June 7, 2001

Page 1

The Chronicle

Sports Hempen heads West Women's soccer coach Bill Hempen resigned Tuesday to accept the head coaching position at the University of Colorado. See page 19

Legislators lament budget constraints A budget passed by the North Carolina Senate last week would drastically cut health and human service funding but proposes adding several education initiatives. The House will take up the matter in the upcoming weeks.

:

By MEG LAWSON

cans is likely to cause some changes to it. The most controversy sur-

The Chronicle

A 24-HOUR DINER could be in the works once ARAMARK takes over the remaining eateries managed by Dining Services July 1.

plans changes By KEVIN LEES The Chronicle

Although food services corporation ARAMARK will not officially take over until July 1, the University’s transition to entirely privatized dining options is already cookin’. “Everybody was afraid of aligning Duke with a big food conglomerate,” said Jim Wulforst, director of Dining Services. “There’s nothing to fear here.” After a full year of negotiations with ARAMARK, the University last week signed a fiveyear contract that will give the Philadelphiabased company control over The Great Hall, the

Marketplace and the other remaining non-privatized campus eateries. ARAMAKK’s plans for The Great Hall and the Marketplace include several stations with different themes, such as Bene’s Pizza, Cranberry Farms—a Boston Market-style eatery—and Pan Geos, which will serve a rotating selec-

tion ofinternational foods. Wulforst also discussed the eventual creation of more space, possibly between the Bryan Center and the West Union Building. In addition, the changes include moving Chick-fil-A to The Great Hall’s serving area and See ARAMARK on page 16

With the tightest state budget in many years, North Carrounding the Senate budget olina legislators have had to has focused on the closing of make some difficult choices four facilities under the manabout which programs to cut agement of the state Departand which programs to keep. ment of Health and Human In the version of the budget Services: the Eastern School for passed last week by the state the Deaf in Wilson, the School Senate, members chose to cut for the Deaf in Morganton, Dorothea Dix psychiatric hospisome health and human services, while adding some educatal in Raleigh and the Whitaker tional programs. School for troubled youths in The 35-15 vote was split Butner. While these facilities cleanly along party lines, with will not be closed for up to two Democrats supporting the bill years, many legislators on both and Republicans opposing it. Senate Minority Whip Jim Forrester, R-Gaston, said many Republicans voted against the budget because they didn’t have input on its proposals. “We would have had some good ideas if we had been asked,” he said. The budget is scheduled for discussion in the House of Representatives next week, where more even division between Democrats and Republi-

sides of the aisle are worried

that the services they provide will not be replaced by community-based programs. “I’m very troubled,” Sen. Wib Gulley, D-Durham, said. “I think we’ve made unconscionable cuts in those areas.” While Gulley said he is concerned that community programs similar to those provided by the schools for the deaf See BUDGET on page 17 >

Primate Center employees feel left out of decisions By JAMES HERRIOTT The Chronicle

In the wake of the University’s announcement last week that it would not renew current Primate Center director Kenneth Glander’s contract, the center’s staff has voiced concern that they have been left out of important discussions. But seniorlevel administrators say they value the employees’ input and have not made any long-term decisions about

making definite decisions about the center for at least another year or two,” he said. “It would be absurd to say they are not informed of the full

discussion.” But employees say that they had hoped the reviews, which have thus

far remained confidential, would lead the administration to revitalize the center. Clark said the first time she knew differently was when she read an article published in The Chronicle last the center’s fate. describing discussions October, was dissummarily “The director missed with no notice,” said staff about disinvestment at a meeting of specialist Dorothy Clark. “And if you the Arts and Sciences Council. “With so little information from think they could do it at the top, what do you think they would do to the administration, we fear the worst,” said Melissa Dean, a staff asthe bottom?” sistant at the Primate Center. “We WednesIn a memorandum last day, Provost Peter Lange informed all believe that the review is a good Clark and other staff members thing. The fact that they have kept it about the Glander decision, citing so secretive and we still don’t know the results of two recent reviews of anything—we are going, ‘Oh my God, they are going to close us.’” the center. Lange said the reviews demondean faculWilliam Chafe, of the ty of arts and sciences, cautioned strated that the Primate Center is not living up to its research and against unnecessary panic. teaching potential. As a result, the to He said he and Lange plan meet with the employees to discuss University will extend resources to See PRIMATE CENTER on page 9 � the matter. “We’re not going to be

THAO Pi

INS/THE CHRONICLE

THE PRIMATE CENTER, which houses the world’s largest collection of lemurs and other prosimian primates, may one day close. Employees have expressed fear that they will be left out of future decisions.

Gunman robs Hardee’s, page 6 � Rufus Wainwright rocks,

page

10


The Chronicle

Newsfile

FROM WIRE REPORTS

Scientists report global

warming worsening A panel of 11 leading

American

World

page 2

atmospheric

scientists and oceanographers, including previous skeptics of global warming, declared that global warming due to human activity was a real problem and getting worse.

Los Angeles elects city attorney as mayor Los Angeles City Attorney James Hahn, a white Democrat with solid support from black and white voters, defeated Antonio Villaraigosa in the city’s mayoral race. Hahn quickly pledged to unite the city.

L.A. jury awards largest tobacco damages ever A Los Angeles jury ordered Philip Morris Cos. to a pay a longtime smoker with lung cancer the largest individual civil award ever levied in a tobacco suit, slightly more than $3 billion in total.

Judge refuses to delay McVeigh’s execution A federal judge denied

Timothy McVeigh a further stay of execution, saying nothing in newly disclosed FBI documents could change his role as the “instrument of death and destruction” in the Oklahoma City bombing.

Labour Party leads in polls on eve of vote As today’s British national elections drew near, polls continued to show Prime Minister Tony Blair and his Labour Party with a steady double-digit lead over William Hague and the Conservative Party. Russia allows importing

of nuclear waste

Russian lawmakers defied broad public opposition to pass a law allowing

nuclear waste to be imported and stored. Critics said the move will turn Russia into the world’s nuclear waste dump.

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National

THURSDAY, JUNE 7, 2001

North Korea, U.S. to resume talks

The outcome of the security talks could lead Bush to relax U.S. sanctions By GEORGE GEDDA The Associated Press

WASHINGTON

After exten-

sive deliberations, President George W. Bush ordered his foreign policy team Wednesday to open security talks with North Korea to focus on that nation’s missile program and its deployment of troops near South Korea’s border “Our approach will offer North Korea the opportunity to demonstrate the seriousness of its desire for improved relations,” Bush said in a statement. Secretary of State Colin Powell will discuss the issue today during a luncheon meeting with South Korean Foreign Minister Han Seung-soo.

“If North Korea responds affirmatively and takes appropriate ac-

tion, we will expand our efforts to help the North Korean people, ease sanctions, and take other political steps,” the president said. An administration official, asking not to be identified, said the talks with North Korea are expected to begin at a low level, then move to a higher level if both sides agree. Bush said he ordered his staff to discuss a “broad agenda” with North Korea, including the communist nation’s nuclear activities, missile programs and missile exports “and a less-threatening conventional military posture.” Bush’s statement said the United

States will encourage progress toward North-South reconciliation, peace on the Korean peninsula and “greater stability in the region.” There were intense negotiations during the last months of the Clinton administration, but the process came to an abrupt halt after Bush took office. Pyongyang reacted angrily to the delay in resuming discussions and has cut off reconciliation talks with the South. At issue is the North’s long-range missile program, a subject of keen importance in Washington because Pyongyang’s rockets are capable of reaching U.S. territory. Another worry is North Korea’s export of

missiles to Iran and other countries.

Details of royal murder become clearer By BARRY BEARAK

New York Times News Service

KATMANDU, Nepal This much is agreed. Last Friday, during the royal family’s dinner at Nepal’s Narayanhity Palace, Crown Prince Dipendra had been drinking heavily. He argued with his parents about his marriage plans. He retired to his bedroom. He returned in a loose-fitting military uniform. He fired at least one automatic weapon. He fatally wounded his father, King Birendra, his mother, Queen Aishwarya, and seven others. Then he shot himself in the temple. These are the common elements from interviews with more than a dozen knowledgeable sources: friends ofthe family and top government and military

officials, including some who have been briefed by the palace security agency. Following the shooting, the 29-year-old Dipendra fell into a coma and was crowned king while unconscious. His uncle Gyanendra, the brother of former king Birendra, served as acting regent until Dipendra died Monday, and Gyanendra ascended to the throne. At least 10 people survived the bloodbath, but none have gone public with their testimony, Wednesday, the royal palace announced that it

would allow the royal survivors to be questioned. Gyanendra, the newly crowned king, appointed the panel hoping to quell street violence. A perplexed public had gone into a rage when a See

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THURSDAY, JUNE 7, 2001

The

Chronicle

PAGE 3

University files Title IX briefs By AMBIKA KUMAR The Chronicle

Duke filed arguments Monday in its appeal of the Title IX case brought by a former female placekicker, arguing that a lower court’s decision last October to award Heather Sue Mercer, Trinity ’9B, $2 million in punitive damages was a “miscarriage of justice.” The 64-page brief, filed in the 4th Circuit Court of Appeals, details the events of Mercer’s football career at the University and denies that her experience caused her any pain warranting reparation. In 1997, Mercer first alleged that then-head football coach Fred Goldsmith treated her differently from male members of the team. Duke attorney John Simpson, from the Washington, D.C.-based firm Fulbright and Jaworski, declined to comment on the case. In the brief, he argued that the punitive damages were unnecessary and excessive. “Title IX is designed to ensure that federal funding is not used for purposes of discrimination and to protect victims of discrimination,” he wrote. “It is not designed in any sense to punish violators of Title IX.” Burton Craige, Mercer’s attorney, could not be reached for comment. Mercer must file a response to the arguments within 30 days ofreceiving them. In addition to claiming that Title IX violations do not warrant punitive damages, the brief stresses that Mercer did not provide enough evidence to justify the penalty, that Duke was denied due process and that at the very minimum, there should be a new trial. It also argues that Duke should not have to pay nearly $400,000 in Mercer’s legal fees. “The remarkable $2 million punitive damage award deprived Duke of due process of law and constitutes a miscarriage of justice,” Simpson wrote. “Duke lacked fair notice that it could be subject to such a severe punishment for its conduct.” Mercer tried to walk onto the football team as a freshman in 1994 but was told to try again. In 1995, she kicked the game-winning field goal in the annual BlueWhite scrimmage, leading Goldsmith to name her to the team. But in the fall ofthat year, he put Mercer on the team’s inactive roster, a fist never before used. Unlike other team members, Mercer was not invited to play on the scout team and was prohibited from dressing out for home games. The University says it was Mercer's kicking ability, not her gender, that motivated Goldsmith. Mercer’s case was initially dismissed by a district court, but on appeal in 1998 she won the right to a new trial.

THAD PARSONS/THE CHRONICLE

THE FUQUA SCHOOL OF BUSINESS put a dent in its ambitious long-range plan by increasing the size of its faculty by nearly 15 percent. It aims to have 92 faculty members in five years.

Fuqua recruits record number � Fuqua School of Business Dean Rex Adams will leave Duke with a bang after recruiting an all-time record 17 faculty members and raising the overall faculty size to 78. By KEVIN LEES The Chronicle

When the Fuqua School ofBusiness’ long-range plan emerged last year, calling for a 33 percent increase in faculty size from 68 to 92 over the next five years, the goal seemed lofty. But if the first year is any indication, Fuqua is well on its way to reaching it. Dean Rex Adams said that the school hired 17 new faculty members this past year, increasing Fuqua’s total faculty to 78. “This is the strongest recruiting Fuqua’s had in its history,” Adams said. “We focus heavily on aggressive faculty recruitment and retention.” Adams, who will be succeeded as dean July 1 by

Doug Breeden, made faculty recruiting a top priority for Fuqua in the school’s long-term plan. “To my knowledge, as a percentage of the existing faculty, it’s unheard of,” said Provost Peter Lange of the additional professors. “It’s a true testimony to Dean Adams and Deputy Dean [John] Payne.” In an increasingly tight market, the business school Rex Adams brought in not only young assistant professors but also a handful of chaired professors as well. Dan LeClair, director of knowledge services for the Association to Advance Collegiate Schools of Business, identified a number of forces driving a high demand for business school professors. He listed as contributors to demand the growth of See FUQUA on page 9 P"


PAGE 4

■JM|

Health & S CIENCE The Chronicle

ACROSS THE NATION

»Skin cancer rates continue to increase Despite increased education and warnings, the incidence ot preventable skin cancer continues to rise about three percent annually, according to the American Cancer Society. Doctors expect 1.3 million new cases of skin cancer this year and 10,000 deaths from the disease. The most common types of skin cancer are curable in more than 98 percent of patients if the diease is detected and treated early. But patients suffering from melanoma—which has the tendency to spread to other parts of the body—have a bleaker prognosis. •

Meningitis scare leads to vaccinations

After two high school students died from a blood infection caused by the bacteria Neisseria meningitidis, Alliance, Ohio, health officials plan to offer meningitis vaccines for up to 5,800 students and staff members at six area high schools. The students who died were thought to have shared a water bottle at a school picnic. The bacteria can either cause meningitis, a disease of the brain, or the blood infection contracted by the students. •

Asteroids resemble early solar system

Astronomers have found a star they believe is ringed by a massive belt of asteroids that resembles Earth’s solar system at its birth when a disk of dust and gas orbiting the sun first began to clump together to form planets. Although the asteroids were not detected directly, the presence of a large amount of dust suggests that objects within the belt must be continually colliding to replenish the swirling disk of debris. With each collision, the objects are thought to be capable of merging to form larger and larger bodies and, eventually, planets. *

Astronomers spy most distant objects yet

Astronomers have found the most distant objects ever seen—two quasars formed when the universe was just 800 million years old. Quasars, thought to be powered by black holes, are galaxies with very active and bright center objects. They can shine with the brillance of a trillion suns. The quasars were found by members of the Sloan project, a five-year, $BO million attempt to map the universe and define its structure in three dimensions. So far, the project has accumulated precision measurements of 14 million objects scattered throughout the universe. News briefs compiled from wire reports.

THURSDAY, JUNE 7, 2001

Cell transplant could help heart By MATT BRUMM The Chronicle

They may be immature and lacking identity, but according to research by one Duke cardiologist, they might just revolutionize heart attack recovery therapy.

muscle Myoblasts—undeveloped cells—could be used to replace damaged cardiac muscle following a heart attack. Damaged heart cells cannot regenerate after an attack, so other parts of the heart must work harder to compensate for the loss. Myoblasts, however, have not yet developed into specialized cells; when transplanted into a new environment, they begin to conform to their roundings. Doris Taylor, assistant research professor of cardiology, demonstrated that this technique could be successful in animals in 1998, but human trials did not

begin until recently. Taylor’s 1998 experiment took a small number of muscle cells from pig

and rabbit legs and grew them in a laboratory. A few weeks later, she transferred the cells back into damaged areas of the animals’ hearts. Once implanted in the heart, the myoblasts stabilized and contracted along with normal cardiac cells. “These cells seem to respond to finding themselves in the heart [and] begin to act like heart ce115.... You can actually get an improvement above the injury state,” Taylor said. But in the last year, procedures

elsewhere have applied Taylor’s technique to humans. Doctors in Europe began human tri-

als last year and have completed six procedures where myoblasts were injected into the heart during bypass surgery. Last month, surgeons at the University ofCalifornia at Los Angeles performed a similar surgery for the first time in the United States, while doctors in the Netherlands became the first to inject myoblasts through a catheter without bypass surgery. Taylor said the Netherlands trial will

MEDICAL STUDENT MATT ELUS looks at myoblasts with Doris Taylor, assistant research professor ofcardiology. Using a method designed by Taylor, surgeons at the University of California at Los Angeles became the first scientists in the nation to use these transplantable muscle cells in bypass surgery last month. provide more evidence about the success of myoblast therapy because doctors do not need to take into account the effects of bypass surgery. Back at Duke, clinical trials similar to those at UCLA can begin once the University grants approval. “Obviously trials could take several years,” Taylor said. “That will tell us everything.” After the completion of clinical trials, researchers hope patients suffering from heart attacks can be treated with thenown myoblasts to prevent the progression to heart failure, Taylor said. Myoblast therapy, researchers said, is revolutionary because it attempts to replace scarred heart muscle. “Once the muscle has been damaged, there is no therapy for that,” said Dr. Robb MacLellan, assistant professor of cardiology and principal investigator of the my-

oblast trials at UCLA. “All other therapies [involve] slowing down progression

of areas not affected by the heart attack. This is to directly try to treat the heart attack area itself.” Myoblasts may not be the only cells that can be transplanted into the heart. Other researchers are investigating the use of stem cells—which have the potential to develop into any cell in the body. Taylor said this technology is still underdeveloped and has yet to be successful. And while stem cells may yield results in the future, Taylor does not plan to change the focus ofher research. “My hope is that this will change the options for people with heart disease,” Taylor said. “We don’t believe we have found the answer. We believe we have found an answer. We’re going to continue to find the best way to do it.”

