October 23, 2001

Page 1

The Chronicle

Tuesday, October 23, 2001

Sunny High 82, Low 58 www.chronicle.duke.edu Vol. 97, No. 41

The trailblazer J.J. Redick’s commitment to Duke last October set into motion the recruitment of a great Class of 2006. See page 11

THE INDEPENDENT DAILY AT DUKE UNIVERSITY

Report alleges embezzlement at Hideawa Sources confirm student took up to $20,000, forcing bar to close early By DAVE INGRAM The Chronicle

to the Undergraduate Judicial Board, confirmed Maj. Robert Dean A former owner of the Hideaway of the Duke University Police Deembezzled as much as $20,000 from partment. Neither of the owners the now-closed student-run campus who discovered the embezzlement, bar during several months last graduate students James Sherrill spring, perhaps prompting the bar’s and Greg Blair, both Fuqua ’Ol, closure this summer. could be reached for comment. Other The embezzlement was alleged in owners confirmed that the board has an April 19 Duke University Police suspended Litt’s diploma until he Department crime report and confinishes repaying the money. firmed by Hideaway owners and “I guess I felt just shock that anbartenders this week. Several ownother student and a friend I had ers began suspecting early last known for two years would do that spring that fellow owner Brian Litt, to his friends and colleagues,” said Trinity ’Ol, had been stealing some senior John Hudson, one of last revenue he was supposed to have deyear’s 10 co-owners ofthe Hideaway. Litt, who was in charge of depositing posited to company accounts. After noticing several discrepanmoney and buying most of the alcocies between the revenue and the hol, declined to comment except to amount deposited, some owners set say that the bar would have reup a video camera that later showed mained closed even if he had not Litt had stolen money. The police restolen the money. Several other ownport, composed mid-investigation, ers could not be reached for comlists four incidents of missing ment, although many have signed a money, totaling $1,976, but others confidentiality agreement with UJB. confirmed that the final amount The Hideaway closed this sumwas far higher. mer after the owners, who each held The owners subsequently de- one-year shares in the bar, declined clined to press charges against the to renew their shares or find new accused, instead referring the matter See HIDEAWAY on page 8 � A BARTENDER at the now-closed Hideaway serves drinks on a busy night,

$ The Bioterrorism Thr

Two dead in D.C. amid anthrax fear

By KEVIN LEES The Chronicle

postal workers, who died Monday, likely had contracted inhalation anthrax, the deadliest form of the disease. By DAVID ROSENBAUM and SHERYL STOLBERG New York Times News Service

WASHINGTON Two postal workers in the District of Columbia died Monday ofwhat health officials said was probably anthrax, and two others are hospitalized with anthrax in their lungs as concerns about

bioterrorism reached a new level.

Those who died and those in the hospital worked in the city’s main mail processing center, a complex that had not figured prominently into the initial inquiry into the biological scare. All mail for Washington, including that for Congress, goes through this center on Brentwood Road Northeast. “There’s a war and a battlefield outside this country, and there’s a war and a battlefield inside this country,” said Tom Ridge, director of the office of

homeland security.

See ANTHRAX on page 7 �

Inside

CHRONICLE

Genomics project gains momentum

� Health officials say the two Washington

The developments also raised new concerns about the adequacy of the public health systems in the city and the country and about why the authorities waited so long to address the danger to postal workers, while

MATT KLEII

CONSTRUCTION CONTINUES on one of five genomics facilities, the Center for Human Disease Models.

S®veral community members spoke in favor and against the use of school impact fees at last night’s meeting of the Durham Board of County Commissioners. See page 3

With last August's arrival of Dr. Sandy Williams, dean ofthe medical school, and the impending arrival of a director of the Institute for Genome Sciences and Policy this year, the University-wide initiative on genomics is finally picking up. Duke, which began the project three years ago, is still in the planning stages for IGSP. Only one of the five centers, the Center for Human Genetics, has a permanent director and of the three planned buildings, two are still under construction, and the final one has yet to gamer Board ofTrustees approval. Executive Vice President Tallman Trask said both the $35 million Center for Human Genetics and the $4l million Center for Human Disease Models, currently being constructed on Research Drive, are on time and on budget. They are scheduled to open sometime during the 2002-2003 academic year. Provost Peter Lange said he was not pleased with the pace ofthe genomics initiative, but that with a new medical school dean and a potential IGSP director, he hoped the initiative would finally begin to take shape. Williams said genomics has been his top priority since arriving at Duke. “I think it was necessary to have a dean of the School of Medicine before this could move ahead,” Williams said. “The opportunity to lead this is one of the big reasons I came back to Duke.” Peer institutions are, by and large, ahead of Duke in some areas of genomics research. The Massachusetts Institute of Technology’s Whitehead Institute began in 1982 and is currently a leading public sequencing center in the world and part of the international consor-

North Carolina serves as the hub for national efforts for a moratorium on the death penalty, as one poll shows 70 percent of state residents support one. See page 3

See GENOMICS on page 9 PThree members of the Graduate and Professional Student Council excused themselves from the committee selecting the next Young Trustee. See page 4


The Chronicle

PAGE 2 �TUESDAY, OCTOBER 23,2001

U.S. planes strike Taliban positions

U.S. mistakenly fires on rebels

U.S. jets Monday apparently fired by mistake on areas where anti-Taliban rebels from the northern alliance in Afghanistan were positioned. No casualties were reported.

Sinn Fein leader brokers for peace

Sparking expectations of a breakthrough, Sinn Fein leader Gerry Adams urged the Irish Republican Army Monday to begin disarming to save Northern Ireland’s peace process. •

Macedonian bombers target police

An explosion shattered the police station in a restive ethnic Albanian village late Monday, just hours after Macedonia’s first ethnically mixed police units began patrolling. The police missions were considered a key test of the country’s peace process. •

China accepts first foreign network

AOL Time Warner Inc. announced a landmark deal Monday that will make it the first foreign television broadcaster in China, in exchange for carrying Chinese state television’s English-language channel on U.S. cable systems. •

Congress considers approving war bonds

Congress is rushing

to approve the first U.S. war

bonds since World War II in the aftermath of the terror attacks, yet many economists said Americans could give a bigger boost by simply spending money. News briefs compiled from wire reports.

FINANCIAL MARKETS N

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DOW Up 172.92 at 9,377.03

NASDAQ <">

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Up 36.77 at 1,708.08

“If Jesus came back and saw what's going on in His name, He'd never stop throwing up.” -Woody Allen

The U.S. bombs are creating a path to Kabul for the northern alliance rebels Bv STEVEN GUTKIN The Associated Press

U.S. jets BAGRAM, Afghanistan struck Taliban front-line positions Monday as the United States tried to pave the way for the opposition to advance on Kabul and other major cities. In an appeal for Muslim support worldwide, the Taliban accused America of waging a campaign of “genocide.” The president of neighboring Pakistan, Gen. Pervez Musharraf, said he hoped military operations in Afghanistan would be over by midNovember, when the Muslim holy month of Ramadan begins. Leaders throughout the Muslim world fear a determined backlash if operations

continue against Muslim Afghanistan during Ramadan. While saying the U.S.-led campaign should continue until its objectives are met, Musharraf said bombing during Ramadan “would certainly have some negative effects in the Muslim world.” During Ramadan, Muslims fast from sunrise to sunset. “So one would hope and wish that this campaign comes to an end before the month of Ramadan, and one would hope for restraint during the

month of Ramadan,” Musharraf said on CNN’s “Larry King Live.” The Taliban’s ambassador to Pakistan, Abdul Salam Zaeef, claimed U.S, and British jets attacked a hospital in the western Afghan city ofHerat Mon-

day, killing more than 100 people. U.S. Secretary of Defense Donald Rums-

feld denied the claim, and Britain said none ofits planes took part in any raid against Herat. Rumsfeld also denied Taliban claims that they had shot down two U.S. helicopters. With the shift toward front-line targets, U.S. jets spared Kabul Monday for the first time since the bombing was launched Oct. 7, aimed at rooting out bin Laden and his chief lieutenants in the al-Qaida terrorist network and punish the Taliban for sheltering him. However, the jets returned before dawn Tuesday and dropped at least 10 bombs on targets in the north of See AFGHANISTAN on page 10 �

Israel demands delivery of Zeevi assassins warned that if Israeli tanks did not withdraw from the biblical town, “Our bullets will fall like the rain on Gilo.” Gilo is a Jewish neighborhood built on disputed land on Standing firm on tough conditions, WASHINGTON Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon said Monday his Jerusalem’s southern fringe, and gunfire there set off the troops would not release their hold on six West Bank incursion early Friday. In the Aida refugee camp outside Bethlehem, a heavy towns until the Palestinians turn over the militants who gunbattle erupted as tanks rolled in. In Ramallah, tanks assassinated an Israeli Cabinet minister. The U.S. government, meanwhile, issued its strongest fired shells and were met by Palestinian fire. One Palesdenunciation of the Israeli operation Monday, demanding tinian was wounded, doctors said. Overnight, Israeli army bulldozers destroyed the headthat Israel pull out immediately. quarters of Force 17, one of the Palestinian security servIn Jerusalem, thousands of Israeli demonstrators demanded that Sharon expel Palestinian leader Yasser ices, in Ramallah. Israel said Force 17 members were suspected of having killed 10 Israelis in shooting attacks. Arafat and bring down his Palestinian Authority. In Nablus, Hamas militant Ayman Halaweh, was killed Israeli tanks rumbled deeper into Palestinian towns, setting off street battles for a fifth day. In Tulkarem, a 65- in a blast in a car. Palestinians charged Israel was responyear-old Palestinian man was killed, Palestinians said. sible, but the Israeli military refused to comment. See ISRAEL on page 9 P A leaflet issued in Bethlehem by Arafat’s Fatah faction By JASON KEYSER The Associated Press


The Chronicle

TUESDAY, OCTOBER 23, 2001 � PAGE 3

Death penalty foes find home in N.C. The National Coalition to Abolish the Death Penalty met in Raleigh over the weekend, and a poll last year showed that 70 percent of North Carolinians may support a moratorium. By REBECCA SUN The Chronicle

COUNTY COMMISSIONER JOE

MATT ATWOOD/THE CHRONICLE

BdWSER speaks about the possibility of imposing school impact fees,

School impact fees draw debate

Community members present arguments for both sides B Y MELISSA SOUCY e C romcle

At a meeting ofthe Durham County Board of Commissioners Monday, the consideration ofschool impact fees evoked what commissioner Ellen Reckhow called “a very spirited debate.” A public hearing—in which 37 realtors, citizens, parents and developers argued before the county commissioners—consumed the majority of podium time, Speakers discussed whether the county should charge impact fees on new residential developments to compensate for the rapid increase of students in Durham public schools. Members of the public often spoke of a $5,000 fee accompanying the purchase of all single-family houses and $3,000 for all other housing developments. The commissioners argued, however, that those numbers represent the maximum amount the county could justifiably charge, not what it actually would charge. They said realtors took the figures out of context and spread them publicly through phone and radio. “I really take offense at the realtors,” commis-

sioner Becky Heron said. “Our board had really not meant to discuss any numbers.” What the board did do was pay $57,500 to a consuiting firm, Tischler & Associates Inc., to prepare a study about the fees—which opponents said was a waste of taxpayer money. They also argued that an across-the-board fee that ignores the magnitude of the cost of a housing development would be unfair. “$5,000 fees for houses and $3,000 fees for condos will eliminate a sector of the population that can afford homes,” argued Judd Barrett, speaking for 60 other people from the Research Triangle. Many said they fear the impact fees would negatively affect the city’s growth. Barnette Crabtree, a Durham resident and builder, said imposing impact fees would cost between 1,700 and 2,400 home buyers, Liz Pullman, a Durham taxpayer since 1961, supported the impact fees, suggesting they fall not on the buyer, but on the developers. “Developers create a need for new schools; developers need to help pay for new See

IMPACT FEES on page 7

>

North Carolina is at the forefront of the death penalty moratorium movement, according to local and national activists who convened at the annual conference of the National Coalition to Abolish the Death Penalty in Raleigh this past weekend. NCADP Communications Director David Elliott said the conference’s location was appropriate because the state serves as the center of the nation’s moratorium movement. “[Questions of] racial equity, class equity, possible innocence and proportionality are all being debated across the U.S., but the debate is louder, more vibrant [and has] a richness in North Carolina that you don’t

find elsewhere,” Elliot said. Seventy percent of North Carolinians would support a moratorium if potential death row inmates could receive a sentence of life without parole, according to a poll conducted by the News and Observer last year. North Carolina currently leads the country with 14 municipalities that have passed resolutions calling for a moratorium.

