Wednesday, September 4,2002
isolated T-storms High 92, Low 64
www.chronicle.duke.edu Vol. 98, No. 10
The Chronicle I
I
l
M
High Point Spiked The Duke volleyball team cruised to an easy win against High Point in Cameron Indoor Stadium. See page 11
THE INDEPENDENT DAILY AT DUKE UNIVERSITY
Nine Democrats to vie for county board spots By RYAN WILLIAMS The Chronicle
A crowded Democratic field marks the highlight of the Sept. 10 primaries in the race for the Durham County Board of Commissioners. The winners ofthe county’s only primary will face a number of Libertarian candidates in the general election, but no Republican nominees. The race’s major issues include the state budget crisis and regulation of eco-
Board
of Commissioners Elections '
Philip Cousin*
Democrat
ds Libertarian Democrat
nomic growth.
ROBERT TAI/THE CHRONICLE
Jazz it up!
Candidates’ responses to the fast pace of growth and development in the county has been more varied. County commissioner Ellen Reckhow supports the current regulations on industrial and residential growth. “I think our growth controls are quite reasonable, in light of the fact that most of Durham County is in sensitive watershed areas,” said Reckhow, who is also seeking reelection. “I think it’s essential for us to be sure we are doing everything possible to protect those drinking water supplies Libertarian candidate Hal Noyes, however, said he thinks some growth regulations are too stringent. “To me, [urban] sprawl is the American dream,” he said. ”
The Mary Lou Williams Center for Black Culture sponsored a jazz concert on the Chapel Quad Tuesday night, featuring Indonesian, American and Dutch musicians.
Democrat Libertarian Libertarian Democrat “It’s strange that people who have that [dream] don’t want other people to get it.” Joe Bowser, yet another incumbent in the race, said he favors a moratorium on growth in areas with insufficient infrastructure. See COUNTY RACE on page 9
Campus life VP gets to know Duke Commuters say remote lots full By CHRISTINA NG The Chronicle
Zoila Airall’s “heart and soul” is in the lives of students, making it only natural that she moved to Duke this summer to take a leading position in a revamped Division of Student Affairs. Formerly the director of institutional diversity at Bryn Mawr College in Pennsylvania, Airallrecently ascended to the position of assistant vice president for student affairs, joining Sue Wasiolek at that position. Airall will help manage many of Student Affairs’ smaller centers and said she came to Durham because she missed working regularly with students. “At Bryn Mawr, I felt like I was operating in a confine. I was pigeon-holed,” Airall said. “I am student-centered, and I feel [student affairs is] where I can do my best work. I love that people here have been so open. I am truly struck by the warmth and welcoming of this campus.” She said her first impressions ofDuke’s cultural climate have been positive, but she added that the University could improve its percentages of represented minorities and ethnicities. Airall said Duke’s cultural agenda differs from that of Bryn Mawr, an all-female liberal arts college. But she said her past experience is still applicable to her new responsibilities. “At Bryn Mawr, I was able to see how communities form. It will enable me to see new possibilities [at Duke],” Airall said. Diversity, culture and the community will continue to be a significant part of AiralTs professional fife at Duke. As assistant vice president, Airall will oversee the Mary Lou Williams Center for Black Culture, the Women’s Center, the Community Service Center, the International House, the Multicultural Center and the Center for Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and Transgender Life. See AIRALL on page 9 ll&iuc;
The Graduate and Professional Student Council overburned its charter Tuesday night, and increased the number of the body’s committees. See page 3
� Parking officials say that once graduate students finish their department parking lotteries. and off-campus undergraduates receive Blue Zone passes, traffic will lighten. By JENNIFER HASVOLD The Chronicle
ZOILA AIRALL, assistant vice president for student affairs, will work with various student groups at Duke.
Despite the creation of two new parking lots on Duke University Road, students and employees alike reported frustration with the availability and location of parking for commuters. The gravel-topped dirt perimeter lots have been consistently full after 9 a.m., commuters said, causing headaches for Duke community members who purchased the lots’ $lO permit but typically arrive later in the day. “For the past two weeks, only once or twice have I been able to get a spot, because I got here before 9,” said Cat Saleeby, Trinity ’OO, who works in the Rare Book, Manuscript, and Special Collections section of Perkins Library. “But after 9 it’s fall.” Saleeby said she parked in the area When it was a dirt lot and is upset that now she has to purchase a permit and is less likely to find a spot. “It’s obvious that they have [oversold],” she said. Catherine Reeve, director of transportation and parking services, said the situation should improve
Duke and UNC researchers have discovered that a gene known to cause cancer in mice also plays a role in human cancer development. See page 4
See REMOTE LOTS on page 8
I
The Durham City Council opened its meeting Tuesday night by saluting the Duke Blue Devils for their first football win since 1999. See page 6
PAGE 2 �WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 4,2002
ftip) •
NEWS BRIEFS
Cuomo quits New York governor race
Just a week before the primary, former U.S. Housing Secretary Andrew Cuomo abandoned his sinking
campaign for governor Tuesday and threw his support to fellow Democrat Carl McCall. •
Congress steps up ‘faith-based initiative’
Working to implement President George W. Bush’s stalled “faith-based initiative,” five Cabinet agencies are writing rules into federal law that will help churches and other religious groups obtain millions of federal social service dollars with few strings attached. •
West Nile kills 1, infects 2
Government health officials confirmed Tuesday that the West Nile virus had killed one transplant patient and infected two others, raising concern it can spread through transfusions and other medical procedures. •
Colombia resumes drug crop spraying
The resumption of aerial spraying of Colombia’s mammoth drug crops is part of a more aggressive phase in the war on drugs, which U.S. officials say could at last begin to destroy Colombia’s coca. •
McDonald’s to offer lower-fat fries
In a nod to growing health concerns about fast food, McDonald’s plans'to use a new cooking oil to lower fat content in its french fries —a move some feel could backfire with its grease-loving customers News briefs compiled from wire reports.
FINANCIAL MARKETS
O
DOW Down 355.45 at 8,308.05
NASDAQ Down 51.01 L at 1263.84
I 1
J
“Find a truly original idea. It is the only way I will ever distinguish myself. It is the only way I will ever matter.” Russell Crowe in A Beautiful Mind
World & Nation
The Chronicle
Court allows Palestinian expulsion
The Israeli army wields the power to expel relatives of suspected terrorists By STEVE WEIZMAN The Associated Press
JERUSALEM Israel’s Supreme Court gave the army a new tool in its two-year struggle against Palestinian violence Tuesday, allowing it to expel Palestinians from the West Bank to Gaza for aiding terrorist suspects. In the first case of its kind, the court upheld the expulsion of two relatives of a terror suspect, but overturned an order against a third person, ruling that expulsion must be limited only to relatives directly involved in terror attacks. Palestinians called for foreign intervention to stop the Israeli practice, while human rights groups said
it violates international law, particularly the Geneva Conventions. Israel said the two, a brother and sister of a suspected terrorist, would be taken to Palestinian Authority territory on the edge of the Gaza Strip Wednesday. Palestinian officials said they would stay in a hotel and then move to a housing project in Gaza City. In a separate development, Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon dropped his earlier opposition to allowing the Palestinian parliament to convene in the West Bank town of Ramallah but said the ban stands for legislators he deems involved in terror. The parliament is debating whether to approve the
new Palestinian Cabinet and consider reform measures. Sharon said a change is appearing among the Palestinians, who “are realizing that we cannot be defeated by force, and this can certainly be an opening to our restoring calm.” Sharon was addressing Is-
raeli police. Also Tuesday, Israeli troops killed two Palestinians walking near a Jewish settlement in the West Bank. A military official said soldiers saw one of the men carrying a weapon and fired a tank shell at him. Palestinians said both men were supposedly unarmed. See ISRAEL on page 8
Progress marks end of World Summit By RACHEL SWARNS
New York Times News Service
After a week of inJOHANNESBURG, South Africa tensive negotiations, diplomats at the World Summit on Sustainable Development arrived at a plan early Wednesday morning intended to reduce poverty and preserve the Earth’s natural resources. The breakthrough came after diplomats worked late into Tuesday night to resolve a dispute over language in the conference’s plan on health care for women. Canada wanted the words “in conformity with human rights and fundamental freedoms” linked to health care to avoid condoning practices like female genital mutilation in poor countries. Developing countries initially opposed the language, but they backed down early this morning.
“We’re very pleased,” said Kelly Morgan, a spokesperson for the Canadian delegation, speaking in an interview early Wednesday. “We are finished.” The plan is meant to set the international community’s agenda for coming years. It calls on nations to reduce by half the number of poor people who lack sanitation by 2015, to commit to sound management of chemicals with the goal of minimizing their adverse effects on health and nature by 2020, and to reduce significantly the num-
ber of endangered animals and plants by 2010. The plan calls for the reduction of agricultural subsidies in wealthy countries, which protect farmers in the United States and Europe poor nations’ competition. It also urges nations to promote renewable energy sources, such as solar and wind power, and the expansion of energy services access to the poor.
The Chronicle
WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 4, 2002 � PAGE 3
GPSC overturns charter at meeting By KIRA ROSOFF The Chronicle Hoping to start the year with greater clarity, the Graduate and Professional Student Council overturned its former charter Tuesday in its first meeting this fall. GPSC officers worked to amend the document over the summer but decided to rewrite the entire charter rather than revise it piece by piece. GPSC President Rob Saunders said the group’s previous charter had five primary flaws: a lack of nomenclature, missing definitions of duties and purposes, no inclusion ofchanges from past years, an absence of procedures and an inaccurate reflection of the current organization. “One of the difficulties of leaving [the specifics] out is we reinvent the wheel every year,” Saunders said. “This way I don’t necessarily have to know everything [GPSCI has done over the past years to understand the purpose of it.” The new charter defines the body as a general assembly and splits the external and internal affairs between the president and vice president, respectively, as well as specifying the purposes of the atlarge positions. “We are trying to increase the number of committees and decrease the number of people on each committee so we can give them more specific purposes,” said Saunders, a third-year physics graduate student. The new charter also includes caucuses, mostly school-based, which Saunders hoped would gain clarity and definition this year as they lobbied administrators through the specific schools. A few members expressed some concern about the specificity of the charter. “The more specific jobs you give people to do, the harder it is for them to do it,” said Will Tyson, a See GPSC CHARTER on page 10
CORRECTION A page-four article in the Sept. 3 edition of The Chronicle failed to include the Wannamaker Quad Council election results. The council’s new officers are: Bobby Zappala, president: Steve Gore, vice president; Brad Dolian, treasurer: Jon Schnaars, Campus Council representative; Rob McDonald, communications coordinator. Results listed as Crowell/Wannamaker are actually for Crowell Quad Council.
THE KENAN INSTITUTE FOR ETHICS
Grants Available for Programs and Events The Campus Grants program provides support for speakers, workshops, meetings, curriculum development, publications, organizational collaborations, and other activities. Grants of up to $5OO are available to all members of the Duke campus and medical staff, and center community—students, faculty—to support initiatives at Duke that promote ethical reflection, deliberation, and dialogue.
Fall Semester Application th Deadline: September 15 For more informationand application form, see the Grants & Awards section of our website http://kenan.ethics.duke.edu call 660-3033, or come by our office at 102 West Duke Building. ,
JEFF BURLIN/THE CHRONICLE
BELMONT APARTMENT RESIDENTS, who has previously anticipated being part of an off-campus Duke bus route, will now have to walk, drive or take a Durham transit bus.
Belmont residents won’t get bus By MOLLY NICHOLSON The Chronicle Causing disappointment and commuting hassles for many off-campus students, parking and transit officials have decided to scrap a plan, at least temporarily, that would have created a bus route to a popular Durham apartment complex. Students who live at the Belmont Apartments had anticipated being able to ride Duke buses to campus after administrators announced this summer that they would run buses to a planned park-and-ride lot on Hills-
borough Road. The bus route from the lot would have passed by the apartments on the way to West Campus every 15 to 30 minutes. But the University ended up building parking lots on Duke University Road instead, canceling plans for the park-and-ride lot and therefore the bus
U BRIL iSB
route, said Catherine Reeve, director of parking and
transportation. “The purpose of that park-and-ride lot was for the overflow of the Maxwell [Street] parking lot,” she said. “We were able to work out something closer to campus.” Duke Student Government officials, however, hold out hope they will eventually get an off-campus commuting bus running. “This route is supposed to reduce the crunch for parking,” said Joshua Jean-Baptiste, Duke Student Government president and a senior. “It will be coming into fruition in the next few weeks. All the pieces didn’t fit, but now it’s coming together. I would like to say it is coming, but I can’t say exactly when.” Cliff Davison, DSG vice president for facilities and athletics and a junior, said student officials had See BELMONT BUSES on page 10
Undergraduate Research Support Program
URS ASSISTANTSHIPS: provide limited salary to students whose research is separate from course credit. Up to $3OO salary. URS GRANTS: provided to help defray research expenses of up to $3OO for students enrolled in faculty supervised independent study courses.
Fall applications available outside 04 Allen Building or may be printed off our website: http://www.aas.duke.edu/trinity/urs. Completed applications will be evaluated on a rolling basis beginning Monday, September 9. Notification of awards will be mailed to students and faculty advisors. SAMPLE TITLES OF URS RESEARCH PROJECTS � Cervantes in England � Structural Studies of Telomerase � � Temporal Network Theory � Effect of Fatty Acids on Pancreatic Islet Insulin Secretion � � Health-Seeking Behaviors of Latinas � Psychology of Venture Capital Decision-Making � � Towards the Synthesis of a Useful Molecule for Self-Assembly �
Undergraduate Research Support Office 04 Allen Building ��� 684-6536
PAGE 4
II
•
Health INSIDE THE HEALTH SYSTEM
Brain Tumor Program receives gift
Imaging method may help detect cancer
Researchers at Duke's Pratt School of Engineering, in collaboration with radiology experts at the Medical Center, have developed new ultrasound techniques that can “remotely palpate” human tissue and detect breast lesions too small to be felt by hand. The method, called Acoustic Radiation Force Impulse imaging, may also be used to detect clogged arteries and blood clots, and ultimately to characterize breast abnormalities as malignant or benign without performing a biopsy.