Scientists discover fossils of second-largest dinosaur By JOHN WILFORD

New York Times News Service

Digging at an oasis in the Egyptian desert, paleontologists have found huge fossil bones of what they say appears to have been the second most massive dinosaur that ever lived. Scientists estimate the new species, named Paralititan stromeri, could have measured 80 to 100 feet long and weighed as much as 70 tons—heavier than an M-IAI tank. The discovery could revive vigorous fossil hunting in a previously neglected area that the researchers say must have been “dinosaur heaven,” teeming with the large reptiles when it was a swampy landscape more than 90 million years ago. In a report in last Thursday’s issue ofthe journal Science, researchers said the partial skeleton represented a new species of titanosaurid, a group of long-necked,

long-tailed, plant-eating dinosaurs. The name Paralititan means “tidal giant,” reflecting the supposed coastal environment in which it lived and died. Stromeri honors Dr. Ernst Stromer von Reichenbach, the University of Munich geologist and paleontologist whose discoveries THE MASSIVE SHOULDER BLADE of a Paralititan stromeri has led before World War I first called attention to the site. But the site—and much of North Africa—had been University of Pennsylvania researchers to believe it was one of the largest dinosaurs. The fossils were discovered in Egypt last week. largely overlooked by dinosaur hunters. Stromer’s col-

lection of Egyptian fossils was destroyed in an Allied bombing raid on Germany during World War 11. The new discoveries were made last year by an American group led by Joshua Smith, a doctoral student at the University of Pennsylvania. He and several other graduate students settled on Egypt in search of “Stromer’s lost dinosaurs.” Eventually, they were able to act on their dream. While on a larger expedition in 1999 to Egypt’s Bahariya Oasis, southwest of Cairo, Smith spent a couple of days looking for dinosaur remains. He and colleagues made their exciting discovery on the first day. In the excavations completed last year, a humerus, or upper arm bone, was the most telling clue to the animal’s enormous size and weight. The bone measured almost six feet in length, about 14 percent longer than the next largest dinosaur ofthat geologic period, the Cretaceous. Large pieces of shoulder blades and vertebra reinforced the impression of the animal’s great size. The discovery team estimated that if this specimen is typical, Paralititans was second only to a South American titanosaurid, Argentinosaurus, which is regarded as the most massive terrestrial animal known. It may not have been much longer than Paralititan, but probably weighed some 30 tons more.


THURSDAY, JUNE 7, 2001

The Chronicle

PAGES

Council OKs Bush could appoint 2 N.C. judges By KEVIN LEES

development

The Chronicle

Two North Carolina judges—one first nominated to the federal Court of Appeals during the first Bush administration, the other twice nominated by Bill Clinton—might now find their way to the bench in the George W. Bush administration. Although nominations to the 4th Circuit of the U.S. Court of Appeals have been blocked for the last decade, political circumstances could give judges James Wynn and Terrence Boyle another shot at seats on the court. Currently, there are four vacancies on the 4th Circuit, three due to retirement and one additional position that was created in 1990 but never filled. No North Carolinians sit on the bench—even though North Carolina is the largest state in the court’s ju-

� Despite protest from hundreds of eastern Durham residents, the Durham City Council voted in favor of a housing development that will span nearly 700 acres. By MATT ATWOOD The Chronicle Eastern Durham came a step closer to having a new large-scale housing development Monday night, as a divided Durham City Council approved the rezoning of 678 acres for the project despite significant opposition from nearby residents. The council voted 8-4 in favor ofthe Village Creek subdivision, which is slated to include 1,347 singlefamily homes, 1,012 townhouses and 328 apartments in a rural area in eastern Durham. That decision disappointed more than 100 eastern Durham residents who attended the meeting to oppose the development. One opponent, the Rev. Dale Brooks, presented a petition with 700 signatures asking the council to reject the rezoning. See VILLAGE CREEK on page 18 �

risdiction.

When the Clinton administration attempted to nominate judges to fill these vacancies, Republican Sen. Jesse Helms blocked them all, arguing that more judges would simply be a waste of the federal government’s money. Among the judges blocked by Helms was Wynn, a Cary native who currently sits on the North Carolina Court of Appeals and would be the first black man to serve as a permanent member of the 4th Circuit Court. Likewise, Boyle, a former legislative counsel to Helms, was blocked by Senate Democrats in 1991. Boyle currently serves as chief judge for eastern North Carolina’s U.S. District Court.

With Bush’s election, however, Helms has indicated that he will follow the president’s lead on judicial nominations, and Bush wants to fill the vacancies as See

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THURSDAY, JUNE 7, 2001

The Chronicle

PAGE 6

Conner arrives, Gunman robs Duke Hardee’s gears up for job By MATT ATWOOD The Chronicle

From staff reports An armed gunman robbed the Hardee’s restaurant in Duke Clinic just before 6 a.m. last Saturday, taking an undisclosed amount of cash from the safe, said Maj. Robert Dean of the Duke University Police Department. No ypi? one, including the two employees X ULldi n nADT n present, was injured. The 6’ light-skinned black IVILrUKi J gunman was wearing a ski mask, an inside-out short-sleeved Hardee’s manager polo

________

Durham’s new city manager arrived Monday to start work—and plunged right into her new job with a 15hour day that culminated in a five-hour meeting of the Durham City Council. At a welcome reception Monday evening, City Manager Marcia Conner stressed that she will try to collaborate with all of Durham’s citizens. “What I felt when I came in this r00m... is that Durham has a wonderful community,” Conner said. “I need to let you know that I have an open door.”

Conner, appointed by the city council in March, said at a press conference Monday morning that her first task will be to study the issues facing the city. But she mentioned plans to focus on growth, economic development, transportation, providing jobs and fighting crime. Mayor Nick Tennyson welcomed Conner at the reception and told the audience of about 100 that she had already begun meeting with other city administrators. “We brought her in today, and she’s jumped right in and started talking to department heads about opportunities to excel—which is another word for problems or challenges,” Tennyson joked. After the reception, Conner attended most ofthe city council meeting, leaving after the biggest issue of the night—a rezoning request for a major development project in southeast Durham—had been settled. Conner said she was happy to be working in Durham. ‘We just really need to let people know that Durham is a great place, and we may not be the capital of North Carolina, but we certainly are ‘the’ city in North Carolina,” she said. Before coming to Durham, Conner served as assistant city manager ofAustin, Texas. She replaces Greg Bethea, who served as interim city manager since previous manager Lamont Ewell left Durham in December for a post as assistant city manager of San Diego. At the reception, Tennyson praised Bethea for his work over the past six months. Bethea will return to his position as assistant city manager—a step he viewed optimistically. “I’m happy for [Conner] to be here and I’m glad to be back,” he said Monday night.

Golf equipment stolen: A visitor reported that between 10:13 and 10:15 a.m., someone stole several items that he left by his vehicle, which was parked at the Washington Duke Inn, Dean said. The perpetrator took a $2OO green and black golf bag containing $l,lOO Harvey Penick golf clubs, a shirt, dark colored pants and gloves. $2OO Carbite putter, a $5O Key Club golf book, 12 CrimeStoppers is offering a reward of up to Titleist golf balls and tees worth $5O and a $5O $1,200 for information leading to an arrest in the blue white jacket. and case. Dean said there were no suspects, but that following were a number of leads. up Laptop taken: Between 6 p.m. May 28 and 8:30 the police May 29, someone entered an employee’s office in a.m. ADF participants harrassed: Two American the basement of the White Zone in Duke Clinic and Dance Festival participants reported that at $9OO stole a GE laptop computer, which had Apple someone behind around 5 p.m. June 3, they met Wilson House claiming to be a student named been broken from the security cable, Dean said. Tony, Dean said. The man offered to show them Cars vandalized: An employee reported that around. They drove in one ofthe participants’ vehibetween 7:15 a.m. and 4:30 p.m. June 1, someone cles to Ninth Street, and they strolled down the broke out a $l5O passenger side window of her street until 6 p.m., when the two women told the vehicle and stole a $3OO Pioneer CD/radio, a $2OO man they had to go. amplifier, a $2OO pair of speakers in a gray speakThe man then asked that they drop him off at er box, $450 worth of compact discs, and a wallet the mall. On the way, the two participants said, with the initials “DGL” containing credit cards, a they stopped at an Exxon gas station near the 1-85 checkbook and a driver’s license, Dean said. The overpass where the man asked them to buy some perpetrator also caused $l5O in damage to the beer for him. They refused, and he attempted to dashboard and $75 to the center console of the grab their wallets. One of the women pepper vehicle, which was parked in the “H” lot at Erwin sprayed him in the face, and he fled after taking and Anderson streets. her $2OO Motorola Star flip phone. Another vehicle in the lot was vandalized beThe man was described as black, stocky, in his tween 6:30 a.m. and 7:30 p.m. June 1. Someone mid-20s, 5’9”, with a dark complexion and scars on broke out the $223 side vent window of an employhis arms and legs, and wearing a bright yellow Tee’s vehicle and stole her $320 Alpine CD/radio, seshirt and khaki shorts. The women said he seemed rial number 7835AN5812166 and caused $l9B in to know a lot of people on Ninth Street. damage to the dashboard. Laptop lifted: An employee reported that CDs, player taken: A visitor reported that between 6:30 and 8 a.m. May 30, someone stole a between 6 and 10 p.m. May 31, someone broke out $2,500 IBM Thinkpad 3cXM556 laptop computer the $2OO left rear passenger window of his vehicle with serial number 53267-HD from the Card Gym and stole his $3OO Alpine CD player and $125 weight room office, Dean said. There were no signs worth of compact discs, Dean said. The perpetrator of forced entry. also caused $lOO in damage to the radio bracket in that the vehicle, which was parked in the Divinity reported An burgled; employee Employee between 2 p.m. June 1 and 9 a.m. June 2, someone School lot.

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entered his unsecured locker at 3447 Duke Hospital and stole his $BOO Nikon CooL-Pix 990 digital camera with black Samsonite case and a $l,OOO pair of engraved surgical loop custom lenses, Dean said. There were no signs of forced entry.

Recycle this Chronicle. The trees will love you.


THURSDAY, JUNE 7, 2001

The Chronicle

PAGE?

Charlotte voters reject new arena Duke hires new

From staff and wire reports The Charlotte Hornets’ quest for a new arena suffered a blow Tuesday as Charlotte voters rejected a referendum on a $342 million package of seven sports and cultural projects. The biggest item of the package was the construction of a $205 million sports arena downtown that would have in- »t eluded more luxury boxes than the 13-year-old Charlotte Colise- rp urn. The arena had been touted by supporters as the only chance for the city to keep the Hornets—although opponents ~

JNEWS 1 HIS W EEK

dismissed that argument. Co-owner Ray Wooldridge did not indicate whether Tuesday’s vote would cause the Hornets to take flight. “The process is still up to the city and its leadership,” Wooldridge told The Charlotte Observer. Several members of the Charlotte City Council said the city should present another referendum on the arena to voters, perhaps as early as this fall. Voters rejected the nonbinding referendum by about 15,000 votes, with 57 percent voting against it and 43 percent in support.

RDU airport opens interim concourse: RaleighDurham International Airport opened a new concourse Sunday, expanding the size of its main terminal to house a total of 23 aircraft gates. The construction of the five-gate concourse, which began in spring 2000, is an interim step toward an expansion of Terminal A. The airport hopes to redevelop the terminal into a larger facility with 35 gates. The need for the redevelopment, which is scheduled to begin in four to five years and to finish by 2010, stems from a 76 percent growth in passengers at the airport since 1995. The $l4 million temporary concourse houses Continental and Northwest airlines, reducing overcrowding in the existing 250,000-square-foot Terminal A building. Southwest, AirTran and Delta airlines will expand their service to additional gates in the existing facility.

Election bill foils in House: The state House of Representatives solidly rejected a bill Tuesday that would have made it easier for third-party candidates to get on the ballot in North Carolina elections. The bill, which failed 45-71, would have reduced the requirement for a third-party or unaffiliated candidate to make the ballot to a petition with as many signatures as 2 percent ofthe number of ballots cast in the last election. Currently, North Carolina has one of the highest such thresholds in the nation, requiring as many signatures as 2 percent of the entire population of registered voters. In the 2000 presidential election, for instance, North Carolina voters could not vote for Green Party candidate Ralph Nader, leading to a lawsuit by the Green Party. The bill passed the Senate two months ago, but 55 Republicans and 16 Democrats joined to reject it in the House, in part because of concerns that it would give too much power to parties outside the mainstream. “It seems to me that it is working well by having a Republican party and a Democratic Party,” said Minority Leader Leo Daughtry, R-Johnston. “I don’t think having the most restrictive rule is a bad thing.” But Rep. Paul Luebke, D-Durham, said the bill would have allowed more points of view to be heard and attracted more citizens to become involved in politics. House votes to raise auto inspection fees: The House also gave final approval Tuesday to a bill that would increase the maximum fee on emissions and safety inspections of automobiles in nearly half of North Carolina counties. The bill, which passed 66-44, now goes to the state Senate for approval. The legislation would set the maximum inspection fee in 48 of North Carolina’s 100 counties at $34. It follows a decision state legislators made in 1999 to expand emissions testing from nine counties to 48 by 2006. The purpose ofthe two pieces of legislation is to curb air pollution and comply with federal air-quality standards, supporters said.

parking director Cathy Reeve, who currently works at North Carolina State University, will join Duke later this summer as the new director of parking and transportation. From staff reports Hoping to give more direction to an often-criticized parking situation, the University this week hired a new full-time director of parking and transportation, choosing Cathy Reeve, currently the director of transportation at North Carolina State University. Reeve will come to Duke this summer with a diverse background in transportation to assume management of all campus parking and related operations. “She has extensive experience in university parking and transportation, strong leadership qualities, and she has extensive prior experience in city and municipal transportation,” said Daniel Rodas, chair of the search committee and assistant vice president for administration. The 10person committee began its search for a new director in January. Management of the parking and transportation system at the University includes ticketing, determining lot occupancy, distributing permits, managing the bus system and communicating

with customers. Unlike Duke’s current parking director, Stephen Burrell, who has several other responsibilities in Auxiliary Services, Reeve will concentrate solely on parking and transportation. Reeve, who has served in her N.C. State role See BRIEFS on page 18 &

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THURSDAY, JUNE 7, 2001

The Chronicle

PAGES

MyDuke.com enjoys growing number of users The Chronicle

At this time a year ago, students left Duke with few ways to access their email accounts from afar. But the University has since witnessed an explosion in web-based e-mail programs, making summer —and all—e-mail much easier. The new sites range from the Office of Information Technology’s official www.mail.duke.edu to the Duke UniGroup’s Linux Users versity duke, edu. dulug. www. But one unofficial service that has

received the most attention—and traf-

fic—is www.MyDuke.com. “[lt’s] great,” said senior Stefan Negritoiu, who runs the site. “I’m just trying to take things to the next level. [Originally, it was designed] to give students access to e-mail, but we’re trying to turn it into an electronic services thing.” Negritoiu launched the site last September, just before OlT’s web site went public. Since then, increased volume has forced him to constantly upgrade the server, originally located in his dormitory room. This summer, the site has been receiving about 200,000 hits per day from 2,500 different log-in users. “I was surprised, thinking it would be useful for off-campus, but a lot of people are using this as their main e-mail client,” Negritoiu said. “Some people log in 20 to 30 times a day.” Last month, Negritoiu changed the

which he has examined and determined to be secure. But many people are willing to disregard security risks in favor of a site some say is more user-friendly. My-

™ ""

MyDuke.com mwo :

look of MyDuke.com, adding a number of new features, including a textbook exchange, local weather, an address book and a “digital dashboard” that lets people know how many new messages they have. This summer, he hopes to add a document storage feature and a calendar. But some authorities and users have worried about the security of unofficial sites. While MyDuke.com’s encryption technology that protects users’ passwords and mail is standard, users must trust Negritoiu not to misuse their passwords. “We cannot guarantee the security of Christopher said MyDuke.com,” Cramer, OlT’s security officer. “I have no way of personally securing what he’s doing with their passwords. It’s theoretically possible that he could be storing [them]. He says he’s not, so that’s great. But I cannot guarantee that for anyone.... So students using MyDuke.com are really doing so at their own risk.” Negritoiu, who even gets messages from confused users asking to cancel their ACPUB accounts, acknowledged this possibility. “I’m just as secure [as OIT]. Yes, definitely the only concern that we have is a trust concern.” Cramer added that he may design a badge for sites, such as MyDuke.com,

By KEVIN LEES

SPECIAL TO THE CHRONICLE

MYDUKE.COM has experienced skyrocketing use since it was started by senior Stefan Negritoiu. It is just one of several web-based e-mail sites that ACPUB clients can use. Michael Bacon, an OIT system adDuke.com receives nearly as many hits ministrator, agreed that he would preeach day as OlT’s official mail site. Negritoiu said that because he built fer a more efficient system. It s maswe his site from the bottom up, he can add sive, one of the fastest features and tweak his site much better have in the building,” Bacon said. “We than OIT, pointing to such simple fea- do run into some problems, because of tures as being able to view newest mail the way our mail is set up. It doesn’t at the top of the screen, as opposed to access the mail servers as efficiently as we’d like to.” the bottom. .

