October 8, 2001

Page 1

Monday, Octobers, 2001

Sunny High 63, Low 37 www.chronicle.duke.edu Vol. 97, No. 32

The Chronicle

Another loss The football team lost Duke’s Homecoming game against Georgia Tech 37-10. See Sportswrap

THE INDEPENDENT DAILY AT DUKE UNIVERSITY

U.S. initiates attack on Taliban American, British forces launch cruise missiles, long-range bombers By PATRICK TYLER

New York Times News Service

WASHINGTON Striking at night from aircraft carriers and distant bases, the United States and Britain Sunday launched a powerful barrage of cruise missiles and long-range bombers against Afghanistan to try to destroy the terrorist training camps of Osama bin Laden’s al-Qaida network and the Taliban government that has protected it. “On my orders, the United States military has begun strikes,” President George W. Bush said in a televised statement from the Treaty Room ofthe White House at 1 p.m., just more than half an hour after the first explosions were reported in Kabul, the Afghan capital. “These carefully targeted actions are designed to disrupt the use of Afghanistan as a terrorist base of operations and to attack the military capability ofthe Taliban regime,” Bush said. The Taliban was warned, he said, to meet America’s demands to surrender bin Laden, stop supporting terrorism and release the foreign aid workers they hold. “None of these demands were met,” he said. “And now, the Taliban will pay a price.

“Today we focus on Afghanistan,” he added, but “the battle is broader” Alluding to the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks on U S NAVY/GETTY America, Bush repeated the warning a bomb onto the the aircraft carrier USS Carl Vinson for strikes Sunday in preparation 1,000 “outAVIATION ORDNANCEMEN move deck of pound flight that nations that sponsor or protect See STRIKES on page 11 f> against al-Qaida terrorist training camps and military installations of the Taliban regime in Afghanistan.

Duke speeds up Hall of Fame inducts Krzyzewski housing changes By CRAIG SAPERSTEIN The Chronicle

The administration this weekend unveiled a plan that includes renovating Main West Campus dormitories during the summer and moving sophomores to West next year. By DAVE INGRAM The Chronicle

The transformation of upperclass residential life kicked into a higher gearFriday with the announcement that several major housing p. 9 changes will take place years earlijoa etK er er *3O anticipated Residential the Umversity will require all Jm La. yf e sophomores to hve on West Campus beginning next fall and will almost certainly restrict renovations of MainWest Campus dormitories to the summer, announced Vice President for Student Affairs Lany Moneta at Friday’s meeting of the Board ofTrustees. Moneta also presented a plan ofbetter integrating academic support services into all campus dormitories through the creation ofnew residence coordiSee RESIDENTIAL PLAN on page 8 �

Inside uc

TEMPLE COACH JOHN CHANEY, Moses Malone and Coach Mike Krzyzewski were inducted into the Basketball Hall of Fame Oct. 5.

The Board °* Trustees Friday apP roved the expansion of Perkins Library and the construction of a building and parking garage behind the Bryan Center. See page 4

The Florida man diagnosed with Anthrax died Friday, and investigators continue to search for clues as to where he inhaled the bacterium. See page 4

An emotional Mike Krzyzewski eagerly accepted his enshrinement into the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame Friday evening, along with his longtime peer, Temple coach John Chaney, and 19year NBA veteran Moses Malone. Crying tears of joy as he walked onto the stage at the Springfield Civic Center, Krzyzewski thanked the numerous members of what he called his “train,” including former Duke and Army players, University administrators, and of course, his family members for their constant support throughout his 26 years of coaching. But the biggest thanks of all went to Krzyzewski’s mentor, Texas Tech coach Bob Knight, who recruited the Chicago native to play at Army and later gave him his first job in coaching as a graduate assistant for Knight’s Indiana Hoosiers. Knight was also influential in Army’s hiring of Krzyzewski in 1976, and five years later, he recommended Krzyzewski to Duke Athletics Director Tom Butters. “I’ve only called one person ‘Coach’ in my See KRZYZEWSKI in SpOftSWVap page ll®-

Perkins Library upgraded the computer cluster on its first floor. Now, users can take advantage of flat-screen monitors and CD writing capabilities. See page 6


The Chronicle

PAGE 2 � MONDAY, OCTOBER 8, 2001

ill' 1

NEWS BRIEFS

Gas prices see record drop

Gasoline prices fell a record 10.81 cents in the past two weeks, but Sunday’s bombing of Afghanistan could send prices higher, according to the new Lundberg survey. Gasoline prices fell in all parts of the country but more so in the Midwest. •

Stocks rebound after attacks

After falling sharply when trading resumed the week after the terrorist attacks of Sept. 11, stocks in the United States have gained back most of their losses, with most foreign markets also rebounding. •

State will not extend Giuliani’s term

The Democratic leader of the New York State Assembly said Sunday that his chamber would not consider any legislation to extend the term of New York City Mayor Rudolph Giuliani. *

Pelosi may become Democratic whip

California Rep. Nancy Pelosi is on the verge of becoming the highest-ranking woman in congressional history. She is the favorite to become the Democratic whip, the party’s top vote-counter and arm-twister in the House. •

Nation goes on highest level of alert

The FBI issued an advisory to local agencies after the U.S. strikes in Afghanistan ByANNEGEARAN The Associated Press

WASHINGTON Concerned about more terrorist attacks, the FBI Sunday urged law enforcement agencies nationwide to move to their highest level of alert after the U.S. military strikes in Afghanistan. “All law enforcement agencies have been asked to evaluate whether additional local security measures are warranted in light of the military operations and the current threat level,” the FBI said. The bureau issued the advisory through its National Threat Warning System after U.S. jets and missiles targeted Afghan military sites and camps belonging to Osama bin Laden.

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tol to visitors, Utah state troopers were shifted from their desks to the highways and airport officials in Chicago, Detroit, Kansas City and

Florida further tightened security. The Energy Department placed its facilities, including nuclear weapons laboratories and nuclear materials storage areas, on a heightened level of security, spokesperson Jeanne Lopato said.

Increased security was evident

nationwide. The Coast

Guard expanded armed defense of major ports Sunday and added special security zones around sensitive piers, waterways and other facilities in the agency’s

District of Columbia police closed off a main street in front of the State

Department as a precaution.

pie. I swear by God, who has elevated the skies without pillars, neither America nor the people who live in it will dream of security before we live it in Palestine, and not before all the infidel armies leave the land of Mohammed. Peace be upon him,” bin Laden said. Bin Laden was wearing green camouflage fatigues and a white Afghan headdress with a Kalashnikov rifle perched beside him during his statement. Those responsible for the Sept. 11 attacks, he said, acted in God’s name. “When God blessed one of the groups of Islam, vanguards of Islam, they destroyed America. I pray to God to elevate their status and bless them,” bin Laden said in the address. The brief speech sounded familiar themes for bin Laden, who since 1996, has waged his campaign from mountain hideouts in Afghanistan.

ByANTHONY SHADED

News briefs compiled from wire reports.

Within hours of the first strikes by American and British warplanes, Missouri shut the doors at its state Capi-

Bin Laden warns U.S. of future attacks

Minnesota labor strikes continue

With state workers ranging from soup-servers to nut-tighteners on strike, Minnesota’s week-long walkout may go down as one of the most expansive public-sector strikes in recent history.

largest port defense operation since World War 11.

Local law enforcement departments were asked to “be at the highest level ofvigilance and be prepared to respond to any act of terrorism or violence should it become necessary.” FBI officials said they had no specific threats, but U.S. intelligence and Attorney General John Ashcroft had been warning for days there was a high likelihood ofadditional terrorism activity, particularly after the U.S. took its first military action.

The Boston Globe

Suspected terror mastermind Osama bin CAIRO Laden, in a taped address broadcast yesterday, thanked God for the attacks on New York and Washington and warned Americans they could not live in security until Palestinians had peace and U.S. forces left Saudi Arabia. The address, carried by the Arab satellite channel AlJazeera was his first since the Sept. 11 attacks blamed on his A1 Qaeda network. He spoke during the day, meaning the speech preceded at least by hours the U.S.-led assault on Afghanistan.

Although not acknowledging responsibility for the strikes, he sanctioned the terror they caused as retribution for what he described as 80 years of U.S.-led oppression in the Muslim world. “To America, I say only a few words to it and its peo-

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The Chronicle

MONDAY, OCTOBER 8, 2001 � PAGE

3

Candidates prep for city primary I Twelve of 15 candidates for Durham City Council will survive Tuesday’s primary and move on to the general election in the first week of November. By MATT ATWOOD The Chronicle

THAD PARSONS/THE CHRONICLE

DINING SERVICES EMPLOYEE SANDY JOHNSON makes a sandwich at the Great Hall. Under ARAMARK, dining employees must undergo more extensive training than they previously did.

ARAMARK broadens worker training Officials hope employee training betters food, service By NADINE OOSMANALLY The Chronicle

In an effort to improve the quality offood and service at ARAMARK Corp. eateries, the company has begun implementing its employee training programs. So far, the company has used CD-ROMs and videotapes that include recipes and pictures of food to introduce employees to the more labor-intensive concepts of ARAMARK. Most of the training relates to new stations at the Marketplace and the Great Hall. David Randolph, the food service’s resident district manager, said the company has focused on stabilizing service, improving guest satisfaction and bettering employee-student communication. Prior to ARAMARK’s July 1 arrival, the University hired an outside company to conduct a one-day training session that included role playing and skits.

Director of Dining Services Jim Wulforst said ARA-

MARK is better able to provide the training because they have the structure and resources to foster a better work environment and improve employee morale. ARAMARK requires employees to attend monthly meetings where they are encouraged to provide feedback for improvement. Managers have individual performance plans to improve disciplinary practices and communication. Randolph said analysis must be ongoing for the company to be successful. “The biggest asset for a food company is the people—they’re needed to be successful,” he said. During school breaks, employees will participate in the ARAMARK Academy, 13 training modules that take up to 40 hours. Managers now participate in ARAMARK’s Eight Steps of Food Production Management, a program See TRAINING on page 7 P'

f

The Duke University Yearbook.

Durham’s municipal election season begins Tuesday, when voters head to the polls to narrow down the field of candidates for mayor and Durham City Council. Although only two of the five mayoral candidates will make it past the primary, would-be City Council members have less to worry about—at least at this stage, when 12 of the 15 candidates will stay in the race. “I would say that by and large, the campaign has been fairly quiet so far and that the real campaign will start Tuesday,” said incumbent Lewis Cheek. So far, most City Council candidates said they have campaigned by attending a few forums, filling out questionnaires distributed by the city’s newspapers and political action committees, erecting signs, speaking at public events and talking to citizens. But the frequency of forums and speaking engagements has so far been relatively low. “I think I’ll be campaigning more [after Tuesday] because there’ll be more campaigning to do,” candidate Jeffery White said. “Everyone seems to be waiting for the primary to be over before they make any decisions on who they want to come speak.” The council, which will consist of the mayor and six regular members—down from 12 in past years—is elected in two different ways. Three members and the mayor are chosen from the city at large. The city is also divided into three wards, each of which sends one resident to the council. The at-large race

Tuesday’s primary will reduce the at-large field

to six candidates. But since only seven—incumbents Cheek, Tamra Edwards, Dan Hill, Angela Langley and Thomas Stith, and challengers Steven Matherly and Joe Williams—are running, only one will have to drop out. That makes current council members more worried about losing the Nov. 6 general election than See

CITY COUNCIL on page 9 �

Sophomores, Juniors, and Seniors: Come pick up your book.

Distribution of the 2001 Chanticleer: :

Wednesday, October 3 Thursday, October 11 -

10 am 6 pm -

012A Flowers Building (Basement) Next to Page Auditorium

Duke

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Students & Staff: Bring this ad for

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Questions?

Email chanticleer@duke.edu, Phone 684-2856


The Chronicle

PAGE 4 � MONDAY, OCTOBER 8,2001

Board OKs parking deck, Man with anthrax dies as building, library addition investigators search for clues ByAMBIKA KUMAR The Chronicle The Board of Trustees Friday approved the planning of two major projects: the expansion of Perkins Library and the construction of a parking garage and building behind the Bryan Center. At the meeting, the Board also approved the final design of the Nasher Museum of Art and the planning of an addition to the Office of Undergraduate Admissions. During the public portion of the meeting, Trustees heard speeches from Duke Student Government President C.J. Walsh, Graduate and Professional Student Council President Elayne Heisler and President Nan Keohane. Administrators can now begin planning a three-story building between the Bryan Center and Science Drive. Expected to cost $2O million, the new facility will house all of the retail stores currently in the Bryan Center, except the Lobby Shop. University Architect John Pearce said in a statement that the project will

free up about 25,000 square feet in the Bryan Center for use for student activities. Administrators have said some offices in the West Union building will also move into the new building, but they have not decided which ones. The parking garage will create 700 to 800 new visitor and permit spaces, which will more than make up for the closing of the Divinity School parking lot—the new engineering buildings and the Divinity and Perkins extensions will be constructed on that site. The construction behind the Bryan Center, which will go to the Board for final approval this winter and begin construction in the spring, also calls for a new landscaped quadrangle and plaza area framed by the south edge of the Chapel, the back of Page Auditorium and the new building. The Trustees also authorized planning for an expansion of Perkins, a project long discussed by administrators, facSee

BOARD on page 8 i :i>

ExxonMobil, the world’s leading energy company, is recruiting Mechanical, Electrical and Civil Engineering students for both full time employment and summer internship positions.

E?£onMobil exxon.mobil.com/careers

An equal opportunity employer

Steve Simon (CE ‘65), president of ExxonMobil Refining & Supply Company, will provide an overview of the corporation and the varied career opportunities within ExxonMobil. Steve will be joined by Dennis Courtney (‘9O) of the ExxonMobil Lubricants & Petroleum Specialties Company and John Ragunas (‘B7) of the ExxonMobil Gas Marketing Company.

Corporate Overview and

Q&A Session

Monday, October 8 7:00 pm Von Canon A, Bryan Center Lower Level •

Food and Beverage will be provided.

From staff and wire reports The search to find out how Florida resident Bob Stevens, who visited campus within the last two weeks, contracted a rare and extremely lethal inhaled form of anthrax expanded after his death Friday. More than 50 health and law enforcement officials have fanned out across Palm Beach County to track his movements over the past two months and look for other possible cases. Officials are also going over medical records in four North Carolina counties that he might have vis-

ited recently. “We have a long chronology of common activities we need to pursue,” Florida epidemiologist Dr. Steven Wiersma said. “We don’t have any really hot leads at this time.” Investigators are awaiting test results from soil and other specimens. The results could take days. No other cases of anthrax have been reported in the area. Wiersma said several of Stevens’ co-workers at the supermarket tabloid The Sun have been tested, but results were negative. As a precaution, antibiotics are being given to close family members.

