,160 2,000 800
$26,500
$26,500
3.600 38,000 1,300 50 100 4,320 4,000
1.600 $53,000
The Chronicle
THURSDAY, MAY 17, 2001
PAGE 11
The Duke University Union Budget
2001-2002 Budget Summary as approved by the University Union Board
ON STAGE INCOME
Description Union Subsidy Ticket Sales Season TOTAL INCOME -
EXPENSES Copying Services Publication Expense
Advertising
&
Publicity
Contract Work Public Relations
& Social Expenses Freight, Express & Postage TelephoneToll Charges Spec Events/Conf Svcs Box Office Labor Box Office 5% of Sales
Spring Fall 12,500 12,500 29,940 29,940 $42,440 $42,440
2,625 5,754 24,500 400
Total 25,000 59,880 $84,880
2,625 5,754 24,500
5,250 11,508 49,000
400
800
45
5,100
60 10,200
5,100
140
140
Contingency
2,096 1,670
TOTAL EXPENSES
$42,440
$42,440
280
4,192 3,340 $84,880
INCOME Sales Tickets TOTAL INCOME -
EXPENSES Publication Expense Production Supp (Ticket Printing) Uniforms, Clothing(T-Shirts) Advertising & Publicity Contract Work Film Rentals Freight, Express & Postage Telephone Toll Charges Spec Events/Conf Svcs Flex Charges TOTAL EXPENSES -
12,833
Spring 12,832
Total 25,665
$12,833
$12,832
$25,665
400 50 100 400 9,908 400 10 1,400 165
400 50 100 400 9,908
800 100 200 800 19,815
400
20 2,800
1,400 164
$12,833 $12,832
330 $25,665
INCOME Concessions Cosponsorships Union Subsidy Table Rentals TOTAL INCOME
Spring
450 345 8,400 2,300
450
$11,495
$11,495
EXPENSES Copying Services Office Supplies & Materials Uniforms, Clothing (T-Shirts) Cost of Goods Sold
8,400 2,300
4,250
115 45 1,258 400 875 2,800 75 220 228 225 795 175 25 10 4,250
$11,495
$11,495
115 45 1,258 400 875 Advertising & Publicity Contract Work 2,800 Contributions and Prizes (Tshirt design)7s Public Relations & Social Expenses 220 Equipment Rentals 228 Freight, Express & Postage
225
Housekeeping Space Rentals
795 175
Taxes and Licenses Telephone Toll Charges Special Events/Conf Svcs TOTAL EXPENSES
25
Advertising
&
Publicity
Public Relations
&
Freight, Express &
Social Expenses Postage
President Misc -
Telephone Toll Charges Communications Local Telephone TOTAL EXPENSES -
EXPENSES Public Relations & Social Expenses VPP Discretionary Fund General Body Meeting Graduation Reception Union & Administration Mixer Changeover Ceremony Parents Weekend Reception Meetings Business Related Travel and Living Expenses ACUI/SAE -
-
APAP CMJ/South By Southwest Film Festival NACB Vehicle Rental TOTAL EXPENSES
6,540
Spring 6,540
$6,540
$6,540
Total 13,080 $13,080
690 150 75
690 150 75
1,380 300 150
150
150
300
1,000 125 1,900 175 100 250
2,000 250 3,800 350 200 500
1,875
1,000 125 1,900 175 100 250 50 1,875
$6,540
$6,540
$13,080
50
100
3,750
7,000
Spring 7,000
Total 14,000
$7,000
$7,000
$14,000
250 400 100 100 50 2,200
250 400 100 100 50 50 2,200
500 1,000 1,250 500 350 250
500 1,000 1,250 500 350 250
1,000 2,000 2,500
$7,000
$7,000
$14,000
50
500 800 200 200
100 4,400
1,000
500
INCOME Description Union Subsidy Sales-Tax Exempt Mdse (T-shirt Rev) Sundry Revenue TOTAL INCOME -
Total 900 690 16,800 4,600 $22,990
INCOME Description Visual Arts Equipment Fund Union Subsidy TOTAL INCOME
100 7,200 $7,300
Spring 100
7,200 $7,300
250
625
$20,950
$20,950
Total 40,150 500 1,250 $41,900
200 Computer Supplies & Materials Studio Supplies & Materials 125 300 Copying Services Office Supplies & Materials 225 Office Subscriptions, Periodicals, & Books Publication Expense (Program Guides) Production Supplies (CD’s, LP’s, etc.) 1,000 500 Uniforms, Clothing(T-Shirts) P & E Agency Personal Prop (Depreciation) 1,652 Minor Mach & Equipment <ssooo 1,250 100 Furniture & Furnishings Office Mach & Equip Computers & Minor Computer Accessories
200 125 300 225
400 250 600 450
175 400
1,000 500
2,000
1,652 1,250
3,303 2,500 200
1,000
100
100
Computer Software Building Security Maint
(Keys, Locks, etc) Office Mach & Equip (M&R & Maint contracts) Advertising & Publicity Assoc Dues, Membrshp, & Certification Fees Contract Work Contributions & Prizes Public Relations & Social Expenses Freight, Express & Postage Insurance Light & Power Space Rentals Telephone Toll Charges Communications Local Telephone SpecEvents/Conf Svcs (ie Table rent) Intra-fund Transfers (Cospons, etc) Contingency for Special Projects Fund TOTAL EXPENSES -
250
250
1,500
1,500
3,000
500
275 3,250 100 300 75 1,200 1,300 175 750 3,500 150 500 1,524
275 3,250 100 300 75 1,200 1,300 175 750 3,500 150 500 1,524
3,047
$20,950
$20,950
1,000
$41,900
INCOME DSG Student Fee GPSC Student Fee Student Affairs 2000-2001 DSG Overenrollment 2000-2001 Investment Income Union Endowment Income TOTAL INCOME
2000-2001 309,750 46,670
30.000 12,036 6,624
2001-2002 318,600 49,004
30.000
9,473
2.000
1.000
1,983
$406,080
$411,060
Executive Committee
16,800 14,000 40,150 24,790
16,800 14,400 40,150 27,080
TOTAL EXPENSES
$399,910
$411,060
Broadway,at Duke Cable 13 Craft Center Development Freewater Presentations Freewater Productions Major Attractions Major Speakers On Stage
Meetings/Symposiums
$22,990
20,075
EXPENSES
-
8,500
Spring
DUU SUMMARIES Total 200 14,400 $14,600
EXPENSES Professional Services (Individuals) Instructional/Classroom S&M Office Supplies & Materials Photographic Supplies & Materials Publications Expense M & R Mach & Equip Advertising & Publicity Public Relations & Social Expenses Catering Freight, Express & Postage Insurance Grants Telephone Toll Charges Travel & Living Expenses TOTAL EXPENSES
Fall 20,075 250
EXPENSES
VISUAL ARTS
SPECIAL EVENTS Description
EXPENSES Work Study Computer Supplies & Materials Copying Services Office Supplies & Materials P & E Agency Personal Prop (Depreciation) M & R Mach & Equip
INCOME Description Union Subsidy TOTAL INCOME
QUAD FLIX Description
INCOME Description Union Subsidy TOTAL INCOME
-
2,096 1,670
WXDU
UUB
1,300 $14,600
Publicity/Communications Quad Flix Special Events
Visual Arts WXDU
Thursday, may seventeen, two thousand one
RECESS
page twelve
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Local Events
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Annie Get Your Gun»The Tony Award-winning Irving Berlin musical that teaches girls how to shoot
straight—from the holster—makes its way to the Triangle. Tonight until Saturday, Bpm; Saturday and Sunday, 2pm; Sunday, 7pm. $55 dress circle; $l5 to $45 orchestra. BTI Center-Raleigh Memorial Auditorium. For info, and tickets: (919) 831-6061. Artsplosure: Spring Jazz and Art Festival»Thousands are expected to attend North Carolina's largest arts festival, featuring 150 booths, live music and interactive sculptures. Saturday, 11am to 9pm; Sunday, 11am to 6pm, Free to the public. Moore Square, downtown Raleigh. For info.: (919) 990-1158.
A Thousand Clowns»Former Magnum PI star Tom Selleck performs in a revival of Herb Gardner's comedy, in its preBroadway run. Tonight until June 3. Reynolds Theater, West Campus. Tickets start at $22. For tickets: (919) 684-4444 or tickets.duke.edu Cat's Cradle»3oo E, Main St., Carrboro. (919) 967-9053 Jonatha Brooke, Tonight Guided by Voices with Creeper Lagoon, Friday Two Dollar Pistols w/ Star Room Boys and Les Dirt Clods, Saturday Tortoise w/ Nobukazu, Takemura and Prefuse 73, Sunday Guttermouth w/ Fenix, TX, U.S. Bombs and Deviates, Monday •
•
•
•
Go! Rehearsal Studios*loo-F Brewer Lane, Carrboro. (919) 969-1400. The White Octave w/ Sorry About Dresden and Vibrant Green, Tonight Fin Fang Foom w/ The Mercury Program and Polline, Saturday The Sandman Film Screening, Sunday Iron Cross w/ The Agency and The Lotus, •
Amores Perros deftly weaves three stories of humans and their canines—it’s nothing to growl at
By Martin Barna
A
dog is a man's best friend. They fetch our slippers, come when called, obey our commands and sometimes, it seems, read our moods from our scent and slouch. And we pay dogs back for it—with trips to the woods for hunting and trips to the groomer for a pedicure. Dogs and man have become close. So close, in fact, that in the sublime Amores Perros the tragic, lovesick characters begin meet their canine equivalents. With loose grammatical guidelines, the English-subtitled film's title translates to "Love's a bitch"—An exceptionally apt title for a film that intricately weaves three plot lines, a la Pulp Fiction, into a larger tale of love, loss and betrayal. Unlike other Pulp Fiction clones, Amores Perros leaves out the rapid-fire, wholly unbelievable Tarantino-style talk. It's a relief; and it's shockingly real. Opening with a daredevil car chase through the streets of Mexico City, we meet Octavio. His dog, Cofi, is lying on the back seat of his car, bleeding from a wound. Running from gun-toting lowlifes, Octavio ponders to a companion how he got in this mess. In his attempt to outmaneuver his pursuers, Octavio runs a red light, totaling his auto and the car of Valeria, who was out for a drive with her own dog. Witnessing the accident is El Chivo (The Goat), a mysterious homeless man who pushes a cart through the town, followed by a large pack of his own GRAD dogs. m that point e story moves irward and backward in me, cruising ugh the lives of ee central
•
•
Wednesday.
Charlie Goodnight's»96l W. Morgan St., Raleigh. (919) 828-5233 Comedian and movie star Kevin Pollack (The Usual Suspects, Avalon, Grumpy Old Men) gets back to his roots—stand-up. May 17 until 19.
New
lik
releases
Film
May 18 Angel Eyes Shrek
May 25 Pearl Harbor
June 1 The Animal Moulin Rouge What's the Worst That Could Happen?