Nepalese palace plans to begin murder investigation dra went to his bedroom. He returned to the dining discreetly to friends who in turn have spoken indishall about 15 to 30 minutes later with at least one creetly to others, embellishing the world’s hottest gossip along the way. short-barreled automatic weapon. Skirting the securiIt is hard to know what to believe. Some published was little apparently problem. ty officials accounts are quite wild. In retelling the tale Tuesday, Tirtha Upadhyay, a friend to some of the royal family, said he had asked the crown prince’s aide-de-camp one Indian newspaper described how Princess Shanti, King Birendra’s older sister, was decapitated by the about the security lapse. spray of bullets, with her head rolling to the ground. “He said, after all, this was the crown prince,” UpadThe truth is undoubtedly wild enough, whatever hyay said. “Anyway, during a family dinner, they’re the truth is. a away.” supposed to stay distance In a story Wednesday by The Associated Press, the The shooting spree, including the final shot that left the crown prince comatose, is estimated to have lasted slain queen’s brother, Suraj Shamsher Rana, provided his understanding of what had occurred. about 90 seconds. He had not been present, but he spoke authoritaSince then, the world has been salivating for a glimpse of the girl whose face launched a fusillade of tively of a lengthy scenario, with the drunken Dipendra chasing victims from room to room before entering bullets. But Devyani has fled the country. The details of the shooting are bad news for average the garden, where he was confronted by his younger Nepalese citizens, who thought of their crown prince brother, Prince Nirajan, and his mother. Nirajan was said to have screamed at his brother, as a well-balanced, dynamic king-to-be and are unprewant to call it.” “Don’t her murderer. But wake of do it, please, kill me if you want.” Dipendra inhim in been to as a the accept pared In this matter, the crown prince may have deed shot him. had cracks to the in Devyani tragedy, begun open rumors that he have grotesque There are and equal. %ven Then when his mother tried to hold him back, he secret world of Nepal’s imperial affairs. At least 10 eloped. He certainly meant to defy his parents. people survived the bloodbath, and some have spoken shot her as well. Drinks in hand, there was an argument, and DipenNEPAL frompage 2

truth blackout had left them with no reliable'information about the massacre within the monarchy. The investigation is expected to begin Friday with a report due three days later, which may finally give the impoverished nation of 23 million the complete story—or, more likely, just another version to dispute. What is sure, however, is that the Nepalese will get an unprecedented look at palace life in a kingdom that dates back to the mid-1700s. The argument that led to the shooting concerned Devyani Rana, the beautiful daughter of a wealthy and influential family, whom Dipendra wanted to marry. But Queen Aishwarya had a different daughter-inlaw in mind. “You have to understand, no one could say no to the queen,” said a former foreign ministry official. “She was arrogant, stubborn, authoritative, whatever you

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THURSDAY, JUNE 7, 2001

The Chronicle

Staff questions Fuqua loses 7 professors, center’s future FUQUA from page 3

PRIMATE

CENTER from page 1

the center in the short term and direct it to focus on academic research until the administration comes to a longer-term solution. Combined with dander’s dismissal and administrative silence about the reviews, the increased focus on research has caused employees to worry that the University’s priorities may not reflect their own. “We got the impression that they wanted to support research that made lots of money—not the kind of research that could save species ofanimals,” said Rachel Harold, a junior who had a work-study job at the center this spring. Senior technician Bill Hess said he worried about conservation efforts at the center. “We have always been research-oriented and we have been told to be more research-oriented and less conservation-oriented,” he said. “We want to know whether this will be the type of center we want to be involved in Chafe said he does see value in the conservationist programs, but wants to in”

crease the center’s attention to research. “I think our concern is that we have conservation imbalanced with research education,” he said. Clark says she still keeps faith that Duke will do what is best for the center. “I hope they’ll invest and commit the financial re- William Chafe sources to make it the worldclass facility that it is already known for,” Clark em-

phasized. “I want to expand the tour and education department that we have built on no money.”

schools like Fuqua, decreased supply in students graduating with doctorates and a growing percentage of faculty members 55 and older staying longer at institutions. LeClair noted that among 30 of the top business schools in the United States, an estimated 225 new faculty members were hired, making Fuqua’s recruiting “class” more than double the average. “Duke can be very proud of the fact that they can hire 17 new faculty members,” LeClair said. One of those new professors, Will Mitchell, currently at the University of Michigan, said coming to Fuqua was a very easy choice. “I like the fact that the school is developing a very strong focus on the field of strategy,” said Mitchell, who will hold the J. Rex Fuqua Chair of International Management. But Mitchell was also drawn not just to the school’s existing strengths but also to Fuqua’s commitment to future success. ROSALYN TANG/THE CHRONICLE “[Dean Adams] and the other deans basically explained the growth and development that Fuqua OUTGOING FUQUA DEAN REX ADAMS created a long-term wants to partake,” Mitchell said. “The success is partgoal of 105 faculty members for the business school. ly reflective. In reality, much more is reflected in the Adams noted that the loss of faculty every year aggressive and exciting growth goals at the school.” Mitchell will join incoming Ford Chair of Global demonstrates the need to integrate new professors Marketing Wagner Kamakura from the University along with current faculty members. But Mitchell did not think the transition to of lowa July 1. Still, even as more faculty are arriving, Fuqua Fuqua would be difficult. “It won’t be a problem at all,” Mitchell said. will lose seven professors. Adams, however, said “Rising waters float all boats, as they say.” this was not extraordinary. Kathleen Schipper, Fox Chair of Accounting, is Adams said he hoped Fuqua would maintain a business school ranking analogous to Duke’s overis for the Fione such loss. Schipper leaving Fuqua all ranking. nancial Accounting Standards Board. With last year’s BusinessWeek ranking of No. 5, “I wouldn’t leave Fuqua School of Business for Adams who said wants Fuqua to remain one of the Univeranother school,” Schipper said, she would miss both colleagues and students. She added that sity’s stronger schools. “We want to be the basketball team, not the the “esprit de corps” and community of Fuqua made it a special place for her. football team,” he said.

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its future, dubious. Few, speculation would posit, would understand. But Amnesiac is a Radiohead album, and Radiohead shattered those boundaries a year ago. Recorded during the same sessions that produced last year's Kid A, Amnesiac is every bit as arresting as its predecessor, agile in its movements, abstract in tone, stark and lush all at once. It transcends genre and defies commercial logic—again, there's not a hook or hit single to be found. The band has argued in interviews that they released Amnesiac separately because its songs simply didn't coalesce with those on Kid A. While

-

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Star Trek and Sci-fi Convention*Damnit, Jim, bust out your Spock ears and your William Shatner impression, the Trekkies have come to town. Passes range from $2O general admission to $65 pass that includes Worf's autograph Sat. and Sun. noon 6 p.m. Marriott Hotel Civic Center, Durham. -

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Amnesiac debunks its pre-release reputation as the "more accessible" album of the pair, it does have its differences. Songs like the opening track, "Packt Like Sardines In A Crushd Tin Box," echo Kid A' s tortured phobias ("I'm a reasonable man / get off my case" lead singer Thom Yorke whispers), but the

Charlie Goodnight's*96l W. Morgan St., Raleigh. (919) 828-5233 Comedy Central's The Daily Show's ever-so-cynical commentator Lewis Black, June 7 until June 9, Glenn Jensen and Jimmy Yacovelli, June 12 and 13. America's premiere ventriloquist—Jeff Dunham, June 14 until June 17.

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releases

|l Film June 8 Evolution Swordfish

June 15 Atlantis: The Lost Empire Tomb Raider

June 22 Dr. Dolittle 2 The Fast and the Furious

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June 12 Blink-182: Take Off Your Pants and Jacket The Greatful Dead: View from the Vault II Brian Setzer: '6B Comeback Special: Ignition!

Sugar Ray: Sugar Ray Travis: The Invisible Band

June 19 311: From Chaos Aaliyah: Aaliyah . Edwin McCain: Far From Over Mandy Moore: Mandy Moore Stone Temple Pilots: Shangri-La

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By Jonas Blank

the most surprising thing about the new Radiohead album is how unsurprising it is. Were it the product of any other band, Amnesiac would be heralded as a blast of fresh air, a shocking, mindaltering revision of the rock songwriting formula. Its sound would be called groundbreaking, its message obtuse,

Made in Asia?*Most Americans think Asian art is confined to pagodas and fancy letters; this exhibit shows off other forms of art from the Far East. Tonight until June 10. Duke University Museum of Art, East Campus. Free to the public. Tues.-Fri. 10 a.m. 5 p.m.; Sat, 11 a.m. 2 p.m. Sun. 2 p.m. 5 p.m. Closed Mondays. -

Radiohead’s Amnesiac sounds nothing like Kid A—and yet still finds away to be excellent

RADIOHEAD FRONTMAN Thom Yorke may not look a thing like Prime Minister Tony Blair, but drummer Phil Selway is a dead ringer for Tory leader, and likely loser, William Hague.

album's sound is more diverse. Amnesiac retains Kid A' s arctic vibe, but does so with spare piano leads ("Pyramid Song"), big guitars

GRADE:

A ("Knives Out"), a jazz band ("Life In A Glasshouse") and a symphony orchestra ("Dollars And Cents"). But the most striking aspect of Radiohead is still Yorke, whose voice gives the band its fearsome energy and fractured beauty. Amid all the musical shifts, he remains a constant: at times desperate, at times just plain scary, but always the center of attention. When the songs don't focus on Yorke —as on the the otherwiseastonishing "Pulk/Pull Revolving Doors" —they stop being the second coming of rock, and start sounding like a mediocre imitation of Aphex Twin. It may not be a pop album, but last year's doubters can take comfort in the fact that Amnesiac has a few songs that recall older Radiohead. The breezy "Knives Out" would have fit perfectly on 1997's OK Computer, and the guitar-heavy "I Might Be Wrong" might have even found a home on 1995's The Bends. Amnesiac leaves two questions in its wake. First, how did a sound this weird ever get so popular? And, more difficultly, where will —where can this band go from here? The answer to the first question is easy: Radiohead is, simply put, the best band on the planet right now, and we're not likely to see a better one this decade. And somehow, people know it. As for that second question, there's one safe bet: Rock won't be the same when they're through. □ —

Rufus Wainwright Strikes a Winning Pose Rufus Wainwright debuted in 1998 and received widespread critical praise from mainstream magazines to indie-minded

fringe publications. Critics lavished the young Canadian star with praise for his mastery of the piano, Stradivarius-like voice, classical-music choruses and lyrics that gracefully shifted from heartGRADE: wrenchingly dramatic to darkly comedic. On his new album, Poses , Wainwright proves that his first try was no fluke—the sophomore effort is anything but sophomoric. Poses chronicles Wainwright's life over the last few years. His increasing personal maturity, deeper understanding of his homosexuality and transplantation into Los Angeles serve as the plot. Poses serves as dialogue, set and score. The album is like an episodic novel or film with Wainwright as our protagonist—a sort-of gay Holden Caulfield—discovering himself and telling the stop/ with music and poetry. On "Cigarettes and Chocolate Milk," the

A

first track, Wainwright waxes on the dangerous nature of his personal vices: "Everything it seems I like/is just a little bit stronger/a little bit thicker/a little bit harmful for me." The track is intensely personal. "California," is a tribute to the fantasy of the Golden State—specifically L.A. While other artists have tried to capture California in lyrics, most have gotten stuck in the state's second or third layer of superficiality. Wainwright drills the state to its superficial core (it is California after-all) but does not condemn the carefree lifestyle that he finds More accurately, he embraces it. Like a good movie, the album is not all about the good times. "Poses"describes a coming of age struggle: "All these poses/now no longer boyish/made me a man/ah but who cares what that is." Wainwright compliments his bewitching lyrics with divergent sounds: the rockoperatic "Evil Angel" is nothing like the funky "Shadows"—the album keeps you guessing. And again like a film, after the

THE GIRLS MAY GO GA-GA, but its clear that Rufus Wainwright is a "One Man Guy."

album's denouement—the haunting "In a Graveyard,"—leaves you frightfully wondering what has died. Luckily, the disc ends with a reprise of "Cigarettes and Chocolate Milk" —as if to tell us that our protagonist has sun/ived and can sing his song again. —By Martin Barna


Thursday, june seven, two thousand one

RECESS

page eleven

let’s talk abou Sex and the City has returned for its fourth season. Does it still titillate? By Faran Krentcil

Fashionistas,

fear not. Voyeurs, enjoy the view. The fourth season of Sex and the City retains its trademark style and more skin than the Spice Channel. It retains hints of sarcasm and satire. It continues to follow the incredibly cool adventures of four girls in heat. But there's something new seeping into Sex and the City 4—all of a sudden, the show has a soul Our story begins as it always does, with a pair of Manolo Blahniks. The ope' shot of the new season is... a sh< Made famous by the stilettoed silhouettes of Carrie, Samantha, Miranda and Charlotte, the Manolo has become the emblem of liberated sex-pots everywhere It's also one of the old staples present in the show's fourth season. Gone are Charlotte's flak' giggles, Miranda's crippling insec rity, Samantha's at-all-costs strah gy and Carrie's party-girl idealism In this fourth installment, Charlotte calls off her marriage in a black leather jacket; quite a change from last season's beige princess coat and its ecstatic newlywed owner. Miranda

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FROM LEFT: hyper-sexual Samantha, fetish-free Charlotte, mannish Miranda and coy Carrie.

perhaps, a You-Go-Girl moment for the character some say is the new face of feminism. Carrie's catwalk turn seems like a small representation of the fourth season thus far. Sex and the City has picked itself up from right where it left off, and continued its celebrated display of great writing, fine performances, drool-worthy wardrobes and attitude to spare. □

of The Practice and The West Wing—McGinley appeared on both

Fonzie, in cliffhanger style, literally jumped over a shark. When a show grows lame, it jumps the shark. Featuring over a dozen indicators to help fans determine whether or not a program has jumped the shark, the website contains a comprehensive list for nearly every television show ever aired. The indicators vary from

the debate is fierce when it comes to many love-em-or-hate-em shoes tike Dawons's Creekand Ally Mcßeal. Other shows have never jumped: Sex and the City and, surprisingly, Law and Order. Yet, if there is one source of shark-jumping agreement it is that NBC's once proud-as-a-peacock lineup somersaulted over the shark a while ago—tallying the votes, it appears Frasier. Friends and ER haven't each just jumped the shark, they've hanglided over the dorsal fin. —By Martin Barna

the common devices of "character wedding" or "special guest

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#||||

TRIANGLE

star" to the more obscure "Ted McGinley" alert.

