Thursday, June 20,2002
Party Cloudy High 82, Low 63 www.chronicle.duke.edu Vol. 98, No. S6
The Chronicle f I
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From MJ to JWill? Although Jay Williams is likely to go No. 2 in the draft, he still has his work cut out for him See page 11
THE INDEPENDENT DAILY AT DUKE UNIVERSITY
Lange responds to DSG report on financial aid Housing, car policy set for change By ALEX GARINGER The Chronicle
Two key components of undergraduate financial aid will change dramatically within the next two years, in response to the Duke Student Government Financial Aid Task Force report released in March. Provost Peter Lange told DSG officials in a memorandum last week that the University will heed the report’s recommendations to eliminate the car policy and establish a universal housTHAD PARSONS/THE CHRONICLE ing rate. MIKE DUNLEAVY (left), who will remain in the NBA Draft, yells at teammate Dahntay Jones (right) in the “Every year we tweak financial aid second round of the 2002 NCAA Tournament. and we value in that process the kind of really thoughtful student input there was in the DSG report,” Lange said. The University will also continue to examine creating more flexible dining plans for Central Campus residents. Officials cited progress on smaller issues, but also rejected other recommendations. Although the car policy was listed as By PAUL DORAN vestigation, I believe I will go reasonably highest priority in the DSG report, the The Chronicle high in the draft and I am excited about housing rate —a version of the universal Men’s basketball star Mike Dunleavy starting my professional career.” which be instituted for the 2003will announced Tuesday that he will forgo Chris Duhon, who along with Dunimpact all un2004 academic year—will his final year of eligibility and keep his leavy was named a captain of the 2002Under the dergraduates. plan, housing name in the NBA Draft. 2003 squad, said he wished Dunleavy rates within occupanbe consistent will he “It was a hard decision to make, but “the best of luck,” but that was not cy levels—whether on East, West or team now forth, back and have decided too worried about the he I will after going Central Campus and whether air-condicaptain by himself. to pursue my dream of becoming a protioned or not. Singles will still be more fessional basketball player,” Dunleavy expensive than doubles and triples. See DUN DEAL on page 14 said in a statement. “After a thorough in-
Dunleavy stays in draft as likely top-three pick
“There’s always been some concern that housing rates were driving housing selections,” Lange said. He acknowledged that decreasing the rate of the most expensive rooms on campus and increasing the cost of the cheapest will be controversial, as equally priced rooms will not necessarily be similar in quality. Currently, the Office of Undergraduate Financial Aid uses the average room rate in its aid packages, “overshooting the mark for some students and undershooting for others,” Lange wrote in the memo. About 40 percent of students receive aid. “I’m elated that everything worked out for the best,” said former financial aid task force chair Jimmy Carter, Trinity ’O2, who spearheaded the initiative. “It’s something that students have been working on for the past 10 years and to see it happen is spectacular.... The universal housing rate and the car policy are two important issues for aided students because they directly affect their bottom line.” Eliminating the penalty for bringing a high-priced car to campus is the second change to the much-maligned policy in recent years. The financial aid office currently deducts 35 percent See FINANCIAL AID on page 7
Tax hike marks A glimpse behind the scenes Durham budget � The City Council approved a 2 percent property tax increase and a 2 percent raise for city employees in a 4-3 decision to approve the budget for fiscal year 2002-03. By KEVIN LEES The Chronicle
Durham residents will pay a slightly higher property tax next year, but city employees will stillreceive a raise, in the city budget approved by the Durham City Council at a meeting Monday night and Tuesday morning. Council members increased the city property tax by just over 2 percent from 53.4 cents to 54.6 cents per $lOO of property value. About 52 percent ofthe city’s general fund revenue comes from property taxes. The new rate means the owner of a $lOO,OOO home will pay $546 in city property taxnext year, instead of $534. The owner of a $150,000 home will pay $BlB in taxes instead of $BOl. Significant in the property tax discussion was a proposal that county commissioners approved Tuesday to See BUDGET on page 10
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STEVE ANDRAWES/THE CHRONICLE
PAULA McCLAIN, professor of political science, (right) meets with students after class in the Ralph Bunche Summer Institute.
Sheila Curran was hired as the next director of the Career Center Wednesday filling a year-long vacancy in the posiSon. See page 3 ,
Dr. Haifan Lin has found a gene in mice that regulates processes linked to sperm production and testicular cancer.Seepage4
Wander up to the second floor of Perkins Library and you just might stumble upon a group of 20 students intensely involved in graduate-level statistical analysis. Although this may look typical enough, there is one catch—those 20 students tackling graduate work are not graduate students at all. Instead, they are participants in the 2002 Ralph Bunche Summer Institute, designed to raise awareness of political science graduate work among black, Latino and Native American undergraduates, groups that are currently underrepresented in the field. For the second consecutive year, Duke is hosting RBSI, named after Ralph Bunche, former United Nations diplomat, 1950 Nobel Peace Prize winner and the first black American to receive a doctorate in political science. “The aim is to convince black, Latino and American Indian students to consider a graduate degree in political science as opposed to going to one of the professional schools,” explained See RBSI on page 7
The Duke University Health System and St. Joseph of the Pines, Inc., sold their joint venture home care services last week. See page 5
The Chronicle
pAGE 2, � THURSDAY, JUNE 20, 2002
Ip •
House fast-tracks new department
NEWS BRIEFS
FBI will monitor July 4 festivities
The FBI said Wednesday it is planning a major national operation to protect July 4 parades and festivities. The operation is not due to any specific threat, but the interrogation of detainees has revealed interest in the holiday as a possible target, one official said. •
U.S. demands immunity for American soldiers
The United States said Wednesday it will not participate in U.N. peacekeeping operations unless the U.N Security Council grants Americans immunity from prosecution by the International Criminal Court. •
Bush announces SSOOM for AIDS treatment
President Bush announced yesterday a $5OO million plan to fight AIDS globally. The money will help prevent expectant mothers in African nations and the Caribbean from transmitting the virus to their babies, •
Aircraft causes White House evacuation
The White House was briefly evacuated last night after an aircraft circling in the restricted airspace failed to make radio contact with the control towers at Reagan National Airport. Within 15 minutes of evacuation, staff was allowed to return to the building. •
Prescription drug bill advances, but not far
A Republican bill to provide prescription drug benefits to the elderly was approved yesterday by one House committee, but stalled in another panel, where Democrats said the bill was a gift to the drug industry in return for campaign contributions. News briefs compiled from wire reports.
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Congress aims for symbolic Sept. 11 deadline despite worries of mshed judgement By DAVID FIRESTONE
New York Times News Service
The U.S. House WASHINGTON of Representatives began a month of late nights and short weekends Wednesday by approving a quickened schedule for creating the Department of Homeland Security. If the House meets the schedule that several members called overly ambitious, it would be ready to vote on the proposal by the end of July, before the annual August recess. If the Senate follows a similar timetable, the two houses could resolve any differences after the recess and the department could then be created by Sept. 11, a date sought for its symbolism. There was widespread skepticism, however, that the proposed departmen-
By JOHN KIFNER
New York Times News Service
JERUSALEM For the second day in a row Wednesday, a Palestinian suicide bomber struck this embattled city, this time killing six people at a bus stop, even as Israel began carrying out a policy of taking back land on the West Bank in retaliation for the attacks. Yasser Arafat, the Palestinian leader, condemned both bombings early Thursday morning in a strongly worded statement distributed to Palestinian newspapers, radio and television stations, in which he expressed a need to “speak to you frankly about the necessity to stop these attacks.” It remained to be seen, however, whether anyone among the Palestinian militants was still listening to
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Nonetheless, the House approved
the timetable, prodded by leaders of both parties who view the department as the summer’s legislative priority. The resolution approved Wednesday established an unusual procedure for creating the department.
Existing committees of the House many of which control the budgets of agencies like the Coast Guard or the Immigration and Naturalization Service that would be transferred to the new department—will be allowed to weigh in on the plan, but will not have their usual definitive voice. Instead, their recommendations must be conveyed by July 12 to a special committee of House leaders, established Wednesday, that will control the language of the bill. The panel is to present the bill to the full House by July 21. By contrast, the Senate plans to use its existing committee structure to handle the bill. Still, Senate leaders have said they plan to work toward a similar fast-track schedule. —
Suicide bombs spur Israeli military action
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tal shuffling, the largest reorganization of official Washington since the 19405, could be accomplished so swiftly considering how radically it would upset the cultivation of turf in Congress. “As I compute it, that leaves nine legislative days to consider the consolidation of agencies that have $39 billion in expenses, and 160,000 employees,” said Rep. Steny Hoyer, D-Md. “I have great reservations about what I perceive to be a rush to judgment on this issue.”
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Arafat, whether the Israelis still regarded him as the prime architect of terror or whether he was simply trying to evade Israeli retribution. The suicide bombing at dusk Wednesday apparently touched off a series of Israeli military actions overnight. Reports were still scanty at 3 a.m. Thursday morning, but they indicated that there had been Apache helicopter gunship attacks at several points in the Gaza Strip, as well as a fierce firelight in Qalqilya in which two Israeli soldiers and a local Palestinian intelligence chief were killed. In addition, there were reports of Israeli tanks poised on the edge of Ramallah. “Out of my concern to our people, their land and their future,” Arafat said in his statement, “I declare my complete condemnation to these attacks that target Israeli civilians.”
The Chronicle
THURSDAY, JUNE 20, 2002 � PAGE 3
Popular Ninth St. hangout closes doors New Career Center head announced By CINDY YEE The Chronicle
Mugshots, a centerpiece bar of last year’s undergraduate social scene migra-
tion to off-campus venues, has undergone a transformation this summer into the new Cafe Diablo, a restaurant-club with
a Latino theme. Saturday night’s salsa and meringue at the Ninth Street haunt have replaced
Sheila Curran hopes to bring graduate school application planning, alumni affairs and development into the Career Center mix.
Tuesday night’s hip-hop “perpetual groove,” and in lieu of the traditional bar fare, there is now a full menu of South American cuisine. Fergus Bradley, Cafe Diablo owner and former Mugshots owner, said the transformation reflected his wish to create a business based on the success of its food, as opposed to the late-night traffic that bar-hopping Duke students brought in. “We got lots of late night business, but that’s not what we wanted to maintain us,” Bradley said. “My goal over there was
to create a restaurant... and whatever students we got was extra.” Bradley said he felt student business was one factor that remained consistent throughout the year, and partially attributed the need to close Mugshots to inconsistencies with the kitchen staff. Ben Franks, Trinity ’O2, who worked as a dee-jay at Mugshots several nights a week last year, agreed that the failure of the restaurant aspect of the business prompted a change in strategy, but Franks also pointed to underlying factors that necessitated the club’s closure. “To have a bar on Ninth Street, a high percentage of sales has to be in food,” Franks said. “The restaurant side of Mugshots completely failed, but not because the food was bad. Duke students—the main clientele—saw Mugshots as a bar and didn’t want to eat there... but [Mugshots] needed that to legitimately open themselves as a bar.” Franks listed high rents on Ninth Street and a declining popularity among students as the true culprits behind Mugshots’ failure. “You have to be packed consistently several times a week in order to meet overhead,” he said. “That was definitely
By WHITNEY BECKETT The Chronicle
JANEHETHERINGTON/THE CHRONICLE
CAFE DIABLO, a Latino-themed restaurant-club, has replaced Mugshots, which became a hub of undergraduate social activity at the beginning of last year. happening at the beginning of the [fall] had to follow the rules, and I think semester, but it wasn’t happening regu- kids started getting discouraged when larly enough.” they weren’t able to get in.” Bradley, who also owns the James Sophomore Katie Fay agreed that the Joyce pub on Main Street, denied Franks’ club’s diminishing popularity was due in claims and held that he changed the busi- large part to increasingly tight regulaness in order to incorporate a theme. tions not present at other Durham “James Joyce is an Irish pub; you walk nightspots, such as Cafe Parizade. in there and you feel that you’ve stepped “They got really strict on IDs and had into Ireland,” Bradley said. “Mugshots a police officer always at the door,” Fay never had a clear identity and that’s what said. “Mugshots was popular—there was we’re trying to create with Cafe Diablo.” a dance floor outside and inside. But Still, Franks said the uncompromising Parizade had that too and they were not identification checks at Mugshots conas strict on IDs.” With Cafe Diablo, Bradley said he tributed to its closing more than the lack of a theme. hopes to draw in more members of the “Ideally the best way to keep the local community. business alive—and this isn’t realis“I think [Latino dance night] will bring in a certain part of the Duke tic—would be to say everyone’s allowed to come here, no one’s going to populace, but also Latinos living and get in trouble, the bouncer won’t be working in the area,” Bradley said. mean to you,” Franks said. “As soon as “Obviously I embrace the Duke busithe Alcohol [Law] Enforcement saw ness—that’s part of what makes Ninth Mugshots was getting really popular, Street a good location. I just don’t want they had a presence there. [Mugshots] to do it exclusively.” .