/
Music
May 22 Echo and the Bunnymen: Flowers Mark Eitzel: The Invisible Man Redman: Malpractice Ike Turner: Here and Now
May 29 Mary Chapin Carpenter: Time Sex*Love Everything but the Girl: Back to *
Mine Goo Goo Dolls: What I Learned About Ego, Opinion, Art & Commerce
irst subplot, we at Octavio is in isana, the wife ing, philandering
THE MYSTERIOUS "EL CHIVO": Traveling the streets of Mexico with a pack of wild dogs, this homeless man only looks harmless,
brother. To win her love, Octavio tries to earn money for herby entering Cofi into bloodthirsty dogfights. As he slowly buys her affection, and as Cofi becomes more vicious in the ring, Octavio grows ruthless —he orders his brother to be beaten to a bloody mess and he sexually assaults Susana. Director Alejandro Gonzalez Inarritu and writer Guillermo Arriaga are not saying that people influence their dogs, but that our dogs eventually seem to influence us. For Octavio, love of Susana changes from juvenile infatuation to animal-like lust. This leads him to kill a man and take part in the car chase; Valeria, a gorgeous perfume model, suffers massive leg injuries from the car accident, but the wounds are not what cripple her. Her dog, Richie, falls into a hole in the floor of her apartment and becomes trapped between the floorboards, along with a few thousand rats. She spends all her time waiting for her dog to crawl out of the floor, exhibiting the ensnared feeling. Her older boyfriend, Daniel, can only watch. Even after Richie is rescued, Valeria will not be the same. I will not reveal much about the story of El Chivo. His comes last in the film and inevitably ties up all the loose ends. Let me just say that the actor playing El Chivo, Emilio Echevarria, pulls off a tremendous performance. We slowly learn that his character is by far the most troubled of the three, and it only gets worse when he rescues Cofi from the scene of the accident. In the end, the film is not about the people-as-dogs metaphor as much as it is about how people, like dogs, can. express the emotion of love so wrongfully that it can cause great pain and lead us to doing horrific things. The theme is not new, but there is something so real in Amores Ferros' telling of this story that haunts the viewer long after the credits roll. Lastly, this film is rated R for a reason. The dogfighting scenes are very graphic, and while the Humane Society's stamp of approval shows up in the end titles, the blood and the reality of this movie are not for the mildly squeamish. □
A Knight's Tale DIR! BRIAN HELGELAND. WITH: HEATH LEDGER, RUFUS SEWELL, MARK ADDY, PAUL BETTANY,
Instructions for viewing A Knight's Tale : 1) Remove stick from ass; 2) Sit back and smile. The movie, which takes place in 14th century England and stars Aussie hunk Heath Ledger, isn't historically accurate, or even well written. It's painfully predictable and really cheesy. It's also way too much fun. A Knight's Tale is about a bunch of guys proving they have the biggest... swords. The movie follows poor squire William Thatcher (Ledger) as he enters a series of jousting tournaments, impersonates royalty, finds a fan base, meets the princess and battles the nasty bluebloods for happily-ever-after. It's a magnetic poetry plot, pieced together with pre-packaged story points. What makes A Knight's Tale jive is a standout supporting cast, some very clever moments, and really exciting fight scenes. Heavy metal takes on new meaning as swords collide and heads bang to the ground, with soldiers knocked off their horses to the tune of Queen's "We Will Rock You." The movie's soundtrack is totally modern, which GRADE: would be fine if the songs were better. A slew of from the Mighty Ducks era pollute this film—tunes from "The Boys are Back in Town" to "We Are the Champions." Sometimes, relief comes in the form of mellow techno beats. A Knight's Tale takes its title from the first Canterbury Tale, written by Geoffrey Chaucer—'who is also a character in this
B-
flick. Played by Paul Bettany, the hilarious and passionate Chaucer is a sidekick worthy of his own sequel (maybe Chaucer in Love7). Laura Fraser is equally WHEN YOU LOOK as good as Ledger, your movie will not luminous as need trivial things—like a decent plot or intelligent script. £
blacksmith who makes magic armor. Heath is solid in his role, as is his true love, a princess played by Shannyn Sossamon. Both are better actors than their material, as is the sexy Rufus Sewell, doing his bad-guy shtick. Overall verdict? It's difficult to admit it in print, but yeah, we dug it. Rufus and Heath are totally hot, Shannyn and Laura are totally cool, and Paul Bettany is absolutely droolworthy. Mad props to the cast of A Knight's Tale for forgetting about their big swords and having tons of fun. And letting us watch. —By Faran Krentcil >*� � «t � HMfJ V*� � � *�� »
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Thursday, may seventeen, two thousand one
RECESS
page thirteen
Un-
The Sopranos Peppers and Eggs: Music from the HBO Original Series Recipe for a soundtrack: Take one part Three Dog Night, add a cover of a Bob Dylan or Paul Simon song done by a new, "edgy" artist, mix with a convoluted cut of rap and toss in half-adozen recent single B-sides. Then find a film or television series to match your soundtrack with Nine times out of ten, soundtracks suck. And then there is Peppers and Eggs, the second soundtrack to The Sopranos. The show, which wraps up its third season this Sunday, has redefined musical direction for both the big and little screen. Frequent viewers of the show are as obsessed with the song playing
GRADE:
A
The Mouse is in the house with Sad Sappy Sucker—a release of old material
By Greg Bloom
Permit
me to break protocol for a moment. Modest Mouse is arguably the most dynamic and interesting band in the country —an argument strongly supported by last year's epic of unprecedented scope and dark, weary beauty, The Moon and Antarctica. But if Recess happens to be the only source for all your pop culture info, then chances are you've probably never heard of them, because we've only mentioned them once after four albums and years of touring. Oops. Rather than continue our marginalization of these indie-rock mystics by grading this first-time release of their long-lost "infant" album on its immature and sometimes feckless composition, I'm abusing the power of reviewer to draw the attention of anyone who might still be in the dark. Go buy Moon and Antarctica post-haste, and then we'll talk about Sad Sappy Sucker. Back? Someone hearing Modest Mouse for the first time with this album would probably be turned off; like most songs in their large catalog, this bunch takes a few runs through before any of it sounds like more than a collection of half-baked ideas—and even then it's a bit uncooked. Recorded when frontman Isaac Brock was a teenager and before bassist Eric Judy replaced their two extraneous guitarists, Sucker shows every bit of the band's very young age. Despite 26 tracks, it runs just a little moi than half an hour. Many songs are under a minute, and several apparently were recon ed on an answering machine—short burst: one-offs that can only be of passing intere: to completists. The real songs largely lack wicked lyrics and never-ending mathematL riff equations that drone into the sublime. For anyone well-steeped in Mouse canon, however, nuggets such
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during the end titles as they are with the plot arcs {my prediction for
Sunday—Christopher dies). Creator David Chase
oversees the selection of music for the show; his selections demonstrate a level of creativity and aptness that is absent from other soundtracks A Sopranos song always has some meaning or relationship to a larger theme of the show or episode. Nils Lofgren's haunting "Black Boots" captures the depression that Carmella Soprano
felt midway through this season. Kasey Chambers' ode to dependency, "The Captain," defines the Gloria Trillo. The Kinks' "Living on a Thin Line" opened and closed the season's most controversial episode, where a stripper was brutally beaten by her mobster boyfriend. Peppers and Eggs also has a cover—Bob Dylan sings the unpoetic, yet appropriate Dean Martin tune "Return to Me." Somehow Dylan's voice and subtle musical changes make it seem GRADE: like a deep, transcending song. Add Elvis Costello, R.L. Burnside and j| Pigeonhed, and you have an album more diverse than a multicultural center. Toss in an Italian Massive Attack-sound-atike named Madreblu and Otis Redding and you have a dish that will entertain the pickiest of guests. Until you hear a good one, you don't realize how bad most soundtracks are. Peppers and Eggs is a very good one. —By Martin Barna
their hat back. Miniature Liberty Bells were so last year, as "Worms vs. Birds," "From Point A to Point B" and "It Always Rains On A Picnic" are pleasingly raw predecessors to Brock's (somewhat) more mature art.
The timing of this release is perhaps questionable After the monstrous hype surrounding The Moon and Antarctica, this is an awkward follow-up, even from the archives —sort of like scoring with a hot date and then showing her your old collection of Magic cards and Star Trek costume apparel. from the vantage point of a true believer, 'keTs jagged edges and scraggly amarism can be exciting in its undiscipline. ering within these baby photos the tiny eds of a distinct sound that has now own ripe and full gives hope that Moon >nd Antarctica was not the peak of Modest artistry, but the first classic in a long chain of good-and-evil, life-and-death musical ponderings. You don't have Moon and Antarctica yet? Go! □ ■'
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THURSDAY, MAY 17, 2001
The Chronicle
Established 1905,Incorporated 1993
Search for justice
Wednesday
was the scheduled date for Timothy McVeigh’s execution. One week ago today, however, the Department of Justice revealed that the Federal Bureau of Investigation had failed to turn over some information to McVeigh’s lawyers. The DOJ claims that the information—several thousand pages of documents—would not have altered the verdict ofthe case. Justice Department officials, however, have delayed the execution until mid-June as a precaution. The good news from this mistake is that the FBI found the problem and reported it quickly; the bad news is that there was a problem at aU. Delaying the execution was the prudent and appropriate action for Attorney General John Ashcroft to take. Reports of the discovery of additional evidence after the delay only add to the confusion. The death penalty represents the ultimate, uncorrectable punishment. If someone’s life is to be taken, then no loose threads should remain to damage the credibility of the punishment. Justice relies upon information, and that information apparently was unavailable for McVeigh’s defense. Although these documents represent a small fraction ofthe vast amount of data compiled for the investigation, not only ofMcVeigh but of various leads investigators pursued in the aftermath ofthe Oklahoma City bombing, their emergence cannot be ignored. Everyone deserves justice, even those who commit the most despicable crimes. Standard procedure should be followed in the courts to handle this newly discovered information. The bureau has clearly erred. The threshold for a new trial, however, should be the same as would be followed in any context. Punishing the Justice Department should not be a desire that takes precedence over standard practices. At the same time, the public push for McVeigh’s execution should not influence the process. While the courts work to settle the mess left before them, other parties must examine the agency responsible for the mess. This embarrassment is just one of several in recent years for the FBI. The handling of the Wen Ho Lee investigation a year ago revealed serious problems in the agency. Apparently, many serious problems remain. Several members of Congress have called for a review of the organization. Their calls should be heeded. Although these two cases are unique in their publicity from many of the Bureau’s daily tasks, a review must ensure that these errors are unique and are not part of systemic problems. The FBl’s investigative work affects many people each day. Investigating the FBI is only appropriate. President George W. Bush has an opportunity to influence the process. With the separately announced departure of FBI Director Louis Freeh, Bush can choose someone who will restore some of the FBl’s recently lost credibility to the vacant post. With the review in hand, the new director could target specific areas that require attention. In the end, the verdict in the case may not change. The evidence may turn out to be inconsequential as the Justice Department contends. McVeigh, who has admitted to the crime, would still face the death penalty for his actions anyway. However, justice serves as an important part of this nation’s foundation. It is a characteristic that separates America from so many other countries. Even in the face of the heinous act to which McVeigh has admitted, upholding justice remains in the best interests of all
The Chronicle AMBIKA KUMAR, Editor JAMES HERRIOTT, Managing Editor DAVE INGRAM, University Editor KEVIN LEES, University Editor JOHN BUSH, Editorial Page Editor CRAIG SAPERSTEIN, Sports Editor JONATHAN ANGIER, GeneralManager PRATIK PATEL. Senior Editor MARTIN BARNA, Projects Editor THAI) PARSONS, Photography Editor MATT ATWOOD, City & State Editor CHERAINE STANFORD, Features Editor TIM PERZYK, Recess Editor JENNIFER SONG, Health & Science Editor MATT BRUMM, Health & Science Editor ELLEN MIELKE, TowerViewEditor PERI EDELSTEIN, TowerView Managing Editor PAUL DORAN, Sports Managing Editor DREW KLEIN, Sports Photography Editor WHITNEY BECKETT, Wire Editor DEAN CHAPMAN, Wire Editor MEG LAWSON, Sr. Assoc. City & Slate Editor REBECCA SUN, Sr. Assoc. City & State Editor MOLLY JACOBS, Sr. Assoc. Features Editor BECKY YOUNG, Sr. Assoc. Features Editor EDDIE GEISINGER, Sr. Assoc. Photography Editor ROBERT TAI, Sr. Assoc. Photography Editor ALISE EDWARDS, Creative Services Manager ALAN HALACHMI, Online Manager SUE NEWSOME, Advertising Director ADRIENNE GRANT, Creative Director CATHERINE MARTIN, Production Manager MARY WEAVER, Operations Manager JORDANA JOFFE, Advertising Manager NALINI MILNE, Advertising Office Manager TOMMY STERNBERG Advertising Manager The Chronicle is published by the Duke Student Publishing Company, Inc., a non-profit corporation independent of Duke University. The opinions expressed in this newspaper are not necessarily those of Duke University, its students, workers, administration or trustees. Unsigned editorials represent the majority view of
the editorial board. Columns, letters and cartoons represent the views of the authors. To reach the Editorial Office (newsroom) at 301 Rowers Building, call 684-2663 or fax 684-46%. To reach the Business Office at 103 West Union Building, call 684-3811. To reach the Advertising Office at 101 West Union Building call 684-3811 or fax 684-8295. Visit The Chronicle Online at http://www.chronicle.duke.edu. © 2001 The Chronicle, Box 90858, Durham, N.C. 27708. AH 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.