Lieberman was first elected to the Senate in 1988 and has since become a nationally recognized leader of the Democratic Party and of numerous biparti-

san policy initiatives. He has been mentioned as a possible candidate for the Democratic nomination in 2004. In the Senate, he chairs the Governmental Affairs Committee and is a member of the

Environment and Public Works Committee, the Armed Services Committee and the Small Business Committee.

Chambers to head UNC civil rights

center; Julius Chambers, former chan-

cellor of North Carolina Central University, famous civil rights lawyer and a Duke Trustee, will lead a new civil rights center at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill’s School ofLaw. The Civil Rights Center will begin operating next spring with a goal of raising awareness about civil rights issues. Jack Boger, UNC law professor and deputy director of the center, said Chambers signed on last spring and helped plan the center during the summer. Chambers founded a law firm in Charlotte and won a number of employment discrimination and school segregation cases in the 19705. Zambian leader to speak Tuesday: Damon's Creek resumes casting Kenneth David Kaunda, the first presicall: The WB network show Dawson's dent of Zambia, will deliver the 2001 Creek will hold a casting call Oct. 20 from Karl von der Heyden Distinguished 9 a.m. until noon in the Alumni Lounge. Visiting International Lecture and dis- The casting call is open to all Duke stucuss the AIDS crisis in Africa at 4:15 p.m. dents and staff; interested applicants Tuesday at the Sanford Institute of should either bring a recent, PolaroidPublic Policy. The address is free and sized photograph of themselves or may open to the public. have a new photo taken for a $2 film cost. Kaunda, who spent nearly 30 years in An original casting call date of Sept. office, lost a son to AIDS in 1986 and has 14 was canceled after the Sept. 11 terrorbeen an outspoken leader on the danger ist attacks. of the disease. Since leaving office in $2.5 million gift honors Semans: 1991, Kaunda has been an advocate for The Duke Endowment will donate $2.5 vichelping orphaned children of AIDS tims and working to break the poverty million to name the central area of the University’s new Nastier Museum of Art and AIDS cycle. for Mary D.B.T. Semans. Kaunda also took a major role in neThe Mary D.B.T. Semans Grand Hall gotiating Zambia’s independence from will be a 10,000-square-foot atrium with the United Kingdom and became president of an independent Zambia in 1964 a glass ceiling and will serve as the meetafter taking part in politics throughout ing area and common entrance to the five pavilions that will form the museum. the previous decade. Construction of the $2O million facility is Lieberman to speak: Sen. Joseph scheduled to begin next spring. Lieberman, a 2000 vice-presidential canSemans, Woman’s College 1939, is a didate and the first Jewish American former University trustee and chair nominated on a major-party ticket, will emeritus ofThe Duke Endowment. She is deliver the 2001 Terry Sanford the great granddaughter of Washington Distinguished Lecture at 8 p.m. Oct. 28 Duke. She was awarded Duke’s highest in the Fuqua School ofBusiness’ Geneen honor, the University Medal for DistinAuditorium. guished Service, in 1986.

Duke Center for International Development The Duke Center for International Development presents the following Rethinking Development Policy Workshops at the Terry Sanford Institute of Public Policy. The series challenges conventional thinking on different development-related issues and provokes lively discussion among participants.

October 11 Dr. Parmesh Shah

October 18 Dr. Inder Sud

Researcher at The World Bank Information Technology and People’s Participation in the 21st Century

Visiting Lecturer with DCID Economic Development in the Middle East and Implications of the Peace Process

October 25 Dr. Norman Uphoff Professor at Cornell University

November 20 Dr. Enrique Rueda-Sabater Senior Manager at The World Bank

Thirty Years of Community-Based Development Is There Any Progress Beyond Rhetoric?

Private vs. Public Financing of Development Do We Still Need Development Aid?

Workshops will begin at 5:30 pm in the Rhodes Conference Center, Room 223 of the Terry Sanford Institute A discussion will follow a short presentation. Light refreshments will be served.

For more information call 613-7333 or e-mail clay@pps.duke.edu.


The Chronicle

MONDAY, OCTOBER

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An employee reported that between -5:10 p.m. Oct. 5 and 12 noon Oct. 6, somee te;ed ,\room on the of the Science D Research Building and stole $5OO worth of silver Mettler flattop scales, said Maj. V^KliVLr/ Robert Dean of the 1) d TT?T7C Duke University Po- -DKili<r j lice Department. Police believe that the room was secured and there were no signs of forced entry. An employee reported that between the hours of 11:40 a.m. and 2:00 p.m. Oct. 5, someone stole her $2O unsecured wallet containing $5OO cash and a driver’s license from a room in the subbasement of

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MSRB. Dean said it is unknown at this time if this theft is related. Light pole damaged: Between 6:55 and 6:57 p.m. Oct. 5, someone knocked down a $l,OOO fight pole near Round Table, Dean said. The damage is believed to have been done by a vehicle. Rocket crashed: At 6:54 p.m. Oct. 6, campus police responded to a report of vandalism in progress in front of Sigma Nu, Dean said. A $lOO rocket made of wood and garbage bags had been vandalized. It was reported that one of the subjects responsible for the damage was in a group of ten to 15 people wearing black robes. Others in this group stood around while the offender was knocking the rocket down. The offenders were described as white males, 21 to 26 years of age, and members of the Society of Black Robed Individuals. The group ran in the direction of Sigma Alpha Epsilon. Some of the offenders were located in front of SAE and identified. Others ran into the fraternity section and were not apprehended. The case is still under investigation. cer

Gate damaged: A campus police offidiscovered that between

7:30 and

8:19 p.m. Oct. 6, someone had damaged the iron gate—by pushing it offits runner—and had broken off the wooden gate arms from the Blue Zone parking

lot, causing approximately $560 in damage, Dean said. Vehicle entered: A student reported that tetween 12 noon &t 21 4P £ secl ed vehide was Sept. 25> while parked on Flowers Drive at the rear of a Trent Drive Hall, someone cut a hole into the $5O canvas roof of his vehicle and stole his $75 Kraco cassette tape deck with a purple face plate, two Alpine stereo box speakers totaling $75, a $l5O Optimus XL 260, 250 watt, four channel amplifier and $2O in miscellaneous stereo system wiring, Dean said.

Purse snatched: A student reported

that between 2:30 and 2:45 a.m. Oct. 6, she left her purse in the back seat of her friend’s unsecured vehicle while it was parked in front of Wayne Manor, Dean said. Her $6O mini-bookbag purse, containing her $3O wallet, credit cards, $lOO Motorola cellular phone, checkbook, $5O cash, driver’s license, keys, Duke ID and other papers were stolen. Purse taken: An employee reported that between 2:05 and 2:35 p.m., someone stole her unseamed purse, which contained $245 in cash, from the fifth floor of North Pavilion.

Laundry room vandalized: An employee reported that between 5 p.m. Oct. 5 and 7 a.m. Oct. 6, someone caused about $l5O worth of damage by kicking two holes in the laundry room door and pulling down a florescent light, breaking the bracket, in the back hall subbasement of SAE, Dean said. Mirror smashed: At 1:30 a.m. Oct. 6, Duke police discovered that someone broke a $lOO mirror located in the West Union Building’s men’s bathroom, Dean said.

Vehicle raided:

A student reported

that between 6 and 7 a.m. Sept. 19, someone stole his personal checks and four CDs, worth a total of $6O, Dean said. The items were stolen from the victim’s unsecured vehicle, parked at 205 Oregon St.

PAGE 5

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The Chronicle

PAGE 6 � MONDAY, OCTOBER 8. 2001

Perkins upgrades technology in computer cluster � Users of the computer cluster on the first floor of Perkins Library now enjoy flatscreen monitors and the ability to write onto CDs. By LAUREN WILLIAMS The Chronicle

Rows of flat-screen monitors sit on tables, and Pentium 111 and Apple G4 processors insure speedy computing. The scene is not from a futuristic classroom—it is the first-floor computer cluster of Perkins Library. The newly renovated lab includes 17 IBM 300 GLs, 21 Power Mac G4 computer systems and four laseijet printers. Both the Macs and the IBMs have zip drives that allow students to work with larger files. In addition, the Macs have the ability to write and rewrite to CDs. “Computer labs are heavily used by the academic community and require consistent upgrade and maintenance of the equipment and facilities,” Ginny Cake, director of customer support for the Office of Information Technology, wrote in an e-mail. Although Cake could not immediately cite the cost ofthe new technology, she said the division spent over $30,000 to remodel the physical structure ofthe lab. The improvements range from better lighting and ceiling repair to acoustic wall panels and solar window shades. The technological and structural upgrades fall under the strategic plan of the library, which allocated $l5 million for improvements. The modifications were also recommended by the Perkins Library Renovation Committee, a group comprising faculty members, library officials and students that was formed in August 2000. According to the committee’s website, University officials aspire to place the library “in the forefront

ALLISON WlLLIAMS/THE CHRONICLE

NEW FLAT-SCREEN MONITORS line the desks in the first floor computer cluster at Perkins Library. Officials recently upgraded the cluster as part of the library’s long-range plan.

of national efforts to construct new measures of research library success.” Some students questioned the latest improvements. Even though he said he will use the lab frequently, senior Tim Chung said, “I think the improvements are a little excessive for the long run. Fd rather have a lot of moderate clusters than one really snazzy one.” Freshman Rachel Heath added, “Anything with In-

Kenneth David

KAUNDA

ternet access could have met my needs, but Fm pretty low-tech.” Cake explained the choice of flat screens, saying, “[Flat screens] provide a space savings of approximately eight to 10 inches, they tend to be brighter and have less glare, and they are better for the environment because their crystal properties emit low magnetic radiation fields.”

Check Out Our New Space

First President ofThe Republic of Zambia Founder, The Kenneth Kaunda Children of Africa Foundation

will present THE 2001 KARL VON DER HEYDEN

DISTINGUISHED VISITING INTERNATIONAL LECTURE

'The Challenges Facing African Development in the 21st Century: The Crisis ofAIDS and AIDSAffected Children”

Durham Academy’s new space (new Preschool, Lower School and expanded Middle School) and extra spaces for new students will debut next fall! With construction and renovation rocketing forward, our new campus will open in August of 2002, providing new spaces for new students Pre-K to grade 12. (...in grades 2 to 4, it's a one-time opportunity! )

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Tuesday, October 9,2001 at 4:lspm FLEISHMAN COMMONS TERRY SANFORD INSTITUTE OF PUBLIC POLICY DUKE UNIVERSITY

The lecture is free and open to the public. For information contact Doug Sershen, 919-684-2910 or doug.sershen@duke.edu

And check out our new extended day program for kids in Pre-K to grade 4. Call Gib Fitzpatrick at 919-489-9118 to learn more or visit www.da.org Founded in 1933, Durham Academy is an independent, coed day school for pre-K to grade 12 and welcomes students of any race, creed, color or national origin. Students annually receive over $700,000 in financial aid.

ACADEMY


The Chronicle

MONDAY, OCTOBER 8, 2001 � PAGE 7

1

1 Duke Career Center J

cm HARK Career Center Calendar, Oct. 8

~

Oct. 15

http://career.studentaffairs.duke.edu Monday, October 8

Eli Lilly (Sales), 7-9pm, Von Canon B Exxon Mobil, 7-9pm, Von Canon A

Tuesday, October 9

Resume Workshop, 2pm, 106 Page Student Athlete Advising, 5-7pm, Schwartz-Butters (3rd FI) Resumes/OCI for Student Athletes, 7-Bpm, Schwartz-Butters (3rd FI) Merrill Lynch, 7-9pm, Von Canon C

Wednesday, October 10 Interview Workshop, 11am, 106 Page Towers Perrin, 5-6:3opm, Old Trinity Room IBM, 6-9pm, Von Canon B Radiant, 7-9pm, Von Canon A Thursday, October 11 JANE HETHERINGTON/THE CHRONICLE

Peace, love and one tasty lollipop Ellen Cancel and her grandson, Austin, participate in the National Gandhi Day of Service, during which students from Duke shuttled to four different locations to volunteer their time. They traveled to Habitat for Humanity, Children First, the Carolina Friend School and the Rape Crisis Center.

Mary

ARAMARK plans additional training for dining employees � TRAINING from page 3 that prepares them to understand the eating habits of their customers and complete tasks like forecasting and im-

plementing menus, ordering, balancing

production in the kitchens and control-

ling waste. They also take part in Pathways to Leadership, a CD-ROM training program that includes ARAMARK policies and procedures regarding cost controls, accounting, scheduling, production, sanitation, training and legal issues. Previously, managers were not responsible for these tasks. Several employees said little has changed under ARAMARK’s direction. “It’s the same menu and not much has changed, but I had expected and am expecting more change,” said C.D. Hunter, an employee in the Great Hall.

Vernon Dunnegan, a cook in the Great Hall, agreed. “The cooks haven’t had a lot of training, but I’m satisfied with what I see.... There’s always other things to learn.” Further changes are expected over the coming months. An independent company will conduct a survey program for students after fall break and will compare the results to those of other universities. Hunter said ARAMARK will change the menu if students dislike the food. Supervisors will also have the opportunity to participate in Building Leadership Skills, a national program that

will enable them to network with food service managers around the country. “Employees need to be prepared for opportunities inside and outside of Duke,” Wulforst said.

Cover Letter Workshop, 1 lam, 106 Page Jet Program, 5-6pm, 106 Page Plexus, 5-7pm, Von Canon C Marakon, 6:30-B:3opm, Von Canon A Bank One, 6-B:3opm, Von Canon B JP Morgan Chase, 7-9pm, Faculty Commons

Think aii the Career Center knows about is 1-Banking and Consulting? Think again! Check out these and other opportunities for non-traditionai career exploration at Duke.

Non Profit Career Forum This is an opportunity to get connected with alumni and friends of the University who are involved in the Non-Profit Sector. Presenters will share their experiences including tips for the job search process. After the forum a networking dinner will take place to give students an opportunity for more informal discussion. Have your issues and questions addressed on November 1 in the Von Canons. See the Career Center web site for more info.

Arts Career Forum Mark your calendars early! Attend the Arts Career Forum on Sunday, November 4th from 2:3Q-spm to learn about ways to build your future in the Arts! Come to DUMA and meet professionals from the Smithsonian, Christie’s Auction House, graphic design firms, art law practitioners, various art galleries and more! This event is co-sponsored by DUMA and the Career Center and is free to all Duke students. Refreshments will be served.

E Leads Learn about full-time positions and internships in Criminal Justice, the Environment, Hospitality, Healthcare Administration, Public Policy, Public Relations/Advertising, Publishing, Radio/TV/Film, Social Services and Sports Marketing in locations all around the world. See for yourself under the Employment menu on our web site.