In order to achieve its goal of a state moratorium, the movement lobbies legislators to vote against the death penalty on both the state and local levels. “We’re going after legislators execution by execution, letting them know that people are being executed in our name and asking them, ‘ls this a fair system?”’ said Ted Frazer, a member of the Charlotte Coalition for a Moratorium Now. This summer, the movement scored a major victory in the state legislature with the passage of a ban on executions of the mentally retarded. Steve Dear, executive director of People of Faith Against the Death Penalty, applauded the new law, which is retroactive. “[The law] literally saves the lives of more than a dozen people on death row, and reflects a rising standard of decency,” he said. Another law passed this summer allows prosecutors trying first-degree murder cases with aggravatSee MORATORIUM on page 10

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PAGE 4 �

TUESDAY, OCTOBER

The Chronicle

23,2001

Graduate Trustee Vehicle raided in the H-overflow lot committee named By WHITNEY BECKETT The Chronicle

The Graduate and Professional Student Council took the first official step last night in its selection of this year’s Young Trustee representative for graduate and professional students. The council finalized the eight-person Young Trustee Selection Committee by electing its chair as well as three committee members, who will fill spots vacated by the GPSC executive board officers that removed themselves to possibly apply for the position. After the deadline for Young Trustee applications passes in November, the committee will examine all applications and narrow them to 10 candidates, whom it will then interview and again narrow to three to five candidates. Early next semester, GPSC as a whole will decide which finalists will become the new Young Trustee, the graduate students’ sole position on the Board of Trustees for a three-year term. Young Trustee Selection Committee chair and GPSC Vice President David Ferguson, a divnity student, will be in charge of convening the committee and guiding it through the selection process. He said he is pleased with the diversity and experience of the eight-member group, which is evenly split between professional and graduate students and males and females. “It is a diverse group by study, which is the key [factor in a good committee],” Ferguson said. “It’s important because they will be able to feel out the applications, which come from various schools.” As a rule, GPSC executive board members comprise the committee, but three declined to do so, since committee members are not eligible for the

Young Trustee position. The three executive board members who abdicated their position on the committee were Will Tyson, a graduate student in sociology, Carol Chancey, a graduate student in biomedical engineering and Jack McNulty, a graduate student in genetics. None of those officers have decided whether they will indeed apply for Young Trustee, Ferguson said. In their place, four GPSC representatives ran for the positions on the committee; the three winners were graduate student Chrissie Merdes, third-year medical student Michael Bernstein and graduate

student Brian Sumner. They will be joined by executive board members Ferguson, french student Elayne Heisler, cancer biology student Shannon Lemrow, law student Tyler Gellasch, environment student Tobin Freid, sociology student Megan Hay and computer science student Michail Lagoudakis. Heisler, GPSC president, said the group will look for candidates who are knowledgeable, visionary and advocates, as well as able to work well in groups. IN OTHER BUSINESS: President of the Duke University Union Brady Beecham, a junior, spoke to GPSC about better representing and involving graduate and professional students, who each contributes $lO to the Union through the student activity fund.

From staff reports: An employee reported that between 8:15 a.m. and 5:15 p.m. Oct. 15, someone pried open the driver’s side rear vent window of her vehicle, causing $5O in damage, said Maj. Robert Dean of the Duke University Police Department. The subject stole her $2,000 Kenwood CD stereo; $6OO Kenwood KDC-C717 CD changer, serial num- p .

nTlv

ber 10229912; $69 Kenwood KCA RC6OO changer remote control; Rdtuipo $6OO Kenwood KRC-5995 cassette PKiIU: o recorder, serial number 10205889; $4OO MTX booster box; $3OO MTX amplifier; $6OO Kenwood door speaker amplifier; 60 CDs worth $780; and $6O cash, all totaling $5,459. Her vehicle was parked in the H-overflow lot on Hillsborough Road.

Twenty-four-year-old Deshaun Lamar Oldham of 2518 Gemena Rd. in Chapel Hill, was arrested and charged with trespassing. Bond was placed at $5,000, and his court date is Nov. 5. Oldham could not be

reached for comment.

Purse snatched: An employee reported that between 6 and 6:30 p.m. Oct. 21, someone stole $175 from her unprotected pocketbook located on the reception desk in 5400 Duke Hospital, Dean said. Window broken: An employee reported that between 9 and 10:15 a.m. Oct. 17, someone broke out the $lOO rear passenger window to her vehicle while it was parked in the School of Nursing parking lot,

Dean said.

License plate taken: A student reported that Golf equipment stolen: A student reported that between 2 p.m. Oct. 17 and 11:30 a.m. Oct. 18, some-

between 8:30 and 8:35 a.m. Oct. 17, someone stole his $3,500 unprotected Zevo golf clubs and $l5O Ping black and green golf bag with stand from the front entrance of the Duke Pro Shop, Dean said. Another student reported that on the same date and time and under similar circumstances, someone stole his Lynx golf clubs and black golf bag, worth $l,OOO. Dean said the cases appear to be related.

one stole her $25 Virginia license plate with number YSSBS26 from the rear of her vehicle while it was parked at the 1700 Pace St. parking lot, Dean said.

Wallet stolen: An employee reported that between noon and 1 p.m. Oct. 19, someone stole her unprotected $lO wallet/change purse, containing credit cards, driver’s license and other forms of identification from the first-floor Divinity School Methodist Reading

Larceny attempt interrupted: At 1:10 p.m. Oct. Room, Dean said. 19, campus police responded to an attempted larceCampus police request that anyone who has Ny on the first floor of the Free Electron Laser Laboratory, Dean said. An employee reported that knowledge about those responsible for these and she observed a man carefully open the desk drawer other crimes at the University contact Lt. Sara-Jane ofher co-worker. Raines at 684-4713 or Durham Crimestoppers at After she asked if she could help him, he ran out 683-1200. Up to $1,200 will be paid for information the front door. DUPD officers located the subject near leading to an arrest, and information can be given anonymously. the intersection of LaSalle Street and Circuit Drive.

Aid agencies offer up conflicting reports By JANE PERLEZ

New York Times News Service

Aid agencies gave conflictQUETTA, Pakistan ing reports Monday of conditions inside southern Afghanistan as the air assaults intensified, but it appeared from accounts inside the country that Afghans were not fleeing to the Pakistani border in

into Afghanistan at Chaman Monday, equipped with supplies for 15,000 people, said they found only a fraction of the refugees they expected in the “no man’s land” a half mile beyond the border. In all, they distributed bread, sweaters and water containers to about 2,500 people, mostly women and

children, and dispatched the leftover supplies to Kandahar, the Taliban center, which lies 60 miles inland the tens of thousands. A spokesperson for the UN. high commissioner for and which has been the target ofair bombardment, inrefugees said that, according to border officials, 15,000 cluding withering strikes by low-flying AC-130s Afghan refugees were waiting for permission to come equipped with gunships and cannons. into Pakistan at the closed crossing of Chaman. But Unlike the hundreds of thousands of refugees who the spokesperson said the agency had no independent streamed into Macedonia and Albania from Kosovo by train and car and on foot in the first days of the conconfirmation of such numbers and had received no reports from its own two monitors on the border Monday. flict there more than two years ago, or the nearly 1 The UN. Children’s Fund, the International Commillion Rwandans who fled the frenzy of killings in mittee for the Red Cross and Mercy Corps, a privately their homeland in one dramatic week in July 1994, run American agency, painted a more nuanced picture. Afghans are behaving differently. They said that some thousands of people were trying In part, this is because more than 4 million Afghans to leave, but they also said many Afghans fleeing town are already refugees in neighboring Pakistan and centers for villages were in good health, and relief Iran. Many of them are the best-educated Afghans, supplies were still being trucked across the border. who have fled the grip ofthe punitive Taliban. In fact, a team of 14 UNICEF workers who crossed See REFUGEES on page 6 &

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The Chronicle

TUESDAY, OCTOBER 23,2001 � PAGE

All You Never Knew About...

WOMEN AND MEN IN HISTORY Classes on Gender in History: Never a better place than Duke. Never a better time than Now. American Women, 1877-Present History 1698.01

MW, 2:20-3:35

From Plantation to Sweatshops: Globalization, Women, & Development History 104.07

MW, 2:20-3:35

The History of Emotions History 154G.D

MWF, 10:30-11:20

Love in Western Civilization History 168A.D.

Real Men, Real Women: 20th Century Gender Identities M, 3:55-6:20

Southern Women in US History History 1965.01

TuTh, 2:15-3:30

Women, Family;

&

History 1965.03

the State Th, 7-9:30

.

Japanese Women's History History 1965.07

Th, 3:55-6:20

Race, Class, and Gender in Modern British History History 2095.01

Sucheta Mazumdar Carr 135 William Reddy East Duke 204D Ronald Witt

MWF, 11:50-12:40

History 1065.06

Felicia Kornbluh Carr 243

Th, 3:55-6:20

White 107

South

Africa,

History 104.05

Consciousness: How/ io Thinfc Ahovf History 104.08

TuTh, 12:40-1:55

£fliandpa*Hon

IJ&O-IJJO

History 1065.01

Tu, 3:55-6:20

frlohalizinz.

Workers, HPtfTA, WTO

History

TuThu, 10:55-12:10

12&.01

Orff &ertrts MovfcW&nf History 163E.01

MW, 2:2Q-3:35

ftl'iticjl Violence in hiwrxc*, History 1965.12

fo&ian

1770-IJ2O

Ylana Miller Carr 229 Karen Wigen Carr 241

Susan Thorne Carr 242

Carr 137

Carr 135

Lawrence Goodwyn Carr 136 Sydney Nathans Carr 242

John French Carr 240 Charles Payne East Duke 204D

Weds, 7-9:30

Martin Miller Carr 242

Tues, 7-9:30

History 163C.01

Claudia Koonz TuTh, 3:50-5:05

Carr 137

Lawrence Goodwyn

TuTh, 3:50-5:05

The Destruction of Slavery History 1965.11

Charles Carlton White 107

TuTh, 2:15-3:30

Mon, 5:30-8

East Duke 204D

Thavolia Glymph Franklin Center 028

Political Violence in America, 1770-1920

Sydney Nathans Carr 241

Weds, 7-9:30

Wars and the US Homefront, 1940-2001 History 1065.07

David Cecelski Lyndhurst 110

Thu, 3:50-6:25

Do We Face a “New World”?

Sydney Nathans Carr 241

A^Hv'i^rn History 2995.01

History 104.03

History 1965.12

Weds, 7-9:30

(rrtelllfffrnsia

History 201.01

World Military History

The Civil War and Race in US History

Karin Shapiro

TuTh, 3:50-5:05

118 C .01

Alec Douglas Griffith Theatre

TuTh, 10:55-12:10

Laura Edwards Carr 229

Claudia Koonz

13JO~FrcScnf

History

The Holocaust

Duke historians write often on the role of conscience and protest in the past. Claudia Koonz has just completed The Nazi Conscience. Karin Shapiro writes on African and African-American workers. Lawrence Goodwyn wrote The Populist Moment. Sydney Nathans researches slave resistance. John French studies Brazilian workers. Charles Payne writes on black freedom struggles. Martin Miller publishes about Russian revolutionaries and exiles.

TuTh, 3:50-5:05

History of the World Wars

Spencie Love Lyndhurst House

protest in history

History 104.03

The History Department welcomes back distinguished historians Charles Carlton and Alec Douglas. Prof. C author ofeight books including Going to the Wars, serv in the British Army and Intelligence Corps, and taught Duke last spring. Prof. Douglas taught at Duke this pas fall, is a Commander in the Royal Canadian Navy, and was Official Historian for the Canadian armed forces. Claudia Koonz examines the perpetrators, survivors, and contested memories of the Nazi War against the Jews. Lawrence Goodwyn and Thavolia Glymph focus on the conduct and the meaning of the Civil War for American life and freedom. Sydney Nathans and David Cecelski look at the impacts of political violence and foreign wars on US homefronts.

History 149.01

comomce- anp

The- ttblooavtf

WARS AND HOMEFRO IN HISTORY

Charles Payne Carr 229

THINK GLOBALLY WITH HISTORY Duke historians offer crucial knowledge and conceptual contexts to live smartly in a globalizing world-and to understand critically the process called “globalization.”

World History History 26.01

Martin Lewis Carr 103

TuTh, 9:10-10:25

Third World & the West Hitory 765.01

Vasant Kaiwar Carr 243

TuTh, 9:10-10:25

South Africa, 1870-Present History 104.06

Karin Shapiro Carr 135

TuTh, 3:50-5:10

From Plantation to Sweatshops: Globalization, Women & Development Sucheta Mazumdar History 104.07

MW, 2:20-3:35

Carr 103

Africo to Modern Times History 1158

Janet Ewald

TuTh, 12:40-1:55

Carr 235

Globalizing Protest Workers, NAFTA, WTO History 121A.Ol

TuTh, 10:55-12:10

Carr 240

Modern World Environmentol History History 132.01

John Richards

MWF, 10:30-11:20

Carr 240

Comparative Approaches to Global Issues History 137

Weds, 3:55-6:25

Asions in the Americas History 1965.09

Mon, 3:55-6:20

John French

Karen wigen Physics 114

Sucheta Mazumdar Carr 242

5


The Chronicle

PAGE 6 � TUESDAY, OCTOBER 23,2001

Iraq transports chemical Agencies work to provide weapons to safe bunkers food, medicine for Afghans By JOHN LUMPKIN The Associated Press

Iraq is moving WASHINGTON some of its chemical weapons industry to underground bunkers, a U.S. government source said Monday. Moving it into specially built bunkers could make it harder to find

and destroy, but the United States has designed bombs and other weapons specifically to blow up concealed, bunkered weapons of mass destruction. The source, who spoke on condition of anonymity, could not say how the bunker project was detected or provide other details immediately. Some Bush administration officials, notably Deputy Defense Secretary Paul Wolfowitz, have called for strikes on Iraq, but others want the war on terrorism to focus solely on Osama bin Laden’s al-Qaida and Afghanistan. U.S. intelligence has not obtained credible evidence linking Iraq to either the Sept. 11 attacks on the Pentagon and World Trade Center or the ongoing anthrax scare. “We have no illusions about Saddam Hussein, and his record of threats and assaults upon his own people, as well as neighboring countries, is very well known, as are his attempts to develop weapons of mass destruction,” State Department spokesperson Phil Reeker said Monday. “We don’t put anything past [lraqi President] Saddam Hussein, but I don’t believe that there’s any clear linkage [to the anthrax attack] at this point.”