When f° rmer Revenge of the Nerds star McGinley guests on your favorite program, its days are numbered. A warning to fans

in the past year. Some shows have jumped the shark more often and in more ways than others. And despite the presence of these indicators,

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calmly confronts a guy who dumped her. Carrie has a no-stress, no-sex night out with the infamous Mr. Big. And Samantha Jones, the woman who always gets her man, doesn't get any this time around (she falls for a priest). These vignettes revolve around Carrie's 35th birthday, and they all hint at a major new theme: growing up. The first episode of the new season concludes with a concession—wedding-hungry that perhaps there isn't a man for "I think maybe we're each other's she sighs to her friends. Sappy? we know she means it. The first 'f the new season was a tightly well-acted winner. the City's second episode d a more coherent storyline, to be a runway model for New s Fashion Week, Carrie strutted n the runway in sparkly nties—and tripped. "She's model ad-kill!" whispered Miranda. In a ,ove sure to be described in ears of girly pep talks, Carrie 'eked herself up, high-fived ipermodel Heidi Klum, and nished her catwalk moment midst monstrous cheers. It was,

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Durham


THURSDAY, JUNE 7, 2001

The Chronicle

Established 1905,Incorporated 1993

Covering the news The media acted properly by reporting on the recent alcohol citations of the Bush daughters

SBWSgf'

up

Almost

a week ago today, the alcohol citations ofPresident George W. Bush’s twin daughters became part ofthe public record. Barbara and Jenna Bush allegedly attempted to purchase alcohol while using false identification to hide that they were under 21, and the media promptly reported the incident. Coverage continued in the ensuing days as more information became available. Some have criticized the media’s coverage of the event, but the press was merely performing its duty to inform the public. The First Family—as the name indicates—plays a role in public life, unlike most other families. Both daughters undoubtedly are aware of their public stature. The names ofthose cited for underage alcohol violations become part ofthe public record, regardless ofhow famous they are. That a reporter would recognize the Bush daughters’ names and report the information should be a logical assumption. White House officials have stressed that the daughters should be off-limits to press coverage and receive treatment similar to that of President Bill Clinton’s daughter, Chelsea. The young Clinton, however, was under 18 for much of her father’s administration. The Bush daughters, both 19, cannot claim this protection. In addition, claims of political bias are not valid, given past media coverage. For example, just last year, the press reported the reckless driving violations ofVice President A1 Gore’s son. Jenna Bush’s recent citation bears even more significance in light ofTexas legislation—passed when her father was governor—that mandates jail time for three alcohol offenses. Should she violate the law a third time, her father’s policy could place her in jail.This angle added depth to the reporting of the story. The media bears the burden of deciding what information reaches the public. It must make these decisions responsibly, being careful not to sensationalize. Fortunately, in this case, the press has already begun debating its own actions, something that ensures proper reporting standards are in place. Open examination of the media maintains public confidence in the institution, and the information it presents. Still, the press should not make its decisions based on protecting high-profile figures—something that it could have done in this case. Journalists have a responsibility to present fair and balanced information to the public. In this instance, they followed this creed. The news itself may have been unfortunate both in the citation and in the people involved, but restricting news coverage to avoid unpleasantries is a dangerous path to tread.

On the

record

And ifyou think they could do it at the top, what do you think they would do to the bottom ? Primate Center staff specialist Dorothy Clark on the decision not to retain the center’s current director (see story, page one)

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, General Manager PRATIK PATEL, Senior Editor MARTIN BARNA, Projects Editor THAD PARSONS, Photography Editor MATT ATWOOD, City & State Editor TIM PERZYK, Recess Editor CHERAINE STANFORD, Features Editor MATT BRUMM, Health & Science Editor JENNIFER SONG, Health & Science Editor ELLEN MIELKE, TowerView Editor 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 & Stale 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 MARY WEAVER, Operations Manager CATHERINE MARTIN, Production Manager NALINI MILNE, Advertising Office Manager JORDANA JOFFE, Advertising 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 Flowers Building, call 684-2663 or fax 684-46%. To reach the Business Office at 103 West Union Building, call 684-3811. To reach the Advertising Office at 101 West Union Building call 684-3811 or fax 684-8295. Visit The Chronicle Online at http://www.chroniclc.duke.edu. © 2001 The Chronicle, Box 90858, Durham, N.C. 27708. All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced in any form without the prior, written permission of the Business Office. Each individual is entitled to one free copy.

Le

:rs to the Editor

Article misplaces credit for Durham Bulls I read with interest the article “The Road to Durham’s Future” in the recent May edition of TowerView. I thought some good points were made, and on the whole the article was well written. I would like to take a moment to correct one particular error in the article, Durham Bulls’ owner Jim Goodmon was referred to as “the man who has shaped the Bulls into a first-class minor league operation.” That is blatantly incorrect, While Goodmon and his staff for referenced article,

Alcohol

taxes

are responsible for moving the Bulls up in class, to the Triple-A level, the Durham Bulls were long known to run a first-class operation while they were members of

the Carolina League, beginning in 1980. Credit for that needs to go to former owner Miles Wolff, who quickly built the Bulls into the flagship of the Carolina League and a source of envy amongst teams around the country. As a former minor league executive with several different teams, I can testify that the Bulls were one

success

of the handful of teams that

we mere mortals looked to as a source of inspiration. The Bulls are proof that

hard work and creative thinking could pay off in big crowds and impressive revenues. Mr. Goodmon and his people have been able to build upon that, but a very strong foundation had been established long before he gave any thought to purchasing the team. Marshall Adesman Staff Assistant Center for Integrative Medicine

see http:llwww.chronicle.duke.edu!story.php?articlelD-22840

could fund psychiatric treatment

I’m responding to Martin Barna’s column that was printed in the May 24 issue ofThe Chronicle. I support the state’s right

based severe mental illnesses like schizophrenia or bipolar disorder. The earlier these disorders are recognized and

Professor Jeffrey Swanson, a nationally recognized expert on mental illness and violence, believes that if fewer hospital beds are available for

treated, the better the people with severe mental illchances for full recovery. ness who need to be hospitalNorth Carolinians should be ized, violent crime, arrests offered the opportunity to and incarcerations will receive treatment for mental increase. “It is past time for a illnesses just as for other serious public investment to physical illnesses. Early improve community mental treatment means a better health services in North Carolina,” he wrote in the chance at having a producties. Severe mental illness tive life. Winter 2000-2001 issue ofthe affects one in five North Last week the state Journal of Common Sense. Carolina families. Tens of Senate passed a budget plan The Senate’s budget has thousands of children are on that slashes funding to the not yet passed the House. I waiting lists for mental Deparment of Health and urge Chronicle readers to health services. These chil- Human Services and calls learn more about North dren may be vicitms of abuse for, among other drastic Carolina’s mental health crior other trauma, may suffer cuts, the closing of Dorothea sis and to contact your reprefrom emotional or develop- Dix Hospital in Raleigh, one sentatives in Raleigh. mental disabilities, or may of four state psychiatric be experiencing the terrify- facilities, Amy Martin Durham, N.C. ing onset of biologicallyDuke Medical School for referenced column, see http:! www.chronicle.duke.edu/story.php?articlelD=22B9l to regulate the sale ofalcohol, and I would support the tax increase on beer, wine and liquor that was discussed in the state Senate last month. This money would be used to increase services for mental health, substance abuse and developmental disabili-

/

Announcement Interested in being an editorial cartoonist? If so, call Jim at 684-2663 or send e-mail to jmhl9@duke.edu.

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


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Page 2

Babysitting

&

BABYSITTING & ELDERCARE REFERRAL SERVICE DUKE UNIVERSITY

This

referral guide lists the names of Duke students, Duke employees, their family members, and alumni who are available to provide child care and eldercare. Schedules of availability are approximate, but each caregiver should be available for at least two hours during any listed time period. The names of references are listed with the name of the caregiver. ELDERCARE PROVIDERS are not trained to care for persons who have medical or other problems requiring specialized care. They can be asked to assist the elderly with daily tasks, read to him/her, or provide companionship. If you would like more information about the child care or eldercare experience that a particular caregiver has had, please call Staff and Family Programs at 684-9040. Included in this directory is a separate listing of CAREGIVERS FOR SICK CHILD CARE AND FOR CHILDREN WITH SPECIAL NEEDS. The information contained in these sections follow the same guidelines as outlined above. Those seeking care should contact the providers directly. Arrangements concerning transportation, compensation, etc., will be made by the caregivers and those seeking care. You are encouraged to contact references as well as arrange a meeting with the caregiver prior to the time he or she will provide care. The information under CHOOSING A CAREGIVER provides suggestions for getting off to a good start.

If you need regular or ongoing child care, visit the Staff and Family Programs website at www.childcare.duke.edu. If you need assistance with elder care resources contact the Duke Family Support Program at 660-7510. Further information can be obtained by calling Staff and Family Programs at 684-9040 or by visiting their office at 154 Trent Hall.

Emerson Waldorf School Balanced academic, artistic, and practical curriculum 30-acre wooded campus Preschool through Grade 8

Kindergarten Come Play with Us Saturday, June 16 10:00a.m.

-

11:30a.m.

OPEN HOUSE Tuesday, August 14 7:00p.m. 8:30p.m.

June 7, 2001 /The Chronicle

ElderCare Guide

STAFF Creative Services

Cover Design

Jonathan Angier

General Manager... Advertising Director

Sue Newsome

Advertising Office Manager

Nalini Milne

Mary Weaver

Operations Manager Production Manager.

Catherine Martin

Creative Director

Adrienne Grant

Creative Services Manager

Alise Edwards

Account Representatives

Monica Franklin, Dawn Hall Yu-hsien Huang

Sales Representatives

Brooke Dohmen, Seth Strickland Preeti Garg

Business Assistants Editorial Content..

~

Staff & Family Programs

Photographs used herein ®2OOO-2001 www.arttoday.com This supplement was produced solely by the staff of the Business Department of The Chronicle. For advertising information, call (919) 684-3811. ®2OOl The Chronicle, Box 90858, Durham, NC 27708-0858. All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced in any form without the prior written permission of The Chronicle Business Department.

NOTICE Neither Duke University nor The Chronicle can warrant or recommend one particular caregiver or service over another. The decision to engage a caregiver must be made by the person seeking care after a prudent evaluation of the prospective caregiver, likewise, the decision of a caregiver to offer his/her services must be made after prudent evaluation of the person seeking care. Duke University nor The Chronicle will be responsible for the care given by providers. Several caregivers have undergone a background check. Please call Staff and Family Programs at 684-9040 to see which caregivers have undergone a background check. No additional screening of caregivers has been conducted by Duke University or The Chronicle. The responsibility for screening rests solely and completely with caregivers and with those seeking care.

The

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Kangaroo Pouch New and quality

secondhand clothing, maternity wear, toys and baby equipment.

for Young Children A Those Who Care for Them A Hands-On Museum

Come and see for yourself!

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471-0322

A kid-size town for busy bodies A busy

minds. Designed for young children ages 7 A under.

2913 Guess Rd.

2000 Chapel Hill Rd Shoppes at Lakewood Durham, NC 27707 (919) 403-3743

Newborn through size 10.

(1/4 mile North of 1-85) We consign or buy.

TRIANGLE SPORTSPLEX NC 86 & Business 70 Hillsborough Exit 165 off 1-85, Exit 266 off 1-40 •

(919) 644-0339

www.trianglesportsplex.com

summer oay cam RS VP Amy Weaver Director of Admissions 919-967-1858

6211 New Jericho Road Chapel Hill, NC 27516 www.emersonwhaldorf.org

AtAgessportspiex 7-13 Beginning in

Canoeing Street Hockey Basketball Ice Skating Swimming Outdoor Games & Activities Arts & Crafts Movies Approximately 1 counselor for every W campers. Call to Register.

Admitting students of any race, creed, color, and national and ethnic origin.

June


The Chronicle/ June 7, 2001

BEHAVIOR CHANGE If you have ever made a New Year’s resolution on January 1 and abandoned it on January 2, you have a sense of how reluctant humans can be to change. Our habits are something we can count on and they give us a sense of certainty about life. Attempting to break an undesirable habit or acquire a new, and perhaps better habit, can make us feel uncomfortable and lead us to revert back to what is most familiar. Below are some steps to help facilitate successful behavioral change.

Take One Small Step Thinking about the work involved in changing a habit can seem monumental and stop us before we start. Instead of picturing the project as overwhelming, remember that change begins with that first small step. It is with the accumulation of all those little steps that we will reach our goal.

Babysitting

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ElderCare Guide

Page 3

STAYING CONNECTED TO YOUR CHILDREN Working parents need to find ways of letting their children know that they are in their hearts even though the parent is away at work. Here are some tips on ways to feel connected to your children while you are at work.

Infants Spend a few minutes upon arrival when dropping off or picking up your infant to chat with the caregiver. Send a favorite toy or blanket to remind the baby of home. Give the caregiver a camera and film to snap pictures of your child’s activities Remember that the “firsts” are relative. Any time your child does something for you for the first time, it’s a first

Toddlers and Preschoolers Fill a small photo album with pictures of your family, home and pets for your child to keep during the day Make a cassette tape of yourself reading a favorite story, Draw a heart to put in the lunch bag Don’t rush off when you pick up your child. Take time to look at your child’s work or do an activity together. Use travel time to the caregiver’s or day care center to talk and foster communication.

School-Age Children Reserve part of the weekend for some one-onone time with each child, doing something you both enjoy Spend the first 15 or so minutes home listening to your child. Get involved in school affairs. Attend meetings and volunteer for at least one activity each term. Let the teacher know at the beginning of the year that you’d like to attend some of the daytime programs, but you need advance notice for scheduling purposes.

This summer kids h

Just wont

ll Activities

The Key to Change Just as habits take some time to acquire, it will take some time to revise, eliminate and/or add new habits. The key to behavior change is to first define the specific behavior you want to change. Then set realistic goals to accomplish the desired change and take small steps toward those goals. Reward yourself for every movement toward change.

Be Specific The statement “I want to get some exercise” is a start toward defining the behavior to be changed, but does not establish exactly how you plan to accomplish change. On the other hand, “I will set aside 20 minutes on Monday, Wednesday and Friday mornings to take a walk” is a much more specific plan with a realistic goal. Later, if you want to increase the time you spend walking, you will have already taken the first small steps toward your goal by getting in the habit of taking a short walk three times a week. After one week of meeting your commitment, you might want to reward yourself with something you enjoy, such as buying a book or going to a movie.

Record Your Progress Another way to make behavioral change fun is to keep a diary and record your accomplishments, or

post a chart on a wall where you can see what you’ve done. That kind of positive feedback does wonders for your motivation. Most of all, show enthusiasm for what you’re doing and keep a sense of humor. Before you know it, you will have gained a positive habit and developed skills that can be used in future behavior change endeavors.

Join the "Carolina Puppet Theater" and Kode-A-Kld Sponsored by WRAL-FM, 101.5. Come enjoy FREE hand puppets, Face Painting, Rainbow The Clown, Oopsy Daisy.

£

■ V

&

r

lB Activities

1lB

"Bouncing Bulldogs jump Rope Team" members receive FREE Jump Ropes, Face Painting and Balloon Art. Hosted by Carly Jo, Blossom Oopsy Daisy Meet

EE

&

Kids Club Summer Activities For July 11 August 1. -

10:00 a.m. in Center Court.

If your child is not a member it's Free to join! Just stop by our Customer Service Center and register today!

1

the right place. right now. S\ '

Dillard's, Hudson Belk and JC Penney Hill Boulevard and 15-501 1-40 East to Exit #270 919-493-2451 www.southsquaremall.com •

A

Design your own shopping bag to use during our speciai shopping hour for kids. Every child who designs a shopping bag at our art table will receive "South Square Shopping Bucks." Use your "bucks" to shop at our "kids only" booth for great bargains. South Square Security Officers will explain to the children about being safe while shopping in malls. Entertainment will include Face Painting and Balloon Art with Rainbow The Clown, Carly Jo, Blossom & Oopsy Daisy. r i

Join us Wednesday mornings at

HI Durham/Chapel

25 Activities

Activities^

South Square Mall's Kids Club Summer Activities. Come take part in Kode-A-Kid Sponsored by WRAL-FM 101.5 and leam about Fire Safety with "Sparky the Fire Dog and Smokey the Bear." Children receive FREE fire hats and "Till Help Arrives" Safety information from The American Red Cross. Enjoy Face Painting and help us celebrate Rainbow the Clown's Birthday with refreshments and balloon art with Blossom and Oopsy Daisy.