DUKE CAREER CENTER

‘io

110 Page Building (West Campus) Appointments: 660-1050 Student Helpline: 660-1070 http://career.studentaffairs.duke.edu


The Chronicle

PAGE 8 � MONDAY, OCTOBER 8, 2001

Addition will Plan may displace 150 juniors, seniors provide longneeded space � RESIDENTIAL PLAN from page 1 nators. The changes are part of a larger undergraduate residential plan, including the opening ofthe West-Edens Link, the movement of selective houses off Main West Quadrangle and

P

BOARD from page 4

ulty and students. The expansion will proceed in three phases. In the first, the University will construct an addition behind the Old Chemistry Building, renovate Perkins’ first floor and build a pavilion cafe. It will add 72,000 feet of much-needed space. “This additional area will permit both a slight increase over time in the number of volumes held on site and a vast improvement in the quality of space allotted to the library and academic services, collections and users,” Pearce said. The second phase calls for the renovation of older portions of the library, while the third includes the renovation of the second through fourth floors of the 1968 addition to the building. Administrators said they will seek final approval of the design and financing in 2002. In their annual speeches, Walsh,

Heisler

and Keohane

briefed the

Trustees on recent developments and future goals. Among many other issues, Walsh described a new DSG initiative to foster campus dialogue surrounding gender equity on campus. In addition to describing GPSC’s activities over the past two years, Heisler spoke of the importance of the graduate student voice and outlined GPSC’s goals for the upcoming year. Keohane’s short speech emphasized her appreciation of Duke’s response to the Sept. 11 attacks.

the establishment of upperclass houses linked to freshman dormitories. Administrators hope the plan will diversify upperclass housing and replicate the East Campus living experience. “We’ve got a wonderfully diverse, communal experience on East where people develop strong relationships with other students. In the current model, we have a very fragmented sophomore class, and the first two years are a very critical period in terms of development academically and socially,” Moneta said Sunday. The University had planned to renovate Main West dorms year-round for about four years, which would have required entire quads to move off Main West into swing space and prevented the University from moving all sophomores before 2006. But administrators now say they are almost certain that the work can be done during two summers beginning in 2003. In the future, West Campus will house about 500 more sophomores than it has in recent years. The WEL will provide about 350 beds, forcing about 150 independent juniors and seniors who would have chosen West Campus to five on Central Campus, in Trent Drive Hall or off-campus. Moneta said he will try to make Trent more attractive by offering all the rooms as singles at reduced housing rates. Wherever upperclassmen choose to five, however, Moneta, the Trustees and other senior-level administrators agreed that uniting sophomores on West should be the first priority. Several student leaders have endorsed that sentiment, “I think that the idea of having two years of solid class unity outweighs displacing less than a tenth of a class,” said senior C.J. Walsh, Duke Student Government president. “The geographic division that exists now between West, Trent and Central.... With those disappearing, there will be a lot more com-

munity among sophomores.” Senior and three-year Central resident Bunia Parker said he enjoyed the opportunity to live offWest sophomore year, but agrees with the need for more class unity and West diversity. “It’s one of those things where, if you’re an upperclassmen, you would have hated not having the opportunity to live on Central your sophomore year. But in the long run, it’s the best

N Y RA

Harry Davidson, conductor presents

An Evening of Music by Mozart with guest pianist Olga Radosavljevich Wednesday, October 10

8:00p.m.

Baldwin Auditorium, East Campus

Admission: FREE

option for creating student unity” said Parker, who has worked on Central issues through DSG and Central Campus Council. Over the next two weeks, Moneta will work out several significant details ofthe housing plan. Selective houses will have to relocate to elsewhere on West because of the independent corridor and may rotate locations each year. All selective houses currently on West Campus will remain there, Moneta said, and will continue to make up about

one-third of each quad. The elimination of Trent as swing space will calm selective houses’ concerns, said senior Michael Wick, Interfratemity Council president, adding that the shuffling of selective house locations will cause some initial headache and confusion. Also yet to be finalized is next year’s lottery process. Moneta said selective houses will retain about the same number of beds, and that spaces will be reserved for all sophomore independents. Moneta has not decided the order of choice for upperclass independents; independent sophomores could pick first, Moneta said, or the required number of beds could be reserved for them while seniors and juniors pick. To bridge the gap between residential and academic life, the plan includes new residence coordinators, some of whom will be post-doctoral fellows and others aspiring student affairs deans. They will coordinate the work ofresidential advisors and other housing staff) while also administering academic support services—such as writing studios or seminar rooms—that will be integrated into dorm commons rooms. “[The residence coordinators] really are a hybrid between the on-site staff members that have student responsibilities and the academic support services staff)” Moneta said. “Nine-to-five is a convenient time period for some people, but sometimes students need tech support at two in the morning or want help organizing a house course.” Although the University is still working on the WEL and is still planning for Main West renovations —projects which together will cost about $75 million—administrators acknowledge that even more West dorms are in the works. Space demands are expected to increase because of the combination of wanting to eliminate Trent as housing, increasing enrollment at the Pratt School of Engineering and enforcing the three-year on-campus housing requirement, which Moneta said may begin with the Class of 2006.



Weekend

ffl?ap-=ca[p@

In this week’s issue

Inside Duke The Charlotte Observer reported Saturday that the Duke football team has •

landed a major recruiting coup in 6-foot2, 220-pound running back Malcolm Ruff. The high school senior from the Gilman School in Baltimore spurned scholarship offers from Penn State

Andrew Greenfield, Tyler Rosen Fozail Alvi, Kiya Bajpai, Nick Christie, Elizabeth Colucci, Gabe Githens, Andrew Greenfield, Harold Gutmann, Michael Jacobson, Colin Kennedy, Kevin Lees, Kevin Lloyd, Ted Mann, Clinton McHugh, Adrienne Mercer, Assaad Nasr, Shawn Nicholls, Christina Petersen, Robert Samuel Catherine Sullivan, Greg Veis, Wil York

and LSD, among others. Ruff, who rushed for 1,213 yards and 14 touchdowns during his junior year, will join fellow Gilman School star Mike Dowling, who committed to the Blue Devils earlier this year.

Special thanks to Chronicle editor Ambika Kumar and managing editor James Herriott.

A look at the ACC

Founded

Inside Baseball The last weekend of the baseball season proved to be quite historic, as Barry Bonds broke Mark McGwire's record for home runs in a season and hit his 73rd of the season Sunday versus the Dodgers. The final weekend also signaled the end of the careers of Orioles' infielder Cal Ripken and Padres' slugger Tony Gwynn. •

Editor: Craig Saperstein Managing Editor: Paul Doran Photography Editor: Drew Klein Graphics Editor: Rosa lyn Tang Associate Editors: Evan Davis, Writers:

Virginia, Maryland, Michigan, Syracuse

No. 25 Maryland continued to silence its naysayers Saturday as it handily defeated ACC foe Virginia 41-21. Maryland quarterback Shaun Hill threw for 2 touchdowns in the rout. The victory gives Maryland its best start in 23 years and keeps the Terrapins undefeated on the season at 5-0. In other ACC action: N.C. State 17,Wake Forest 14 North Carolina 24, East Carolina 21

Sportswrap

in 1983, Spoitswrap is the

weekly sports supplement published by The Chronicle. It can be read online at

www.chronicle.duke.edu To reach the sports department at 301 Flowers Building, call 684-2663 or e-mail sports@chronicle.duke.edu

Women's Soccer ACC go away 4 IThe women's soccer team lost its third and fourth conference games of the season this weekend. •

Men's Soccer A tough weekend •

5

Volleyball Reality sets in •

8

After its hot start to the season, Duke dropped its second straight match Friday before rebounding Saturday.

Field Hockey A near upset •

8

The Blue Devils fell to Rutgers and St. John's in games in the New York metropolitan area.

The field hockey team nearly defeated No. 1 Maryland before falling 6-5 to theTerps in overtime.

Football Stung

Women's Golf 3 in a row

6

9

Georgia Tech shattered Duke's hopes for a Homecoming upset with a huge third quarter.

For the third straight year, the women's golf team swept the Tar Heel Invitational in Chapel Hill.

Football Same old, same old 7 Like so many other games this season, Duke got

Football NFL: Week 4

off to a fast Start, but could not sustain it.

10

The 49ers finally beat their old coach, George Seifert, in a 24-14 victory over the Panthers.

Game OF THE

Football Wake Forest vs.

WEEK Saturday, 1 p.m. Wallace Wade Stadium Despite its improvement over the past few weeks, the football team has simply been overmatched against its past three opponents. But Saturday, the Blue Devils will play an emerging, but still inexperienced Wake team that they are capable of beating.


The Chionlcja

8. 2001 �PACE 3

Field hockey takes No. 1 Terps to OT, but loses 6-5 By CHRISTINA PETERSEN The Chronicle

7 On a sunny Sunday aftemoon, a day after the

Puke

0 rain and No. 1 MaryDavidson land poured down on 13th-ranked Duke, the Blue Devils avenged Saturday’s loss with a 7-0 drubbing of Davidson. Duke began the weekend with its second ACC contest of the season against Maryland Saturday. The Blue Devils stunned the top-ranked Terrapins by jumping out to a 4-0 first-half lead on the back of sophomore Kim Van Kirk’s, freshman Johanna Bischof’s and senior captain Liz Bateman’s two goals. Yet like every game this season when Duke gained an early lead, the Blue Devils found it harder to play with the same intensity when they are ahead 4-0 than when they were down. “We have to learn how to play with a lead,” Tchou said. “It’s a matter of holding them off or stopping them, and Maryland is probably one of the most skilled teams we’ll see all season.” The Blue Devils watched their lead dwindle to 4-2 at halftime and then the Terps tied it at 4-all in the second. With the chance to down the No. 1 team in the country on the line, Bateman stepped up and rebounded a shot by Bischof for the lead with 13:09 remaining in the game. With a 5-4 in place, all Duke had to do was hold off the Maryland offense, a feat few teams have been able to do this season. Nevertheless, the Blue Devils managed to stave off two penalty corners and heavy play in the Duke circle .

before the Terps were awarded one last comer with no time left on the clock. Maryland redshirt freshman Sara Silvetti knocked it past Blue Devil goalie Hallie Smith to force Duke’s second overtime battle this season. Duke is now 1-1 in overtime contests. In field hockey, when the score is tied at the end of regulation, seven players take the field for a 15-minute sudden-

death period. Unfortunately for Duke, the mental lapse that granted Maryland a second chance also allowed Terrapin senior Dina Rizzo to complete a hat trick of her own 40 seconds into

overtime to push the ball past Smith for the win. “We haven’t been able to score back on them in the past and as we sat there and watched the four-goal lead diminish and diminish, I knew the win was right there,” Bateman said. “And then they scored with no time left on the clock. It was kind of a let down.” With the loss, Duke moves to 0-2 in ACC play, but that record also applies to the Blue Devils’ record against ACC teams that were ranked No. 1. “I’ve never seen a Duke team I’ve coached play with such heart and passion to want to win that game,” Tchou said. “We had them, we really did. I’m very disappointed for [my players]. They deserved to feel a top-five win today.” The Blue Devils returned to action Sunday under a sunny sky and a new determination to win. As opposed to a Duke team that started the season with a freshman and a senior dominating the offensive stat sheets, seven different players scored the seven goals Sunday with two players notching their first goals of the season. “All of our goals seemed like they really connected,” Van Kirk said. “They would start in the backfield and send it up the middle. Everyone worked together for almost every goal.” After 20 minutes of unconnected play, the Blue Devils turned on the intensity to head into the locker room with a 2-0 lead. Van Kirk scored her fifth goal ofthe season a minute after senior Robin Merritt outran Davidson goalie Cate Schenning for her second on the year. Freshman sharpshooter Johanna Bischof scored first in the match for her team-leading ninth goal of the season while Stacey Tsougas, Jessica Fluck and freshman Katie Anthony all got on the board for the Blue Devils. In a sense, Anthony’s goal typified the Blue Devils’ dominant play of the afternoon. Shortly after the Wildcats substituted their goalie, three Duke players bore down on the new recruit in a power play straight out of the Raleigh Entertainment and Sports Arena. Bateman continued her offensive hot

ASHLEY WICK/THE CHRONICLE

LIZ BATEMAN scored a second-half goal in Duke’s 7-0 victory over Davidson “I think we started out a little slow,” Tchou said. “We needed to get our movement going right away and that means and assist against Maryland. that our dynamic movement needs to be “It’s exciting for everyone for a differ- there all the time. When you have a ent person to score each goal,” Tsougas team that plays with all its players back inside the defensive [circle], that movesaid. “It was a total team effort today.” Duke (7-4, 2-0 in the ACC) allowed ment is paramount to be able to move Davidson only a trio of shots in the conthe ball around the field.” Duke will next take on Wake Forest test, with all three coming in the second stanza. The Blue Devils’ defensive effort at Kentner Stadium in Winston-Salem was so strong that even the Wildcats’ four Wednesday at 7 p.m. penalty comers couldn’t break their comDuke 7, Davidson 0 posure late in the second half. 1 2 F The Blue Devils’ fifth shutout of the FINAL Davidson (4-7) 0 0 0 year marked Duke’s solution to DavidDuke (7-4) 5 2 son’s “packing” defense, which, like GOALS: Duke-Bischof (North) 13:11, Tsougas (Bischof) 8:24, Merritt that of Virginia Commonwealth, placed (Van Kirk) 27:14, Van Kirk (Bischof) 26:14, Bateman 18:08, Fluck 15:14, Anthony(Tsougas)ll:l9 all of its players in the defensive circle SAVES: Duke 2 (Smith, Perrier 2), Davidson 13 (Schenning). Location; allow Duke shots. Williams Field any easy to not streak of seven points on three goals

and an assist last week with a goal against Davidson and another hat trick


4 �MONDAY,

Women’s soccer falls to Clemson, beats Seminoles By FOZAILALVI The Chronicle 3 Playing two

top-15 teams to a standstill in 2 under two days, the Duke Duke women’s soccer team returned

FSU

_

home late Sunday night with nothing

but two losses to show for a weekend of great play. The two losses dropped Duke to 4-6 overall, but more importantly left the team with a winless 0-4 mark in the conference standings. The Blue Devils dropped an extremely tight 1-0 game to No. 11 Clemson Friday night before dropping another hardfought battle against No. 14 Florida State Sunday afternoon. Duke took both ACC foes to the limit with both games going into overtime, but Duke just could not manage to scrap a victory despite out-shooting both teams. Unlike last season when it seemed Duke was on the

winning end of all the tight games, the Blue Devils have now lost three in a row by a combined four goals. The match Friday night versus Clemson (7-1, 2-1) was definitely going to be a challenge, considering the Tigers came into the game with two straight shutouts and the never underestimated home-cooking. But from the opening play, the pressure of a challenge was squarely placed on Clemson, who was forced to play without junior forwards Deliah Arrington and Heather Beem. With her teammates playing Clemson to a standstill for most of the game, goalkeeper Thora Helgadottir came up with eight important saves in the more than 91 minutes of play. It would take a questionable call in the box

leading to a penalty kick past Helgadottir, that would bring the defensive struggle to a premature end for Duke.