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students, as well as work to establish links with alumni. The Career Center has not previously focused on graduate school placement, and Moneta said it will help the center become more
full-service. “I got the impression that this is a place willing to make some changes and is open to ideas, but that the right goals are already in place,” Curran said. “Coming to Duke is like getting on a bullet train. A new train is going to run over some bumps, it’s not sure See CAREER CHIEF on page 10
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qualifications for the position. “She really understands the environment we have at Duke and the diverse needs of the students,” Moneta said. “She has a breadth of understanding of the whole career spectrum, including nonbusiness, which we have a particular need for at Duke.” In her new position, Curran will oversee internship, job and graduate school placement and recruitment of
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Ending a year-long vacancy of the Career Center’s directorship, Vice President for Student Affairs Larry Moneta announced Sheila Curran as the center’s new head Wednesday. Curran currently holds the same position at Brown University, where she has worked since 1982. Moneta cited her fund-raising skills and experience with non-business placement as her particular
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Health PAGE 4
|i •
INSIDE THE HEALTH SYSTEM
Earlier statin does not stop heart attacks
Beta-blockers protect brain functions
Medical Center scientists have found that betablockers, a class of heart drugs, provide protection for the brain and its functions when given before or during coronary artery bypass surgery. Led by Dr. Mark Newman, chair of the Department of Anesthesiology, the team found that only 3.9 percent of patients receiving beta-blockers suffered negative neurological effects compared to 8.2 percent. The findings were published in the Journal of Cardiothoracic and Vascular Anesthesia.
AROUND THE WORLD •
Errors in the human genome sequence?
Scientists in Iceland have suggested that current drafts of the human genome sequence being circulated internationally among academic centers contain 104 large-scale errors. The researchers, working for the Reykjavik-based company Decode Genetics, posted their findings in the web edition of Nature Genetics. Decode’s workers are attempting to construct the genome using a recombination map, which tracks how sections of two parents' chromosomes are exchanged in the creation of the child's genetic sequence, and in that process, discovered sections of DNA sequences that were flipped head-to-tail or were in the wrong order. News briefs compiled from staff and wire reports
DESIGNER
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The Chronicle
Gene linked to male infertility, cancer By JENNIFER SONG The Chronicle
You may have heard myths that consuming certain foods can lower sperm count, but now researchers at the Medical Center have identified a gene that regulates processes involved in sperm production. The researchers initially identified the gene in fruit flies and used it to find similar genes in mammalian systems. When the researchers removed the gene from mice, sperm generation ceased. Conversely, overexpression of the gene, called miwi in mice, produced testicular cancer. “This gene acts like a master switch,” said the study’s senior author Dr. Haifan Lin, associate professor in the Department of Cell Biology. “There are many genes required for sperm production, but this gene is in charge of controlling all of their activities.... Clearly, this is an important gene that needs to be regulated to maintainproper sperm production.” When the researchers screened human patients with testicular cancer, they found elevated expression of the same gene, known as hiwi in humans, suggesting that this gene’s function in mice would be comparable to its function in people. “Because mouse genes are more than 90 percent identical to human genes, there’s a very strong indication that miwi and hiwi have identical functions,” Lin said. “These genes are present in fruit flies and other organisms, and they work in the same ways and yet, only have 35 percent homology [with mammals]. It’s a safe bet they will have the same function as those in humans and mice.” Researchers believe these findings could be used as a diagnostic tool to identify patients at risk of becoming infertile or getting testicular cancer. In the long term, these results might help develop gene therapy that ad
IDEAL CUT D AMQNDS
$
Science
THURSDAY, JUNE 20, 2002
Although statins have been effective for reducing the likelihood of a second heart attack, Medical Center researchers have found that prescribing it earlier does not necessarily help prevent heart attacks from occurring. The findings of Dr. Kristin Newby, associate professor of cardiology, were published Wednesday in the Journal of the American Medical Association. Scientists did not see any improvement between those who did and did not receive statins, but they did find increased rates of death and heart attack in those with cholesterol below a certain threshold. Statins work by slowing down the liver’s production of cholesterol, particularly the levels of LDL-cholesterol. The class of drugs has also been shown to increase the amounts of HDL, the so-called good cholesterol, in the body. •
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SAM MORGAN/THE CHRONICLE
DR. HAIFAN LIN’S team has found a link between infertility, as well as testicular cancer, and the miwi gene in mice, which acts similarly to the human hiwi gene. dresses these problems. be at the core of stem cell biology. “This work... sheds new light on how “I want to caution people that these findings are not going to revolutionize germ cells develop in the embryo and [treatment for infertility or testicular how they develop during the fetal cancer] but these findings definitely stages,” said Dr. Peter Donovan, an asput us in a better position. We can also sociate professor at the Kimmel Cancer use this gene to identify other genes Center ofThomas Jefferson University. that regulate this process. From that “We know very little about the regulaangle, this is an exponential finding,” tion of sperm reproduction so these Lin said. studies have been really fundamental Using these results as the ground in helping us understand this process.” The study was published earlier this work, the researchers are now focused on learning more about the genetic program month in the journal Oncogene. The involved in regulating sperm production. study was co-authored by Wei Deng, a Furthermore, this process is believed to postdoctoral fellow in Lin’s lab.
The Chronicle
THURSDAY. JUNE 20, 2002 � PAGE 5
Staying in the DSG loop Duke Student Government hosts one of several weekly summer forums in the Loop Wednesday afternoon, as several participants hear a report on parking from Director of Parking Services Catherine Reeve. The meeting was the fourth in a series of eight such events designed to bring together students and administrators for discussion of relevant issues across campus for the coming academic year. The remaining four DSG meetings will consist of: Academic Integrity, July 10; Perspectives on Gender Issues at Duke, July 17; Bryan Center Renovations and Student Village Development, July 24; Race Relations and Economic Disparity at Duke, July 31. All meetings will be held at 4 p.m. at The Loop restaurant on West Campus. JANE HETHERINGTON/THE CHRONICLE
UNIVERSITY BRIEFS From staff reports
Health System, partner sell Wilmington-based home care unit Duke University Health System and St. Joseph of the Pines Inc. have sold their joint venture, Duke & St. Joseph Home Care, to Liberty Home Care, LLC, a home care services company based in Wilmington, N.C. Duke & St. Joseph Home Care currently employs about 800 workers at eight North Carolina locations in a range of health care and. administrative positions. The organization provides services to nearly 1,400 patients daily. “While we’re proud of our significant achievements during the past four years, Duke and St. Joseph feel that the time is right for us to move forward from this partnership,” said William Donelan, executive vice president and chief operating officer of the Health System. Home care providers deliver a variety of health care and supportive services, including professional nursing and physical, occupational, respiratory and speech therapies.
Dawson’s Creek to return University officials and producers of the WB television show Dawson’s Creek have agreed in principle to continue location filming at Duke over the next year. A definitive shooting schedule for the teen drama has not yet been established, but could begin again as early as August, said Cabell Smith, radio and television services manager for Duke News Service. In the show, Katie Holmes’ character Joey Potter attends the fictional Worthington University near Boston, Mass. In last year’s episodes, Duke’s West Campus and the Sarah P. Duke Gardens served as stand-ins for Worthington. Crews first arrived on campus in late July 2001 to shoot scenes for the show’s fifth season. Students throughout the year participated in the filming as extras and some also worked on the crew as part of a Dawson’s Creek tutorial class in the Film and Video Program,
Duke-United Way distributes funds The Duke University-Triangle United Way Community Partnership announced it will present $59,450 in grants to 12 local organizations, community outreach programs and schools. This year, the Duke-United Way partnership received 21 requests totalling $135,273. The recipients include: Calvary Ministries of the West End Community Inc. ($15,000), Community Service Center ($5,000), Crest Street Community Council Inc. ($4,000), Duke-Durham Partners for Youth ($4,450), Durham Judicial Department, Administrative Office of Courts ($5,000), Lakewood Elementary School ($3,000), Northside Baptist Church ($8,500), St. John’s Missionary Baptist Church ($1,500), Volunteer Center of Durham ($1,000), Walltown Children’s Theatre ($7,000), Walltown Neighborhood Ministries ($3,000) and West End Community Center ($2,000). Created in 1997, the Duke-United Way partnership designates a portion of annual Triangle United Way donations made by Duke employees to programs that address key community and educational issues in the 12 neighborhoods and seven public schools near Duke’s campus that comprise the Neighborhood Partnership Initiative.
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The Chronicle
PAGE 6 � THURSDAY, JUNE 20,2002
N.C. NEWS THIS WEEK From staff and wire reports
also use $l2O million from the three national tobacco settlement funds and $lOO million in unspent Hurricane
Senate backs Democratic budget The state Senate approved a $14.2 billion spending plan Wednesday, adding money for teacher raises but rejecting a proposal to completely eliminate Gov. Mike Easley’s preschool initiative. The Senate approved the 2002-03 budget proposed in two separate 33-16 votes. The plan, which now goes to the House for consideration, would use $205 million from the state’s Highway Trust Fund to help balance the budget. It calls for $125 million of that money to be repaid over five years. The Senate would
cused Democrats of stifling debate.
Council opposes domestic partner coverage
Floyd relief money.
The budget plan includes no broad tax increases. However, it does rely on a tax swap proposal with local governments and fee increases to raise $364 million. The chamber did vote to restore seniority-based “step pay increases” to teachers. The raises average 1.86 percent and will cost $5l million. Sen. Ellie Kinnaird, D-Orange, in voting against the budget, called cuts in various social program “draconian.” Several Republican amendments were rejected, including one by Sen. Patrick Ballantine, R-New Hanover, who ac-
The Durham City Council Monday came within one vote of being only the third city in the state to allow medical benefits for domestic partners, including same-sex partners. The proposal would have made domestic partners, homosexual and heterosexual, eligible for city health and dental coverage. The council voted the proposal down 4-3 after finishing the budget process for the 2002-03 fiscal year. Mayor Bill Bell and council members, Howard
Clement and Cora Cole-McFadden, supported the measure. Two city employees had requested the benefit and the city budget and planning office recommended the coverage, on the basis of the city’s nonsexual discrimination policy. John Best, a council member who opposed the measure, said he voted against it because he did not think most Durham residents approve of homosexual lifestyles. “We have to realize we’re dealing with other people’s money,” Best said. “I don’t think [we should necessarily use public funds to support] a lifestyle that a majority of Durham citizens do not condone.”
From staff reports
Marijuana found on driver
Students harassed by masked man Two female students reported that a man wearing a gorilla mask attempted to enter their Yearby Street apartment June 15 around 3:15 a.m. They said they heard something hit their apartment window and saw a stick under the window when they looked out the door viewer. A few minutes later, they heard a knock on
the door and the jiggling of the door knob. When they looked out, they saw a black man wearing the gorilla mask, dressed in a black T-shirt with a white logo on the front neck and black baggy jeans. He motioned with his hands for them to come out ofthe apartment. They told him to go away. The students reported that the person also opened the screen door of their apartment patio and tried to open the sliding glass door, and he was joined by two other men. The female students told them to leave or they would call the police, which they did, but the police could not locate the men when they arrived.
A Duke officer conducted a traffic stop after he observed a white Ford SUV run through the stop sign coming from Chapel Drive toward Wannamaker Drive at 11:41 p.m. June 13. As the officer was talking to the driver, he noted a faint smell of alcohol coming from inside the vehicle. Further investigation revealed the driver was in possession of a plastic bag containing marijuana. Duke employee Adrian M. Clewlow, of 3133 Patterson Ave., Richmond, Va., was charged with possessing less than half an ounce of marijuana. The court date is July 17. Clewlow could not be reached for comment.
More charges filed in break-ins
Eight more charges have been filed against James Edward Pryor, of 1307 Lancaster St. Apt. B. He was charged June 13 with two counts ofbreaking or entering a motor vehicle, two counts of larceny, one count of
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financial transaction card theft, one count of financial transaction card fraud, and forgery and uttering. These charges were in connection to two car break-ins in the Washington Duke Inn-Duke Forest area May 31 and June 4. He was served the warrants while in jail custody for similar charges. He is being held on a $25,000 secured bond and has a court date of July 1. No property was recovered in connection with any of the arrests. Pryor could not be reached for comment.
Construction equipment pilfered An EnCompass Construction employee reported that between noon and 1 p.m. June 15, someone stole his unsecured $350 Dewalt 18-volt cordless drill, engraved with the numbers 41499 or 1452 and $350 Dewalt 18 volt cordless saw, engraved with the numbers 41499 or 1452, from the Fuqua School of Business construction site.
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The Chronicle
THURSDAY, JUNE 20,
RBSI
STEVE ANORAWES/THE CHRONICLE
This is only a test
Duke Emergency Medical Training practice a biomedical hazards drill Saturday morning.
