September 16, 2002

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Monday, September 16,2002

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THE INDEPENDENT DAILY AT DUKE UNIVERSITY

Morgan to open up monitoring � Unlike in past years, Head Line Monitor Jeremy Morgan is taking applications for Krzyzewskiville line monitors. By MOLLY NICHOLSON The Chronicle

Afterward, the rain fell down on the celebrating Blue Devils, washing away some of the painful and frustrating memories of last year’s losing season. “Last year’s game [a 4-0 defeat at Clemson] rested in all our heads really big time,” senior co-captain Donald Mclntosh said. “They kind of embarrassed us last year. And we wanted to come out and get them back.... This puts last season behind us—all the overtime losses last year. We’re just ready to go.”

It may be the equivalent of the Civil Service Act for the town of Krzyzewskiville. Departing from tradition, Head Line Monitor Jeremy Morgan is accepting applications for students who want to be line monitors during tenting season. In Jeremy Morgan past years, the head line monitor has chosen his associates—students who enforce tenting rules in K-ville—from his friends or based on recommendations. Morgan hopes to select his 25 line monitors by fall break. “There’s never been applications before,” said Morgan, a senior. “I wanted

See SOCCER on Sportswrap, page 7

See MONITOR on page 9

JENNY MAO/THE CHRONICLE

DONALD McINTOSH blows past a Clemson defender at Koskinen Stadium Saturday night. The Blue Devils defeated the No. 2 Tigers 2-1 in double overtime for their first win in the ACC.

Men’s soccer upsets No. 2 Clemson By TYLER ROSEN The Chronicle

2 The ball looped in over

Duke

the defense and Clemson 1 bounced on the six. A swarm of Blue Devils charged across the goal mouth, freezing Clemson goalie Doug Warren, who was expecting a redirection to his right. Instead, nobody made contact and the ball bounced over the left shoulder of the stunned and outof-position goalie and into the upper comer ofthe goal. Trevor Perea’s goal on a 35-yard di-

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rect kick with eight minutes remaining in the second overtime lifted Duke (3-11,1-0 in the ACC) to a stunning 2-1 victory over No. 2 Clemson (2-1-1, 0-1) in Koskinen Stadium Saturday night. “We worked every day this week on kicks, because we get fouled a lot,” head coach John Rennie said. “Trevor is capable of hitting that kind of serve. He hit the right kind of serve—it’s over the defense, it’s a problem for the keeper, maybe they head it out for a comer [or] maybe we get a shot. This one went all the way through.”

free

The Mary Lou williams Center for Black Culture was to b e g un ren ovations this summer, but officials are still finalizing their plans. See page 3

Panhellenic Council sororities are implementing new rules for their upcoming rush, which officials are now call'"9 recruitment. See page 3

Three Rick’s Diner customers threw food and broke several chairs last weekend, according to campus police reports. See page 4


World & Nation

PAGE 2 �MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 16, 2002

(tO) •

Iraq softens its resistance to U.S.

NEWS BRIEFS

Violence continues in Kashmir province

Indian soldiers shot and killed nine suspected Islamic rebels Sunday in a border sweep just hours before Kashmir’s crucial state elections and a few hours after a key government minister survived an assassination attempt. •

Agents discover al Qaeda phone calls

Government agents have recently uncovered numerous calls from difficult-to-track prepaid cellular phones, Internet-based phone service, prepaid phone cards and public pay phones in the United States to known al Qaeda locations overseas. •

Macedonian elections run smoothly

Celebrations erupted Sunday night after Macedonians and ethnic Albanians set aside bitter rivalries to vote in the first elections since ethnic warfare engulfed the country. •

Anthrax survivors suffer further problems

Many of the 17 survivors of the anthrax attacks that began a year ago have been ill with symptoms their doctors cannot explain —fatigue, shortness of breath, chest pain and memory loss. •

Saudi Arabia may permit U.S. to use its bases if U.N. authorizes military action SAM GHATTAS By The Press Associated

UNITED NATIONS

News briefs compiled from wire reports.

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By NEELA BANERJEE

New York Times News Service

With the United States pushing for action against Iraq and oil prices rising on fears ofwar in the Persian Gulf, the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries is being pressed to pump more oil to soothe jittery markets. But as the cartel prepares for its meeting in Osaka, Japan, Thursday, members have indicated that OPEC will probably do nothing to rein in prices, which have risen 24 percent since mid-June and hover around $3O a barrel. The cartel has 11 members, but one, Iraq, is not allowed to vote because ofUN. sanctions. OPEC is grappling with the same uncertainty about the global economy and intervention in Iraq as is the rest of the world. When the cartel has faced a cloudy picture in the past, it has chosen to wait and watch. Industry experts

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But Foreign Minister Saud alFaisal said Sunday on CNN that if the U.N. Security Council authorizes military action against Iraq, “Everybody is obliged to follow through.” In another interview, with the London-based newspaper A1 Hayat, Saud urged Saddam Hussein’s regime to quickly allow U.N. weapons inspectors back into Iraq to head off a new Security Council resolution that could open the way for military action. President George W. Bush demanded last week that the United Nations force Iraq to comply with resolutions requiring U.N. supervision of the destruction of Iraqi weapons of mass destruction.

He warned that America will act, alone if necessary, if the Security Council doesn’t. Jordan, a neighbor of Iraq that faced an influx of refugees during the 1991 Gulf War and worries about the repercussions of another war, also called on Iraq to implement the various Security Council resolutions, including the return of U.N. weapons inspectors. Compliance would spare the region “the dire consequences” of war, Jordanian Foreign Minister Marwan Muasher told the U.N. General Assembly on Sunday. Iraq’s foreign minister, Naji Sabri, See IRAQ on page 7

OPEC faces pressure for more oil output

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Arabs

sought Sunday to head off a war between Iraq and the United States, but also pressed the United Nations for action on another destabilizing dispute in their region, the PalestinianIsraeli conflict. Arab countries joined other nations that have called on Iraq to comply with UN. resolutions to avert a showdown with Washington. And Saudi Arabia, the richest Arab state, signaled a policy shift likely to put more pressure on the Iraqi government. Saudi Arabian leaders previously had ruled out any use of Saudi bases by US. forces to attack Iraq.

Swedish socialists maintain control

Sweden’s ruling socialists appeared positioned to maintain power after a tight race against the centerright opposition.

DOW

The Chronicle

Strategic advisors. Boutique philosophy.

said they expected the same response this week. Moreover, these analysts said, just as the possibility of war in Iraq has driven oil prices higher, the uncertainty confines and complicates what OPEC can do to bring down prices. Saudi Arabia, which dominates the group and often gives in to Western pleas to moderate prices, is wary of how overtures to help the biggest oil consumers, especially the United States, would be viewed by the rest of the Muslim world, analysts said. “The last thing the Saudis want with a crisis to the north oftheir border is a crisis within OPEC as well,” said Mehdi Varzi, president ofVarzi Energy, an energy consulting firm in London. “They wouldn’t want to be seen to be openly helping the West when the Palestinians are still See OPEC on page 10


The Chronicle

MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 16, 2002 � PAGE 3

Mary Lou Williams Center expansion plan delayed By CHRISTINA NG

a summer, Dunkley said, al-

The Chronicle

though he declined to give § new target date. The Mary Lou Williams Center renovation is part of a larger project of assessing whether current space allocation fulfills the needs of the staff and students of various campus life offices and centers, said Zoila Airall, assistant vice president for student affairs and campus life.

Finalization of renovation plans for the Mary Lou Williams Center for Black Culture has been postponed from its originally planned deadline of this summer. Officials said the center’s expansion has been delayed by prospective construction projects in several other offices, including the Center for Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and Transgender Life and the Division of Student Activities

“[The renovationl is definitely something that is on the books and is something that is being looked at,” she said. Students an the Cultural Space Committee, which is helping to oversee the renovation plans, are hoping for more concrete plans. Senior Polentzi Narvarte, a committee mem-

main office. “We’re not a singular unit,” said Leon Dunkley, director of the Mary Lou Williams Center. We are dependent on other campus renovations.” In the past, the University has said that plans for the center would be completed by fall 2002. The plans either will entail an expansion of the current space in the basement of the West Union Building or a relocation to another, refurbished location, possibly in the Bryan Center. Construction will eventually take place over

ber, said they have not received any updates or official communication from the administration since fall 2001. “I am still waiting for the administration to update us on its promises and the timeline for its promises because they See MARY LOU on page 12

BRYN BURKHOLDER/THE CHRONICLE

THE MARY LOU WILLIAMS CENTER FOR BLACK CULTURE will eventually undego renovations, or possibly a move, as part of Vice President for Student Affairs Larry Moneta’s plan to reorganize West Campus student space.

Sororities prepare to implement new rules for rushing By MEGAN CARROLL The Chronicle

It’s all in a name.

Whether it’s rho chis talking to rushees or recruitment counselors talking with potential members, sorority recruitment will begin again in January, and members of the Panhellenic Council have been meeting to discuss recruitment changes that will go into effect this year. We’re still at the gathering-information stage,” said Nicole Manley, the program coordinator for the Office of Fraternity and Sorority Life. We’re getting everyone’s affirmative or negative votes.” Panhel has already decided to implement two significant changes in the recruitment process—rho chis have been replaced with recruitment counselors, and a re-

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cruitment rule orientation meeting is scheduled for all sophomore sorority members. Manley said recruitment counselors will give additional support and guidance to the freshmen when they meet with the counselors before winter break. First-year students will know what to expect during recruitment when they return in January. Manley hopes new recruitment counselors will establish better relationships with their advisees than in the old system. Kasey Miller, president of Alpha Omicron Pi, said recruitment officers will benefit potential members. “If the recruitment officers can make better connections with the girls they are advising, they can help relate to their advisees on a more personal level and be a bigger help to them during recruitment,” she wrote in an e-mail.

But closer relationships between the recruitment officers and potential members could make the recruitment officer’s job as an unbiased advisor more difficult, said senior Courtney Slagle, president of Kappa Kappa Gamma. “The role of the recruitment counselor is to provide an objective view of greek life, and sometimes the best way to learn this information is from girls with whom one is not as close,” Slagle wrote in an e-mail. “Also, if a close relationship is formed, it would make it harder for the counselor not to reveal the group with which she is affiliated.” Panhel leaders also hope the new sophomore recruitSee SORORITIES on page 7


The Chronicle

PAGE 4 � MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 16, 2002

From staff reports

Rick’s disturbance reported

Tools lifted

At 3:25 a.m. Sept. 8, Duke University Police Department officers responded to a call at Rick’s Diner in reference to three males believed to be of student age causing a disturbance by throwing food on the floor, walls and serving counters. The students also picked up dining chairs and threw them off the elevated patio area, breaking them and causing $375 in total damage. The subsequent investigation identified the students. The case has been referred to the Dean of Students Office.