Iraq has rebuilt some of its capacity to make chemical weapons since the Persian GulfWar, and has the scientific expertise to produce such weapons on short notice, according to a Pentagon report released in January. Saddam has long tried to hide his weapons production capacity. He had previously stockpiled mustard, tabun, sarin and VX chemical agents, says the report, “Proliferation; Threat and

Response.”

Information on Iraq’s weapons program has been sketchy since it expelled UN. weapons inspectors in 1998. The

country has also retained the scientific and engineering expertise for its

weapons programs. The Iraqi military has used chemical weapons against Iran and Kurds in northern Iraq. A document found by UN. inspectors but seized by Iraqi officials suggested Saddam may have hidden an additional 6,000 weapons after the Gulf War. In addition, Iraq acknowledged in 1995 that it had produced 7,800 gallons of biological agents, including anthrax, botulism toxins and aflatoxins. However, U.N. weapons inspectors said Iraq likely had produced three to four times more. Iraq also said it had deployed munitions filled with biological agents to airfields to be used against Israel and coalition forces in Saudi Arabia, the report says. It claimed all these weapons had been destroyed.

If you missed him in the N.Y Times...

REFUGEES from page 4 Also, say Afghans living in this sprawling desert town, this is a transient area, where the border is so porous that people move over unofficial tracks and then meld into the society where

&

fellow Pashto-speaking people of Pak-

istan dominate. Further, some of the international assistance that has kept drought-stricken Afghanistan more or less afloat over the last four years is still in place, and new supplies are being driven in by commercial Afghan truckers and smugglers eager to make money.

The executive director of the World

Food Program, Catherine Bertini, said Monday that her agency was delivering 900 tons of grain a day, and she was con-

fident this would be increased to 1,600 tons daily, which would put the agency close to meeting its goal of dispatching 52,000 tons offood a month. An official of the U.N. Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs said Monday that the United Nations was beginning to plan for airlifts of food and medicine to Afghans in remote areas. The Taliban confiscated more than 6,000 tons of World Food Program food in warehouses in Kabul and Kandahar last week, forcing the agency to truck food directly into remote village areas rather than stockpiling it in city centers, U.N. officials said. The Taliban also hijacked about 90 U.N. vehicles last month. The Taliban leader, Mullah Muhammad Omar, or-

dered them returned. But U.N. workers said Monday that only a handful of the looted trucks and cars had shown up. For Daniel O’Neill, the president of Mercy Corps, who arrived here Monday from the United States to assess his group’s operations inside Afghanistan, the picture was better than he had anticipated. The corps’ network of 200 Afghan staff members was still working inside the country tending to children at clinics and inoculating livestock, he said. “We were very pleasantly surprised

to find our staffalive and functioning as best they can,” O’Neill said after listening to reports from Afghan staff members at the Pakistani border. “Assistance is going forward. On the inside, supplies are going forward. None of our supplies have been taken.” One of the most decisive turning points for those living in Kandahar appears to have been the flights ofthe AC130s, airplanes designed to level buildings that also make horrendous noise. Afghans have lived through years of rocket-propelled grenades and shelling, but such close overhead air attacks were something new and mean in their vocabulary of war. Word also soon spread, mainly through radio, of the landing of the American Special Forces overnight last Friday inKandahar, another action that scared civilians who believed that they might be killed or kidnapped, several Afghans who had spoken to people in Kandahar said.

All Interested Duke Students Are Welcome to Attend

RELIGION

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Tuesday, October 23, 2001 5:00-6:30 pm Weldon Student Lounge 05 New Divinity This is a wonderful

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Pizza and drinks will be served


The Chronicle

TUESDAY, OCTOBER 23,

2001 � PAGE 7

Congressional buildings Fee proponents say burden remain closed for testing is worth better quality schools P ANTHRAX from page 1

quickly investigating the potential danger on Capitol Hill. Until this month, no cases of deadly, inhaled anthrax had been found in the United States since 1978. So far, officials said, the only piece of mail found in Washington contaminated with anthrax is the one opened on Oct. 15 in the office of Sen. Tom Daschle, D-S.D., the majority leader. The Capitol, closed since Thursday, reopened Monday. But the Senate and House were not in session, and the congressional office buildings remained shut as technicians in white safety suits and masks scoured them in search of haz-

ardous materials. Traces ofanthrax have been found in the separate mailrooms of the Senate and the House and in a mail sorting center on P Street Southeast, about 15 blocks from the Capitol. The Senate and House announced plans to hold regular sessions Tuesday but to keep their office buildings, closed because environmental tests were not completed. Senators and representatives will be offered temporary office space in government buildings away from Capitol Hill. Ridge said the assumption of the investigators who were blanketing the capital was that all the contamination here originated in that letter, but he said the authorities had not ruled out the possibility that other pieces of mail contained the potentially lethal bacteria. Anthrax has not positively been diagnosed in the postal workers who died Monday, but Dr. David Satcher, the surgeon general, said, “It does seem highly probable that those two deaths were related to inhalation anthrax.” The hospitals and government officials refused to disclose the names of the victims. Deborah Willhite, a senior vice president of the U.S. Postal Service, told reporters: “They and their families need your prayers. They do not need, at this point in time, your curiosity.” The decision for Congress to meet was “an indication to the nation that the legislative business of the United States continues,” said Lt. Dan Nichols, a spokesperson for the Capitol Police. While the deaths and serious illnesses were reported here, the principal focus of the criminal investigation remained in New Jersey, where the letter to Daschle and ones sent to NBC and The New York Post were postmarked. Ridge repeated Monday that the strains of anthrax found in the three let-

ters were “indistinguishable,” suggesting they came from the same source. If the two deaths here trim out to have been caused by anthrax, they will be the second and third this month. Robert Stevens, a photo editor at American Media in Boca Raton, Fla., died Oct. 5. One of those who died Monday, a 47year-old man, arrived at the emergency room at Southern Maryland Hospital Center in suburban Prince George’s County at 5:45 a.m. The hospital released a statement saying, “The patient was put on a ventilator and died six hours later, despite aggressive antibiotic therapy and supportive care.”

The hospital said a blood sample taken by doctors at the hospital showed germs called bacillus, a family of more than 50 types of bacteria whose members include anthrax. Further tests to determine ifthe germs are, in fact, anthrax are being conducted by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. The man first went to the hospital Saturday after he collapsed in church. Doctors saw nothing that suggested anthrax and sent him home with a diagnosis of the flu, The Associated Press reported. That decision was made at the hospital even though, according to Ridge, federal medical surveillance teams were “on the highest alert” for anthrax cases. The other postal worker died at Greater Southeast Community Hospital in Washington. The hospital did not release information about the worker, but Dr. Ivan C.A. Walks, chief medical officer for the District of Columbia, said the victim was a man and that his blood cultures also were consistent with anthrax. The two workers hospitalized with pulmonary anthrax are at Inova Fairfax Hospital in Falls Church, Va. They are seriously ill and being treated aggressively with antibiotics, the authorities said. One of them was identified Sunday as Leroy Richmond, 57. The other, who entered the hospital Monday, has not been identified. Richmond worked in an area that dealt with express and priority mail, Willhite said. That raised the possibility of additional mail containing anthrax, since the Daschle letter went through normal mail channels. Walks said 13 potential cases of anthrax, including the two who died and the two who are hospitalized, were under investigation in the District of Columbia. Not all of these people necessarily worked at the Brentwood postal station, he said.

� IMPACT FEES from page 3 schools,” she said. Others objected that the developers would merely pass that cost on to buyers by raising prices.

Supporters argued that impact fees

are better than the possible alternative, a property-tax increase. “An impact fee is one-time,” said Lavonia Allison, chair of the Durham Committee on the Affairs of Black People. “Property tax is continuous and continues to go up.” Proponents also stressed that the improvement in Durham’s quality of education outweighs the monetary burden.

They said Durham’s classrooms currently include 140 trailers, students are often assigned to lunch periods as early as 10 a.m. and as late as 2 p.m., and that some schools do not have enough books.

The commissioners explained that they will remain open to new methods of implementing impact fees, saying something does need to be done to alleviate the high density of students in public schools. Commissioner Joe Bowser suggested ideas such as setting the fees on a percentage basis, or exempting programs like Habitat for Humanity. The state Legislature earlier chose not to grant the county explicit authority to levy the fees, but county attorney Chuck Kitchen said the county would still be legally permitted to impose them. County Manager Mike Ruffin said that the earliest vote on the issue will likely be in December.


The Chronicle

p AGE 8 � TUESDAY, OCTOBER 23, 2001

Officials deny withholding Hideaway information >

HIDEAWAY from page 1

sent in the crime reports, either because it was not finished or because it was sent back to the initial officer who needed to make some corrections or additions. We’re all human, and sometimes we make mistakes.” Student Affairs administrators said that the crimes were a separate issue from the bar’s closing, and that they handled the situation like any other judicial violation. Universities are prevented by federal privacy laws from revealing details of students’ judicial violations. “We don’t have conversations like that about student disciplinary actions because we’re governed by laws that prevent us from talking about allegations about students,” said Sue Wasiolek, assistant vice president for student affairs. She added that the administration would only notify the public of an incident if it 'affected the safety or security of the campus, and even then, circumstances and students’ names could be withheld. Wasiolek could not comment or on other details ofthe case, but Hudson expressed confidence in the University’s handling ofthe matter. “I don’t believe it was intentionally kept quiet, but it’s a political matter, and there was a need to keep it quiet for a while before we knew what the true outcome would be,” Hudson said. “I have full confidence in the University and their decision with what to do in this case. It’s up to them to decide what it means to award someone a diploma and what it means to have a

owners. Hudson said he was discouraged from searching for new owners by more

stringent alcohol policies and by the structure ofthe bar’s lease with the University, but he said that the embezzle-

ment exacerbated the financial trouble. “In the end, there was still the way the lease agreement was set up and the debt was to be paid out. The end was inevitable. This just made it happen a few years before its time,” Hudson said. “Everything has worked out except for the closing of the Hideaway. The true loser was the student body.” Jennifer Curfman, a junior and former manager of the Hideaway, said that the bar’s demise would not have been imminent without the embezzlement. “Had this not happened, the Hideaway would be open,” Curfman said. “The lease agreement was not fair and was not good business, but it would have stayed open until at least the end ofthe lease agreement.”

Neither the administration nor Hideaway owners made the embezzlement public in the spring, nor did they mention the incidents during repeated interviews about the closing of the bar. Campus police officials regularly send all crime reports to local media, including The Chronicle, but police did not send the report of the Hide-

SPACE FORMERLY ALLOCATED to the Hideaway now sits empty, following owners’ decision not to seek additional investors at the end of last year.

If you've ever wondered if crack Is a main ingredient of burritos Then you know.

away embezzlement. “We have nothing to hide from our community as it relates to police investigations,” said Dean, who is responsible for distributing crime reports. “It might have been one of those things that by no harm intended, it was not

diploma from our University.”

Attention: Undergraduate Economics Majors! OPEN ADVISING HOURS For Spring 2002 Registration

Monday, October 22nd Friday, November 9th -

Come by Room 134 SocSci during the following hours to receive your PIN and Faculty Advisor Assignment. Seniors expected first week; Juniors & Sophomores expected second & third weeks. Please bring your University Check Sheet, or a Printout of your Academic History from the ACES/SISS system.

NO APPOINTMENT NECESSARY! Hours:

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The Chronicle

TUESDAY, OCTOBER 23,2001 � PAGE 9

Searches continue for directors of genomics centers

p- GENOMICS from page 1

tium of 16 laboratories that comprise the Human Genome Project. Stanford Uni-

versity’s Human Genome Center and Harvard University’s Bauer Center for Genomics Research are both well-established, while Duke is only beginning to shape its own genomics center. Lange, who said the interdisciplinary nature of IGSP made it unique, said the slow pace of the initiative has not negatively affected Duke. “In some areas, we’re probably ahead,” Lange said. “Our [Center for Genome Ethics, Law and Policy] is thriving ahead.... I think bioinformatics has really taken off. There’s a certificate in place, they’ve hired some su-

perb faculty, superb applications.” Williams and Lange noted that genomics research at the University should not mirror private pharmaceutical research. Private companies have competed, often successfully, with universities in the race to map the human genome and are both willing and able to spend more money on research and development. “I think we need to compete by not trying to do what industry can do,” Lange said. “The things that are intellectually simpler and less complex.... Those are areas we should not be in because the industry can do better.”