In the overtime session, freshman minute with the game-ending goal in Sarah Turner’s shot from inside the box sudden death overtime. appeared to glance off the back of teamFlorida State freshman goalkeeper mate Tricia Williams and sail over the Ali Sims consistently made the spectacgoalpost. However, the referee ruled it ular play in denying Duke from putting was a hand-ball and awarded Clemson the game away in the first half. Sims with a penalty kick,which would result then carried the load in overtime, as she in the game-winning goal by Lady Tiger stopped a potential game-winning Tatum Clowney less than two minutes penalty shot by Duke senior Katie into the extra session. Heaps. The Seminoles would then put Less than 48 hours and almost 400 the game away on Schofield's goal, givmiles later, the Blue Devils took the ing FSU its first ever victory over Duke. The loss assures that Duke cannot field at the Seminole Soccer Complex in Tallahassee to take on Florida State. finish with a winning ACC record for Duke jumped out early, as freshman just the third time in the past eight sensation Casey McCluskey added to years. The Blue Devils hope to turn her team-leading goal total with a pair things around Friday when they travel of strikes before halftime. to Gainesville to take on the No. 15 McCluskey has now scored eight Florida Gators. goals on the season, all of them coming Florida State 3, Duke 2 in the past seven games. But FSU (9-3, 3-0) answered back with two early goals FINAL 1 2 OT F Duke (4-6, 0-4) 20 0 0 within the first 15 minutes of the secFlorida State (9-3, 3-0) 0 10 2 ond half. The two teams would then play 13:56, Duke-McCluskey McCluskey GOALS: State30:13. Florida the length of almost another entire half Tollefson (Dyche) 53:24, Bybee (Schofield) 59:03, Schofield 101:59 before Seminole Cindy Schofield ended SAVES: Duke 7 (Helgadotfir), Florida State 5 (Mims). the marathon game in the 102nd Stadium: SeminoleSoccer Complex

DAVE BRADLEY/THE CHRONICLE

CASEY McCLUSKEY continues to lead Duke in goals after scoring twice against FSU Sunday.


Sportswrai

The Chronicle

MONDAY, OCTOBER 0, 2001 �PAGE 5

Scarlet Knights, Red Storm take down men’s soccer By TED MANN The Chronicle

2 The Duke men’s soccer team traveled to Duke 1 New Jersey Friday looking to prove it belongs amongst college soccer’s elite teams. Instead, the Blue Devils (4-5) left with two heartbreaking losses, a three-game losing streak and proof that the young team needs just a little more experience before it is truly a player on the

St John’s

national scene. The Philips/Adidas Soccer Classic, held at Rutgers University, pitted the unranked Blue Devils against the host team Friday night. Duke scored two goals in the final 16 minutes of regulation to force overtime, but ultimately fell 3-2 in double overtime to the ninthranked Scarlet Knights. This devastating loss was followed Sunday afternoon by yet another overtime loss, this time 2-1 to third-ranked and unbeaten St. John’s, leaving the Blue Devils extremely disappointed but cognizant of the fact that they can play with the best teams in the country. “It was a heartbreaking weekend for us,” Duke coach John Rennie said. “We played well, we worked hard.... [We] certainly don’t feel bad about anything but the final score.” In the first game, Rutgers jumped on

top in the first half with a goal in the 25th minute by senior Dustin Sheppard, offfeeds from Dennis Ludwig and Sherif El Bialy. The Scarlet Knights scored again soon afterwards, as Ludwig, Rutgers’ leading scorer, netted a goal of his own in the 29th minute off a pass from Josh Gros. This score held up until late in the game, when Duke finally found the back of the net in the 75th minute. Sophomore forward Jordan Gila headed in a cross from Donald Mclntosh for his third goal of the season. Duke complet-

Ed the comeback in the 83rd minute, when senior Demetrio Sanchez took a long pass from Trevor Perea and beat Rutgers goalie Ricky Ginter one-on-one, tying the match at two. Duke took this momentum into overtime, but could not capitalize, as both teams failed to score in the first overtime period. In the second overtime, however, Rutgers finally broke through, as Dennis Ludwig scored the game-winner to give him two goals on the night and his team its fifth win in a row. Unfortunately, after a long, hardfought game, the deciding goal was scored on a freak play. Ludwig beat one Duke defender but had the ball cleared by another defender. However, the ball hit a different Duke player and bounced right back to Ludwig, who converted the easy opportunity. “It was unfortunate that we did a good job defensively, we cleared the ball,” lamented Rennie. “Of all things, [the ball] bounced right back to him instead of any other place it could have gone..,.That’s kind of the way things are going for us now.” Duke was left with only a day to regroup before playing St. John’s. In that game, the second and final of the tournament, Demetrio Sanchez scored his second goal of the tournament to stake the Blue Devils to the early lead, slipping a shot past St. John’s goalie Guy Hertz after being given a one-touch pass from Gila. It was only the fourth goal allowed in eight games this year by

the Red Storm. St. John’s tied the score in the 75th minute, as Chris Corcoran took a corner kick from Matt Groenwald and chipped it over goalie Scott Maslin’s head. Despite several scoring chances by both teams, the game remained tied at one apiece until the end of regulation. In overtime, St. John’s began to apply

ROBERT TAI/THE CHRONICLE

DANNY WYMER and the Blue Devils dropped two pressure. Two corner kicks were unsuccessful for the Red Storm, but Duke could not clear the ball. After a scramble in front of the goal, Chris Bennice gained possession at the top of the penalty area and passed back to Angel Rodriguez, who fired in the game-winner from 15 yards out. Duke was left with even more disappointment and a bad case of deja vu, knowing once again how tantalizingly close it was to upsetting one of the top teams in the country. “In the second half, we played really well, and in my mind we deserved to get another goal or two,” Rennie said. “We had some scoring opportunities that we just didn’t convert ”

The Blue Devils return to Durham disheartened, but eager to gain the

| Cingular

weekend games in overtime, experience needed to take the final step and become one of the nation’s elite soccer teams, one that can finish off top-ranked teams like St. John’s and Rutgers. “We’re very very close to being a really good team,” Rennie said. “We feel pretty good about the progress we’re making. We’re a young team, we’re getting better, and... we just need to finish a game off against one of the

top teams St. John’s 2, Duke 1 ”

Duke (3-4) St. John’s (7-0-1)

GOALS: Duke-Sanchez (Cila), St. John’s-Corcoran 74:28, Rodriguez (Bennice) 118:04. SAVES: Duke 5 (Maslin), Clemson 2 (Hertz). Stadium: Yurcak Field

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PAGE 6 �MONDAY, OCTOBER 8,2001

Blue Devils stung by Yellow Jackets By NICK CHRISTIE The Chronicle

GT

M Duke dropped its 17th straight game Satur-

Duke 10 day, losing 37-10 to No. 17 Georgia Tech. A scoring surge late in the second quarter enabled the Blue Devils (0-5, 0-3 in the ACC) to be within a touchdown at halftime, but Georgia Tech (4-1, 1-1) scored on its first four second-half possessions, dashing Duke’s hopes for an upset. “We’ve got to be able to put two halves together,” Duke coach Carl Franks said. “The way we played in the first half was commendable. We played hard, we executed some things—now there were some mistakes in the first half, but when you’re sitting there at 17-10 with the No. 17 team in the country, that’s pretty good.” Although the game began in a steady downpour, the rain did not initially appear to bother Georgia Tech’s high-octane offense, as the Yellow Jackets jumped out to a 17-0 lead midway through the second quarter. Heralded quarterback George Godsey looked sharp, completing 14 of his first 22 passes for 175 yards and a touchdown. Suddenly the rain appeared to dramatically affect Godsey’s performance, as his next two passes were both intercepted, leading to 10 Duke points. Ryan Fowler picked off the first, jumping into Godsey’s passing lane. “I was dropping back into coverage, reading the quarterback’s eyes, when his intentions told me to break,” Fowler said. “When I did I was in the right place.” Seizing momentum, the Blue Devils promptly marched down the field 49 yards for a touchdown. The drive featured seven straight rushing plays, and ended in a Chris Douglas’ touchdown dive from the one. Returning to the field, Godsey promptly threw his poorest pass of the game. Duke’s Ronnie Hamilton intercepted the badly underthrown ball, and an ensuing field goal cut the Blue Devils’ deficit to seven points. At halftime, the Blue Devils were a confident team. Having surprised Georgia Tech with a 10-point rally to close the first half, Duke hoped to build on their first-half success. “We were really proud at halftime,” Douglas said. “We knew we could play with these guys, we knew that if we accomplished what we did in the first half we could come out with a win.” Unfortunately, Georgia Tech used the intermission to regroup, and upon returning to the field simply decimated the Blue Devils. In the decisive third quarter, Georgia Tech held the ball for 11 minutes, scored 17 points, and posted 157 yards of total offense. In contrast, Duke ran only seven offensive plays. The Yellow Jackets sacked quarterback D. Bryant three times, and held the Blue Devils to a cumulative total of negative 12 yards. “We came out in the second half flat,” Douglas said. “We were missing assignments, not picking up blitzes, and it showed. It put us behind and the momentum in their favor.” Franks emphasized the importance of a key missed opportunity on Georgia Tech’s opening drive in the second half, in which Blue Devils safety Josh Krieder barely missed snagging Duke’s third interception. “The first drive in the second half is

always critical,” Franks said. “We had the perfect defense called, our safety was in position, the ball was right in his hands, and [he] couldn’t catch it. “That would have been a big turning point in the game. I don’t know how it would have eventually worked out from there, but that would have certainly given us an emotional lift.” However, Georgia Tech kicked a field goal, and then promptly sacked Bryant twice on the next Blue Devil series to force a punt. The ensuing lopsidedness of possession affected the Blue Devils both physically and emotionally. “Ideally, we would say as a team that it wouldn’t affect us,” Fowler said. “I guess maybe we get a little tired, maybe morale goes down. I would like to say that it didn’t change anything, but I think it did.” At the start of the fourth quarter, Duke once again found itself facing an insurmountable deficit, just as it had in previous losses to Florida State, Northwestern, and Virginia. For an exhausted defense—one that not only held the fearsome offense of the Yellow Jackets temporarily in check, but also presented Duke’s offense with terrific field position on their only two scoring drives—continuing to play hard was undoubtedly an arduous task. “In a game where you’re pretty much out of it, and you can’t feasibly win, you play for pride,” Fowler said. “We really stress that while we’re out there. We all come from winning programs [in high schooll, so to give up is just not our way of doing things.” Such steadfast resolve will be essential in Duke’s effort to end the NCAA’s longest active losing streak.

PHOTOS BY YOAV LURIE, DREW KLEIN AND JENNY MAO/THE CHRONICLE

RYAN FOWLER (No. 27) had a busy game tackling Georgia Tech offensive players, totaling 11 tackles on the day, seven of which were unassisted. Meanwhile, CHRIS DOUGLAS (No. 4) continued to anchor Duke’s offensive attack, running for 94 yards and one touchdown. BEN ERDELJAC (bottom right)lso had a solid day catching the ball, making four receptions for 63 yards.


Sportswra

The Chronicle

MONDAY, OCTOBER B, 2001 �PAGE 7

7-10 in dieary Homecoming affair As Georgia Tech’s opening kick Saturday sailed deep into the endzone for a Blue Devil touchback, a look at the crowd revealed a lot of yellow and very little blue. It was the Homecoming game—a crowd-drawing event at most schools—and no one had come. Overcast skies and scattered showers apparently scared off many, especially in the student area, which was pitifully bare compared to the Yellow Jacket cheering section. The first Duke drive resembled many thus far this season. Several promising gains and a first down moved the offense towards midfield. But the Blue Devils were quickly stopped in their tracks, highlighted by a thirddown sack, and the punting unit took the field for their first of nine kicks. While penalties, poor blitz pickups and pressure from a swarming Georgia Tech defense kept the Blue Devils from advancing the ball much throughout the first quarter, the play of the Duke defense kept the game from getting out of hand.

*

Shawn Nicholls Game Commentary i

Granted, it did surrender seven points in the first quarter, as well as a touchdown and a field goal on Georgia Tech’s first two possessions in the second, but putting some points on the board was something that coach Carl Franks said afterwards was to be expected from an offense ranked so high in several ACC categories.

However, the Blue Devil defense

continually came up with big plays that just seemed to have the capability of igniting their stagnate offense. Moments of perfect execution, such as cornerback Ronnie Hamilton knocking the ball to the ground on an intended fourth down pass, defensive back Alex Green’s crushing tackle near the goal line that saved a touchdown, and later, linebacker Jamyon Small’s fumble recovery deep in Blue Devil territory, didn’t do much to create offensive momentum. But then linebacker Ryan Fowler and Hamilton came up with interceptions on two consecutive Georgia Tech drives, and quarterback D. Bryant led the Blue Devils towards the endzone. As rain continued to pelt down on

Wallace Wade Stadium, Duke closed the score from 17-0 to 17-10 in just

i

over a minute. As the first half came to a close, the Yellow Jacket offense seemed rattled by its three turnovers, and chose to run out the clock and then sprint off the field, possibly contemplating a blowout that could have been. Perhaps instilled by the confidence of keeping its team in the game, the Blue Devil defense exited to the locker room pumping fists, trying to extract

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passion and excitement from the sparse crowd. During the marching band’s performance, the rain started to subside and the clouds appeared to break, emitting a few rays of sunlight. It could have been symbolic. The home team was within striking distance of a big-time upset. Perhaps the nagging losing streak would end. And then they played the second half. After safety Josh Kreider very nearly intercepted a pass with plenty of running room ahead of him on

Georgia Tech’s first drive of the new half, hopes for a win started to dwindle. The Yellow Jackets scored on that drive, and put up points on every one of their second-half drives except for the last one, when backup quarterback Andy Hall was stuffed at the

goal line. While that near-interception could have been the play that crushed the confidence of a struggling GeorgiaTech offense, which was already susceptible coming off their heartbreaking overtime loss the week before, it instead seemed to reinvigorate them. As the game rolled on, the Blue Devil defense look more and more fatigued, partly due to the revival of the Yellow Jacket attack. “[Georgia Tech] did a great job of making adjustments,” Hamilton said. Even more than that, the defense was left on the field most of the half because of a sputtering offense, which failed to register a first down in the third quarter, and only had three in the fourth. Two of them came with less than a minute to play in the game. “On offense we couldn’t protect the quarterback and couldn’t run the ball a lick,” Franks said. Overall, the Blue Devil team that took the field after halftime did little that resembled their encouraging performance earlier in the game. “We learned we could play one half of football,” Franks said. “We need to learn to play two. We need to play smarter and coach a little smarter.” While the Blue Devils can take many things from this game and possibly build on them for upcoming contests, in the end, the weight of the loss and the losing streak outweighs the positives of the first half. The players, coaches and the few faithful fans that weathered the rain and the cold Saturday must live another week with an empty win column. Georgia Tech 37, Duke 10 FINAL Georgia Tech (4-1,1-1)

Duke (0-5,0-3)

1 7 0

2 10 10

3 17 0

4

3 0

F 37 10

First Quarter 4:01 (GT), Watkins 15-yard pass from Godsey (Manget).Drive: 10 plays, 78 yards, 1:58. Second Quarter 13:32 (GT), Burns 17-yardrun (Manget). Drive: 7 plays, 55 yards, 2:57. 9:46 (GT), Manget 43-yard FG. Drive: 8 plays. 29 yards, 2:35. 1:35 (DU), Douglas 1-yard run (Garber). Drive: 7 plays, 49 yards, 2:07. 0:31 (DU), Garber 30-yard FG. Drive; 5 plays, 41 yards, 0:58. Third Quarter 9:35 (GT), Manget 43-yard FG, 15 plays, 65 yards, 5:25, 4:42, (GT) Watkins 15-yardTD pass from Godsey (Manget). 7 plays, 39 yards, 2:53. 0:14 (DU), Bums 1-yard run (Mangel). 8 plays, 53 yards, 2:51. Fourth Quarter 8:44 (GT), Mangel 26-yard FG. 10 plays, 46 yards, 4:16.