Construction workers in the Center for Human Genetics reported that between 12:45 p.m. and 12:50 p.m. Sept. 7 a 5’10” white male, 35 to 40 years old, average build, wearing a white T-shirt, tan shorts and white shoes, took a $1,200 red Laser level, a $3OO red and black Hilti ram set gun, a $2OO set of wrenches and a $5O blue and white folding tool bag for wrenches from the bed of a truck belonging to Mid Atlantic Infrastructure Systems, Inc. When they yelled out at the subject, he ran to his 1990s white four-door sedan parked in the KT lot, threw the tools in

Bullet hole discovered An employee discovered a bullet hole in an exterior second floor window of the Duke University Medical Center’s North Pavilion. Police determined the bullet was fired from the direction of Shirley Street and was shot between 4:45 p.m. Sept. 9 and 1:45 p.m. Sept. 10. The bullet traveled through two panes of glass valued at $2,000 and came to rest inside a sheet rock wall, where it was later recovered.

‘An offering made by fire’ Students celebrated Yom Kippur, the Jewish day of atonement, with a pre-fast dinner Sunday at the Freeman Center for Jewish Life. The holiday ends Monday at sundown.

Vehicle broken into An employee reported that between 9 a.m. and 1:03 p.m. Sept. 10, while his secured vehicle was parked in the R.

David Thomas Center parking lot, someone stole his

$4OO Sony CD player

and eight CDs valued at $BOO. There were no signs offorced entry.

Man spotted tampering with car

Equipment snatched

side window of another vehicle with a clothes hanger. The man also used a car jack on the front of the vehicle as if he was trying to move it. When officers arrived, they found the subject had fled

CDs stolen A student reported that between the hours of noon and 6 p.m. Sept. 8, someone stole his $250 Kenwood CD player (model KDC-7011) and 20 CDs in a car-

the area. The victim’s door was left slightly open, but nothing was missing.

See CRIME on page 12

An employee reported that on the first level of Parking Garage 11, at 3:30 a.m. Sept. 11, a black male wearing light colored pants, scarf and hat in a red Ford Probe exited his vehicle and attempted to gain entry to the driver’s

ANTHONY CROSS/THE CHRONICLE

and drove off.

Between 10 p.m. Sept. 9 and noon Sept. 10, someone entered a cubicle located on the first floor of the School of Law and stole a $6OO Dell/EISIFP flat screen computer monitor.

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The Chronicle

MONDAY, SEPTEMBER

16, 2002 � PAGE 5


The Chronicle

PAGE 6 � MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 16, 2002

U,S. government knew of c New York terrorist cell U.S. York for connections to bin Laden and al Five Yemenese men were arrested in New Y( •

dividuals,” Battle said. He declined to further comment on any specifics, but said that law enforcement officials had taken investigative steps to corroborate the information, “It was based upon that corroboration that we begem to look a little deeper,” Battle said. He said the communica-

By BEN DOBBIN Associated Press BUFFALO, N.Y. An alleged terrorist cell based in western New York and trained by Osama bin Laden’s al Qaeda network had been on the U.S. government’s radar since before the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks, a prosecutor said Sunday. The investigation into the Lackawanna cell began in early summer 2001, about the time records say the men returned from Afghanistan, said Michael —

Battle, U.S. attorney for western New York. All five were bom in the U.S. and are ofYemeni descent.

“What essentially happened is that information came to our attention that pointed us in the direction of these in-

tions and other activities surrounding

the cell intensified this month. Federal authorities who announced the arrest of the members of the alleged terror cell said bin Laden himself lectured the men on his anti-American beliefs while they were in Kandahar, Afghanistan, in the months leading up to the Sept. 11 attacks. The men came home to Lackawanna, 5 miles south of Buffalo on the

shore ofLake Erie, in June 2001. Federal agents said they had no information the cell was planning an attack in

the United States.

Relatives of the men have denied they were involved with al Qaeda. Officials said the discovery of the terrorist cell was connected to information that also prompted President George W. Bush’s administration to raise America’s terror alert to “code orange,” the second-highest,on Sept. 10. FBI Special Agent in Charge Peter Ahearn said Saturday that the investigation was continuing and appealed for help from anyone who might have some information. He also said that authorities believe key figures in western New York have been caught.

The men appeared in a Buffalo courtroom Saturday in handcuffs and shackles and were charged with providing material support and resources to foreign terrorist organizations. The judge entered a “not guilty” plea for each and ordered the men jailed until a detention hearing Wednesday.

According to the criminal complaint unsealed by the judge Saturday, the five New York men—Shafal Mosed, 24; Faysal Galab, 26; Sahim Alwan, 29; Yasein Taher, 24 and Yahya Goba, 25—five within a few blocks of each another in Lackawanna

and trained together in Afghanistan. “At this point in time, we’re not sure they have in fact committed a crime,” James Harrington, a court-appointed lawyer for Alwan, told CNN.

)f public c pub lie support challenges Lackk of Lad Arafat’s power (

By KARIN LAUB

The Associated Press

RAMALLAH, West Bank Many Palestinians say they no longer are willing to put up with Yasser Arafat’s absolute rule a turning point in the history of a people largely shaped by one man. The challenge is led by Arafat loyalists, raising for the first time the possibility that he may have to give up some power though his ability to survive and outwit his opponents is legendary. Although the issue driving the current rebellion is official corruption and mismanagement, it also is clear that there is growing dissatisfaction with the handling of two years ofviolence with Israel that have left the Palestinian territories in mins. —

Arafat’s growing vuln vulnerability was exposed last week when parliament, 1led by lawmakers from his Fatah movement, forced forced his 1 Cabinet to resign. Fatah members and even some some in Arafat’s inner circle now demand openly share power by appointing a openly that he si hi prime minister, by the United States. minister, an idea backed “This is the time for chai change, and he should accept this change,” said Ahmed Abdel Rahman, a senior Arafat adviser. An August poll suggests that a large majority of sugg want a prime minister, while as Palestinians, 69 percent, w£ Palestinians, A as a figurehead. 44 percent want Arafat many as 44 Just a year ago, talk talk abo about Arafat relinquishing some ino He was still a key power would have been inconceivable. player, courted by world leaders trying to broker a

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Mideast cease-fire, while at home he controlled even the tiniest details of government. Israel believes it triggered the change by confining him to his West Bank headquarters beginning in December and persuading the United States to shim him. The boycott has turned Arafat into a lonely prisoner. He receives some delegations and the occasional envoy from the European Union or United Nations, but the steady stream of foreign ministers to his Ramallah compound has stopped. Left with little to do, especially on curfew days when Israeli troops shut down the entire town, Arafat reads, looks out the window or encourages switchboard operators to put through calls from ordinary Palestinians offering advice or seeking help.


The Chronicle

MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 16, 2002 � PAGE 7

IRAQ from page 2

tector. Arab countries maintain that a war in Iraq could destabilize a region already tense over Palestinian-Israeli said late Saturday he hoped the crisis violence. could be resolved without new action by The United States is pushing for a the council. Security Council resolution that would Although the Iraq crisis has taken set a quick deadline for Iraq to allow center stage at the current session of the the return of weapons inspectors and General Assembly, Arabs said that the comply with all previous resolutions. conflict with Israel continues to domiIf Iraq did not comply, the Bush adnate their lives, as it has since the es- ministration wants the council’s autablishment ofthe Jewish state in 1948. thorization to take military action. Syria’s foreign minister accused the Secretary of State Colin Powell met world of “blind bias” in dealing with with council members last week to garIraq while ignoring what he said was ner support for a tough resolution. Israel’s refusal to abide by similar inUN. Secretary General Kofi Annan ternational demands. joined a Saturday meeting of the 22“Is it reasonable for the world to remember Arab League at the United quest Iraq implement Security Council Nations to urge them to individually resolutions while some assist Israel in pressure Iraq. Arab diplomats later said Iraq’s being above international law?” Farouk al-Sharaa asked in a speech Sabri told them his country was ready Sunday to the General Assembly, clearto let inspectors return, but after cerly referring to the United States, which tain conditions were met. Washington has rejected any conditions. many Arabs consider Israel’s main pro-

SORORITIES from page 3 ment orientation Oct. 7, which replaces rush previews as the method of assigning spaces for rush, will prevent “dirty rushing” this fall.

“The new members will be made aware of the [recruitment] process,” Manley said. She said it will help these women understand what a recruitment violation is and how the violation is processed by a judicial committee. Sorority members have an incentive to attend this session, earning points to receive their top room preferences and themes during recruitment. Miller explained rush previews were an ineffective way to gain “space points,” which determine the order in which sororities choose the rooms in which they will conduct meetings for prospective members, and Panhel members needed to devise a new process. “Rush previews simply wasn’t working in the way that it was intended to work, and a new system was needed,” she wrote. “If the new meeting is done well, I think it can definitely be helpful to the chapters and the whole Panhellenic recruitment process.” Sorority leaders said the recruitment rule meeting will be an effective

way to inform members of Panhel policies and procedures. “I think the new recruitment workshop will educate all our members so that all chapters are starting out with the same expectations of each other,” said senior Becky Abraham, president ofDelta Gamma. Panhel leaders have also supported a measure that will permit freshmen to pay the recruitment fee only if they decide to join a sorority. In the past, potential members had to pay a fee when they applied. Manley said she hopes this change will lead more women to rush. “I probably wouldn’t even have considered it ifI had to pay” freshman Jen Martini said. “I definitely would’ve been more hesitant [to rush].” Miller said that potential members might feel less obligated to “stick out” recruitment if they do not have to pay before the process begins. “It creates a sort of no-risk, no-obligation kind of feeling for the girls going through recruitment,” she said. “It might make’the decision to drop out easier.” Slagle wrote that the postponement of the fee is not a positive change. “Girls need to be made more aware that pledging membership to a sorority entails a certain financial obligation,” she wrote.