FINANCIAL AID from page 1
sentiment was another important factor. The provost’s memo recommended that the Duke University Student Dining Advisory Committee, another component of DSG, look into providing Central Campus students with more workable dining options and submit a report in the upcoming year. Administrators will also continue to examine increasing work-study pay rates over the summer, and the financial aid office will unveil an improved website for viewing statements in the fall. In addition, Lange cited progress in strengthening budgetary support for financial aid, an area in which Duke has trailed its peers because of its relatively small endowment. Lange, however, rejected the creation of a Student Affairs liaison to financial aid, a process already handled by the office ofthe vice provost for finance and administration, as well as the re-establishment of a spring semester job fair.
of the car’s value from a student’s aid, unless the car is worth less than $3,000 or is older than five years. Following DSG’s original 2000 report, officials had already reduced the limit from seven to five years. The policy is meant to restrict students with a high level of demonstrated need from bringing a new car to campus. “The car policy restrictions are inher-
ently discriminatory, reinforcing the cleavages between aided and unaided students,” DSG’s 2002 report read, adding that nine other highly selective universities have no such policy. Lange said the University’s decision to change the long-standing policy was due in part to a fresh perspective from his “Den of 10”—a group of 10 administrators he consults on admissions and financial aid issues. He noted that strong student
2002 � PAGE 7
The program, sponsored by the American Political Science Association and funded by both Duke and the National Science Foundation, provides students the opportunity to take a practice Graduate Record Examination and speak with Kaplan test experts about their results. Students also attend weekly Thursday night dinners featuring guest speakers and will meet with about 30 recruiters from doctoral programs nationwide. Henard said she finds the dinners to be one ofthe most beneficial parts of the program. “The speakers give us a chance to ask questions and let them present their research to us,” she said. “We’ve been able to explore the different avenues of political science through a variety of people. It’s a good chance to
from page 1
Paula McClain, professor of political science and director of the institute. The RBSI is a five-week program that invites 20 rising seniors from colleges nationwide to live on campus, complete a major research paper on a topic of their choice and take two graduate-level classes —McClain’s Race and American Politics, and Introduction to Statistical Analysis, taught by Scott de Marchi, assistant professor of political science. This year’s class has 17 black and three Latino students. RBSI’s primary goal is to show promising minority students scholastic options other than law or medicine. “A lot of people aren’t aware of what people really do in the social sciences,” talk one-on-one.” Thomas Scotto, also a political scide Marchi said. “[RBSII is a free chance to see whether or not you ence graduate student and TA, added that one valuable aspect of the program would like graduate school.” is its focus on exposing students to a Indira Henard, a student who attends Wheaton College in Massachubroad range of issues in the field, insetts, said she enjoyed the welcoming cluding American, international, and atmosphere the institute provides. “It is comparative politics, along with politicrucial that these programs are out cal theory, not just minority issues. “It’s wrong to make the assumption that if there because some of us who go to predominantly white colleges don’t have you are a minority scholar you are inaccess to [environments that encourage terested in minority issues only,” he said. “What we do is expose them to all graduate work],” Henard said. Another key aspect of the program is four areas of [political science inquiry],,., We’re not railroading people.” the participants’ exposure to true graduAt the end of five weeks, each stuate level work. “Graduate school, espedent has had a healthy dose of life as a cially in political science, is unlike anything the students have seen,” said Alan doctoral candidate, possibly opening the Kendrick, political science instructor and door to a future in scholarly work. “Too often undergraduates think RBSI teaching assistant.“It’s the thought processes that are different in graduate their career paths are very limited and school; it’s about getting more involved they aren’t aware of all the options,” and more in-depth and we’re asking them said Niambi Carter, another TA. “What to think as young scholars n0w.... They we want them to see is the Ph.D. is real and is a worthwhile goal to achieve.” are being introduced to a new jargon.”
Readings at the Regulator Friday, June 21,7:00 pm
Elizabeth Gilbert &
Eustace Conway
In The Last American Man (Viking) Elizabeth Gilbert tells the story of Eustace Conway, a brilliant, charismatic, romantic and contradictory figure who for most ofthe last 20 years has lived off the land-hunting, gathering and trapping-in the mountains outside of Boone, NC. Eustace Conway and Elizabeth Gilbert will appear together at the bookshop.
Tuesday, June 25,
7:00 pm
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June twenty, two thousand two
�
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a ei^ht
Spi elberg, Cruise Pull Dick off Well ■
piece and the, um, three-breasted prostitutes of Schwarzenegger's gore fest, but it still manages to be truer to Dick's spirit than either. It also happens to be one of Steven Spielberg's most cohesive and richest films of the last twenty years. No small surprise. Last year's bastardized A.1.: Artificial Intelligence suggested that Spielberg was uncomfortable, if not outright incompetent, well-documented, too. in a world that asked murkier moral questions than those posed by >ude thought he was icovering a sinister sharks, dinosaurs and Nazis. (Those three problems occupy just illywood/Scientology Gl lADE: about half of his oeuvre.) Toss him a Philip K. Dick short story, and you're coupling a manchild who tells boyish fantasies with a drugjt nspiracy, and addled schizo who tells men's nightmares. After all, one of Philip K. >nned to find and >ose all the other actor Dick's more famous quotes could be Spielberg's anti-mantra: "Reality is that which, when you stop believing in it, doesn't go away." its. Dude might have But a Spielberg and Dick combo makes more sense than at first it would it he was in a Philip K. seem. After all, many of Dick's ideas are so compelling because of a childish ry. best simplicity at their fantasy core. In Minority Report's case: What if we could wise, that's not the an foresee —and prevent —murder before it happened? Spielberg does with this \o be. Philip K. Dick, influential scipremise everything that good science fiction should do —setting up a future ific and the and sixer of fifties world with some societal tweak, developing and pushing the limits of that the warped logics of tweak and finally confronting its consequences. re technology and drugs And as much a humanist as he is visual master, Spielberg brings a compasblurred boundaries the big queshave the of sion to Dick's world that feels right in every way that Kubrick's A.I. vision felt and even creepy. If it's a bit predictable, a bit long, a bit too invested wrong for a and paranoiac, tions, what is human and what is rea\. Crunchy fodder in playing that Dick's stories out the drama to the very end, Minority Report is also a movie even riper for cinematic adaptation —one would think thematic tug-of-war between safety and freedom is so on the since his whose troubled big screen, especially only two would see more treatment noir. relevant astonishingly (Blade Recall) Total are hallmarks of sci-fi as to be almost political. Runner and prior adaptations —Greg Bloom lacks the weirdness Scott's lurking of Ridley masterMinority Report once found some website where this dude had developed a theo•y that Tom Cruise was a obot—it was pretty
Yeah it's heavy; that's the point! A month after Alice in Chains' vocalist Layne Staley died of a drug overdose, guitarist Jerry Cantrell has released his second solo album, Degradation Trip, which streams from the same pained existence that has lead so many rockers to Staley's fate. Cantrell and Staley's success with Alice in Chains was rooted in some of their decidedly less heavy metal characteristics. While many bands rely simply on cheap riffs played at tremendous volumes, AIC sold stories.
Likewise, Cantrell's music reveals a man who teeters on the edge of sanity—his hardened exterior masking a soul battered by years of seeing friends combat the throes of addiction. On Trip, Cantrell unsurprisingly allows his songs to swirl into the musky undertones that have characterized almost all of his prior works. The opening song, "Psychotic Break," deals with an unresolved source of pain through muffled cries, and lays the groundwork for the more mainstream tracks like "Anger Rising" and "Angel Eyes," which merit more than a few spins on alt-radio turntables this summer. Though this work will stand firmly next to any of Alice In Chains' albums, this is not the same Cantrell. This time around, he brings a world-weariness GRADE: that, while not inspirational enough to spawn
B+
classics like AlC's "Rooster," still allows him to make an album that works for the complete 72-minute running time. On Trip, his wails bring an eerie blend of sorrow, apathy and, ultimately, resolution to the foreground, where it can be admired for the achievement that it is. —Yoav Lurie
How to Counter-Attack Summer's Gone A paper doll. With every cut, every unfolding revealing a clone of identical proportion, each doll discloses the error of the original, the superficiality of the image. Blending generics and originality, a singular paper doll does the impossible and comes out looking nothing like its proverbial brothers. Based upon espionage novelist Robert Ludlum's best-selling trilogy, The Bourne Identity appeared doomed from the GRADE: start. Already adapted into a terrible' A- TV movie in 1988, one would predict a further gluttony, a further cloning of James Bond gizmos and super chicks. But no, it works, it excites. Director Doug Liman does something right. Similar in scope to his earlier project, Go!, Liman takes an expected story and
chase in a Mini; quick, collected fight scenes and two actors (Matt Damon and Run Lola Run's Franka Potente) who seem
,
JeflVp
out of place in anything but a Princeton crew meet and a German rave, respectively. Unexpected, needed freshness. Matt Damon is not an action hero. He's a pretty face (and CIA assassin) toting nothing more than a case of amnesia, a bag full of money and uncanny directionless instinct. Random counterpart and chronic drifter Marie Kreutz (Potente) comes along for the ride. >n is merely hitchhiking a ride to is to rediscover his past, to escape is former allies and newfound dversaries. Nothing is for certain, le story unfolds slowly, every move
otted and calculated. >is is a smart suspense film withthe arrogance of Bond, without errors of every single identical ■spionage movie that has come before. It uses simplicity to draw us into the story and envelops us within the believability of Jason Bourne's world.
—Tom Roller
June twenty, two thousand two
RECESS
Bunkaa roug ht to You by the Lette r E” Get :
“
ready for the soundtrack to your life. It's music that spreads through your head
and seeps through your thoughts. It's liquid-like sound that rushes and rolls, throbbing with a steady and thumping‘pulse. It's Bunkaa, the 10th album of über-DJ Paul Oakenfold, and if you listen to the 11 tracks even once, you'll understand addiction. Paul Oakenfold's been rocking the suburbs—and the cities and the small clubbing paradise islands —for more than a decade now. Recently named the World's Best DJ by Rolling Stone, he's produced cuts for U2 and written
soundtracks for major motion pictures (Swordfish, most recently).
marking Bunkaa as the first time that Mr. DJ put his own record on. While he has some help from celebs like Ice Cube and Nelly Furtado (whose vocals shimmer in the album's only remix, "Harder
They Come"), the stuff is mostly original, and mostly damn good. In Bunkaa's first track, "Ready Steady Go," melodies wrap around each other before wrapping around you, and suddenly you realize, you're trapped. It's liquid-like music with mesmerizing fits and starts, perfect for popping in the car stereo. Another song, "Hold Your Hand," sounds sleepy and slinky; fabulous for early morning treks to the gym. And
Sun" its a beat that neaks up on the
Oakenfold even holds a
Guinness world
music and ends up dancing across the song. Use it in your bedroom before some movie snags it for a steamy
record, as the world's VI: L most sueSPil W PAULOAKENFOL cessful DJ on E hair His new album came out Tuesday. He summers scene with the jet set in Ibiza and moves This is music you can't shut off. It the masses in London's hotspot, is simply that good. If you need a new groove for Ministry of Sound. GRADE: But while Oakenfold's got a few your summer, pick up Agood notches slashed into his Bunkaa, just push play, Euro-scene belt, he's still got a lot then hope the batteries in your to prove. Past albums like Fluoro Walkman are fresh —you'll want to lisand Another World relied heavily ten to this one for a long, long time. on remixes and borrowed sounds; —Fa ran Krentcil
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page nine
SANDBOX Calendar j n AFI: Summer Love ond Brando's Nuts /)
On June 11 the countdown-happy American Film Institute presented its list of the 100 greatest romances of 20th-century film. The stuffed shirts at the AFI called their self-promotionathon 100 Years... 100 Passions, and they packed it with an eclectic mix of classics, tearjerkers and pure fluff. It may have been the beginning of a beautiful friendship, but Casablanca was also the end of a very lackluster countdown. Here are some notes that the AFI forgot to consider when picking these movies out of a hat: #97 GREASE: I liked it until I saw Olivia Newton John's video for "Physical." #93 DIRTY DANCING Patrick Swayze s greatest career moment next to Ghost... and the SNL skit where he auditions to become a Chippendale's dancer with Chris Farley.
APl’s Top Five Romance Films: 5) An Affair to Remember 4) Roman Holiday 3) West Side Story 2) Gone With the Wind 1) Casablanca
Thursday, June 27. The advertising deadline for this issue is
Monday, June 24. The Annual
SEND HOME ISSUE will be published on July 24. Regular Daily Publication resumes
August 22.
MUSIC Indie-rockers Luna will be at the Cat's Cradle Saturday night. All four members, including hottie bassist Britta Phillips, will be playing their instruments on stage in front of hundreds of people. I hope for their sake that they don't mess up. That would be embarrassing. Doors open at 9pm. 300 E. Main St., Carrboro. $l2.
If you weigh under 150 lbs., are dead frightened of the gym and don't like the taste of Schlitz, do yourself a favor and don't go to the Danzig show at the Lincoln Theatre tonight. If you fit that description, it's at 126 E. Cabarrus St in Raleigh. Show up around 9pm and shell out $23.
FILM
#4B LAST TANGO IN PARIS: Any film featuring a naked Marlon Brando should come with a warning label and a magnifying glass. #37 TITANIC: It may still be king of the box office, but before Episode II stole the crown, it was also king of gag-worthy love dialogue. #24 KING KONG: It's always been a fantasy of mine to be felt up by a giant gorilla. Oh, just thinking about his strong hands makes me tingly. #l6 SINGIN' IN THE RAIN Comedienne Anne Meara said it best: The real romance in this film is between Gene Kelly and the lamp post."The science of that just can't be comfortable. But we'll always have Paris....
weekly Issue of the Summer on
The Pilobolus Dance Theater will prance happily June 20-22. These shows differ from the ones earlier in the week, and the main piece is The Four Humours. Page Auditorium at Bpm all nights. Also, catch the children's performance Saturday at Ipm. $2O-35.
—Sarah Brodeur
In July. "Daniel discovers a new self and learns to truly fight for his happiness, even as he gets high on drugs for the first time, gets beaten up, is seduced, robbed, and finally busted by Turkish border guards.” Sweet. 7:20 and 9:20 every night. 2:20 and 4:20 weekend days. Carolina Theatre. 309 W. Morgan St.
SUI H I T To request event posting in Recess, e-mail recesso2o3@yahoo.com two weeks in advance. Include event description date, time, cost, location and contact information.
PAGE 10 � THURSDAY, JUNE 20, 2002
The Chronicle
Inside the Durham Budget Total operating budget: $157 mil. Where the money goes
Highlights of the FY 2002-03 budget approved June 18: Increase property tax rate from 53.4 to 54.6 cents per $lOO of property value Increase city employee wages by 2 percent Establish $5O-per-year yard waste fee Pulls $2.8 million from set-aside transit trust fund •Will not receive $4 million from the state because of the North Carolina $2 billion deficit •
Transfer to other funds $10.9 mil.