Letter to the Editor
Community as whole must confront racial issues It is with great sadness similar line of reasoning and disappointment that we unabashedly opined that read in the April 25 issue of India did not have history The Chronicle about the and culture worthy of alleged occurrences ofracialrecording prior to English ly motivated harassment at colonization. These stateDuke. Unfortunately, we ments enraged not only me, have not met these events but several others as well. However, a surprisingly high with the surprise commensurate with their boldness and number of people to whom hatefulness. In four years at we spoke read the letters this respected University we without having the slightest often felt the undercurrents blip of indignation appear on of racial prejudice—either in their social radar. We felt an insensitive joke or in a some consternation at this racist comment occasionally but found clarity after thinkpassed off in a class discusing over the situation. sion or mealtime conversaThere are people at Duke
tion as factual and truthful. An incident from my senior year comes to mind. Members of the staff at the Duke Review had written particularly strong
remarks in letters to The Chronicle regarding the
University’s need for a Hindi major relative to the need for statistics as a major offering. Among the reasons was that Hindi was not a language worth learning because it was a language spoken in a third-world country overrun
who are so warmly nestled in the comforts afforded by $30,000 per year of tuition that they are blind to the reality already perceived by many in the community. The reality is that both subtle and overt instances of racism are too often ignored or accepted by the population at large as normal and commonplace. Talk to average Duke students of racial
might look at recent inci-
dents and have difficulty convincing themselves that a hate crime has occurred. It is the Duke community as a whole that must know that an injustice has occurred against one of its own and that the scourges
of prejudice, ignorance and hatred exist right here in
this Gothic Wonderland. It is not the 0.01 percent of Duke responsible for these
incidents that will set the tone regarding response to racial inequity, but the remaining 99.99 percent that will dictate how these and future incidents will be addressed. Through its action or inaction, the Duke community as a whole will decide if this University is strengthened or diminished as a result. Andrew Wang Engineering ’99
Alex Wang Trinity ’93
prejudice, and they will flip textbooks, out citing
Sejal Zota Birmingham or Rodney by poverty and disease. A King. Those same students Trinity ’96 for referenced article, see http:/1www.chronicle.duke.edu/story.php?articlelD=2277B
Bumper sticker vandalism silences subtle protest I recently fell victim to the parking lot vandalism that is becoming all too common here at Duke. Was my CD player stolen? My window smashed in? My parking pass lifted? None of the above. In fact, an even more heinous crime was committed! My “SAVE AMERICA— Stop Hillary Now” bumper sticker was violently ripped
off the back of my car by some mischievous bandit. I am writing to let this bandit and other would-be bandits out there to let them know that their actions will not deter me from continuing to lodge my protest against a woman with the moral and ethical standards ofthe late, great Dick Nixon. You won’t find me screaming in your
face on the Bryan Center walkway or ramming flyers down your throat as you walk to class; let me take my peaceful, silent stand. So I say to you, as I’m sure Bubba wishes he said to Monica, hands off! (My bumper sticker that is).
Scott Goodwin Trinity ’O2
On the record An attitude will get you somewhere,
if not anywhere.
Graduating senior Dan Mallory in his speech at commencement (see story, page seven)
Letters
Policy
The Chronicle welcomes submissions in the form of letters to the editor or guest columns. Submissions must include the author’s name, signature, department or class, and for purposes of identification, phone number and local address. Letters should not exceed 325 words; contact the editorial department for information regarding guest columns. The Chronicle will not publish anonymous or form letters or letters that are promotional in nature. The Chronicle reserves the right to edit letters and guest columns for length, clarity and style and the right to withhold letters based on the discretion of the editorial page editor.
Direct submissions to: Editorial Page Department The Chronicle Box 90858, Durham, NC 27708 Phone: (919) 684-2663 Fax: (919) 684-4696 E-mail: letters@chronicle.duke.edu
THURSDAY, MAY
Commencement Address
17, 2001
PAGE 15
Welcome to the big world out there Charlayne Hunter-Gault encourages graduates to stay informed and keep an open mind
The following contains excerpts from the May 13 commencement address of journalist Charlayne Hunter-Gault. President Keohane, members of this distinguished dais, including fellow honorary-degree recipients, faculty, administrators, Daniel Mallory, parents and other relatives, as well as loved ones, and lovers of the Class of 2001 and most importantly, the Class of 2001.... I’ve learned a lot about languages and culture since I got to South Africa, not least that in South Africa alone there are 11 official languages. And most black South Africans to one degree or another speak most of them, even though many black South Africans have had limited if any access to formal education. In addition to language and culture, I’ve also learned
a life of servitude; values that created a suit of armor that enabled me to walk past hostile mobs and into college; values that gave me the inner confidence to know and to insist that I belonged.... Having fulfilled my dreams beyond my wildest dreams and enjoyed and endured adventures that would make Brenda Starr eat her heart out, I can say that it was only possible because those values about which I spoke prepared me to take [Robert] Frost’s road not traveled, even before he became my favorite poet.... To be sure, I have encountered the darkness, uncomfortable places like northern Uganda, where death came suddenly one day in the unsuspecting guise of a routine thing, like the simple handshake or the communal washing of hands during the ritual burial of a loved one. It was the deadly Ebola virus that had swept into villages and homes, taking with it fathers and mothers and their children in a death almost unimaginable in its horror, until you see its consequences in the flesh. But I have found something solid in that darkness, in the bravery of doctors and nurses and community workers who mobilized to confront the killer... at great risk to themselves.... Likewise, my journey to the horizons has taken me to uncomfortable fields of combat, where the warriors and their victims are almost always children who have never known the innocence of childhood, or a time of peace. But the road not traveled, the journey in search of people, has also found in that particularly bleak darkness, unknown and unsung heroes.... And there’s the little 12-year-old girl named Wendy... You have no doubt encountered her, but only in the mind-boggling statistics of the tens of thousands of children being orphaned by HIV-AIDS that has claimed at least 24 million African lives.... Both her mother and father have died from AIDS-related causes, and she alone is taking care ofher five siblings, the youngest of whom is two. She arises before dawn to gather firewood to warm the one-room, thatched-roof hut she fives in. Then she makes the fire, the breakfast, wakes the others, bathes them and sends them off to school before getting ready to go to school herself. Her fife is hard, but she says that she will be there for her siblings until the youngest reaches her age. It doesn’t seem to have occurred to her that she is only 12. I have seen things that even with the vivid imagination that was mine as a graduating senior, I could not have dreamed of that I would see.... Inasmuch as that while technology is rapidly narrowing the distance between continents and civiliza-
sounds in the meetings and debates on this campus and others over reparations for slavery to those in South Africa over redress for apartheid attest to that reality.... Now, as John Hope Franklin reminds, the problem is both local and global, compounded by new global proximities and receding boundaries that make neighbors of us all. Thus America’s problem with difference, while still largely residing in race, is now compounded by difference that arises from culture and its conflicts. I believe the challenge of culture will be to the global world of the 21st century what the challenge of race was in the 20th.... So what’s that got to do with you? Well, in a real sense, when you woke this morning... it was the first day of a new chapter in your lives, when you have every right to feel... the elite of your world, prepared for leadership wherever your professions and careers take you. If you at the same time [are] feeling a little anxious, that, too, is understandable. There are a 10t... out there waiting to test you, your credentials and your values. Early on in my career... as a black reporter working for The New York Times—the white newspaper as it was known then—l was challenged by one of the young [Black] Panthers when I came to report on some of their programs. When I asked him what I needed to do to convince him that my report would be accurate and printed as I wrote it, he said, “You’ve got to come in right.” He didn’t define what he meant, but somehow I knew. He meant that I had to come up, not with a made-up mind, but open and willing to see the things that I had not yet learned to see, and to use that knowledge to preempt prejudgments and to create
accurate and honest portrayals of the people I met and the events I witnessed. I have carried that Panther’s lessons from Harlem to Harare, from Capetown to Kosovo... we both had to give each other some space. As you move out from this place to your space in a century that is new, you have the unique opportunity to shape it and establish its legacy. My wish for you as you confront
some things I never knew about wildlife and their language.... The environment that I have lived in and worked in for the past four years has indeed had an impact on me, and I believe that I am the better for it.... And so, slowly, but incontrovertibly, I think I am becomthat challenge is thatyou will do so ing a child of Africa, learning from its people and its animals things I didn’tknow about them and about myself, by traveling from time to time, if not all of the time, outside of your and about their attitudes, and about my attitudes. That, too, is amazing, considering I remember being are comfort zones, creating new maps in your mind that hold out the posyour age and confidently telling an older neighbor in sibility of navigating roads not Atlanta that I believed I knew most ofwhat I needed traveled, new ways to approach old to know ever in the world, and that I was ready to take problems that have so far led only on the world. Yep, that’s attitude, huh. to dead ends. In the intervening years, I have learned to harness Toward that end, let me encourthe unbridled hubris of my 21-year-old self. But with age you not to be content that you the benefit of a slight few more years I can forgive are informed by watching the myself for it, because without it I would not, for one thing, be standing here today, in what is surely one of tions, in the medium that affirms nightly news. Politics, which can be to to a fickle fool, and the bottom line the most honored places a person can stand—at the and forms the basis of most of our graduation ceremony for what surely are some of the awareness and perceptions, televiseem to be determining editorial content more and more. Thus whole sion, and to a lesser extent, the print best minds and best people in the universe.... areas of the world that I think you Thus armed, I would hope that as you sit there, you media, it is less rapidly being used need to know about in the interest are as convinced as I was when I was your age that you to impart the kind of knowledge really do know what you need to know to take on the that would help us to know our new neighbors in the of being good global citizens are being completely ignored except in episodic flirtations and at moments hood that is globalist, Snoop Dogg might say. world. For that would mean that even as you are preThus Africa, for example, is portrayed... as an of high drama. I would like to think present company pared to take your place in the workaday world or in academia, you will also be prepared to step outside uncomfortable place of conflict, death and dying. You and CNN excepted. There is a wonderful world awaiting you, a world of your comfort zones, without worrying about whether or see the wars and the warriors, but rarely the warnot you can step back in. I was in that mode when I left weary who want no part of either. You see the disease, dynamic and different cultures and creatures that the United States and a 20-year, high-visibility career death and dying but rarely the heroes of those sieges. have much to share provided judgments are made not with David Gergen and some other colleagues, to go You see the ravages of AIDS, but you never meet a on fear, which as South African philosopher-poet Wally four years ago to live and work in Africa—not the least heroine like Wendy... You see Africans with their begSerote writes, becomes a final judgment. You have the foundation laid at this great instituging bowls, but rarely those who are trying to do things bit assured that it would be a magical mystery tour. You but nationtion rarely for themselves. see those to follow weird directions, to encounter with coups, What prepared me for that leap outside my comfort zone were the experiences I had growing up in a far states that are struggling, let alone succeeding and respect the people and the creatures that you meet. different South.... Back then, I told my mother that I nurturing the roots of their newly democratic cultures. You have the values that will enable you to embrace A friend of mine from the States who visited us in the concept that is the foundation of African culture had dreams of becoming a journalist, a desire no doubt inspired by my comic strip idol, Brenda Starr. My South Africa recently wrote this to my husband and me: and consciousness: A human being is a human being mother didn’t tell me to leave that pipe dream right “We had a remarkable time, and thanks to the two of you because of other human beings. This road, I can guarantee you, will lead you to new there in the funnies, as we used to call themback then, met so many people who know and work in that country. that such a dream was impossible, although for a little As my wife must have told you, our trip to Soweto to visit perceptions about yourselves, about others, about your black girl like me at the time it was. She simply said, the school was most enlightening and inspiring. From world and the global community. And you will be able “If that’s what you want to do.” There was nothing in reading the U.S. papers, one would think the situation is to look each man, woman and child along your journey her experience that informed those words other than hopeless in much of Africa, and even in South Africa. We to the horizons as we look at each other today and be the values passed down through the generations, val- came away with much of the enthusiasm that you have confidently able to utter the words... ofYeats: What do we know but that we face one another in this place? ues that enabled my ancestors to survive the Middle conveyed to us over these many years...” As Duke’s own distinguished sage, John Hope Travel safely. Do well. And do good. Have fun. And Passage and slavery and segregation; values that informed her that dreams propel ambition, and that Franklin, said on a recent visit to South Africa, “The learn how to f1y.... Stay well, and thank you for giving even if the dreams were unrealistic, without them I problem of getting along together is a global one, and we me the honor of sharing this Mother’s Day and this would be consigned to lowered ambitions and probably haven’t learned how to do it yet.” The often cacophonous Graduation Day with you.