However, Katharine Bartlett, dean

of the law school, said that the initiative’s slow pace of the genomics initia-

U.S. rebukes Israel for military action � ISRAEL from page 2

A statement by the government said Halaweh had been No. 1 one on a list of militants Israel had demanded the Palestinian Authority arrest. A 19-year-old Palestinian police officer from Bethlehem died Monday from wounds suffered two days

earlier, doctors said. Since the current round of violence began in September 2000, 704 people have been killed on the Palestinian side and 186 on the Israeli side. Speaking to party activists in Tel Aviv, Sharon repeated his main demand, already rejected by the Palestinians, that militants who gunned down Tourism Minister Rehavam Zeevi Wednesday be handed over to Israel, “We are not willing to make any compromises concerning... a complete halt of terrorism, the dismantling of terror groups acting against us and the extradition of the killers of minister Zeevi and those who sent them,” Sharon said. In Washington, State Department spokesperson Philip Reeker gave the harshest criticism yet of the incursions and the deaths of civilians. “Israel Defense Forces should be withdraw immediately from all Palestinian-controlled areas, and no further such incursions should be made,” Reeker said. In a statement, the Prime Minister’s office said: “The murder of Rehavam Zeevi crossed the red line and Israel, as any democratic country is exerting its right to self defense and the defense of its citizens.” Israeli media report a deep rift between Israel and the United States over the incursion, reflecting U.S. concern that Mideast violence could sabotage efforts to bring moderate Arab states into its anti-tefrorism coalition.

tive has hurt recruitment for GELP. Officials have not yet found a director for the center and are also searching for someone to head the Center for Bioinformatics and Computational Biology. “We have candidates coming in at rapid order,” Williams said, adding that he would have less input in those searches. “There’s a high probability they could be filled before an institution director is selected.” Clark Havighurst, William Neal Reynolds professor of law, is the law school’s representative on GELP’s steering committee. He said last month that the search is underway and that applications will close this month. Vice Provost for Research Jim

Siedow, interim director for the bioinformatics center, said candidates are coming in every week for that center. “It seemed we were kind ofmoribund when former [Dean of the School of Medicine] Ed Holmes left,” he said. “It has been hard to gain momentum. Sandy’s made a lot of difference.” Holmes left after only 18 months in September 2000, for a position at the University of California at San Diego. Williams said searches for the Center of Human Disease Models and the Center for Genome Technology will take longer. With research linked more closely to the Medical Center, Williams said he and the new IGSP director will help select those directors.

TERRY

SANFORD INSTITUTE OF PU BLIC POLICY

DUKE

8 p.m. Sunday October 28,2001 Geneen Auditorium Fuqua School of Business Duke University Senator Lieberman was first elected to the U.S. Senate in 1988. He is a nationally recognized leader of the Democratic Party and of numerous bipartisan initiatives. In 2000, he was Democratic candidate for Vice President, becoming the first Jewish-American to be nominatedfor national office. The Terry Sanford Distinguished Lecture was endowed by a gift to the university from the William R. Kenan Jr. Charitable Trust in honor of the late Terry Sanford, who served as North Carolina Governor and U.S. Senator, and as Duke’s President for 16 years. Sanford also was founder of the Institute that now bears his name.

The event is free and open to the public. Geneen Auditorium is located in Duke’s Fuqua School of Business, which is on Science Drive on West Campus. Parking is available offN.C. 751 and Science Drive, in lots adjacent to Fuqua. More information: www.pubpol.duke.edu


The Chronicle

PAGE 10 � TUESDAY, OCTOBER 23, MU

Activists protest Taliban accuses U.S. of Afghan genocide death penalty’s inequitable use � AFGHANISTAN from page 2 the city. Huge blasts shook buildings in the center of

demonstration planned for Tuesday in Jacobabad, site of a base being used by the U.S. military. Police prevented the head of a major Islamic party from traveling to Jacobabad and arrested several hundred of his supporters.

the capital. With pressure mounting to break the Taliban grip on the country, U.S. jets have shifted major efforts from Al-Jazeera television in Qatar reported that the cities to Taliban positions fending off the opposition Taliban in Mazar-e-Sharif had executed a number of northern alliance —especially those units around the Afghans accused of spying for the United States. President George W. Bush has asked European capital Kabul and the northern city of Mazar-e-Sharif. Losing those cities would be a major setback for the Union leaders to consider a range of new measures to Taliban, who have refused to hand over Osama bin fight terrorism, including improvements to border conLaden, chief suspect in the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks on trols and transportation safety, EU officials said. the World Trade Center and the Pentagon. During a press conference in Islamabad Monday, Along the front near Kabul, U.S. jets roared in at the Taliban envoy Zaeef claimed Washington was least twice during the day Monday, bombarding Taliban playing down the number of civilian casualties from positions in parched, abandoned villages about 25 miles the air campaign. “It is clear that American planes are targeting the north of the capital. Bombs sent up plumes of black smoke and dust over Afghan people to punish the Afghan nation for having chosen an Islamic government,” Zaeef said. “America the countryside, littered with rusting military equipment from Afghanistan’s two decades of conflict. The has resorted to genocide of the Afghans.” Opposition commanders were clearly pleased to see Taliban held their ground and responded with mortar fire toward alliance positions. American jets striking Taliban positions and expressed Opposition spokesperson Ashraf Nadeem also rehope there would be more attacks. One commander, Bismillah Khan, pointed to strikes ported daylong U.S. attacks against Taliban positions in Dar-e-Suf in Samagan province, about 30 miles east of Monday on two Taliban forts outside Mazar-e-Sharif. Mazar-e-Sharif, and around the Kishanday district “We are happy because these two bases were major fortifications,” he said. “And now we are optimistic about southeast of the city. There was no opposition advance around either launching a successful attack.” The United States has been reluctant to allow the opKabul or Mazar-e-Sharif after the airstrikes. Opposition forces have been trying unsuccessfully to capture position to enter Kabul until Afghan factions had agreed Mazar-e-Sharif, which would cut Taliban supply lines in on a broad-based government to replace the Taliban. the north and enable anti-Taliban units to receive Pakistan had been urging the United States to reweapons and ammunitionfrom Uzbekistan to the north. strain the alliance, arguing that the ethnic minority “Our efforts clearly are to assist those on the ground Tajik and Uzbek-dominated coalition would never be occupy more ground,” Rumsfeld said in Washington. accepted by the Pashtun majority, which forms the core •

� MORATORIUM from page

3 ing circumstance to seek sentences other than the death penalty. Activists are now working to pass a law that would call for a day in court devoted to evaluating any potential racial motivation behind a local prosecutor’s decision to pursue the death penalty. Defendants whose victims are white are 3.5 times more likely to receive a death sentence in the state, according to an April study conducted by two professors at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. In addition, Dear reported that three-quarters of the state’s executed are AfricanAmerican. Moratorium supporters are also pursuing an execution ban for individuals convicted of a felonymurder, who were accessories to the murder. Dear cited the Oct. 12 execution of David Junior Ward, convicted for the 1991 killing of a Greenville convenience store owner, as an example in which a “less culpable” offender was put to death while his partner received a life sentence. Dear blamed a disparity in resources for hiring legal defense as the cause of the different sentences. “The most glaring problem with capital punishment is that those without the capital get the punishment,” Dear said. Moratorium advocates stressed that because inequity still exists in the application of death sentences, their members do not all necessarily support the abolition of the death penalty. “Even if you believe in [the death penalty] theoretically, you could not support how it’s being imposed,” said Marshall Dayan, president of PFADP.

In other developments: A 23-year-old Afghan refugee died of gunshot wounds suffered when Pakistani border guards opened fire to drive back angry Afghans demanding entry. Up to 15,000 Afghans in flight from U.S. bombs were crowded into the southern border no-man’s-land with Pakistan, UN. officials said. Pakistani police worked to prevent an anti-US, •

"■““

of the Taliban. Opposition figures were also widely discredited after the brutal infighting which marked their fouryear rule. An estimated 50,000 people were killed in

Kabul until the Taliban ousted the alliance from the capital in 1996.

However, little progress has been made in forming a new government.

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Sports

Kelly has proven to be the best unner on the Duke men’s cross country team. See page 12

� The Yankees return to the World Series after eliminating Seattle 12-3. See page 14 The Chronicle

TUESDAY, OCTOBER 23, 2001

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Franks: Uncouth youth hurt Duke against Terps By ROBERT SAMUEL The Chronicle

Following Duke’s 59-17 lost to Maryland Saturday, coach Carl Franks had a one-word explanation for the Blue Devil’s troubles; youth.

YOAV LURIE/THE CHRONII

RONNIE HAMILTON tackles Maryland’s Matt Murphy, while freshman Alex Green looks on

I

Open House

Heels lose Chapman

The Duke women’s basketball team is holding an open house this evening for its fans. From 5 p.m. to 7 pm, the players will sign autographs, pose for pictures and hold practice.

On the day that the North Carolina football team returned to the Top 25, it learned it would lose Will Chapman for the rest of the season. The starting DT tore ligaments in his knee.

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“After watching the tape, we had too many guys who just didn’t know what to do,” Franks said. “We were not in position. We were not where we were supposed to be. Some of it I’m going to have to learn to accept because a lot of them are guys who haven’t played before.” Franks feels the younger players on the field were not adequately prepared because they have missed practice time. “[The young playersl need to get as much practice as they can,” Franks said. “Some of them didn’t get as much practice as I would have liked last week. We had a few guys who were sick, and we have got some nagging injuries. We didn’t get a lot of practice time that would have been beneficial.” Despite not having won a game this season, Franks is still confident in his younger players. “They will get better and better,” Franks said. “I do know that. I do know that they’re good athletes. Once they learn what to do, what to expect [and] how to adjust, we’ll be fine. We’re moving where we want to, just not as fast.” With all the growing pains being shown by the younger players, it has been tough for the seniors. But senior defensive end Chris Porter is not feeling sorry for himself. “It makes me think about my days as a freshman, and knowing how hard it is,” Porter said. “It’s very depressing not winning a game in 18 tries, but in that situa-

tion, you look for your coach’s help and guidance. They’ve been there for us.” Franks also feels for his older players. “I have a great deal of frustration for our older players,” Franks said. “I wish that they didn’t have to go through this. When there’s not that many of them, it’s tough on them.” Porter feels that a win would do wonders for the Duke football program. “There are no words to explain how important it is to win one game,” Porter said. “Everybody wants to win. We want to win, our fans want to win, our friends want to win. That’s what we’re concentrating on.” Both Porter and Franks feel confident that Vanderbilt will give the Blue Devils

win number one. “Watching film today, I feel as though we have a great opportunity ahead of us this weekend,” Porter said. “We go into each game thinking we have the opportunity to win, but Vanderbilt especially. I think we match up well against them.” Franks is also very enthused about the game. “It’s going to be one heck of a football game,” Franks said. “I guarantee you Vanderbilt feels the exact same way, and there’s no reason they shouldn’t. We better make sure we know what we’re going to do, and come out with some intensity. I guarantee Vanderbilt is looking at this [game] as one they can win.” The team is in better spirits playing against a comparable foe, as opposed to a team like Maryland. “We’re more enthusiastic coming into this week,” Porter said. Kickoff against Vanderbilt is at 1:00 p.m. Saturday at Wallace Wade Stadium.

Ho °P Dreams

Tennis match

Matronal Hockey League

this afternoon, a seat next to Spike Lee fora Knicks home opener against the Wizards is up for grabs. As of Monday, the bidding exceeded $lOO,OOO.

Andre Agassi married Steffi Graf in a small, privale ceremony in Las Vegas yesterday, Tine two tennis greats are expecting their first child—a boy—in December.

Sharks 5, Rangers 1 Flames 3, Blues 2 Predators 4, Oilers 2

In a charity auction through


Sports

PAGE 12 �TUESDAY. OCTOBER 23. 2001

The Chronicle

Running with the Devils Senior Sean Kelly has emerged as a star on the cross country team By Adrienne Mercer The Chronicle

“'"He’s

try were at that meet. It’s very hard to be at the top. It just illustrates how well Sean is doing.” This year’s ACC Championships will be crucial for Kelly. He will be expected to pace Duke as well as defend his own ACC Championship title. “Of course he’s going to pace the team because he’s the best guy,” Ogilvie said. “And it’s not even like it’s close. He’s by far the best guy on the team.” At the ACC meet, Kelly will face two runners who are equal to, if not better than, himself. These men are AllAmerican Chris Dugan, a senior from N.C. State, and Nathan Sisco, a junior, from No. 14 Wake Forest. Sisco is currently one of the best cross-country runners in the ACC. Like Kelly, he has won ACC Cross Country Performer of the Week twice, virtually splitting the award team.” with Kelly during the season. it you don’t have to take Ogilvie’s word for it. Just “[Sean] is the defending ACC Champion. Whether he , a look at Kelly’s season results to date. wins or not, this year is going to be difficult because there Kelly started out the season pacing the team at the are two other [runners] that have risen up and are definiteInvitational at Van Cortlandt Park in Bronx, N.Y. ly as good as Sean,” Ogilvie said. “Sisco, who is running phetitle in the five-mile race with a nomenally captured the individual has beaten Sean head-to-head well right now, time of25:52, leading the Duke runners to a first-place finish. twice. So for Sean to capture the individual title would be a Kelly then helped the Blue Devils place third at the upset. However, he’s ranked third in the ACC and he Great American Cross Country Festival in Rock Hill, S.C., mild still would be one of the top-20 runners in the country.” an impressive result given the strong 29-team field. He ran Regardless of where Kelly finishes this year, he will the eight-kilometer course in a time of 24:12:10 to finish undoubtedly lead in the ACC fourth at the Festival. Kelly earned ACC Cross Country Championships next the Blue Devils four years at Duke, During week. his Performer of the Week during consecutive weeks in he has become the team’s premier runner. September for his performances in those two meets. “He’s everything that a coach could want. He’s a hard Just last week, Duke placed eighth out of 36 teams in worker, he’s a leader and he’s come from a long way back,” the Gold Race at the pre-NCAA meet held at Furman. Once Ogilvie said. “He struggled as a freshman and had a tough his again, Kelly led team with a ninth-place finish, complettime. By the end ofhis freshman year, he was worn out. And ing the course in 24:34. now, four years later, he’s one of the best guys in the coun“The meets we’re going to are essential,” Ogilvie said. try. It’s a great story. He’s the kind of guy that we show off “At the Minnesota meet, 14 of the top 25 teams in the coun- to other recruits.”