Babysittin

Pai

&

June 7, 2001 /The Chronicle

ElderCare Guide

iJto^KSiyiiii^^iiifftVAipJtfditi^P HOURS AVAILABLE MON TUES WED

**ln Caregiver’s Home Only

NAME/PHONE

EVE

CAR/ REG/ ELDER THURS

FRI

SAT

SUN

BIKE

OCC

CARE

EVE

EVE

ALL

EVE

Car

Both

Yes

EVE

EVE

EVE

Car

Occ

Car Car

Martha Baker 220-9087

EVE

EVE

Brenda Baldwin

EVE

EVE

Emilia Benova 471-8854

ALL

ALL

ALL

ALL

ALL

AFT

**Serwaa Carr 687-0078

ALL

ALL

ALL

ALL

ALL

ALL

Linda Clark 598-3760

EVE

EVE

EVE

EVE

EVE

EVE

Janie Dortch

AM EVE

AM EVE

AM EVE

AM EVE

AM EVE

David Roselli

919-598-8131 919-682-6773

No

Belinda Turner Tracey Smith

919-493-2539 919-732-3486

Both

No

Lyn Baker Steve &. Christy Hinkle

919-382-8617 919-286-5894

Both

No

Ella Godley

919-596-3357

Juanita Allen

919-361-1233

Car

Both

Yes

Arteshia Bostic

919-682-1550

No

Both

Yes

Andromeda Connor Jolene Nagel

919-660-3945 919-684-2778

Car

Reg

Yes

Beatrice Holland Hugh Marshall

919-471-8208 919-477-3542

Car

Both

Only

Deborah Scurlock Mima Mujahid

919-660-0514 919-490-0063

Car

Both

Yes

Mary Alston Steve Pascall

919-682-1543 919-684-2365

Car

Occ

No

Kelly Brady

919-933-7616

Gwynn Sullivan

919-383-0107

Beth Payer Risa Keene

518-587-1190 603-847-9122

Zhong Wang

919-684-3248 919-684-3168

361-3018

530-8470

ALL

Doris Edmundson 956-5365

EVE

Emma Farrington

EVE

EVE

EVE

ALL

ALL

489-3173 AM

AM

AM

AM

EVE

EVE

EVE

EVE

EVE

EVE

EVE

EVE

EVE

EVE

AM AFT

AM AFT

AM AFT

AM AFT

AM AFT

Sue Hemingway

684-2179 Candy Hunt

EVE

EVE

489-6848 Megan LeDuc

ALL

ALL

Car

Both

No

Car

Both

No

309-4137

Qian Liu

383-4697

Tasha Mcßroom

Demeta Ingram

Linhua Song ALL

ALL

REFERENCES

Car

Both

Yes

956-5061

Bishop Robert Jones Annette Alston

919-667-9074 919-286-1519

Catherine McCalop 681-8804

EVE

EVE

EVE

EVE

ALL

Car

Both

Only

Patricia Graham Harreyette Crowell

919-682-9194 910-497-4208

Brenda McCoy 384-1158

EVE

EVE

EVE

EVE

ALL

Car

Both

No

Amy Pierce Kelly Williams

919-684-6885

Linda McDonald

AFT

Janet Robinson

919-684-4161

479-5415

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bike shop with over

Bikes for the whole family

Full lines of mountain, road, hybrid, and kids' bikes

Joggers available

Duke’s Full Service Bike Shop 639 Broad Street Durham (next to the WeQsprtng) 2453 Across the Street from East Campus Dll/ C ?QA LOvrDIIVL 10*7Mon-Sat* IZ-SSun •

Car

Both

No

Katrina Price

919-684-6545 919-309-0320


The Chronicle/ june 7, 2001

Babvsittin

&

ElderCuie G

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HOURS AVAILABLE

NAME/PHONE

MON

TUES

WED

THURS

FRI

SAT

**Tanzy McNair 683-2529

ALL

ALL

ALL

ALL

ALL

ALL

CAR/ REG/ ELDER

Zelma Munn

ALL

490-4805 Shelly Reaves

AFT

AFT EVE

AFT

AFT EVE

AFT EVE

Veronica Roberts 309-0589

EVE

EVE

EVE

EVE

EVE

Helen Stroud 220-2501

EVE

Gwendolyn Terrell

EVE

667-1294

EVE

EVE

EVE

EVE

EVE

EVE

SUN

ALL

EVE

ALL

EVE

Deborah Wallace

Car

Both

REFERENCES

Yes

919-489-5190

Yes

Dr. Renee Simmons Patricia Lester

404-629-9683 919-479-4817

Car

Both

Only

Margie Klenke

919-471-2475

Car

Both

Yes

Dorothy McGrit Andrea Carson

919-489-3855

Kimberly Hodge Tameka Cannady

919-596-3833

Mercie Lewis

Versell Jones

919-286-3394 919-688-1464

Both Reg

Yes

Only

919-680-3161

919-957-2763

Both

No

Pastor D. Q. Fozard Bettie Holder

919-544-2731 919-220-2124

AM AFT

Car

Reg

No

Dr. E. Livingston Dr. Tod Laursen

919-471-3921 919-382-0446

AFT EVE

AFT EVE

Car

Both

Only

Call Alice

919-684-5171

ALL

ALL

Car

Both

No

Nancy Holton

919-544-2872 919-286-7113

ALL

ALL

ALL

ALL

**Claudette Weaver 471-6999

AM AFT

AM AFT

AM AFT

AM AFT

Alice Williams

AFT EVE

AFT EVE

AFT EVE

Valarie Woodbury 403-9110

ALL

ALL

ALL

Ella R. Woods

EVE

ALL

ALL

ALL

ALL

Jill Shiflett EVE

EVE

EVE

Car

EVE

Occ

Yes

Mr. Mr.

493-8172 ALL

ALL

ALL

ALL

Car

ALL

IB

Both

1

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&

919-542-4242 919-847-5712

Mrs. Signer Mrs. Green

252-523-9869

Call Peggy

Only

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Peggy Wright 252-523-9869

919-956-5921

Jessie Jones Both

682-7770

684-5171

Clora Smith

Car

Car

EVE

CARE

Car

ALL

**

OCC

Car

ALL

403-8441

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Benefit #7:

Non-Competitive

Environment.

We teach your child the fun of being fit! •

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Children 6 months to 12 years old. Physical, mental and social development. Fun, non-competitive classes. Gymnastics based programs. Qualified, trained instructors.

Gymnastics based summer camps, classes in gymnastics, sport skills,

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Companionship Light Housekeeping

Meal Preparation Errands & Appointments Long Term Respite, Hourly & Live-in

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2501 University Drive, Durham, NC 27707

HUH SMHB

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:~HHI

if

5


Pi page

Babysitting

b

&

June 7, 2001/The Chronicle

ElderCare Guide

CTmsmnD^TgaifnT HOURS AVAILABLE MON TUBS WED

NAME/PHONE

Sr Naomi Goldberg 383-8037

THURS

FRI

SUN

BIKE

OCC

CARE

AFT EVE

AFT EVE

ALL

ALL

Car

Both

No

Call Sarah

910-389-3123

EVE

AFT EVE

AM EVE

AM EVE

AM EVE

AM EVE

AM EVE

ALL

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Car

Both

No

Deb Guy Julie McGin

847-475-7400 847-869-9422

These caregivers are available for care of children who are mildly ill but do not need medical supervision. They can come to your home for an entire morning or afternoon if listed for AM or AFT, or for a full workday. These caregivers are not medically trained and will follow your instructions on care. Their rates vary from $2O to $4O or more per day. As always, the responsibility for screening lies with parents and caregivers. References for

most of these babysitters are listed in the first part

of this directory. Staff and Family Programs recommends that you meet the babysitter(s) before hiring her or him and discuss hours, fees, transportation, and your child's needs. You cannot predict on what day your child might be sick, but you can use these babysitters for regular care and get to know them before you have an urgent need.

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We accept all insurance and payor plans, including Duke Select®, Duke Option®, Duke Classic®, and Partners®

Quality care, and the best physicians possible. Mangle Orthopaedic Associates is the premier orthopaedic specialty practice in the region. With nine locations, patients have access to outstanding general orthopaedic care, specialty orthopaedics, and physical medicine and rehabilitation. Main Office: Durham, NC ■ Appointments (800) 359-3053 www.triangleortho.com Durham

REFERENCES

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at


The Chronicle/ June 7, 2001

Babysitting

&

ElderCare Guide

Page 7

ADDITIONAL RESOURCES CHILD CAKE Resource and Referral Agencies These agencies provide information on availability, affordability, and quality of child care as well as current listings of registered home day care providers, licensed day care centers, preschools, afterschool and summer programs and child sitters.

Child Core Services 403-6955

Child Care Services Association of Orange County

967-3272

Chatham County Child Care Networks

542-6644

Child Care Resource and Referral of Wake County

Information

&

ELDERCARE Resource and Referral Agencies Triangle J Area Agency on Aging Council for Senior Citizens Orange County Department on Aging Resources for Seniors (Wake County)

549-0551 688-8247 245-2000 872-7933

Elder Care Consultation Service (Duke)

660-7510

Information

Child Care Services Association of Durham County

832-7173

Support Phone Line

Family Information Network 1-800-TLC-0042 (Information and materials for parents of children with special needs.)

CHOOSING A CAREGIVER

&

help to provide a safe and happy experience for your family member and your caregiver by doing the following: You can

Referral Phone

Read a good reference source on using caregivers in your home. Booklets and videos are available through the lending library of Staff and Family Programs at 154 Trent HaU. Call 684-9040. Decide

on questions you will ask the prospective caregiver during the phone interview. Make notes

Line

Include: Their experience with infants, children, and older

as you talk.

National ElderCare Information

1-800-677-1116

-

people

SUPPORT GROUPS

Any training in CPR, first aid or in child or elder care

-

What they like to do with children or older people

-

Daughters Concerned for Aging Relatives Open to daughters/daughters-in-law concerned about issues regarding aging relatives. For more information call the Duke Family Support Program at 660-7510.

Availability

-

-

-

-

Alzheimer's Support Group For more information call the Duke Family Support Program at 660-7510. -

in

-

-

-

-

-

Orange and Wake Counties) Information and referral relating to the growth, health and safety of young children.

-

Parents and Kids Love Baby Bear!

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y : :

special needs,

Give tour of home. (Parents can let older children help with this.)

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Discuss preferred methods of communications.

discipline and/or

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Allow time for caregiver and child or elder

to

get acquainted. •

i

Discuss any

Arrange a personal visit.

1-800-831-1754 Chatham, Durham,

'

caregiver about your family. Describe the person(s) for whom care is needed.

Infolinc (formerly First Coll) Infolinc (Information and resources

Transportation

Check references

683-1595 1-800-367-2229

NC Family Health Resource Line

Child and Parent Support Services (CAPSS) (Crisis Line)

Fee

Tell the prospective -

Parents and Caregiver Support Group for Memory Disorders For more information call 668-2836.

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Babysitting

Page 8

&

ElderCare

Guide

June 7, 2001 /The Chronicle

INFORMATION FOR CAREGIVER Use this form and attach a note giving an update on how you may be reached

or

located. Prepare the update tor the caregiver each time you go out.

EMERGENCY CONTACTS;

NAMES OF PARENTS OR RESPONSIBLE ADULTS:

Doctor (Name)

(Phone)

(Name)

(Phone)

(Office Phone)

Fire Department

HOME ADDRESS:

(Name)

(Home Phone)

dson Control

Rescue

(Place) Taxi

(Name)

(Place)

Contact

(Neighbor/Local Relative)

(Address)

(Phone)

(Neighbor/Local Relative)

(Address)

(Phone)

WORK ADDRESS:

ATTACH A NOTE TELLING WHERE YOU WILL BE: Where

NAMES AND AGES OF CHILDREN OR ELDERS:

(Name)

(Age)

(Name)

(Age)

Tele >hone

Time of Return


Commentary

THURSDAY, JUNE 7, 2001

PAGE 13

Lacking ‘benevolent compassion’

Opposition to the Supreme Court’s Casey Martin decision ignores injustices to the golfer says? Should the player receive a fourfundamental modification of the game, to challenge unfairness and discriminaThe game strike limit? as Scalia purports. tion at every level. In this system, Casey Craig Saperstein When a person thinks about a slippery slope in terms of golf, he is usually referring to the undulation of a putting green. But last week, with the decision by the Supreme Court to allow professional golfer Casey Martin to use a cart when playing in Professional Golf Association Tour events, a whole new question has arisen: Will allowing Martin to use a golf cart while playing in PGA events result in a bevy of requests for special accommodations by other players? Well, it might, but the decision was correct nonetheless. In the 7-2 decision, the Court ruled that the PGA must continue to permit Martin—a talented Stanford graduate—to receive the necessary accommodation granted to the physically disabled under the Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990—specifically, a golf cart. Meanwhile, in his dissent, Mr. Sensitivity himself, Justice Antonin Scalia, called the majority opinion a demonstration of “benevolent compassion that the law does not place... within our power to impose.” Scalia, who supposedly stands as the court’s chief opponent of judicial overreach, made two claims that serve as the foundation of his dissent. First, Scalia attacked the “slippery slope” argument head on, noting the enforcement difficulties of the ruling. What if a Little League baseball player has Attention Deficit Disorder and therefore can’t concentrate on how many balls and strikes have been thrown against him, Scalia

The Reagan-appointed justice also challenged his colleagues by noting that they inconspicuously seemed to omit an essential aspect of the ADA—that it “explicitly does not require modifications [that] would fundamentally alter the nature of the goods, services and privileges [in this case, the PGA golfrules].” Now, I’m no lawyer, but any time a justice’s opinion leaves out such a glaringly important aspect of the law it is interpreting, a red flag should definitely be raised. However, in this case, Scalia’s charge against his colleagues’ majority decision is simply incorrect. While the PGA Tour itself has never allowed golf carts to be used during its officially sanctioned events, it has allowed the use of golf carts on its Senior Tour and in its member clubs throughout the nation. Only the professional men’s and women’s tours reject the usage of carts during tournament play. Even Scalia himself warns the PGA and other organizations to “make sure that the same written rules are set forth for all levels of play, and never voluntarily... grant any modifications.” There’s no question that allowing even one player to use a cart during tournament play is a major exception that should be rigorously considered, and that’s why the PGA Tour was justified in its initial challenge to Martin’s right to invoke the ADA. But from a political, and ultimately legal, standpoint, the PGA rightly received a black eye for taking its efforts too far. It should have relented after a pro-Martin ruling in the U.S. 9th Circuit Court of

Players face a near laundry list of variables that enter into the fairness of a golf round, such as the weather, the time of day that each golfer plays his round and the impact of spectators on the event. In essence, they will never receive a completely fair shake because ofthe nature of the game. As Martin will tell you, the additional variables he must deal with, which include the crushing pain of each step he takes, the endless fatigue of using his degenerative right leg in any fashion, and the taunts he endures from unfriendly spectators, more than outweigh any perceived advantage he could receive from using a cart while playing. We have a judicial system that provides open access to those who are prepared to fight for their rights. It does not

mean we have a litigious society. It means that injustice is so inimical to our basic beliefs, that we feel it appropriate

Martin played by the rules, and in a great example of competitive courage, fought the PGA. That is exactly the kind of spirit and values we want our professional athletes to exhibit. Unfortunately, there will always be the Scalias of the world who will try to avoid any attempts at “benevolent compassion,” and they will manipulate the law to do so. This instance of“benevolent compassion,” though, is backed by clear jurisprudential proof that Martin should be able to use a cart. Sure, now it might be a little bit tougher to interpret accommodation requests under the ADA, but if one person has benefited from this compassion and this benefit has been accomplished lawfully, then the Supreme Court, in its decision, has hit a hole-in-one. Craig Saperstein is a Trinity senior and sports editor of The Chronicle.

Appeals, but it again challenged Martin in the U.S. Supreme Court. In both trials, the judges ascertained that Martin’s use of a golf cart did not constitute a

Perturbed about Peru Insight and intuition Nick Christie When I first saw the results of Sunday’s Peruvian presidential elections, I was originally quite hopeful. After a decade of Alberto Fujimori’s outrageously corrupt leadership, President-elect Alejandro Toledo’s victory offered the prospect of an untainted democracy blossoming in Peru. Accordingly, I greeted Toledo’s win over political rival Alan Garcia with much excitement.