AROUND THE WORLD •
Scientists model new superconductor
Physicists at the University of California at Berkeley analyzed the molecular structure of the common metallic compound magnesium diboride to determine why it acts as a superconductor, carrying electricity with virtually no resistance, and remains one at temperatures 29 degrees warmer than for any other metal. The scientists, writing in the Aug. 15 issue of Nature, expect the cheap substance to be used in magnetic resonance imaging machines and electronic devices. •
Science
The Chronicle
WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 4, 2002
Following past successes in creating fat, cartilage and bone, Medical Center researchers have transformed adult stem cells into what they believe to be human nerve cells. Although it is still necessary to confirm that the cells behave like native nerve cells, the result may offer away of treating central nervous system diseases and disorders, such as stroke and spinal cord injuries. •
&
Debate stirs over mammogram benefit
Two studies published Sept. 3 in the Annals of Internal Medicine disagree sharply on the value of value of regular breast cancer screening for middle-aged women. One paper, by the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force, found a benefit from yearly mammograms for women ages 40 to 74. The other, a study of over 90,000 Canadian women, found no benefit, continuing a longstanding debate among medical researchers. News briefs compiled from staff and wire reports
Mouse cancer gene offers human target The Ras gene, now understood to be instrumental in causing pancreatic cancer, is forcing a reevaluation of the methods of cancer research. By MALAVIKA PRABHU The Chronicle
The discovery that a gene known for causing cancer in mice also plays a role in human cancer is leading scientists to reconsider how they target their research. Researchers at Duke and the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill have uncovered a previously undetected cancer-causing pathway of the Ras gene, a major cancer-causing
agent in pancreatic cancer. Although research on the gene, which had been studied only in mice, could hold a bright future for the development of anti-cancer drugs, researchers say a more immediate concern highlights the limitations of relying on mouse models in the laboratory. The Ras study began two years ago when Christopher Counter—assistant professor of pharmacology
and cancer Biology as well as radiation and oncology—realized that Ras caused different types of cancer in mice and in humans. “If you look at the cancers associated with Ras, the result [in humans] was different with the kinds of cancers you modeled with Ras [in mice],” said Counter, who headed the research project. In humans, Ras is partly responsible for thyroid, lung and colon cancer and causes 90 percent of pancreatic cancer. By contrast, the gene does not cause pancreatic cancer, but rather breast and skin cancer in mice. The research team, which paired the Duke Comprehensive Cancer Center with UNC’s Lineberger Comprehensive Cancer Center, discovered that Ras communicates with a previ-
GISTS
THE RAS GENE IN MICE, long recognized as a primary agent in breast and skin cancer, has been found to operate differently in humans by Duke Comprehensive Cancer Center researchers. ously unknown protein, RALGEF, which then causes normal cells to proliferate permanently. Counter emphasized that although the newly found pathway exists in mice, it was overlooked because of the minor role the pathway plays in that organism. Research collaborator Bob Abraham, director of the Durham Cancer Research Center in La Jolla, Calif., cautioned about mouse models because of this oversight. “Mouse models have limits that
haven’t been recognized previously,”
Abraham said. Counter believed that his team’s recently completed research was “on line” with research in other labs to reinvestigate pathways previously thought to be understood. Abraham added that research situations such as theirs “point out limitations on relying extensively on rodent models” and that time would soon tell See CANCER GENE on page 9
Only have one class on Tuesday and Thursday,.,
\l/y What are vx\( YOU waiting for? \
E
o o x:
Now hiring:
I
/ /
Advertising Sales Representative to work Tues./Thurs. between 10am-2pm
Applications available in 101 West Union Building or call 684-3811
£
lys!
The Chronicle
THE INDEPENDENT DAILY AT DUKE UNIVERSITY
The Chronicle WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 4, 2002 ďż˝ PAGE 5
Your career. Your
future.
Are you ready to excel? Put your career on the fast track with Banc of America Securities. We deliver powerful intellectual and financial capital to clients across the globe-and represent a wealth of distinct knowledge, skills and perspectives. Above all, people are our greatest asset. Join Banc of America Securities and take your career as far and as fast os you can go.
www.bofasecurities.com/campusrecruiting
actuate Presentation ember 5, 6:00 pm Canon A and B
Lines
of business attending: Corporate and investment banking Global markets soles, trading and research
Business casual attire Refreshments and
brief discussion following presentation
Banc of America
Banc
of
America
Securities
LL C
,
member
NYSE/NA
S D
/
St P C,,
is
a subsidiary
of
Bank
of
America
Corporation
Š
20 0 2
Securities^^^ Banc
of
America
Securities
The Chronicle
PAGE 6 � WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 4, 2002
City council discusses drought Durham officially congratulates Duke football By JOSH NIMOCKS The Chronicle
Durham’s water conservation efforts and a new report on locations for affordable housing dominated the discussion of Tuesday
ANDREA OLAND/THE CHRONICLE
Fire! Fire! Several students, employees and faculty evacuated Perkins Library Tuesday morning after the fire alarm went off in a planned drill.
Planning Director of Housing Bonnie Estes and Housing Community Development Director Charlene Montford addressed the concerns, saying that an inventory on existing subsidized housing, census data from 2000, information on inclusionary zoning, and a review of the exemptions will all be available in November. In addition, a session for public participation will occur in February, a month before the final draft of the policy revision is due. Council members stressed the importance of including in the policy the controversial practice of inclusionary zoning, which requires that additional affordable housing be built wherever new development occurs. Such a measure spreads the affordable housing all over the city instead of concentrating it in just a few areas.
night’s Durham City Council meeting, delayed one day due to the Labor Day holiday. Officials presented new data on the progress of the drought and the effects of recent rain. Following the significant amount of rainfall over Labor Day weekend, water levels rose at the Lake Michie and Little River Lake reservoirs, officials reported. The city, however, remains at Stage 111 of the Water Conservation Ordinance, a moderate level of mandatory restrictions on activities such as car washing or serving water in restaurants without request. “We were seriously considering going to Council member Cora Cole-McFadden Stage IV of the city water conservation ordinance,” said A.T. Rolan, director of the Envisaid that because the Housing Impact Policy ronmental Resources Department for strongly affects East Durham, there needed Durham. The city had been purchasing to be some residents from that area on the ad water from Cary but recently decided to stop hoc committee dealing with policy issues. As it stands, the bulk of the committee is comto minimize impact on the budget. Also at the meeting, city housing officials posed of developers and builders. presented a status report on attempts to reAlthough the next draft is due in March, vise the Housing Impact Policy, passed in council member Thomas Stith mentioned 1996 to set guidelines for site selection of afthat the potential for improvement on the fordable housing. housing policy will always exist. The council had called for a revision of “We’re just scratching the surface of what the policy to address a variety of concerns, we can do,” he said. and participants at the meeting cited sevIN OTHER BUSINESS; The meeting eral: a lack of data on existing subsidized opened with a local salute: “I would like to congratulate the Duke Blue Devils on their housing, disagreement about the exemptions required for housing benefits, the revictory,” said Cole-McFadden, referring to liance on 1990 census data, a lack of public Saturday’s football win. Mayor Bill Bell was absent from the meetparticipation in debate and the reactive naing due to a diplomatic engagement in China. ture of the policy.
Lazard Cordially invites Duke Seniors to a presentation and reception;#
/P
f
e
On
T^ursda^ September26
yVS f
U/v
(
liX
V
,2002 ■■■4
The Faculty Commons \f 6:00 PM
\
-s
th
Mi „
-
U>v
r-'J/rS .
f)
k
JJqrlors interested in
in our Investment Banking Group should submit resumes and cover letters through Blue Devil IRAK. 'I: For additional information, please contact: Shannon Sullivan: (212) 632-6244 A
*
r
Positions available in New York, San Francisco, Chicago
1’
The Chronicle
WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 4, 2002 � PAGE 7
Senate commences debate over homeland security By CURT ANDERSON The Associated Press
WASHINGTON The Senate kicked off a contentious debate Tuesday on President George W. Bush’s blueprint for a Homeland Security Department, with Democrats flatly rejecting White House demands for greater management flexibility over the agency’s estimated 170,000 employees. The White House responded with a statement repeating Bush’s vow to veto the Senate measure, largely over the worker dispute. Senate Majority Leader Tom Daschle called Bush’s proposal “a power grab of unprecedented magnitude” that would undermine the nonpolitical government civil service system and threaten labor union rights and protections for onethird ofthe current workers. -
“We’re not going to roll over when it comes to principles and beliefs we hold to be very, very important,” said
Daschle, D-S.D. The White House and its Republican congressional allies also dug in their heels. Tom Ridge, the president’s point man on homeland security, said the new department needs broader powers to hire, fire, promote or demote and pay employees—and waive union rights in
matters of national security—to meet emerging terrorist threats. “The president has indicated it’s not just a matter of reconfiguring letterheads and addresses,” Ridge told reporters after meeting privately with Republican senators. The Senate GOP leader, Trent Lott of Mississippi, predicted that Bush would bring enough political pressure
Manufacturing concerns cause stocks to plummet Major stock indexes tumble nearly 4 percent By JONATHAN FUERBRINGER New York Times News Service
NEW YORK Stocks plunged Tuesday on a report that showed manufacturing remains weak and that fueled concerns about the already sluggish economic recovery. The Standard & Poor’s 500 index declined 4.2 percent for its worst single day since just after Sept. 11. The two other major indexes fell at least 3.9 percent, pulled lower by sharp drops in Citigroup, down 10.3 percent; General Motors, down 4.8 percent; Exxon Mobil, down 5.2 percent; General Electric, down 5.6 percent; Microsoft, down 4.2 percent,and Intel, down 4.9 percent. All 30 stocks in the Dow Jones industrial average were down, as were 482 of those in the S&P 500. All three indexes are above their levels when the overall market hit a five-year low in July. But Nasdaq is within 58 points of its low, and the S&P 500 is below 900 for the first time in four weeks.
was at 3.96 percent. Except for a brief
intraday trading dip below 4 percent in mid-August, the yield has not been this low on a security with a 10-year
maturity since the early 19605. Since the stock market reached its five-year low, investors have digested conflicting news on the outlook for the economy and, in turn, corporate earnings. Some analysts have argued that the market is attractive because stocks are undervalued, while others still worry about how high prices are relative to earnings. “I think mixed-signals are the inescapable reality in a modest recovery, but that can be especially disappointing to anyone who is hoping to return to the boom times of the 19905,” said
Robert Barbera, chief economist at Hoenig & Co. in Rye Brook, N.Y. Barbera said that he does not expect the economy to fall into a second, or double-dip, recession. Economists and analysts generally contend that the last recession ended late last year. But there is increasingly more talk The market’s decline on the first of what is called a growth recession. trading day in September is not an auspicious beginning to the month. The This is a period when the economy is Dow and the Nasdaq composite index growing, but the pace is so slow that finished August in the red, for the fifth unemployment can still rise and the consecutive month of losses. It was the economy has the feel of a recession. first decline of that length for the Dow There was such a period after the end since 1981 and the first for the Nasdaq of the 1991-1992 recession, when since 1984. George Bush was president. Although “The market still has a lot of speculathe recession officially ended in March 1992, the Dow did not get into a steady tion built into it,” said Richard Bernupward trend until the next year. stein, the U.S. equity strategist at Merrill Lynch. He said that he does not In positive news last week, orders for think the market has reached a bottom. durable goods were reported as being higher in July, while consumers inInvestors who are playing the market’s volatility, trying to profit on the creased their spending by 1 percent, rallies and the slumps, are the driving also a big surge. force in the market, he said. “The domiConsumer confidence, on the other hand, declined. nant theme in the market is momenThe report Tuesday from the Institum,” he said, “momentum up and momentum down.” tute for Supply Management stated But as stocks fell Tuesday, the bond that the factory index stayed at 50.5 in market rallied and interest rates fell August, though Wall Street analysts sharply, which could be good news. had predicted the index would rise to 51.8 percent. Lower interest rates encourage borhomeallow David Greenlaw, chief U.S. fixed-inmany and could rowing owners to refinance their mortgages, come economist at Morgan Stanley, giving them extra cash to spend. In said the report seemed to him even late Tuesday afternoon trading, the weaker than the overall numbers had yield on the Treasury’s 10-year note indicated.
to bear to get much of what he wants in the end. “It’s about doing the job.If we get into this political folderol I think that’s a mistake,” Lott said. The president met Tuesday with GOP senators at the White House to reinforce his demands for the new Cabinet ...
agency and planned similar sessions later this week with Democrats. “I don’t recall the term veto being used by the president but he made it very clear that the bill had to be acceptable to him, that he wasn’t going to accept some—these are my words—weak compromise,” Sen. Bob Smith, R-N.H., told reporters afterward. Later in the day, however, the White House issued a statement stating that Bush would veto the Senate bill “in its current form.” In addition to the person-
nel issues, the statement said Bush objects to the bill’s “intrusive” new White House Homeland Security Office with a Senate-confirmed director. As the battle lines hardened, the Senate voted 94-0 to proceed to full debate, which could take two or three weeks. Presidential power to waive union collective bargaining rights for federal employees for national security reasons has existed since 1977, said Sen. Fred Thompson, R-Tenn. Congress has approved more flexible personnel systems for agencies such as the Internal Revenue Service, the Department of Housing and Urban Development, the Federal Aviation Administration and the new Transportation Security Administration. See SENATE on page 10
The Chronicle
PAGE 8 � WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 4, 2002
REMOTE LOTS
from page 1
by the end of next week. She did not know the exact number of permits issued but said usage should decrease when off-campus undergraduate students are assigned Blue Zone permits off of a waitlist and graduate students receive permits from their school lotteries. “We are confident that we will have a balance between supply and demand,” Reeve wrote in an e-mail. She added that the University has created a van service between the lots and Science Drive to help accommodate students and that overflow lots are available on N.C. 751 and at the Washington Duke Inn. Still, many commuters expressed annoyance with the new parking alternative. “All of last week, after 10:30 it was full and there was nowhere else to park,” said senior Natasha Hanshaw, who parks on
Swift Avenue or on East Campus when she cannot find a spot on Duke University Road. She added that many of her friends living in the Belmont Apartments would rather walk to campus than attempt to utilize the parking spaces on Duke University Road. Not all commuters are disgruntled by the parking situation; those arriving earlier
have experienced little trouble finding a
place to park. “It’s never full really,” said Brian Fahey, a
first year graduate student in the Pratt School of Engineering, who generally arrives before 9 a.m. “I’d rather park someplace closer, but I don’t really mind the walk,” he said. First year environmental graduate student Takaharu Funatomi agreed. “It’s a little far from the Nicholas School [of the Environment and Earth Sciences], but it’s good exercise for me,” he said. Funatomi added that the walk was a good way for him to become familiar with the campus. Others said rather than walking, they take a bus that stops at the Duke University Road lots and runs to West Campus, but service is not always guaranteed. “It took me today half an hour from the time I got to campus to get to Main West campus,” Saleeby said. “That’s ridiculous. There’s got to be a better way.” Kirsten Cappel, a first-year student in the master of environmental management program, agreed, noting that although she lives close to campus, she allocates between 30 and 45 minutes to get from her residence to class. “I would take the bus but it stops running at 7 [p.m.] and sometimes I have class later,” she said. Cappel also fisted safety issues as reasons for her concern. Before their transformation, the lots were generally considered unsafe and the University discouraged parking there. Police now patrol the lots between 7 a.m. and 7 p.m., and some fights have been installed.