Capital outlay $4.7 mil
•
•
ebt service 18.9 mil
•
•
Maintains $1.2 million downtown development fund
•Deferrence of $2.8 million in building maintenance
Property tax rates hikes:
Operating $36
•
•
mil.
Voting for the budget: Mayor Bill Bell, Lewis
3.2 pet.
Cheek, Cora Cole-McFadden,Tamra Edwards Voting against the budget: John Best, Howard Clement, Thomas Stith
SOURCE: CITY OF DURHAM WEBSITE
2 pet. � #
1.5 pet. .... ...
*
2000
2001
2002
KEVIN LEES /THE CHRONICLE
UDGET from page 1 raise the county tax rate from 72.9 cents per $lOO in property value to 75.4 cents. Durham Mayor Bill Bell said, on balance, he was pleased with the result. “I obviously would have preferred not to have raised taxes at all,” Bell said. “We had a few choices. I could have easily recommended no tax increase, but we would have had to do that by giving employees no raise or taking money out ofthe downtown fund completely.” Two years ago, the council approved a 1.5 percent tax hike for downtown revitalization, and last year, a 3.2 percent tax increase was set aside to pay debt on bonds approved in past referendums. According to figures on the City of Durham’s website, $18.9 million of the
$157 million operating budget is earmarked for debt service. “It was anticipated when the bonds were passed... that property taxes would be increased to pay off the debt,” Bell said. “This was the year that we could no longer afford to [subsidize the debt without an increase!.” City employees received a 2 percent raise, less than the original 3 percent suggested by City Manager Marcia Conner and less than the 6 percent raise they received last year. Some council members, however, supported eliminating next year’s raise altogether as away to avoid increasing taxes. City Council member John Best said he opposed increasing taxes or fees to balance the budget. Instead, he hoped to postpone payments to city employees’ 401(k) retirement plans
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“When times are a little bit better, then we can just put it right back in there, and they’ll never have missed it, because it’s a retirement plan,” he said. “That would have balanced a big chunk of the deficit.” Bell, Lewis Cheek, Cora Cole-McFadden and Tamra Edwards all voted in favor of the budget, while Best, Howard Clement and Thomas Stith voted against it. Many departments had been asked to reduce spending in order to accommodate budgetary demands, yet had already cut a number of programs or were locked into long-term contracts. “I think we reduced spending as much as we could,” said Cheek, pro tempore of the council. “Frankly, a lot off the reductions had taken place
last year.” Some of those reductions include a discontinuation of $1 million for building maintenance and a $l.B million suspension ofthe city’s allocation to its capital budget. Although a proposed $4O-per-year basic garbage service fee was not approved, the council added a $5O-peryear yard waste fee. Best said he, and other members, opposed the overall garbage fee because they considered it to be as fundamental a service as fire and police protection. Because of the state’s $2 billion deficit, Gov. Mike Easley has canceled a number of state reimbursements to cities across the state, which meant about $3.6 million in lost revenue for Durham. The city will likely receive $500,000 less in state highway revenue as well. Bell said low sales tax revenue and the economic slowdown have stunted revenue growth for the city.
&
what stops it’s going to make, but in the end, it will end up in a better place than it started.” Curran will not take over the position full-time until January, but said she will visit often in the fall. The appointment is the second of three vacancies Moneta hopes to fill this summer. Last month, Moneta named Zoila Airall as the new assistant vice president for campus life. The final position—director of residential life and housing services—may not be filled this summer as targeted, Moneta said. Curran, who is originally from England, received a bachelor’s degree from Durham University in England and a post-graduate degree in education from the University ofLondon. Before becoming Brown’s career director six years ago, Curran served as director of organizational planning and development, and is a Senior Practitioner in Human Resources—the field’s highest honor. She also has worked at the University of Michigan and Galadette University, a school for the deaf in the District of Columbia. Attracting funds for a stronger Career Center is one of Moneta’s goals for the office in the next few years, and he said Curran’s speaking skills will aid in this plan. Curran plans to work with the Office of Alumni Affairs and University Development to cultivate relationships with alumni and encourage giving. “I feel passionately that students need to explore opportunities in different fields, and that message is received well by alumni,” Curran said.
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Sports
f
The Durham Bulls lost four straight to Buffalo before taking o from Charlotte. See page 12
� Where will Boozer, Dunleavy and Williams go? Check out The Chronicle’s draft coverage. Coming next week The Chronicle
THURSDAY, JUNE 20, 2002
USA pumped for quarterfinal match
Americans looking to take down German juggernaut By RONALD BLUM The Associated Press SEOUL Bring on Germany! In a World Cup where anything seems possible, the United States thinks it can beat the three-time champions and advance to the World Cup semifinals for the first time since 1930. Four years ago, the Americans were tentative during a 2-0 first-round loss to the Germans in Paris. U.S. players say that won’t happen again. “We can’t give them as much respect as we did then,” U.S. captain Claudio Reyna said Tuesday. “The difference is that in a knockout game, you have to be cautious and also go for it.” Just after the start of the game at Parc des Princes in 1998, Germany’s Jens Jeremies kneed Reyna in the back during a throw-in. Reyna wasn’t a factor for the rest ofthe night. “For about 25 minutes in that game, my back tightened up,” Reyna recalled. “It was a pretty hard challenge and I remember it. But it’s over. He’s a hard player and that’s the way he plays.”
Mike Dunleavy’s last dance � Dunleavy might have rescinded his promise to stay four years, but no one can really fault him for acting in his best interest. Who does Mike Dunleavy think he is? Dunleavy said that he was a four-year guy. I don’tcare if he’s changed his mind—he said that he was going to stay, and he should have stuck to it. I’m a Duke basketball fan, and Mike Dunleavy owes me that fourth year. What Mike Dunleavy thinking? This guy could have V had the world on a platter. Team captain, -p. player of the year and -c Evan Davls another national From the cheap seats championship. Why would anyone ever want to give something like that up? Never mind the fact that millions of dollars are on the line. Never mind the fact that it’s his decision to make. Never mind the fact that some kid with blue and white face paint doesn’t exactly rank up there with the people that Dunleavy should be considering when making this choice. .
Germany went ahead when Andreas Moeller scored off a comer kick in the ninth minute, then coasted and got a second goal from Juergen Klinsmann off a counterattack in the 65th. The difference between the teams was far greater than the score. The Germans looked like men toying with boys. Their fans, chanting “DeutschDPPI/ICON SMi
See WORLD CUP on page 13
� page 11
U.S. GOALIE BRAD FRIEDEL tries to punch the ball out the box during America’s 2-0 win over Mexico
See DAVIS on page 16
Will Jay-Will follow in Jordan’s footsteps to Chicago? The national player of the year is a virtual lock to end up with the Bulls The NBA Draft Over the last three weeks, The
Chronicle has examined the
draft status and NBA expectations of the
three men’s basketball the NBA Draft.
stars who have declared themselves eligible for
June 6s Carlos Boozer June 13: Mike Dunleavy •
Today: Jay Williams
By PAUL DORAN The Chronicle
JAY WILLIAMS should fall no lower than the No. 2 pick, but unless there is a trade, he will not be picked No. 1.
Uno or dos? Ein or zwei? One or two? With a little under a week left before the NBA Draft, those are basically the options for Jay Williams. Barring a last-minute trade or evidence of a sizable weakness in his game, anything less than being drafted by the Chicago Bulls at the No. 2 pick would be a surprise for the New Jersey native. Williams’ position is so certain that he has begun making tentative post-draft plans. He has already met a number of Bulls and is trying to figure out how he can add to the trophy collection. “I can’t guarantee that we are going to do the things
Michael Jordan did,” Williams said at a press conference after a two-day visit with the Bulls last week. “I can guarantee that I’m going to work my hardest, try my hardest and that I’m never going to quit.” His agent Bill Duffy agrees that if Williams falls out of the top three, it would be a draft day shocker. “It would be difficult for Chicago to pass up on him,” he said. “Golden State would be delighted to have him, but there are still trade possibilities.” The most likely option that Duffy is referring to would be a deal giving a team other than the Houston Rockets the draft’s first pick. Currently, the Rockets have one of the game’s better floor generals, former Maryland star Steve Francis; for Houston to pick Williams, a point guard, would be foolish. Usually the No. 1 pick is someone who will make an immediate difference on the team and unless Houston wants to play with a pair of ones and no big man, they will probably take the 7-foot-5 Chinese center, Yao Ming. Observers say Ming, unlike Williams, is very much a question mark. See NBA DRAFT on page 14
Cassese nation’s best
All-star game on
Women’s tennis adds 2
Layden honored
Senior Kevin Cassese received the Lt. Donald McLaughlin Jr. award given to the nation’s best midfielder by the United States Intercollegiate Lacrosse Association
Duke will host its second annual Basketball All-Star Charity Hoopla, culminating in the All-Star Charity Game which will take place at 7 p.m. Aug. 23 in Cameron Indoor Stadium.
The women’s tennis team signed two new recruits for next season, Julia Smith and Katie Blaszak. Blaszak joins the Blue Devils after playing her freshman year at Vanderbilt.
Baseball star Tim Layden was named a second team All-American by Baseball America Tuesday. Layden pitched and played outfield last season for the Blue Devils.
Major League Baseball
*
'
J Rangers 7, Cubs 4 Braves 4, Tigers 1 Expos 6, Royals 3 White Sox 3, Phillies 1 A’s 3, Pirates 2 Cardinals 6, Angels 3 Mariners 2, Reds 0
PAGE 12 �THURSDAY. JUNE
Sports
20. 2002
The Chronicle
Durham Bulls end roller-coaster week on hot streak Hall’s offensive power lifts Durham in two-game sweep of Knights Damon Buford hit a three-run homer for Charlotte and Scott Morgan added three hits and scored two runs. Denny Wagner (0-1) took the loss in his first Triple-A level appearance. He went two innings and allowed one walk and the game-winning home run.
From wire reports Bulls 2 Toby
Hall’s single drove in Carl Crawford 1 with two outs in the Knights bottom of the 13th inning to give the Durham Bulls a 2-1 win and a sweep of a two-game series with the Charlotte
Knights Wednesday afternoon. June 17: Bisons 4, Bulls 3 Charlotte scored in the fifth inning Tony Medrano BUFFALO, N.Y. on a Damon Buford home run. It was drove in three runs to help the Buffalo one of only four hits that the Knights managed all afternoon. Durham tied the Bisons edge the Durham Bulls, 4-3. Medrano hit a bases-clearing double game in the bottom of the ninth when Andy Sheets’ RBI fielder’s choice scored to cap a four-run sixth inning and give his team the lead for good. Josh Crawford. Crawford reached base on a fielder’s choice in the Bard added his 30th RBI for 13th, stole second and scored on Buffalo, which has won eight i Hall’s single to right field to straight and 12 of its last 13. Dave Maurer (4-0) yielded win the game. IB one run and two hits over two Emil Brown and Hall each had two hits for the Bulls and relief innings for the win and Heath Murray spun a perfect Crawford stole two bases to reach 20 for the season ninth to earn his fifth save. Buns Wright, rehabbing from Rick Croushore (2-0) picked NOTEBOOK up the win after pitching a offseason shoulder surgery, scoreless top of the 13th inning. Three yielded an unearned run and four hits Bulls’ relievers combined for six with two strikeouts and five walks innings of shutout baseball, allowing issued over five frames, but received a only one hit. no-decision. Steve Schrenk (1-5) took the loss Dave McCarty hit a solo home run for after allowing the winning run. He went Durham, which dropped four straight 2 2/3 innings allowing two hits and two for the first time this season. Gerardo walks while striking out one. Kris Garcia (1-1) was charged with four runs, McWhirter went seven scoreless innings six hits and three walks with five strikein his Triple-A debut allowing four hits outs in 5 2/3 frames to suffer the loss. while striking out two. The Bulls head south to face the June 16: Bisons 7, Bulls 6 Charlotte Knights starting Thursday Chris Coste and BUFFALO, N.Y. Earl Snyder both drove in a pair of runs night at 7:15 p.m. to lead the Bisons past the Bulls, 7-6. It was the third consecutive come-fromJune 18: Bulls 9, Knights 8 Toby Hall’s home run leading off the behind win for the Bisons over the Bulls. Coste hit a solo home run in the botbottom of the 12th inning gave the Bulls a 9-8 victory over the Knights Tuesday. tom of the third inning and an RBI sinThe win snapped a four-game losing gle in the fourth. Snyder delivered a streak for the Bulls. two-run double in the sixth to stake The Bulls opened up a 6-0 lead Buffalo to a 7-5 advantage. Tim Drew (8-3) allowed six runs and through five innings and led 8-5 entering the ninth inning only to allow Charlotte nine hits with three strikeouts and a to tie the game and send it to extra pair of walks over eight innings to pick innings. Following scoreless 10th and up the win and Dave Elder spun a per11th innings, Hall hit a shot over the Blue fect ninth to earn his second save of the Monster in left field to win the game. season for the Bisons, who won their Hall finished 2-for-5 with a double seventh game in a row. Carl Crawford and Toby Hall both and the walk-off home run. Andy Sheets added two hits including a drove in a pair of runs for Durham, three-run double. David McCarty hit which lost its third straight contest. his eighth home run of the season in Talley Haines (1-4) gave up three runs the fourth inning. and five hits over three innings to suffer Lance Carter (4-1) notched the victothe loss in relief. ry after pitching three scoreless relief innings. He allowed two hits and struck June 15: Bison 10, Bulls 9 out two batters. Josh Bard homeBUFFALO, N.Y.