I would hope that as you sit there, you as convinced as 1 was when I was your age that you really do know what you need know take on the world.
Comics
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THURSDAY, MAY 17, 2001
THE Daify Crossword
Zits/ Jerry Scott & Jim Borgman
Edited by Wayne Robert Williams
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19 Undothed 20 Movie set in Texas? 23 Seed packet 24 Wise ones 25 Hidden fence 27 Lacking 30 Remove innards 31 Museum guides
34 36 37 38 39 40
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DO YOU FEEL GUILTY ABOUT TAKING BRIBES FROfA VENDORS?
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villain For one Warms up Fulton's power Salutation Whimsical composition
from Arizona? 31 Retreat 32 Maudlin 33 Maliciously sarcastic 35 Country east of Fiji
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42 Uses a heatingcooling process 43 Somber and grave 44 Steer flesh 46 Crowd stirrer? 49 Utah city 50 American Beauties
51 Como Usted? 52 Chipper 54 Press 55 Play part 58 Quasi-religious group 57 Time periods 59 Notes of scales
The Chronicle: The joys of move in-out day: Ambika’s furniture moving muscles: .Ambika and Jim Kevin’s new stone garden: Kave and Devin The U-Haul’s deluxe ride-in cabin featuring cloth seats!: John TV’s no longer facilitate laziness: Pablo and El Crague The very useful online move in-out evaluation forms; Matt We ail hijack Craig’s bachelor pad: Rosalyn .Matt A.B. Dukes refuse Duke’s prestigious moving services Rain. Sweet, dude, sweet: Thadrach, Allison
oxlrot/ Bill Amend
Roily, the human dolly:
JASoN LOCKS HIMSELF IN HIS BEDROOM WUH AN ARMLOAD of textbooks.
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TELL WHEN EXAM WEEK iS COMING.
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Account Representatives:
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Monica Franklin, Dawn Hall,
Yu-hsien Huang
Sales Representative:
Brooke Dohmen Taeh Ward
Business Assistant:..
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THURSDAY, May
17
leer House Healthy Happenings; “AARP 55 Alive Mature Driving Course.” First of a two-part series. Fee. To register, call 416-3853. 10:00 a.m. to 3:00 p.m. 4019 N. Roxboro Road, Durham. Restorative Chi Gung for cancer patients, family members, and caregivers. Every Thursday at 12:45 p.m. to 1:45 p.m. at the Cornucopia House Cancer Support Center, 111 Cloister Ct., Ste. 220., Overlook Building. For more information call 401 -9333.
“A Thousand Clowns, by Herb Gardner. Starring Tom Selleck, Directed by John Rando, Produced by Theater Previews at Duke in association with Jeffrey Richards R.J. Reynolds Industries Theater at the Bryan Center on Duke University’s West Campus. 7:30 p.m. For information and tickets call 684-4444. “
Community
w®
Calendar
Teer House Healthy Happenings: “Hepatitis What Is It?” To register, call 4163853. 7:00 p.m. to 8:30 p.m. 4019 N. Roxboro Road. Durham.
FRIDAY Teer House Healthy Happenings; “AARP 55 Alive Mature Driving Course.” Second of a two-part series. Fee. To register, call 416-3853. 10:00 a.m. to 3:00 p.m.
Living with Advanced/Metastatic Cancer Support Group is held every Friday from 3:00-4:30 p.m. at the Cornucopia House Cancer Support Center, 111 Cloister Ct., Ste. 220., Overlook Building. For more information call 401-9333.
“A Thousand Clowns, by Herb Gardner. Starring Tom Selleck, Directed by John Rando, Produced by Theater Previews at Duke in association with Jeffrey Richards R.J. Reynolds Industries Theater at the Bryan Center on Duke University’s West Campus. 8:00 p.m. For information and tickets call 684-4444. “
Center for Documentary Studies: “Documentary Work and Social Change; An introductory Workshop for Nonprofit Community Groups.” Fee is $6O. One-day workshop for members of community organizations dedicated to improving their communities. The goal is to help organizations envision and plan documentary projects that enhance their work. Call 660-3663.10:00 a.m. 1317 W. Pettigrew St.
“A Thousand Clowns, by Herb Gardner. Starring Tom Selleck, Directed by John Rando, Produced by Theater Previews at Duke in association with Jeffrey Richards R.J. Reynolds Industries Theater at the Bryan Center on Duke University’s West Campus. 2:00 p.m. and 8:00 p.m. For information and tickets call 6844444. “
SATURDAY Teer House Healthy Happenings; “Infant/Child CPR and Safety at Teer House.” Fee. To register, call 416-3853. 9:00 a.m. to 1:00 p.m. 4019 N. Roxboro Road, Durham.
Classifieds
THURSDAY, MAY 17, 2001
NEED FREE HELP WITH YOUR WRITING
Announcements
Writing Studio tutors are available at Perkins Library for Duke undergraduate summer school students. To check available times and schedule an appointgo on-line ment, at www.ctlw.duke.edu/wstudio.
Attention Students. Moving in or moving out? Remember Us Habitat Hand-Me-Ups. We take your donations of good quality items. We sell good quality items reasonably. 3215 Old Chapel Hill Rd., Durham. -
Students
&
Professors.
Need
Desktop Publishing Services? Call Starr G. Publishing, 949-0302 Email estherglen@aol.com.
Duke University does not discriminate on the basis of race, color, national and ethnic origin, disability, sexual orientation or preference, gender or age in the administration of educational policies, admission policies, financial aid, employment, or any other university program or activity. It admits qualified students to all the rights, privileges, programs, and activities generally accorded or made available to students. The university also does not tolerate harassment of any kind. Questions, comments or complaints of discrimination or harassment should be directed to the Office for Institutional Equity, (919)-684-8222. Further information, as well as the complete text of the harassment polmay be found at icy,
WANTED: PARTICIPANTS IN LISTENING EXPERIMENTS These studies are designed to determine the role of various brainstem neural subgroups in the physiological process of hearing and their influence in selective auditory attention. Principal Investigator: David W. Smith, Ph.D. Rooms 204/205 Sands Building. Hearing Research Laboratories, Division of Otolaryngology-Head and Neck Surgery, Duke University Medical Center. Eligibility Criteria: Over 18 years of age with normal hearing. Subjects will be compensated $B/hr for sessions ranging from 1-2 hours each. For information, please contact Gilda Mills at 681-8270.
http://www.duke.edu/web/equity/.
In American Village. Minutes to Duke. 2 bedroom with eat-in kitchen: wooded. Available June. $750 per month. Call 919-6031952. LARGE 2 BEDROOM DUPLEX APARTMENT FOR RENT. GOOD NEIGHBORHOOD, SHORT DRIVE TO DUKE. AVAILABLE MAY 1. PREFER GRAD/PROFESSIONALS. $485/MONTH. ED 919-6633743 (LEAVE MESSAGE).
The Chronicle
Babysitter needed for two girls 3 1/2 and 2 for MW afternoons 12:30s:3opm Through summer and next year if possible 544-9939
Fitness and Aerobic Instructors needed. Please call the Chapel-Hill Carrboro YMCAask for Evie at 919942-5156.
Babysitter needed. Flexible times, after 1 P.M., up to 5 days/week. Two children. Call Diana 403-1585.
Do you like fish? Need responsible and conscientious summer help to care for zebrafish in a research laboratory. Main responsibilities include fish feeding, monitoring fish health, and general fish room maintenance. Job could carry over to fall semester (work study preferred). Learning opportunities possible.
Babysitting available in our Durham home. To care for along with our 2 daughters. Arayb 419-3480.
Roommate wanted for fall 2001 and spring 2002 school year. Erwin Square apartments. Call 286-0213.
Reliable, responsible and caring babysitter needed for occasional weekend nights and several hours on some weekdays. Competitive pay rates, non-smoker, minutes from Duke. Sweet-natured, active, 7 month old boy. Must have experience with infants. Please provide references and contact Sheryl at 401-0939 if you are interested.
Autos For Sale www. PerfectCol legeCar.com. Your parents never had it this
good!!!
Be an Econ tutor! Economics 51D and 52D tutors needed for summer school. Undergraduates earn $B/hr and graduate students earn $l2/hr. Apply in 217 Academic Advising Center, East Campus, 6848832.
Certified
FREE TUTORING
lifeguards for West Campus Aquatic Center. Contact Coach Thompson, 684-6028. Hours available now through sum-
Apts. For Rent
The Peer Tutoring Program is offering free tutoring in both summer sessions to Duke undergraduates in the following classes: Chemistry 11L, 12L, 151L, 152L, Computer Science 001,006, Economics 51D, 52D, Math 31L, 32, 32L, 103, Physics 53L, 54L, Statistics 101, 102, 103. Stop by 217 Academic Advising Center, East Campus and pick up an application.
mer.
1,2 & 3 Bedroom Apartments available for rent. See display ad. Bob Schmitz Properties, 416-0393, www. bobschm itzproperties.com.
Law Offices of
Duplex one bedroom apartment available June Ist. Good Neighborhood near Duke. Prefer Grads/Professionals. Ed 919-663-3743 $420/month.
Kenneth
3600 N. Duke St, Suite 5
Durham, NC 27704
(leave message).
Graduate assistant needed for executive training program on campus from May 21 July 11. s2ooo+ per month, free meals. Individual must be friendly, responsible & responsive, organized, and attentive to detail. International experience a plus. Call 668-1926 or
Furnished Studio Apartment for rent in quiet neighborhood near Duke Gardens-Private drive and entrance, walking distance to Duke, washer and dryer, cable, access to swimming pool $575, utilities included. Call: 489-9130 leave message for Nikki or Jamie.
-
veitch@duke.edu
The Chronicle classified advertising
rates business rate $6.00 for first 15 words private party/N.P. $4.50 for first 15 words all ads 100 (per day) additional per word 3 or 4 consecutive insertions -10 % off
J. Steinberg
(919)
479
Speeding Tickets DWI License Revocations DMV Problems Auto Collisions Workers' Comp. All Injuries •
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Donors Wanted!!
Ist donation NEED CASH!?!? $20.00; 2nd donation $40.00; 3rd donation $25.00; 4th donation $25.00. Bring a friend and receive a $2O BONUS. Bring in this ad and receive an extra $5 bonus. Fraternities, Sororities Earn Cash Fast! Alpha Plasma Center, Village Shopping Center Ste. 235, Durham. (919)683-1970.
HAVE AN AMAZING SUMMER AT CAMP TACONIC IN MASS. Caring and motivated college students and grads who love working with children are needed as SPECIALTY and GENERAL counselors. Prestigious coed camp seeks Swim, Sail, Windsurf, Waterski, Athletics, Tennis, Musical Theater, Piano, Arts, Crafts, Silver Jewelry, Video, Photography, Newspaper, Ropes/Climbing Wall, Gymnastics, etc instructors. Join a dedicated team. Competitive salary, room and board, and travel. 1-800-762-2820. LEASING CONSULTANT, parttime, needed for N. Durham apartment community. Sales or leasing experience a plus. 10-20 hours per week and every other Sat. Please fax resume to Regency Place Apartments at 471-2431 or call 471-6800.
Marketing student intern (salary & commission) needed for local Environmental Consulting firm. Some knowledge of computers essential. Possibility of future fulltime employment. Send resume via FAX (919) 489-9643 or email SarahSajedi@eraenvironmental.com
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After hours and weekend appointments available.
SSTO Y( Intro Flights $35
3 Aircrafts t 1 Ch« 'i
I
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 -
Experience! 1, C mmitte ] Full Time Instruct rs I
Private Pilot
Instrument Rating Photo Gift Certificates Rental Scenic Rides Ground School Commercial/CFI Program •
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Empire Aviation Lakeridge Airport Fails Neuse Lake Durham, NC 15 min from Duke 479-1050 www.empire-aviation.com •
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MAXIM HEALTHCARE SERVICES has immediate openings to work one on one with disabled children during the summer. Positions involve working in the child’shome, community or Day Campus. GREAT PAY & experience. Call today (919) 419-1484, ask for Joe Elia.