ISRAEL from page 2
JEFF BURLIN/THE CHRONICLE
THE DUKE UNIVERSITY ROAD LOTS sit empty during orientation week, but commuters say the lot now fills before 9 a.m., leaving them with few parking options.
the West Bank and Gaza Strip Palestinian Cabinet Minister Saeb Erekat called the expulsions war crimes and said the Palestinians may ask the U.N. Security Council to discuss the current situation.
In the Jenin refugee camp, seven Palestinians, including two children, were hurt when a bomb exploded, residents said. They said it was apparently left over from a battle with Israeli forces in April, when Palestinians planted hundreds of bombs in the camp. At the Supreme Court hearing, the Israeli military argued that expulsions are an effective deterrent against suicide bombings and other attacks. Human rights lawyers said the measure violates the Geneva Conventions, which forbid “individual or mass forcible transfers” or deportations of “protected persons from occupied territory to the territory of the occupying power or to that of any other country.” The court accepted the state’s argument that the West Bank and Gaza Strip constitute one territory, and so sending people from the West Bank to Gaza did not amount to deportation. Israel has never acknowledged that the Geneva Conventions apply to
The justices approved the expulsion ofIntisar and
Kifah Ajouri, sister and brother of Ali Ajouri, a member of the A1 Aqsa Martyrs’ Brigade militia. Ajouri allegedly sent two suicide bombers to Tel Aviv on July 17, and two Israelis and three foreign workers were killed in the attack. Ali Ajouri was killed in an Israeli military strike
August 6.
The court said Intisar Ajouri sewed the explosives belts for the bombers, and Kifah kept watch while his brother moved explosives between hiding places. The judges overturned the expulsion order against Abdel Nasser Asidi, brother of a Hamas activist accused of involvement in two West Bank attacks that killed 19 Israelis. The conflicting rulings indicated that every time
the military tries to use expulsion, it may face future court hearings. Lawyer Leah Tzemel represented two of the Palestinian petitioners. “It puts Israel into difficulties with international law and leads soldiers into the possibility of being sentenced as war criminals,” said Tzemel. She said the Hague-based International Criminal Court had jurisdiction only in cases dating from July 1, 2002, when it came into being. The ruling, written by Chief Justice Aharon Barak, said that the military can expel a relative of a militant only if that person poses a serious securi-
ty threat. The ruling said the Israeli court sought to strike a balance between security concerns and individual human rights. “In this balance, human rights cannot receive complete protection as if there were no terror, and state security cannot receive complete protection, as if there were no human rights,” Barak wrote.
Sa e Haven � Need a safe place to wait for the bus or Safe Rides? � Wish there were a clean bathroom to use at a party? � Are you a victim of sexual abuse or relationship violence and want a safe place Open Every to sit or sleep? SATE is here Friday & Saturday you, and llpm-7am by student vofunteers at the at the Women’s Center, 684-3897. Women's Center.
for
mm*
staffed
Want to Volunteer? We’d love to have you. Applications are available at the Women’s Center. Please turn them by Monday Sept. 9th, Volunteer Training: Saturday, Sept. 14th 9:3oam-I:3opm Both men and women are encouraged to apply. For more information call the Women’s Center at 684-3897, or email Kelly Quirk at kq3@duke.edu.
hui util t<< i
Hit
r
h f � fn
r
tr
r mrr
;
fr m
f f
;
m
<
The Chronicle
WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 4, 2002 � PAGE 9
CANCER GENE frompage4
COUNTY RACE from page 1
Other Democrats on the ballot will include: Preston Edwards, a local realtor, Ricky Hart, an employee of Orange County Child Support Enforcement, Warren Herndon, a former executive at Duke University Medical Center, former city council member Mary Jacobs, and Durham School Board member Arnold Spell. Libertarian candidates include Noyes, Dwight Ennis, Laurin Mancour, Michael Owen, and
whether other such “rediscoveries” could occur. “We don’t have the infrastructure in certain areas Although both Counter and Abraham were somewhat and certain areas are overcrowded already that decritical of the mouse model, neither entertained the velopers are interested in,” he said, pointing to southviewpoint that a human model could be a viable option. west Durham as one such area. Abraham proposed taking existing human cell lines to Most candidates expressed frustration with county see the pathways and downstream targets encountered budget problems stemming from the North Carolina Stephen Messer. directly in a human line. This method of research, howbudget crunch. Since five candidates from each party will proever, inhibits the ability of scientists to see the effects of County commissioner Becky Heron said the state ceed to the general election, all five Libertarians are cancer development across an organism, he said. government has withheld at least $ll million from guaranteed a spot on the ballot. The Democratic priResearchers said the next step was to determine if Durham County to compensate for its own lack of tax mary will eliminate four individuals from the race, what was found in the lab occurred in human patients revenues, leaving the county responsible for funding however. As there are no Republican are candidates afflicted with cancer caused by Ras. the difference—either by raising revenue or cutting running for the position, the winners of the Democ“What we have to do is take this research from the lab services. ratic primary have a high chance of being those to the clinic,” said Counter, warning that this next step “Finding additional sources of revenue to avoid elected in November. Many candidates feel the Decould take some time. He stressed that before the final cutting services is one of my main priorities,” said mocratic race will be close—Bowser said any of the stage of drug development can take place, scientists Heron, who is seeking reelection. candidates could emerge out of the primary a winmust understand how the gene actually operates. “It is Heron said that she opposed property tax increasner. “I think it’s going to be very close, and every particularly important because you want to know how a es, but would consider implementing an education imvote counts,” Edwards said. gene works to know how it does not work,” he said. pact fee. The Board of Commissioners serves as the legislaAbraham noted that the average time frame between The Democratic primary ballot will include four of tive body for the whole of Durham County. Its activiclinical trials and drug marketing to the public varies bethe five current commissioners. Board chair MaryAnn ties include setting tax rates, approving zoning plans, tween 11 and 14 years. He stressed instead the broader Black, who was recently named the Duke University financing construction projects, such as new schools, significance of this research project. “I think the imporHealth System’s community affairs director and who and overseeing county services. All five seats on the tance [of this research] may be telling us we’re not neceshopes to focus more on her local psychotherapy pracboard are at-large positions and members do not repsarily looking for targets the right way” he said. tice, decided not to run again after six terms in office. resent any particular areas ofthe county.
AIRALL from page 1 Vice President for Student Affairs Larry Moneta said she has made quick progress since her arrival Aug. 1. “She’s quickly begun to identify key issues that fall within the campus life worlds and has developed individual and team relationships with her staff,” said Moneta, who previously worked with AiralL at the University of Pennsylvania. “It’s already been a delight to have Zoila Airall on board, and I anticipate that our campus life activities and initiatives will be well served by her presence.” Airall, a Rutgers University graduate, traces her interests in culture, diversity and minorities to her
childhood. Because her father was in the military, Airall lived in Panama, Thailand and Germany before going to college. “[My interest] has a lot to do with the way I was raised,” Airall said. “I had seen a lot of the world my college friends hadn’t seen, and I was exposed to lots of different cultures.” Placing a high priority on collaborative work, Airall hopes to meet and bring together as many campus figures as possible to discuss ideas. Airall also wants to be a strong advocate for the directors of the different centers she coordinates. “The better I can be for them, the better they can be for their student constituency,” Airall said. “These center directors have done a lot and are multi-talented people, and my professional
Fiufcnljght Awards for Graduate Study &
Research Abroad
[UUJRJOT
Information Session with
life can only be enhanced by working with them.” Karen Krahulik, LGBT Center director, said she eagerly anticipates working with Airall, especially to find increased space for the center’s activities. “Dr. Airall has proven herself already to be an exemplary leader for the campus life team. I hope and have faith that the campus life program will reflect her visions and goals for the campus,” Krahulik said. Although Leon Dunkley, director of the soon-to-berenovated Mary Lou Williams Center, has not yet determined specific goals for his collaboration with Airall, he expressed enthusiasm nevertheless. “Our initial meetings have been fabulous,” Dunkley said. “She is open, accessible and friendly. She will bring lots of energy to campus life.”
Can’t wait for a summer internship? Interested in learning more about careers in:
Marketing Advertising Publishing Art The Media Law Finance Public Relations The Environment Public Service And More... •
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
Ventures Internship Program
Professor Sheridan Johns, Political Science
Fall Semester 2002
&
Doug Sershen, Assistant to the Vice Provost
for International Affairs
Wednesday, September 4, 2002
4-6 P.M. John Hope Franklin
Center, Room 240
2204 Erwin Road
The VENTURES INTERNSHIP PROGRAM provides students with the opportunity to explore a variety of careers and to develop essential skills in industries they would like to learn more about. These internships are offered in organizations throughout the Triangle area..
Attend an Information Session: September 4 (Wed) September 6 (Fri) September 9 (Mon) September 10 (Tues) September 11 (Wed) *2nd floor, enter
For more information:
684-2910
or doug.sershen@duke.edu
Duke Application Deadline: 4:00 P.M. Thursday, September 26, 2002
11:00am
106 Page
2;oopm 1:00pm 4:oopm
106 Page 106 Page Resource Room*
11:00am
Resource Room*
through 106 Page and follow the signs
DUKE CAREER CENTER 110 Page Building (West Campus) Box 90950 Appointments: 919-660-1050
Questions: career @duke.edu Web: http://career.studentaffairs.duke.edu
PAGE 10 � WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 4, 2002
SENATE from page 7
The Chronicle The Coast Guard, Transportation Security Administration, Customs Service,
Even though there was no immediate sign of compromise on the personnel dispute, both sides predicted the Senate would pass a Homeland Security bill later this month. That would set up further negotiations on a final version with the House, which in July approved a measure much like Bush’s original plan. Both bills would merge all or parts of 22 agencies into a single department focused on protecting Americans against terrorism at home.
BELMONT BUSES
Border Patrol, Secret Service and Federal Emergency Management Agency are among those to be moved. Both measures also would set up a new intelligence analysis office—the Senate’s version is more powerful—that would sift through data produced by the CIA, FBI and others to identify potential threats and take action to protect targets or prevent future terrorist acts. The chief Senate sponsor, Democrat Joseph Lieberman of Connecticut, said the areas of agreement were too impor-
tant to let the legislation founder over served more deliberate scrutiny. the worker issues. “What counts in the end is not when “If we marshal these strengths of it’s done, but what the product is,” said ours, we can make another Sept. 11-type Byrd, chair of the Senate Appropriaattack impossible,” Lieberman said. “We tions Committee. stand broadly on common ground even Other difficult issues to be debated as we remain debating some ofthese difsoon would exempt much of private inferences between us.” dustry from the Freedom of Informa. The threat of extended delay, or filition Act in some cases, delay by one buster, evaporated Tuesday when Sen. full year the deadline for airports to Robert Byrd, D-W.Va., announced that begin screening checked baggage for he would support action bringing the explosives. A final issue to consider is legislation to the floor. Byrd had resiswhether to allow the president to shift ted immediate consideration of the money around within the new departHouse-passed bill in July, arguing that ment without first obtaining congressuch a massive reorganization plan de- sional approval.
the Durham Area Transit Authority, Durham’s city bus system, is a possible mode of transportation from the Belmont Apartments to campus, since planned to begin the bus route the first week of DATA stops in front of the apartments. school but that parking had taken precedent. But many students said they would not consider “We lost emphasis on it. On our priority list, it was using DATA. most important to take care of parking,” he said. “But Carlos Guevara, a first-year medical student, said he now that parking is starting to settle down, this is our would rather get a ride from his roommate or take his number one priority.” bike than ride DATA. Senior Morgan Wurzburger, a Belmont resident, said Tve never even thought about that,” he said.“It doeshe was disappointed that the bus route will not happen. n’t seem like it’s worth it. I don’tknow exactly how much “That’s how I was planning on getting to campus,” he it runs or how much it costs.” said. “Now I’m parking on Central [Campus] and walkDATA buses stop by the Belmont Apartments at five ing. You could park in the Blue Zone—that’s what I did and 35 minutes past the hour. One ride costs 75 cents, last year—but most of my classes are at [the Social Sciand unlimited-ride monthly passes can be purchased for ences Building].” $32. There are no discounts offered to Duke students. Elizabeth King, also a senior, said she was excited King said the lack of a bus contributes to a sense that about the bus route, but without it, she carpools with administrators have no concern for off-campus students. friends to get to class. “We’re kind of like an afterthought,” she said. “I feel like I’m a chauffeur,” she said. “We all kind of Reeve said discussions of adding a commuting bus feel that way. Parking on campus is totally atrocious. It’s are part of larger transportation plans for off-campus almost worth it to walk from the Belmont.” students, and that officials would continue to look at imFor students who do not want to walk, Reeve said proving transit for next year. «
Interested in reporting for The Chronicle? Attend one of our reporter training sessions. Wednesday, 8 p.m. 1088 West Duke Building
GPSC CHARTER from page 3 fourth-year sociology graduate student. After a short discussion regarding the attendance and voting policies, the assembly voted, the charter passing with a vote of 30-4. Members voted to add seven committees alongside the existing student affairs committee, in a manner that Saunders said reflects a board of trustees. . While the childcare, health insurance and parking and transportation committees were established to address long-standing graduate and professional student issues, others, such as academic affairs and undergraduate mentoring will work on more specific projects. “We thought about what GPSC needs in general,” said Audrey Beck, a second-year student in sociology. “For example, we created the communications committee because of past problems with the melding of graduate and professional students.” Academic affairs will address the new Universitywide academic integrity codes while the undergraduate mentoring group will follow up with a career counseling-type program beginning this fall, pairing graduate students with students in each of the West Campus quads.