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LEE GARDNER and the Durham Bulls lost four in a row before winning their last two. red and drove in five runs and Tim and three RBI in a losing effort against Laker added a pair of RBI to help the Buffalo Bisons. Chris Coste drove in the go-ahead Buffalo beat Durham, 10-9. Bard connected on a grand slam in the run in the seventh inning and Ben fourth inning and ripped an RBI double Broussard homered with three RBI to in the fifth. Laker added a two-run lead the Bisons past the Bulls, 6-5. homer in the seventh. Todd Dunwoody Coste laced a two-out, RBI single into finished 3-for-5 with a pair of doubles right field that scored Jolbert Cabrera and three runs scored for Buffalo, which for a 6-5 lead. Broussard belted a twohas won six straight. Martin Vargas (3-2) run shot in the first inning and lifted a allowed two unearned runs and five hits sacrifice fly to left field in the third, in four innings for the win. tying the score at 3-3. Dave Maurer (3-0) who began the Andy Sheets had three hits and three RBI and Emil Brown and Jason Tyner game with batters hitting .165 against both knocked home a pair for Durham, him, tossed two perfect innings with which dropped to 13-9 in one-run four strikeouts to pick up the win. games. Jesus Colome (1-2) surrendered Heath Murray yielded a hit and three runs—two earned—and four hits fanned two of the seven batters he faced to collect his fourth save. Josh in two innings for the loss. Bard doubled home a run and Zach Sorensen ripped his first triple of the June 14; Bison 6, Bulls 5 BUFFALO, N.Y. Emil Brown went season for Buffalo, which has won five 4-for-4 with a home run, two doubles straight and nine of its last 10.
Sports
The Chronicle
THURSDAY. JUNE 20. 2002 �PAGE 13
Those damn Yankees strike again Those damn Yankees! Normally that’s what I find myself yelling in the middle of baseball games or Sportscenter highlights, but in recent weeks the phrase has taken on an entirely new meaning, one that doesn’t involve an MLB star
wearing pinstripes.
Instead, the phrase seems to be the new mating call of the world, radiating from its epicenter in South Korea where the United States soccer team has taken down a couple soccer juggernauts en route to its first appearance in the World Cup quarterfinals in 72 years. Now, instead of gladly joining in, I find myself chuckling at the chorus every time. Every Landon Donovan goal, Brian Mcßride header, Claudio Reyna cross, Eddie Pope tackle and Frankie Hejduk yellow card. It’s absolutely great because we weren’t expected to make a single wave—we finished dead last in France in 1998—but Portugal and Mexico have drowned in the U.S. tsunami. The Americans have done the unthinkable. They’ve taken the one sport that every country thought they could dominate us in—the sport that kept us humble after all those Dream Team gold medals—and turned it on its head. Portugal ain’t got nothin’ on us. We
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dominate Mexico and now own North America. Poland can’t... well, anyway... hey, at least we made it further than them. Oh yeah, and France, Argentina, Paul Doran Italy, Croatia, etc. One mans trash All but seven teams in the world. Those damn Yankees! The thing that’s so funny about this whole mess is that it’s really beginning to vex the international players, coaches and media. Comments like “Time to take the Yanks seriously?” or “Will Americans now learn how to play football?” have graced the pages ofworld newspapers. South Korea’s coach said that he didn’t think America deserved to beat Portugal—the second goal was clearly offsides—and most anyone will tell you how flat Mexico looked, or how they just had an off game. Funny how that seems to happen around us a lot in this World Cup. Anyway, even though we’re in the third round we’re still the joke. According to most media, Germany’s got the easiest ticket into semis: Beat up on Cinderella. Hell, only about one out of every six stories on the game that are posted to FIFA’s website even acknowledge the fact that the United States may field a squad. And all this is coming after the Juergen Klinsmann
and pals exodus that had critics predicting that the Reich’s sub-par squad would not even make it out of the knockout phase. As one British paper pointed out: If you had told England that, after beating perrenial power Germany 5-1 in qualifying, they would get to face Brazil in the quarterfinals, but the Germans would play the United States, then England would have thrown the game. Those damn Yankees! All in all, the whole thing’s fairily funny, especially when you consider that when push comes to shove, the United States cares more about the Miss Wyoming pageant than the World Cup. If we were to shock everybody and win the thing, the team would get a nice bonus and a trip to the White House. They may even get a big parade, and for the first few months, the building that would house the cup might even be slightly packed. After all there are a few soccer fans in this country. But mostly, Americans would want to see it only because every other country would turn cartwheels over the golden trophy. It’s also made of gold, so maybe, when it’s collecting dust in a few months, someone could even try to steal it. That’s the American way.
Those damn Yankees! If all goes well we’ll be reading the German translation come Friday morning.
OPPI/ICON SMI
NO. 21 LANDON DONOVAN heads in the second goal in the U.S’s quarterfinal World Cup victory.
WORLD CUP from page 11
foe than the Mexicans, whom they have beaten with some regularity and are familiar with from gritty World Cup qualifiers. They respect the Germans’ athletic ability, their relentless physical play and
land! Deutsch-land!” throughout the game, were never in doubt of a victory. Neither were the German players. their professionalism. “Nerves get to you a little bit,” U.S. defender “Germany’s the type of team, even when they don’t Frankie Hejduk said that night. “They came out hard play well, they’ve been able to get results,” Reyna said. and strong, and we weren’t really ready for that.” “We definitely have to be more aggressive, not necesThis time, the Americans vow to be different. They sarily in attacking, but in defending, be all over them.” know they still have to prove themselves to much of Reyna started his professional career with Bayer the soccer world. Leverkusen after the 1994 World Cup, then moved to U.S. coach Bruce Arena sounded peeved after the the VfL Wolfsburg for the 1997-98 season before joinMexico game when the interviewer selected by FIFA ing Scotland’s Glasgow Rangers and England’s asked him whether the Americans, who opened the Sunderland. He knows the German system well. tournament by upsetting fifth-ranked Portugal, were The Germans, who beat the United States 4-2 in an lucky to be in the quarterfinals. exhibition game in March, know the Americans, too. “Luck? I wouldn’t call it luck,” Arena said. “We beat Germany goalkeeper Oliver Kahn looks at the U.S. one ofthe top five teams in the world. We were the only team and sees characteristics of his own. team to take a point from the Koreans, the host team. “They will be a very unpleasant rival,” he said. And we beat a group winner [Mexico]. We’ve had some “They fight a lot, like us, and they are very patriotic impressive results in this World Cup.” guys who give everything for their country. We have to Still, the Americans regard Germany as a tougher be very careful.”
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iDAY. JUNE 20. 2002
Sports
The Chronicle
Castillo ties Hornsby’s hit-streak record at 33 games By STEVEN WINE
The Associated Press
BMH
man Jim Thome, and Castillo continued to second. Official scorer Ron Jemick immediately credited Castillo with a hit and charged Baez with an error for allowing the runner to advance. TV replays confirmed the call, showing that Castillo reached first as the
MIAMI With two hits, an RBI and a run scored, Luis Castillo beat Indians 1 the Cleveland Indians and tied throw sailed past. Rogers Hornsby. “I don’t think his feet hit the ground,” teammate “Who?” Castillo said Even though his grasp on baseball history is shaky, Derrek Lee said. “He wanted it bad.” Castillo raised his average to .401 during the streak he’s creating some himself. Castillo matched Hornsby’s 80-year-old record for the longest hitting streak by a and .338 this season. “Esta bien!” teammate Mike Lowell shouted at second baseman, going 2-for-4 to make it 33 games in a row Wednesday night as the Florida Marlins beat Castillo in the clubhouse, which becomes more congested with media every day. Cleveland 2-1. The Dominican is one game from matching Benito Castillo had a hand in both Florida runs. He was 0for-2 before beating out a dribbler to the pitcher in the Santiago’s record for the longest hitting streak by a sixth inning, and he scored the tying run on Cliff Latino player, set in 1987. Castilla’s streak is the Floyd’s single. longest in the majors since then. But the streak has yet to shake South Florida fans His one-out single to right in the seventh drove in Preston Wilson. out of their apathy toward the Marlins. The game “Luis took care of his hit,” manager Jeff Torborg drew just 9,428, which is below the team’s season said. “I was thinking about the game. Then Luis took average of 11,220. Castillo is not yet a national celebrity. As he chascare of that too.” Castillo tied four players at 33 games in a row— es Joe DiMaggio’s record 56-game streak, a New Hornsby of St. Louis in 1922, Heinie Manush of York Post headline said; “Nation Turns Its Lonely Washington in 1933, Hal Chase of the New York Eyes to Who?” Still, he’s beginning to feel the glare ofthe spotlight, Yankees in 1907 and George Davis of the New York saying Wednesday he’ll no longer talk to the media Giants in 1893. Only 13 players have had a longer streak, including before games. “He ain’t soft, but he hates a lot of pressure,” Floyd just four since 1949. “Tomorrow is a new day,” Castillo said. “Four more said. “I hope he doesn’t put pressure on himself and has fun with it.” at-bats. I start over.” That’s easier said than done, Castillo said. The speedy leadoff hitter extended the streak “Everybody says to play to have fun, but that’s when he topped a 1-0 pitch that pitcher Danys Baez fielded on the second hop between the mound and hard,” he said. “When I go to the plate, I want the peoplate. Baez’s hurried throw sailed over first base- ple to be happy. That’s a lot of pressure.”
LUIS CASTILLO extends his hitting streak to 33 games with this hit in the sixth inning off Cleveland’s Danys Baez.
DUN DEAL from page 1 “We’re going to be fine,” the junior said. “We have a great recruiting class coming in and some guys that stepped up at the end of last season. We’ll be very young, but we’ll be very enthusiastic and excited. We’re going to be a very hungry team. A lot of the guys that won the national championship are gone, so there will be a hunger on this team.” Senior Dahntay Jones agreed with Duhon, adding that he knew Dunleavy’s absence would affect the team, but he did not think it would cripple the Blue Devils. “I’m sure our team will be quite fine,” the Trenton, N.J., native said. “With the players we have coming back and the freshmen we have coming in, we’ll have a lot of talent and we’re excited about the upcoming year.” However, junior Nick Horvath was not quite as optimistic. He said that although he was very happy for Dunleavy, he knew the team would “miss him, on and off the court.” Unlike teammates Carlos Boozer and Jay Williams, who announced at the beginning of the 2001 season that they would forgo their senior season, graduate early and enter the NBA Draft, Dunleavy had planned on returning for his senior season, but in a lastsecond move, he tossed his name into the draft pool just before the deadline. Earlier in the year, coach Mike Krzyzewski told The Chronicle that Dunleavy would return to Duke for his senior season. However, Dunleavy did not hire an
agent, thus allowing him to withdraw his name and return to school for any reason anytime before today. Tuesday afternoon Dunleavy told the program, and that night he announced that he would not exercise that option. Dunleavy said that just like Boozer and Williams he plans on “finishing his remaining few courses and graduating from Duke University as soon as possible.” He also said he would like to
JASON WILLIAMS dives for a loose ball during a game last season against Georgia Tech. eventually look at Williams as a better from page 14 choice than Ming. Williams’ status in the draft has “The thing about [Ming] is that no one changed little since choosing to leave at knows this guy,” said Sports Illustrated the end of his junior season, a move he college basketball analyst Seth Davis. announced nearly a year before. “Williams you know, and he may be the Scouts drooled over Williams’ abilities, best college point guard in 20 years. He’s even at the end of the 2001 season, and better than Mike Bibby... but Ming is a forecasted that he would be picked at the No. 1 slot—in last year’s draft. younger, healthier Gheorghe Muresan.” Experts point to Williams’ play-makUltimately, the biggest question for the Rockets—the question that could ing skills, one-on-one moves, and that, as shape the rest of the draft—lies in deter- Davis said, “the pick and roll was inventmining the relationship between ed for him,” as his strengths. Long before Williams and Ming. As the Rockets have next week’s draft and even before the use for only one point guard, they can dynamics of the draft became clear, either trade the No. 1 pick, trade Francis experts predicted Williams will make an or draft Ming. instant impact on the NBA. Although it is unlikely Francis will “After other people are exposed to him leave Houston anytime soon, Williams’ I think they will also find he is great,” chance of being the top pick would vault Duffy said after Williams’ first workout. tremendously in either one of the trade “He’s an excellent talent as a point guard scenarios. Currently, the Rockets favor and a great human being.” Ming, who would be the first foreigner That is not to say, however, that selected at the top slot. Williams does not have his flaws. At Duke, Barring that elusive trade, nearly he was often chastised for being a sub-par every mock draft posted by the most popdefender and a streaky shooter. Some critular online sports sites —ESPN.com, ics even question his fitness level and abilCNNSI.com, TSN.com and others—has ity to play an 82-game, NBA-length season. Chicago selecting Williams. “TheyVe just quibbling if they’re look“He’s going to go No. 2 or somebody ing at problems,” Davis said. “He’s going will move to No. 1 to get him,” Davis said, to be better in the pros because it’s easier adding that he thought history would to score in the pros.”
NBA DRAFT
MIKE DUNLEAVY has played his final game in for the men’s basketball team. remain active in the University and its athletic program. “I have very much enjoyed my years at Duke,” Dunleavy said. “I have made good friends, had great experiences and received a world class education. I am appreciative of the support that Coach K and his staff have given me throughout my time at Duke.” Most experts expect Dunleavy to be a lock for a top-five selection in the June 26 draft. Mock drafts have projected him going around the No. 3 or No. 4 slot; however, some experts have even specu-
lated that Dunleavy will be the draft’s top pick if Chinese sensation Yao Ming, who is still under contract with the Shanghi Sharks in China, is not allowed to enter this year’s draft.