PHYSICS TUTORS Are you here for the summer and need a job? Why not tutor physics 53L? Applications are on the website: www.duke.edu/web/skills. Undergraduates earn $B/hr and Graduate students earn $l2/hr. Peer Tutoring Program, 217 Academic Advising Center, East Campus, 684-8832. RESEARCH ASSISTANT needed, full-time, temp to perm at Frank Porter Graham. MUST have BA/BS in psychology/related field, excellent references and love chilSerious Inquiries Only. dren. Salary $9-11.00/ hr. Call Laura at 919-843-9239.
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, publications, recommendations. Computer skills needed. Minimum 1 year commitment. Send CV and references to jeffrey.petrella@duke.edu SPECIAL OPERATIVES NEEDED Banzai Entertainment seeks marketing and propaganda interns for upcoming independent film. Call 969-6909.
STATS TUTORS NEEDED The Peer Tutoring Program needs Statistics 101 and 102 tutors for first summer session. If you are looking for a flexible part-time job, apply in 217 Academic Advising Center, East Campus, 684-8832. Undergraduates earn $B/hr and graduate students earn $l2.
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St. Joseph's |X[ Episcopal \ I j Church M/
fr »m
k I ise
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1 1
919-620-1481
FAX 919-471-4704
FLORENCE NURSING' SERVICES
3215 Guess Rd Suite 207 Durham, NC 27705 •
invites you to worship with us 8:00 am Holy Eucharist Education forall ages 9:15 am Sung Holy Eucharist 10:30 am
1902 W. Main St
BT.II
Main at Ninth St 286-1064 Father Steven Clark, Rector
W*
-
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:
Ms
\*Mm.
*
*os
Specializing in charming homes, duplexes,
and apartments Signing leases NOW for summer and next school year!!
-
Chronicle Classifieds Box 90858, Durham, NC 27708 0858 fax to: 684-8295 -
Only 2 Large Homes Left, Applications Accepted Now Available June Ist for next school year:
409 Gregson St.:
SBR, 2BA, Near E. Campus, off street parking, lots of space 2237 sq. ft!! -
807 Wllkerson St.: SBR, 2BA, living room, dining room, deck!!
phone orders: call (919) 684-3811 to place your ad Visit the Classifieds Online!
Houses include all appliances plus W/D, security systems. Most have central heat/air. **We also have many 2-3 BR homes and 1-4 BR apartments**
Call 684-3811 if you have any questions about classifieds, No refunds or cancellations after first insertion deadline.
1222 Broad St., Apt. A Durham, NC 27705 (919) 416-0393
http://www.chronicle.duke.edu/dassifieds/today.html
WALK OR BIKE TO DUKE! •
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www.bobschmitzproperties.com
THURSDAY, MAY 17, 2001
The Chronicle
PAGE 18 Students needed over the summer for office responsibilities to include deliveries, making answering phones, copying, filing, retrieving and sorting mail, etc. Work 10-20 hr/wk @6.75 hr. If interested please call 6843377. The Center for Human Genetics is seeking student labor for the summer. We currently need individuals to perform clerical duties, literature searches, and assist in data management for genetic studies. Individuals will work either on heart disease or spina bifida genetic studies. The hours are up to full time, with opportunities to continue part time during the school year. Candidates should have some PC skills and general genetics who want to learn about the clinical side of genetic research. If interested, please contact Liz Melvin, 6844787 or emelvin@chg.mc.duke.edu. Two positions available. Wanted a work study student (25/75) attending summer session for office work in a research setting with Dr. Doraiswamy, of Psychiatry. Department Contact person: Mae Burks, 919668-2572. Please email your to resume burksoo4 @ mc.duke.edu.
Houses For Rent
15 ACRES, Cole Mill Road. Furnished 1960 brick house overlooking pond in northwest Durham. Immediately adjacent to miles of hiking trails in Eno River State Park. 2,800 sq. ft.; 3BR/2.58A; huge closets; two fireplaces; cable and DSL connections; high-efficiency central heat and air. Less than Durham 10 minutes to Freeway. August, 2001 July, 2002. through $2,000/month; negotiable for Allenton the right tenant. Management; 490-9050; 9670543; Arnolds@allenton.com Call today; we encourage you to inquire.
2BR, 2BA House. North Durham 6 Miles to Duke. Fenced &Safe. In-Law Suite. $750/ mo. 477-2911.
3 Bedroom, 21/2 Bath Townhouse. Dishwasher. Washer/Dryer, $9OO/mn. Available 8/1/01. 919471-0689, evenings. 3 BR 2.5 BA House. Family room/living room/dining room/kitchen huge loft that can be used as office space. Two-car garage. Research Triangle Park. 15 minutes to Duke/Freeway and Raleigh via Highway 70 or I-40. Quiet, professional neighborhood. No pets. $l2OO/mth. 660-5621. +
www.ezsummerjobs.com Tired of sitting at a desk? Want to make cash, while having a good time. We need: promoters, bartenders, waitresses, hosts, and door personnel, to work this summer in New York's finest hotspots. Call 212-244-5064 ext. 15 for more info.
3-6 bedroom homes available for rent. See display ad. Bob Schmitz Properties, 416-0393, www.bobschmitzproperties.com.
Historic, country cottage. 1 bedroom, 1 bath, central heat/air, heart pine floors. 2 fireplaces, yard ser15 minutes to Duke. vice, No pets. Available June 1. $7OO/mn. 620-0137. Wooded security patrol subdivision w/hiking trials, close to shopping. Convenient location-2 1/2 miles from Duke Campus. 2 story townhouse. 3-bedroom, 3-bath, living
room, fireplace, dinning room, kitchen, breakfast room, laundry room, lots of closet, newly carpeted, deck, 2 other enclosed storage, parking, walk to clubhouse, pool
and tennis. Some amnesties included. $1350/mon. Grad, professional, family preferred. 336email674-5069 or
maguyrick@aol.com.
Houses For Sale 45 Stonewall Way.1 level, endunit. 3 bedroom, 2 bath. 9 foot ceilings. Bx3o patio, alarm system. HOA dues includes exterior maintenance, grounds, & pool. Call 471-6321.
BEAUFORT, NC COTTAGE available for sale by the owner. The historic cottage has been restored completely- top to bottom. Classic storey-and-a-jump, has three small bedrooms, two baths, front porch, deck, appliances included. The lot is large, landscaped and sits back about four blocks from the waterfront. Call (252) 728-4440 anytime. Asking $148,000.00 Historic Hillsborough charmer: 2 bedroom, 2 bath, full walkout basement with greenhouse on 1/2 acre. $225,00. Call McClure North Carolina Estates, 919-932-2828 ext. 231.
Misc. For Sale
BUY A BAGEL, GET j A BAGEL FREE! (up to a dozen total!) purchase your choice of deliciousfreshly baked bagel andget another FREE with this coupon. Buy as many as six bagels and get one FREE for each purchased Limit six free bagels per customer per day. Offer good with this coupon only. Offer applies to freshly baked bagels only. Does not include cream cheese, toppings or other condiments.One offer per coupon. One per customer. Not valid in combination with other offers. Expires 8/17/2001.
RRUEGGER'S BAGELS™ DURHAM: 626 Ninth Street Commons at University Place (1831 MLK Parkway at University Drive) CHAPEL HILL; 104W. Franklin St. Eastgate Shopping Center RALEIGH: 2302 Hillsborough Street Mission Valley Shopping Center North Hills Mall Pleasant Valley Promenade Sutton Square, Falls of the Neuse Rd StonehengeShopping Center, Creedmoor Rd. HarvestPlaza, Six Forks & Strickland Rds. GARNER: 117 Small Pine Drive (Hwy. 401N at Pine Winds Dr CARY: 122 S.W. Maynard Rd. Preston Business Center, 4212 Cary Pkwy •
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Mall Pleasant Valley Promenade Sutton Square, Falls of the Neuse Rd Stonehenge Shopping Center, Creedmoor Rd. Harvest Plaza, Six Forks Strickland •
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THURSDAY, MAY 17, 2001
The Chronicle
PAGE 19
Keohane endorses key points of Colleages laud Cultural Space Committee report Baker’s efforts P- MULTICULTURAL from page 1
about 20,000 square feet. Such areas, according to the report, would give groups like Diya, the Black Student Alliance and prayer groups a sense of ownership and support at the University. “Learning about and experiencing different cultures should be an integral part of every Duke student’s daily experience,” according to the report. “We see a vibrant, highly visible and identifiable multicultural center as a part ofthe Bryan Center.” The report also recommends that the Mary Lou Williams Center expand within the West Union Building, rather than within a new freestanding building, which the committee saw as less visible
and available. Moving the center to the ground level with also about 20,000 square feet would be more appropriate, the report states.
Additionally, it suggested associating the Great
Hall with the center to make the space more available for weekend events. The committee said the physical connection between the West Union and the Bryan Center should be improved, by reworking the Bryan Center walkway and the surrounding area into a defined quadrangle. Although the facilities serve similar populations,
the centers should remain distinct in their respective missions, the report argues. President Nan Keohane issued a two-page response to the committee’s report, endorsing its main points and promising studies this summer to determine what space is available. She added that as Bryan Center renovation plans proceed, the needs of cultural groups will be considered. Beyond improving cultural interaction, the new spaces would help advance racial and ethnic relations at the University, said Leon Dunkley, director of the Mary Lou Williams Center and a member of the space committee. “I think the good that will come of this is to change the conversation we’re having about what racial and social differences mean at Duke,” he said. Several questions remain, Dunkley added, about what direction the proposed multicultural center should go. For example, the committee has yet to define what a cultural group is. Dunkley wondered whether the Center for Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and Transgender Life should be allotted space in the center. Such unanswered questions point to larger racial issues at the University, he added. “It really was a lot to ask student groups to solve institutional and perpetual problems at Duke in six months,” he said.
I* BAKER from page 3
for student affairs at the University of Pennsylvania, could not say how he hopes to shape the Office of Student Development. “I don’t have any sense yet of organizational plans,” Moneta said. “Vice President Clack is making all the interim decisions. We did talk about how to fill the vacancy. The goal now is to use existing staff to plug holes.” Clack said the new dean’s work will focus on the West-Edens Link, the new student life strategic
plan and the evaluation of the undergraduate judicial process. Moneta, who got to know Baker when she was a student life administrator at Syracuse University and he at the University of Massachusetts, said Baker will be missed. “On a personal basis, I’ve known Barbara for over 20 years, and she is a tremendous loss for Duke,” he said. “The love she’s had for students is irreplaceable.” At Duke, Baker said she has enjoyed working on the upperclass residential life plan. That experience will come in handy at MIT, where freshman and residential life will be her first priorities.
Friends remember Allen’s kindness, fim-loving nature � ALLEN from page
1
water. Two of them went after him; one had to be rescued, and the other returned to the beach after realizing she could not reach him. Before authorities arrived on the scene, Allen fell unconscious. Officials tried to resuscitate him for about 40 minutes, but he was pronounced dead at Healtheast Medical Center in Nags Head. Kill Devil Hills Police Lt. Michael Jasielum said Allen was no more than 50 feet from shore. “He went out in the ocean and it was just too rough for him.” Jasielum added that drownings in Rill Devil Hills are not common; about three or four people drowned last year.
Allen, a University of Southern California gradu-
ate, had hoped to pursue a career with the State De-
partment, Ladd said. “He was very smart and was a good critical thinker. He loved negotiating,” said Ladd, professor of public policy studies. “He knew what he wanted to d0.... He was really passionate about human rights and issues
like arms control reduction.” Allen’s giving nature was exemplified last year when he helped a fellow graduate student from China pursue action against someone who had fraudulently sold him a car damaged by floods in eastern North
Carolina, Corcoran said. Allen tried to fix the car and also contacted the Bet-
Interested in writing for The Chronicle? Contact
ter Business Bureau and the state attorney general. “[The salesman] was taking advantage of a Duke
student and a person from another country that didn’t speak the language very well. Russ worked tirelessly to rectify the situation,” said Corcoran, who graduated last Sunday. Allen’s family—his wife Jessica, mother, father and 19-year-old sister—attended the public policy graduation ceremony last Saturday. The family held a memorial service last Saturday afternoon at the Church of the Good Shepherd in Raleigh. His family requests that donations in Allen’s name be made either to the church or the Sanford Institute of Public Policy.
Jim at 684 2663
or jmhl9@duke.edu.