SENIORS Don’t know what’s going on? Need direction in your career path? Find out how the Career Center can help.
Senior Orientation Kick-off Tuesday; Wednesday, Thursday September 3, 4, 5 7:oopm, 139 Soc Sci
Senior Engineers Orientation Tuesday Septembers 7:oopm 203 Jeer ,
DUKE CAREER CENTER 110 Page Building (West Campus) Box 90950
Appointments: 919-660-1050
Questions: career@duke.edu Web: http://career.studentaffairs.duke.edu Sponsored by Duke University Stores
*
■
H ':
*
'
Sports
Roger Clemens got the win as Yankees outlasted the
J^^RedSox4-2. See page 13
iM
� Catch up with the week in ACC football in Gridiron Notes. See page 12 The Chronicle
WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 4, 2002
Volleyball rolls over High Point
Blue Devils dominate outgunned Panthers in 3 consecutive games By ROBERT SAMUEL The Chronicle The women’s volleyball team preyed on the intimidated Panthers'of High Point University during a 3-0 (30-10, 30-18, 30-22) win Tuesday in Cameron Indoor Stadium. Aside from a brief lapse in the third game, the Blue Devils dominated nearly every facet of the match, combining a blend of power and finesse. “I was pleased we came out to play tonight,” head coach Jolene Nagel said. “Sometimes we play down to the level of the opponent, and I don’t feel like we did that at all tonight.” After crushing the Panthers in the first game and taking the second easily, Duke found itself with a slim lead, 14-12, in Game 3. Starting with an ace from junior Tassy Rufai, however, the Blue Devils went on a 61 run, and never looked back. “I think we just had a little mental lapse,” Rufai said “We got back on track to focus well and execute well.” Since she was playing mostly reserves at the time the Panthers nearly caught up, Nagel decided to view the third game as a learning experience. “We just had a lot of inexperience on the floor,” Nagel said. “They haven’t had me bark at them enough at where they’re supposed to be on defense. It will come with time.” In short, the coach was more impressed with Game 1 than she was worried about Game 3. The Blue Devils dominated with balance on both offense and defense. Freshman Sarah Salem led the team with 12 kills with a .611 hitting percentage, Rufai and junior Krista Dill were next with a total of six, while junior Katie Gilman and senior Jill Sonne followed with five.
Welcome back, college
football
Maybe it’s because it was the first game of the year. Or perhaps it was because I was curious as to how much purple I would see in the stands of Wallace Wade Stadium. To be honest, I have no idea what possessed me to go stand with my friends in the rain Saturday evening to watch what was sure to be a one-sided thrashing of Duke by the East Carolina Pirates. As we walked toward the stadium, we discussed how long we planned to stay. To be certain, if the Blue Devils were trailing by their usual 30 or 40 points by halftime, we were out of there. After r . -p. all, there was college bvan Uavls football to watch on T.V. From the cheap seats
Ahh, T.V.
JEFF BURLIN/THE CHRONICLE
SARAH SALEM spikes against two High Point Panthers. She finished with a
See VOLLEYBALL on page 14
� page 11
For the college football fans who populate East, West and Central campuses, it’s been a salvation on fall Saturday afternoons for the past two years. Anyone w.ho wanted to watch a competitive game had to do so on television, because it was a virtual certainty that one was not occurring on the field at Wally Wade. Even in the press boxes, journalists crowded around tele
team-leading 12 kills in Duke’s 3-0 win.
See DAVIS on page 16
Serena Williams breezes, Venus struggles to advance By HOWARD FENDRICH
Venus, meanwhile, lost seven more games against Rubin than she had in her previous three matches
The Associated Press
KEVIN LAMARQUE/REUTERS
VENUS WILLIAMS struggled to defeat Chanda Rubin in the fourth round of the U.S. Open before ultimately winning 6-2,4-7,7-5.
No one has come close to testing combined. NEW YORK Serena Williams at the U.S. Open. Here’s how older “Today just wasn’t my best day,” Venus said. “I had sister Venus responded to her first challenge: She dug a lot of short balls that I just missed. It was definitely in, pulled out a three-set victory, then went right out strange missing those shots, but I tried to stay calm.” and practiced. She will play Monica Seles for a semifinal berth. Both moved closer to another all-Williams final with Still grunting on each shot and still hitting with two victories Tuesday, though in vastly different ways. hands off both wings, Seles beat Martina Hingis 6-4, 6Serena reached the semifinals by dominating 2 to end Hingis’ streak of six straight semifinal Daniela Hantuchova 6-2, 6-2 at night. Venus had plenappearances at the year’s final major. Hingis had ty of problems against Chanda Rubin before emerging ankle surgery in May and made it into the field here with a 6-2, 4-6, 7-5 victory to reach the quarterfinals as a wild-card entry. for the 18th time in 20 Grand Slam events. On the other half of the draw, 1998 champion Top-seeded Serena, the 1999 Open champion, had Davenport moved into the semifinals by eliminating 29 winners to six for the llth-seeded Hantuchova, and unseeded Elena Bovina 3-6, 6-0, 6-2. Davenport, playwhipped 12 aces at up to 115 mph. Next up as Serena ing just her fifth tournament since right knee surgery tries to become the first woman since Steffi Grafto win performed by the same doctor who rebuilt Rubin’s left three straight majors: Lindsay Davenport. knee, capitalized on Bovina’s 36 unforced errors. Serena has lost a total of 14 games through her five Three-time French Open champion Gustavo matches at the National Tennis Center, spending an Kuerten was undone by his 55 unforced errors and lost average of 51 minutes on court. She certainly seems on in the fourth round to No. 24 Sjeng Schalken 6-3, 7-6 pace for another all-in-the-family championship match, (6), 6-7 (5), 7-6 (4). Schalken next plays No. 28 having lost to Venus in last year’s U.S. Open final and beaten her at the French Open and Wimbledon in 2002. See OPEN on page 14
50th Anniversary Tennis
Bulls begin playoffs
Duke highlighted the ACC 50th Anniversary women’s tennis team, with 12 players—the most of any team—including recent stars Ansley Cargill and Kathy Sell.
The Durham Bulls begin their quest for the Governor’s Cup tonight at 6:30 p.m., in Toledo. After two away games, the Bulls will return home to host the Mudhens Friday night.
m ■jyp
Knight settles Bobby Knight settled a lawsuit brought by Ron Felling, his former assistant at Indiana. Knight stipulated that he pushed Felling during a dispute and agreed to pay $25,000.
'
uj *
Guns and Rose Chicago Bulls guard Jalen Rose was shot at and a passenger in his Bentley was wounded when an attempted car-jacker
opened fire on the escaping car in Brentwood, Calif.
ftyy
Bf
*'
r|
J
f
\
J
Major League Baseball Rangers 7, Orioles 1 Tigers 4, Indians 0 Marlins 3, Mets 2 Expos 7, Phillies 6 Pirates 3, Braves 0 White Sox 5, Blue Jays 4 Angels 10, Devil Rays 2
Sports
PAGE 12 �WEDNESDAY. SEPTEMBER 4. 200:
The Chronicle
imiojEs^ xnr
———
� Rivers reaches historic threshold N.C. State junior quarterback Philip Rivers surpassed the 6,000-yard passing mark over the weekend. He is just the 17th quarterback in ACC history to reach that mark. Rivers, second all-time for the Wolfpack, is 3,400 yards shy of N.C. State’s career leader, Jamie Barnette.
la State State
Through Today
PASSING YARDS Comp/Att P. Rivers, N.C. State 25/36 C. Rix, FSU 27/43 27/39 M. Schaub, UVa 24/37 D. Durant, UNC J. MacPherson, Wake 9/17 17/37 W. Simmons, Clemson RUSHING YARDS Att. G. Jones, FSU 43 I. Hollings, Ga. Tech 17 I. McLendon, N.C. State 29 W. Lundy, UVa N. Maddox, FSU A. Wade, Duke
Yds 292 154 142
130 118 109
RECEIVING YARDS Rec. Yds S. Aiken, UNC 8 174 134 B. McMullen, UVa 8 J. Cotchery, N.C. State 5 120 8 A. Boldin, FSU 113 B. Peterson, N.C. State 6 107 82 5 S. Hicks, N.C. State
Duke Georgia Tech Clemson Maryland North Carolina Wake Forest
� Streaking past the competition
Virginia
Last week in review Saturday, Aug. 31 Duke 23, East Carolina 16 No. 5 Florida State 40, Virginia 19 No. 23 Notre Dame 22, Maryland 0 Miami (OH) 27, North Carolina 21 No. 10 Georgia 31, Clemson 28
This week’s schedule Saturday, Sep. 7 Georgia Tech @ UConn., Noon No. 21 N.C. State @ Navy, Noon Louisiana Tech @ Clemson, 1 p.m.
Akron
@
Maryland, 6 p.m.
East Carolina @ Wake Forest, 6:30 p.m. Louisville @ Duke, 7 p.m. No. 22 South Carolina @ Virginia, 7:30 p.m North Carolina @ Syracuse, 8 p.m.
CH£efc?^£RS SQ(/
^.
Sunday, September 8 East Campus, Brodie Gym, 2-spm Email srl2@duke.edu with any questions.
During Saturday's win over Vanderbilt, Georgia Tech kicker Luke Manget extended his ACCrecord consecutive PAT streak to 137. The streak was in jeopardy when the Yellow Jackets were penalized 15 yards after Tony Hollings’ 56-yard TD run, making Manget nail a 35 yard PAT instead of a 20 yard kick.
� Different game plan, same result
Florida State moved away from its traditional pass-happy offense in a 40-19 demolition of Virginia Saturday. Behind Greg Jones, FSU picked up 397 rushing yards against the Cavaliers. Jones, who ran for 173 yards, racked up the most yardage for a Seminole since Warrick Dunn ran for 185 yards in 1996.
� MAC haunts ’Heels once again Miami (OH) manhandled North Carolina 27-21 Saturday, forcing a school record nine turnovers the most in the ACC since 1956. Miami (OH) is the second MAC school to dominate the Tar Heels in a major sport in the past year, as the Ohio Bobcats muscled past Coach Matt Doherty’s basketball team 86-78 this past February. —
‘The rain: we didn’t han die it very well. We need to throw the football, they did not need to. They pounded on us pretty good with their running game.” East Carolina coach Steve Logan
on why his Pirates were unable to win
THEIR SEASON OPENER AGAINST DUKE.
“If we don’t learn from these mistakes, then it is a tragedy. What we have to do is understand what we did wrong and grow from this experience.” Maryland coach Ralph Friedgen ON HIS DISAPPOINTMENT WITH HIS TEAM'S PERFORMANCE AGAINST PREVIOUSLY UNRANKED
Notre Dame.
“They couldn’t stop us. It’s just unfortunate we had a couple of mishaps that cost us the game.” North Carolina quarterback Darian Durant,-who threw three interceptions IN A 27-21 ABERRATION TO MIAMI (OH), ON HIS TEAM'S NINE-TURNOVER'PERFORMANCE AGAINST THE Redhawks.
“You hold your head up a little higher. People kind of notice you more now. it’s a great feeling.” Duke offensive lineman Rusty Wilson, on walking around West
Campus after the Blue Devils’ first win in more than two years.
The Chronicle
Sports
WEDNESDAY. SEPTEMBER 4. 2002 4PAlG rE 13
Clemens allows 1 run in victory over Red Sox Yankees stretch lead over Boston in AL East lead to 7 1/2, put Red Sox 5 1/2 behind By JOSH DUBOW
Shea Hillenbrand’s grounder for another error, Qn firgt and second Nomar Garciaparra followed with an RBI single, but Mendoza got out of the jam when he got the dangerous Manny Ramirez to hit the first pitch for an inning-ending double play, Robin Ventura hit a solo homer with two outs in the eighth to give the Yankees an insur-
The Associated Press
putting runners
Roger Clemens 4 ' NEW YORK struck out 10 in his 292nd Red Sox 2. career victory as the New York Yankees strengthened their grip on the AL East with a 4-2 win over the Boston Red Sox on Tuesday night. Clemens (12-5) established himself from the start against his former team, striking out the
Yankees
ance run.
Mike Stanton pitched the ninth for his third first four batters of the game and making three save, getting the final out when pinch-hitter first-inning runs stand up. Carlos Baerga lined out to Jeter with a man on. The Yankees snapped a three-game losing Jeter, who went O-for-5 and stranded six runstreak and increased their lead in the division to ners Monday, got the Yankees started with his 7 1/2 games over Boston with one game remain- solo homer in the first inning, mg against their rival. The Red Sox dropped 5 1/2 Jason Giambi followed with a double and games behind Anaheim in the wild card race. walks to Bernie Williams and Jorge Posada Derek Jeter homered off Frank Castillo (5- loaded the bases with one out for Ventura. 13) and a rare error by second baseman Rey Castillo induced a potential double-play Sanchez helped the Yankees score two more grounder to shortstop, but Sanchez’s relay throw runs in the first. was wide of first and two runs scored on the play. That was enough for Clemens. He allowed one It was just Sanchez’s fifth error of the season, earned run and four hits in 7 1-3 innings against Castillo, who has lost seven straight decisions, the team he started his brilliant career with settled down after that, giving up only three hits before being forced out as a free agent following in his final five innings. the 1996 season. The Red Sox got on the board in the third Clemens has won three Cy Young Awards and inning when Damon doubled with two outs, two World Series championships since then, Hillenbrand followed with an RBI single, but adding more pain to a franchise that hasn’t won it Clemens recovered to retire Garciaparra on a all since 1918. groundout. Clemens posted his 102nd career double-digit Boston didn’t get another runner as far as strikeout game—third most all-time—and won third base off Clemens. for the 19th time in his last 20 decisions at Notes: The season series is tied at nine. If the home. His .767 winning percentage at Yankee Red Sox win Wednesday they will take the seaStadium is the best for any New York pitcher son series for the first time since 1999.... with at least 30 wins. Clemens improved to 6-2 with a 2.44 ERA in 14 Clemens left to a standing ovation following starts vs. 805t0n.... Castillo allowed three runs— RAY STUBBLEBINE/REUTERS s throwing error that allowed Johnny two earned—and five hits in six innings to lose ROGER CLEMENS fires a pitch to strike out Boston Red Sox batter Nomar Jeter Damon to reach with one out in the eighth. for the first time in four career decisions against Garciaparra to end the first inning. After Ramiro Mendoza came on, Jeter hobbled New York.