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Sharaa repeated Syria’s opposition to Weapons inspectors who were seeking out the elements of Iraq’s projects an attack on Iraq and took aim at Ison nuclear, chemical and biological rael. “Making Israel abide by Security Council resolutions amounting to 28 weapons left the country before U.S. and British airstrikes in 1998 and resolutions” is the only way out of the Middle East crisis, Sharaa said. have not been allowed to return. Bahrain’s foreign minister also Saddam’s regime maintains that it has fulfilled all U.N. obligations and urged U.N. action to end the Palestinian-Israeli conflict. wants an end to U.N. sanctions im“The oppression to which the Palesposed after the Iraqi army invaded Kuwait in 1990. tinian people are subjected t0... reSyria, like other Arab countries, has quires the immediate intervention of frequently complained that Israel is not the Security Council and the international community to stop Israeli pracheld to account for refusing to impletices against the Palestinian people,” U.N. resolutions for Israeli calling ment Sheik Mohammed bin Mubarak told withdrawal from Arab territories capthe General Assembly. tured in the 1967 Middle East war. Bush Jordan’s Muasher called for Israeli Thursday, his reafspeech In firmed Washington’s support for crewithdrawal from occupied Palestinian ation of a Palestinian state side by side cities and for the resumption of peace negotiations. Senior officials from the with Israel and said America will continue to encourage efforts to reach a United States, the United Nations, the “just and comprehensive settlement” to European Union and Russia are scheduled to meet Tuesday to discuss the Isthat conflict. At the General Assembly Sunday, rael-Palestinian situation.


The Chronicle

PAGE 8 � MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 16, 2002

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Sign up for our mailing lists and receive regular updates on our events! Visit our website at http://career.studentaffairs.duke.edu

CAREER FAIR notice! The annual

Career Fair will be held on Wednesday, September 25! Prepare yourself by registering for BIueDevNTRAK on our website and attending any of our following events

STUDENT ASSISTANTS NEEDED for Career Fair This is your chance to talk to the recruiters on a more informal basis and get the inside scoop on the jobs that will be available and what these organizations are looking for. Assistants are needed throughout the day from 8:00am to 4:3opm. The Career Center will put together a resume booklet of all students who act as assistants and present them to the recruiters at the Career Fair. Email: racquel.white@duke.edu for more information. You can sign up to be a Career Fair Assistant in The Career Resource Library (21 7 Page).

Resume, Cover Letter, and Interview Workshops Cover Letter Workshop Monday, September 16, 11 am, 106 Page Resume Workshop Tuesday, September 1 7, 7pm, 106 Page Interview Workshops Wednesday, September 18, 4pm, 106 Page Thursday, September 19, spm, 106 Page

Fuqua2Duke Resume Reviews! If you are a pre-business student interested in having your resume looked at by Fuqua MBA students, stop by the table on the BC Walkway on Tuesday, September 17, from 11 am-2pm to have your resume reviewed! For more information, contact andrew.halverstam@duke.edu.

On-Campus Recruiting Workshop Confused about the whole On-Campus Interviewing (OCI) process? Come attend any of these informal sessions to learn how to register for BlueDevilTßAK, sign up for company interviews, and submit your resume You may also contact our helpline at 660-1070. lues. 9/1 7 at spm and Wed. 9/18 at 4pm, both at 217 Page (Resource Room).

Teach Abroad! You may have considered studying abroad, but what about teaching? Come learn how and where! Wednesday, September 18, spm, 106 Page

Careers in Finance Interested in finding out candid, relevant information about the breadth of careers available in finace? This event will have a panel discussion, Q&A, and an opportunity to meet and network with employer representatives from Bank of America, Capitol One, GE, Eli Lilly, and American Express Financial. Wednesday, September 18, 7pm, 106 Page. Career Fair Preparation Workshops For MA/MS students: Thursday, September 19, 4pm, 106 Page For Undergraduates: Friday, September 20, 3pm, 106 Page.

Resume Critiques on the BC Walkway! Need a head start on the upcoming CAREER FAIR? Get a quick resume critique on the BC Walkway; Friday, September 20, 11 am -1 ;30pm

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Le Placard (The Closet) Directed by Francis Veber (2001) Wednesday, October 2nd, 8:00pm Griffith Film Theater, Bryan Center

Les Rivieres Pourpres (The Crimson Rivers) Directed by Mathleu Kassovltz (200) Wednesday, October 9th, 8:00pm Griffith Film Theater, Bryan Center

La Pianiste (The Piano Teacher) Directed by Michael Haneke (2001) Wednesday, October 23rd, 8:00pm Griffith Film Theater, Bryan Center

35 mm films screened in French with with English Subtitles. All films are free and open to the public. The French and Francophone Fim Series was made possible with the support of the Cultural Services of the French Embassy and the French Ministry of Culture (CNC). Cosponsored by the Center for French and Francophone Studies, the Department of Romance Studies, and the Program in Film and Video's Screen/Society program. Series organized by Karen Cirillo of the Program in Film and Video. For further information, please visit our website www.duke.edu/web/cffs



Sportswrai

2 �MONDAY,

The Chronicle

this week’s issue In Mfaowao® A look at the ACC Weekend

Terrence Holt blocked a 38-yard field goal with 9:08 remaining during the Wolfpack's 32-12 victory over Wake Forest to become the ACC's all-time leading kick-blocker. It was the 12th blocked kick of Holt's career. Clemson took control of the battle for the middle-tier of the ACC when it bested Georgia Tech 24-19 Derrick Hamilton led the Tigers, running for 97 yards and a touchdown. Hamilton also returned a punt 79 yards to set up another Clemson score. The game was the first in the last six between the two schools that was decided by more than a field goal. •

Sportswrap Editor: Paul Doran Managing Editor: Tyler Rosen Photography Editor: Robert iai Graphics Editor: Brian Morray Sr. Associate Editor: Evan Davis Associate Editors: Nick Christie, Mike Corey, Neelum Jeste Writers: Gayle Argan, Jesse Colvin, Paul Crowley, Abby Gold, Gabe Githens, Michael Jacobson, Jack Kamb, Colin Kennedy, Paula Lehman, Robby Levine, Ted Mann, Assaad Nasr, Sarah O'Connor, Jake Poses, Shane Ryan, Robert Samuel, Adam Schmelzer, Brian Smith, Catherine Sullivan, Matt Sullivan, Emily Vaughan, Jeff Vernon, Adam Yoffie

Special thanks to Chronicle editor Dave

Ingram and managing editor Kevin Lees

NCAA Top 25

Founded in

1 Miami 44, Temple 21 No. 2 Oklahoma 68, Texas El-Paso 0 No. 3 Texas 52, North Carolina 21 No. 4 Tennessee 26, Middle Tenn. St. 3 No. 5 Florida State 37 Maryland 10 No. 6 Ohio State 25, No. 16 Wash. St. 7 No. 7 Virginia Tech 47 Marshall 21 No. 8 Georgia 13, South Carolina 7 No. 9 Oregon 58, Idaho 21 No. 10 Florida 34, Ohio 6 No. 11 Southern Calif. 40, Colorado 3 No. 12 Notre Dame 25, No. 14 Michigan 23 No. 13 Washington 34, San Jose St. 10 No. 15 Penn State 40, No. 18 Nebraska 7 No. 17 N.C. State 32, Wake Forest 12 No. 19TexasA&M 14, Pittsburgh 12 No. 20 UCLA 38, Oklahoma St. 24 No. 21 lowa State 36, lowa 31 No. 22 Wisconsin 24, N. Illinois 21 No. 23 California 46, Mich. St. 22 No. 24 LSU 33, Miami (OH) 7 No. 25 Kansas St. 63, E. Illinois 13

1983, Sportswrap is the

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

No,

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

Game OF THE Women's soccer Swamped The Blue Devils beat a pair of Floridian

3

teams—No. 14

Florida, 2-1, in overtime and Central Florida, 3-0.

Football Wild one *

4

Three bad plays and fourth-quarter rally offset Alex Wade's 134-yard day as Northwestern beat Duke.

Football

Game commentary

5

Despite a matchup between two of the nation's biggest conferences, no one noticed.

Men's soccer ® Maryland

Field hockey Ramming Rams •

The Blue Devils broke a 2-2 tie to beat Virginia Commonwealth 5-2 in Richmond, Va.

Cross Country

Good start

7

The nationally ranked cross country teams got solid wins under their belts.

Coming tomorrow Both the men's golf and tennis teams began fall action this weekend.

Sunday, Sept. 22, 2 p.m. Ludwig Field After picking up a huge upset against the nation's No. 2 team, Clemson, the Blue Devils travel north to face No. 18 Maryland for a pivotal ACC game. If the Blue Devils win they would move to an impressive 2-0 in the ACC and establish themselves as a contender. A loss could mean a rough conference season.

The Hart Leadership Program and the Division of Student Affairs present

Shane Battier

"Leadership: A Commitment to Act" Wednesday, September 18, 7 p.m. Page Auditorium Ticket distribution: Bryan Center walkway. Sept. 16-17, 10am-4pm. Limit two tickets per person. Co-sponsored by the Athletics Department, the Duke University Union, and The Chronicle. The Hart Leadership Program is part of the Terry Sanford Institute of Public Policy.


The Chronicle

Sportswrai

16, 2002 �PAGE 3

MONDAY,

Women’s soccer shocks No. 14 Florida Gators Casey McCluskey’s 8-yard goal 3 minutes into overtime gives Duke rare home win vs. UF 6

romc e

2 The women’s soccer Duke team returned from Florida 1 this weekend’s road trip with a pair of wins over Central Florida and No. 14 Florida at the Adidas Showdown in Gainesville, Fla. The Blue Devils followed up their 30 win over Central Florida Friday by defeating the Gators in a thrilling 2-1 overtime game Sunday afternoon, with Casey McCluskey netting both goals for Duke. With just over three minutes into the first sudden-death overtime, McCluskey used her lightning-quick speed to beat the Gator defense and create a breakaway for herself. The sophomore midfielder let her shot rip from eight yards away and scored her second golden goal this season.

“Florida is a final four team from last year and they’ve won a national championship,” head coach Robbie Church said. “Anytime you get a win at Florida it is a very, very precious thing.”

Despite being outshot by Florida 8-4 in the first half, Duke made an attacking run that drew a penalty kick for McCluskey with three minutes remaining in the half. She subsequently buried the shot behind Florida goalkeeper Jordan Kellgren and gave the Blue Devils a 1-0 lead. Church then decided to preserve both the lead and some ofhis players’ energy by changing strategy for the second half. “It was very hot and very humid,” Church said. “We had to do some things tactically to change the pace. We compacted our defense and tried to play their outside players tougher because they were very fast.” With more players in the back, Duke forced Florida to struggle to get quality scoring opportunities. The Gators were unsuccessful with their first five shots of the second half, including one penalty kick which Duke goalie Katie Straka denied. Straka’s eight saves in the game were possibly the most impressive statistic for the Blue Devils. “Katie did a fantastic job in the goal

today,” Church said. “She stopped a penalty shot and was tremendous at coming out and collecting the balls in the air.” After a 25-minute lightning delay in the second half, both teams were well-rested from the heat and the Gators were ready to make an offensive surge. With about five minutes remaining on the clock, Florida pushed the ball into the Blue Devils’ half and made one last attempt at tying the game. Defender Candace Rivers found the back of the net at the 87:35 mark in the game when she rifled the ball

past Straka.