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THURSDAY, MAY 17, 2001
The Chronicle
PAGE 20
Attorney General appoints first female SBI chief � N.C. NEWS from page 6 the number ofwards from six to three, a step that is necessary to reduce the council’s size while still preserving the balance between at-large and ward seats on the council.
First female SBI chief appointed; North Carolina Attorney General Roy Cooper appointed Robin Pendergraft Monday to lead the State Bureau of Investigation, making her the first woman ever to fill the post. Pendergraft, a former prosecutor who has served as interim SBI chief since
January, will replace current crime control secretary Bryan Beatty. Cooper said he hoped Pendergraft will help modernize the SBl’s use of technology to deal with increasingly technological crimes. The SBl—the state counterpart of the Federal Bureau of Investigation—is responsible for running the state crime lab for forensic evidence and assisting local law enforcement officials. The bureau has more than 600 employees.
Presidential commission recommends tobacco quota buyouts: A 10member presidential commission sug-
in demand for tobacco, said commission member Jimmy Hill, a Kinston farmer. According to the report, which proposes replacing the quota system with one based on production licenses, the tax increase would raise $3.4 billion annually for a buyout of quota holders—enough money over five years to fujid the estimated $l6 billion cost of the buyout if three out of every four farmers stop growing tobacco. 1997 government statistics estimated that there were about 90,000 tobacco farms nationwide. North Carolina, Kentucky and Tennessee are the largest producers of the crop.
gested raising the tax on cigarettes to pay farmers to stop growing tobacco, according to a report released Monday in North Carolina and Kentucky. The commission, appointed last September by former president Bill Clinton, consists of farmers, health advocates and economic experts. The report calls for a 17-cent tax increase on each pack of cigarettes as well as for more federal power to regulate the sale of tobacco products. The tax increase would fund payments to tobacco farmers currently operating under a federal quota system—which has declined in recent years because of a drop
Byrd presents four options for Perkins renovations Trial approval of the online system represents the � A&S MEETING from page 3 archive with five semesters of information. Although culmination of nearly two years of work by DSG and the council approved the plan nearly unanimously, the administration. Bergsman and his predecessor, some faculty members expressed reservations about Drew Ensign, both strove to find a replacement for the last online course evaluation system, Duke Unthe system and want to review it in the fall. written dergraduates Evaluate Teaching, after the faculty “It is this type of system—that will exclude comments in favor of quantitative responses—that is canceled the program in fall 1999. Professors rejected another plan a year ago, before going to devolve written comments out of existence,” this month to what some professors have called yielding said James Rolleston, professor of Germanic languages and literature. “Students are going to wonder, ‘Who is the inevitable development of an evaluation system. IN OTHER BUSINESS: Robert Byrd, chair of the reading my comments? Not the computer.”’ Library Renovation Committee, presented the new evaluation Perkins “green sheets,” the Unlike the old council with reports from his committee’s six working forms are machine readable, making the online posting of results much easier. Dean of Trinity College groups. The reports outlined what is needed before the Robert Thompson and Prabhu’s predecessor Jason committee and architects decide on future plans. Byrd said the committee and architects have four Bergsman, Trinity ’Ol, took on the challenge this past year of developing a distribution system. options: renovation of the library’s interior; demoliIn response to recent criticism of the new form’s tion and reconstruction of the interior; construction design, this month the council informally agreed that of an addition to the library; and replacement of the the evaluation should be redesigned to emphasize older stacks with an addition. the importance of written comments. He also reassured several professors of the com-
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mittee’s commitment to improving the library’s aesthetic qualities. Director of Undergraduate Admissions Christoph Guttentag also gave his annual update on the incoming undergraduate class. He stressed the success ofrecruiting efforts, citing this year’s record high number of completed applications and of minority applicants. The meeting was the last ofthe council’s two-year term and ofProfessor of Chemistry Steven Baldwin’s term as council chair. Baldwin’s two years at the helm saw a wide range of activity—addressing issues like the course evaluations and the Honor Code—and raised the profile of the sometimes-overshadowed Arts and Sciences Council. Ironically, the first meeting of this council term—Sept. 10, 1999—saw the demise of DUET and the beginning of work toward the new course evaluation system. Next year’s council members and Baldwin’s successor are expected to be announced later this month.
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PAGE 21
THURSDAY, MAY 17, 2001
evils fall to No. 8 Loyola
Jackets beat Duke in ACC opener
By CRAIG SAPERSTEIN The Chronicle
7 Going into the NCAA tournament Loyola with only three losses—two of which 6 came to top-ranked Maryland— Duke and competing as the tourney’s second seed, the Duke women’s lacrosse team clearly understood that a second Final Four in school history was well within its reach. However, after defeating Temple decisively one week ago in the opening round, this opportunity was snatched away from the Blue Devils (15-4) last Sunday at Koskinen Stadium. Another perennial power from the Old Line State, eighth-seeded Loyola (15-4), scored four goals at the beginning ofthe second half and held on to win a heart-thumping 7-6 battle over the Blue Devils to advance to the round of eight, while Duke will be left at home wondering what might have been. The manner in which Duke finally succumbed was was heart-breaking for the home crowd. Attempting to erase a four-goal deficit midway through the second half Duke trimmed the Greyhounds’ lead to 7-6 and seemed to tie the game when leading scorer Kate Kaiser hurled the ball through the net with 7:42 remaining. However, one of the NCAA officials disqualified the goal, ruling that Kaiser had entered the crease when taking the shot. The Blue Devils had a few other chances to score during the game’s waning minutes, but none of these opportunities were as close as Kaiser’s. The game concluded with Loyola goalie Tricia Dabrowski running out the clock by circling her net as time expired. Needless to say, Kaiser showed her displeasure with the controversial ruling and subsequent outcome in her post-game comments. See
WOMEN’S LACROSSE on page 27 �
By CRAIG SAPERSTEIN The Chronicle
SPECIAL TO THE CHRONICLE
16 CHARLOTTE Ga> Tech The improvement of 2 the Duke baseball Duke team this season has been clearly demonstrated in its better record and the respect it is beginning to receive from the rest of the conference. In fact, this year, the Blue Devils’ newlook team not only extricated themselves from the vaunted ACC tournament play-in game, but also earned themselves a date against preeminent national power Georgia Tech in the No. 4 versus No. 5 matchup. However, yesterday, the Yellow Jackets, who recently received the services of All-American third baseman Mark Teixeira, proved that Duke is not yet ready to enter the upper tier of the ACC as they drubbed the Blue Devils 16-2 in the first-round contest. Paced by the play of shortstop Mark Lewis, who went 5-for-5 and scored three runs, Georgia Tech will move on to face top-seeded Florida State tomorrow, while Duke will face the Seminoles’ victim, N.C, State. See
KATE KAISER and the second-seeded Blue Devils were upset by Loyola
BASEBALL on page 27
Men’s golf prepares for NCAA regional in Williamsburg By PAUL DORAN The Chronicle
Now that the waiting game is over for the men’s golf team, things can only go up.
Before the ACC tournament the Blue Devils had been on a tear, playing some of their best golf of the year, including winning their second tournament of the year, The Intercollegiate Golf Tournament. Talk of an ACC title was buzzing through the locker room. However, after the unthinkable happened—a miserable seventh place finish in the ACC tournament the Blue Devils were left praying the NCAA selection committee would look very favorably on their two tournament wins. When the word finally came on May 8, Duke landed a spot in the East Regional at Golden Horseshoe Golf Club in Williamsburg, Va. The Blue Devils get to play close to home. However, they have to play in the much tougher East Region. “I felt confident we [would] still get a bid. We prepared as if we are going to make it, [took] care of our school work, and then buckled down,” coach Rod Myers said. However, now that it has landed the bid, Duke has a few things to work on before they can regain their old form and hopefully finish in the top seven—a requirement to make the finals, which will be held in Durham. First, Duke must get off to a good start if it is to hang with the leaders. That should also put away any unranked teams like Virginia and North Carolina —
SPECIAL TO THE CHRONICLE
MATT KRAUSS and Duke will take part in the NCAA East Regional.
that the Blue Devils beat all year until the ACC tournament. Squads like that should be gone after the first 18 so Duke can concentrate on upsetting the higher, ranked teams in the field. In a field this tough, they cannot afford to fall behind like they have before and have to play catch-up for the next three rounds. Secondly they need to put better than they did in the ACCs. Ironically, they drove the ball very well on a hard course in windy conditions, but, when it came to finishing off their putts, the Blue Devils were often successful. Little things like that can kill their confi-
dence and scoring average very quickly. “I’m not pleased, especially coming off the last [tournament's victory at Chapel Hill],” senior Paul Tucker said after the teams’ problems in Orlando. “The team putted terribly. It’s frustrating when you hit the ball like a tour player and putt it like a 30-handicap.” Finally, in order to qualify for the NCAA finals, Duke will need to be firing on all cylinders, from recent three-time All-ACC selection Matt Krauss on down. The ones at the top must contend for the individual titles, and those lower on down cannot rely on the top to do all the work. “If we want to have a chance to win golf tournaments we need to have individuals in position to win golf tournaments,” Myers said. “Matt and Leif [Olsen] are both outstanding players. It will come.” It will come, its just a matter of if it will come at the right time.
Rowing concludes
Track shines at Invites
Duke steals Raven’s doc
Two golfers make Open
The Duke rowing team’s season ended last weekend at the South Regional in Oak Ridge, Tenn. Duke’s second-place finish means the team did not qualify for the NCAA Championships.
The track and field teams had nine top-ten finishes and tied one school record over the weekend at both the James Madison and UNC/NCCU May Madness Invitationals,
Third generation Duke alum and former Baltimore Ravens head team physician Dr. Claude Moorman will take charge of the sports medicine program in July.
Freshman Leigh Anne Hardin shot a final round 70 on Tuesday to join teammate Candy Hannemann in qualifying tor this years LPGA tour’s U.S. Open.
League Baseball /Q* BravesMajor 6, Rockies 4 m
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Twins 4, Red Sox 3 Orioles 3, Tigers 2 Diamondbacks 2, Reds 1 Devil Rays 5, Royals 4 Dodgers 7, Expos 2 Indians 4, Rangers 3
THURSDAY, MAY 17, 2001
The Chronicle
PAGE 22
Men’s lax season ends with 12-10 loss Philly takes 1-game lead in semifinals By NICK CHRISTIE The Chronicle
Unable to overcome an 12 BALTIMORE early three-goal deficit, the men’s lacrosse Duke 10 team ended its season in disappointing fashion Saturday. The Blue Devils fell 12-10 to Towson University in the first round ofthe NCAA Championships. Although they managed to tie the score on three separate occasions, the Blue Devils cohid never seize an outright lead over the sixth-seeded Tigers, who improved to 13-3 and will move on to face Towson
By ROB MAADDI Associated Press
76ers
Maryland in the second round. With the bitter defeat, Duke finished its season with a record of 11-6, and the abrupt finality of Saturday’s contest left many Blue Devils stunned. “I don’t think anyone thought that the season would end this week,” Duke co-captain Scott Bross said. “I wasn’t prepared for it by any means, and I don’t think anyone else was either.” In contrast to the shocked Blue Devils, a euphoric Towson squad charged the field while celebrating their victory, the school’s first postseason win in five years. “We had some unbelievable efforts today,” Towson coach Tony Seaman said. “It was the first time for any one of these kids to be in an NCAA playoff game, and it was just a wonderful win for us.” Although battling injury, Tiger goalkeeper John Horrigan gave his team a particularly inspiring performance. He made sixteen saves, including several crucial stops in the fourth quarter to thwart a Duke comeback Towson began the game on a tear, scoring four goals in the first six minutes to jump out to an early 4-1 advantage. SPECIAL TO THE CHRONICLE Despite the Tigers’ dominance in the game’s opening minutes, were eliminated by Towson. and the men’s lacrosse team CASSESE KEVIN the Blue Devils did not panic. Duke fought back from the Besides the face-off, the other area in which Duke expectearly deficit behind the outstanding play of Alex Lieske and Chris Hartofilis, who combined to score seven of Duke’s 10 ed to have an advantage was in athleticism. Yet, despite a clear edge in size and strength, the Blue Devils had difficulty goals, including the team’s first five. “It’s tough to dig yourself out of a hole like that,” Lieske containing the lighter, quicker Tigers. “Towson is unbelievably fast,” Brennan said. “It was almost said. “But we came back. We tied it a couple of times, and we like you couldn’t move the ball fast enough. They weren’t that had some opportunities.” Disappointed with both his own personal production as well physical but they made up for that with speed.” Towson attackman Ryan Obloj brazenly refuted any notion as the team’s, sophomore attackman Kevin Brennan attributed that Duke’s zone. Duke’s size intimidated the Tigers. inability to execute in the offensive the loss to “They may be big but we’re much faster than them,” Obloj “They threw a couple of different looks at us defensively,” Brennan said. “Coach brought us in and told us, ‘Go at the said. “Personally, I didn’t think about how big they were at all.” Teammate Josh Tankersley pointed to his team’s offseason shortsticks, [then] dodge and make two or three passes.’ When we did what he said, it worked. But sometimes players tried strength and conditioning program as a significant reason for Towson’s victory. to do their own thing.” “I don’t think there’s team in the country that works the One of the game’s marquee matchups pitted two teams’ face-off specialists against one another. The pivotal battle harder than we do off the field,” Tankersley said. “I think it between Bross and Towson’s Justin Berry—who entered the really shows when we step on the field against a team that contest ranked third and fourth nationally in face-off winning outweighs us by an average of 20 pounds. We’re definitely percentage—ultimately swung in favor of the victorious outsized by them, but I think we showed today that we Tigers, who won 15 of the game’s 26 face-off draws. “I can’t say enough about our face-off guy, Justin Berry,” Seaman said. “I’ve read press all year long about how the kid from Duke was the best kid in the country; that might have been settled today.” However, Berry’s success was controversial. As the game wore on, the referee’s refusal to call Berry for false starts visibly frustrated the Duke sidelines, as an irate Mike Pressler threw his hat in disgust. Afterwards, a more restrained Pressler chose his words with care. “There are three parts to the face-off,” the Duke coach said. “They’re the two face-off guys and there’s the guy who blows the whistle. Scott Bross is the best in the game, and when it’s a fair fight in the middle, we’re going to win our share.”