definitely a team leader,” said Duke cross country coach Norm Ogilvie, who has plenty of good things to say about Sean Kelly, the star senior on his team. To say the least, this has been a great senior year for Kelly. He has been running well all season up to now, wh competitions really start to matter. The team is ranked 17th nationally going into the ACC Championships this Saturday Clemson, S.C. “Sean has the experience that no one else on the team Ogilvie said. “He’s been to the NCAA Championships, he’s won an ACC individual title. He’s certainly one of 'tter cross country runners in America right now, and by example. He works harder than anybody else ;’s why he’s really good. He’s definitely the backbone

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The Chronicle

Sports

TUESDAY. OCTOBER 23. 2001 »PAGE 13

Sooners, Comhuskers take top spots in BCS rankings By RICHARD ROSENBLATT

“We just put our emphasis on winning.” Says Nebraska coach Frank Solich: “If Miami, No, 1 in the AP media poll and you’re able to play great football and win the Coaches’ Poll, was fourth in rankings every game, you’ll be there in the end.” that determine which teams will play for Expect lots of shuffling in next a national championship at the Rose week’s standings. Bowl in January. Besides Oklahoma versus Nebraska The Hurricanes, thanks to a first-half Saturday, UCLA (6-0) visits Stanford (4schedule ranked 92nd out of 117 teams, 1); Florida (5-1) plays Georgia (5-1) in were behind Oklahoma, Nebraska and Jacksonville, Fla.; South Carolina (6-1) is UCLA in the first Bowl Championship at Tennessee (4-1); Maryland (7-0) travels Series standings released Monday night. to Florida State (4-2); and Oregon (6-1) Unbeaten Miami is on the outside plays Washington State (7-0). looking in because its first five oppoOklahoma had 3.06 points in the BCS nents have a combined 8-19 record standings—two for poll average, 1.50 for against major colleges. The second-half computer-rank average, 0.56 for schedule gets tougher, with season-endstrength-of-schedule, zero for losses and ing games against Washington (5-1) and a one-point bonus deduction for its win Virginia Tech (6-0). over Texas Oct. 6. “I don’t need a computer. Teams are The bonus award is based on a sliding going to fall,” Miami coach Larry Coker scale from 1.5 points for beating a firstplace team down to .1 for a win over the said. “The month of November is as critical as December. We saw three unde15th-place team. feated teams fall last week. The only Nebraska had 6.40 points—three thing we can control is to make sure for poll average, three for computer we’re not one of them.” rank average, .40 for strength-ofThe BCS rankings are based on a forschedule, zero for losses and no bonusmula that incorporates the AP poll plus point deduction. the USA Today/ESPN coaches’ poll, eight UCLA had 8.34 points, Miami regiscomputer rankings, strength-of-schedule tered 12.01 and Virginia Tech had 13.88. and number of losses. The Sooners are first in four of the New this year are bonus points for a eight computer rankings; Nebraska and win over a team in the BCS’ top 15. Final UCLA split the four remaining firststandings will be released Dec. 9, with place spots. the top two teams playing in Pasadena, Miami is second in two computers Calif, Jan. 3 in the Rose Bowl. with a low ranking of 13thfrom another. With the standings out a week later The BCS, chaired again by ACC comthan originally planned, the timing missioner John Swofford, was created couldn’t be better for the BCS—the three years ago to create a national title Sooners (7-0) visit the Comhuskers (8- game without instituting a playoff. 0) Saturday. Champions of six conferences—the Oklahoma and Nebraska are ACC, Big East, Big Ten, Big 12, Pac-10 ranked 2-3 in the AP poll and coaches’ and SEC—qualify for a BCS game, and poll this week. two at-large teams are selected to fill out Virginia Tech is fifth in the BCS the field. standings, followed by Texas, Michigan, In the first two years of the BCS, the Maryland, Tennessee and Washington teams that played for the title were State. Rounding out the top 15 are ranked first and second in the polls. Last Florida, Washington, Oregon, Stanford year that changed, with No. 1 Oklahoma and South Carolina. playing No. 3 Florida State. No. 2 Miami, Oklahoma still has games left which beat Florida State earlier in the against Tulsa, Texas A&M, Texas Tech season, ended up in the Sugar Bowl and Oklahoma State before a Big 12 against Florida. title game, where a rematch with The eight computer polls are operated Nebraska is possible. by Richard Billingsley, Kenneth Massey, ‘With our schedule, if we win out we David Rothman, Jeff Sagarin, Scrippsdon’t have to worry about what the BCS Howard, Seattle Times, Peter Wolfe and is doing,” Sooners coach Bob Stoops said. Wes Colley. The Associated Press

Women’s Basketball

Open House Tonight

5:00 to 7:oopm Cameron Indoor Stadium Meet the Players and Coaches Autograph and Picture Opportunities with the Team •

Watch Practice

Order or pick-up your season tickets at the Ticket Office Prize give-aways from Duke Women’s Basketball, Dick’s Sporting Goods, and Duke University Stores All children who bring their parents receive a coupon for a free Ben Jerry’s Ice Cream Cone •

&

Everybody gets the new Duke Women’s Basketball United Poster

JOHN BIEVER/ICON SPORTS PHOTOS

THE OKLAHOMA SOONERS wait in a tunnel before a game earlier this season. This weekend the Sooners, who are ranked first in the BCS, visit second-ranked Nebraska.


PAGE 14 �TUESDAY. OCTOBER 23.2001

Sports

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The Chronicle

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Yankees return to World Series with win over M’s By JOSH DUBOW

The Associated Press

The 12 NEW YORK Yankees made a liar Mariners 3 out ofLou Piniella. The American League championship series never made it back to Seattle, as the Mariners manager promised, thanks to a 12-3 victory in Game 5 Monday night that gave the Yankees a chance to win their fourth straight World Series. “I have never been prouder of a group of men in my life,” manager Joe Torre told his team. “Whatever motivates us, I know the ‘NY 1 on your cap had a lot to Yankees

HENRY RAY ABRAMS/AFP

JAMES THRASH celebrates after making the game-winning catch with 1:52 left as the Eagles beat the New York Giants 10-9.

Eagles beat Giants late in bitter defensive struggle By DAVE GOLDBERG

downs and out. Then it forced a fumble by Giants quarterback Kerry Collins on EAST RUTHER- New York’s final possession, when Eagles 10 The Jeremiah Trotter stripped the ball and FORD, N.J, Giants 9 New York Giants have Brandon Whiting managed to recover never been known for flashy offense. before the ball went out of bounds. They let Donovan McNabb and the New York took a 9-0 lead as it conPhiladelphia Eagles take advantage of trolled the ball for 24:35 of the first 30 their stodginess Monday night. minutes. But it settled for field goals of McNabb threw an 18-yard touchdown 24,21, and 24 yards by Morten Andersen. pass to James Thrash with 1:52 left in The defense, meanwhile, sacked the game to give Philadelphia a 10-9 vicMcNabb six times—including two by Michael Strahan, who now has 10 1/2 in tory over the Giants Monday night. It was Philadelphia’s first win over his last four games. It was the second the Giants in 10 games and gave the one-point loss for the Giants, who lost 15Eagles (3-2) a one-half game lead over 14 in St. Louis last week because the New York (3-3) in an NFC East where Rams forced a fumble as New York was no other team seems likely to challenge. driving for the winning field goal. The touchdown followed a 27-yard “It was a little disconcerting. We punt by Rodney Williams after his first should have won both games,” Collins punt to the Philadelphia 33 was negated said. “We could have put the game away by a holding penalty. Philadelphia had a in the first halfbut we didn’t.” first down at the New York 40 with 5:52 New York had 13 first downs in the left. Six plays later, McNabb rolled to his first half to two for the Eagles. right and found Thrash in the left comer The Giants took a 3-0 lead on of the endzone. Andersen’s 24-yard field goal at the end “They kept fighting and we played of a 64-yard, 15-play drive that constupid and they grabbed the game,” sumed 8:17 on the clock. It was helped said New York coach Jim Fassel, whose by three offside penalties on the Eagles. team took a 9-0 lead on three long firstNew York made it 6-0 on Andersen’s half drives, none of which found the 21-yarder 2:04 into the second period. Giants in the endzone. Then it was 9-0 on Andersen’s second As much credit goes to the 24-yarder that followed another plodPhiladelphia defense, which held New ding drive. That march covered 61 yards York to four straight series of three on 13 plays and ate up another 8:28. The Associated Press

do with it. This ballclub will be remembered by me forever.” MVP Andy Pettitte took a shutout into the seventh inning, Bernie Williams and Paul O’Neill homered and the Yankees put the bumbling Mariners

away early. Next up for New York is Game 1 of the World Series against aces Curt Schilling, Randy Johnson and the

Arizona Diamondbacks at Bank One

Ballpark on Saturday night; The Yankees jumped out to a 4-0 lead in the third inning—thanks to third baseman David Bell’s error and Williams’ third homer in as many days. The rest was just a formality as the Yankees brought a swift ending to

Seattle’s record-tying 116-win season and won their 38th pennant. “You need a different hero every night,” Derek Jeter said. “Fortunately we have 25 heroes.” A team that looked old and tired in the first two games in the opening round against Oakland staged an improbable rally. One home run swing away from being swept, the Yankees showed a resiliency that endeared them more than ever to their fans in this shaken city. “Down 2-0 to one of the best clubs in baseball, you never, never, never doubted yourselves,” Torre said in toasting his team. “This city needed something like this. We needed something like this.” Mayor Rudolph Giuliani was among the 56,370 fans cheering Torre’s Yankees so loudly the stadium shook. The celebration was a wonderful distraction from the heartache and devastation endured by this city following the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks. “I think it’s as emotional as I’ve ever heard it at Yankee Stadium,” Giuliani

said. “This year I have to say the emotion adds something extra to it.” After Shane Spencer’s sliding catch ended the game, Giuliani and Torre walked arm in arm to the mound to congratulate the celebrating players. The Yankees of Derek Jeter, Williams and Pettitte became the first team since their predecessors in 1960-64—led by Mickey Mantle, Roger Maris and Whitey Ford—to win four straight pennants. There was no more tough talk to come from Piniella on this night. All he could do was stare at the field and pop his chewing gum while the Yankees romped around the bases. After two straight losses at Safeco Field to open the series, a defiant Piniella made a promise his team couldn’t keep—that the ALCS would return to Seattle for Game 6. “First of all, I won’t say it again,” Piniella said. ‘You live and learn. I just had confidence in my team. That was it.” Piniella looked like a prophet after Seattle’s 14-3 Game 3 win Saturday. But the Mariners lost in the ninth inning on Sunday and they let him down again in the clincher. After becoming the first team in 53 years to lead the league in batting average, fielding and ERA, the Mariners could do nothing right. Seattle committed one error, let three flyballs fall in front of outfielders for hits and threw a run-scoring wild pitch in one of its sloppiest games of the year. After Tino Martinez’s three-run homer in the eighth inning, the fans chanted: “No Game 6! No Game 6!”—as if Piniella and the Mariners didn’t know

that already. “The one thought that did come to my mind strangely enough is this city had suffered a lot and let out a lot of emotion,” Piniella said. “I felt good for them. I really did. That’s a strange thought from a manager” who was getting whipped badly. The Mariners joined baseball’s only other 116-win team as a postseason dud. The 1906 Chicago Cubs lost the World Series to the crosstown White Sox in six games. “The amazing thing about baseball is no matter how many games you win, unless you win the World Series you’re going to feel disappointment,” Piniella said. See ALCS on page 16 P-

Are you interested in playing on a

DUKE WOMEN’S CLUB BASKETBALL TEAM? Come to the organizational meeting Tuesday, October Wilson Room 020

(downstairs) 9:00 pm M Mil

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Please email kagl4@ you will be attending th or if you need more in v


Classifieds

The Chronicle BERLINER ABEND

Announcements

Duke in Berlin

the Dept, of German cordially invite you to a Berliner Abend (Berlin Evening) of refreshment & entertainment Thurs., Oct. 25, 7 p.m. in the House Lounge, Shaefer (Language Dorm), Edens Quad presented by Prof. Monika Fiedler of Humboldt University, Berlin. Interested in applying for spring 2002? Applications are being accepted in the Office of Study Abroad, 2016 Campus Drive, 684-2174.

ATTN: UNDERGRAD ECON MAJORS! OPEN ADVISING HOURS For 2002 Spring Registration Monday October 22nd-Friday November 9th. Come by Room 134 SocSci during the following hours to receive your PIN and Faculty Advisor Assignment. Seniors expected first week; Juniors & Sophomores expected second & third weeks. Please bring your University Check Sheet or a Printout of your Academic History from the system. ACES/SISS NO APPOINTMENT NECESSARY! Hours: Mondays: 9am- 12pm &

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FREE CAT. Gray tabby; white paws, throat and belly. Neutered male. Inside only. Call 489-0423.

Apts. For Rent

3pm-7pm Tuesdays: 9am-spm Wednesdays; 9am-12pm & 2:3opm-4:3opm Thursdays; 9am-spm Fridays: 9am-Ipm &

1,2, and 3 bedroom apartments

available for January 1 near East Campus. 416-0393.