First downs Rushes-yards (net) Passing yards (net) Passes (atl-comp-int) Total Offense (plays-yards) fumble returns-yards Punt returns-yards Kickoff returns-yards Interception returns-yards Punts (number-average)

FumbSes-lost

Ga. TechYellow Jackets 27 48-210 295 40-24-2 88-505

8-81 2-40 0-0 1-46-0

Duke Blue Devils 37-102

29-11-0 66-303

9-36.8

Penalties-yards

Possession-time Sacks by (number-yards) RUSHING: Georgia Tech-Burns 24 att, 122 yards; Ford 6 att, 27 yards Godsey 6 att, 20 yards; Hall 2 att, 20 yards; Gregory 9 att, 15 yards, Smith 1 alt, 6 yards. Duke-Douglas 23 att, 94 yards; Moore 2 att, 12 yards: Landrum 1 att, 5 yards; Dargan 1 att, 2 yards; Wade 1 att, 0 yards; Sharpe 1 att, -1 yards; Bryant 8 att, -10 yards. PASSING; Georgia Tech-Godsey 24-40, 295 yards, 2 INI. Duke-Bryant 11-29, 201 yards, OINT. RECEIVING: Georgia Tech-Smith 6 rec, 86 yards; Campbell 6 rec, 58 yards; Burns 6 rec, 52 yards; Watkins 4 rec, 60 yards; Glover 2 rec, 39 yards. Duke-Erdeljac 4 rec, 63 yards; Douglas 4 rec, 24 yards; Hartofilis 3 rec, 23 yards; Hart 2 rec, 65 yards; Sharpe 2 rec, 29 yards; Brzezinski 1 rec, 20 yards; Dargan 1 rec, 18 yards; Love 1 rec, 6 yards. INTERCEPTIONS: Georgia Tech-None. Duke-Hamilton 1 (no return); Fowler 1 (no return). Stadium: Wallace Wade Stadium Attendance—lo,43l Officials; Joseph Rider (referee), Talbert Pearce (umpire), Perry Hudspeth (linesman), Tom Symonette (line judge), Barry Hendon (back judge), James Coman (field judge), Van Colmont (side judge), Taplie Coile (scorer) Total elapsed time—2:s3 Temperature: 65 degrees/scattered showers Wind: Calm


Sportswrai

8 �MONDAY, OCTOBER 8, 2001

The Chronicle

Volleyball splits weekend games against ACC foes By GABE GITHENS The Chronicle

After suffering its only loss of the season last weekend, the Duke volleyball team (12-2,4-2) lost again to Maryland (7-6, 3-2 in the ACC) on Friday. The Blue Devils then traveled and rallied to Charlottesville, Va. to beat the

to its advantage again in the fourth game jumping ahead and keeping a lead until the end. Outside hitter Maria DiLivio took control with six kills in the third game, as her Terrapins won 30-27. Duke coach Jolene Nagel knew her team should have won, but also realized that its opponent was worthy of the win. “Maryland played well,” Nagel said. “You’ve got to give it your best shot every match and I didn’t feel like we did

Virginia Cavaliers (5-8, 1-5) easily in three games. Sophomore Krista Dill, who had 15 kills in the two matches this weekend, that tonight.” was disappointed in her team’s perforThe Blue Devils hit the road Saturday and entered Virginia’s campus with mance Friday night. “I think we did a good job preparing a mission. Dili knew her team was betfor Maryland, but we didn’t use that ter than they played Friday, and needed preparation at all during the game,” to show the Cavaliers. “After the loss to Maryland, that was Dill said. In the first game against the Terrapdisappointing,” Dill said. “We knew we ins, the Blue Devils looked impressive expected to beat this team. We had while Ashley Harris hit five kills en higher goals than a loss to Maryland.” route to a 30-19 lead. During the break In impressive fashion, Duke won the between games, Duke clearly lost its in- first game against Virginia 30-19, a simtensity. Setter Arielle Linderman could ilar beginning to a match as Friday not quite pinpoint the problem, but once night. This time the Blue Devils kept their focus and used Harris and Jill again thought lack of mental preparation hurt her team. Sonne to anchor the offense. “We were sulking around the court,” As a team, Duke had 12 blocks SatLinderman said. “It was completely urday, stuffing most of Virginia’s hit atmental. After we lost to UNC we felt like tempts and tipping many of them back we couldn’t lose again.” to its defense, something that did not The Blue Devils lost the second happen in its match with Maryland. game 25-30 and let up on defense, Linderman said her team moved on namely in the blocking department. quickly after the loss Friday and reAfter the Terrapins built an early lead, grouped for the win. “We definitely forgot about the MaryMaryland’s middle hitter, Willette Dority, led her team with seven kills in the land game right away,” Linderman said. second game. “We blocked everything and our defense With the match knotted at one game was a lot better against Virginia.” The second and third games were apiece, Duke once again made too many unforced errors that cost them in the dominated by Duke’s stellar defense long run. This time, Maryland’s key ofand clutch hitting. In the 30-18 win in fensive threat was Carey Brennan, who game two, the Blue Devils doubled Virdominated play in the 30-24 win, and ginia’s kill total by a margin of 14 to also contributed six kills and two blocks. seven. Aside from hitting, the Blue Dev“In the first game we played really ils also had nine more digs than their well, we didn’t make many errors,” Dill opponents after disposing of the Cavasaid. “I don’t know if we were playing liers 30-24 in the final game. not to lose or let up mentally. We shut “We played better defensively them down in the first game and after tonight,” Nagel said. “We controlled the they won the second game, they thought ball better when we had it on our side. It they could play with us.” was definitely a team effort. A lot of peoMaryland used Duke’s lack of defense ple contributed.”

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YOAV LURIE/THE CHRONICLE

ASHLEY HARRIS and the Blue Devils split their weekend matches


Sportswrai

The Chronicle

MONDAY, OCTOBER 8. 2001

9

Women’s golf sweeps Tar Heel tourney for fifth straight year By GREG VEIS The Chronicle

On the leaderboard at the Franklin Street Trust Tar Heel Invitational, it never appeared as if Duke, who has now won this event five years running, needed any coming back to do. From a first day, five-over 293 that jumped them out to a quick sevenstroke lead, the Blue Devils cruised their way to an easy 17-stroke victory over UNC, their closest competitor in the 14-team field. However, away from the red and black numbers for all to see, several smaller problems lurked beneath the surface that Duke worked through successfully this weekend. Most impressively, junior Kristina Engstrom shot three-over for the weekend to nab the individual prize, her first tournament victory since her freshman campaign. “As excited as I am about the team win, I am just as excited about Kristina’s,” coach Dan Brooks said. “This is a significant win for her because she got over her hurdle of negative thoughts by confronting them. Negative thoughts will always happen, so you can let them become a big animal or you can eliminate them, and Kristina did that.” Down by two strokes heading into Sunday’s final round, Engstrom

picked up three birdies while only dropping one stroke to par en route to a three-stroke victory over Vanderbilt’s Nicki Cutler. “I didn’t really think about my score at all,” Engstrom said. “I just kept thinking about the mental part of it. That was my only goal of the tournament—to keep strong mentally.”

All-American Virada Nirapathpong-

porn also had to exorcise some demons to leave Finley Golf Course with a mere tie for 14th.

On Friday, Nirapathpongporn shot

a 39 on the front nine—matching the worst nine-hole score of any of her teammates that day—that on the outward nine while also marking a 42 on the back half. As expected, though, she crawled her way back into contention with two 745, one of which Saturday, amounted to Duke’s best score in the damp and

swirling conditions. Despite their leader’s slow start and relatively low final position, the other members of the Blue Devils shot low enough to eliminate any chances of drama concerning the final team result. Obviously, Engstrom did more than her share, but junior Leigh Anne Hardin and freshman Niloufar Anzam-Zanganeh also pieced together top-10 finishes that advanced the team’s chances for victory. Hardin finished sixth overall with a 10-over 226, and Anzam-Zanganeh ended one stroke and three places back of her with a 227, including an even-par Friday of 72. While 17-stroke victories cannot

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LEIGH ANNE HARDIN finished tied for sixth place with a score of 226 over three rounds

truly be classified as dissapointing, 07 Brooks still does envision improved i shot-making and lower scores in his team S future. J

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AA7p pan Hn hpftpr AA7p pen dTinot in vve tan_UO uetter. vve can snoot in the 280s, Brooks said. What we need to do is not have the start like we did. We need to eliminate that which we need to ficfbt b3.ck. from ’ 55 6 i£

Franklin Trust Tar Heel Invitational Oct 5-7 2001

Finley Golf Course—Chapel Hill, N.C. Team Standings 1. Duke (293-305-296=894), 2. North Carolina (300-306-305=911), 3. Vanderbilt(301 -307-306=914). 4. Wake Forest (309-308-304=921), 4. Georgia (310-302-310=922), 6. Furman (300-313-316=929), 7. Tulane (321-316-305) 8. South Florida (315-312-316=943), 9, Kentucky (309312-324=945), 10. uNc-wiimington (311-331-307=949) T

Duke lndividuals

1. Engstrom (73-76-70=219), te. Hardin (73-78-75=226), tg.AazemZanganah (72-77-78=227), tl4. Nirapathpongporn (81-74-74=229), t27. Garcia-Estrada (75-82-77=234)

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Are you ready to Getaway from the hustle of campus for a night? Then sign up for Getaway, a retreat for first-year students. Have a chance to relax, reflect, and rejuvenate in a beautiful setting with your peers. Information and registration can be picked up at the Marketplace during dinner October 8-11 and 17 & 18.

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� Junior Kristina Engstrom took home individual medalist honors after posting a score of three-over par for the weekend.

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Spoitswi

NFL Update PHILADELPHIA Jake Plummer threw a touchdown 35-yard Jenkins with nine seconds left Sunday, lifting the Arizona Cardinals to a 21-20 victory over the

21 20 Eagles pass to MarTay Cards

Philadelphia Eagles. Plummer led the Cardinals 74 yards in 1:04 for his fifth fourth-quarter comeback victory over Philadelphia (22) and 13th in his career. He completed passes of 16 and 28 yards to Jenkins before connecting on fourth-and-10 for the game-winner. Donovan McNabb threw two touchdowns passes to Todd Pinkston, and Correll Buckhalter ran for 134 yards for the Eagles. Plummer was 18-of-32 for 238 yards, two touchdowns and one interception. Jenkins had 119 yards receiving, and Michael Pittman added 83 yards rushing. The Cardinals (1-2) had lost nine straight, dating back to last season. Ravens 26, Titans 7 BALTIMORE Baltimore kept Tennessee winless, harassing Steve McNair and stuffing Eddie George for a

surprisingly easy victory. The Super Bowl champion Ravens (3-1) limited Tennessee to five first downs in taking a 17-0 halftime lead. Terry Allen ran for 108 yards and a touchdown and Jason Brookins had 68 yards on 15 attempts. The Titans (0-3) already have as many losses as they did last season, when they went 13-3 to win the divi-

Saints 28, Vikings 15 Ricky Williams ORLEANS NEW ran for 136 yards and a touchdown, and John Carney kicked five field goals as New Orleans beat Minnesota. Williams also had five receptions for 42 yards. He averaged 4.5 yards a carry, helping the Saints (2-1) chew up 32 minutes and 34 seconds. Minnesota (1-3) converted only one of eight third downs in the game, and gained just 31 yards rushing. Dante Culpepper completed 23-of-34 passes for 332 yards and two touchdowns, but was sacked six times and threw one interception. Dolphins 30, Patriots 10 Lamar Smith rushed for MIAMI 144 yards, Jay Fiedler scrambled for 37 yards and Miami’s defense held New England scoreless in the final 36 minutes of an easy victory. The Patriots (1-3) mustered only 150 yards and mounted just one scoring drive. Smith carried 29 times, scored once and topped 100 yards for the first time this season. He also caught three passes for 23 yards, helping the Dolphins (3-1) control the ball for more than 36 minutes.

Fiedler ran for a first down four times in seven carries. He completed 11-of-21 passes for only 87 yards, but that included a 14-yard touchdown to infrequent target Jed Weaver.

Bears 31, Falcons 3 ATLANTA Marty Booker caught sion title and earn home field advana 63-yard touchdown pass and threw tage throughout the AFC playoffs. for another score as Chicago routed AtMcNair went 17-for-32 for 154 yards lanta, which played without injured

and an interception. George was limited to 26 yards on 13 carries before missing the entire fourth quarter with a sprained ankle.

Browns 20, Chargers 16 CLEVELAND Tim Couch threw a 19-yard TD pass to Kevin Johnson with 1:15 left as Cleveland defeated San Diego, giving the Browns its first threegame winning streak since returning to the league in 1999. In just four w eeks under first-year coach Butch Davis, the Browns (3-1) matched their entire win total from

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last season. Doug Flutie finished 17-of-37 for 149 yards, and rookie LaDainian Tomlinson rushed for 102 yards, including a 54yarder. on 19 carries and one TD. Phil Dawson kicked two field goals for the Browns, who finished 3-13 a year ago after starting the season 2-1.

Jamal Anderson. Brian Urlacher returned a fumble 90 yards for a touchdown to help Chicago (2-1) get off to its best start since 1995, the team’s last winning season. Atlanta (2-2) also had to play the second half without Chris Chandler, who was knocked out with a concussion. Chandler equaled a career high by throwing three interceptions in the first half before giving way to Michael Vick. Vick was sacked six times, including two in a row after the Falcons had another first-and-goal.

PAUL SAKUMA/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

MUHSIN MUHAMMED breaks away from 49er cornerback Ahmed Plummer in the first quarter. and Ryan Longwell’s 35-yard field goal before the Buccaneers (2-1) drove 95 yards to go ahead with 6:45 to go. Mike Alstott, filling in for injured running back Warrick Dunn, ran 39 yards for the TD to cap the longest drive in Tampa Bay history.