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work harder.” For the Blue Devils, who pride themselves on their strength, toughness and overall physical conditioning, such comments carry a particular sting. Yet both Tankersley and Obloj each tallied three goals against the Duke defense, reinforcing their claim of superior physical preparation. Afterwards co-captain Matt Breslin, Duke’s starting goalkeeper each of the last three seasons, looked back on both the game and the season with mixed emotions. “There’s definitely a lot of pride that I have for this team,” Breslin said. “They’re some phenomenal people on this team. I’m disappointed for our senior class. We’ve had a great career as a whole, and it’s disappointing that it ended this way. But it’s always disappointing unless you’re the only one standing in the end.”
JfOk JE
Allen Iverson stared 88 directly into Vince Raptors Carter’s eyes, seemingly toying with him. He faked to his left, then to the right, continued to dribble, shuffled back and nailed a 3-pointer over Carter’s outstretched arm. It was that easy for Iverson last night. The NBA’s most valuable player scored 52 points, including 29 in the first half, as the Philadelphia 76ers beat the Toronto Raptors 121-88 to take a 3-2 lead in the Eastern Conference semifinals series. “To me, [the basket] looked like an ocean,” said Iverson, who sprained his left thumb during the game. X-rays on the thumb were negative. Carter scored 16 points and Antonio Davis added 14 for the Raptors, who trail for the first time in the series. Carter left early in the fourth quarter when he was hit in the head by 76ers center Dikembe Mutombo, but said he has just a “major headache.” Mutombo broke his pinkie and is listed as day-to-day. Aaron McKie had 19 and nine assists
for Philadelphia, and Mutombo added 14 points and nine rebounds. From the moment NBA commissioner David Stem presented Iverson with the league’s MVP trophy before the game, the night belonged to the Sixers. Philadelphia scored the first 11 points, led 17-4 midway through the first and 33-12 after one quarter. Toronto never got closer than 17 in the last three quarters. The Raptors shot 53 percent in the first half, but
trailed 62-40. “They were ready; we weren’t,” Raptors coach Lenny Wilkens said. “We were awful.” Iverson, who scored a career-high 54 points in Game 2 of the series, displayed every weapon in his arsenal, especially his 3-point shooting. He finished 21-of-32, including 8-of-14 from beyond the arc. “People say I have a flaw in my
game—l’m not able to make the outside shot,” Iverson said. “My whole thing is to punish people when they back up off me.”
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The Chronicle
THURSDAY, MAY 17, 2001
PAGE 23
Nirapathpongporn, Blue Devils dominate East regional By CRAIG SAPERSTEIN The Chronicle
CHAPEL HILL The Duke women’s golf team won the NCAA East Regional in convincing fashion last weekend with an eight-stroke victory over Auburn at North Carolina’s Finley Golf Course, but apparently, not all are convinced going into the NCAA championships next week in Howey-in-the-Hills, Fla. Coach Dan Brooks was happy with his team’s victory, but believes the Blue Devils are not even playing their best golf right now. In particular, the ACC coach of the year thinks that Duke might need better play from the bottom half ofits lineup in order to win its second national championship in three years. “I would say, given the numbers we’ve been shooting and given the weather we’ve be in, we are not playing our very best,” Brooks said after Saturday’s round. “If you look at our third player, fourth player, and fifth player, their numbers are not as low as those players have played this year. “This win does not tell me that we’re the best in the country. I think we are, but it’s not this win that
shows me.” While the scoring of Duke’s lower seeds was not optimal in Brooks’ eyes, the solid performance of Virada Nirapathpongporn, the ACC rookie of the year, is another story. Not only did “Oui,” as she is
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Place
Team Duke Auburn Georgia So. Florida New Mexico South Carolina San Jose St. Pepperdine Wake Forest Vanderbilt
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Place '
Strokes by Round 286 291 294 294 290 295 297 298 292 303 - 303 293 299 303 300 305 293 306 299 308 300 307 297 304 306 301 302 311 296 304
Total 871 879 887 899 902 904 907 908 909 911
Name Strokes by Round Virada Nirapathpongporn6s 73 71 Candy Hannemann 68 72 72 Leigh Anne Hardin 76 74 74 Kalen Anderson 77 74 77 Kristina Engstrom 75 82 78
1 2 15T 301 501
Total 209
212 224 228 235
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called by her teammates and friends, win her second straight tournament after winning the ACC tournament in her last outing, but she also tied a record for the lowest 54-hole scoring total in Blue Devil history by shooting a 210 over the three-day Regional competition. The Bangkok, Thailand, native distanced herself from the field, taking a huge lead early with a 7-under-par 65 in the opening round and playing consistently throughout the following two rounds (73, 71) to edge out Candy Hannemann for the individual medalist honors. Nirapathpongporn was especially content with her mistake-free, final-round performance, in which she pared 13 holes and birdied
three others.
“I’m so glad about the way I handled myself today,” Nirapathpongporn said after the final round. “I wanted nothing more than to come out here and play my game and stay calm. Lately, I’ve been getting more nervous and I hate playing like that.... [Finley] is a course we play all the time, so I was just saying ‘hit to the target you usually do.’”
Meanwhile, Hannemann was outperforming her opponents as well, trailing only Nirapathpongporn during the event and living up to her billing as ACC player of the year. The senior followed up her opening round of 72 with a four-under-par 68 on the second day and a par 72 in the closing round to complete a round of four-over par, 212. In fact, Hannemann’s only disappointment was that she could not surmount her teammate’s overwhelming first-round lead to take home the individual medalist honors. But all in all, Hannemann felt good about her performance. SPECIAL TO THE CHRONICLE “I just tried to play the best I could today,” she NIRAPATHPONGPORN won individual honors last weekend. VIRADA said after the final round. “I tried to shoot a couple under [par] to give myself a chance. I’m happy with as you go on back. So I would say because we’re deeper the way I performed this week.” one through five, that increases our odds [to win] In addition to Hannemann and Nirapathpongporn, Another factor that might play into the hands of several other Blue Devils competed at the East the Blue Devils is the fact that they have already Regionals last weekend as well. Freshman Leigh won a tournament this season at Mission Inn. In Anne Hardin finished with a 54-hole total of 224, September, the Blue Devils, paced by the play of while senior Kalen Anderson tied for 30th after postEngstrom and Nirapathpongporn, won the shortened ing a 77 in the final round Saturday. After falling into NCAA Fall Preview by three strokes over No. 2 the 80s during the second round, Swedish sophomore Arizona just before the torrential downpours of Kristina Engstrom improved her play Saturday, Hurricane Gordon suspended play. Brooks, however, shooting a 78 and tying for 50th. is quick to point out that Duke won the Fall Preview Given this solid top-to-bottom lineup, Brooks likes in 199 and was not able to transfer this early season his team’s chances for success at the Mission Inn victory into a triumph on the same course at the end Golf Resort next week, assuming his team members of the season. play up to their potential. “We won the [Preview] last year and we finished “I think this might be our best team. The reason is 14th at Nationals, but I think it’s good to have had because I now talk about a team where the fifth player success,” Brooks said. “Any time you’re going to a has a chance to win and when they’re not playing thentournament and you have visions of winning there best golf, I’m a little disappointed,” Brooks said. “In the from a time before, you can recall the kind offeeling past, we’ve been really hot on top and it sort of dissipates the team had there before.... That’s always a plus.” ”
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The Chronicle
PAGE 24
Blue Devils cruise to third round match against Texas After a long layoff, women’s tennis initiates NCAAs with a pair of 4-0 wins By CRAIG SAPERSTEIN The Chronicle in both 4 Capitalizing on quick starts their first and second-round matches 0 this past weekend, the Duke Alabama women’s tennis team advanced to the NCAA round of 16 in Stone Mountain, Ga., which will take place today. After easily disposing of Campbell 4-0 in the first round last Friday and likewise cruising past No. 28 Alabama 4-0 in the second round Saturday, Duke (26-1) now looks to its match against 14th-seeded Texas (19-8) Thursday at the Lincoln Tennis Center. Duke’s No. 1 singles player, freshman Ansley Cargill, likes her team’s prospects for advancing deep into the NCAA field, especially if they are able to build an early lead against their opponents, which has been a staple of Duke’s tournament run so far. “It’s important to get off to an early lead because
Duke
it gives you motivation,” Cargill said. “It’s sort of a domino effect—if one person looks at another court and sees her teammate up, she will try to finish her match as quickly as the other person has finished theirs. It’s a really positive effect, especially when you can see all the courts.” Building on their confidence from Friday’s victory, the Blue Devils posted their second straight 4-0 victory Saturday, this time over a battle-tested, yet overmatched Alabama squad. Duke seized the doubles point with wins by the Amanda Johnson/Hillary Adams team at the second slot and the Kathy Sell/Katie Granson duo at No. 3 doubles. Johnson continued her domination over the Crimson Tide with a 42-minute, 6-0, 6-0 victory over Bama’s Jenny Ketchum. Sell soon followed her teammate into the clubhouse with a 6-2, 6-1 triumph over Weyli Chang. After a first game that
lasted nearly 20 minutes, Cargill concluded Duke’s sweep in easy fashion in the No. 1 flight, defeating Alabama’s Emma Berard, the country’s 42ndranked player, by a score of 6-1, 6-2. Despite his team’s dominant victory over the Crimson Tide, Duke coach Jamie Ashworth felt that the Blue Devils will benefit greatly from their match last Saturday, citing the constant pressure Alabama applied in nearly every match. “[Alabama] has played as tough a schedule as any team in the country,” Ashworth said. “They’ve played Florida twice, and they’ve played Georgia and Tennessee. That’s six matches against teams in the top six in the country, so they’ve been in tough matches. So it was good for us, especially for our doubles play. It was good to finally play good doubles on all three courts.” The improvement of the doubles teams was especially evident against Alabama, as the three Duke teams—all of which were created by Ashworth in the Blue Devils’ final regular-season match April 15 against Clemson—seemed at ease with each other. According to Ashworth, the gelling of Duke’s doubles teams not only puts the Blue Devils in an advantageous position heading into singles, but it also builds the confidence of the team’s players. “The doubles point is a huge momentum builder,” Ashworth said. “If you get up one point, it takes so much off the singles players... and puts more pressure on your opponents. We were able to get that point today and that’s been our trend the last 10 or 12 matches.” In the Blue Devils’ first-round match against the Camels, Duke demonstrated its might early and never looked back, sacrificing only four games at the first and third doubles flight, and securing a doubles point for the home team. Sell and sGranson glided to an easy 8-2 victory at the three spot, while Cargill and senior co-captain Megan Miller finished soon after, defeating Campbell’s Carmen Linder and Laurence Poujoulat 8-2. The results of singles play were quite similar, as
SPECIAL TO THE CHRONICLE
AMANDA JOHNSON and the women’s tennis team steamrolled their competition in the first two rounds of the NCAA tournament,
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THURSDAY, MAY 17, 2001
PAGE 25
Men’s tennis completes double sweep, excited for Athens By PAUL DORAN The Chronicle
Puke Auburn
4 The men’s tennis team continued its torrid play over the weekend, blitz0 ing its competition on its way to the