The Blue Devils handily defeated the Golden Knights from Central Florida 3-0 in the first match of the Adidas Showdown Friday afternoon. Carolyn Riggs chalked up two goals and Gwendolyn Oxenham scored the other in the win. “We had a lot ofchances against Central Florida,” Church said. “We shared the ball very well but we still have to work on finishing.”

DUKE UNIVERSITY PHOTOGRAPHY

CASEY McCLUSKEY scored the game-winning goal against Florida.

Volleyball drops 3 straight matches in Duke Classic After winning 8 straight to start season, the Blue Devils lost to American, UCSB and Wisconsin By JESSE COLVIN The Chronicle

JENNYMAO/THE CHRONICLE

KRISTA DILL goes up for a kill during the Blue Devils’ loss to the No. 18 Gauchos.

The volleyball team lost big twice SatWisconsin 3 urday in Cameron Indoor Stadium Duke 0 falling to No. 18 UC-Santa Barbara 30 (30-16,30-24,30-22) and No. 12 Wisconsin 3-0 (30-19, 30-15, 30-15) in the Duke Classic. The Blue Devils narrowly lost to American the previous day. Duke’s record now stands at 8-3 after beginning the season a perfect 8-0. The Blue Devils kept each game close before letting the Badgers go on big runs to turn close scores into gaping margins of victory. Wisconsin broke all three games open with runs of 17-9 in the first game, 22-7 in the second game, and 21-5 in the last. However, neither the Duke players nor their head coach Jolene Nagel were ready to concede inferiority. “We have the skill and manpower to play with these teams, but we didn’t play like we could have,” said senior middle blocker Rachel Vander Griend, who had four kills against the Gauchos and four kills and .250 hitting percentage against the Badgers. Nagel agreed with Vander Griend. “We didn’t come to play our best volleyball this weekend,” she said. “We didn’t execute as well as we should have. We didn’t do the little things well.” The Blue Devils only had one player in double digits in kills—Katie Gilman who tallied 10 kills and a .364 hitting average. Wisconsin was able to break away because Duke was having defensive lapses and was making unforced errors.

“We made stupid mistakes, and that’s what’s so frustrating,” Vander Griend said. “We weren’t making those mistakes when we were winning.” The Badgers were led by Lisa Zukowski, Lori Rittenhouse and Amy Hultgren. All three had more than 10 kills, and Rittenhouse had an attack percentage of .579. Nagel said she thought her team did not come out with a high enough level of intensity against Wisconsin. She also pointed to the close loss Friday night against American, saying that it may have hurt the team’s morale. ‘We need to be more consistent,” said junior middle blocker Krista Dill. In the morning game against the Gauchos, the Blue Devils also struggled in the 3-0 loss. Duke had two players with more than nine kills, highlighted by Dill’s 12. Dill also paced the team in hitting average with a mark of .267. Nagel commended Dill for her play Saturday, saying she had the most consistent performance of all her players. Santa Barbara managed to have three players with more than 13 kills, including Francina Edmonds’ 17. Edmonds and Courtney Guerra had hitting percentages of .448 as well. The Blue Devils next face North Carolina A&T Tuesday at home in Cameron Indoor Stadium. Before then, the team hopes to rediscover its formula for winning. “We are just going to work our butts off in practice and hope we find our confidence again,” Vander Griend said.

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MU 4 �MONDAY, HVM

The Chronicle

10,1001

By MIKE COREY The Chronicle

EVANSTON, 111. For nearly three quarters of football Satur■ Duke (1-2) showed semblances of greatness, handling Northwestern (1-2) to the tune of a 2113 advantage. But by the end of the game in Evanston, 111., the Wildcats had rebounded from their early woes to beat Duke 26-21. Duke’s refreshing play began to go sour when junior tailback Chris Douglas re-injured an ankle injury in the second quarter. Duke also sustained injuries to backup tailback Cedric Dargan and starting defensive tackle Demetrius Warrick. Duke persevered, however, grabbing a 21-13 lead early in the third quarter, keeping hopes alive that they could improve their program’s record against Northwestern to 8-5. The Blue Devil running attack was forceful; the defense was responsive; quarterback Adam Smith was accurate; and play calling was intelligent.

In the remaining sixteen minutes of play, however, Duke errors allowed Northwestern to rally and end their eight-game losing streak, seizing a lead they would never relinquish with 10:39 remaining in the game.

“I feel we had a great chance to win,” junior fullback Alex Wade said. “It’s a game we should have won, but you’ve got to give them credit. We handed them the ball and they capitalized on it.” Despite a career game from Wade in which he bulled his way to 134 hard-

fought yards with a 5.4 average per

rush, Duke could not score after the 10:21 mark in the 3rd quarter. Wade explained Duke’s deterioration with a sim-

ple—yet ironic—metaphor. “When it rains, it pours,” Wade said. Quarterback Adam Smith, who solidified his starting role going 13-26 for 188 yards and two touchdowns, agreed with Wade’s assessment. “I don’t think there’s really any way to express the disappointment,” Smith said. “We did a good job on offense except for just three plays.” Those three plays—a fumble from Khary Sharpe recovered by the Wildcats, a miscommunication with a receiver leading to an interception, and a poor handoff to Douglas that was fumbled and also recovered by Northwestern—were magnified by a handful of false start penalties and mishandled snaps. The lapses were fatal for head coach Carl Franks’ much improved squad, and eliminated hopes of a Duke victory over Northwestern for the first time since 1998. “We certainly helped Northwestern beat us,” Franks said. “That, combined with big plays on their part.” Whether or not Duke’s players got nervous after monopolizing the game is moot. It appeared as if the Blue Devils were unable to maintain a high level of play, and in fact returned to the Duke of old in their

setback to the Wildcats.

“We didn’t play our best,” Franks said. “And even playing that way we had a chance to win.” On their first drive of the game, Duke’s offensive line pummeled Northwestern, creating spaces for both Wade and Douglas. The highlight of the djive was a 41-yard pass play to tight end Andy Roland. Smith lobbed a beautiful ball overtop of the defense to a streaking Roland who was brought down at the Northwestern 21. Douglas would even-

Clawed: Blue Devils tually score on an eight-yard dash over the right guard. “Our offensive line did a great job,” Wade said. “They were getting 4 or 5 yard chunks every play.” Duke’s second scoring drive was marked by a 51-yard reverse by true freshman Ronnie Elliot. A shrewd play call, Smith handed the ball to Elliot while in motion, then made a ball fake to Wade. Elliot found a crease along the left sideline and ran virtually untouched to the Northwestern eight yard line where he was shoved out of bounds. Duke would score a few plays later on a bootleg pass to a wide open Roland in the end zone. The Wildcats rallied at the end of the second quarter to cut the lead to 14-13 at halftime. The momentum shifted back to the Blue Devils on their opening drive of the second stanza. Duke marched 80 yards down the field, with bursts from Douglas of three, four, six, and 10 yards; gains by Wade of one, five, and six yards; and a first down pass from Smith to Senterrio Landrum for seven yards. Smith then flung a spiraling ball along the right sideline to a wide open Khary Sharpe who strutted into the end zone, completing the drive in a timely 4:39. “Smith was hitting some people today,” Franks said. Then something happened. To capitalize a steady drive, Northwestern scored on a 32-yard reverse run that left Ted Roofs defense perplexed. A second score, a one yard scamper from quarterback Brett Basanez, came on the heels of consecutive crossing patterns to Northwestern receiver Jon Schweighardt, moving the Wildcats 72 yards closer to the end zone.

Duke’s defense gave Smith and company a few extra chances, thanks to acrobatic interceptions by Alex Green and Terrell Smith late in the second half. Duke could not take advantage, though, gaining just one first down before going four-and-out at midfield. In the end, Duke’s mishaps proved too costly as Northwestern’s offense was able to muster just enough offense—43o yards worth—to outperform the Blue Devils, who accumulated 428 yards. “We’re all down right now,” Franks said. Northwestern 26, Duke 21 FINAL Northwestern (1-2)

Duke (1-2)

1 0

2 13

77

3 6 7

4

F

7

26 21

10

Pint Quarter 8:31 (DU), Douglas 6-yard run (Garber). Drive: 91 yards, 6 plays. 3:42.. Second Querter 14:13 (NU), Wasielski 42-yard FG. 11:06 (DU), Smith 3-yard pass to Roland (Garber). Drive: 80 yards, 7 plays, 3:07. 5:49 (NU), Basanez 17-yard run (Wasielski). Drive: 40 yards. 4 plays, 1:26. 00:00 (NU). Wasieiski 20-yard FG. Third Quarter 10:21 (DU), Smith 32-yard pass to Sharpe (Garber), Drive: 80 yards, 9 plays, 4:39. 4:40 (NU), Aikens 32-yard run (conversion failed). Drive: 61 yards. 8 plays. 3:01. Fourth Quarter 10:39 (NU), Basanez 1-yard run (Wasielski). Drive: 97 yards, 10 plays, 3:26. First downs Rushes-yards (net) Passing yards(net) Passes (atl-comp-int) TotalOffense (plays-yards) Fumble retums-yards Punt retums-yards Kickoff retums-yards Interception retums-yards Punts (number-average)

18 39-185 245 35-21-2 74-430

47-240 188 28-13-2 75-428

2-26

4-24 2-40 2-40

7-37,1

2-38,5

Fumbles-lost

16-146 Possession-time 27:48 32:12 Sacks by (number-yards) 0-0 1-8 RUSHING; Northwestern-Wright 20 att. 107 yards, Aikens 1 att. 32 yards, Basanez 10 att. 29 yards, Herron 4 att. 13 yards. Duke-Wade 25 att. 134 yards, Douglas 15 att. 56 yards, Elliot 1 att. 51 yards, Dargan 1 att. 7 yards. PASSING: Northwestern-Basanez 21-34, 245 yards, 2 INT. Duke-Smith 13-26,188 yards, 1 INT, Dapolito 0-2, 0 yards, 1 INT. RECEIVING; Northwestern-Schweighardt 6 rec. 104 yards, Patrick 5 rec. 54 yards, Jordan 3 rec. 32 yards, Wright 2rec. 25 yards. DukeRoland 4 rec. 62 yards, Powell 3rec. 33 yards, Wade 3 rec. 32 yards, Sharpe 1 rec. 32 yards. INTERCEPTIONS; Northwestern-Stuckey, 1 INT 16 yards, Szymul 1 INT 0 yards. Duke-T, Smith, 11NT 44 yards, Green 1 INT 0 yards. Penalties-yards

YOAV LURIE/THE CHRONICLE

(clockwise from top left) CHRIS DOUGLAS tries to pick up some yards on the ground against the weak Wildcat run defense. ADAM SMITH drops back to throw. ANDY ROLAND levels a Wildcat. NORTHWESTERN QB BRETT BASANEZ looks for an open receiver. ALEXWADE breaks a tackle.