Unlike Garcia, whose reign as Peru’s president from 1985-1990 featured hyperinflation and corruption similar to that of Fujimori’s, Toledo represented the possibility of a fresh, new form of leadership. Toledo came from a working-class background; he shined shoes as a youth. Through the help of two American Peace Corps volunteers who arrived in his village in 1964, Toledo managed to attend the University of San Francisco. He would go on to attend Stanford, earning a doctorate. In electing Toledo, the Peruvian people would have a president they could identify with, one who looked as they did. With his working-class roots, Toledo could empathize with the impoverished destitute conditions. He would better understand what it was like to be poor, and armed with an excellent education, he would have solutions for Peru’s economic problems. Yet the more stories I read concerning Toledo’s presidential victory, the more skeptical I became regarding Toledo’s ability to revitalize Peru. Strangely, despite Garcia’s track record of a corrupt and ineffective gov-

eminent, Toledo bested his opponent by only a few percentage points. Furthermore, the Peruvian public’s reaction revealed a complete lack of enthusiasm. The series of personal attacks that Toledo and Garcia levied on one another during the political race may have been the reason why. Unfortunately, Toledo is no golden boy. Rather, he is embroiled in controversy surrounding both his personal life and his incredibly image-conscious public presence, which appears to border on demagoguery.

Clearly, instead of bringing hope of new leadership to Peru’s citizens, Toledo carries the egregious gage of scandal into office... -

Nearly every article I read concerning Toledo’s recent victory and the conclusion of the lengthy campaign introduced a new scandal unbeknownst to me. Quite simply, one cannot fit all the suspicious rumors concerning Peru’s president-elect into a single article. Here a few of the highlights: Several newspapers quoted Toledo as having said that his mother died during one ofthe most devastating earthquakes in Peruvian history, and on the very same day he received a degree in economics in 1970. This is not true. Toledo has since attempted to backtrack, saying his original phrase was misinterpreted. The Peruvian newspaper Liberacion challenged Toledo’s comments, which it said were used to gain pre-election sympathy on Mother’s Day. A young woman adamantly insists that she is Toledo’s

daughter bom out of wedlock. In recent months, many Peruvians called for Toledo to address the allegation by undergoing a DNA test. Toledo refused to do so. During the election, Garcia accused Toledo of money laundering, cocaine use and rampant sexual affairs with prostitutes. Toledo refuted these denunciations in bizarre fashion, saying that any associations with cocaine or prostitution result from a 1998 kidnapping in which Peruvian intelligence agents sought to embarrass him. Clearly, instead of bringing hope of new leadership to Pern’s citizens, Toledo carries the egregious baggage of scandal into office, a sight with which all Peruvians are familiar. The more aware I became of Toledo’s many scandals and their incredible extent, my optimism gradually gave way to disillusionment. Yet my idealism has not vanished entirely. Toledo played an instrumental role in finally ousting Fujimori after years of corruption, and his campaign pledges new economic reforms capable of creating 2.5 million jobs. Toledo is also Pern’s first freely elected president of native Andean descent, an accomplishment in and ofitself. Recent news stories concerning South American governments have seldom been positive. Whether concerning Columbia’s ongoing war with the rebels, which resulted in 40,000 deaths in the past decade, or the release of CIA documents revealing the extent of former Chilean dictator Augustus Pinochet’s heinous human rights violations, press clippings rarely harbor good news.

One can only hope that Toledo’s election will aid a fledgling democracy’s economic recovery and not add further to a people’s disillusionment. Nick Christie, a Trinity junior, is a member of the sports staffof The Chronicle.


Comics

PAGE 14

Zits/ Jerry Scott

&

THE Daily Crossword

Jim Borgman W9W.IEENA.SO WfcßbcmZ-

THURSDAY, JUNE 7, 2001

«?rr

Edited by Wayne Robert Williams

ACROSS

1 Minnesota's twins? 4 Tennis shot 9 Showery month 14 Ready to go Domingo 15 16 Actress Davis 17 Start of Lily Tomlin quote 18 Part 2of quote 20 Mine finds 22 The Promised Land 23 Scandinavian country: abbr. 24 Take

disciplinary

Gilbert/ Scott Adams I DEf*\AND A

TOO BAD,

CONTRACT T

SKIPPY. YOU'RE A

THE FACT Tf DIDN'T REA

fAUNIST

ONE BEFOR

action 26 Commutes 28 Part 3 of quote 33 Occupation 36 Jacob's twin 37 Discard 38 Noble rank 40 Of Icelandic literature 43 Sicilian erupter 44 Stand-in 46 Religious

6 Celebes ox 7 Bedazzle 8 College in Geneva, NY 9 Meetings' plans 10 Church seat 11 Puts back in a slot 12 Centerward 13 Cowardly Lion's portrayer 19 Lion's den 21 Make a lap 25 Haggard heroine 27 Behold, Caesar 29 Way cool! 30 Sound track 31 Holm and McKellen 32 Practice boxing Quip 33 34 Solemn vow

image

48 Russ, or Lith.,

once

49 Part 4 of quote 53 Steel plow pioneer

54 Accused 58 Station from Tenn. 60 South Carolina

SIGNED IT

river

63 Singer Amos 64 Part 5 of quote 67 End of quote 68 Birth-related 69 Blue dyes 70 UFO crew 71 Soothes 72 Hidden store 73 Cover crop

Doonesbury/ Garry Trudeau

DOWN 1 Bar legally 2 Indian jacket

47 Nothing at all

3 Dutch painter

39 Better than

trees

50 Angelico and Diavolo 51 Meddlesome

4 Booming jet's

never?

52 A Cole

35 West Indies

style

letters 5 Italian

41 Hospital letters

42 Bossy's ringers 45 Some engines

nobleman

women

55 Societal 56

standards Muse of poetry

Scatterbrained 58 Daly of 57

"Cagney & Lacey"

Weather grp. 61 Hue 59

62 Director Kazan

65 "Norma 66 Gray shade

The Chronicle: Top perks of the parking director job:

bxTrot/ Bill Amend what

Private gated lot:

Ambika and Jim

Receives rare handicapped Chapel lot sticker:

Kevin and Dave

Two words: Valet service:

John

Remote control to change stoplights:

Craig

Administrators volunteer to wash your car: Car alarm plays Blue Devil fight song: Gold-leaf parking ticket pad: You get to kiss Kevin for his birthday:

a Difference

Thad

Rosalyn Matt

Thad

Disappearing/reappearing fire lane paint: (We miss you, Roily!):

Account Representatives

Business Assistant:

Community C, -

-

Preeti Garg, Taeh Ward

V

Restorative Chi Gungfor 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 FRIDAY, June 8,2001 American Dance Festival: Garth Fagan 401-9333. Dance Tony award wining choreographer Freewater Rims: “Gunga Din” (1939), di- of Broadwa/s The Lion King, Garth Fagan rected by George Stevens, with Cary returns to the stage with an ADF-commisGrant, Douglas Fairbanks Jr. Tickets are sioned premiere. Call the Box Office at free to Duke students, $3 for the public. 684-4444 for tickets and more information. For information, call 684-2323. 7:00 p.m., 8:00 p.m. Page Auditorium, West Campus. 9:30 p.m. Griffith Film Theater, Bryan Center, West Campus. American Dance Festival: Garth Fagan Dance Tony award wining choreographer of Broadway’s The Lion King, Garth Fagan returns to the stage with an ADF-commissioned premiere. Call the Box Office at 684-4444 for tickets and more information. 8:00 p.m. Page Auditorium, West Campus.

.Adrienne

Monica Franklin, Dawn Hall, Vu-hsien Huang Brooke Dohmen, Seth Strickland

Sales Representative

THURSDAY, June 7,2001

...Martin

-

. fsr

N.C. WRIT

FERENCE

p.m. Duke Some ope shops, ma more. Ficti< ing, busirx fee of $9O members) i

American Dance Festival: Garth Fagan Dance Tony award wining choreographer of Broadway’s The lion King, Garth Fagan returns to the stage with an ADFcommissioned premiere. Call the Box Office at 684-4444 for tickets and more information. 8:00 p.m. Page Auditorium, West Campus. The Borromeo String Quartet Featuring Beethoven’s Opus 59, N0.3, Bartok’s String Quartet No. 2 and Debussy’s String Quartet will be at 8:00 p.m., at the Griffith Film Theater, West Campus. -

i Krrint niitii

SUNDAY, June 10,2001

Summer Festival of the Arts: VocalArts Ensemble, conducted by Rodney Wynkoop. This 28-member ensemble includes selected singers form local choirs throughout the Duke and Durham communities. Free. For information, call 684-4444. 7:00 p.m. Duke Chapel, West Campus.


Classifieds

THURSDAY, JUNE 7, 2001

1994 Mitsubishi Eclipse. Green, 5-

Announcements

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

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. -

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

and am/fm cassette. $4,000.00. 919-419-4899.

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.

Apts. For Rent 1, 2& 3 Bedroom Apartments avail-

able for rent. See display ad. Bob Schmitz Properties, 416-0393,

www.bobschmitzproperties.com. Duplex in American Village, Duke Forest. 2 bedroom, 1 1/2 baths, living room with fireplace, kitchen with dining area, and washer/dryer. Minutes to Duke. No pets. $750/month. Call 919-603-1952. Duplex one bedroom apartment

PROBLEMS SLEEPING?

available June Ist.

Male volunteers 20-39 years old who have difficulty falling asleep, staying asleep, or who feel unrested after sleeping are needed for a sleep research study at the VA and Duke Medical Centers. Volunteers will receive thorough sleep evaluations and will not be charged for any of the procedures during the research study. Individuals com* pleting the study will be paid $325 for their participation. Individuals who are medically healthy and not taking medications for anxiety or mood disorders may qualify. For more information, call Melanie at (919) 286-0411 X7025.

Good

Neighborhood near Duke. Prefer Grads/Professionals. Ed 919-663-3743 $420/month. (leave message). Onebedroom apartment. 1/2 block from East Campus. 800 sq. ft. Hardwood floors. Large, sunny rooms. Gas heat/central air. W/D. Call 416-0702.

Autos For Sale 1976 Mercury Grand Marquis, excellent condition, garage-kept, 44,000 original miles, pi, pw, ac, call 575-0295.

Professors. Need Desktop Publishing Services? Call Starr G. Publishing, 949-0302 Email estherglen@aol.com. &

1986 Dodge Pick-up. 3/4 ton, 108K, needs minor work. Runs well. $3,000. 681-2569 or 336-578-3199.

The Chronicle

96K.

90 Toyota Celica, manual, white, very reliable, $2500. Call Judith 361-9010 X7334 (day), 465-1473 (evenings). ‘9B Suburban SLT 4x4. Loaded, 43K. $25,000. 681-2569 or 336-578-3199.

Child Care

Medical Center. Eligibility Criteria: Over 18 years of age

Equity, (919)-684-8222. Further information, as well as the complete text of the harassment polmay be found at icy, http://www.duke.edu/web/equity/.

Students

speed manual, power steering, C/C

Needed: Afterschool care for children age 6 and 11 beginning m(dJuly. Woodlake subdivision, near

Woodcraft.

2:45-4:00, MondayThursday. Good pay, nice family. Call Mary at 218-2302.

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.

MAXIM HEALTHCARE has an immediate opening, LOCATED JUST MINUTES FROM DUKE, to work one-on-one with al6 year old boy with cerebral palsy, who enjoys interacting and communicating with others, and looking to become more independent. He also enjoys leisure activities such as; swimming, reading and going for walks. In search of someone that can work 3 to 5 weekday afternoons. GREAT PAY and excellent experience. If interested call Joe or Katie immediately at (919) 419-1484. MAXIM HEALTHCARE SERVICES has immediate opening for a student to work one on one with developmentally disabled 8 year old girl during the summer and through the following school year. The position involves working in the child’s home or community up to 5 days a week from 3pm 7pm. GREAT PAY & experience. Call today (919) 419-1484 ask for Katie Jones. -

EXCELLENT

INTERNSHIP with major investment firm. Must be highly motivated with superior written and oral communication skills. 20 hours/week required. If interested, fax resume to 490-4714 and call John at 490-4737.

OPPORTUNITY

Needed immediately: Biology or chemistry major to prepare biochemical solutions, microbiological media, and do lab tasks for a nucleic acids research lab. 10-20 flexible hours per week through the summer and next year. Email steege@biochem.duke.edu, call 684-4098.

MEMORY STUDY: Subjects needed for studies using magnetic resonance imaging to examine autobiographical memory. Subjects should be 18 years old or older and should have no history of neurological injury or disease. Participants will be paid $lO.OO per hour for their participation in a 10-15 hour study. Please contact Holly Griffin at the Cognitive Psychology Lab at memlab@psych.duke.edu tor additional information.

Part-time employees needed in the

Full time kennel assistant and veterinary technician needed for animal hospital in Durham. Located between Durham and Chapel Hill near 1-40. Full benefits and paid vacations. Must be compassionate. Please call 489-5142 if interested.

PROFESSIONAL NANNY/HOUSE MANAGER needed immediately for two young boys. Must be loving, educated, organized, mature and energetic. Non-smoker, Good salary and benefits. Email resume to nannyposition@hotmail.com or fax resume to 544-5920. Research Coordinator position for Stress Management Study. Full time position to conduct research on the LifeSkills Workshop, and run a small business office. Duties include recruiting and scheduling participants for research study, psychosocial and physiological data collection, maintaining computer database, some statistical analysis, and office responsibilities. Direct inquiries to Sharon Brenner at Williams Life Skills, Inc.: 2020 West Main Street, Suite 100, Durham 27705; Fax 286-3374; e-mail sharon @ williamslifeskills.com; and telephone 286-4566.

page 15

Wanted: Part-Time Research Assistant. Duties include collecting medical information from medical charts, data entry, maintaining a medical database, photocopying and filing. Data entry experience and knowledge or physiology helpful. Call 684-6823 for more information. Leave message.

Houses For Rent 3-6 bedroom homes available for rent. See display ad. Bob Schmitz Properties, 416-0393, www.bobschmitzproperties.com.

913 Saint Paul Street. GREAT House in good NeighborhoodCompletely Remodeled, central HVAC- Washer, Dryer, Stove, Fridge, Included. 2 BR and Office. Huge Shady Lot. With garage, and storage Bldg. 493-3983 office, or 489-8349. $950.00 Deposit. +

-

NEEDED PAID VOLUNTEERS Attractive, thin females, (petites OK) who smoke needed for scene in glamour video. No nudity. Member of 888. Earn $2OO. Send 2 photos (returned) to: Visual Solutions, PO Box 2304, Chapel Hill, NC 27515. 928-0013.

The Chronicle

Durham area to provide one-to-one habilitative treatment to a child with Autism. Flexible Very Tuesday/Thursday schedule with alternating Saturdays. Minimum requirements: one year of college or equivalent experience. Excellent hourly wage. Send letter or interest and/or resume along with hours of availability to: Autism Society of N.C., Attn: Conchetta, 505 Oberlin Rd., Ste 230, Raleigh, NC 27605 or email at Cvonaitis @ autismsocietv-

Saladelia Cafe seeking cashiers, full-time, part-time, good pay, please inquire within. 489-5776.