.•
.g J* .r .g
********
;
f
’.
bU<<l>
».1
Sports
PAGE 14 �WEDNESDAY. SEPTEMBER 4. 2002
OPEN from page 11
They might have been going over what went wrong when she was broken three straight times in the second set. Fernando Gonzalez, who beat Arnaud Or what led to the trouble at 5-5 in Clement in straight sets. Either the last set, with Williams facing two Schalken or Gonzalez will be a Grand break points. But the 14th-seeded Slam semifinalist for the first time. Rubin, who’s had two operations on her Against Rubin, Venus bailed herself left knee since January 2001 and out with the help of 41 winners and appeared to be gasping for air after longer rallies, finally succumbed to seven aces, snapping one at 121 mph. But she also made 41 errors, had six Williams’ constant pressure. Rubin sent a forehand wide on the double faults, had her serve broken five times, and allowed her 25-set winning first break point, then put another forehand into the net to close a 17-stroke streak at the Open to end. Watching from the stands while rally. She threw her head back, sighed, snapping pictures through a 2 1/2-foot and staggered along the baseline. “I had rushed so many shots, missed so lens, the Williams sisters’ father, many,” Williams said. “I was just happy to Richard, wasn’t pleased. “It looks like all her techniques are be able to get through those points.” breaking down,” he said. Up to that part of the match, Rubin’s When the match ended, Venus attacking style kept Williams off-balwalked off court and swung her racket ance, though it didn’t produce all that in a forehand motion while looking at many winners. her father, as though to say, “I know, I “I gave myself a chance in the match. know. We have some work to do.” Sure As a competitor, you want to go out in enough, 20 minutes later, she was on an every match and do that,” Rubin said. adjacent practice court, hitting while “But it’s disappointing not to win it when the chances were there. You look getting instructions from Richard.
up—you’re right there for the match.” Rubin has made quick progress since returning to the tour in May after her second surgery, including victories over Serena Williams and Davenport en route to winning a hard-court tournament in Los Angeles last month. Of Rubin’s seven main draw losses in 2002, five came against players who have been ranked No. 1: the Williams sisters, Davenport and Seles. Hingis also used to be at the top, but the last of her five Grand Slam titles came at the 1999 Australian Open. Since then, she’s lost in five major finals, while the Williams sisters have combined to win seven of the past 12. Now Hingis is coming back from ligament damage that one of her doctors said might end her career, and she didn’t do much to push Seles off her game Tuesday. Seles figures to get a different test against Venus Williams, who has won seven of their eight meetings, including in the French Open quarterfinals. It’s been 10 years since Seles won her second straight U.S. Open title.
VOLLEYBALL from page 11 Sophomore Stephanie Istavan lead Duke with a 23 assists while junior Arielle Linderman added 15 assists. No other Dukie tallied more than one. On the other side of the ball, Istavan led Duke with 10 digs, while Gilman had six and Linderman had four. Senior Rachel Vander Griend added four blocks to go with a perfect hitting percentage. Linderman and Rufai had the only solo blocks for the Blue Devils, but Dill assisted on five occasions. “I think our team did a real good job of executing in Game 1, which made our job a lot easier,” the fourthyear Blue Devil coach said. “I really appreciate that
remarkable
JEFF BURLIN/THE CHRONICLE
KATIE GILMAN [left] and ERIN NOBLE extend for a ball during Duke’s 3-0 victory over High Point.
The Chronicle
U.S. Open Results Sept. 3, 2002
Men’s Singles: Fourth Round Sjeng Schalken (24), def. Gustavo Kuerten, 6-3, 7-6 (6), 6-7 (5), 7-6 (4). Andy Roddick (11), def. Juan Ignacio Chela (26), 5-7, 6-4, 6-4, 6-4. Pete Sampras (17), def. Tommy Haas (3), 7-5, 6-4, 6-7 (5), 7-5. Women’s Singles: Fourth Round Venus Williams (2), def. Chanda Rubin (14), 6-2, 4-6, 7-5. Monica Seles (6), def. Martina Hingis (9), 6-4, 6-2.
Quarterfinals Lindsay Davenport (4), def. Elena Bovina, 3-6, 6-0, 6-2. Serena Williams (1), def. Daniela Hantuchova (11), 6-2, 6-2.
because it allowed us to really give some other people opportunities out there in a game setting.” Leading High Point was Kimberly Wright with 11 kills with Tracyan Pryce added seven. Jamie Kutz and Wright had 15 and eight assists, respectively. All in all the Blue Devils we are pleased with their performance, and felt their future was bright. “I thought we played well for our first home match,” Sonne said. “If we focus on each individual skill, we shouldn’t have any problems.” Duke won the Loyola Marymount Invitational last weekend, and with a 4-0 record, the Blue Devils look to repeat as ACC champions. Their next matches are this weekend when they play Pittsburgh, Bowling Green and Boston College in the Keystone state at the Pittsburgh Classic.
The Chronicle
Classifieds HAPPY BIRTHDAY KATIE!
Announcements
Have a very special day. -The Lewis Duke Clan
ATTENTION SENIORS!! Information meeting for Seniors interested in applying to Business School. Tuesday, September 17 in 139 Social Sciences at s;3opm. Please attend!
Compete against the Haarwards, the PrinceTONS...the Smiths. DEBATE Recruitment meeting today. Join one of the top intercollegiate academic teams at Duke...the Duke Debate Team. Compete at national and international parlia-
mentary
debate
tournaments.
Inexperienced or novice debaters are encouraged to join. The Duke Debate placed Ist, 2nd or 3rd at every tournament last year (8 tournaments). 7:00 p.m. Bryan Center Meeting Room B. For information call 684-2401 or e-mail odor@duke.edu.
CONSERVATION WORK-STUDY
HOUSE COURSES FALL 2002 ARE HERE CHECK OUT THE EXCITING & CHALLENGING TOPICS OFFERED THIS SEMESTER!! ON-LINE Registration Deadline: September 6, 2002. Brief descriptions of each House Course are available at www.aas.duke.edu/trinity/house crs/hc.html. Descriptions can also be located thru ACES online course listing. Course syllabi are available in 04 Allen Building and on Duke’s Online
e-reserves.
STAIOI
Tutoring I’ve taught STAIOI in previous semesters but I am not teaching this year. Limited slots available for tutoring individuals or groups of 2 or larger. 9418302.
Work-Study Research Assistants
needed by Ecology & Conservation Laboratory. Work includes data entry, analysis, collection, lit. searches, etc. Possibility of fieldwork in tropics or paper collaboration. Prefer upperclass math or biosciences major with computer experience. Up to $lO/hr. Contact luke@duke.edu.
DISSERTATION PROBLEMS? For information on weekly task-oriented problem-solving support groups now forming call Richard Cooper, Ph. D. at (919) 942-3229 or go to ‘www.EasyToTalkTo.com’. EARLY CHILDHOOD EDUCATION STUDIES Applications available. Learn about this fascinating interdisciplinary program and its internship at local child care agencies. Open to all undergraduates. Come by 02 Allen or call 684-2075.
Apts. For Rent 2 bedroom, 1 bath on quiet cul-desac. $7OO/month includes washer/dryer and water. Near Highway 751 and Hillsborough Road. 336578-8383 or aliceray-realtor@hotmail.com. 27 FLOOR PLANS FROM $399* ON IBR APTS TO $499* ON 2 BR APTS— 2 BLOCKS TO DUKE. 4 MONTH FREElFlexible lease terms. Check our specials! Duke Villa Apartments, 493-4509. www.apts.com/dukevilla. 'subject to change. Beautiful 1 & 2 BR, ideal for students. Convenient to Duke, East and West campus. Starting at $5lO. Call Amy at (919) 416-0393 or www.bobschmitzproperties.com.
Nissan Stanza 1987 168K $1650, EPA Emission Certified. Washer/Dryer $60.00 684-6094 or 489-0082, nikshu@hotmail.com
Montessori Morning Program Enrolling Fall 2002-2003 3-4 year olds 8:30-12:30 Monday-Friday. Contact Claudia Green 286-1020.
Looking for responsible tenant with appreciation for quiet secluded liv-
Child Care
In-home child care provider for Duke Alum’s 18-month-old adopted daughter from China. Must have experience and excellent references, spoken Chinese a plus. 1822 hours/week, flexible. Excellent pay, lovely home, and bright engaging child. 2 miles from East Campus. 220-3193.
kitchenette, utilities included, full bath, and private entry. Pets ok.
ing. 20 minutes from Duke. $BOO/mo. Minimum 6 month lease. Call John at 732-9025 in evenings.
After School Tutor in Reading and Math for 6th Grade Students (in our Home). 6 to 10 hrs. a week. Must have car. Competitive pay. Please call 489-1900, 660-2649.
One-bedroom Durham apt. available in gated complex (Beech Lake Apts, near SouthSquare). 750 sq. ft. w/lake-view. W/D and some fur-
Afterschool care for 8 year old twin girls two days per week. Must have car and be non-smoking. Childcare experience a plus. References. 419-3178 evenings.
nishings negotiable. Reduced rent $569/mo. Call 403-1318 or page.
Private student housing. Campus Oaks 311 Swift Ave., 2br/2ba, fully
furnished W/D, $925/ month, 0.8.0. 910-724-4257, 919-3823043.
THE CLOSEST APT COMMUNITY TO DUKE. 2 MONTHS FREE! leases Academic available. Flexible lease terms. Walk or free shuttle bus to campus. Check our specials! CHAPEL TOWER 383-6677. APARTMENTS, www.apts.com/chapeltower.
•
classified advertising
rates business rate $6.00 for first 15 words private party/N.R $4.50 for first 15 words all ads 100 (per day) additional per word 3 or 4 consecutive insertions -10 % off 5 or more consecutive insertions 20 % off special features (Combinations accepted.) $l.OO extra per day for all Bold Words $1.50 extra per day for a Bold Heading (maximum 15 spaces) $2.50 for 2 line heading $2.00 extra per day for Boxed Ad
Babysitters needed for local church (5 min from Duke) while parents attend service. 2-3 Sundays/month
8/28 Machock 682-3865, voice mailbox #3l.
Great kids,
flexible
escs@duke.edu.
Experienced sitter needed 2-3 afternoons/week, 3:45-6 for 2 wellmannered children of Duke profs, in Trinity Park. $lO/hr. References required. 530-1600.
OR STAY AND PLAY. Academic leases available. Flexible lease terms. Walk or free shuttle bus to campus. FANTASTIC clubhouse w/ fitness center. Student specials! Rates starting at $478. Duke Manor Apartments, 3836683. www.apts.com/dukemanor.
TEACHERS/Child Care Assistants Needed. Local area church hiring experienced workers for Sun. AM, Wed. PM, $B.OO per hour. Call after
Help Wanted $lOO-$l5O/night possible. Delivering pizza for Wild Bull’s. $lO/hr to put up flyers. Call 5564994.
NANNY $lO/HR PARTTIME 10-15 hours per week in our home near Southpoint Mall for our active, loving 3 1/2 year old and 6 month old. MUST be non-smoker, have experience with babies under 1 year old, and have a valid driver’s license. Job includes feeding, care, playing, light housework. References and background check required. Call 919-4516514 or email inquiry and/or resume to lisa@sunlink.net.
Autos For Sale 1996 Toyota Corolla DX Sedan 4D Green, 4-Cyl/I,BL, Automatic, 130K, A/C, All-Power, Cruise, AM/FM/Cass, New tires, battery,
timing-belt. Single owner, highway
excellent miles, condition, $5090/060. (919)489-9495, email nmrguy@hotmail.com
i Haircuts
s l2°°
Family Haircut Center Best Service Best Prices
For Campus Performing Arts Events. One or two interested, reliable students needed to assist with evening events in Duke’s professional visiting artists series: world music concerts, classical music concerts, theater, and dance events. Flexible schedules, mostly evenings 7 pm-10:30 pm; a few weekend daytime events. Work as house managers, usher coordinators, merchandise sales, on-site ticket sales, artist hospitality, occasional backstage work. Experience not required, but pleasant attitude, flexibility, open-mindedness are and essential. Flaving a car is a plus. Contact Duke University Institute of the Arts, 660-3356 or email ksilb@duke.edu.
•
8 Blvd. Plaza 4125 Chapel Hill Blvd. 489-0500 Mon. Fri. 8 am 6 pm Sat. 8 am 5 pm Walk-ins welcome •
-
-
•
-
We accept MasterCard and Visa.
LEASING CONSULTANT for every other Saturday 9:30-4:00 at a N. Durham apartment community. Seeking an enthusiastic person who has persuasive verbal skills, enjoys many people contacts and likes to work independently. Competitive Pay. Fax resume and cover letter to Asset Manager at 878-0308. Bartender
trainees needed. $250/ day potential. Local positions 1-800-293-3985 ext 519.
-
-
-
-
"I" Of
7001 Old Wake Forest Rd Raleigh, NC 27616
''
”,
ffa/e/ffn
Go Retro with a Metro! ■ 50cc
Moped legal
Great undersea! storage ■ Locking centerstand for security Colors: Denim, Salsa, Sky Juice HONDA PERFORMANCE FIRST'
accounting office available
-
Chronicle Classifieds Box 90858, Durham, NC 27708 0858 fax to: 684-8295 e-mail orders classifieds @ chronicle.duke.edu phone orders: call (919) 684-3811 to place your ad. Visit the Classifieds Online! -
http://www.chronicle.duke.edu/classifieds/today.html
Call 684-3811 if you have any questions about classifieds, No refunds or cancellations after first insertion deadline.