Tha Chronicle

U to Wildcats, 26-21

MOMMY, SEPTEMBER 18, 2002 �MSB 5

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� Two of the nation’s worst football programs met in a match that no one outside of Duke and Northwestern cared about, yet it somehow it was a big contest for both schools. Sitting alone in my hotel EVANSTON, 111. room, having just returned from Northwestern’s 2621 win over Duke, I flipped on the television to find my hometown favorite Ohio State Buckeyes in a grudge match with Washington State. At the time I started watching, OSU was losing by the modest deficit of 7-6. Soon, however, freshman Maurice Clarett took over the game, running by and with y., defenders en route to a 230-yard perCorey formance and a 25-7 victory. Game Commentary Following the game, I begrudgingly watched postgame analysis from the best trio of commentators in college sports—Lee Corso, Kirk Herbstreit, and Chris Fowler. They analyzed the minutia of each Big Ten game that day, extrapolating and interpreting the strength of the conference by the performances of the member schools. OSU-Washington State was of course reported, as was another game with BCS implications, Michigan-Notre Dame. The triumvirate then breezed through statistics and highlights from Wisconsin-Northern Illinois, IllinoisArkansas State, and Minnesota-Toledo. There was a notable exception, however. Where the hell was Northwestern-Duke? Are the

Wildcats not one of the charter members of the Big Ten? Didn’t they play Saturday? Could it be that a Big Ten-ACC matchup was more frivolous than that of a game between the Big Ten and—laughter please—the Sun Belt Conference? Apparently.

The truth of the matter is, the sports world cared little about the outcome of the Duke-Northwestem game. In a game pitting two of major college football’s most despondent programs, there were no BCS bowl hopes in danger nor Heisman Trophy chances dashed. Why, then, did a fan site for Northwestern claim that this contest was one of the most significant in Wildcat history? Besides the natural correlation between the two schools because of academic prowess, Northwestern and Duke will forever be linked because of two unforgettable streaks of losing. Northwestern, of course, holds the NCAA record for the longest losing streak at 34 games, set more than a decade before any current players were playing Nerf football. Duke, as you recall, was recently streaking towards the record. It ceased at 23, along with a lower standard for the football team’s success. Saturday it showed. The Blue Devils played knowing that they were the better team. That attitude was evident in their early dominance, buoyed by offensive and defensive line play that was nothing short of stellar. Sophomore quarterback Adam Smith was, for a time, excellent. Head coach Carl Franks was crafty, utilizing team speed and clever offensive stunts to confuse Northwestern’s defense. Fullback Alex Wade plowed through Northwestern’s defense like a Sherman tank. But, as Wade pointed out following the game, a

land attack is only as useful as its versatility and aerial complements. “We need Chris healthy to make some big plays,” Wade said. “I’m not fast like he is, we need his speed.” Smith fell apart when his team needed him the most. This is probably more attributable to his youth and inexperience then his obvious capabilities as a Division I quarterback, but his inconsistency and poor decisions in the fourth quarter were detrimental nonetheless. “I didn’t put some balls where they needed to be,” he said. Perhaps this game was a bildungsroman for Smith and the Blue Devils. After being asked how important making “big plays” was to Duke’s offense, Smith calmly responded with a resolve and wisdom not customary of players starting just their third college game. “What we need to do is make the small plays in between,” he said. Franks sees the improvement in Smith, as well. This is evidenced by Franks’ decision to not only start Smith, but to play him in the entire second half. He still concedes, however, that Smith still has a long way to go. “He was playing pretty good,” he said. “We left him in because he was playing the best. Adam’s still learning how to play right now.” So as I watch Sportscenter for the third and fourth times in the waning hours of Sunday morning, I’m solaced by more than the quips of Kenny Mayne. Duke football is, indeed, on the rise, despite a disappointing loss to Northwestern yesterday. And soon, if all goes well, my psychologists at ESPN will nary forget to cover Duke games.


6 �MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 18.

Sportswrai

Cross country dominates Lou Onesty Invitational By CATHERINE SULLIVAN The Chronicle

Youth can often be a disadvantage to collegiate cross-country teams, but, if Saturday’s victories at the Lou Onesty Invitational in Charlottesville, Va., are any indication, a plethora ofyoung runners on both the No. 11 women’s and No. 20 men’s squads are poised to lead the Blue Devils to one of their most competitive seasons ever. Nowhere was the triumph of youth more evident than in the women’s race, where five freshmen led Duke (29 points) to a solid victory over 10 teams, including William & Mary (47 points) and No. 16 Virginia (52 points). “Overall, this was a very good start to the season,” head coach Jan Ogilvie said. “There were very few negatives today.” Leading the charge was freshman Caroline Bierbaum, who finished first overall in a time 0f16:59, which is also a personal record. In her first collegiate race, Bierbaum established an early lead and distanced herself from the rest of the pack over the 5,000-meter course. “I was really happy with my time,” Bierbaum said. “I was a little worried that I came out too fast, but I was able to keep the lead.” Bierbaum’s closest competition was

fellow freshman Clara Horowitz, who finished in 17:32, good for second overall. Rounding out the Blue Devils’ top-5 runners were freshmen Shannon Rowbury (6th; 17:58), Sally Meyerhoff (Bth; 18:05) and Laura Stanley (12th; 18:08). Last year’s top runners, sophomores Paige Miller and Paris Edwards, also had solid races, finishing in 14th and

16th places, respectively. “I think this is a good indication of

where we’ll be later in the season,” Ogilvie said. “We’ll only get stronger as the season goes along.” In addition to the women’s dominance, the men’s squad also had a very strong day. Duke (26 points) edged No. 16 William & Mary (34 points) and soundly defeated third-place Virginia (77 points) by placing five runners in the top 10. “They gave us a heck of a fight,” said head coach Norm Ogilvie of the Tribe. “They put out a strong team, and it was a real battle out there.” The men were led by the one-two punch of junior Chris Williams, who finished the 8,000-meter course first overall in a time of 24:28, and sophomore Michael Hatch, who finished second

CHRONICLE FILE PHOTO

JOHANNA BISCHOF scored two goals during Duke’s win over VCU,

Field hockey squashes VCU, loses to Old Dominion, 8-1 By NEELUM JESTE

six saves on the day. She split the position with Erica Perrier the previous day. “Both our goalies are excellent,” 5 The field hockey team Duke rebounded from Satur- Tchou said. “They are very close, abilityVCU 2 day’s loss to Old Dominwise, and we just wanted to split the time and see what they could do.” ion with a 5-2 victory over Virginia ComDuke found itself at the mercy of secmonwealth Sunday. The win snapped the Blue Devils’ two-game losing streak and ond-ranked Old Dominion in its 8-1 loss put them at 3-2 for the season. Saturday. The Lady Monarchs scored “Coming off such a competitive game three goals in the first halfand the first [Saturday], we were happy to have a two goals of the second before Duke win,” head coach Liz Tchou said. “We were found the net. Jessica Fluck scored off a much more proactive in the second game, deflection from Chrissy Murphy for the instead of being reactive, and created Blue Devils’ only point of the day. plays. We had good setups and assists and “They came out and set the tone from were happy to have support in the circle.” the beginning, and we backed off,” Grant Midfielder Chrissy Ashley notched said. “We came out too slow and when the first goal of the game with just we were able to compete, it was too late. under 18 minutes left in the first half. We got a wake-up call with the loss and The Rams’ Lauren Sparrow quickly re- realized how much we need to work on.” The Lady Monarchs scored off half of sponded with a goal four minutes later. With only three seconds remaining in their comer shots and outshot Duke 23the first half, sophomore Johanna 9. Morgan and Perrier combined for 11 Bischof scored off a penalty stroke to saves, compared to ODU’s five. After opening the season with five put the Blue Devils up by one. VCU scored quickly after halftime, road games, the Blue Devils return home this weekend for Saturday’s game but Duke finished off with three unanswered goals, all assisted by freshman against Louisville and a Sunday contest Katie Grant. versus Richmond. “We decided to take control and atDuke 5, Virginia Commonwealth 2 tack,” Grant said. “We came out stronger 1 2 F in the second half. After they scored a FINAL 3 5 2 (3-2) quick goal, we dominated the rest of the Duke 11 2 VCU (3-2) game. In the first half, we didn’t put on GOALS; Duke-Ashley 17:16; Bischof 2, 34:57; 65:42; Sorbello 38:26; the pressure as much.” Dudek 39:57. VCU-Ray 2, 21:28; 36:54, Playing in goal the entire game was SAVES: Duke 6 (Morgan), VCU 10 (Stiles). freshman Christy Morgan, who recorded Stadium: Cary Street Field The Chronicle

CHRONICLE FILE PHOTO

MICHAEL HATCH finished second at the Lou Onesty Invitational.

overall just behind Williams in 24:29. “I was really happy the with race,” Williams said. “Mike and I have been running together a lot. It was great to be one-two with a teammate, but I wish we both could have been first.” William & Mary swept the third through fifth slots to make the race competitive, but sophomore Nick Schneider (6th; 24:50), senior captain Jared Moore (7th; 24:55) and sophomore lan Cronin (10th; 25:13) all finished in the top 10 to secure the Blue Devils’ victory. Cronin, who has traditionally been strongest in middle-distance races, pleased his coach with his performance. “This was clearly the best cross-coun-

try race that lan has ever had,” Norm Ogilvie said. “It was great to see him step up as the fifth man.” The next race for the men is the Great American Cross Country Festival in Charlotte at the end of September, while the women will run a splitsquad meet that weekend in Charlotte and at the Stanford Invitational in Palo Alto, Calif.