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Apts. For Rent 175 MONTROSE 6 ROOMS (4 DOWN AND 2 UP) 3 BDRMS 1250/1250,2 BATHS (1 DOWN AND 1 UP), CENTRAL HEAT AND A/C, WOOD SIDING EXTERIOR, STOVE, W/D CONN, OFF HOPE VALLEY ROAD. RICK SOLES PROPERTY MANAGEMENT, 2862040. -
2nd SUMMER SESSION
The Peer Tutoring Program is offering “Free” tutoring for Duke undergraduates students in 2nd summer session. Courses tutored are: Chemistry 22L, 152L, Economics 51D, 52D, Math 31L, 32L, 103, Physics 54L, Spanish 1, 2, 76, Statistics 101,103. Pick up an application from 217 Academic Advising Center, east campus. We want
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BROADWAY AT DUKE SEASON TICKETS NOW ON SALE: RENT, SOUTH PACIFIC, FOSSE, THE SCARLET PIMPERNEL Four great musicals, with Duke student season savings up to 71% compared to regular single ticket prices. Season Tickets Duke Student $B5, $7O, $5O; General Public $l4O, $125, $llO. Information and order forms available at the Bryan Center Box Office.
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THE CLOSEST APT COMMUNITY TO DUKE UNIVERSITY & NEAR DURHAM FREEWAY (147), 15501 & 85. Academic leases available. Flexible lease terms. Walk or free shuttle bus to campus. Check our specials! Tower Chapel Apartments, 383-6677. www.apts.com/chapeltower.
THIS IS A JEWEL
Lovely, spacious one bedroom apartment in 1915 vintage renovated home at 1104 N. Elizabeth. Washer/dryer, ADT security Included in rent. Brand new gas furnace, A/C, stained glass doors, gorgeous. wood floors and large, fenced yard close to Duke. Available first week July. Grads & professional only. $595.00 month. Year lease, references required, 361-2639 or lamarglenn@aol.com. No pagers.
THURSDAY, JUNE 20. 2002 � PAGE 15
WALK TO DUKE (2 MINUTES), DRIVE TO RTF (12 MINUTES) OR STAY AND PLAY.Academic leases available. Flexible lease terms. Walk or free shuttle bus to campus. FANTASTIC clubhouse w/ fitness center. Check our specials! Rates starting at $478. Duke Manor 383-6683. Apartments, www.apts.com/dukemanor.
Autos For Sale Brand-new 2001 Red Ford Escort 4 DR. Sedan. Excellent condition, lady driven. Great for student or professional! I’m moving to Canada and must sell before July 30. Call 919-932-7463, ask for Andrea or email blonde_angell9@hotmail.com. Asking $ll,OOO 0.8.0.
Seeking babysitter/homehelper for our 6 & 10 year olds in Hope Valley area. Full time in summer, part time (2pm 6pm+) starting in the fall. Call 403-2784. -
27 FLOOR PLANS FROM $399* ON IBR APTS TO $499* ON 2 BR APTS— 2 BLOCKS TO DUKE Flexible lease terms. Check our specials! Duke Villa Apartments, 493-4509. www.apts.com/dukevilla. ‘subject to change.
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311 SWIFT 2 BR FURNISHED UNIT. 895/600. WALKING DISTANCE TO DUKE. UNITS 206, 207 & 308 AVAILABLE. RICK SOLES PROPERTY MANAGEMENT 2862040. -
It’s not too late to get help! The Peer Tutoring Program is offering “FREE” tutoring to Duke undergraduate students summer school. Courses tutored are: Chemistry 21L, 151L, Electrical Engineering 61L, Economics 51D, 52D, Math 31L, 32, 103, Physics 53L, Spanish 1, 63, Statistics 101. Pick up an application today in 217 Academic Advising Center, east campus.
3703 TURRENTINE 5 ROOMS, 2 BDRMS, 1 BATH, GAS. 675/675. PACK CENTRAL HEAT, ELECTRIC HOT WATER, GAS PACK CENTRAL AC. VINYL/CARPET FLOORING, BRICK EXTERIOR, W/D CONN. OFF CARVER STREET NEAR DURHAM REGIONAL HOSPITAL. RICK SOLES PROPERTY MANAGEMENT 286-2040. -
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TWO BEDROOM APTS. FOR RENT
168 Alamo Ct. American Village 2BR, 1.5 baths, fireplace, dishwasher, washer & dryer, deck, central electric heat/AC, new carpet. $750.00/ mo. 1608 & 1610 Green St. Remodeled 2 BR brick duplexes. One block to E. Campus, 1 bath, new cabinets, new carpet, RNG/REF, central gas heat & A/C unit, $625.00/ mo. 158 Tarawa Ter American Village 4 BR, 2 baths, RNG, REF, dishwasher, fireplace, 2 decks, carpet, fireplace, blinds, central electric heat & A/C, $1300.00/ mo. Dick Patton Realty 620-8681.
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THE VILLAS Spacious 2 BR duplexes. Garage or carport, 2 full baths. $795-$B5O. LAKEVIEW APTS 2 BR APTS. Utilities included. Screened porch, A/C, appliances. $725. One month free rent with a oneyear lease. Broker 489-1777 NIGHTS 382-9729.
Private student housing. Campus Oaks 311 Swift Ave., 2br/2ba, fully furnished W/D, available June 1. $925/month, 1 year lease required 910-724-4257, 919-382-3043.
St. Joseph's IXI I Episcopal \ I ) Church \J/ invites you to worship with us 8:00 am Holy Eucharist Education for all ages 9:15 am Sung Holy Eucharist 10:30 am
1902 W. Main St across from
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Main at Ninth St. 286-1064 Father Steven Clark, Rector
International experience/interest preferred. Meet, greet, assist arriving internationals. 20-40 hours/week in August, $B/hr. Contact Dee Blankfard, 6843585 or dcb2@duke.edu Durham Academy is looking for a mature student willing to work with middle school children during afterschool. Hours are 2:30 pm 6 pm. Duties include supervise children during indoor and outdoor activities. If you are interested in making extra $ contact Director of Ext. Day Services at 490-0193 x 445. -
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Learn to Scuba Dive Classes taught in Durham. Raleigh. Chapel Hill Check waterworldinc.com for schedules and cost f9I9J 596-8185
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YAMAZUSHI JAPANESE CUISINE
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Part-time job for the month of July. of Cultural Department Anthropology is looking for a student to locate articles in the library and then to scan them for placement on a website. Flexible hours. Hourly rate of $7.50. Please call 684-5107, or email slim@duke.edu for further information.
Townhouse in Walden Pond. 2 bedrooms, 1 1/2 bath, 5 minutes to Duke. Washer/Dryer included. $750/month. Call 469-2744.
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25 Georgetown Ct. In Walden Pond. 2BR, 1.5 baths, carpet, RNG/REF, dishwasher, washer+dryer, fireplace, patio, blinds, central electric heat & A/C, $750.00/ mo. 9 Grove Park In Walden Pond. 2 BR, 1.5 baths, carpet, RNG/REF, dishwasher, blinds, fireplace, patio, central heat & A/C, $725.00/ mo. 2691 Hitchcock 1 BR with loft, RNG/REF, washer & central dryer, carpet, patio, gas #4 heat/AC, $650.00/ Moorefield Ct. 2 BR, 1.5 baths, RNG/REF, dishwasher, carpet, central gas heat/AC blinds $885.00/ mo. 18 Scottish Lane @ New University Dr. & Garrett Rd. 2 BR. 2.5 baths, RNG/REF. dishwasher, microwave, blinds, gas central deck, heat/AC, $975.00/ mo. Dick Patton Realty 620-8681. -
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Student assistant wanted for Cognitive Psychology Research lab. Assistance is needed 30-40 hours per week for June-August, with options for Fall employment. Duties include subject recruitment & research testing, data entry and general office work. Good communication skills are a must. E-mail or call Ms. Harris at 660-7537 or
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Beth El Synagogue in Durham is seeking a warm energetic resourceful assistant to work with our administrator and Rabbi 20-30 hours per week. Candidates must be proficient in Microsoft Office and have some knowledge of the Jewish community. Students are welcome to apply if able to give at least a 1 year commitment. Fax cover letter and resume to (919) 682-7898 email or
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NEED EXTRA CASH? Earn some cash and give back something to Duke too as a SUMMER TOURGUIDE!! Times available fit a variety of schedules. For details call Steve Wilkins in Undergraduate Admissions at 684-0159 or email steve.wilkins @ duke.edu.
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LIVE IN OLD WEST DURHAM Convenient to Duke. 909
Houses For Rent 2-4 BR houses near Duke. Recently renovated, hardwood floors, appliances included, decks, large yards, pets ok. Avail: Now and 8/1, www.bobschmitzproperties.com, 419-0393. For rent. Brick ranch with front porch & carport, 1/2 acre lot, 3BR, 1 1/2 B, LR-gas log fireplace. All appliances, central heat/air. Near Duke and Durham Regional Hospital. $l,OOO/mo. 2307 Carver St. Call 489-4749. Furnished 3bds/3full baths, lots of closets. Wood floor in entry, new carpeting. Dining room/living room with fireplace. Large fully equipped kitchen: refrigerator with icemaker, Jennaire stove, microwave, dishwasher, lots of cabinets. Breakfast room with table and chairs, sliding glass door opens onto deck. Yard is small, maintenance free. Upstairs: laundry room with washer and dryer. Large bedrooms with own bathrooms. Master bedroom has a walk-in closet and dressing area. 2 large outside storage rooms. This is a safe wooded area within 2.2 miles from Duke Business School and 3.4 miles from Duke Medical School. Tennis court, outdoor swimming pool, playground and club house are within 2 blocks. Front of townhouse parking. There are walking and biking trails. Restaurants and shopping are near as well as I-40 and 15/501. 1, August rent: included $1250/month water/sewer. Small ok pet
W/deposit. Security deposit required. Email maguyrick@earthlink.net or call 336-210-1882. House for rent in historic district of Chapel Hill. Lovely older home is within walking distance from campus and downtown amenities. The home has 5 bedrooms and 2 bathrooms. A spacious living space includes a large dining room, living room, and family room. The kitchen is fully equipped and includes a new stove and dishwasher. Hardwood and high ceilings throughout. A wonderful home. $2500/mo. Pets negotiable. House available 7/01/02. Call Brian @ 932-1279 or 942-1450.
Rosehill Avenue A&B, 1 bedroom, hardwood floors, new windows, AC, stove & frig. $450/month. 1001 Carolina Avenue (left side, 1 bedroom duplex. $530/month. 922 Hale Street (right side), renovated 1 bedroom, range frig, washer/dryer. wood floors. $570/month. 2629 Lawndale Avenue, 1 bedroom duplex, LR, DR, range frig, washer, dryer. $560/month. 1002 Hale Street, 2 bedroom, 1 bath house, living room, frig, washer/dryer, central gas heat, window AC, fenced yard & covered back patio. $795/month. 1009 Ninth Street, 5 bedrooms, 3 baths, gas, range, refrigerator, central air, w/d hookups. $1,385/ month. 2301 Englewood Avenue 3 bedroom 2 bath house, gas range, frig, dw, washer, dryer, porches, wood floors, 1007 Ninth $1,475/month. Street , 4 bedroom, 2 bath house, LR, DR, frig, range. $1285/month. Ninth Street Commons, 1011,1013, 1015 9th Street, 3 bedrooms, 2.5 baths, cathedral ceilings, all appliances, security & data & cable wiring, 9 unique units under construction. $1,485/month. One month free for OTHER preleasing. DURHAM LOCATIONS. 1216 Broad Street 2 bedroom duplex, recently renovated, range, frig, washer, dryer, across from School of Science & Math. $775/month. 1605 W. Club Blvd. 2 bedroom duplex, range, frig, hardwood floors, porch, fenced yard, $515/month. 105 E. Delafield Avenue (right side), Grand master bedroom with many windows, opening to deck and back yard, 2 bedrooms, 1 bath, hardwood floors, range, frig, dishwasher, washer 6 dryer, central air. $795/month. 117A E. Maynard Avenue, 1 bedroom, duplex, hardwood floors, range, frig, washer connection, no AC,. $505/month. 1331 Hamlin Road, 2 bedroom, 1 bath brick home in northern Durham with fireplace, hardwood floors, range, frig, w/d connections, attic, basement. $755/month. Apple Realty 6253645, 688-2001.
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PAGE 16 �THURSDAY.
Sports
20. 2002
The Chronicle
Castillo ties Hornsby’s hit-streak record at 33 games By STEVEN WINE The Associated Press
Marlins
With two hits, an RBI and a run scored, Luis Castillo beat 1 the Cleveland Indians and tied
2 MIAMI
Indians Rogers Hornsby.
“Who?” Castillo said
Even though his grasp on baseball history is shaky, he’s creating some himself. Castillo matched Hornsbys 80-year-old record for the longest hitting streak by a second baseman, going 2-for-4 to make it 33 games in a row Wednesday night as the Florida Marlins beat
Cleveland 2-1. Castillo had a hand in both Florida runs. He was 0for-2 before beating out a dribbler to the pitcher in the sixth inning, and he scored the tying run on Cliff
Floyd’s single. His one-out single to right in the seventh drove in Preston Wilson. “Luis took care of his hit,” manager Jeff Torborg said. “I was thinking about the game. Then Luis took
care of that too.” Castillo tied four players at 33 games in a row— Hornsby of St. Louis in 1922, Heinie Manush of
Washington in 1933, Hal Chase of the New York Yankees in 1907 and George Davis of the New York Giants in 1893. Only 13 players have had a longer streak, including just four since 1949. “Tomorrow is a new day,” Castillo said. “Four more at-bats. I start over.”