BARTENDERS NEEDED No experience necessary. Earn up to $3OO a day. 866-291-1884 ext. ullO.
>
deadline
1 business day prior to publication by 12:00 noon payment Prepayment is required Cash, Check, Duke IR, MC/VISA or Flex accepted (We cannot make change for cash payments.) 24 hour drop off location •101 W. Union Building or mail to:
BARTENDERS NEEDED!!! Earn $l5-30/hr. Job placement assistance is top priority. Raleigh’s Bartending School. Call now for info about our BACK TO SCHOOL tuition special. Offer ends soon!! HAVE FUN! MAKE MONEY! MEET PEOPLE!!! (919)-676-0774. www.cock-
tailmixer.com. bartenders needed, no experience lecessary. Earn up to $3OO/day.
166-291-1884 ext. 4110
BE A TUTOR! Are you a good student who enjoys helping people? Are you looking for a flexible part-time job? Why not be a tutor? Tutors needed for introductory Chemistry, Computer Science, Economics, Engineering, Math, Physics and Statistics.
Undergraduates (sophomoresenior) earn $9/hr and graduate students earn $l3/hr. Print an application off our website; www.duke.edu/webskills or pick one up in the Peer Tutoring Program Office, 217 Academic Advising Center, East Campus, 684-8832.
ARTS EVENT ASSISTANTS
•
The Chronicle
non-smoker. Fax references and resume to (919) 544-8217.
scheduling. Email
WALK TO DUKE
Seeking PT nanny for infant. Would entail 3-4 hours, 3-5 mornings a week. Schedule flexible. Experience with children required. Need own transportation; must be
Baby sitters needed for two children. We live near East campus. Especially need on help Wednesday mornings and afternoons. References required. Contact Mary Jo at 683-8287.
$10.50/hr.
Fraternities Sororities 'Clubs Student Groups
Earn $l,OOO-$2,000 this semester with a proven CampusFundraiser 3 hour fundraising event. Our programs make fundraising easy with no risks. Fundraising dates are filling quickly, so get with the program! It works. Contact CampusFundraiser at (888) 923-3238 or visit www.campusfundraiser.com
WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 4, 2002 � PAGE 15
Daylight Basement Apartment in Private Residence- Located on 42 acres with river view from apt. Also pond and dock; WD, fireplace,
eneral clerical $7.75 per hour approximately 10
hours/week ries finance office call 660-3765
NORTHGATE
BARBER SHOP i Full Service Style Shop Mon.-Fri. 8-5:30 Sat. 8-5:00
286-4030 Northgate Shopping Center, down from Sears Auto, next to Harris Teeter Durham
CALLING ENGINEERING STUDENTS Help your fellow classmates by tutoring them in ECE 61L, ECE 62L, EGR 53L, or EGR 75L. The Peer Tutoring Program you. needs Undergraduates earn $9/hr and graduate tutors earn $l3/hr. Print an application off the website: www.duke.edu/web/skills.
CHEMISTRY TUTORS NEEDED Tutors needed
for
General
Chemistry (21L, 23L) and Organic Chemistry (151 L). Undergraduates earn $9/hr and graduate tutors earn $l3/hr. Pick up an application in the Peer Tutoring Office, 217 Academic Advising Center, East Campus, 684-8832 or the website:
www.duke.edu/web/skills. Chronicle Business Office: Student 10-12 hrs per week. General Office Duties, Data Entry. Call; Mary Weaver, 684-3811.
to Work
College grads needed as part-time reading and math instructors for flexible afternoon and Sat. morning instruction. Requires enthusiasm for teaching and working with kids. Fax resume and cover letter to 3099766.
CPSTUTORS NEEDED! Be a tutor for Computer Science 1 or 6L. Apply in the Peer Tutoring Office, 217 Academic Advising Center, East Campus, 684-8832. Undergraduates (sophomore-senior) earn $9/hr and graduate tutors earn $l3/hr.
DOWNTOWN PUB NEAR EAST CAMPUS IS SEEKING WAIT STAFF. High energy, experienced team players. Multi-tasking a MUST. Call Joe at 383-5474.
Impress your friends and family by working at the best bar in Durham. Satisfaction Restauraunt is-now hiring for Delivery Drivers and Wait Staff. Please apply in person between 2 and 5 pm. Independent project work for The Campaign for Duke. The Office of University Development on West Campus is hiring 1 work study student to help with various projects, campus errands, light clerical work, and assisting the Research Secretary and Researchers with filing and projects. Very flexible hours. Casual work environment. Please contact Tim Young 6810441 or email timothy.young@dev.duke.edu.
Sports
PA< iG ?E 16 �WEDNESDAY. SEPTEMBER 4. 2002 Independent project work for The Campaign for Duke. The Office of University Development on West Campus is hiring 1 work study student to help with various projects, campus errands, light clerical work, and assisting the Research Secretary and Researchers with filing and projects. Very flexible hours. Casual work environment. Please contact Tim Young 6810441 or email
SOCCER THREE RAINBOW FIELD ASSISTANTS WANTED for Chapel Hill recreational league. Fall semester, approx. 25 hrs., weekday afternoons and Saturdays. Must be dependable, good with kids of all ages, organizational skills, dynamic attitude, and reliable transportation. Soccer coaching and refereeing experience preferred. Call 9673340 or 967-8797 ASAP.
TANGO FOR $5
timothy.young@dev.duke.edu.
JOIN THE CHRONICLE ADVERTISING STAFF
Students are needed to work in The Chronicle Classified advertising department. This is a paid position (work-study is preferred but not required),with flexible daytime hours. Call Nalini at 684-3811 or stop by tor an application at 101 West Union Building (directly across from the Duke Card Office.)
WANTED: Econ Tutors The Peer Tutoring Program is looking for Economics ID, 51D and 55D tutors. Pick up an application in 217 Academic Advising Center, East Campus, 684-8832 or print one from the website: www.duke.edu/web/skills. Earn $9/hr as an undergraduate tutor (sophomore-senior) or $l3/hr as a graduate student tutor.
MATH TUTORS
WANTED: Stats tutors
If you took Math 25L, 31L, 32L, 32, 41 or 103 at Duke and want to share your knowledge, we need you to be a tutor! Be a math tutor and earn $9/ hr (sophomore-senior) or graduate students earn $l3/hr. Apply in the Peer Tutoring Office, 217 Academic Advising Center, East Campus, 684-8832.
Statistics tutors needed for 101, 102, 103. Undergraduates earn $9/ hr and graduate tutors earn $l3/hr. Print an application off the website: www.duke.edu/web/skills or call the PTP Office at 684-8832.
PHYSICS TUTORS Be a physics tutor for the Peer Tutoring Program today! Tutors needed for physics 52L and 53L. Earn $9/hr as an undergraduate tutor or $l3/hr as a graduate student tutor. Peer Tutoring Academic 217 Program, Advising Center, East Campus, 684-8832. Positions are available for several work study students to assist research group in Psychiatry department in the Medical Center. Duties may include assistance with data management, entry and scanning. Rate of pay $7.00/hr. minimum. Contact Ron Garrison, 6845130.
PT enthusiastic, energetic dog lover needed to supervise dogs at play. Flexible hours. 919-545-9790. RAINBOW SOCCER COACHES WANTED! Volunteer coaches needed for Youth, ages 3-13, and Adults, 9th grade and older. Practices M&W or T&TH, 4:15s:lspm for youth, s:lspm Dark for adults. All big, small, happy, tall, -
large-hearted, willing, funloving people qualify. Call 967-3340 or 967-8797 for information. RESEARCH ASSISTANCE—extra* cash and a resume item, too! Are you a Walt Whitman fan? Are you interested in technology? English Professor needs undergraduate student for research assistance with digital humanities project, 5 flexible hrs/wk. Will train. 684-2252
Sociology has openings workstudy students. General office duties that include mail, phone, filing, photocopying, faxing, errands on campus & special projects. Great people, place & pay. Email interest and resume to lyoung@soc.duke.edu.
TEACHERS NEEDED
for religious school and Hebrew school. Sundays and/or Tuesdays 4-s:3opm and/or Thursdays 4s:3opm. Openings for the 2002-03 school year. Good wages. Call 489-7062 or email efk@cs.duke.edu.
Tutors Needed Earn money tutoring student athletes. Flexible schedule. Work as much or as little as your schedule permits. Qualified tutors especially needed in Public Studies, Policy Economics, Math, Computer Science, and all Sciences. Apply online at www.duke.edu/web/afhletetutor/ or call 613-7568 for more information
Housekeeping/LaundryDependable perfectionist with outstanding references and flexible hours. Durham area. Brenda 493-6852.
Warehouse-reliable, honest, furniture handlers needed FT/PT Apply Unfinished Furniture Mart 301 South Duke Street 804-467-4583
Work for DSG! Duke Student Government is looking for Work-Study students to be Administrative assistants in the office. We are especially interested in people who can work 11-1 M-F. Starting @ $B/hr. Contact Maggie: mep23@duke.edu or 613-4172. WORK STUDY STUDENTS NEEDED as assistants in Surgery Research Lab. Call 684-3929 for appointment.
Houses For Rent 2BR, 1 BA House in Trinity Park —W/D, Central air, fenced yard, appliances. $B5O/month. Deposit & background check required. 682-4216.
7 Room (3 bedrooms), central heat/air, all appliances, screened front porch, hardwood floors, 2 car garage with enclosed storage, on 2 acres. Hillsborough area. 2 Minutes off 1-85/1-40. Professional quality. Call 919-732-8552 or 880-5680. House for Rent. 1604 Valley Run, Durham 3 br House, w/d, 3 mins to Duke, 11 mins to UNC or RTP. $llOO/mo. valleyrun_nc@yahoo.com.
SOFA & LOVESEAT. CONTEMPORARY. See pictures @ http://artronics. homestead.com/files/couches. h tml. $400.00. 477-1458.
Student rush tickets for TANGO TIMES performance Thurs., Sept. 5 at 8 pm in Reynolds Theater, Bryan Center. Get them (cash or check only) at the Box Office or inside Reynolds Lobby starting at 7 pm on Thursday night. Tango music performed live with dancers from Triangle Tangueros.
#1 Spring Break, Travel Free Caribbean, Mexico, Florida, Padre. Free Drinks/Lowest 1-800-426-7710 Prices www.sunsplashtours.com
#1 Spring Break, Travel Free, Caribbean, Mexico, Florida, Padre Free Drinks/Lowest Prices 1-800-426-7710 www.sunsplashtours.com 111 Early Specials! Spring Break Bahamas Party Cruise! 5 Includes Meals, Days $299! Parties! Awesome Beaches, Nightlife! Departs From Florida! Get Group-Go Free!! springbreaktravel.com 1-800-678-6386 111 Early Spring Break Specials! Cancun & Jamaica From $429! Free Breakfast, Dinners & Drinks! Award Winning Company! Group Leaders Free! Florida Vacations from $149! springbreaktravel.com 1-800678-6386
Spring Break 2003-Travel with STS Mexico, to Jamaica, Bahamas or Florida. Promote trips on-campus to earn cash and free trips. Information/Reservations 1-800648-4849 or www.ststravel.com.
The Chronicle back to our rooms, but unlike past games, this time we were coming back. While drying off during halftime, we spread word around the halls that not only was Duke not being destroyed, but the Blue Devils were actually up by 10. As the third quarter got underway, the student section had noticeably swelled. The rain fell harder, but no one seemed to mind. Chants of “goalposts” and “undefeated” began to arise. There was an ECU fan shouting something at the students, but his thick Southern drawl coupled with a lack of sufficient teeth left his actual words a mystery. For once, Wallace Wade actually presented a real college football environment. The end of the game is by now quite well-known. Students rushed the field, goalposts came down and the Blue Devils—the 1-0 Blue Devils—had finally shaken the monkey of a 23-game losing streak from their backs. The events of Saturday evening were certainly unique. Duke students can’t expect to rush the field again this season; they can’t even be sure that the Blue Devils will win another game. Duke’s victory, however, did enact one major change. Whether the Blue Devils can keep up with Dave Ragone and company remains to be seen, but at least the student body can show up hoping for a competitive game, rather than simply searching for one on TV.
DAVIS from page 11 vision sets —that is when they weren’t attacking the free buffet—to watch a game going on hundreds of miles away. From dorm rooms to media rooms, the mentality was the same. Nobody cared who the teams were, but everyone wanted to watch a game where the winner wasn’t decided before the postmeal cookies were long gone. Saturday night, things were no different. I planned to see an ECU touchdown or six, shower, watch Notre Dame play Maryland and get ready for my fraternity’s party. But that evening, the Blue Devils did something that they hadn’t done for a really long time—they made the game interesting. Duke’s defense under new coordinator Ted Roof looked like, well, for the first time in years, a defense. They forced four turnovers and had a key sack to end the Pirates’ final threat. On the other side of the ball, Alex Wade had the first 100-yard rushing game of his career, while Duke’s tandem of quarterbacks didn’t throw an interception the entire game. The Blue Devils raced out to a 20-0 lead to open the game, something that must have made fans arriving late double-check to make sure that “Sarcasm Day” wasn’t one of Duke Athletics’ new promo-
tional ideas. But sure enough, there the Blue
Evan Davis is a Trinity senior and senior associate sports editor. His column appears every Wednesday
Devils were, walking into the locker room at halftime with a 20-10 lead. And there my friends and I were, heading
Sports Staff and new writers interested in joining the Sports Staff: Come to the lounge in 301 Flowers at 2:15 Friday for the Sports meeting. Full Bar & All ABC Permits
FI
ON ERS
Restaurant & Oyster Bar
Steamed Maryland Style Crabs &- Fresh Soft Shell Crabs Friday Special, 2-5 pm, Oysters $4 dozen Tuna Crabs Catfish Mahi Mahi Salmon Grouper RainbowTrout Scallops Live Lobster •
Real Estate Sales
•
*
•
•
•
•
806 W. Main Street Durham (across from Brightleaf Square) Lunch Tues-Sun Dinner every night 682-0128 No reservations needed •
•
Condo for Sale. 31 Fashion Place. Completely renovated. Ready for occupancy. End Brick unit. Many extras. $69,000, Near Duke. For Sale by Owner. 383-5075.