3pm-spm Watch for e-mails & flyer postings in SocSci for the most current hours. Advising will be handles through the EcoTeach Center in Room 134 Social Sciences

Get Paid For Your Opinions! Earn $l5-$125 per survey, just for giving your opinions on different products and services.

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Childcare needed for 3 children, ages 4, 6 and 9. 2-6pm.

Mondays, Fridays.

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Non-smoker only.

References required. 919-9670857. cam.harvey@duke.edu.

Attention! Dreaded school loans? Work from home. Full.or Part-time $lOOO-$5OOO/month. Free information booklet. 1-800-545-7271.

BARTENDERS CAN make over $250 per shift! No Experience Necessary. Call 1-800-509-3630, ext 127.

Autos For Sale 1994 Ford Thunderbird LX Coop. Great condition, well maintained. Aluminum wheels, alarm system, auto transmission, AM/FM cassette. Tinted windows, dual airbags, and power seats. Hunter green. 79,000 miles. $5500. Call 309-1304.

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Elvis, Renaissance, Mambo, genie, dancehall, Western and hundreds of other Halloween costumes plus lots of accessories and sale costumes. Formal Wear Outlet, Daniel Boone Village, Hillsborough, 15 minutes from campus. For hours and info 6448243. Napoleon,

Business Opportunities

PRE-MED/PRE-VET PRE-DENT?

Fraternities-Sororities Clubs- Student Groups

Planning application to medical, dental or veterinary school for matriculation in 2003? Dean Kay Singer will hold information sessions focused on the application process October 22 and 23, 5:307:00 pm, 116 Old Chem, October 24, 7:00-8:30 pm, 139 Social Sciences. Plan to attend one of the Forms required for meetings. opening a file in the HPAC will be distributed at that time.

Earn $l,OOO-$2,000 this semester with the easy Campusfundraiser.com three hour fundraising event. Does not involve credit card applications. Fundraising dates are filling quickly, so call today!

Contact Campusfundraiser.com at (888)923-3238, or visit www.campusfundraiser.com

The Chronicle classified advertising

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

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ty. Raleigh’s Bartending School. Call now for info on half price tuition special. HAVE FUN! MAKE MONEY! MEET PEOPLE!!! (919)6760 77 4.

www.cocktailmixer.com Bring this ad for FREE shooters book with enrollment.

Earn Extra Cash. Get Free Eats! We are looking for sophomores to participate in a market research discussion group. If you have used QuickStudy® reference guides, or other study guides printed on laminated sheets, Contact Brandy at 1800-734-5662.

1 Saladelia Cafe

is seeking part-time office assistant. Telephone and computer skills a must. $9/hr, flexible hours. Call Diana, 489-5776.

Lifeguard needed for up to 10-15 hours per week at the Lenox Baker Hospital therapeutic pool to guard for children and adults with special needs. Person must be at least 18 years old and hold current lifeguard certification. Hours available immediately. Pay rate is $9.00/hr. If interested contact Catie Shafer at 6844315. Local businessman needs Mandarin speaking tutor. Prefer someone from Shanghai or Beijing. 493-8721 ext. 111.

TUESDAY, OCTOBER 23, 2001 � PAGE 15

MCAT PREP Help yourself prepare for the MCAT while assisting a fellow student. Be a tutor for Physics or Chemistry. Undergraduate tutors earn $9/hr and graduate student tutors earn $l3/hr. Print an application off the website at

NEED MONEY??? Have some extra time? Why not be a peer tutor and help someone while earning cash? Tutors needed for Chemistry 21L, 23L, 151 L, Math 25L, 31L, 32L, 32, 41, 103, Physics 52L, 53L, Engineering 53L and Computer Science 6. Undergraduate tutors earn $9/ hr and graduate students earn $l3/hr. Apply in the Peer Tutoring Office, 217 Academic Advising Center, east campus, 684-8832 or online at

aaswebsv.aas.duke.edu/skills. Saladelia Cafe is seeking parttime cashier with a great smile. $9/ hr from 11am-2pm and weekends. Call Bernardo @

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Courier, Clerical, Lab Assistants Positions available on campus and in Med. Ctr. $7.50/ hr, flexible schedules between 5-40 hrs/wk. 660-3928, check list: g s n i

auxweb.duke.edu/studtemp/

WORK AT HOME $lO PER HOUR Duke grad/buz owner needs administrative assistance. Internet, phone calls, faxing. $lO/hour, flexible time, min. 5 hours/week. Email response to

work@princetonmr.com. Work-study position open for undergraduate student in Drosophila Molecular Genetics Lab. To maintain the fly strings in good conditions, to help with media preparation for flies, and assist researchers as needed. Position requires a minimum presence of 68 hrs/week. Schedule can be adjusted to course and lecture requirements. Student must qualify as work-study. Hubert Amrein, hoal@duke.edu or Deborah Holifield, holifool@mc.duke.edu. 684-3290.

Work-study student to work as office assistant in the Office of Research Support, 15-20 hrs. per week, filing, typing, clerical and general office duties. Flexible 5:00 p.m., hours, 8:30 a.m. Monday-Friday, beginning immediately. $7.75 hr. Contact Judy Cox @ 684-3030. -

MATH TUTORS NEEDED Be a math tutor for the Peer Tutoring Program. Pick up an application in 217 Academic Advising Center, east campus, 684-8832. Undergraduates earn $9/hr and graduate students earn $l3/hr.

1810 Albany close to DUKE. 3BR On 1 1/2BA fenced yard. Hillandale Golf Course. Quiet neighborhood. $BBO/mo 419-8850. 5, 6, and 7 bedroom houses near East Campus for ‘O2-‘O3 school year. Call 416-0393.

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payment Prepayment is required Cash, Check, Duke IR, MC/VISA or Flex accepted

(We cannot make change for cash payments.) 24 hour drop off location •101 W. Union Building or mail to: Chronicle Classifieds Box 90858, Durham, NC 27708 0858 fax to: 684-8295 phone orders: call (919) 684-3811 to place your ad Visit the Classifieds Online! -

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Sports

PAGE 16 �TUESDAY. OCTOBER 23. 2001

The Chronicle

Redick has added facets to game Pettitte chalks up win, MVP award REDICK from page 11 a couple inches taller than Trajan and I think he’s probably a better scorer than Trajan,” Jackson said. “Redick definitely has got to work on his defense and some other aspects of his game. I think he’s going to be the same type of player Trajan was, but I think he’s

going to be better.” Redick laughs at the comparisons to the former

Blue Devil. “Trajan Langdon is my favorite player that has ever played for Duke,” he said, “I guess we’re similar because we’re both about 6-3 [and] shoot, but other than that, he was unbelievable. He had an awesome CAREER HIGHLIGHTS career. He was one of the greatest players to ever play � Competed withthe East team in the USA Basketball Youth at Duke. I hope I can be as good as him or better, but I Development Festival this June don’t think you can compare a high school player and an All-ACC, All-American player.” � Averaged 28.4 points per game, 6.5 rebounds per game and 4.3 Although he was best known for his shooting abiliper game as a junior assists ty when he committed to Duke, Redick has added other elements to his game in the last year. � Ranked 14th in his class by Dave Telep who rates “I think my overall game has improved,” he said. Tm recruits for CNNSI.com a much better rebounder. My defense has really improved just in the last 10 months. I’ve gotten stronger, and I can score now pretty much any different way. WHAT THEY SAID Whereas before I was just an outside shooter, I can take people off the dribble now.” He's an unbelievable shooter, and what can I say? He’s an Having watched the Roanoke native play on many absolutely pat player. He’s got the whole package. occasions, Jackson echoed Redick’s comments. Lee Melchionni, future Duke teammate “He’s one of those fantastic three-point shooters,” Jackson said. “They only come along two or three in a He’s one ofthose fantastic three-point shooters. They only come year. He’s probably the best in the country. along two or three in a year. He* probably the best in the country. “[ln the last year] I think his mindset has improved -Clint Jackson, recruiting analyst for High Major Hoops to where he knows he has to do a little more than just shoot the ball. He knows he has to keep defenders on him by having some moves off the dribble and creating teammate Thompson—the two played together on the for his teammates. He’s gone from being just a shooter Raleigh Heat—and much has been made of his tight to being a more well-rounded offensive player whose friendship with Randolph, another AAU teammate. strength is shooting.” “I see all those guys being my best friends,” Redick But Duke recruited more than a phenomenal said. “Socially, I can’t wait just to hang around with jump shot and some increasingly polished offensive those guys.” skills; Redick believes he was brought in to be a But this band ofbrothers is not coming to Duke just to leader as well. pal around; they figure to win some basketball games too. He backed up that expectation by verballing first “I think that our class will win a ton of games and and helping to bring in a stellar class ofguys whom he will win a ton of championships,” Redick said. “And feels will be his best friends. when all is said and done, I think we will go down as He has already become close friends with his AAU the best class [in history].” -

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For more on Duke’s incoming recruiting class, continue check back to the sports section all week. Tomorrow: Michael Thompson

Duke

University Hospital

Allied Health. Nursing & Professional Job Fair Tuesday, October 30, 2001 4 PM TO 9 PM

Duke University Hospital will host a Job Fair on Tuesday, October 30, from 4 PM to 9 PM at the North Pavilion (just off the Durham Freeway). Hiring managers will be on site to interview and answer questions about opportunities at one of the world's great health care providers. Please join us (bring multiple copies of your CV and/or Resume). For information on directions and campus map: wwwJu.duke.edu / jobs/hospitaljobfair.html

If you are unable to attend on the 30th, please submit your resume online at wwwJu.duke.edu (identify 'JFHIO/01' as the source ofyour interest). Please e-mail marchooB@mc.duke.edu with questions.

ALCS from page 14 The Yankees showed a bit oftheir own bravado, not bringing their suitcases to the stadium for a crosscountry flight that never took off. “We wanted to be confident,” Pettitte said. “We wanted to get it done tonight.” Seattle’s best shot in the game came in the first inning after Mike Cameron reached on a one-out double that third baseman Scott Brosius appeared to lose sight of in the red-white-and-blue background of bunting hanging over the stands. But with two outs, Edgar Martinez hit a soft liner to left field that Chuck Knoblauch made a shoe-top catch on to save a run. It was Knoblauch’s miss on a similar play that turned Game 3 in Seattle’s favor. The fielding play that turned this game came in the third inning, when the sure-handed Bell misplayed Brosius’ grounder leading off the inning for an error. Alfonso Soriano, whose ninth-inning homer won Game 4, lined a single to center field off Aaron Sele. After a sacrifice bunt, Jeter hit a sacrifice fly to give New York the lead and David Justice followed with an RBI double. Williams then hit a drive toward the monuments in left-center—where Yankee greats from past dynasties are honored—for his 16th postseason homer to make the score 4-0. O’Neill, likely in his final days before retirement, hit his second homer of the series to make it 5-0 in the fourth and that was more than enough for Pettitte. Pitching with his hat pulled tight over his steely eyes, Pettitte held Seattle scoreless until Bell’s tworun single in the seventh inning cut New York’s lead to 9-2. Pettitte allowed three rims and eight hits in 6 1-3 innings to improve to 10-5 in the postseason. More importantly, the Yankees won for the 17th time in Pettitte’s 22 postseason starts. The Yankees tacked on four runs in a sloppy sixth when flyballs fell in front of Cameron in center field and Jay Buhner in right for hits. Joel Pineiro also threw a run-scoring wild pitch. Notes: Torre joined John McGraw (New York Giants 1921-24), Joe McCarthy (Yankees 1936-39) and Casey Stengel (Yankees 1949-53 and 1955-58) as the only managers to win four straight pennants.... Williams trails Jim Thome (17), Mantle (18) and Reggie Jackson (18) on the all-time postseason homer list.... Sele dropped to 0-6 in his postseason career with five losses to the Yankees, &

to

PLANNING TO APPLY FOR EDICAL SCHOOL, DENTAL SCHOOL, VETERINARY SCHOOL MISSION IN 2003? Attend one

of the following meetings:

Monday, October 22 Tuesday, October 23

5:30 7:00 pm 5:30 7:00 pm 116 Old Chem -

-

Wednesday, October 24 7:00 8:30 pm 139 Social Sciences -

Dean Kay Singer will provide information about applying for health professions schools and distribute material required for opening a file in the Health Professions Advising Center (HPAC) Sponsored by the HPAC Trinity College ofArts and Sciences

What's At Stake? Challenges, obstacles, and New Horizons for Interdisciplinary Research A Panel Discussion by Recipients of the Barbara and Randall Smith Faculty Enrichment Fellowship

Introductions by Berndt Mueller, Dean of Natural Sciences Moderated by Cathy N. Davidson, Vice Provost for Interdisciplinary Studies Smith Fellows: Annabel J. Wharton (Art and Art History, Economics) “Economics of Space” James S. Clark (Biology, Nicholas School of the Environment and Earth Sciences): “Ecological Forecasting” Daniel J. Gauthier (Physics, Biomedical Engineering) “Heart Dynamics” Giiven Guzeldere (Philosophy, Center for Cognitive Neuroscience, Department of Psychological and Brain Sciences): “Seeing With and Without Consciousness”

Time: October 24, 2001 from 4-s:3opm ' Place: Franklin Center (Corner of Erwin and Trent), Room 240 Parking: Paid parking is available in the Medical Center parking garage. For directions, please visit the Franklin Center website at: www.duke.edu/web/jhfcenter


Comics

The Chronicle

TUESDAY, OCTOBER 23, 2001 � PAGE

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Doonesbury/ Garry Trudeau AGAIN?