Seahawks 24, Jaguars 15 Trent Dilfer, replacing SEATTLE the injured Matt Hasselbeck, made his first start at quarterback since the Super Bowl and led Seattle past Jacksonville. Dilfer, who won his last 11 starts in Heinz Field. Baltimore last season on the way to a Giants 23, Redskins 9 Bettis needed 54 yards to reach Super Bowl victory, teamed with backup EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J. the milestone. He got them on his tight end Itula Mili for a one-yard Damon Washington, limited to one first five carries, gaining 103 yards touchdown pass in the first quarter. A carry in two NFL seasons, stepped in by halftime. It was his eighth 100- 41-yarder to Mili to set up Seattle’s for injured Ron Dayne and ran for 90 yard game against Cincinnati (2-2) third touchdown in the second quarter. yards on 25 carries to help New York since 1996. Second-year running back Shaun beat winless Washington, Kordell Stewart scored the Steelers’ Alexander rushed 31 times for 176 Washington, who spent last season only touchdown on an eight-yard run yards and two touchdowns in his secon special teams and gained one yard with 5:27 left in the second quarter, setond-career start. on his lone carry this season, carried ting up the score with runs of 11 and three times for 10 yards in the first nine yards as the Steelers (2-1) outJets 42, Bills 36 half. Then, with Dayne sidelined by a rushed the Bengals 274-65. ORCHARD PARK, N.Y. Curtis Marsprained neck, he drove the Giants (3Kris Brown kicked field goals of 48, tin scored two touchdowns and rushed for 1) to the game’s only offensive touch135 yards for New York, which converted 42 and 26 yards for the Steelers. down—Kerry Collins’ 1-yard touchfour Buffalo turnovers into scores. down pass to tight end Dave Backup quarterback Alex Van Pelt, Buccaneers 14, Packers 10 Campbell—early in the fourth quarter. who took over after starter Rob JohnTAMPA, Fla. Tampa Bay interThe Redskins’ (0-4) offense, ranked cepted three of Brett Favre’s passes, son was elbowed in the back of the last in the league, had to settle for and Shelton Quarles returned one of head by linebacker Mo Lewis in the three field goals by Brett Conway. New them 98 yards for a touchdown against first quarter, threw for three touchYork’s Morten Andersen also made Green Bay. downs and almost brought the Bills (0three field goals. The Packers (3-1) led 10-7 after Favre’s 4) back from a 28-9 deficit. 67-yard touchdown pass to Bill Schroeder After Buffalo closed to 28-22 early in Steelers 16, Bengals 7 PITTSBURGH Jerome Bettis rushed for 153 yards and became the 14th player in NFL history to rush for at least 10,000 yards as Pittsburgh won the first regular-season game at

the third quarter, the Jets (2-2) scored twice—Anthony Becht’s two-yard touchdown reception and Lewis’ 15-yard fumble return—in a span of 64 seconds. Raiders 28, Cowboys 21 Jerry Rice OAKLAND, Calif. caught his third touchdown pass in two games, Tyrone Wheatley ran for two scores and Zack Crockett ran for a third as Oakland handed Dallas its fourth straight loss. Rich Gannon finished 21-of-28 for 209 yards for the Raiders (3-1).

Cowboys quarterback Quincy Carter left in the first quarter with a strained left hamstring. Carter, who missed the last two games with an injury to his right thumb, was replaced by Anthony Wright, who was 14-of-22 for 126 yards.

49ers 24, Panthers 14 SAN FRANCISCO Terrell Owens caught two touchdown passes from Jeff Garcia as San Francisco beat former coach George Seifert for the first time in five tries. Seifert, who led the 49ers to two Super Bowl victories in eight seasons as

coach, had never lost to San Francisco since taking over at Carolina (1-3). Owens had eight catches for 118 yards, while Garcia was 17-of-31 for 212 yards and also rushed for a score. Rookie Chris Weinke was 29-of-47 for 275 yards and a TD, with three interceptions for the Panthers.


The Chronicle

8, 2001 �PAGE II

Knight, Coach K show mutual admiration despite rumors � KRZYZEWSKI from page 1

life and that’s been you,” Krzyzewski said to Knight as he stepped on stage to give his acceptance remarks. “Most of the things that I have done, I’ve learned from you, and there’s no really greater honor for me than having you be the person who presented me tonight Despite ongoing rumors of a fallout between mentor and protege over the past few years, Knight had nothing but praise for Krzyzewski as he introduced the Duke coach to the audience. In particular, Knight hailed Krzyzewski for his coaching abilities, mental toughness and emphasis on teamwork, all assets the Texas Tech coach believes have been instrumental in Krzyzewski’s enormous success over the last quarter-century. “The example that he gives all of us of teamwork, the example that he gives us all of playing the game—not to complain, not to worry about the officiating, not giving up passes—the example that Mike has set in his leadership, particularly during these last 10 years—l don’t think anybody has ever put all ofthese ingredients together,” Knight said ofKrzyzewski. “That, more than anything, I think, is Mike’s legacy, and that is why he deserves being honored here tonight.” Touched by the praise lavished upon him by Knight, Chaney and others, Krzyzewski expressed how humbled he was to have his name put alongside basketball’s greatest figures. In particular, he reiterated a theme that he first introduced in a press conference Thursday in Durham, in which he stated how happy his late father would have been to see the Krzyzewski surname dignified in such high regard. ”

Wilson’s Auto

“I didn’t know my dad very well; all he did was work trance and its national television audience on NBC and provide for us. But... I wish he was here,” The festivities featured many wisecracks by Bill Krzyzewski said. “He wouldn’t have been so surprised, Cosby, Rashad, the presenters, as well as the inductees. because fathers are proud oftheir sons... but he would At one moment, former Georgetown coach John have been amazed that somebody with the name Thompson mentioned that despite the possible danger Krzyzewski would make it. When I grew up in Chicaof assembling in a large crowd because ofthe Sept. 11 go, my dad was an elevator operator and my mom used terrorist attacks, he felt very safe attending the ento clean offices in downtown Chicago, and they never shrinement ceremonies because ofthose in attendance. went by the name Krzyzewski because of prejudice. Al“You’ve got Bobby Knight and John Chaney—now though we have prejudice today, at that time, there what terrorist is going to come in here and mess with was a white world and a black world; we didn’t call it them?” Thompson asked. “This has got to be the safest prejudice because we lived in two different worlds. But place in America.” there was a lot of prejudice in the white world and my Later, Knight, known for his distaste of sports jourdad always went by the name of ‘Kross’ just so he nalists, noted that a reporter had asked Krzyzewski could get jobs so we could eat... I’m glad my dad is in what he would have done had he not been a coach. the Hall ofFame with me.” “Mike said, ‘Well, I might have been a writer and Hosted by NBC basketball commentator Ahmad written a sports column.’ And I told him that that Rashad, the enshrinement ceremony took on an Acadwould be a hell of a waste of intellect because damn emy Awards-style atmosphere with its red-carpet ennear anybody could do that,” Knight joked.

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The Chronicle

MONDAY, OCTOBER 8, 2001 � PAGE

9

City Council candidates remain confident about chances � CITY COUNCIL from page 3 Tuesday’s primary. “Frankly, I’ve said to many people that if I can’t... make it into the final six, then I’ve got no business running for the election anyway,” Cheek said. Williams suggested that the voters might want new blood on the council. “The confidence that [the incumbents] have is real high right now,” he said. “I think it’s overconfidence.” Matherly was also confident about his ability to win, though he admitted that the conventional wisdom was that the incumbents would have a relatively easy primary. “What I’ve heard in the papers is that with the five incumbents and Joe Williams and me in the race..., Joe is the one for me to beat,” he said. “And I think I can do that.” Ward 1 The most competitive of the council races Tuesday is the Ward 1 race, where four candidates—incumbent Jacqueline Wagstaff and challengers White, Cora Cole-McFadden and Ray Übinger—are running. But only two of those names can be on the ballot come November. Most political insiders see Cole-McFadden as the jgSßjjM ,gv'

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favorite in the race, with Wagstaff as the next most likely to advance. “Certainly Cora will get through because she has the backing of all the PACs,” said Michael Peterson, a Ward 2 candidate. Neither Cole-McFadden nor Wagstaff could be reached for comment. But White said he thought he would win the primary. “The city of Durham and the citizens of Durham may think it’s time for a change,” he said. Übinger, a Medical Center employee, also said he was confident, but added that he was prepared to mount a write-in campaign in the general election if necessary. “I intend to keep campaigning whether I make it to the general ballot or not,” the Libertarian Party member said. “It ain’t over till it’s over.” Wards 2 and 3 The two remaining wards will not even be listed

on the primary ballot, since there are only two candidates in each race—Peterson and Mayor Pro Tem Howard Clement in Ward 2, incumbent Erick Larson and challenger John Best in Ward 3. Peterson said the absence of a primary has made for a disappointingly slow campaign so far. “I think Fm the only person generating any kind of thought because Fm the only one dealing with issues,” he said. “I am really eager to start the election after the primary so that we can start focusing on the issues.” Clement said he has already started his campaign. “I campaign all the time,” he said. Best said the absence of a primary in his race has given candidates more time to raise money and generate support before facing the possibility of elimination. “But also the disadvantage, I guess, is that a primary kind of gives you a good read on what the voters are thinking,” he added.

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2BR, IBA basement apt. in 2-story home near E. Campus, museum, pool, greenway. Prefer professional, grad or tried student. $6BO/mo ($760 for 2 people) includes utils. $7OO dep. 1-yr lease. No smoke, no pets. Refs and proof of income required. 865577-3914, leave msg. For rent, 2 units walk to East. Private, hardwood floors, and economical. 1013 Gloria upstairs, $450. Call Trudy, agent, 919-403-7773.

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MONDAY, OCTOBER 8,2001 � PAGE 11

Ground troops could follow aerial campaign STRIKES from page 1 laws and killers of innocents” would “take that lonely path at their own peril.” The skies over Kabul lit up with flashes, and thunderous explosions rumbled through the night, witnesses

said. The Taliban fired anti-aircraft guns into the dark sky, and their tracers could be seen in the capital and around the cities of Kandahar and Jalalabad, strongholds of the radical Islamic regime. Bush’s statement was followed by one from Prime Minister Tony Blair of Britain. Both leaders emphasized that the military campaign was not “a war with Islam,” as Blair asserted, though no Muslim country took part directly in the attacks and many refused to allow offensive operations to be staged from their territory. . Bush said that “we are the friends of almost a billion” people worldwide “who practice the Islamic faith.” Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld noted that in the last decade the United States had sent its armed forces to defend oppressed Muslim populations five times—in Kuwait, northern Iraq, Somalia, Bosnia and Kosovo. Shortly after Bush spoke, bin Laden issued his own defiant statement. On what appeared to be a videotape recorded before the attacks began and beamed worldwide by CNN, he staked a claim to lead all Muslims in the fight against America and cast it as the murderer of Iraqis and Palestinians oppressed by Israel, America’s friend. Bin Laden blessed the hijackers who killed more than 5,000 people in the attacks on America and warned: “I

swear to God that America will not live in peace before peace reigns in Palestine, and before all the army ofinfidels depart the land of Mohammad. “I seek refuge in God against them and ask Him to let us see them in what

they deserve,” he said. The opening aerial campaign could go on for a week and would be followed by ground operations by Special Forces units to garner information and hunt down the leaders of the al-Qaida network, administration officials indicated. Gen. Richard Myers, the new chair of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, said the bombardment began at 12:30 p.m. Eastern time, and included 15 landbased bombers and 25 strike aircraft from aircraft carriers. Their weapons included precision-guided bombs, and American warships and British submarines fired 50 Tomahawk cruise missiles. Rumsfeld, speaking at the Pentagon, said bin Laden was not a specific target. The initial bombing, he said, was intended “to create conditions for sustained anti-terrorist” operations against his organization. Bush did not mention bin Laden in his remarks, suggesting that the White House was seeking to lower expectations ofhis capture even as Central Intelligence Agency and Special Forces teams were said to be working feverishly to locate the suspected mastermind of terrorist strikes on Americans and American interests. Even before the Sept. 11 assault, they included attacks in Somalia in 1993, on two embassies in East Africa in 1998 and on the destroyer Cole in Yemen a year ago.

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A spokesperson for Al-Jazeera television, in Qatar, on the Persian Gulf, said bin Laden’s tape had arrived at the network’s satellite uplink station in Kabul. “People bring tapes,” said Omar Bee, head of news gathering for Al-Jazeera. “They deliver them to the office or leave them at the door.” This tape, he said, “was delivered today to us.” “We, honest to God, don’t know when it was shot, where it was shot, or how it was shot,” Bee said. Bush ordered the attack 26 days after hijackers, several of them now linked by investigators to bin Laden’s network, seized four airliners, crashing two of them into the World Trade Center in New York and one into the Pentagon in Washington. The fourth crashed into a Pennsylvania field after passengers apparently tried to overpower the hijackers. Rumsfeld made clear that the United States was seeking to orchestrate the overthrow of the ruling Taliban by providing military assistance and “developing relationships with groups in Afghanistan that oppose the Taliban regime” and the “terrorists they support.” The most prominent opposition force is the Northern Alliance, but Rumsfeld also said disaffected members of the Taliban and other groups could coalesce to challenge the Taliban. The secretary said the goals of the military operation were to punish the Taliban for “harboring terrorists,” to “acquire intelligence” to help future operations against the al-Qaida network and to weaken the Taliban so severely that they will not be able to withstand an opposition assault.

Another goal of the campaign, Rumsfeld said, was to provide relief aid “to Afghans suffering truly oppressive living conditions under the Taliban regime.” To that end, the Pentagon on Sunday sent two C-17 cargo planes flying from Germany at high altitude to drop 37,500 packets of food and medical supplies to assist perhaps hundreds of thousands of refugees who might flee Afghan cities during the bombing campaign. The packets can be dropped without parachutes on special palettes that shred to cushion their fall. With no Muslim government taking part in the attack—in contrast to the case a decade ago when Arab forces helped to eject Iraq’s army from Kuwait—Bush nonetheless stated that “we are supported by the collective will of the world.” “More than 40 countries in the Middle East, Africa, Europe and across Asia have granted air transit and landing rights,” the president said. The FBI, concerned about more terrorist attacks, urged law enforcement agencies across the country to move to their highest level of alert. “All law enforcement agencies have been asked to evaluate whether additional local security measures are warranted in light ofthe military operations and the current threat level,” the FBI said. Security at public buildings and key installations was reported as tight across the United States and at American missions abroad as administration officials—and the public—braced for any attempted counterstrikes by terrorists.