The speedy leadoff hitter extended the streak when he topped a 1-0 pitch that pitcher Danys Baez fielded on the second hop between the mound and plate. Baez’s hurried throw sailed over first base-
man Jim Thome, and Castillo continued to second. Official scorer Ron Jernick immediately credited Castillo with a hit and charged Baez with an error for allowing the runner to advance. TV replays confirmed the call, showing that Castillo reached first as the throw sailed past. “I don’t think his feet hit the ground,” teammate Derrek Lee said. “He wanted it bad.” Castillo raised his average to .401 during the streak and .338 this season. “Esta bien!” teammate Mike Lowell shouted at Castillo in the clubhouse, which becomes more congested with media every day. The Dominican is one game from matching Benito Santiago’s record for the longest hitting streak by a Latino player, set in 1987. Castillo’s streak is the longest in the majors since then. But the streak has yet to shake South Florida fans out of their apathy toward the Marlins. The game drew just 9,428, which is below the team’s season average of 11,220. Castillo is not yet a national celebrity. As he chases Joe DiMaggio’s record 56-game streak, a New
York Post headline said: “Nation Turns Its Lonely
Eyes to Who?”
Still, he’s beginning to feel the glare ofthe spotlight,
saying Wednesday he’ll no longer talk to the media before games. “He ain’t soft, but he hates a lot of pressure,” Floyd said. “I hope he doesn’t put pressure on himself and has fun with it.” That’s easier said than done, Castillo said. “Everybody says to play to have fun, but that’s hard,” he said. “When I go to the plate, I want the people to be happy. That’s a lot of pressure.”
LUIS CASTILLO extends his hitting streak to 33 games with this hit in the sixth inning off Cleveland’s Danys Baez.
DUN DEAL from page 1 “We’re going to be fine,” the junior said. “We have a great recruiting class coming in and some guys that stepped up at the end of last season. We’ll be very young, but we’ll be very enthusiastic and excited. We’re going to be a very hungry team. A lot of the guys that won the national championship are gone, so there will be a hunger on this team.” Senior Dahntay Jones agreed with Duhon, adding that he knew Dunleavy’s absence would affect the team, but he did not think it would cripple the Blue Devils. “I’m sure our team will be quite fine,” the Trenton, N.J., native said. “With the players we have coming back and the freshmen we have coming in, we’ll have a lot of talent and we’re excited about the upcoming year.” However, junior Nick Horvath was not quite as optimistic. He said that although he was very happy for Dunleavy, he knew the team would “miss him, on and off the court.” Unlike teammates Carlos Boozer and Jay Williams, who announced at the beginning of the 2001 season that they would forgo their senior season, graduate early and enter the NBA Draft, Dunleavy had planned on returning for his senior season, but in a lastsecond move, he tossed his name into the draft pool just before the deadline. Earlier in the year, coach Mike Krzyzewski told The Chronicle that Dunleavy would return to Duke for his senior season. However, Dunleavy did not hire an agent, thus allowing him to withdraw his name and return to school for any reason anytime before today. Tuesday afternoon Dunleavy told the program, and that night he announced that he would not exercise that option. Dunleavy said that just like Boozer and Williams he plans on “finishing his remaining few courses and graduating from Duke University as soon as possi-
ble.” He also said he would like to
JASON WILLIAMS dives for a loose ball during a game last season against Georgia Tech eventually look at Williams as a better from page 14 choice than Ming. Williams’ status in the draft has “The thing about [Ming] is that no one changed little since choosing to leave at knows this guy” said Sports Illustrated the end of his junior season, a move he college basketball analyst Seth Davis. announced nearly a year before. “Williams you know, and he may be the Scouts drooled over Williams’ abilities, best college point guard in 20 years. He’s even at the end of the 2001 season, and better than Mike Bibby... but Ming is a forecasted that he would be picked at the younger, healthier Gheorghe Muresan.” No. 1 slot—in last year’s draft. Ultimately, the biggest question for Experts point to Williams’ play-makthe Rockets—the question that could ing skills, one-on-one moves, and that, as shape the rest of the draft—lies in deterDavis said, “the pick and roll was inventmining the relationship between ed for him,” as his strengths. Long before Williams and Ming. As the Rockets have next week’s draft and even before the use for only one point guard, they can dynamics of the draft became clear, either trade the No. 1 pick, trade Francis experts predicted Williams will make an or draft Ming. instant impact on the NBA. Although it is unlikely Francis will “After other people are exposed to him leave Houston anytime soon, Williams’ I think they will also find he is great,” chance of being the top pick would vault Duffy said after Williams’ first workout. tremendously in either one of the trade “He’s an excellent talent as a point guard scenarios. Currently, the Rockets favor and a great human being.” Ming, who would be the first foreigner That is not to say, however, that selected at the top slot. Williams does not have his flaws. At Duke, Barring that elusive trade, nearly he was often chastised for being a sub-par every mock draft posted by the most popdefender and a streaky shooter. Some critular online sports sites —ESPN.com, ics even question his fitness level and abilCNNSI.com, TSN.com and others—has ity to play an 82-game, NBA-length season. Chicago selecting Williams. “They’re just quibbling if they’re look“He’s going to go No. 2 or somebody ing at problems,” Davis said. “He’s going will move to No. 1 to get him,” Davis said, to be better in the pros because it’s easier adding that he thought history would to score in the pros.”
NBA DRAFT
MIKE DUNLEAVY has played his final game in for the men’s basketball team. remain active in the University and its athletic program. “I have very much enjoyed my years at Duke,” Dunleavy said. “I have made good friends, had great experiences and received a world class education. I am appreciative of the support that Coach K and his staff have given me throughout my time at Duke.” Most experts expect Dunleavy to be a lock for a top-five selection in the June 26 draft. Mock drafts have projected him going around the No. 3 or No. 4 slot; however, some experts have even speculated that Dunleavy will be the draft’s top pick if Chinese sensation Yao Ming, who is still under contract with the Shanghi Sharks in China, is not allowed to enter this year’s draft.
The Chronicle
Comics
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THURSDAY, JUNE 20, 2002 � PAGE 17
Jim Borgman
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The Chronicle The Chronicle’s guesses on who Deep Throat really is:
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American Red Cross: Open blood donor site. By appointment (684-4799). 9:00 am to 2:00 pm. Duke Clinic. Restorative Chi Gung for cancer patients, family members and caregivers. Every Thursday from 12:45-1:45 pm, at the Cornucopia House Cancer Support Center, 111 Cloister Gt., Ste 220, Overlook Building in Chapel Hill. For more information call 401-9333 or see the web site at www.cornucopiahouse.org.
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Calendar
leer House: Polycystic Ovary Syndrome Support Group. To register, call 416-DUKE (416-3853). 7:00 pm, 4019 N. Roxboro Road.
Friday International Coffee Connection: Fridays, 12 Noon-1:15 pm, Duke Chapel Lounge.
Restorative Yoga for cancer patients, family members and caregivers. Every ThursJumah (Muslim Community Prayer). Medday from 6:00-7:30 pm, at the Cornucopia ical Center Chapel/Mosque, Duke HospiHouse Cancer Support Center, 111 Clois- tal. 1:15 pm. to 2:00 pm. For more inforter Ct., Ste 220, Overlook Building in mation, call Dr. Sameer Ahmad, 970-0225. Chapel Hill. For more information call 4019333 Living with Advanced/Metastatic Cancer Support Group for cancer patients. Every Downtown Thursdays R&R visit DownFriday from 3:00-4:30 pm, at the Cornutown Chapel Hill for a little Summer R&R. copia House Cancer Support Center, 111 Tonight’s kick off concert: Armand Cloister Ct., Ste 220, Overlook Building in Lenchek & Bluesology, at McCorkle Place, Chapel Hill. Call 401-9333 or see the web 7:00 -10:00 pm. site at www.cornucopiahouse.org.
American Dance Festival: Dancing for the Camera. Videos from the global dance community. “Portraits in Dance” and “Limn: A Life Beyond Words.” Call 684-6402. 7:00 pm, East Campus. American Dance Festival: Pilobolus Dance Theatre. 8:00 pm, Page Auditorium. Call 684-4444 . Also on Saturday, June 22. AA/ Geeks: “Huh? Kiddie Mindwarp.” Baffling educational films that warped a whole generation of little kiddies’ minds, 8:00 pm. Call 681-7600. Center for Documentary Studies, 1317 W. Pettigrew St.
.
-
Saturday
Ingram and Lees Beckett and Garinger Reinker Doran Parsons and Hetherington Lees and Ingram Yee Hetherington, Morgan and Andrawes Miller
Account Representatives:
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Kermit the Frog: That Sunday Night Sex Show lady: William Chafe; Bea Arthur: Philip K. Dick: Richard Nixon, Law ’37: Kevin’s family (welcome to Duke):
American Dance Festival: Dancing for the Camera. Videos include “Resistance,” “Refuge” and ‘To Create Something Out of Nothing: The Children of Ibdaa.” Call 6846402. 7:00 pm, East Campus.
Monica Franklin, Dawn Hall,
Yu-hsien Huang ...Jonathan Chiu, Kristin Jackson Sim J. Stafford, Brooke Dohmen Rachel Claremon Chris Reilly
Sunday Weekly gathering of Falun Dafa voluntary teaching and practice of the five sets of physical exercise. South lawn of the Duke Gardens. 8:30 am to 11:30 am. Web site: http://www.duke.edu/web/falun.
Sunday Worship Service: 11:00 am, Duke Chapel. For information, call 6842572. Catholic Mass: 11:00 am, York Chapel in the Divinity School, West Campus and 9:00 pm in the Duke Chapel, West Campus. American Dance Festival; Dancing for the Camera. Short videos from the global dancing community. For information, call 684-6402. 2:00 pm, East Campus. Duke Mediation Group meets at 5:00 pm every Sunday. Practice meditation sittings and instruction. Room 200 Divinity Building. See the web site at http://www.duke.edu/web/meditation.
The Chronicle
PAGE 18� THURSDAY, JUNE 20, 2002
Thf Chronic F X
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Letters to Incorporated
1993
Leave no woman behind
Women
have simply not been given the opportunities they
deserve, particularly in engineering and the natural sciences.
Call it a Cold War relic, a product of society’s gender constructions, or something else, but there exists a widespread problem of gender inequality in the sciences at universities. Duke is no exception, and recent complaints from its natural science departments suggest that the administration, faculty and students need to aim for a widespread change. The Pratt School of Engineering is in a better position than the others. It is one of the few engineering schools led by a female dean and has made significant strides in appealing to women. Its current enrollment rates of women are well above the national average and Dean Kristina Johnson has made four new female hires over the past year and is talking to one other candidate. Moreover, dropout rates in Pratt are equal between men and women. In the future, curriculum changes, like the addition Engineering 10, promise to improve support for all students, men and women. Considering the highly competitive market for female engineering professors, the school’s hiring record is particularly impressive. Of course, the engineering school still has some room for improvement. For example, some students have complained that the atmosphere in Pratt is unwelcoming. The school should take more ambitious steps in areas such as mentoring and student recruitment as part of attempts to first attract more women students and then ensure that those students are satisfied and remain in the program. On many levels, however, these issues are beyond Pratt’s control. The natural sciences as a whole are plagued by sex disparity, as evinced by the fact that at Duke there are only a handful oftenured female professors. Moreover, sex disparity is an issue that must be tackled by science education at the elementary and secondary levels, since that is where the disparity begins. The University has an obligation to close the gap between the haves and have-nots along sex lines, but diversity is not just an end in itself. All disciplines, including engineering and the natural sciences, benefit from a wide variety of viewpoints. Scholars who see problems from different angles offer unique perspectives. Moreover, by perpetuating a climate that dissuades an entire segment ofthe population from entering a field inevitably excludes certain talented individuals. As Pratt and other academic divisions grapple with sex issues, they will hopefully find an ally in President Nan Keohane, whose address past this spring on the status ofwomen at Duke should provide the impetus for further discussions. Addressing gender inequity in the sciences fits well with the mission of Keohane’s task force, and its members should see that women are not left behind.
On
the record
“Coming to Duke is like getting on a bullet train. A new train is going to run over some humps, its not sure what stops it’s going to make, hut in the end, it will end up in a better place than it started
Israel has carefully minimized civilian casualties The June 13 letter, “Murders in Jenin” is a fantasy in desperate search of supporting facts to give it credence. The firsthand accounts given to the BBC and European newspapers came from those whose sole interest was to spread propaganda. To the everlasting shame of those newspapers and broadcast media, news of a massacre was disseminated without even bothering to check the facts. All have now admitted their error, though only the Guardian newspaper in England has so far had the journalistic backbone to apologize.