Roommate Wanted 4BR, 3BA House in N. Durham.lo min. from campus. Need 2 roommates. Prof, and Grad, students only. $400.00/ mo. +l/3 utilities.
(919)477-0341.
Services Offered Horses boarded stalls available in renovated barn. Complete care, great pastures, all weather lighted arena with jumps, miles of trails, 20 mins, to Duke. $325/ mo. 620-0135. Roomy IBR guest house on horse farm. Lg LR. FP, heart pine floors, stone terrace, available immed. $BOO/mo., conv. to Duke. No pets. 620-0137. -
•
www. fishmongers. net
The Chronicle
Comics
B lazing Sea Nuggets/ Eric Bramley and David Logan f
NOW
WHERE D\D
\
SEPTEMBER GO? THIS FARSIDE CALENDER WASN'T , f\ Good \oea.
'
xq-U B
Good
i got this SvnjASorr CALENDER, Too
Wi41
thuacj
r
W
\
j
J
OfcKG, h CMEMOS?'
hLOrtt
THE Daily Crossword
for ißstMce, SEPTEMBER Looks UKE A Good KOHTH FOR |A£. y
VOU OR&A,n\‘Z.EO.
TMSPuzzles@aol.com
weighllifter 6 Evening in
Bologna
Mid-month 14 Keen 15 Short beep 16 Gold Rush boomtown 10
UA
vjokvc.
Edited by Wayne Robert Williams
ACROSS 1 Mythical
NOO NK-EH'T...
V/CWT GET
yJT takes
WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 4, 2002 � PAGE 17
17 Eating
meeting?
19 Heavy reading Dawn's early
20
light
R IQOL-Tnn-,
CZU
sc
ilbert/ Scott Ada
21 Helps out 22 1996 British Open champion 24 Bailiff's call 25 “Final Analysis
star
26 Spectacles 29 Perceived
ITA SIGNIN' PEOPLE FOR
I SEE YOU'RE USING A WESTERN GRIP.
ttANDATOR'Y TRAINING C
THAT'S JUST BEGGING FOR CARPAL TUNNEL.
33 Recorded
WEAK MUSCLES. I'LL PUT YOU IN THE .
.
TWO-HANDED ttOUSE CLASS.
34 Bond type
35 Judicial
liego, CA
garment
36 At one time 37 Wild fear 38 Fertilizer compound
Declare openly 40 Tiny pests 39
41 Knot 42 Summer serving 44 Regatta lineup 45 Gestures of
affection
46 Shrubbery 47 At work 50 Singer Perry
51 Put on TV 54 Horse color 55 Rely on instinct
58 Larger-than-life
Trudeau
story 59 Not new 60 Start of a path? 61 Netting
AL3X, PIP ANY OF THB SUVOMNSPS SHOW OP m/is youwops t/cpstINOTHS/PCAF&r
62 Soaks up rays 63 Dens
expanse
5 Used aerosol 6 Writer Terkel 7 Ages and ages
and ages of
8 Big bird legend
9 Physically strong
10
When the chips
are down
11 Dire fate 12 Madame
Bovary
13 Spotted 18 Tall tales 23 Before, briefly 24 Boxer's tactic 25 Lamp dweller 26 One way to get to second 27 Whittle 28 Derby site 29 Ninny
DOWN
1
3 Mown 4 Exist
30 Pentateuch 31 Critic Roger
Egyptian cobras
32 Bargains
34 Some hotel
2 Biblical
employees
pronoun
49 Platform
37 Egg-laying
mammal
41 Alternative fuel
43 Writer Hentoff 44 Arizona city 46 Stephen and
Billy
47 City near Provo 48 Curt negative
50 Normandy town 51 Pro's opponent 52 Bakery worker 53 Greek letters
56 Fighting Tigers' sch. NAFTA
57
participant
The Chronicle McDonald’s gets rid of fat in fries!! What next?
FoxTrot/ Bill Ame |
i
|
I
THE MENU Says
“MYSTERY MEAT."
MMN7.'
can we
im Sounds INTRiGUiNG.' STARVED/
.
\
\
\
_
op
THI iRDS? GET SECONDS? i \
VJoohoo.' Look AT
THAT LADLE/
ST« >P
PdSl-
iN6/
THESE Pooß FRESHMEN
BREAK MY
r
ToO Took AN OATH. NoW Glop iT
Ronald gets blue hair (like Brody): Kevin and Dave McNuggets actually contain chicken: becky young, not old Real sauce packets in the Bryan Center: ken reinker and file We can’t stress this enough: tyler and guns and rosen We want the f%*ing ketchup, okay!.'; Jessica and adam west No cheese on Filet-o-Fish: brian and Jennifer and whitney Breakfast all the time: playin’ CARDs on the BEACH John Bush stops his Value Meal #2: jane, sam, jeff, tai, andrea Roily C. Miller: roily Account Representatives: Account Assistants: Sales Representatives:
'\
—*
Sales Coordinator: Administrative Coordinator: National Coordinator: Creative Services: Business Assistants: Classifieds Coordinator:
1
Monica Franklin, Dawn Hall, Jonathan Chiu, Kristin Jackson Katherine Farrell, Johannah Rogers,
Sim Stafford David Chen
Brooke Dohmen Chris Graber
Charlotte Dauphin, Megan Harris Chris Reilly, Melanie Shaw
Sallyann Bergh
Duke Events Calendar Submissions for the calendar are published on a space available basis for Duke events. To submit a notice for the Duke Events Calendar, send it to the attention of “Calendar Coordinator” at Box 90858 or calendar@chronicle.duke.edu.
Academic WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 4 INTERPRETING RACIAL DISPARITIES IN ACCESS TO HEALTHCARE: 12-1 PM. KEVIN and SCHULMAN, MD, MBA, Professor of Medicine Business Administration, Duke University. Lunch provided..Duke North Hospital, Room 2002. Contact: csmeh@mc.duke.edu. Teer House: 7-B:3OPM. Single Again; Creating a New Life, Alice Carlton. Call 416-DUKE. 4019 N. Roxboro Road.
Popßio Seminar: 7PM. “Base substitution patterns of of S-RNase and a gene closely linked to S-locus in Nicotiana alata,” Naoki Takebayashi, Duke University. 140 Biological Sciences.
FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 6 VISUALIZATION FRIDAY FORUM; 12-1 PM. “Visualization: Tools and Uses,” Rachael Brady, VisualizationTechnology Group. The Friday forum is an opportunity for individuals to share their expertise and experiences in using visualization in their research. This talk will introduce the fall semester series of lectures and discuss resources for doing visualization at Duke. DlO6, LSRC.
Information Session: 7-BPM. CLICK seeks student volunteers to teach basic computer skills to 6th graders at Rogers Herr Middle School. CLICK teachers meet with students two afternoons a week beginning in October. MEETING ROOM A in the BRYAN CENTER. For more information, 668-6468 or click@duke.edu. CLICK Creating Literacy in Computer Knowledge. -
InterCulturalFellowship Weekly Gathering: 7:30B:3opm, Every Thursday. “Tell Us Your Story” Guest series. Chapel lounge. More info: http://tuesday.s33.net/dukeicf-new/index.html, Contact: -
Social Programming and Meetings THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 5 Freewater Films: 7, 9:3OPM. “Dog Day Afternoon,” with Dustin Hoffman. For information, call 684-2323. Griffith Film Theater, Bryan Center, West Campus. Tango Times: BPM. Daniel Diaz and seasoned tango
musicians trace the history of the Argentine Tango. Dancers from the Triangle Tangueros featured. Call 684-4444. Reynolds Theater, Bryan Center, West
dsw9@duke.edu.
FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 6 Friday Flix: 3PM. The Brothers McMullen, Best Film, Sundance Film Festival 1995. Lilly Library, East Campus, http://www.lib.duke.edu/lilly/fridayflix.html. Freewater Films: 7, 9:3OPM. “Amelie.” For information, call 684-2323. Griffith Film Theater, Bryan Center, West Campus.
Religious
THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 5
Campus.
WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 4
Teer House: 2-3:3OPM.ToYour Health: Food Safety for Seniors, Mary C. Lewis. Call 416-DUKE. 4019 N. Roxboro Road.
MOVIE NIGHT: Bpm, Thursday, September 5. Relax at FCJL with FREE DESSERT and a fun movie. Or just come by for snacks and a game of pool, ping-pong, or
Lay Academy of Religion, Gospel of Luke: 9:3011:30AM. The Lay Academy of Religion is a ministry of Duke University Divinity School designed to encourage ongoing theological study by laity. Epworth UMC, Durham. Contact: div-conted@duke.edu.
air hockey. Freeman Center for Jewish Life.
Catholic Mass; 5:15 PM. Duke Chapel Crypt Choral Vespers: S:ISPM. Beautiful candlelight service with Choral Vespers Ensemble. Duke Chapel.
JFAM JFAMiIy DINNER; 6pm, Wednesday, September 4. More inter-class bonding at Bubbe’s +
Kitchen (at FCJL). Freeman Center for Jewish Life. MEETING: 7:3opm, Wednesday, September 4. In the FCJL Lounge for anyone who is looking to get involved with Jewish Life! Freeman INTEREST
Center for Jewish Life.
Ongoing
Events
Carillon Recital: Weekdays, 5 pm. A 15-minute performance by J. Samuel Hammond, University carillonneur. He also gives a recital before and after the Service of Worship each Sunday. Duke Chapel, West Campus. For information, call 684-2572.
Organ demonstration: Weekdays, 12:30-1:30pm. A daily recital of mostly sacred music on the Flentrop organ, which both tonally and visually reflects the techniques of Dutch-French organs of the 18th century. Duke Chapel, West Campus, x Weekly Vespers/Fellowship: Orthodox Christian Student Fellowship. Duke Chapel Basement. Father Edward Rummen, 919-782-7037, fatheredward@mindspring.com.
The Chronicle
PAGE 18 � WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 4 2002
Thf Chronici f X ILL/
yi lIW/Mly
Incorporated
Hfe Noted n HOT TO W-
1993
Honoring the 11th
One
week from today is the one-year anniversary of the Sept.
11 attacks, and like the rest of the nation, the University will commemorate the anniversary in its own way. The
University’s plans for Sept. 11, which were released last week, are somber, respectful and elegant. The center of the University’s memorial is the ringing of the Chapel bell. The bell will ring once for each major event of Sept. 11, at the exact time each event occurred. The bell will also toll once for each of six alumni who died in the attacks. The deceased alumni will also be honored with trees planted outside of the WestEdens Link. These events symbolically recreate what occurred last year, in a respectful remembrance, but also as a message of hope for the future. In particular, the Chapel bells are very powerful and tasteful. The administration has done an excellent job carefully planning this important and heart-felt memorial. The day will open with a reception at the Duke University Museum of Art and will close with a multidisciplinary symposium discussing the attacks. In addition to the official University events, many campus groups have planned their own commemoration of the day. Despite all the remembrances, class will continue to be in session on Sept. 11 this year as it was last year. The University must remember that whatever else is going on, it remains a place focused on academic pursuits, and thus it is appropriate class remains in session. Additionally, the fact classes will be held that day gives students a structured opportunity to discuss the events of the past year in an intellectual climate. Professors have the discretion whether to utilize class time to discuss Sept. 11 or not, but surely many professors will take advantage of such an opportunity. Even though some classes may seem like a somewhat random place to discuss the implications of Sept. 11, classes are nevertheless a gathering of students, and it is always enlightening and cathartic to just discuss. Because the University is an intellectual place, it is important to have the time and opportunity to discuss events that are so important in history. The University is one place where people can engage in actual, informed discourse about the events of Sept. 11, their aftermath and their long-term impact. The only questionable part of the schedule for Sept. 11 is that there is only one forum being held, and it is to be held in the Sanford Public Policy building, one of the smaller venues on campus. The University should strongly consider either moving the forum to a larger location or consider having more forums, in order to give more students the opportunity to attend.
On the
record
To me, [urban] sprawl is the American dream. It’s strange that people who have that [dream] don’t want other people to get it. Hal Noyes, Libertarian candidate for Durham County Board of Commissioners, on the beauty of suburbs (see story, page 1).