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JACQUES GARELLI AUTHOR OF SEVERAL WORKS, INCLUDING INTRODUCTION AU LOGOS DU MONDE ESTHETIQUE AND RHYTHMES ET MONDES TOPIC: “PRESENT TRENDS & PERSPECTIVES IN FRENCH PHENOMENOLOGY: BEYOND THE MODERNIST/ POSTMODERNIST CONTROVERSY”

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The Chronicle

page 12 �MONDAY, OCTOBER 8,2001

The Chronia

he service cai

?s several

dars through the week as detailed below: Monday Duke Bulletin Board Community Calendar Tuesday-Friday Sports Events

Monday

Friday Arts & Entertainment To submit a notice for our Duke Bulletin Board and Community Calendars, send it to the attention of “Calendar Coordinator at the address below, fax or e-mail. Submissions for these calendars are published on a space-available basis with priority given to Duke events. Notices must be for events which are free and open to the public or for which proceeds benefit a public/not-for-profit cause. Deadlinefor the Bulletin Board is noon Thursday. ”

To submit a notice for Entertainment calendars, send

the Sports or Arts and

information to the attention of the Sports Editor or Recess Editor, respectively, at the address below: The Chronicle, Box 90858, Durham, NC 27708. Fax: (919) 684-4696. Phone: (919) 684-2663 (Notices may not be taken over the phone). E-mail: calendar@chronicle.duke.edufor community calendar and bulletin board notices only.

MONPAr

ocvooe*. s Forum; “The Terrorism Crisis and the World Economy; What Effects, What Strategies?” Participants will include Doug Breeden, dean of the Fuqua School of Business and William W. Priest Professor of Finance, other members of the Duke faculty and outside experts. Part of a series of discussions designed to promote informed thought and debate on critical issues surrounding the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks. For information, call 660-7700. 7:00 pm, Geneen Auditorium, Fuqua School of Business, West Campus. Teer House: Retiring in 2001 or 2002? How to Evaluate Your Alternatives for Achieving Financial Security in Retirement. 7:00 pm, 4019 N. Roxboro

pm. Griffith Film Theater, Bryan Center, West Campus.

The Society for Creative Anachronism (SCA) meets on Tuesdays at 7:00 pm. Study and recreate the middle ages. Sword-fighting, feasting, dancing, costuming, etc. For information, call 682-0551. Center for Documentary Studies: “Indivisible: Stories of American Community.” Presentation by Tom Rankin and Elana Hadler and reception in conjunction with the Indivisible postcard exhibit. For information, call 660-3663. 7:00 pm. 1317 W. Pettigrew St. Duke Forum on the September 11th attacks: “What is the Morality of War in Islamic and Christian Perspectives?” 7:00 pm. York Chapel, Divinity School, West Campus.

The Historic Preservation Society of Durham (HPSD) Fall Gala will bring a taste of the Biltmore Estate to Durham, literally, to help raise money for the HPSD Endangered Properties Fund. The event begins at 7:00 pm at the Carolina Theatre, on Morgan Street in downtown Durham. Tickets may be purchased at the Regulator Bookstore on Ninth Street or Morgan Imports at Peabody Place, or through the HPSD Office at 919-682-3036. The Self Knowledge Symposium presents “Thinking the Unthinkable: Zen and the Art of Individuality”, an interactive lecture by David Gold. Do you want to live a fulfilled life with few regrets? Come hear what retired lawyer Gold has to say about strategies to “beat the odds” and avoid a mid-life crisis. The lec-

ture is. being held in 226 Perkins Library (in the reference area) and begins at 7:30 pm. Guillermo Gomez-Pena: “Ethno-Techno,” illustrated lecture. 7:30 pm, John Hope Franklin Center 2nd floor conference room.

Duke Institute of the Arts: “Brownout Border Pulp Stories.” In this solo performance, Guillermo G6mez-

Pena plays a spoken word brujo-poeta to explore fear of immigration, the dark side effects of globalization, the digital divide, censorship, and interracial sexuality. The artist uses multilingualism, humor and hybrid literary genres. 8:00 pm, Griffith Theater, Bryan Center, West Campus. Tickets are $l7 general admission; call 684-4444.

Restorative Chi Gung for cancer patients, family members and caregivers. Every Thursday from 12:45-1:45 pm, at the Cornucopia House Cancer Support Center, 111 Cloister Ct., Ste 220, Overlook Building in Chapel Hill. For more information call 401-9333 or see the web site at www.comucopiahouse.org.

Duke University Department of Ophthalmology Joseph M. Bryan Research Lecture Series presents Claes of MD, Professor H. Dohlman, Ophthalmology, Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts, speaking about “Corneal Edema-An Update,” and “Beyond Corneal Graft Failure: The Case For Keratoprosthesis.” Lectures at 3:30 and 5:30 pm, reception at 5:00 pm. Homaday Conference Room, Duke Eye Center. The Duke Association of Scholars is sponsoring a panel discussion on “The Evaluation of Teaching in a Research University” at 4:00 pm on Thursday, October 11, 2001 in the Breedlove Room in Perkins Library. Panel members are Provost Peter Lange, Prof. Larry Evans (Physics), Prof. Stephen Craig (Chemistry), Bill English (student), and Prof. John Staddon (Psychological and Brain Sciences), moderator.

Center for Documentary Studies: Reception for “Recollections of Home/Recuerdos de mi Tierra,” a photography exhibit celebrating the rich cultural practices, beliefs, and values that Latino farmworkers and immigrants bring to North and South Carolina. For information, call 660-3663. 5:00 pm, 1317 W. Pettigrew St. Organized and created by Student Action with Farmworkers.

Mind. Brain and Behavior Distinguished Lecture Series: Alex Martin, neuroscientist at the National Institute of Mental Health, will explain his work on the use of functional magnetic resonance imaging in

Rd. Call 416-DUKE.

Screen Society: Boxing in International Film, TBA. For information, call 660-3030. 8:00 pm. Richard White Auditorium, East Campus.

Department of Music: Master Class, Olga Radosalvjevich, piano. For information, call 6603300. 11:00 am, Baldwin Auditorium, West Campus.

UPG (University Program in Genetics)/CHG (Center for Human Genetics) will sponsor a Bake Sale/Fundraiser for September 11th Relief Efforts. At the Bryan Center Walkway, today from 10;00am -

3:30 pm. Restorative Yoga for cancer patients, family members and caregivers. Every Wednesday from 11:00 am -12:30 pm, at the Cornucopia House Cancer Support Center, 111 Cloister Ct., Ste 220, Overlook Building in Chapel Hill. For more information call 401-9333 or see the web site at www.comucopia-

house.org.

American Red Cross; Open blood donor site. By appointment (684-4799). 11:30 am to 4:30 pm. Duke Clinic Mind/Body Skills Group for cancer patients, family members and caregivers. Every Tuesday from 12 noon -1:30 pm, at the Cornucopia House Cancer Support Center. 111 Cloister Ct., Ste 220, Overlook Building in Chapel Hill. For more information call 401-9333 or see the web site at www.comucopiahouse.org. Department of Music: Master Class, Christopher Parkening, classical guitar. For information, call 6603300. 1:00 pm, Baldwin Auditorium, East Campus.

Teer House: Fire Prevention in the Home. To register, call 416-3853 or 1-888-ASK-DUKE (275-3853). 1:00 pm, N. Roxboro Road, Durham. Music Lecture/Demonstration by Barry Bauguess on the history of the trumpet from 1500 to 1900. Mr. Bauguess will demonstrate a number of instruments

including cometts, natural trumpets, slide trumpets, valve trumpets, and comets. 3:30 pm. Bone Hall, Biddle Music Bldg., East Campus

Simmill and Lesley Curtis in Pergolesi’s Stabat Mater. 12 Noon, Duke Chapel. Free.

Duke Center for Integrative Medicine: Dr. Andy Puckett, associate dean emeritus of medical education, “Reflections on Self-Healing and Professional Health and Wellness.” For information, call 2860411. 12:15 pm, Duke Clinic Amphitheater. Center for French and Francophone Studies: “Venus Beautd (institut) (Venus Beauty Institute).” Free. For information, call 660-3030. 8:00 pm, Griffith Film Theater. Bryan Center, West Campus. (This is a change in date and location.) Department of Music: Duke Symphony Orchestra, Harry Davidson, conductor, with guest pianist Olga Radosalvjevich. Works by Mozart. Free. For infor-

mation, call 660-3300. Auditorium, West Campus.

8:00 pm,

Baldwin

Duke University Artists Series presents Christopher Parkening, celebrated as one of the world’s preeminent virtuosi of the classical guitar. 8:00 pm. Page Auditorium. For ticket information call the University Box Office at 684-4444.

rwKswr

Kazanjian (Queens College CUNY), entitled, “Beyond the Border; Articulating the US-Mexico War and the Caste War of the Yucatan”, on Tuesday, October 9th at 4:00 pm in the Carpenter Boardroom (more information call 684-2203).

American Red Cross: Open blood donor site. By appointment (684-4799). 9:00 am to 2:00 pm. Duke

-

Public Forum on “Terrorism: Options for America.” The meeting will take place on Thursday, October 11th, 2001, 7:30 pm 9:30 pm in the Von Canon room, Bryan Center, Duke University Campus. Sponsored by TISS. Panelists: Lt Col Frank J. Abbott, USA (UNC) W.A.B. Douglas (Duke) Curtis Jones (State Department Retired) Akram Khater NCSU) Benjamin Miller (Duke) and Martin Miller (Duke) Free and Open to the Public. Sponsored by TISS (The Triangle Institute for Security Studies). -

Campus Wide Area Coordinator/Resident Advisor Candidate Information, 9:00 pm, Bryan Center, Meeting Room B. For more information please visit our web site at http://osd.studentaffairs.duke.edu/and click on “Student Staff Opportunities”.

fWAX Fundaciun Amistad: “Cuba: Destination Deferred; Interpretation, and the Travel Restrictions,

Constitution.” 240 Franklin Center. Call 684-4491. Postponed because of travel concerns following the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks. The conference will be rescheduled for 2002, but no date for the conference as been set yet.

North Carolina Association for Biomedical Research: “Stem Cell Research: The Latest Science, the Controversy, and the Coverage.” Keynote address by Dr. Jeremy Sugarman, director. Center for the Study of Medical Ethics and Humanities. 9:30 am to 3:15 pm. Sanford Institute. International Coffee Connection- Fridays, -1:15 pm. Duke Chapel lounge.

Clinic.

12 noon-

Political Science: Katri Sieberg will give a talk titled

“Resistance is Futile!: The Collective Action Problem and Successful Dissent.” 12 Noon to 2:00 pm. Carpenter Board Room, Perkins Library. West

the human brain. For information, call 681-8054. 5:15 pm. Love Auditorium, Levine Science Research Center, Research Drive.

Living with Advanced/Metastatic Cancer Support Group for cancer patients, family members and caregivers. Every Friday from 3:00-4:30 pm, at the Cornucopia House Cancer Support Center, 111 Cloister Ct., Ste 220, Overlook Building in Chapel Hill. For more information call 401-9333 or see the web site at www.comucopiahouse.org.

Duke

Center for International Development; Rethinking Development Policy Workshop; Dr.

Parmesh Shah, The World Bank, “Information Technology and People’s Participation in the 21st Century.” For information, call 613-7333. 5:30 pm 223 Sanford Institute.

Restorative Yoga for cancer patients, family members and caregivers. Every Thursday from 6:00-7:30 pm, at the Cornucopia House Cancer Support Center, 111 Cloister Ct., Ste 220, Overlook Building in Chapel Hill. For more information call 401-9333 or see the web site at www.comucopiahouse.org. Teer House: Redirecting Children’s Behavior. Raelee Peirce. Five-class program. Fee. To register, call 4lb-3853 or I -888-ASK-DUKE (275-3853). 7:00 pm. N. Roxboro Road, Durham. Teer House: Twelve Dating Traps and Solutions. To register, call 416-3853 or 1-888-ASK-DUKE (2753853). 7:00 pm. N. Roxboro Road, Durham. ‘TERRORISM AND THE MORALITY OF SELFDEFENSE” a lecture by Peter Schwartz. Thursday, October 11 at 7:00 pm in Zener Auditorium. Sponsored by VEM. -

Freewater Films: ‘The Apartment,” with Jack Lemmon, Shirley MacLaine, Fred MacMurray. Tickets are free to Duke students, $4 for Duke employees, and $5 for all others. For information, call 684-2911. 7:00, 9:30 pm. Griffith Film Theater, Bryan Center, West Campus.

Campus.

ffcIPAX, OCTOQ&L n fAU-

Creative Bible Study and worship among supportive friends. 7:00 pm weekly, Duke Chapel Basement Lounge. Open to all, sponsored by the Baptist Student Union (BSU). Call 684-5994 for more information.

-

8.00 PM.

OCW&Z.V)

The 3rd Annual Autism Ribbon Run will begin at 9:00 am at City Market in downtown Raleigh. The Autism Ribbon Run benefits the EndowmentFund of the Autism Foundation of North Carolina, providing support for the continuation and expansion of programs offered by the Autism Society of North Carolina. Interested individuals may register online at www.autismsociety-nc.org, or by phone at 1-800442-2762 or 919-743-0204. Free homebuying seminar: Learn everything you need to know about how to purchase a home. 9:15 am-12 noon, at LaQuinta Inn, Chapel Hill Boulevard near the intersection of 1-40 and 15-501 in Durham. Reservations are needed, call 919-505-3082.

Duke String School; “Oktoberfest,” Dorothy Kitchen, Director. 3:00, 4:00 and 7:00 pm, Baldwin Auditorium.

Chamber Arts Society presents the Orion String Quartet violinists Daniel Phillips and Todd Phillips (brothers who share the first violin chair equally), violist Steven Tenenbom and cellist Timothy Eddy. 8:00 pm, Reynolds Theater. For ticket information call Page Box Office at 684-4444. -

The English Department presents a talk by David -

Duke International Students Inc (ISI) meets in the Chapel Basement at 7:30-9:00 pm for a bible study geared towards international students. All are welcome. For information email shawkins@duke.edu.

studying neural systems that mediate aspects of memory, language and perception. In his lecture, titled “Objects, Concepts and the Brain,” he will also discuss the organization of conceptual knowledge in

Duke Chapel Music: Lunchtime Concert featuring

TV£sP*r

Book Room. For more information call 660-5816


Comics

The Chronicle

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PAGE 14 � MONDAY, OCTOBER 8,2001

The Chronicle Proceeding with caution

The

United States made a timely and seemingly appropriate response when it launched air attacks against the Taliban, Afghanistan’s ruling regime 26 days after the terrorist attacks on

the World Trade Center and the Pentagon. Nonetheless, caution and continual re-evaluation ofthese strikes is critical if the Bush administration is to achieve its stated goal ofbringing terrorists to justice. Certainly, a respectable interval has passed between the attack and the air raids such that emotions play a lesser role in a mission that should be targeted toward ending terrorist threats. Administration officials have stressed that these weeks have given them time to construct a plan targeted to damage the Taliban regime’s underlying infrastructure, such as airfields and military installations, while preserving civilian lives. In fact, the United States is even dropping food supplies as a humanitarian gesture toward the people ofAfghanistan. The Taliban has also had sufficient time to respond to US. demands to hand over Osama bin Laden, to close terrorist facilities and to release wrongfully imprisoned foreigners; but the Taliban has shown little movement on these fronts. Perhaps the United States should have been open to negotiation; even so, the Taliban has not come close to responding in full. US. officials have shown their case against Osama bin Laden to allies through diplomatic channels, and key allies, particularly Great Britain, have found the evidence sufficient enough to lend military support to the cause. Even the Taliban—by way of Pakistan—have had access to this circulated evidence Bin Laden, meanwhile, did little to deter these conclusions when he acquiesced to the terrorist attacks in a video-taped statement released Sunday. He called the United States an evil country and singled out President George W. Bush for condemnation. Furthermore, he tried to depict the U.S. pursuit of him as a battle of Christianity vs. Islam—a distinction that American leaders have tried hard to dispel. Bin Laden’s rhetoric aside, the key U.S. target remains bin Laden and not the Islamic faith. These strikes, however, mark the beginning of what could be a long fight consisting ofthese open strikes as well as covert operations. Officials cannot blindly continue if these attacks harm large numbers of civilians or if the objectives fail to be met. The American people need to remain cautious in their support because the coming days will be somber due to the loss of life that has undoubtedly occurred and will continue. Operation Enduring Freedom—the name coined for the U.S. response—is a just cause only as long as the United States holds to its stated intentions ofminimizing the loss of innocent life. Caution may save lives and prevent this military action from degrading into retaliation as opposed to ending the international terrorist threat.