The Chronicle

Sportswrai

7

MONDAY, SEPTEMBER IS,

IRIS BORGES, JENNY MAO AND TOM MENDEI/THE

(left to right) OWOICHO ADOGWA receives a pass and dribbles the ball off his thigh. ROBERT ANTONIOU tries to get control of the ball against the Tigers. JORDAN CILA passes across the field

CnrrPß OUuuLrl

.

from The Chronicle page 1 ,

Rennie agreed. “We deserved to win, but beating the number two team in the country... it’s exactly what we needed,” he said. The Blue Devils, who outshot Clemson 15-10, opened the game by chal-

lenging the Tigers and getting a handful of early shots. Duke had a few good scoring opportunities before the 42nd minute, when Perea brought the ball up the left side of the box and crossed the ball to Jordan Cila, who was charging in on the six. Gila’s shot was deflected, ricocheted off the post and was cleared. But the clear went straight to Mclntosh, who blasted a shot from 30 yards out that next made contact with

the upper left corner of the net. the keeper. The shot had such low velocAfter taking the 1-0 lead just before ity, however, that a Clemson defender halftime, Duke did not retreat into a de- was able to race back and save the ball fensive formation. The tenor of the game on the goal line. Clemson finally got on the scoredid not change, as the Blue Devils continued to challenge and, at times, domi- board in the 71st minute when Paul nate in the midfield. When Clemson at- Souders launched a free kick into the tacked the Duke goal, Matt Ahumada or box from the front of the Tigers’ bench, one of Duke’s other defenders usually came up with a well-timed tackle. “It wasn’t one of those games where they were the better team and we were just packing it in and trying to get the breakaway goal,” Mclntosh said. “We wanted to come out here and play. We didn’t want to sit back.” Midway through the second half, Owoicho Adogwa got the ball on a breakaway before being tackled by War-

ren, but managed to slip the ball past

SKI

Ricky Lewis flicked it across the goal with a header and Kenneth Cutler buried it in the goal, During the next twenty minutes of frenetic soccer, both teams had good scoring opportunities, but Warren and Duke keeper Justin Trowbridge had key saves, Duke dominated both overtimes and nearly scored with six minutes left in the first when Perea took the ball with his back to the goal at the edge of the penalty area, turned and fired a shot off

the post. In the next overtime, Perea was able to sneak in the game winner. “We feel like we’ve played better than every team we’ve played against this season,” Perea said. “Last week, losing to South Carolina, we didn’t feel that was a scoreline that represented the way the game should have gone.... This was a fair scoreline. We played even with them and we had better scoring chances. I think we earned some re-

spect here.” Duke 2, Clemson 1 FINAL Clemson (2-1-1, 0-1) Duke (3-1-1,1-0)

OT 2 10 0 1

1 0 1

GOALS: Duke-Mclntosh 41:37; Perea 101:57. Clemson-Cutler (Lewis,

Souders) 70:51.

SAVES: Duke 5 (Trowbridge), Clemson 8 (Warren). Stadium: Koskinen Stadium

Attendance—9so

TEAM

The Duke Ski Team is looking for a new coach. This is a paid position that requires minimal time investment. Applicants must have racing and/or coaching experience and be passionate about the sport. If interested, please contact Brett at bchs@duke.edu.

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The Chronicle

MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 16,2002 � PAGE

to use applications so that people could have the opportunity to try to get involved if they wanted to.” Selecting line monitors from among friends assured past head line monitors that they could depend on their appointees, said senior Brian Goldfarb, who was a line monitor last year and also a candidate for the head line monitor position. “The reason that there hasn’t been a formal application process [is] the head line monitor needs to have a very trusted group of people to work with,” Goldfarb said. By opening up the position to more students, Morgan risks appointing line monitors who will not enforce the rules fairly, Goldfarb said. However, he remained optimistic about the process. “I think [the application process] is a valiant effort to be more inclusive to the Duke community, as long as [Morgan] gets a group of people he can trust,” Goldfarb said. “I think it’s something that needs to be tried.” Trustworthiness is one quality Morgan said he is looking for in applicants—a quality he hopes to discern by interviewing

each candidate. “If they’ve been extremely involved in the tenting process, then they understand the importance of integrity in the process,” he said. “Ideally, I’m looking for upperclassmen that

are big basketball fans... or that

have leadership experience.” Morgan added that he would prefer West Campus residents, for whom K-ville is more easily accessible, although he will not necessarily accept only applicants who live on West. Last spring, some students

opposed Morgan’s appointment, citing his lack of tenting experience and his commitments to other organizations. Although Morgan, also president of the Inhad terfraternity Council, missed only a few basketball games since his freshman year, he had never tented. DSG eventually approved Morgan by a 29 to 10 vote, with four abstentions.

Clifford Davison, Duke Student Government vice president for facilities and athletics, said he favored the new process, which he felt could establish a fair system and help justify why each

line monitor was selected. “I’m glad to see this happening,” he said. “My only disappointment is I wish it had happened sooner.” The applications could also create a more diverse group of line monitors, Davison, a junior, said. “In the long run, having a diverse group of line monitors will also attract a diverse group of people,” he said. “There’s a significant impact on campus culture [in K-ville]. Adding an element of diversity to that would

be great.”

Applications are available in the DSG office in the Bryan Center and are due Sept. 25.

TENTERS FOR MEN’S BASKETBALL get their IDs verified at a tent check last year with line monitors, who in the past have usually been friends of the head line monitor.

Help Grace with her knitting, talk cooking or t

Taize Evening Prayer Tuesdays at 5:15 p.m.

mysteries. Since her stroke two years ago, her husband James cares for her around the clock. She would love to meet someone new who them both a ed

in the Memorial

Chapel of Duke Chapel

All are welcome to this unique meditative service of prayer and song in the style of the ecumenical community of Taize.

Come

Meditate

m VOLUNTEERS NEEDED

Pray

Grow Your Spirit ■

MONITOR from page 1

9

Make Money N

Join the

Duke Undergraduate Investment Club "Learning for Profit"

Introductory Meeting; Wednesday, September 18th Social Sciences, Room 311 Bpm

Enter our Stock Picking Contest! Make Valuable Contacts! For more info contact: Dan Roller (djr2@duke.edu) or Beth Lesniak (bal7@duke.edu)


The Chronicle

PAGE 10 � MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 16, 2002

OPEC from page 2 getting hit and an American invasion is

brewing.” Arab allies of the United States appear to be softening their resistance to an attack against Iraq now that President George W. Bush’s administration has appealed to the United Nations to enforce resolutions against Baghdad. Egypt’s foreign minister, Ahmed Maher, said last week that his government would support an American strike against Iraq if it were approved by the United Nations. The Saudi foreign minister, Prince Saud al-Faisal, told CNN Sunday that if the United Nations ap-

proved attacks on Iraq, his country would permit its air bases to be used, a reversal of its earlier position. What is unclear is whether such flexibility will extend to increasing oil exports. The reluctance to increase output stems in part from a conviction among most OPEC members that global markets have enough oil. OPEC members say they think that prices have been driven higher by anxiety over war and the possibility of disruptions of oil shipments from the Persian Gulf, not by the balance between supply and demand. “OPEC says, ‘Prices may look like $3O, but $2, $3, $4 of that may be hype and we don’t raise production based on

hype,”’ said Vahan Zanoyan, the chief executive of the Petroleum Finance Co., a Washington consulting firm. “So how do you respond to a market that isn’t based on fundamentals?” Analysts are divided about what OPEC should do, given the swarm of political and economic uncertainties. OPEC has reduced its output 3.5 million barrels since January, and is now producing 21.7 million barrels a day. Normally, prices as high as they have been this year—on average about

$25 a barrel—are indicative of a

healthy global economy. But several analysts said that this time, the prices are not a result of demand, but of supplies reduced by

DUMA from page 1

ALEX GARINGER/THE CHRONICLE

Cornin’ down the home stretch A contestant in the Duke Blue Devil triathlon runs to the end of the finish line Saturday night on West Campus.

IJI Bnil; i2B

“At any given time, a museum is only able to show 2 percent of its pieces. With the new facility, we will be able to display more than that,” he said. Among the new pieces acquired are two large, painted Egyptian sarcophagus masks. Anne Schroder, curator for research and exhibitions, explained that the pieces were done by an unknown artist during the Ptolemaic period. Helene Awad Wahba donated the pieces to the museum earlier this year. The masks show detailed pharaoh faces with striking brown eyes and delicate features. Each is surrounded by a black and gold headpiece and is made from wood. Elsewhere in the room, there is a large Roman sculpture believed to be the head of Bacchus, the Greek god of wine. Due to damage, which Schroder said occurred before DUMA acquired the piece, a fragment of the head has been lost. But from what remains, the artist had apparently intended the piece to be very realistic, Schroder added. This first century marble piece is just one of many examples of the works that DUMA acquired this year and that will be featured in the museum’s new space. Tucked away in one side of the storage area is a large canvas painting entitled “Madison Avenue”. The painting

OPEC and by Iraq, which has taken most of its exports off the market because of disputes with the United Nations over sanctions. The higher prices, in turn, analysts said, may be slowing the economic recovery. At this time of year, oil companies and refiners in Europe and the United States usually build reserves of crude oil ahead of the heating season. But stockpiles have been falling because few refiners are buying oil at high prices if there is chance they might fall shortly, “and the market is getting steadily tighter as we go into winter,” said Leonidas Drollas, the chief economist at the Center for Global Energy Studies in London. was done by a Russian artist named Shimon Okshteyn and it features a striking young woman in a delicate green dress standing in front of a store window with her white dog. The painting was done in 1985 and is currently on loan to DUMA from Sidney and Judith Myers, Schroder explained. Duke students are encouraged to take advantage of the opportunity to view the works, Mezzatesta said, as well as thousands of other pieces that also make up the DUMA collection. He expects the new museum will offer a welcoming environment for students. “We want students to go there to learn, look at art, take a class or even to read a book in our sculpture gar-

den,” Mezzatesta said. One student who is excited about the prospect of viewing the new art pieces in public is sophomore Rachel Knox, who is currently fulfilling her pre-medicine requirements but also looking for ways to explore her creative nature. “I have been interested in art my whole life. Scheduling conflicts here do not allow me to indulge in it as often as I would like,” Knox said. “The new museum sounds like it will provide more opportunities for me to do so in the future.” For now, these priceless pieces sit in storage and wait for their viewers, but soon, in their new home, they are sure to draw crowds.

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.