DAVE INGRAM, Editor KEVIN LEES, Managing Editor WHITNEY BECKETT, University Editor ALEX GARINGER, University Editor KENNETH REINKER, Editorial Page Editor PAUL DORAN, Sports Editor JONATHAN ANGIER, General Manager MATT BRUMM, Senior Editor JENNIFER SONG, Senior Editor JANE HETHERINGTON, Photography Editor REBECCA SUN, Projects Editor & RUTH CARLITZ, City Stale Editor RYAN WILLIAMS, City & State Editor & MIKE MILLER, Health Science Editor BECKY YOUNG, Features Editor MEG LAWSON, Recess Editor GREG VEIS, Recess Editor MATT ATWOOD, TowerView Editor JODI SAROWITZ, TowerView Managing Editor JOHN BUSH, Online Editor BRIAN MORRAY, Graphics Editor TYLER ROSEN, Sports Managing Editor ROBERT TAI, Sports Photography Editor PATEL, AMI Wire Editor KIRA ROSOFF, Wire Editor MOLLY JACOBS, Sr. Assoc. Features Editor MELISSA SOUCY, Sr. Assoc. City & Slate Editor NADINE OOSMANALLY, Sr. Assoc. University Editor EVAN DAVIS, Sr. Assoc. Sports Editor MATT KLEIN, Sr. Assoc. Photography Editor ANDREA OLAND, Sr. Assoc. Photography Editor PARSONS, THAD Sr. Assoc. Photography Editor SETH LANKFORD, Online Manager ALISE EDWARDS, Creative Services Manager RACHEL CLAREMON, Creative Services Manager SUE NEWSOME, Advertising Director CATHERINE MARTIN, Supplements Coordinator BARBARA STARBUCK. Production Manager MARY WEAVER, Operations Manager MILNE, NALINI Advertising Office Manager The Chronicle is published by the Duke Student Publishing Company. Inc., a non-profit corporation independent of Duke University. The opinions expressed in this newspaper are not necessarily thoseof Duke University, its students, faculty, staff, administration or trustees. Unsigned editorials represent the majority view of the editorial board. Columns, letters and cartoons represent the views of the authors. To reach the Editorial Office (newsroom) at 301 Flowers Building, call 684-2663 or fax 684-46%. To reach the Business Office at 103 West Union Building, call 684-3811. To reach the Advertising Office at 101 West Union Building call 684-3811 or fax 684-8295. Visit The Chronicle Online at http://www.chronicle.duke.edu. © 2002 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 Offiee. Each individual is entitled to one free copy.
teach-in .on one-sided Middle East issues at Duke a few weeks ago. For others who may also not yet know what happened in Jenin, here are some of the real facts. Fewer than 60 people were killed. Most were cornbatants. Ofthe few civilians killed, some were killed by booby-traps set by the Palestinian terrorists themselves. Twenty-three Israeli soldiers were killed in vicious hand-to-hand fighting in the camp. Those casualties could have been avoided if Israel had used the massive force available to her. Humanitarian aid was allowed into Jenin. Reports to the contrary come from sources such as
the Red Crescent, headed by Yasser Arafat’s brother. Blood was even offered to the injured and refused, of course, because it was Jewish blood. Seldom, if ever, has a society at war been so careful to minimize civilian casualties, even at great cost in lost lives from their own forces, as Israel has in this conflict. Contrast this care with the deliberate of innocent slaughter civilians by Palestinian suicide/homicide bombers. It is time for this libel of Israel to cease.
The letter writer may not SUSAN Elinoff know this; he has perhaps Data Technician been in isolation since the Behavioral Sciences for referenced column, see http:llwww.chronicle.duke.edu!story.phplarticle_id=263o4
Fault for Jenin massacre does not lie with Sharon Elahi’s Ershad
letter
about Ariel Sharon leaves out a few facts. First, he claims that Ariel Sharon killed 1,500 people and in Shaba
by and watched as Bosnian Muslims were slaughtered
by Serbian troops. With respect to Jenin, he states, “It is clear that mass destruction and murder took place.” His letter was obviously written when were Palestinians outlandishly claiming 500 peopie were killed. Of course we all now know that was a lie and that the actual number was about 50 and almost all of them armed combatants, In fact the Palestinian Authority has done a cornplete 180 and is no longer claiming Jenin was a massacre, but a great Arab vic-
Shatila. What he fails to say is that Arab Lebanese soldiers, fighting in a civil war started by Yasser Arafat, were the ones who killed the people there, not Israelis. The most Sharon can validly be accused of is not intervening to save them. If this sort ofinaction is a war crime then the entire Dutch government should be indicted for war crimes as its soldiers stood for referenced column, see http:!
/
Tory over the Israelis. He also claims that the Israelis primarily target women and children. According to the PA’s own figures, however, in the last 20 months 132 Israeli female civilians have been killed compared with 40 Palestinian women. In addition, Palestinians actively target areas filled with Israeli children such the suicide bomber who killed 23 teenagers and injured 83 others at the discotheque in the seaside Dolphinarium June 1.
David Marks Trinity ’94
www.chronicle.duke.edu!story.php?articleJd=263o4
Questions on the Quad What do you think about the parking situation on campus and what should the University do about it? “The Blue Zone is
Sheila Curran, new director of the career center (see story, page three).
The Chronicle
the editor
a dangerous place. There should be
Laura
Tobolowsky Trinity 'O4
parking closer to campus.... I’ve never really felt the presence of Duke Police, period,”
Liala Messin
Alana Elias
“I lived on Central [last year] so parking wasn’t really a problem.,.. One of the reasons I choose to live on Central was parking.”
Graduate School'OB
in places we
thought were fair game..,. There are other things they could work on, like safety.”
Hosea
Chang Trinity ’O3
“We both received tickets at 7:30 p.m.
GraduateSchool ’O7
your money again?”
Trinity 'O2
“I have nowhere to park. Right now I’m on the street, so I’m taking the bus. I could pay for a permit in the H Lot, but it fills up at 7:30 and I don’t get here until 9:30.”
Matt Swingle
“Do you see the irony in spending money on Duke that will in the end get
Jennifer Snook
Trinity 'O4
“It’s a bad situation. In the year, I’m bound to be parking in the back of the [Blue Zone]. I think it’s unsafe.”
Commentary
The Chronicle
THURSDAY, JUNE 20, 2002 �PAGE 19
Two sides of the coin on the subcontinent Sweeping specious relativism aside reveals Pakistan’s evil in its conflict with India avoid nuclear escalation Pakistan, howe d “ thatit
weaponss first. Tnakl tan 8 cal 1ed for a 1l Clte m call this is mor,f iromc and devoid of any danbljr meaning balanced hand-wrinmn? i mce a military junta has used coups and both are referenda to abrogate the ability of W and counternrodurtive h ld fr Morally eauaW Ma i*| f w ere a plebiscite to be held m Kashmir, 3 and Pakistan as akistan would export these same tactics, Ambati wronffheaded aspnnat JUSt aS haS fxP or{ed tei 7’onsm to the ing self defense with sniride Weiner g nr eglorL Meanwhile, India has remained Prpddpnf PpnroT w r u ° g \ a demo atlc Bmce &ainhig independence bm Laden. rw Chic evenhandedness may be from Great Britain in 1947. U a^lsta lB na character explains, to world b h Vp repugnant and h caan t Jnshfy, its behavior towards hicha. Pakistan s military has ruled the India fin id+ Vdi counseledto h repeatedly country for most of its history and has stiw itself mid to open diplomatic fled democracy the past. restrain m In 1980, East negotiations with Pakistan. Forgotten are Pakistani parties won Pakistan’s elecndian Prime Munster Atal Vajpayee s tions, but Pakistan’s military junta two summit overtures to Pakistan in the barred the victors from forming a govemlast three years. Pakistan’s response to ment, thus kindling a movement for East these peace initiatives is telling. The first Pakistani independence. In eight months in 1999, a year after the nuclear weapons in 1971, in a horror belying Pakistan’s tests, was rewarded by a Pakistani inva- pretense of Islamic fraternity, the sion into Indian-held Kashmir orchestrat- Pakistani military killed 800,000 East ed by General Pervez Musharraf. The sec- Pakistanis and forced 10 million refugees ond, last summer, was rewarded with to flee. India prepared to intervene in attacks on Kashmir’s state assembly and order to stop this horrendous genocide, the Indian parliament by terrorist groups but Pakistan struck first, attacking operating freely in Pakistan. Indian airbases and starting a war. After Although Musharraf rounded up some two weeks, East Pakistan was freed and terrorists in January, almost all of them became Bangladesh. India seized about were released only two months later, just 5,000 square miles of West Pakistan and before the snow melts in Kashmir. This captured 90,000 prisoners of war but revolving door would make Arafat proud, relinquished this for an empty promise pmiivalpnrp moral between the antagonists But naive attemnts at
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Meanwhile, India has shown restraint during all three wars with Pakistan— occurring in 1948, 1965, and 1999—over Kashmir. In the 1999 invasion, India showed great restraint by promising not to cross the line of control established in Kashmir in 1972 and committing to a nofirst-use of nuclear weapons policy to
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is the former, he is irrelevant. If it is the and present threat. More than likely, he is little more than an Arakt in a suit-and-tie, masking radical Islamic fundamentalists bent on breaking up India behind his sartorial splendor. The bottom line is that Pakistan is spawning ground for terrorism. It has long given arms, supplies, training, money, and logistical support to terrorists that kill Indians. It has also coordinated its attempts to break the Indian union with terrorists by sponsoring secession movements in several Indian provinces, Moreover, Pakistan’s support if the United States in the war on terror is at best far overstated and at worst a facade masking Pakistan’s betrayal of the United States. Pakistan supplied weapons to the Taliban, its creation, even after the United States started bombing in October. Pakistan airlifted hundreds of
fighters out from a besieged Kunduz last November and may bm Laden shelter and medical treatment. While fighting an enemy such as this, India should be allowed to apply the Bush doctrine: Those who harbor, arm and export terrorists are themselves terrorists and should be eliminated. The United States should assist India in countering the threat posed by this state sponsor-ofterrorism by cutting offaid and neutralizing Pakistan’s nuclear weapons, the number and hazard of which will grow if ignored. Continued inaction held at nukepoint will only embolden other terrorist groups. Expediency should not trump principle, because terrorism anywhere threatens freedom everywhere,
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from Pakistan that future conflicts would
be resolved through negotiations, Asking India to show restraint and diplomacy While dealing with'terrorists, their sponsors and their harborers is farcical and suicidal. Whether Musharraf is unable or unwilling to stop the terrorists operating in Kashmir is unimportant. If it
WASHINGTON Two weeks before a supemational criminal court opens—over strong U.S. objections—a U.N. war crimes tribunal is setting a legal precedent for the “globocourt” that will add to the dangers faced by war
Enter the Globocourt
tell which side is winning, but to bear witness to the murder and rape of innocents? The European judges wholly missed that central point, instead holding that Randal today runs no percorrespondents from every nation. Nine years ago, sonal risk. They demand that France haul him in; how Jonathan Randal of The Washington Post quoted a dare any writer resist an order to Bosnian Serb official who advocated the expulsion of come before an international tribunal to be cross-examined under oath about what he has written? I know Randal; for decades, he and I were almost alone in public The New York Times defense of the brutalized Kurdish people, and Jonathan often did it non-Serbs from northwest Bosnia. For his role in that the dangerous way, from inside no savage ethnic cleansing, the Serb is now being tried in terror-ridden Iraq. When this guy, The Hague for war crimes. now researching a new book, A U.N. investigator showed up at the Paris home of argues against putting journalists at increased risk in Randal, now retired from the Post, to get him to testify war zones and under tyrants’ thumbs, he knows against the accused. The former reporter verified the whereofhe speaks. accuracy of his printed account (always a mistake— Stipulate that even accused war criminals have legal never talk to the globocourt withrights (and that should go for suspected too), out a lawyer) but declined to terrorists, appear as a witness at the trial. IICiTCLSSTIfICIfIt COTfICS CLOtUTL Journalistic privilege is not The reason to resist becoming absolute. But the reporter’s a participant is obvious: If dictaappearance in court in this case to a is far from crucial to the defense tors see reporters as potential witnesses in prosecutions, tyrants of the accused, and certainly not in trouble will be likely to kill so dispositive as to override the public interest in being able to those witnesses. As Randal argued in resisting a subpoena, learn the truth about mass muras a der in the future. “Journalists would collective The harassment of Randal profession be put at risk of comes down to a case of selfgreater harm and danger” This is not a problem of protecting sources; the sleazy righteous European judges, perhaps contemptuous of Serb interviewee spoke on the record and was directly America’s First Amendment, reacting angrily to any quoted. The central issue goes to the heart of protecting affront to an authority they assert is “not bound by the human rights; Will courageous journalists be able to gain laws and judicial pronouncements of any state.” Making access to war zones as objective observers—not just to law by fiat, these judges tell the world’s journalists that
a U.N. tribunal has “a right to question their report”—a power beloved by totalitarian and forbidden to government by the U.S. Constitution. That is a vivid example of what we can expect from the international criminal court that comes into being July 1. With no intention of submitting its formation for ratification to the Senate, which he knew would have rejected the globo-
Bush properly informed the United Nations last month that the United States was longer a signatory
William Safire
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case of self-righteous European judges, perhaps contemptuous of Americas
First Amendment
.
court overwhelmingly, former President Clinton embarrassed the United States by signing the multilateral abomination;
President George W. Bush properly informed the United Nations last month that the United States was no longer a signatory. This principled decision drew much cluck-clucking from fair-weather aides who like being able to convict—under their ideas of justice—citizens of the United States and other democracies. But Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld formally noted “the lack of any effective mechanism to prevent politicized prosecutions of American service members and officials.” This could “create a powerful disincentive for U.S. military engagement in the world. If so, it could be a recipe for isolationism.” Read that to mean: No immunity from the globocourt for U.S. peacekeeping troops, no U.S. peacekeeping. By gleefully sticking their thumb in the eye of the superpower, Europe’s UNilateralists have damaged their sore thumb more than our unblinking eye. Globocourt enthusiasts cannot have U.S. service members both involved and indictable, its citizens both engaged and endangered. Step one; Get off Randal’s back. .
William Safire is syndicated through the New York Times
News Service.
The Chronicle
PAGE 20 � THURSDAY, JUNE 20, 2002 PLU 214
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