On

the record

The idea of having two years of solid class unity outweighs displacing less than a tenth of a class. Duke Student GovernmentPresident C.J. Walsh on proposed residential life changes that require sophomores to live on West Campus (see story, page one)

The Chronicle AMBIKA KUMAR, Editor

JAMES HERRIOTT, ManagingEditor 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 & Slate Editor CHERAINE STANFORD, Features Editor TIM PERZYK, Recess Editor MATT BRUMM, Health & ScienceEditor JENNIFER SONG, Health & Science Editor ELLEN MIELKE, TowerView Editor PERI EDELSTEIN, TowerView Managing Editor PAUL DORAN, Sports Managing Editor DREW KLEIN, Sports Photography Editor EVAN DAVIS, Sr. Assoc. Sports Editor ROSALYN TANG, Graphics 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 CATHERINE MARTIN, Production Manager MARY WEAVER, Operations Manager NALINI MILNE, Advertising Office Manager JORDANA JOFFE, Advertising Manager TOMMY STERNBERG Advertising Manager The Chronicle, circulation 16,000, is published by the Duke Student Publishing Company, Inc., a nonprofit 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 theEditorial Office (newsroom) at 301 Flowers Building, call 684-2663 or fax 684-4696. To reach the Business Office at 103 West Union Building, call 684-3811. Toreach the Advertising Office at 101 West Union Building call 684-3811 or fax 684-8295. Visit The Chronicle Online at http://www.chronicle.duke.edu. © 2001 The Chronicle, Box 90858, Durham, N.C. 27708. All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced in any form without the prior, written permission of the Business Office. Each individual is entitled to one free copy.

THE:

Letters to

the editor

Editorial wrongly accuses GPSC of lacking The

Oct.

4

editorial

accused the Graduate and

Professional Student Council of not being proactive on the issue of graduate summer funding. The editorial argued for GPSC’s leadership to champion the cause of summer funding. A wonderful idea, we’ve been doing exactly that for the past several years. The editorial’s accusation lacks credibility. A simple call to the graduate school or to GPSC itself would have remedied this problem. GPSC has been working on these issues, and before I even officially took the office of GPSC president I met with Lewis Siegel, Dean of the Graduate School to discuss issues of funding. In particular, we discussed the summer initiative and for referenced editorial,

the consequences it would have on the finances of the Graduate School. Pushing such funding initiatives have been on GPSC’s agenda over the last several years. We continue to work hard on these issues. With the arrival of Vice Student President for Affairs Larry Moneta and the changes in Student Affairs that will result, the executive board of GPSC, and I saw a unique opportunity to improve student life within the graduate and professional student community. Working toward these issues is easier to publicize but does not mean that we have abandoned our commitment to securing more funding for graduate students. We realize that

stance

funding issues are particularly important in times of financial strain. We continue to appreciate The Chronicle’s coverage of

graduate and professional student issues. The Oct. 3 article, written with input from GPSC Ombudsman Will Tyson, represented the issues well. Unfortunately, the editorial did not complement this piece with the quality and accuracy we have come to expect from

The Chronicle. A quick discussion with GPSC could have remedied the misinformation; I welcome such dialogue in the future. Elayne

Heisler

Graduate Student

Department of Sociology The writer is president of GPSC. see http: // www.chronicle.duke.edu / story.php?article _id=237l4

Columnist proposes battered wife syndrome defense Kevin Ogorzalek proposes

the battered woman syndrome for Americans. Why do you keep making me hit you? This is the thesis sentence for men who beat their wives as well as the mantra for proterrorists from Kabul to Berkeley. This is what Ogorzalek wants America to play into—if someone is being violent toward us it must be our fault. I was wondering if Ogorzalek’s desire to “understand” terrorists pertains to other terrorists as well or just terrorists that are antiWestern? The Ku Klux Klan has murdered AfricanAmericans. They have blown homes up and burned churches down. They are a clandestine organization that is very, very mad at for referenced column,

Letters

blacks, Catholics and Jews. Should we try to “understand” their anger? Should blacks “look inside themselves,” as Ogorzalek put it, and maybe change themselves so the Klan will no longer be angry at them? Of course not. No sane person believes that the Klan should be listened to.

Why is Ogorzalek being selective with which terrorists we should listen to? Are the racist militia groups around America an “outcry from some dissident community that we have ignored” as Ogorzalek sees Arab terrorists? You say that attacking terrorists will not get rid of them. Wrong. If the world can get rid of Nazism, it can get rid of terrorism. Remember Adolf

Hitler? Remember Neville Chamberlain? Enough said about running from evil. Maybe the people who hate us do so because they see the rest of the world responding to the democracy, prosperity and civil rights that the West has. Problems in the Third World—and the world in general—existed centuries before America ever existed. To attribute the

problems of the world to America is to ignore thousands of years of war and poverty, that existed long before America did. Maybe Ogorzalek should take the time to really understand the culture right under his nose here in America.

Max Greene Chapel Hill, N.C.

see http:! / www.chronicle.duke.edu!story.phptarticle_id-23472

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


Commentary

The Chronicle

MONDAY, OCTOBER 8,2001 �PAGE 15

Lines in the sand

Many quickly divide world’s people into groups aligned with or opposed to U.S. Early in my Duke Zoology Ph.D. program, my advisor gave me an article by a Japanese biologist who had visited the University. The arti-

cle described the differ\ ences between Eastern and Western philosophy, and how they f impact the work of sci- W entists from each culJoshua ture. This article was Rose seemingly unrelated to my proposed work, and I didn’t really understand why he asked me to read it. But I read it a few more times and eventually understood. Since then, I’ve noticed how not only scientists, but people in general, allow our mode of thought to shape our views of the world and behavior toward it. The article described Eastern science as viewing the world continuously, with intermediate grades between extremes. Western scientists tend to classify the world into discrete categories. Discrete categories work in some cases; in others, intermediate gradation may be ignored in an attempt to force a continuum into discrete categories. Plant versus animal. #

Mutualism

.

versus

parasitism.

Structuralist versus functionalist. Darwinist versus Creationist. Black versus white. Good versus evil. Us versus them. Beyond biology, the habit of categois not solely Western. rizing Proponents of beliefs, especially religious or ethnic ones, practice this all over the world. And in many countries, and many violent conflicts, one category—“us” for some, “them” for others—is Muslims. They fight Jews in Israel and Palestine, Serbs and Croats in the Balkans, Hindus in India and Pakistan, Christians in Africa. The Taliban persecutes Christians and Buddhists. Muslim rebels murder

tourists in Egypt and Indonesia. Muslims even fight other Muslims when Sunni and Shiite sects clash, as they did in the Iran-Iraq war. Some try to avoid the “us and them” mentality, but it isn’t easy. Not long ago, Palestinians murdered an Israeli in a West Bank restaurant. The restaurant’s owner, a Palestinian, revealed that the victim not only was his friend, but helped him open the restaurant. The folks who like or trust each other grow ever rarer, while “us” and “them” increase. Now Muslims have attacked the United States. Bereaved friends and relatives and U.S. patriots cry out for justice, for revenge. But revenge against whom? The terrorists? They died alongside their victims. Their domestic supporters? Many trained the terrorists, cared for their money and otherwise aided them without a clue what would happen. Their mastermind, Osama bin Laden? Fine, but we have to find him first. Which brings us to the Taliban, the Muslim theocracy that rules most of Afghanistan. They have avoided surrendering bin Laden, while inciting loyalists to destroy the evacuated U.S. embassy and threatening jihad if attacked. This apparent hostility and lack of cooperation has placed the Taliban into the category of “them” in our current war against terrorism. Then life gets complicated again. The Taliban rules by force over some of this planet’s poorest people and most desolate land. While some Afghan people are Islamic fundamentalists who support the government, many others are too busy surviving the hostile landscape and near-constant drought to care who governs their land. And while like neighboring governments Pakistan, Russia and even Iran have pledged (to varying degrees) to support

our efforts, each of them have segments of their populations who sympathize more with the Taliban than with their own country’s governments. Many U.S. conservatives, including some at Duke, try to categorize the entire populations of countries like Afghanistan or Iraq as “them,” in order to win support for military actions by

“us.” “They’re not innocents! If they were good people, they would overthrow their government, or leave their country.” Unfortunately, that logic cuts both ways and is being

used by fundamentalists to justify actions their against “us.” Osama bin Laden is at least

never directly affecting Hussein, how many of us even objected, much less voted against him? Or voted at all? How many of us supported former presidents Ronald Reagan and George Bush, even after we knew that they had armed Nicaraguan terrorists oops, I meant “freedom fighters,” terrorists are “them”—and made deals with various Islamic extremists, most of whom later attacked us? How long until Columbians, besieged by violent right-wing militia armed by our “war on drugs,” start seeing U.S. citizens or as “them”? terrorists So —

The folks who like trust each other grow ever rarer, while “us” and “them" increase.

partly an American creation. Back in the 1980s, we gave him weapons, money, and power. Why? Because back then, he was “us.” The Soviet Union—now Russia—was “The Evil Empire” then. They invaded Afghanistan, so we empowered bin Laden to fight them, later leading to the Taliban’s taking power. We also helped Saddam Hussein’s government of Iraq become a major military force, because they were “us;” Iran, after the hostage crisis, was “them.” In this present conflict, Russia has become “us,” and possibly even Iran, now that Iraq and Afghanistan

have become “them.” Our government similarly supports Saudi Arabia, Israel, Columbia and other governments the

attacked U.S. civilians, killing thousands. But while some of the victims supported attacks on Iraq or else-

where, others opposed them. How many American allies of the Palestinians turned against them when they danced in the streets, celebrating their victory of “us” over “them”? How many formerly undecided people now oppose all Muslims because of the polarizing actions of the violent few? So sure, we can have our justice, or revenge, or whatever. We can drop bombs, fire missiles and kill people. Some might even deserve it. And then, when buildings in Kabul topple and thousands are dead, the bereaved relatives and friends and other Afghans

world over. So why don’t the citizens of Afghanistan, Iraq and elsewhere rise up and overthrow their unjust governments? They probably ask the same question about us. When thenPresident Bill Clinton repeatedly bombed Iraq, killing civilians and

will cry for justice, for revenge. Only

then, “us” will be “them”. And then another section of the Pentagon, or perhaps the Statue of Liberty, or Disney World, will be targeted. And we will go looking for another “them.” Joshua Rose is a graduate student in the Department of Biology.

Sparky McQueen’s Crime Report Pacifist takes a beating The Duke University Police Department responded at 3:30 a.m. Saturday, Oct. 6 to a report of someone’s getting severely beaten by two unknown assailants in front of the Old Chemistry building. When police officers arrived at the scene, Divinity School student William Garner was lying naked on the ground, bound and gagged by his own “tighty whities” which had been ripped into two sections. Apparently Garner, a well-known Mcqueen on y student activist against the U.S. mili- on tary buildup in the Middle East and organizer of the “Let’s All Hug Afganistan” demonstration, was doing Yoga and singing “All Creatures Great and Small” in a circle ofcandles he’d set up on the sidewalk just prior to the pounding. Miraculously, Garner, who was unconcious during most of the assault and happened to be carrying 400 dollars of cash at the time, was not robbed, although one of his candles was still missing at the time of this printing. Police are still unsure of the location of the remaining candle. Gamer, complaining of abdominal pain, was taken to the Emergency Department. *,

_

All laptops stolen

telling everyone, ‘One day, they’re all going to disappear.’ Did anyone bother to listen? No. And did anyone bother to get their laptop engraved or painted for protection? No. We set up an engraving table in the Bryan

Center one day and we had more kids come and engrave their skateboards than people with laptops. They’re all morons. Quote me on that. You’re all morons. Yeah, you heard me.”

Stolen cars located

Eight Jeep Cherokee SUVs believed to be lost since a rash of “thefts” in 1999 were recovered Wednesday afternoon. All of the supposedly lost vehicles were found deep in the Blue Zone parking lots. It seems the owners were simply unable to find their cars. “Alright. No. I refuse to a part of this one,” said Hastings. “First off, this segment is written around a bad premise. The cars were stolen, and to try and build a ‘funny’ snippet out of the idea that the Blue Zone is so horrible that people can’t find their cars is just hairbrained. Second, there was no Blue Zone back in 1999, so it doesn’t even make sense. Don’t quit your day job, Sparky.” Hastings was stampeded and eaten by a pack of wild gorillas shortly after speaking to this reporter.

Operations halted

Industrial operations have been halted at ACME Industries’ Durham factory and three ofthe company’s Friday afternoon. top officials have been detained for questioning for “You knew this was going to happen,” said Sgt. Jim receiving funds that may be linked to a terrorist group. Hastings of DUPD. “Every single week, at least five ACME, a maker of top quality anvils, rocket-prolaptops are stolen from dorm rooms, some catacomb of pelled roller skates, birdseed and TNT explosives and the Med Center or a million other places and I kept detonators, allegedly accepted a wire transfer of $125

All laptops that have ever been made were stolen from whatever unsecured location they were sitting in

from a location in Kabul, Afganistan last week and then proceeded to fill and ship an order for one umbrella and one “In heaven’s name... what have I done?” sign to the addressee “0. bin Laden, 635 Secluded Cave, North Afganistan.” ACME officials declined to comment. Crime statistics The following are crime statistics gathered by McQueen for the last four years: University employee embezzlements: 3

Public masturbations: 1 “Silly Fred” crank calls: 2 Busted car windows: 6.023 X 1023 Urinations: 26 Into trash cans: 15 Into bonfires: 3 Out of buildings; 8 Second story windows: 2 Third story windows: 6 Not on someone: 5 On someone: 3 Stolen Laptops: All Stolen Projectors: All Stolen Purses: All Stolen Wallets: All Pacifist beatings: 1 Graffittiings: 25 Helpful: 0 Completely unhelpful: 24 Infuriating:! Clever: 0 Sparky McQueen hopes Tony Blair will run dent in 2004.

for presi-


The Chronicle

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