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Caspian

9 Aging problem of paper 10 “The Plough and the Stars" playwright

56 Wow!

59 Opinion page,

11 “Lamia" poet 12 Nocturnal

60 Rich or Worth 61 "Sixteen 62 Artifice 63 Drug cops 64 Faux pas 65 Sketch artist 66 Sen. Kefauver 67 Mary Baker or Nelson

13 Fido's org. Gooey mass McKinley and Cantor 24 Comic Chris 26 Field measure 27 Comic Silvers 29 Out-and-out 30 Sister's sib Footwear finish

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Edited by Wayne Robert Williams

Vein of iron Young haddock Academy frosh Singer Cantrell Sea east of the

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ACROSS Of discos Spread wide Neighbor of Tex. 14 Aroma 15 Irish county 16 Business VIPs 17 Dark time in ads 18 Of the kidneys 19 Seniors 1 grp. 20 Rock composer Brian 21 Freak out 23 Goody Twoshoes 25 Black Sea port 26 Chef's garb 28 Pedestrian tunnel 31 Inspects 33 Speaker of baseball 34 Whitney's invention 37 Peril 38 Discover by chance 40 Lady from Lisboa 41 RRs on trestles 42 Center 43 Plant unions 45 Barber's tool Gay47 -48 Makes amends 51 Unobstructed 53 Follow

primate

DOWN Left

Attempt Olympic

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greatness

husband Start printing the news

Part of ISS 36 Shuttle grp. 39 401K kin

40 Comic Garvey 42 Newsman Huntley

44 Stink and then some

45 Poet Gary 46 Wall bracket 48 Where Aesop shopped?

49 Refill 50 Past plump 52 Fertile loam 54 Notable times 55 Lahr or Parks 57 OK city 58 Spot in a crowd 61 Half an African fly?

The Chronicle other things we’re hiding away; all our good headlines:

jim’s managing associates craig’s staffbox: other kids’ fourth-grade milk money ambika’s imposing stature:

FoxTrot/ Bill Amend zzzz

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tyler’s wits:

crime reports: Account Representatives Account Assistant: Sales Representatives:

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.Jim and ambika amisha

john tyler tim, thad, drew ~..roz and ilene mike and amisha .matt, robert, tim, matt klein roily Monica Franklin, Dawn Hall, Yu-hsien Huang, Matt Epley

Lucy DePree, Constance Lindsay Kate Burgess, David Chen,

Melissa Eckerman Creative Services:. ..Rachel Claremon, Cecilia Davit, Laura Durity,

Lina Fenequito, Megan Harris, Dan Librot Thushara Corea, Preeti Garg, Ellen Mielke, Veronica Puente-Duany Courtney Botts, Seth Strickland, Emily Weiss

Business Assistants: Classifieds:

TlißSdßy ’October23

1 1

American Red Cross: Open blood donor site. By appointment (684-4799). 11:30 am to 4:30 pm. Duke Ctinic.

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., Ste22o, Overlook Building in Chapel Hill. For more information calf 401-9333 or see the web site at www.cornucopiahouse.org.

Taize Evening Prayer, in the tradition of

Community

(

Master Class MATT HAIMOVITZ, cello. 7:00 pm, Nelson Music Room. -

Freewater Films: “Story of Ricky," with SiuWong Fan. 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.

the Brothers of Taize. 5:15 pm. Memorial The Society for Creative Anachronism Chapel, Duke Chapel. (SCA) meets on Tuesdays at 7:00 pm. the middle ages. Study and & FAITH FRf ENDSHIP: Join others at 6:45 Sword-fighting,recreate feasting, dancing, costumpm each Tuesday, upstairs balcony room ing, etc. For information, call 682-0551. in The Marketplace, for Bible study and supportive friendship over supper. SponHappening Warm-up Screening of Les y BSU (Baptist Student Union) and Blank’s “Sprout Wings and Fly" and “A Well all. Call 684-5994 for more infor- Spent Life.” At the Center for Documentary mation. Studies, 7:00 pm. -

Calendar Teer House: Helping Children and Teens to Develop Inner Discipline. To register, call 416-3853 or 1-888-ASK-DUKE (2753853). 7:00 pm. N. Roxboro .Road, Durham. The Self Knowledge Symposium meets every Tuesday at 7:30 pm In 204 Perkins (near the Perk). Be prepared for boisterous discussions on the things that really matter. The curious are always welcome.

Wednesday Covering Bioterrorism: A Special Seminar for NC Journalists. 9:00 am-12 Noon, at the Freedom Forum Conference Center on the third floor of Carroll Hall on the UNCCH campus. The seminar is free to all journalists, please call 919-966-7024 to regis-

ter.

17

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.cornucopiahouse.org. Teer House; Medication and Immunization Awareness for Seniors. To register, call 416-3853 or 1-888-ASK-DUKE (2753853). 2:00 pm. N. Roxboro Road, Durham. CAROLINA-DUKE WORKING GROUP ON MEXICO Center for Latin American and Caribbean Studies, 2114 Campus Drive, Duke University. The Mexico Working Group will have its next meeting on October 24th at 7:30 pm at the Duke Center for Latin American and Caribbean Studies. All are welcome. For more information or to subscribe to the list serve contact Stuart please Day <days@unc.edu>. -


pAGE

18 � TUESDAY, OCTOBER 23, 2001

The Chronicle

.—ss Letters to the editor

Evaluating evaluations The University wrongly permits professors, departments and schools to hold back course evaluation data from students students should welcome the news that the Arts and Sciences Council finally allowed some evaluation data to be displayed online, the system of disseminating this data is far from perfect. Inconsistency in openness across courses hampers efforts to provide the students with complete information about these classes. In particular, the council failed to mandate that all departments display the evaluations for all professors and all courses. Instead the group unacceptably allowed itself to be swayed by several gun-shy faculty. These professors were, at best, concerned students would use the system to find easier courses but perhaps selfishly fearful of seeing themselves evaluated in public. The concern that some students will use the evaluations for wrong reason bears a shadow of validity. But even so, distributing this information has great value. Outside of course evaluations, students are usually stuck choosing their courses based on word of mouth and the short paragraph description listed on ACES. One student’s related experience may be highly atypical from the rest of the class. Course evaluations simply provide a more empirical view of a class than rumor. If professors fear that course evaluations do not provide a complete picture, they are correct, but the proper response to this problem is to realize that, without course evaluations, students choose courses with even less information. Instead, the faculty should mandate that course evaluations be posted for all classes and encourage instructors to explain their evaluation numbers. Students will appreciate this effort at it adds a key perspective to the information they have available in choosing their classes. Such explanations would supplement the course synopsis webpages. Currently, some professors do provide more information than the standard blurb, and such pages are very helpful in letting students know what they are getting into. Professors should always be filling these forms out, and those who are not, certainly should not be complaining that course evaluations are imprecise. As the methods of distributing information change, so do the means of collecting it. The council recently changed and improved the end-of-semester evaluation forms. Unfortunately, some faculty members were arrogant enough to believe that they should not be required to hand out these evaluations forms. Student feedback is always highly valuable, for other students, for the department and especially for the teachers themselves to consider how well they are actually communicating the knowledge they are charged with explaining. Still, the Pratt School of Engineering has yet to consider posting course evaluation results online. This is something that Duke Student Government should not have overlooked in their years of campaigning for course evaluations for Trinity College students. Now DSG, Engineering Student Government and the school’s faculty should turn their attention to providing access to this information.

Although

The Chronicle AMBIKA KUMAR, Editor JAMES HERRIOTT, Managing Editor DAVE INGRAM, University Editor KEVIN LEES, University Editor JOHN BUSH, Editorial Page Editor CRAIG SAPERSTEIN, Sports Editor JONATHAN ANGIER, General Manager MARTIN BARNA, Projects Editor PRATIK PATEL, Senior Editor MATT ATWOOD, City & Stale Editor THAD PARSONS, Photography Editor CHERAINE STANFORD, Features Editor TIM PERZYK, Recess Editor MATT BRUMM, Health & Science Editor JENNIFER SONG, Health & ScienceEditor ELLEN MIELKE, TowerView Editor PERI EDELSTEIN, TowerView Managing Editor PAUL DORAN, Sports Managing Editor DREW KLEIN, Sports Photography Editor ROSALYN TANG, Graphics Editor EVAN DAVIS, Sr. Assoc. Sports Editor WHITNEY BECKETT, Wire Editor DEAN CHAPMAN, Wire Editor MEG LAWSON, Sr. Assoc. City & State 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, CreativeDirector CATHERINE MARTIN, Production Manager MARY WEAVER, Operations Manager JORDANA JOFFE, Advertising Manager NALINI MILNE, Advertising Office 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 editorialboard. Columns, letters and cartoons represent the views of the authors. To reach the Editorial Office (newsroom) at 301 Flowers Building, call 684-2663 or fax 684-4696. To reach theBusiness Office at 103 West Union Building, call 684-3811. To reach the Advertising Office at 101 West Union Building call 684-3811 or fax 684-8295. Visit The Chronicle Online at http://www.chronicle.duke.edu. © 2001 The Chronicle, Box 90858, Durham. N.C. 27708. 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.

University should reduce burdens on employees they had free access to Card Gym, the weight room and the pool. That has been replaced with a stiff annual fee. When that fee went into

The plan to increase parking fees from $B5 to as much as $l2O imposes an outrageous burden on University employees. Staff salaries at Duke are not excessively generous, and an increase of 147 percent is simply taking back much ofthe small annual increases earned by even the best employees. This is the second recent

financial

blow

to

effect, a member ofthe house-

keeping staff told me that he would have to quit playing pickup basketball games in Card because the fee “is food off my family’s table.” Duke is closing in on a hugely successful $2 billion fundraising campaign, and it can afford to spend $2O mil-

Duke

employees. Until the Wilson Recreational Center opened,

lion for another football building. These are surely signs that Duke can also afford to be a bit more generous with its employees. Thus, it would be appropriate for the University to share its bounty by reducing rather than increasing the parking fees for its hard-working and loyal employees.

Ole Holsti Professor Emeritus Department of Political Science

Proposed parking changes do not improve situation el, maybe a lot at RaleighAnd here’s an idea: Have Durham International Airport the people who are going to is a possibility. use the new lot behind the Why do the buses need Bryan Center pay for it, not Global Positioning System the people who have a longer technology? How difficult is commute from the parking it to find them now? Do we lot to their departments than from their homes to the parkreally need all the bus shelters to look alike? Why does ing lot. the parking office need a director of marketing? Are Steve Ponisciak we ■ trying to sell parking Graduate Student Institute of Statistics and spaces to people who don’t Decision Sciences actually need them?

Fm very impressed with Duke’s recent hire of a full-

time parking director. She continues in the footsteps of her predecessors, finding even more ways to steal even more Duke students’ and employees’ money, while not improving the situation at all and possibly making it worse. Where will this “low-cost

park-and-ride” lot be located? With the decrease in air travfor referenced article, see http:! www.chronicle.duke.edu! story.php?article_id=23B69 !

Letter writer blasts the ‘very fabric that binds us’ vacationing in Iraq any time soon. But, Bowling continues to enjoy the spoils of his citizenship, while blasting the very fabric that binds us together. Sure, the United States has never been perfeet. Yes, we have some past actions to be ashamed of. But, never in the history of

After reading Kelly Bowling’s letter in the Oct. -19 issue of The Chronicle, I felt that Bowling is the one who showed his hypocrisy to

the world, not the United States. If this great nation is so “selfish” and horrendous, why does he continue to inhabit our fair shores? I try to escape unpleasantness at all costs. Thus, I will not be for referenced letter,

modern civilization has a nation come close to

embodying the ideals that

we stand for. Last time I was Bowling checked, exhibiting these very ideals

with his pathetic diatribe freely published and disseminated, but maybe that’s just because he’s rich, white and straight. Rick Overholt Trinity ’B9

see http://www.chronicle.duke.edu /story.php?article_id=23B93

PPS facilitates stimulating intellectual environment of fall 2000, public policy was one ofthe three most popular majors at Duke. The inaccuracies in Zimmerman’s column go on and on—from technicalities such as attributing tools of policy analysis taught in PPS 55 to PPS 114 and claiming a false lack of security policy classes to more substantial issues like the claim that the institute was training bureaucrats, not leaders. This outlandish remark is particularly disturbing. First, I encourage Zimmerman to enroll in one of Tony Brown or Alma Blount’s legendary leadership classes. But beyond that, it is important to recognize that PPS classes are more than just venues for facts to be imparted and then memorized and regurgitated. Instead, they to reconcile his unsubstantiatare avenues for analytical ed claim with the fact that, as skills training, ethical inquiry

reading After John Zimmerman’s Oct. 11 critique of the Sanford Institute of Public Policy, I can’t help but feel sorry for him. Somehow he has managed to arrive at his fourth year at this University without learning how to write a proper argument. A quick analysis of Zimmerman’s column —something I learned how to do effectively in one of my many PPS classes—reveals one particularly disturbing flaw: It lacks any evidence to support his many claims. Claims that, with a little bit of research, are easily seen to be false. Zimmerman begins by stating that eager freshmen in PPS classes quickly get discouraged and drop out. What Zimmerman doesn’t do is try for referenced column,

On

and character development. It is that unfortunate Zimmerman’s experience has

not been as fulfilling as mine and that ofmany others. The Sanford Institute of Public Policy is nationally with distinrecognized, guished professors that succeed in creating an intellectually stimulating environment. It is, in Zimmerman’s own words, a “true treasure.” Zimmerman concludes his column by stating that unless reforms are instituted, Sanford will remain “a waste of students’ time and Duke’s money.” I believe the only money being wasted is Zimmerman’s, for he evidently has not learned much during his time here at Duke.