Undergraduate graphics assi stent needed for 6~3hrs/w(c on estimate-related research. Should be familiar with or have

ability in various MA-O-baSed

graphics packages, transferring

data on the web, and

graphics;

SAMPLE TITLES OF URS RESEARCH PROJECTS 4 Cervantes in England 4 Structural Studies of Telomerase 4 4 Temporal Network Theory � Effect of Fatty Acids on Pancreatic Islet Insulin Secretion 4 4 Health-Seeking Behaviors of Latinas 4 Psychology of Venture Capital Decision-Making � 4 Towards the Synthesis of a Useful Molecule for Self-Assembly 4

Undergraduate Research. Support Office 04 Allen Building ��� 684-6536

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Classifieds

The Chronicle Announcements

GRAD & PROF’L SCHOOL DAY

ATTENTION SENIORS!!

Thursday, October 24. Don’t miss your chance to meet representatives from more than 60

Information meeting for Seniors interested in applying to Business School. Tuesday, September 17 in 139 Social Sciences at s:3opm. Please attend!

Business, Graduate, Law and Medical Schools. From 10am4pm visit tables and meet reps

HARVARD BUSINESS SCHOOL An open presentation on admissions. Thursday, September 26, 12:00 noon, (Bring Your Lunch), Breedlove Room, 204 Perkins Library. Sponsored by the Duke Business Club and the Prebusiness Advising Office.

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

“READING AS A WRITER” WORKSHOP

‘www.EasyToTalkTo.com’.

Wednesday, September 18, 11:45 to 1 PM, 106 West Duke. Learn strategies to interact more deeply and more productively with what you read. Sign up for this interactive Writing Studio workshop online at

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Brand new townhomes for rent! Away from the bustle but minutes to everything you need. Roomy, crisp, and entertainment friendly floorplans. Many amenities including pool and clubhouse. 2 & 3 bedrooms, starting at 1100/mo. Call 919-225-5874. New, one bedroom garage apartment. Fully furnished, full size bed, all kitchen needs. Off-street parking, one-half block to East Campus. Walk to everything including bus. Rent includes electric and water. $7OO. Call 286-0556 or email

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MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 16, 2002 � PAGE II

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. EHO.

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THE CLOSEST APT COMMUNITY TO DUKE. 2 MONTHS FREE! Academic leases available. Flexible lease terms. Walk or free shuttle bus to campus. Check our specials! CHAPEL TOWER APARTMENTS, 3836677. www.apts.com/chapeltower. EHO.

AWESOME DEAL 1 -bedroom starting at $559. 2bedroom starting at $677. 3bedroom starting at $875. FREE W/D and spa membership.

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Beautiful 2 BRs, ideal for students. Convenient to Duke, East and West campus. $6OO. Starting at Upcoming seniors remember to reserve your 4 to 7 bedroom house for next year! Call Amy at (919) 416-0393 or www.bobschmitzproperties.com.

needed.

1-800-293-3985 ext 519. 1998 Volvo Wagon, 1 owner. 34,800 miles. Garaged Leather interior. CD. $18,900. Call 933-8018.

Business Opportunities Get Green s6oo+/week On campus job marketing electric vehicles, use your own creativity to promote, fop pay, flexible hours, free demo product. Call Penny 415-455-5300.

BARTENDERS NEEDED No experience necessary. Earn up to $3OO a day. 866-291-1884 ext. ullO.

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Babysitter needed for 6 mo old at our home 10 min from Duke. Hours vary. Call 401-9663.

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Chronicle Business Office A/V SPECIALIST Men's Rugby needs help with digital photography at matches. Social benefits. Visit

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Students Needed: Data entry, general office duties. 10-12 hrs/wk. Contact Mary Weaver 684-3811. GARDEN WORKER needed by professor for mowing, weeding, pruning etc., 10-15 hrs/week at your convenience. We have all

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Leadership Work-Study Work-Study assistant needed for Hart Leadership Program. Work includes program development, data entry, general office duties, etc. Prefer current/former HLP student with Access skills. $9/hour. 510 hours/week flexible. Contact dashaies@pps.duke.edu.

Personal Injury Traffic Tickets Minor Criminal

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The Chronicle

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

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Needed student...preferably with work-study funding...to work in the capacity of a lab assistant to assist with experiments, prepare buffers and cell culture media, cast electrophoersis gels, assist in stocking lab and re-ordering lab supplies, help maintain frozen cell bank. Rate: $7.50 Contact: Tim Clay, Ph.D. at 684-5705 Hours: Flexible Needed Student...preferably with work-study funding...to do filing, light typing, errands, copying, etc. Rate:

Hyde

$7.00/hr Contact; Sheila @684-3942. Hours: Flexible

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, 684SI 30.

RECEPTIONIST WANTED New hair salon in southwest Durham. Morning and afternoon hours available. Call 317-8730. Please leave message.

-

payment Prepayment is required Cash, Check, Duke IR, MC/VISA or Flex accepted (We cannot make change for cash payments.) 24 hour drop off location •101 W. Union Building -

or mail to: Chronicle Classifieds Box 90858, Durham, NC 27708 0858 fax to: 684-8295 e-mail orders classifieds @ chronicle.duke.edu -

phone orders: call (919) 684-3811 to place your ad. Visit the Classifieds Online!

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’AGE 12 � MONDAY,

The Chronicle

16, 2002

SEPTEMB

Research Data Technician

NTX THUNDER 21 SOX amplifier and 2 12” ORION XTRI2S subwoofers enclosed. $425/neg. Call Britton, 423-2230.

Houses For Rent

Cognitive Psychology Lab Applications invited for full-time data technician position in the Cognitive Psychology Lab, DUMC. This lab is located in the Center for the Study of Aging and conducts research on agerelated changes in cognition, using behavioral and neuroimaging (fMRI) methods. Duties include analysis of neuroimaging data, subject recruitment & research testing, data entry, and general office work. Required: Bachelor’s degree, good communication skills, computer skills. Helpful: knowledge of statistics, interest in cognitive testing. & neuroimaging. Submit your resume on-line at http://www.hr.duke.edu/apply. In the requisition field enter MCTR22763. Duke is an Action/Equal Affirmative Opportunity Employer.

3 Bedrooms, Dining room, Newly remodeled kitchen and bath, fireplace, washer and dryer. Large backyard with stone patio. Quiet neighborhood. Close to Duke. $B5O/month. Call 620-0399. Prefer upper grads. 5 bedroom 2.5 bath house, 1 housemate needed, occupied currently by 4 males, 2 minutes from Duke campus, pool table 919-4937327.

Personals SENIOR ENGINEERS Seminar "Choosing Graduate School” Thursday, Sept. 19, at 7PM 203 Teer Library Bldg. SENIOR

Are you coming to Florida for DUKE vs FSU? Why not stay at the beach? St. George Island rental homes, white sandy beaches, emerald water...only 80 minutes away from Doak Campbell Stadium. Call Anchor Vacation Properties for details. (800) 824-0416 www.floridabeach.com

Student Groups

PLAY RUGBY

Play Rugby? Want to? Learn how to ruck a hooker. No prior experience necessary. Visit http://www.duke.edu/web/rugby/

Swim Instructor Part-time Fall Winter, Spring at Hope Valley Farms. Call 919-403-7875.

Trinity Park House For Rent 2BR, 1 1/2 bath. Five minute walk to Duke. $975/month. Available October 1. Call 688-9101 or Julia@time-

Sylvan Learning Center needs flexible, part-time, enthusiastic college students with initiative to assist teachers. 309-4477.

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Want a break? Reliable gardenter needed close to East campus., 2-3 hours a week. $B.OO/10.00 an hour depending on experience. 2865141. Work Study Student Wanted African & African American Studies 10 hrs/week, competitive salary. Call Connie, 6842830.

chronicle.html.

Travel/Vacation

Duke in Los Angeles Spring 2003 meetings Informational Wednesday, 9/11, 10:30 Tuesday, 9/17, 12:40 Both in 04 Art Museum

#1 Spring Break Vacations! 110% Best Prices! Mexico, Jamaica, Bahams, Florida, Texas. Book Now & Receive Free Parties & Meals Campus Reps Wanted! 1-800-2347007 endlesssummertours.com #1 Spring Break, Travel Free Carribbean, Mexico, Florida, Padre. Free Drinks/Lowest Prices 1-800-426-7710 www.sunsplashtours.com

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Work-study students needed 6-10 hours a week ($6.25 per hour) in Oncology Recreation Therapy. Assist adult cancer patients and family members with recreation groups and activities. Call 6812928.

ENGINEERS Seminar

Graduate School” "Choosing Thursday, Sept. 19, at 7PM 203 Teer Library Bldg.

Duke ‘True Blue Soda” ‘9l National Champs 6-pack cans. Flip-top intact, drained bottom, season record on side, also ‘9l-'92 “Backtoßack” champions cans 6-pack. Make offer, 609-882-0672.

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Spring Break 2003-Travel with STS to Jamaica, Mexico, Bahamas or Florida. Promote trips on-campus to earn cash and free trips. Information/Reservations 1-800648-4849 or www.ststravel.com.

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CRIME from page 4 rying case valued at $3OO, and caused damage to the $3O dash/stereo housing while his secured vehicle was parked at the Science Drive metered parking lot across from Fuqua.

DukeCard lost, purchases reported

Between 1:23 p.m. and 3:15 p.m. Sept. 13, a student lost her DukeCard in the East Campus quad area. When she reported to the Card Office that her card had been lost, she learned that it had been used to make $245 worth of purchases.

Crime briefs are compiled from Duke University Police Department reports. Anyone with knowledge about those responsible for these or other crimes at the University can contact Lt. Davis Trimmer at 684-4713 or Durham CrimeStoppers at 683-1200.

MARY LOU from page 3 should have broken ground already, and for some reasons they haven’t,” Narvarte said. “On the whole I’m grateful for the multicultural center, but I want to see [all the renovation plans] come to fruition.” Senior Troy Clair, another committee member said he was also hoping for more finalized plans. “Things have definitely been moving more slowly than I would have like to have been moving,” he said.. “I would like to see some finalized plans by the time I graduate so we can see some commitment.” Over the past three years, minor renovations have taken place, including a new wooden kitchen floor and changes to the back meeting hall. Due to increased programs and events, however, the center now needs additional expansions on a larger scale, Dunkley said. “We have started to outgrow our capacity. We’re just bursting at the seams,” he said. The renovations will allow for an expansion of the library, which currently holds 600 volumes, as well as more gallery display options for musical instruments and artwork. The meeting hall and gallery will be expanded and office space added. Officials are also planning a Duke-Durham outreach program. Clair said he hopes the renovations will also increase the center’s visibility and accessibility. “The idea is that one of the places to stay is in the West Union, but [the center] has to have a first floor presence. That’s very important to achieve the first goal [of visibility],” he said. “[The renovations] are supposed to add cultural space and also other facilities needed on campus more broadly.” He added that this could include dance rehearsal space. Renovation plans took a significant step forward two years ago through a proposal for a free-standing Mary Lou Williams Center, written by Clair, Denis Antoine, Trinity ’Ol, and Bunia Parker, Trinity ’O2. This developed into a proposal given to the Cultural Space Committee, which issued a final report in May 2001. The plan also drew ideas from a former proposal for increased space for minority groups by Spectrum Organization.