round of 16 Dropping only one match in two 4-0 routs, No. 5 Duke crushed Hampton May 12 and Auburn the next afternoon, just as the rest of the Duke population school was at a cap and gown ceremony. The 21st-ranked Tigers were the first test for Duke in quite some time. For the surging Blue Devils, who were riding a 13-match winning streak and the ACC regular-season and tournament crowns into the first round, Hampton was about as much of a challenge as the rest of the ACC—a conference that has been referred to as “cupcake city.” On the other hand, Auburn presented some interesting problems, the biggest of which came at doubles, which has proven to be Duke’s most visible weakness all season. The Blue Devils’ red-hot 22nd-ranked pair of Phillip King and Ramsey Smith—both of whom were All-ACC selections—put away Auburn’s tandem of Tiago Ruffoni and Georges Matijasevic 8-5. But Auburn snuck away with an 8-6 win at the No. 3 slot as Rameez Junaid and Estevam Strecker beat recently named All-ACC team member Andres Pedroso, who teamed with Alex Bose. With the No. 2 slot left as the rubber match, the Tigers had high hopes against a supposedly rusty team of Marko Cerenko and Mike Yani, who had not played together since the finals of the ACC tournament. However, their hopes were soon crushed as Cerenko and Yani systematically demolished Mark Kovacs and Andre Boz 8-2 to claim the doubles point for the Blue Devils. “I am really proud of our team,” coach Jay Lapidus said. “The doubles was very close and our No. 1 doubles team played very well. Auburn fought very hard and our four seniors showed their composure really well.” Duke carried its momentum from the doubles victo-
ry into singles, winning the first set in all of the singles matches. Bose had the easiest time, beating Boz 6-1, 62 to extend Duke’s lead to 2-0. Auburn’s biggest glimmer of hope came when Strecker took a 4-1 lead on Joel Spicher in the second set at the No. 5 slot. However, the sophomore from Geneva, Switzerland won the next five games to edge Strecker 6-3, 6-4, putting Duke within one point of the victory. “It always happens like that,” Spicher said. “I have trouble concentrating after winning the first set. Auburn is a good team and played well today. It is going to get tough as we move on, but we feel we have a good chance and everyone is playing well.” The matched was finally closed when Smith held off Ruffoni 6-3, 7-5 to send Duke into a Sweet 16 date Saturday with Miami. “It was tough losing the first set in four singles matches, especially after losing the doubles point,” Auburn coach Eric Shore said. “We did a good job coming from behind in the second set, and were a few balls from forcing a few third sets. We had opportunities today, but Duke is a top-five team and they deserve it.” Although Duke sliced through the Hampton Pirates like hot butter on the fourth of July, its only main weakness was again at Nos. 2 and 3 doubles. The Blue Devils did not drop one match in doubles, but they did have to go to 8-5 at the third slot before winning—a close match compared to the consistent 6-0 and 6-1 wins during singles play. “The doubles play was very competitive,” Hampton coach Robert Screen said. “We had a wonderful chance to win the doubles point. Our team has nothing to hang their heads about.” All that being said, as the Blue Devils get into the meat of the NCAA tournament, Lapidus could not be much more pleased with his team’s play. After running the table in the ACC and following it up with a win over Auburn, the Blue Devils now look primed for a run that could take them as far as the national championship, even if they drop the doubles point.
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The Chronicle
PAGE 26
THURSDAY, MAY 17, 2001
From the ACC to ER: Soccer star to appear on hit show case, the role was a young accountant and my agent called the casting director When a Duke athlete goes to the for ER and said ‘I think Peter Gail emergency room, it is usually a not a would be good for this.’ I went in, audigood sign. tioned for them, the casting director agreed, and they gave me a job.” But when former men's soccer forPlaying a young accountant is a far ward Peter Gail, Trinity ’OO, makes his visit there tonight, not only will it be a cry from the type of playing Gail did on the soccer field. But if his persistence on positive step, but it could be career-makthe former the field—where he scored 14 career This is because Blue ing. Devil co-captain, who also became an goals and registered 45 points as a foravid drama student during his four ward—is indicative of his effort in the studio, Gail's acting career could be a years at Duke, will make his major television debut tonight on the hit show ER success. At least, that’s the opinion of Duke soccer coach John Rennie, who in front of millions of viewers. Needless to say, the opportunity is an always viewed his 5’H” forward as one exciting one for the Oregon native, who of the team's hardest workers. “Peter was a classic blue-collar kind of has quickly climbed the ladder of acting success. And it's just as exciting for player,” Rennie said. "He worked Gail's girlfriend, Blue Devil women's extremely hard, was always incredibly tennis star Kathy Sell, who eagerly fit and gave everything he had every awaits the performance. time he stepped on the field. He was “It’s going to be awesome,” said Sell, kind of a self-made player; he was not all Trinity ’Ol. “He's been working really that talented—no more talented than a hard out there. I watched him move out lot of other players—but he always fought his way onto the starting team.” to [Los Angeles] in August and it’s unbelievable that he already has a role and But Gail did not confine his strong he's going to be on one of the best TV work ethic to the soccer field. After he shows in the country.” took Drama 99 and played a part in Following graduation, Gail coached Orpheus his sophomore year, he began to soccer, using his athletic skills to fund prioritize acting as well. And as drama his move to Hollywood and pursue an became his career goal, he faced a tenuacting career. After choosing an agent, ous balance between playing soccer and the former soccer player nearly landed a honing his acting skills, year-round. role in a major motion picture, but that “It was just two totally different job fell through at the last minute. Still, things, and I liked it that way,” Gail said. “It was a really great way for me to Gail and his agent pressed on and landed the single episode spot on ER. experience both worlds.” “[Agents] have access to all the roles And now, Sell cannot wait to experithat are out that week and they submit ence her boyfriend's debut in another the actor that they think is right for cernew world—the land of network televitain roles,” Gail explained. “So in this sion. Of course, the recent graduate By CRAIG SAPERSTEIN The Chronicle
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SPECIAL TO THE CHRONICLE
PETER GAIL, who captained the men’s soccer team to a perfect record, will appear on ER tonight. admits she will be slightly spooked when she sees her boyfriend in such a high profile spot alongside famous actors like Anthony Edwards and Noah Wyle.
“For him to actually go through with it, to be on the set, it’s going to be really weird watching,” Sell said. “But it’s also going to be really fun.”
The Chronicle
THURSDAY, MAY 17, 2001
PAGE 27
Controversial ruling turns 10-run eighth inning propels tide of close NCAA match favorite Tech to lopsided win � WOMEN’S LACROSSE from page 21 “I shot the ball, it went in, and then [a Loyola player] pushed me and I fell,” a distraught Kaiser explained as she held back tears. “When I fell, they called me in the crease after the ball was in.” Duke coach Kerstin Kimel agreed with her leading scorer, noting that the
implications of the ruling were back-
breaking for the Blue Devils. “In a situation like that, when it’s been back-and-forth for the middle third of the half and then [the official] disallows a goal and our player ends up on the ground, it changes the momentum completely,” Kimel said. “We felt like that was our chance.” While Kimel’s disappointment was obvious after the game, her mood was likely quite different halfway through the contest. In a nip-and-tuck first half, Duke rebounded from a slow start, scoring two goals in the final six minutes to cling to a 4-3 lead over the Greyhounds. Kelly Dirks tied the game at the sixminute mark with a score at point-blank range and freshman Lauren Kickham followed up the senior’s goal with one of her own only 21 seconds later. The Blue Devils came out flat in the second hal£ though, while Loyola seemed to be the team poised for victory. Midfielder Suzanne Eyler commenced the Greyhound run with a goal at 28:48 and soon after, attacker Kristy Wamock scored, allowing Loyola to retake the lead, 54. Minutes later, senior Megan Santacroce recorded her second goal of the game attacker Stacy Morlang increased the Greyhounds’ growing lead to 7-4 with 19:44remaining.
“I think we were expecting a victory [at that point], but we also knew that
Duke was a team that could come back,” Santacroce said. “Both teams were playing with such heart that we knew it would end up being a close game.” Santacroce’s instincts about an eminent Duke comeback were correct. Sensing the Blue Devils’ life-or-death situation, Kaiser stopped the bleeding at the 16:28 mark with a momentum-changing goal that put Duke within two. Less than two minutes later, sophomore Lauren Gallagher connected on a free-position shot to cut Loyola’s lead to 7-6 with 14:32 left on the clock. Then, after seven more minutes of closely contested action, Kaiser drove toward the net in what turned out to be the decisive, and of course, most controversial play of the game. Loyola coach Diane Geppi-Aikens commented after the contest that, contrary to the opinion of the
Blue Devils, the questionable encroachment call on Kaiser did not solely decide the outcome of the matchup. “You like to believe ifyou lose that one play makes a difference. To be quite honest...a lot of those plays could have gone either way” Geppi-Aikens said. “There were things that were happening to both sides from the first second that whistle blew and I don’t believe for one second that one particular play made a difference in the outcome. I’d have to majorly differ about not only this game, but as a coaching philosophy, that one play is going to make a difference in a game. I think that’s a travesty to your team and how hard they played.”
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� BASEBALL from page 21 “I knew coming into this game that Georgia Tech had something to prove,” coach Bill Hillier said. “I know they are motivated to play well in this tournament, as we are. They pitched well and hit well.” Tech’s solid hitting was especially apparent in the eighth inning, when they put the finishing touches on a Duke team that was already on the ropes, down 6-2. After Greg Burke
Jason Basil nailed his 14th home run of the season to left-centerfield on the first pitch of the bottom of the second. Then, when the Yellow Jackets came to bat in the third inning, Prince pummeled a two-run shot which scored Lewis, who had reached base on a single to start in the inning. “Any time you get runs from your pitcher early, it gives him a chance to
relax and feel like every pitch is right where it needs to be. That’s kind of what we saw today—Kevin [Cameron] did a walked Yellow Jacket outfielder Brad Stockton with one out in the inning, great job and Burks coming in did a Georgia Tech exploded, scoring six runs great job.” Meanwhile, the Blue Devils were and having eight straight batters reached base. Even when Duke recorded unable to hit many hard balls of their its second out of the inning, which came own, scattering only six hits during the on a sacrifice fly by Stockton that made game. The lone bright spot was senior the score 14-2, the Yellow Jackets still third baseman J.D. Alieva, who went 2for-3 and drove in an RBI in the fifth managed to put up two more runs, further distancing themselves from the inning, smashing a double off the wall in left-centerfield, scoring shortstop beleagured Blue Devils. “Once one guy hits one hard, another Kevin Kelly. Duke also struck in the guys hits one hard,” said Georgia Tech top of the seventh, when Kelly hit a coach Danny Hall. “The old saying is sacrifice fly to center which scored leftthat hitting is contagious, and I believe fielder Brian Patrick. Despite the whipping they received that. We hit some really hard balls yesterday, the Blue Devils’ season is today [in the eighth inning].” Of course, the Yellow Jackets did not still alive, as they face N.C. State in do all their damage in the eighth the consolation bracket of the doubleinning; they built an early lead in the elimination tourney. And while Hillier game’s first three innings to set the was disappointed with yesterday’s outstage for their domination. After Lewis come, he remains optimistic about the got his first hit of the game, a single to general improvement of the Duke baseball program. left field, catcher Bryan Prince also sin“I feel good about where we’re going,” gled to left which scored Lewis and gave the second-year coach said after the Tech an quick 1-0 advantage. Duke went scoreless in the top of the game. “I just don’t feel too good about it second inning, but then, Tech senior right now.”
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