Sari Silverman Trinity ’O2

see http: / / www.chronicle.duke.edu / story.php^articleJd-23822

the record

The most glaring problem with capital punishment is that those without the capital get the punishment. Steve Dear, executive director of People ofFaith Against the Death Penalty, on economic inequalities of the death penalty’s application (see story, page three)


Commentary

The Chronicle

TUESDAY, OCTOBER 23,2001 �PAGE 19

Flying in less than friendly skies People’s perceptions have been altered by Sept. 11 attacks

Now I don t claim to be the best-lookmg guy in the world; vanity is one of the few vices I have left unscathed. That being said, 1 never imagined mat my pnys1 ig ical appearance would Jp#. such reac'Vf ewer inspire .xjtspi tions as I received while .

traveling this fall break. I � knew the Abdullah prospect of flying was a A i risky one indeed. It had A1 Arian been a month since I had left campus for any considerable length of time, and an airport was perhaps not the smartest place to go. I had heard about instances of “Middle-Eastern-looking” people harassed at airports, thrown off of airplanes or just treated badly, but I had no idea what to expect myself. Upon entering the airport, I decided to stay as alert as possible and notice anything out of the ordinary, including people’s reactions to my presence. It is certainly possible that my apprehension got the best of me, allowing my imagination to roam free, as I anticipated the worst. “Take your American passport,” my friends advised me beforehand, although I would not be leaving the country. The looks I received from my fellow travelers cannot be adequately described. They were looks of uncomfortable recognition, looks that seemed to say more than words ever could. As I waited in line, I felt the many eyes in the room follow me all the way to the ticket counter. It was the feeling of someone on stage and not knowing his lines. I searched for a behavior type that would ease the tension and alleviate their worries but could not manage more than a nervous smile. I avoided eye contact, “but wait, that is suspicious behavior,” I told myself. “Look at them, for God’s sake... No, don’t stare, that’s even worse.” Thus went the two hours prior to boarding. Security did not \

*

harass me as much as I had anticipated, but the sight of fully armed soldiers was enough to send chills down my spine, just as it had probably laid to rest many of the other passengers’ fears. After boarding the plane, things T got worse. Apprehensive glares, only some of them quite angry in their own right, followed me to my seat. I helped an elderly woman stow her bags away, and she asked me for my name. I hesitated for a while before I told her. The eyes came back on me at once. “They should get him out of here,” said one man, just loud enough for me to hear. At that point, something came over me. I felt that I had to prove myself, not only to them, but to my own wounded sense of belonging. I smiled at the girl across the aisle, commenting on her history book and did so in perfect English, to the amazement of many around me. She proceeded to introduce herself, as did I. To her and many others’ surprise, I did not come from any place exotic or dangerous, although Florida is one of the more culturally diverse states, and our crime rate is nothing to boast. As our conversation continued, I felt the trep-

atrocious act runs deeper than that sands. These unfortunate incidents of fateful morning. Our loss of innocence backlash come despite the fact that the has led not only to a heightened xeno- majority of Americans have expressed phobic anxiety, but even those in their genuine tolerance and sympathy whose name these acts were commit- with Arab and Muslim-Americans. In ted, have suddenly the same wav J that lost all worth. we should not Palestinians sufferUtiT LOSS Of IVLTLOCeriCe blame all Arabs for ing under a brutal of a 7*7 7 the actions are fICLS iCCI occupation tO CL very small ignorant somehow no longer and extremist ele. j deserving of our ment within them, XenOphOOlC CLUXiety. sympathy, let alone all Americans the 5,000 Iraqi should not be held children who die each month from accountable for what a few of them sanctions. Indeed, the victims of this have done since that horrific day. tragedy are worldwide. Thankfully, I did not have to endure Back at home, many have suffered much more than angry stares and the under the most extreme vigilantism of occasional insensitive question, “so can citizens. At least five post-terrorism you fly a plane?” to which my only murders have been blamed on this response was, “Hey, how ’bout dem xenophobic outpouring, while lesser Yankees?” incidents of assaults, vandalism and threats have numbered into the thou- Abdullah Al-Arian is a Trinity senior. .

,

,

,

...

,

.

idation gradually reduce itself, and the awkward collective silence was broken in the crackling of airline peanuts. As much as it troubles me to say it, I could not fault the passengers for their reactions. In some ways, I felt more empathy with them than any real anger. We have all suffered a great loss, whether of life, property, security and ultimately, innocence itself. My real anger is still directed toward those responsible for our dismal state of affairs. My heart, which has thus far known no hatred for any human being could suddenly justify such feelings because no human being, in the true sense of the term, could possibly be capable of such deeds. And yet that

Media self-censorship: Why we should care In light of our “war on terror,” the news media are showing increasing signs of self-censorship. But why are they doing it—and does this threaten democracy? On all the news programs and websites, our current conflict dominates— the CNN website especially, which is no longer headed “CNN News,” but the special report “America Strikes Back,” regardless ofthe negative pop-cultural implications (Secretary of Defense Edward Donald Rumsfeld is Darth Vader?). Benson Throughout the media, stories not to our related “new war” have practically vanished The most striking example: the 2000 presidential balloting in Florida. That story, the single biggest of last year, was historic: The presidency was won by George W. Bush by a solitary electoral vote, but only if Florida’s 25 votes were lost by A1 Gore. Democrat Gore’s attempt to get selective recounts done in counties where ballots were confusing was upheld by the (majority Democratic) Florida Supreme Court. But that count was blocked by the (normally states’-rights) Republican majority ofthe U.S. Supreme Court, giving the presidency to the Republican Bush. It was a great story: the most powerful elected office in the world, conniving on both sides, clear conflicts of interest all over the place and a willful disregard for precedent up and down the judiciary. It was a mess and high drama. In the aftermath, several major media outlets (The Washington Post, The Wall Street Journal, CNN and others) decided to contract with the highly reputable, non-partisan National Opinion Research Center at the University of Chicago to analyze exhaustively the ballots from Florida. Last Saturday, a tiny article buried in our local news-

paper revealed that the analysis is now done—and the news organizations involved “put the whole project on hold.” A seven-figure budget and months of research have just stopped. The findings will not be released. Perhaps this is a vast conspiracy, designed to shield us from the truth at this tumultuous time, to avoid

news, or as background, analysis or prediction. The media cannot let up, especially as rapidly developing stories get momentum that compels both more interest and more coverage. This means continuous pressure on the media to produce new information, no matter how sketchy or misleading or biased, as long as those undercutting President Bush’s authority? shortcomings are somehow defensible (“sources say,” Could be. “unconfirmed reports,” “we believe”). But Bush is president (if for no other reason than So the evident self-censorship in the media may that Gore had to concede). The analysis could help to not in fact be due to any deliberate conspiracy, rightbolster Bush’s standing, or at least help us to remedy wing or otherwise. It may simply be the result of marflaws in our system. Coverage of the most important ket pressures, forcing the media to focus on the curstory of last year could be a good thing. So, more like- rent meal-ticket. ly, the media decision to kill that story is about money. But this corporate, bottom-line imperative holds a The media are a microcosm of the strengths and real threat, both to an informed public and to democracy. weaknesses of our capitalist economic system: A powThere are two reasons for this: One, the big “news erful innovation (breaking news) can be rapidly discorps” ofthe world now control more of the media than seminated throughout society by quick recruitment of ever before, and their choice of stories to cover influresources to exploit the profit associated with the ences not only the informing of the public, but also new(s). And then the market becomes saturated: Too what issues the public views as important. many profit-seekers flood the market with oversupply, And two, capitalism doesn’t always drive social margins of the initial providers are driven down, and systems to greater freedom; it can drive them to to re-enlarge those margins, a novel new(s) product greater repression. In Weimar Germany, the biggest must be created. The cycle begins again. financial boosters of Nazism were industrialists, who The result is an endless series of incentives (or liked the anti-communism, social order and lucrative treadmills) for business, and waves ofinnovation and government contracts that the Nazi regime promcost-reduction (or endless planned obsolescence). This ised—and delivered. is true whether it’s in high-tech (Apple innovates, The Nazis also delivered an abusive government Microsoft and Dell drive down costs), or politics (a that killed and imprisoned millions in pursuit of illumaverick presidential candidate runs as a reformer, sory goals. That system was supported by capitalists, and as he takes off in the polls, the establishment rival and based on mass propaganda. It was not a system we should aspire to emulate, suddenly christens himself a “reformer with results”). In the news media, a story breaks, and coverage even slightly. expands. To keep consumers’ attention, novelty must continuously be re-introduced, either as breaking Edward Benson is a Durham resident.


The Chronicle

PAGE 20 � TUESDAY, OCTOBER 23, 2001

I

MARY LOU WILLIAMS CENTER presents J g|

%'» w,

■m

“The Money Was Paid Small, but We Live Big’: Epistolary Narratives of the Panama Canal.” Thursday, October 25 at 4pm West Union 02 (West Campus) Dr. Rhonda Frederick, Professor of English at Boston College and Visiting Scholar at The Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture, presents a free lecture. For more information call 684-3814.

ORGAN RECITAL SERIES BEGINS

“GRAND HOTEL” produced by Hoof’n Horn October 25 & 26 at 8 pm, October 27 & 28 at 2pm, and Oct. 27 at 9 pm. Sheafer Lab Theater, Bryan Center Tickets $9 general admission, $7 students and seniors ’

Who’s to say what happens on the other side of the revolving doors of Berlin’s premiere hotel in 1928? Only its guests know the true stories. Treat yourself to a night of indulgence and intrigue at Hoof’n’Hom’s fall musical. Tickets at 684-4444 or tickets.duke.edu

mm bxi m mmmm ARTS EVENTS ON CAMPUS This Week and Next; October 23-29,2001 ON TAP! is coordinated by the Duke University Institute of the Arts in cooperation with participating campus arts departments and programs. For more information about performing arts events, call the Duke University Box Office, 684-4444 or view online at tickets.duke.edu. To inquire about this ad cal! 660-3356.

Based in fact. Our Country’s Good tells the story of the first play produced in the Botany Bay Colony (modem Sydney, Australia) by convict actors in 1789. By turns harrowing, funny, and moving the play uses an ensemble student cast to examine the role of art in the new society that was created across the world from England. Jeffery West of the Theater Studies faculty directs. Tickets at 684-4444 or tickets.duke.edu.

MATT HAIMOVITZ, violoncello Wednesday, October 24 at 8 pm Page Auditorium Tickets $3O/$27/$24 General, $25/$22/$l9 all students ;

The young cellist Matt Haimovitz displays independent spirit and creative vision rare artists of his caliber. He embraces new mu works by modem composers as well as approaching familiar pieces with a fresh ear open mind. Tickets at 684-4444 or tickets.duke.edu.

STUDENT RUSH TICKETS AVAIL* AT BOX OFFICE ON WEDNESDAY.

Susan Moeser, recently appointed University Organist and Lecturer at the University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill, will open this year’s series of free organ concerts in Duke Chapel. Moeser has performed throughout the U.S. and Europe. An organ concert in Duke Chapel is a unique “Duke Experience.” Bring parents and friends!

DOINGS AT DUMA The Duke University Museum of Art East Campus Quad DUMA presents a free “After Hours” Reception and Lecture by Dr. Eric Zakim, Assistant Professor of Hebrew at Duke, beginning with refreshments at 5:30, and lecture at 6:30 pm. DUMA will also have extended hours for Parents Weekend; noon to spm on both Saturday and Sunday. Permanent collections are on view, along with special exhibitions “Apocalyptic Landscapes” by Rodolfo Abularach and “Selections from the In Our Time Portfolio” by R:B. Kitaj.

MUSIC DEPARTMENT ENSEMBLES

“OUR COUNTRY’S GOOD” by Timberlake Wertenbaker October 26 & 27 at Bpm, October 28 at 2pm Reynolds Theater, Bryan Center Tickets $9 general admission, $7 students and seniors.

Sunday, October 28 5 pm in Duke Chapel Free admission at

,

DUKE JAZZ SERIES Parents Weekend Concert Friday, October 26 at Bpm Baldwin Auditorium Tickets $l5 general admission, $l2 seniors and students Paul Jeffrey and the Duke Jazz Ensemble are joined by pianist Roberta Piket and vocalist Danila Satragno.

Parents Weekend Concert Saturday, October 27 at Bpm Duke Chapel General admission $5; Students and seniors are free.

The annual music extravaganza features the Duke Chorale, conducted by Rodney Wynkoop; Duke Symphony Orchestra, conducted by Harry Davidson; and Duke Wind Symphony, conducted by Thomas Jenner. The Department’s chamber musicians and vocalists will be featured on Sunday, October 28 at 2pm at “In The Spotlight,” a free

ROCKWELL BLAKE, tenor Guest Recital Thursday, October 25 at 8 pm Baldwin Auditorium Tickets $25 general, $l5 students with I.D. or groups of 10 or more Outstanding tenor Rockwell Blake presents a voice recital on Thursday night and a masterclass (open to the public) on Friday, Oct. 26 at 12:15 pm, both in Baldwin Auditorium. Blake is known for his wide-ranging, highflying heroic-coloratura voice. Expect fireworks! Tickets at 684-4444 or tickets.duke.edu


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