SUMMER STUDENT ASSISTANT POSITION The position includes staff functions in support of environmental social sciences faculty and the Director of Professional Studies for the Nicholas School of the Environment and Earth Sciences. Duties include environmental Internet and library research; Excel, Word, and Internet document creation and editing: filing: image scanning; document reproduction; and facsimile use. The assistant would need to be oncall for a section of each day or week. The schedule will be varied, based on the need for different tasks, and will of course accommodate the student’s schedule. The pay is $7.50. If required, training will be provided for areas of responsibility. Please contact Alisa Drake via email, alisa.drake@duke.edu, or call 613-8112.

nc.org

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THURSDAY, JUNE 7, 2001

The Chronicle

PAGE 16

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ARAMARK plans 24-hour diner P ARAMARK from page 1

using the space in the Cambridge Inn to build a 24-hour diner. “It’s an old soda-shop style, [that has] the shakes and floats. It’s kind of a grill, a ’sos style diner and we want to bring that back to campus,” said Dave Randolph, who will be ARAMARK’s manager at Duke. “It was the number-one thing [students] wanted and reiterated in two... surveys,” said senior Jason Freedman, co-chair of the Duke University Student Dining Advisory Committee. “I think that is a concept everyone is ready for... Honey’s is packed with Duke students every weeknight, let alone weekend nights. We’re not pleased with only one late-night option.” The vast majority of Dining Services’ 153 employees will remain on Duke’s payroll. None of the 114 employees belonging to Local 77—a union representing dining and housekeeping staff-will move to ARAMARK Employees, the majority of whom favored the transition, will receive CD-ROM training in skills ranging from preparation and presentation of exotic foods to safety and sanitation. Wulforst said he spent $16,000 in January on employee training seminars but that ARAMARK managers have more training expertise. “We’re at an academic school, not a culinary school. [Dining] is pretty good, but it could be better, and we need those professional ser-

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vices,” Wulforst said. “I can only carry Dining Services to a certain point Local 77 officials declined to comment on AKAMARK’S training. Concernsremain about ARAMARK’s potential, which will compete with many other on-campus private vendors. But Associate Vice President for Auxiliary Services Joe Pietrantoni said the competitive nature of Duke’s dining is one reason the company was so accommodating during negotiations. “I think Duke’s going to get special treatment from ARAMARK,” he said. He noted that the company—which employs a number of Duke graduates, including the president of its campus division, Jack Donovan, Trinity ’80 wants to make the University a “showcase” to impress potential clients. “Ifthey don’t [thrive], that’s something they will have to live with,” Pietrantoni said, adding that he expects the company to thrive on campus. All fears aside, dining officials say the contract puts the burden of quality on ARAMARK, not Duke, since a 60-day out-clause in the contract allows the University to end the relationship at any time. “Bringing ARAMARK in is rounding out our profile,” Wulforst said. “Their goal is to try to get as much business from privatization as they can.” ”

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THURSDAY, JUNE 7, 2001

The Chronicle

PAGE 17

Jeffords switch could play Senate budget includes role in court nominations more education funding � JUDGES from page 5 soon as possible. “[Vacancies cause] backlogs, frustration and delay of justice,” the president said May 9 as he

announced Boyle’s nomination along with 10 others. “I urge senators of both parties to rise above the bitterness of the past, to provide a fair hearing and a fair vote, to every nominee.” Last month, Helms’ Democratic counterpart, Sen. John Edwards, said he hoped that with the Senate split evenly, the two senators could find a compromise such that both Boyle and Wynn might end up with seats on the court. “Sen. Edwards’ primary concern is North Carolina,” said Mike Briggs, Edwards’ press secretary. “For the last eight years, there were four individual nominations to fill the 4th Circuit from North Carolina who never got a hearing at all. “Sen. Edwards has a feeling that after eight years, we ought to give Judge Wynn or some of the others a chance to be considered by the Senate along with whomever else the president nominates,” he added. Now, with Vermont Sen. James Jeffords’ switch from Republican to independent—giving control of the Senate to the Democrats—both Boyle and Wynn are caught in the balance. “I think that both parties would really like to get out of this fix they’ve got themselves in,” said Ted Arrington, a professor of political science at the University of North Carolina at Char-

lotte, noting that it might be in the president’s best interest to nominate both judges. “‘That’s a hard pill to swallow, but [he’s] got to realize that unless the Democrats lose their nerve, he won’t get anything through,” Arrington said. “[The Senate Republicans] successfully blocked Clinton’s nominees. It’s titfor-tat time. “The obvious solution for this is to pair them up, and this is a kind of obvious first pair,” he added. “It does bode well for both of them.” Unlike Boyle, Wynn has not yet been nominated by Bush, but he was interviewed two weeks ago by White House counsel A1 Gonzales. Gonzales interviewed Raleigh bankruptcy judge Rich Leonard as well. Leonard was nominated by Clinton in 1995 but also blocked by Helms. Jimmy Broughton, an administrative assistant to Helms, said the court has historically seated 13 judges, rather than the full 15. Broughton added that it was not worth the cost ofemploying additional judges to have North Carolinians represented on the 4th Circuit bench. “I’m not a lawyer, but [I don’t agree with] this idea of a court being a representative body,” Broughton said. “I don’t see that as an issue.” The 4th Circuit is based in Richmond, Va. It takes cases from Virginia, Maryland, West Virginia, North Carolina and South Carolina.

Is BUDGET from page 1

and resources so that we can have institutions that meet the needs of all our students,” she said. Gulley said he is generally happy with the budget’s provisions regarding education. He hopes the new policies at lower-performing schools will attract and keep more teachers. “There have almost been disincentives to teach in underperforming schools,” Gulley said. “But the reduced sizes and pay incentives will hopefully change that.” But some legislators were less content with hikes in the tuitions for University of North Carolina schools and community colleges. Luebke, who is also a professor at the University of North Carolina at Greensboro, said he thought the tuition increase would deter students from enrolling in college. “For many of my students it will require them to take fewer classes and work longer hours to complete their education,” he said. “There is a limit to the number of courses you can take successfully and work 30 or 35 hours a week.” Both Lucas and Gulley said they believe the tuition increase is justified, especially because of a corresponding grant program to help lower-income students pay the tuition. “We are finding... that we have some ofthe lowest tuition rates in the nation,” Lucas said.

do not exist, he said the delay will give administrators time to plan for the future. “The closing is put off until July 2003 so all parties can develop a plan for closing and a program for every student affected by the closing,” he said. Sen. Jeanne Lucas, D-Durham, said she hopes money can be found in later budgets to keep these centers open. Rep. Paul Luebke, D-Durham, said he is optimistic that a bill he introduced in the House will create additional revenue and possibly deter some of the closings. The bill would raise the top income tax rate from 7.75 percent to 8.5 percent for people earning more than $200,000 per year. That increase would come in addition to a $423 million tax increase over two years already included in the Senate budget. However, even with the budget crisis, the Senate’s plan included increased funding for certain education initiatives. One such measure in the budget passed by the Senate that would increase teacher incentives and reduce class sizes at lower-performing schools drew broad support. Lucas said the increased spending on schools reflects the prominent place of education in the state. “We want to make sure that we give the support

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THURSDAY, JUNE 7, 2001

The Chronicle

PAGE 18

Gardens impose parking fees to pay for new lot BRIEFS from page 7 since 1997 was out of town this week and not available for comment. Rodas said however that Reeve has also served as a manager and transit planner in several North Carolina cities. In her current position, Reeve has guided the parking system for a large research university. “She has been involved with developing master plans, models for future growth, car pool and van incentive programs and developing a universal transit pass with Raleigh,” Rodas said, I*

“She also has had success in fostering positive relations with the community and making her office more accessible,” he added.

Gardens charge parking fees:

Visitors to the Sarah P. Duke Gardens are now required to pay for parking at the gardens’main lot off Anderson Street. Automated pay stations have been installed that charge 25 cents for every 15 minutes, up to a maximum of $4. Anyone who parks illegally could be ticketed, something which garden offidais hope will cut down on illegal park-

ing by some students, faculty and staff: The fee is also an attempt to recover some of the costs of constructing the $300,000 lot, which was built last year. After Duke recovers the costs ofbuilding the lot, any excess income will be distnbuted evenly to Parking Services and to the gardens.

Minority students dISCUSS gradu-

ate careers: More

than 160 minority

doctoral and postdoctoral students from around the country will gather this week at the University to exchange information about graduate careers.

The 10th annual Mellon Minority Fellowship Summer Conference began unWednesday and will run throug day. June 10. The program was designed to increase the number of black, Latino and Native American graduate students m 6

■um

i

nnf ornlntrv sciences and ecology. Physics, This year s forum addresses topics that include the transition to graduate school, the importance of developing professional networks and general m Sner education issues. ,

Housing development proposal generates heated debate

nearby commercial development, several potential de� VILLAGE CREEK from page 5 velopers told the council. The project, which would take about 10 years to comBut opponents pointed to the development’s costs. plete, sparked debate on a question that Durham has The project would add 812 new students to the area’s When benefits of outgrowth do the long struggled with: weigh the burden that increased development places on already-overcrowded schools and triple the traffic on schools, roads, the environment and the rest of the city’s nearby Sherron Road, according to estimates by city planners. infrastructure? Council member Brenda Burnette also suggested that Council member Erick Larson said the development would help achieve one of the key tenets of smart the increased population density could lead to more growth, “putting people where the jobs are and putting crime in the area. “People are coming here, but they are adversely affecting our quality of life,” Burnette said. jobs where the people are.” Construction on the project would also include mass Larson said the subdivision would place residential which opponents said would disrupt the ecosysgrading, major Park, a housing close to the Research Triangle source of jobs, thereby reducing the amount of traffic tem ofLick Creek. The development would be built along generated by RTP commuters who five on the other side the creek, and would endanger rare plants and animals like the four-toed salamander and the Carolina darter, of the city. Council member Dan Hill agreed that residential de- they said. “My neighbors and I see this as a win-lose situation. velopment in the area was necessary. The developer and those connected with the developer want the de“I understand that the neighbors don’t velopment,” Hill said. “I don’t want it either.... But we’ve are the winners,” Brooks said, drawing loud applause. “The schoolchildren, the environment, the got people that need to five there.” the commuters... and the neighborhood itwildlife, also further The project could growth in encourage eastern Durham because the residents could support self are the losers.”

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But representatives for the development company, Triad Homes, offered to extend the buffer zone around the creek beyond the legally required size, saying that step would further protect the most fragile areas ofthe ecosystem. And they offered to donate 28 acres as a site for a new elementary school—although Durham Public Schools would still have to raise the money to build the school. Triad Homes would also pay to bring water and sewer lines into the area. As is often the case, the council received opposing recommendations from the jointcity-county zoning committee and the city planning department. The zoning committee unanimously recommended that the council deny the development request, and the planning department supported the rezoning. In addition to Larson and Hill, council members Lewis Cheek, Mayor Pro Tern Howard Clement, Mary Jacobs, Angela Langley, Thomas Stith and Mayor Nick Tennyson voted in favor of the rezoning. Burnette, Tamra Edwards, Floyd McKissick and Jackie Wagstaff voted against the motion. Pamela Blyth was absent.


Sports

Chris Duhon (left), Carlos Boozer, and Dahntay Jones were all named ists for Team USA. See page 20

� Jason Williams takes a break, >

See page 20 Candy Hannemann continues to shine. See page 21

PAGE 19

THURSDAY, JUNE 7, 2001

Schwartz ties for 2nd place at NCAAs Hempen By CRAIG SAPERSTEIN

accepts job in Boulder

The Chronicle

Duke pole vaulter Jillian Schwartz fell just short of capturing the NCAA individual pole vaulting crown last weekend in Eugene. Ore., but that does not mean she is disappointed. Schwartz, who already owned both the ACC and Duke women’s pole vaulting records going into the NCAA championships, finished second to Arizona’s Andrea Dutoit in the national championship meet, as Dutoit was the only vaulter to complete all of her attempts at a height of 13’09.25, giving her a winning score of 10 points. Meanwhile, the Duke senior cleared the 13’09.25 mark on all but one ofher attempts, registering seven points, which tied her with UCLA’s Tracey O’Hara for the runner-up position. Even though Schwartz did not take home the NCAA championship, she once again succeeded in breaking her own school record and improved her own personal best with her impressive vault in Eugene. Furthermore, her jump at the NCAAs places her as the eighth best women’s vaulter in the United States, including all amateurs and professionals. Duke pole vaulting coach Scott Still was thrilled with Schwartz’s effort at the NCAA meet. “In our world, what we try to do every week is do better than we did the week before,” Still said. “She had done 13.7 the week before, so a move up to 13’9.25 is awesome. “I think she likes to progress in the sport itself. It just so happens that every one of her progressions is a new school record. That’s just icing on the cake for her.” The numerous records, accolades, and respect Schwartz has gained from her emergence as one of the nation’s best pole vaulters were hardly a thought in the Illinois native’s mind when she entered Duke four years ago. Surprisingly, Schwartz had never competed in the pole vault during her high school track and field days, and was actually recruited for her hurdling, long jump and triple jump abilities. Even when she began to concentrate fully on pole vaulting during See SCHWARTZ on page 23 P ;

-

By KEVIN LEES The Chronicle

Bill Hempen stood beside men’s soccer coach John Rennie in 1986 when Duke won its first national championship, a 1-0 win against

Akron. Two years later, he launched the women’s soccer proat gram Duke and within six years, was standing on his own in a Bill Hempen national championship game. But Tuesday, after 13 seasons with the program he founded,

COURTESY OF DUKE UNIVERSITY PHOTOGRAPHY

Hempen resigned to take the head coaching position at Colorado. When discussing those 15 years he spent at Duke, the coach found himself choked up talking about Rennie, his mentor. “I’ll miss those Monday morning chats about how the weekend went, how he supported me and everything we did,” Hempen said. “I hope the next person has the same kind of relationship.” See HEMPEN on page 22

JULIAN SCHWARTZ tied for second at the NCAA Championships.

Sixers stun Lakers 107-101 in Game 1 of NBA Finals By CHRIS SHERIDAN Associated Press

76ets Lakers

107 LOS ANGELES There won’t be a 101 sweep in the NBA Finals unless it’s the 76ers—not the Lakers—who can

pull one off.

ALLEN IVERSON drives on Shaquille O’Neal during the second half.

Tennis players honored Duke tennis players Philip King, Ramsey Smith and Andres Pedroso were named as All-Americans last week. Smith was also chosen for the USA Tennis Collegiate team.

In a thrilling opener to the championship round, Allen Iverson had a mesmerizing first half, a poor second half and a clutch overtime, scoring 48 points to lead Philadelphia to a 107-101 victory Wednesday night. Iverson scored seven straight points after the clock ticked inside two minutes to give Philadelphia a lead it never relinquished. The 76ers ended the Lakers’ 19game winning streak, giving them their first loss in 67 days. “We knew we could win before we came here, with everybody counting us out,” Iverson said. “They thought we would get swept and that is like a slap in the face.” Iverson and Shaquille O’Neal both had 41 points at the end of the fourth quarter, but Iverson scored only three over the final 19 minutes of regulation as he was hounded defensively by speedy Lakers reserve Tyronn Lue.

Soccer inks 9 recruits Men’s soccer coach John Rennie announced the signing of nine recruits for the 2001 installment of the Blue Devils. Midfielder Jeff Miller, a Durham native, is one such recruit,

O’Neal hit a jump hook for the first points of the overtime, Kobe Bryant spun around Eric Snow for a layup and O’Neal hit one of two from the line for a fivepoint lead with three minutes left. Raja Bell flung up an underhanded shot with his left hand that fell through, and Iverson hit two foul shots to get the 76ers within 99-98 with 1:46 left. Lue then missed a drive and Iverson beat him downcourt and hit a wide-open 3-pointer. After a turnover by Rick Fox, Iverson buried a corner jumper over Lue for a 103-99 lead.

Bryant answered with a jumper, but Snow hit a runner from the lane with 10.5 seconds left for a fourpoint lead that all but ended the game—along with all the talk about how the Lakers would sweep the 76ers and become the first team to go undefeated through the postseason. “That’s the way we are. We play hard,” Iverson said. “We came in here expecting to win. We know we can win. Everybody’s been counting us out.”

Florida wins NCAA golf

Au revoir Andre

The Florida Gators took home the NCAA men’s golf championship last weekend at the Duke University Golf Club by 18 strokes, the third-largest margin of victory ever.

Frenchman Sebastian Grosjean delighted his countrymen yesterday with a four-set victory over third-seeded Andre Agassi in the quarterfinals of the French Open.