The Chronicle 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 REBECCA SUN, Projects Editor JANE HETHERINGTON, Photography Editor RUTH CARLITZ, City & State 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 ROBERT TAI, Sports Photography Editor LER ROSEN, Sports Managing Editor AMI PATEL, Wire Editor KIRA ROSOFF, Wire Editor MOLLY JACOBS, Sr. Assoc. Features Editor MELISSA SOUCY, Sr. Assoc. City & Stale 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 THAD PARSONS, Sr. Assoc. Photography Editor SETH LANKFORD, Online Manager SUE NEWSOME, Advertising Director A LISE EDWARDS. Lead Graphic Artist YU-HSIEN HUANG, Supplements Coordinator BARBARA STARBUCK, Production Manager MARY WEAVER, Operations Manager NALINI MILNE, 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. Toreach the Editorial Office (newsroom) at 301 Rowers Building, call 684-2663 or fax 684-4696. To reach the Business Office at 103 West Union Building, call 684-3811. Toreach the Advertising Office at 101 West Union Building call 684-3811 or fax 684-8295. Visit The Chronicle Online at http://www.chronicle.duke.edu. © 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 Office. Each individual is entitled to one free copy.
ife
Letters to t E EDITOR
Community
must act
This past weekend, Duke, at long last, won a football game. Kudos to them. All across campus this was celebrated in a night of revelry and partying. Unfortunately, this happy occasion also exposed the darker complexities of trying to have a good time on campus. Events that I witnessed demonstrate many of the problems that we face as a community and laid bare many of our failings to
together
place the next morning. I woke up to find a message on my answering machine from one of my friends bawling and screaming about how some man tried to break in her dorm room and kill her. An unidentified, half-dressed man tried to beat down her door at six in the morning by repeatedly throwing his body against the door and kicking at it. Luckily, my friend had locked the door when she
work together. returned from the bathroom Somewhere between midmoments before. She called night and one in the morning, the police. Looking through I was exiting the newly conthe peephole, she identified structed diner in the West him as in his thirties and Edens Link byway of the severely drunk. By the time patio door. I opened the door the police arrived, he had and became aware of not only wandered down the hall, the rain still falling lightly, tried a few more doors and but of a different stream disappeared. Now, the police splashing down near my are saying that my friend’s ankles. A student was relievversion of the story is ing himself of some beer he improbable and are advocathad consumed and apparently ing an entirely different vercouldn’t be bothered to find a sion of the story involving a bathroom. I cursed at him for lost, drunk Duke student a while. He merely looked up who was “knocking” on the at me with this distant glaze door in an attempt to find his to his eyes and muttered, own room “Yeah man, I know.” The first example is relaThe second event took tively harmless. It sucks for http:
/ /
www.chronicle.duke.edu
/
to ensure
safety
the employees of the diner
who have to suffer through these indignities, but it was raining, so the alcohol-laden urine probably washed away without anyone noticing. The second is a much more serious and
viscerally
disturbing
event. But together they paint a picture of campus life that does not meet the hopes, or even the rightful expectations, ofeither the administration or the students. Obviously, these problems are larger than the incidents I describe here. The culture here is not one that promotes taking active responsibility for the affect our actions may have on our classmates. It is our role as students to cultivate an atmosphere that is conscientious and the administration’s duty to institute some real reform to campus security. It is our responsibility, as a group, to put pressure on the administration to secure a consistent and effective policy toward campus life after dark, for all of us. Donwong Song Trinity ’O4
vnews /display, v / ART12002109102 !3d736254e64de
More student support needed for Louisville game Although I am not an alumnus of Duke, I have been attending Duke football games since 1957.1 have been disappointed in the turnout from the student body at Duke football games the last few years, but Saturday night, the students were special. Despite the fact that the Duke fans were out-num-
bered, the student body generated noise and enthusiasm that inspired the team. This is a very young team and will need all the support that all the Duke fans can give. I am excited about attending the remaining games because this team is going to be fun to watch. There were around 1,000 students at
the East Carolina game and it would be great if there were around 3,000 (or more) at the Louisville game. It will be a tough game, but with a lot of support, this Duke team is capable of winning. See you on Saturday night! David Fields Hillsborough, N.C.
Http:! www.chronicle.duke.edu/vnews/display.v/ART/2002/09/ 02/3d736255e 162f /
Correction Monday’s letter, “Course offerings demonstrate Duke is not racist” was mistakenly attributed to Charles Gearing, ’os,who published a letter on Friday. Monday’s letter was actually authored by Sam Schwartz, Trinity ’Ol.
Letters
Policy
The Chronicle welcomes submissions in the form of letters to the editor or guest columns. Submissions must include the author’s name, signature, department or class, and for purposes of identification, phone number and local address. Letters should not exceed 325 words; contact the editorial department for information regarding guest columns. The Chronicle will not publish anonymous or form letters or letters that are promotional in nature. The Chronicle reserves the right to edit letters and guest columns for length, clarity and style and the right to withhold letters based on the discretion of the editorial page editor.
Direct submissions to: Editorial Page Department The Chronicle Box 90858, Durham, NC 27708 Phone: (919) 684-2663 Fax: (919) 684-4696
The Chronicle
Commuter woes
Commentary
WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 4, 2002 �PAGE
Focusing on domestic issues
19
Commencement speeches should social programs, defense and interwith a call to cure cancer or AIDS, For the commuting student, a 2:20 p.m. class requires more than parking one’s butt in a classroom seat. First, be given on the first day of college, est on the debt. We need to reverse involve youth in national service or tax cuts and corporate welfare, slowput a man on Mars? you have to figure out how to park your car, which goes when their inspiration would exert 8) Science and Society: Advances ly raise retirement age over the next something like this.... 50 years and pay off the debt. in cloning, genetic manipulation, 2:oo—Leave off-campus residence. 2:o6—Arrive at more influence than KS'grv 4) Health: Over 40 million unininformation technology and robotics full perimeter lot to find $lO pass useless, as men with as the last words n Jr| have outpaced public discussion, sured, costs of $1.4 trillion now foreorange cones shoo you off to the dreaded overflow lot. before receiving one’s 2:o9—Consult campus map left over from freshman diploma. Focusing JKr w casted to rise to 16 percent of GDP threatening a future where definiyoung minds on what tions of personhood and freedom by the end of the decade and tremenyear to locate mysterious overflow spaces. Look despert>ala for needs to be done is dous patient dissatisfaction reveal a may be made in a vacuum of ethics. ately non-freshman to ask direcan aspect of college tions. 2:15—Find lot is farther away system adrift. Medicine is no longer Science must not relegate the meanAmbati t t* forgotten. too often about patients and doctors but about ing of humanity to statistics. e than the Washington Duke. Consider . Sweep of Uaylmt XT ~ insurance companies. Health care Nothing concen9) Liberty and Security: The old omith returning to off-campus location where trated minds more than a national health rules Sept. rationing, 11, insurance, on individual rights and govare confident a you space is available moment of revelation about the arbitration screening frivolous malernmental responsibilities were part directly in front of residence. Devil’s Food world and who our true friends are. practice suits and limits on drug of the rubble of ground zero. We have Rationalize that first week is too early for Thought The upcoming anniversary should marketing all need to be considered. to write a new book, keeping in mind to skip and commence running to Main 5) Environment: Global warming, both basic principles and current West. 2:2l—Begin to sweat heavily. 2:27—Arrive late to also be a moment ofreflection on our and what needs be done. habitat destruction and pollution are needs. Security protects the liberty country class perspiring, panting and pissed. 1) Energy: Oil addiction perverts insidious dangers indifference to that is the purpose of America; At Duke, the hardest thing to do with a car is to park guardians and advocates of both it. This year the challenge is magnified by construction foreign policy, fuels fundamentalism which will only reap future sufferenvironmental destrucshifting and wreaks Cleaner income need each other and must remember ing. energy, and residential changes. Although a lack of space creAlternatives —gas-electric taxes to pollution and conservation this critical symbiosis. ates inevitable parking problems, many of the worst tion. Sept. 11 dispelled the illusion obstacles could be avoided if parking regulations made hybrids, fuel cells, renewable sources taxes, debt reduction in return for sense. The following was decipherable after a thorough and conservation—exist but remain rainforest preservation and smarter that individuals can ignore the world, and discredited the hubris of study of the parking website and some quality time on untapped due to lack of political corporate regulation are essential. commitment. 6) Integrity: While the business of the conformity cops of the right and the phone with parking. 2) Education: Public schools are a America may be business, not everythe apologists of terrorism of the Off-campus students could be waitlisted for Blue Zone vital but of our should be reduced to crumbling pillar thing profit thought police of the left, who share but after a only purchasing passes, $lO perimeter lot pass motive. Commodification of practishrill hysteria, historical amnesia granting them access to two commuter lots on Duke social, intellectual and economic fabric. nor coarsens life and money cally everything Neither and intellectual flaccidity. Society is throwing University Road. After Aug. 15 when Blue Zone sales to West Campus residents ended, waitlisted commuters piecemeal privatization can nourish taints society not only in business often the best guard of the individthe foundation of the future. scandal but in political influenceual. As a poet once said, the meaning assumed that they would hear about their status. Watered-down standards inflation and peddling, grade are no subof life is not a fact waiting to be disperWrong. Even though 545 passes were left over on Aug. 15, those waitlisted were not informed of permit avail- stitute for leveling the playing field verse incentives in health care. A covered but a choice about the way ability until Aug. 30. Once those waitlisted were offered with better opportunity and higher dollar value cannot be placed on we live, a truth best heard at the character. Special interest influence beginning of one’s journey through passes, administrators congratulated themselves on expectations for all. A national curshould be curtailed by public camhigher education. accommodating all students wanting a Blue Zone permit. riculum, rigorous standards for stuincentives and free time. TV paign financing teachers, dents and for However, those accommodated were just the 98 com7) Vision; Not since the call to put Dr. Bala Ambati is a former fellow in muters who were desperate enough to pay $lO for waitlist teaching, increased resources and cultural academics on the moon has the nation the School of Medicine and is curemphasis on a man status. Students not on the original waitlist still cannot been rently on the faculty at the Medical need to be to bear. rallied to a mission that capbrought purchase a Blue Zone permit, even though more than 440 Two Policy: every imagination. Why College of Georgia. His column 3) Fiscal of tured the not chalremain after waitlist sales. passes will the American can-do spent lenge spirit appears every third Thursday. three federal dollars are on Despite poorly handling permit allocation, the adminwith students istration has shown a willingness to work by authorizing non-West residents to use the gated Edens lots on the weekends. However, students traditionally have not been twisting the administration’s arm for this Well, maybe you can. Duke’s trying pretty hard. But chess. Sculptures and statues are so intellectual-looking; privilege. Instead, they have just been breaking the our students will definitely absorb some class and cremechanical ones guarding the gates. Not only should so far things have run smoothly, sans the typical catasbe the or ativity, and if not, at least feel smarter. A perfect addition these lots open on weekends, but also during week. trophe (cough, housing) catch-22 (cough, housing). Move-in really surprised me —I to any campus. After 5 p.m., they should be available for students going to Themed Dorm Parties! Also at Stanford, dorms get the gym, the library or meetings. And to eliminate the con- remember thinking how disastrous the A together the would but was and throw huge themed parties open to all. This suggest I be, tinual $6O charge of replacing streamlined process gate arms, I is a great idea for Duke, especially with our rapidly and am pleasantly surprised. Moreover, raising them. declining on-campus social scene. I’m sure there are It’s impossible to talk about parking without mention- the West-Edens Link was actually comfunds available for this type of activity, as it defiif Aug. many Here’s the bottom on for move-in even launJJj 19, line the guard pleted ing parking security. nitely promotes campus unity, diversity and all that good tower—it’s geographically challenged. A university with dry, dining and landscaping have had Chandra stuff, while providing a semi-safe atmosphere for stuminor The setbacks. buildings that look like castles should know that towers some stand Jacobs dents to have fun. Last year’s dorm party to remember at their Rather outside The Subway/Breyers should be built at hill-tops, not at bottoms. Stanford was Exotic Erotic—two articles of clothing than guarding you on your trek from the woods to civi- Great Hall was also supposed to be open Outside the Box allowed for the girls and one for the guys. Good clean fun lization, the tower congratulates you for making it back to after labor day, but these are only minor it after all. was had by all. Our administration would dig this alterPerhaps year someone it. As for details. be a good in will campus. That is, if there’s actually I do, however, have some suggestions that I have native to greek parties, maybe. the security van, I know it’s no SAFE Rides substitute. Bullfrogs! California Institute of Technology has a But officers may strengthen their mission of providing stolen from the various universities I spent time at over in the middle of campus containing the most fanpond home the rides alone at summer. to girls walking safety if they offer tastic in bullfrogs I have ever seen, noises and all. Not only Toledo, Blue Bins! At the of northBig University them. past speeding instead of night frogs gargantuan, but also, they sat upon neat move-in and were the move-out process, One good idea has come out of the new parking regu- west Ohio, to expedite the lily the to a blue bin out little pads, with turtles swimming underfoot. The Why option gigantic commuters. should a student has wheel lations: a cheaper option for short-term parkers have to pay the same price as those to his car, load it up with stuff and roll it to his room for turtles weren’t nearly as impressive, however. I think residential students whose permanent parking spot is on unloading. This is really a fantastic invention, alleviating that Duke should invest in a project of this sort for the West? The trick is that the commuting lot must have the burden of multiple trips to and from the car to the Sarah P. Duke Gardens, or at least provide us with bulldorm. Apparently Duke utilized a shuttle service for frogs in some way, shape or form. Let this be a lesson for enough space for the commuting students. Blue Zone parkers this year which is a start, but I think the administration: Bullfrogs Happier Students. If the problem is truly that there is not enough space Drainage! One thing common to all the fine instituBins would be away to really tie-up the moving Big would be to Blue for everyone to park, a sensible solution tions in I visited this summer is excellent drainage. package. a bus a neat little Duke-blue do-it-yourself process providing campus by the number of cars on reduce (what drainage for a superior school, I should say. The At Duke of the West Superior Stanford, the Fountains! for off-campus residents. This is an option students want camanyways), drainage claims to fountains adorn the is excellent at Stanford, Berkeley, UCLA, (The be, for. and Duke Belmont and may even be willing to pay CalTech, U-Toledo, and I think it is time that Duke an and Although expeninto on almost quad. perhaps pus every incorporated initially going Walk were to be Campus suit. For they definitely follow no more puddles on West Campus stone, provide a bus route originating from a Park-and-Ride lot on sive landscaping alternative, drains at the bottom of a slope! Hopefully put elegance peacefulness university just and to the the beauty, for this lot were Hillsborough Road. When plans figured The best is students use Duke this out for the WEL. part atmosphere. that Stanford buses.) the so were for plans scratched, Duke is definitely on its way to something, that’s for In the meantime, if you are lucky enough to be pur- them not only to look at, sit by or occasionally throw sure. Be it organization, efficiency, a healthy social scene, chasing the coveted Blue Zone pass or you need to appeal money into, but to swim in. So fountains have an appligood or evil—only time will tell. Hopefully these few, one of your many tickets, the parking website requests cable functionality to them as well. The WEL needs fountain or even —why pious suggestions can lead Duke down the path of the not consider a two? that you take the bus, because parking at parking, just landscaping even conin Sculptures righteous and used and deliver it from (more) evil. Statues—possibly like everywhere else, is limited. junction with fountains! UCLA has a most excellent and Chandra Jacobs is a Trinity junior. Her column appears Julie Smith is a Trinity senior. Her column appears every legendary sculpture garden where students sit and poneven perhaps play every third Wednesday. coffee, have a of cup der, discuss, third Wednesday. m
"
'
t
Can’t rush perfection J9
,
,
=
The Chronicle
PAGE 20 � WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 4, 2002
aew
SiS
Food and Drug
IN-STORE PHARMACY
Items
&
Prices Good Through September 7, 2002
We reserve theright to limit None sold to dealers.
qua n
1
titles!* n ' 3
I
C
ITO S,l
TO05,“ rs
l
| VISA
1
111 llll
l|j KZ ;
IBU WKsHL
50* my
See store for details.
■M*