See SIXERS on page 23

Major League Baseball Tigers 7, Red Sox 3

■ |J| „

Indians 5, Twins 2 Yankees 7, Orioles 4 Devil Rays 6, Blue Jays 2 Royals 12, White Sox 6 Cubs 4, Cardinals 1 Phillies 6, Mets 1

>


THURSDAY, JUNE 7, 2001

The Chronicle

PAGE 20

plans to relax USA Basketball selects 3 Blue Devils Williams concentrate on season ,

By CRAIG SAPERSTEIN The Chronicle

Summer basketball tournaments have often served as a showcase for the best players on the Duke men’s

basketball team. Just ask former national player of the year Elton Brand and current national player of the year candidate Jason Williams, both of whom impressed their detractors by playing in international competitions

over the summer. This summer, three Blue Devil players—juniors Carlos Boozer and Dahntay Jones and sophomore Chris Duhon—might receive a similar opportunity, as they were selected as finalists for the 2001 USA

� Blue Devil point guard Jason Williams will take a break from competitive basketball this summer after two previous summers representing the U.S. By CRAIG SAPERSTEIN The Chronicle

While three of his teammates will likely be chosen to represent their country in the FIBA World Championships for Young Men tournament in August, Team USA alum Jason Williams has something different in mind for this summer. Instead of competing as a member of USA basketbah, as he has the past two summers, Williams plans on getting ahead on his coursework, working on his game, and most of all, relaxing. “My body just needs to rest, because, for the past two-and-a-half years, Fve been playing non-stop basketball,” Williams said. “I still want to play basketball, I just don’t want to play competitively for a while. I’d rather take some time to work on my game and relax. This is my last year of college. I’ll be graduating [next year]. I want to be a kid for a minute. I haven’t had the chance to be that for a while. I want to be with my girlfriend at home, and just have fun.” Throughout the past two summers, Williams has spent very little time at home. Before college, he served as the point guard for USA Junior National Select team that won the USA Hoops Summit inTampa, Fla. And last year, Williams did double duty for his country, competing as a member of the World Championship for Young Men team in Brazil and testing his progress on a select team of college players that trained with the Olympic Dream Team before the start of the Sydney games. Therefore, Williams understands the benefits his teammates will receive from competing in international tournaments. “I think these guys are going to pick up a lot,” Williams said. “It’s not just improvement, I think it’s a

Basketball World Championship for Young Men team that will compete in the FIBA World Championships for Young Men tournament in Saitama, Japan. The U.S. team’s coach, Jim Boeheim of Syracuse, will decide which 12 of the 16 finalists will represent the U.S. at a final tryout July 22-26 at a training camp in Dallas, Texas. The World Championships runs from Aug. 3-12. Boeheim’s decision will weigh heavily on Boozer especially, as the Alaska native missed the cut when trying out for last year’s team, which featured two of his Duke teammates, guard Jason Williams and swing man Mike Dunleavy. To compensate for his disappointing performance last year, Boozer entered last week’s tryouts in Colorado Springs, Colo, on a mission. “I’m excited,” Boozer said. “I want to come back and MATT KLEIN/THE CHRONICLE redeem myself and represent my country. “I’m in good shape now, but I’m going to be in great CARLOS BOOZER (right) will compete for a spot on Team USA. shape by the time I go out there. My weight isn’t going to be a problem for me, hopefully for the rest of my Williams believes that Jones could turn some heads when he goes up against the world’s best. career. I definitely feel a lot better about my shape and “A lot of people didn’t get to see the real Dahntay my playing than I did at this time last year.” Playing on the Young Men’s team could also serve Jones at Rutgers because he wasn’t in an environment as a proving ground for Jones, who looks forward to where he was competing against the best everyday,” displaying his improved skills after sitting out a year Williams said. “I’ve seen him go through practice everyday here and when he goes out there, he’ll be able from competitive basketball as a result of his transfer from Rutgers to Duke. The 6-foot-5 slasher seems to say, ‘This is who I am and this is what I’m about.’” Duhon, who will be representing his country for the to be a sure-fire contender for a spot among the final squad, as Boeheim enthusiastically commented on second time in a world basketball tournament, will Jones’ vast improvement from his days in the Big receive a similar opportunity to that of Jones if he East conference, where the Syracuse coach was able makes the team. The 6-1 guard continually reiterated level ofconfidence that you’re getting. And after his teammates gain this newfound confihis strong desire to make the 12-man team because he to see Jones play on a regular basis. dence and he recuperates from fast-paced schedule, his Duke as teammates, Despite the fact that he led all players in scoring at thinks playing with two of Williams believes the Blue Devils will be in prime posicomhigh-level performance against Jones described his at the well as his confidence trybuilding the tryout, tion to repeat as national champions. petition, has a high utility. outs as only “all right.” “A lot of people are saying that all these other “I just tried to play as hard as I could,” Jones said. “[Playing together] definitely helped Mike and teams are going to be really good,”Williams said. “But since Jason came a in I “They summer,” haven’t been a situation a while last Duhon said. back lot “I in game think there’s a chance for us to be better than we more confident in themselves and those two together, I redshirted this year.” were this year. But Jones’ Duke teammate and fellow New Jersey they know how to play with each other better than the “I think we’re going to be a very good team. It’s just native Williams believes that the transfer’s productive rest of us. It definitely helped them and I hope it does going to be a matter of us gelling and playing together.” year of practice will benefit him this summer. In fact, the same thing for me.”

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THURSDAY, JUNE 7, 2001

The Chronicle

PAGE 21

Hannemann finishes as top amateur in U.S. Women’s Open By NICK CHRISTIE The Chronicle

Capping off an amazing month of Candy NCAA champion Hannemann won low amateur at last weekend’s U.S. Women’s Open, beating fellow collegiate Natalie Gulbis by one stroke. Hannemann finished the tournament with a score of 291, 11-over par and tied for 31st place. Had Hannemann competed as a professional, she would have won over $20,000, but her amateur status prevented her from accepting prize money. However, after her round an elated Hannemann focused only on the prestigious honor. “It was awesome,” Hannemann said. “You can’t even explain it. It’s such a great feeling. It’s such a great honor.” Although Sunday’s exciting finish

golf,

made Hannemann’s accomplishment all the more special, earlier in the round she appeared to have all but locked up low amateur status. She played the first 14 holes at even par, striking the ball extremely well and outplaying her playing partner, LPGA veteran Cindy Figg-Currier. However, after three consecutive bogeys, Hannemann needed a par on the 18th hole to avoid tying Gulbis. Watching from the sidelines, Duke coach Dan Brooks felt confident in Hannemann’s ability to concentrate, having watched her play a multitude of big matches. “You watch Candy and she gets this calm whenever that buzz is in the air,” Brooks said. “She actually starts to slow down a little bit. She doesn’t get quick and jerky.”

When later asked how she felt on the 18th hole, Hannemann confirmed her coach’s predictions. “I was feeling calm,” Hannemann said. “I know that’s when I play my best golf. That’s how I felt on 18. No matter what, I’ve gained, and there was nothing to lose, really.” Hannemann nearly didn’t qualify to play during the weekend. After a fierce rain storm forced the suspension ofplay during Friday’s second round, the Brazil native had to conclude her round at 7 a.m. Saturday. Needing to play the last two holes in no more than 2-over par, Hannemann immediately doublebogeyed the difficult 17th, leaving no room for error. She managed to par 18, procuring a spot in the weekend’s field with a total of 6-over par. “It was hard, especially so early in the morning,” Hannemann said. “I was a little nervous. I knew I was right on PAUL DORAN/THE CHRONICLE the bubble.” After making the cut, it appeared CANDY HANNEMANN (right) finished as the low amateur in last weekend’s U.S. Women’s Open, that Hannemann would be battling for second place amongst the four surviving At the tournament’s conclusion, one of the best female golfers in the amateurs. Stephanie Keever’s dazzling Hannemann joined Open champion world. But despite her terrific showing play during the first two rounds had her Karrie Webb at the awards presentaat golf’s premier championship, in a tie for eighth place at 1-over par, tion to receive the gold medal presented Hannemann is excited to return to Duke for senior season. and positioned her to challenge the leadto the low amateur. During Webb’s vicers. But Keever shot a catastrophic 83 tory speech, the two-time champion “It’s hard to go back to school, but at in the third round, eliminating her even singled out Hannemann, congrat- the same time it feels good because it chances at low amateur and opening the ulating Duke’s rising senior on an takes me away from everything, from all excellent tournament. this,” Hannemann said, gesturing door for Hannemann and Gulbis. Despite Keever’s outstanding play “She has had an unbelievable couple toward the 18th green, which only 30 during the first two rounds, of weeks,” Webb told the crowd, before minutes before played host to the Hannemann set her sights on being low turning to face Hannemann. “I’m sure United States Open trophy ceremony. amateur as soon as she made the cut. that this week just topped it all off, so “Duke gives me such a good bal“I’mproud of the way I handled things, congratulations, Candy.” ance, so it’s good to go back to school and live a normal life away from all Many amateurs might turn profesespecially when it got tough. I was able to sional after receiving such praise from this hectic stuff.” stay focused,” Hannemann said.

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THURSDAY, JUNE 7, 2001

K.C. takes Alieva Hempen hopes to revitalize Buffaloes as 716th draftee

Hempen, who seriously considered but ultimately turned down an offer to coach at UCLA two years ago, succeeds Austin Daniels. Daniels resigned May 20 after launching the program in 1996. Interestingly, the Blue Devils faced Colorado once in Chapel Hill in 1999. Not surprisingly, Hempen led Duke to a 2-0 win. Over his career at Duke, Hempen compiled a 162100-16 record and made nine NCAA appearances. Only once, however, did the Blue Devils make it past the second round. In the 1992 championship game, Duke lost 9-1 to Anson Dorrance’s soccer juggernaut at North Carolina, just another of the Tar Heels’ 16 national championships in the sport. In the ACC, a conference that featured seven teams in the top 25 last season, nothing came easy for Hempen, especially against North Carolina, a team Duke has beaten only once. “Coaching is a weird profession,” Hempen said. “You come here and you see security. I could probably stay here for the rest of my life. At the University of Colorado, it’s almost like where I started at Duke and that can be exciting too.” Hempen said it was tough notifying the Duke come to Colorado,” said Colorado athletic director players of his decision. He noted that they were disDick Tharp, announcing Hempen’s selection the appointed, but also excited for him. The Blue Devils same day as Hempen’s resignation in Durham. finished 14-8-1 last season and finished as the ACC Hempen’s contract, pending approval from Colorado Tournament’s runner-up to North Carolina, which, Chancellor Richard Byyny, is only for one year. incidentally, went on to win a national championship. Alieva announced that a search would begin However, this short-term commitment to Hempen should not be taken as a lack of commitment to immediately for Hempen’s replacement. There was women’s soccer overall; Colorado, under its Athletics no word Wednesday regarding who the athletic 2010 initiative, hopes to build a new soccer facility. department would consider for the job and how long Calling his first year in Boulder a “freebie,” the search process would last. Hempen noted that while he has not yet talked to Note: Assistant coach Carla Overbeck, former capany members of his future squad, he looked forward tain of the gold medal-winning U.S. women’s soccer to the challenge of working with them. team and player at North Carolina, said she was not “There’s an exhilaration that comes from a coninterested in coaching full time and has ruled herself tinued building process,” he said. “The program out as a candidate to replace Hempen. The mother of a started, it never really got there, so I can’t say its three-year-old son, Overbeck is committing most ofher rebuilding. I’m going to have to go back a level and time to the nascent WUSA league as captain of the bring the kids at Colorado to the level where the kids Carolina Courage. Craig Saperstein contributed to this story. here at Duke are and that’s exciting.” HEMPEN from page 19 Hempen said the resignation, which was effective immediately, came mainly from his two-fold desire to take on a new challenge and to be closer to family. “It was probably the most difficult thing I’ve ever had to do, because my life is here. I grew up here basically,” Hempen said. “At the same time, you have to think past that and think about what’s best for everybody.” Athletic director Joe Alieva wished Hempen well and thanked him for his service at Duke, saying that Hempen has been an integral part of the women’s soccer program’s success. Hempen’s wife Stephanie, who was also his assistant for four years at Duke, graduated from Colorado in 1990. Her mother lives in Los Angeles and his parents live in St. Louis, so their new home will allow them both closer proximity to family. At Colorado, Hempen will truly begin anew with a program that has never seen an NCAA tournament. In their five-year history, the Buffaloes posted only a 36-53-5 record overall, an 18-28-4 mark in the Big 12 conference. “Bill is a serious competitor, and we are very excited to have attracted a coach of this caliber to

>

From staff reports J.D. Alieva was drafted by the Royals Wednesday afternoon in the 24th round of the 2001 Major League

-

Baseball amateur draft, the 716 th pick overall. Alieva is one of 10 Blue Devils to be drafted in the last six Major League Baseball drafts and the third Duke player ever to be drafted in the 24th round “I’m very happy for J.D.,” second-year Duke coach Bill Hillier said. “This is a great opportunity for him to play right away. They are going to use him a lot at third and maybe some behind the plate and he’ll do fine wherever they play him

Alieva played third base in 2001 mostly, but was drafted as a catcher for Kansas City. eva Alieva, son of athletic director Alieva and brother ofDuke Joe pitcher Jeff Alieva, was the only member of the baseball team to start in each of Duke’s 56 games last season. Although technically only a junior, Alieva is foregoing his final year of eligibility at Duke. A switch-hitter, the Durham native hit .332 for Duke and gathered 36 RBI, 74 hits, a team-high 42 runs scored. Alieva also led the Blue Devils in total bases. Alieva saw a lot of action his freshman year, batting .346 before spending most ofhis sophomore year in 1999 on the sidelines after only three games. An elbow injury allowed him to redshirt. He returned to form in 2000 with a .297 batting average and 34 runs and continued to post strong numbers last year. Kansas City chose Colt Griffin, a right-handed high schooler out of Texas as its first pick, the ninth pick overall.

...

Attention Student Groups! In order to be included in the 2001-2002

Blue Devil’s Advocate, pick up an application form at The Chronicle Advertising Department and return it to The Chronicle by Friday, June 29.

If your group’s listing was in last year’s

Blue Devil’s Advocate, copies of that issue are available at The Chronicle Advertising Department at 101 West Union Building for your review. The listing is a free service. Return the completed form to The Chronicle Advertising Department (101 West Union Building, near the Alumni Lounge or fax a copy of the form to (919) 684-4696.

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Questions email calendar@chronicle.duke.edu or call Catherine Martin at 684-2663. -

I

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THURSDAY, JUNE 7, 2001

The Chronicle

PAGE 23

Schwartz to continue pole Talk ofLaker sweep quickly vaulting career next year abates with Sixers’ victory P" SCHWARTZ from page 19 her sophomore season, Schwartz was not sure how things would pan out. “[Success was not] something I expected coming in, since I hadn’t pole vaulted before,” Schwartz said. But ultimately, with the help of Still and the encouragement of fellow Duke vaulter Seth Benson, success is exactly what Schwartz achieved. And the accomplishments of Schwartz and Benson—who won the IC4A championship two weeks ago—has dramatically raised the prominence of the upstart Blue Devil pole vaulting program. “Any time you have two athletes who not only break records, but also do it in the big meets, that’s an important thing,” Still said. “Jillian is just a big meet vaulter. Seth has had an up-and-down year. But I think both of them have left a

mark on Duke vaulting and they’ve definitely left the foundation that enables me to go out and get top recruits. That’s the most important thing that seniors or juniors can do for your program.” While Still and his Duke pole vaulters hope to continue to improve their stature on the national level, Schwartz will continue to improve her own pole vaulting throughout the next year. In fact, the recent graduate has deferred her accep-

tance to the Washington University Law School for at least one year, so she can resume her training and competition in pole vaulting events. “I’m really just thinking about next year,” Schwartz said. “Right now, I’m just going to take it a year at a time and see how it goes. I just want to improve a lot, keep getting better. And as long as that happens, I think I’ll keep with it.”

JULIAN SCHWARTZ will continue to pole vault, having deferred her acceptance to law school

� SIXERS from page 19

O’Neal finished with 44 points and 20 rebounds, but Bryant scored just 15 points on 7-for-22 shooting. “I don’t think Kobe Bryant had a Kobe kind of day and he will play better Friday,” Snow said. “In OT, we came out slow, but gathered the troops, Allen hit a big shot and we got some stops.” Game 2 is Friday night in Los Angeles. Iverson had his third consecutive 40point game, and Snow and Dikembe Mutombo added 13 points each. Fifteen minutes before tipoff, the crowd at Staples Center began chanting, “SWEEP! SWEEP!” But when Iverson started hitting from all over, the chorus turned to “OOH” and “AAH.” Iverson scored 30 points in the first half as the 76ers came back from an early 13-point deficit, and he opened the second half with a jumper that hit nothing but net and brought more howls of astonishment from the celebrity-studded crowd. Midway through the third quarter, Iverson came up with a steal, raced ahead of O’Neal and braced himself for a 350-pound impact as he went up for a layup. O’Neal, however, barely even swiped at the ball. The layup gave Philadelphia a 68-56 lead, and a threepoint play by Snow put the Sixers ahead

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missed both free throws. Bryant, though, hit a jumper with three-and-ahalf minutes left to even the score. O’Neal dunked off a pass from Bryant to give the Lakers a 94-92 lead, but Snow answered with a runner with 1:19 left. Philadelphia missed its next two shots, but grabbed offensive rebounds both times. Mutombo missed two foul shots with

for-19 until then—and Bryant lost the ball out of bounds with 18.9 seconds left. That gave the Sixers the last shot of regulation, but Iverson couldn’t free himself of Lue and Snow missed a run73-58 with 5:23 left in the third. ning 3-pointer at the buzzer. That’s when the Lakers started to Notes: This is the Lakers’ 20th trip show some resiliency of their own. to the finals since they moved from O’Neal scored the Lakers’ next 12 Minneapolis. They are 9-11 in Game Is. points, dominating Matt Geiger and Geiger had scored a total of 12 points

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