Recycle this newspaper!

WORK STUDY STUDENTS

NEEDED

GRADUATE ASSISTANT needed for the Americas Studies Planning

Committee, a faculty development seminar for interdisciplinary research on the Americas chaired by Jan Radway, Literature. Duties (8 hours per week) will include coordination ofand attendance at committee meetings, management of group correspondence, planning lecture series and special events, copying and circulation of ; reading materials, and some bibliographic research.

GRADUATE OR UNDERGRADUATE ASSISTANT needed for the Race, Gender, Sexuality and the Cultural Study of Medicine working group, a faculty development seminar for interdisciplinary research. Responsibilities include coordinating and attending committee meetings, copying and distributing the readings and announcements, coordinating associated events (e.g. receptions) and arranging for travel and lodgings. Flexible hours. Must be eligible for work-study. Applicants should send resumes by Thursday, Sept. to Amy L. Williams at Amu. Williams@duke.edu. No phone calls please.

2&h


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The Chronicle

MONDAY, SEPTEMBER

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fAAYBE ITS BECAUSE ALL OF OUR COMPUTERS ARE CARDBOARD PROPS THAT UJE STOLE FROtA A FURNITURE STORE.

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14 Lifting device 15 Church

passage

Peggy or

Brenda

Parisian

breakfast? 19 Traveler's stop 20 Sun. homily

21 Jabba the

22 White-water

conveyances

24 Brussels

breakfast?

28 Bronte or Dickinson 30 Gulf of Mex, neighbor

31 Drunkards 32 Inserts 34 Indy stop 37 Fast driver 39 On the line

41 CIA precursor 42 Eaves hanger 44 Scrutinized 45 Shell rival 46 Opera songs

47 London breakfast? Bolshevik leader

53 Lat. list-ender 54 Some MDs 57 Ms. Gardner breakfast? 62 Court divider

Peer recognition Beginners DOWN

34

"Vegas"

Dental malocclusions Stimpy's pal Roguishly Singer

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Landon and others Actor Richard

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7H£ PROTEGE-

18 Embrace e.g. 25 Ultimatum word 26 Twangy 23 Eglin,

Welby, e.g.

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Kildare

THE R3TURH OF

7 Mob violence countermeasure 8 O.T. book 9 Urban RRs 10 Exits Amtrak 11 Precipice 12 Streisand film 13 Thick

27 Produce a literary work 28 Exxon, formerly 29 Swabbing tools 32 Rio Grande tributary 33 Robert of

63 Ray

Doonesbury/ Garry Trudeau

Williams

Snooped

58 Dublin

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16. 2002 � PAGE 13

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35

Bearing

cost of

the

Home decor

company

36 Turner and Williams 38 Lessen 40 Actress Garr 43 Revives

45

Will

Smith

biopic

46 Waterborne 47 Large antelope 48 Less than once 49 Tiny pests 50 King Arthur's father

money

56 Understands 59 Major studio,

once 60 McKellen of "The Lord of

the Rings"

61 Young fish

51 H.S. teachers 55 Guadalajara

ct

The Chronicle Who we think should be Miss North Carolina Nan Keohane; Our city-state editor; Alana Beard: Jessica Rabbit: That girl at the dry cleaners: Sue Newsome: Liddy Dole: Kevin’s girlfriend:

bxTrot/ Bill Amend

Roily:

,Dave and extempy kevi

collins amir paul

dave and jeff brian kiya anthony, alex, bryn, jenny roily

Monica Franklin, Dawn Hall, Jonathan Chiu, Kristin Jackson Katherine Farrell, Johannah Rogers, Sim Stafford David Chen Sales Coordinator: Brooke Dohmen Administrative Coordinator: Chris Graber National Coordinator: Charlotte Dauphin, Megan Harris Creative Services; Chris Reilly, Melanie Shaw Business Assistants: Sallyann Bergh Classifieds Coordinator:

Account Representatives: Account Assistants: Sales Representatives:

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 MONDAY Biology/EEOB Seminar: 4pm. "The Evolution of Genome Complexity," Mike Lynch, Indiana University. 111 Biological Sciences.

TUESDAY

Teer House: 4pm. Diabetes in African-Americans, Marilyn Sparling. Call 416-DUKE. 4019 N. Roxboro Road.

Duke Event s Calendar j

10am, Reform Services. Freeman Yom Kippur: Center for Jewish Life.

6pm, Reform and Conservative Yom Kippur: Services. Freeman Center for Jewish Life. Yom Kippur: Sundown, around 7:45pm, Break Fast. Free to all students, RSVP for meals by Thursday, September 12, spm. Freeman Center for Jewish Life.

Social

Programming

and Meetings

Teer House; 7pm. Using Acupuncture for Relief of Pain and Stress, Joe Pfister and Lori Fendell. Call 416-DUKE. 4019 N. Roxboro Rd.

MONDAY Hip Hop Film Fest Premieres: 7pm. "Straight Outa Hunter's Point." Griffith Film Theater, Bryan Center.

WEDNESDAY

Cinemateque: Bpm. "Out of the Past," directed by Jacques Tourneur. For information, call 684-2323. White Lecture Hall, East Campus.

Duke

College Bowl: Bpm-10pm, Wednesdays.

acaGeneral practice for upcoming intercollegiate demic and pop culture competitions, as well as organization for upcoming high school tournaments. 107F West Duke No experience necessary. Chuck, Ph.D. Thomas Emil Building. etchuck@yahoo.com.

Yom Kippur; 9am, Conservative Freeman Center for Jewish Life

Admission is Free.

Hip Hop Film Fest Premieres: 9pm- "Scratch." Griffith Film Theater, Bryan Center. Admission is Free,

Services

Duke Friends of Israel: Bpm. Information Meeting with free ice cream. East Campus. Theatre of Yugen/Theatre Nohgaku: Bpm. An evening that features a short Kyogen comedy, Tied to a Pole (Bo Shibari), followed by William Butler Yeatsl Noh- influenced play At the Hawkt s Well (in English), plus a short musical interlude of Noh Hayashi music on traditional instruments. Reynolds Theater, Bryan Center, $22 Preferred Rows; $lB General Seating: $l2 Students. 660-3356, CONTACT: Institute of the Arts, duke.edu/web/dia.

WEDNESDAY VACCESSHeaIth: in cooperation with Student Health Service, will be conducting a Meningitis, MMR and Tetanus Immunization Program for all Duke University Students. Bryan University Center Von Cannon Room. Meningitis, $BO. MMR, $6O. Tetanus, $3O. Bill to you Bursar / Flex Account. For more information; please contact VACCESSHeaIth at 1-800-321-8419. -

TUESDAY THE SYMPOSIUM: 7pm. Info session for those interested in editing, photography, layout, etc. 204 Perkins, Breedlove Room. Email chi@duke.edu for application.

Religious MONDAY

-

Kevin Epps, Tod Hickey, Kevin Fitzgerald, Lila Maes and Mark Martzke. This discussion is a continuation of a previous discussion that will be held on September 16, 2002 in between the films in Griffith Film Theater at 8:30 p.m. Mary Lou Williams Center for Black Culture.

Hip Hop Film Fest Panel Discussion: Bpm. Enter into Film Fest filmmakers

a conversation with Hip Hop

Ongoing Events Exhibition Continues; "‘Shroud’ from Anya

Belkina." Exhibition runs through February 2, 2°°3 ° uke universi,y Museum f Ar

-

°

*

Exhibition Continues; "Russian Collection Re-Installation," From the Permanent Collection. Exhibition runs through December 20, 2002. Duke University Museum of Art "Missing: Continues: Documenting the Spontaneous Memorials of

Exhibition

9/11," Photography. Exhibition runs through October 27. Duke University Museum of Art

Orthodox Weekly Vespers/Fellowship: Christian Student Fellowship. Duke Chapel

Basement.

Father Edward Rummen, 919-

782-7037, fatheredward@mindspring.com.

CDS Exhibition: Through Sep 28. Juke Joint: An Installation by North Carolina Artist Willie Little. The Center for Documentary Studies, 1317W. Pettigrew Street. For more information, 660-3663, cds.aas.duke.edu, daocstudies @ duke.edu. Photography Exhibition: Through Oct 3. 9/11 Memorials. Duke University Museum of

For more information, www.duke.edu/duma. Art.

684-5135,

Touchable Art Gallery; Art and crafts by people with visual impairments. Main Lobby, Duke Eye Center.


The Chronicle

PAGE 14 � MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 16, 2002

The Chronicle Florida’s voting woes

Florida

On

the record

“If they’ve been extremely involved in the tenting process, then they understand the importance of integrity in the process. Ideally, I’m looking for upperclassmen that are big basketball fans... or that have leadership experience.” Jeremy Morgan, a Trinity senior, comments on the application process for line monitors (see story, page one)

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 JANE HETHERINGTON, Photography Editor REBECCA SUN, Projects Editor RUTH CARLITZ, City & Slate Editor RYAN WILLIAMS, City & State Editor MIKE MILLER, Health & Science Editor BECKY YOUNG, Features Editor MEG LAWSON, Recess Editor GREG VEIS, Recess Editor JODI SAROWITZ, TowerView Managing Editor MATT ATWOOD, Tower View Editor BRIAN MORRAY, Graphics Editor JOHN BUSH. Online Editor ROBERT TAI, Sports Photography Editor TYLER ROSEN, SportsManaging Editor AMI PATEL, Wire Editor KIRA ROSOFF, Wire Editor MOLLY JACOBS. Sr. Assoc. Features Editor MELISSA SOUCY, Sr. Assoc. City & State 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 SETH LANKFORD, Online Manager THAD PARSONS, Sr. Assoc. Photography Editor ALISE EDWARDS, Lead Graphic Artist SUE NEWSOME, Advertising Director 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 those of Duke University, its students, faculty, staff, administration or trustees. Unsigned editorials represent the majority view of the editorial board. Columns, letters and cartoons represent the views of the authors. To reach the Editorial Office (newsroom) at 301 Flowers Building, call 684-2663 or fax 684-4696. To teach the Business Office at 103 West Union Building, call 684-3811. To reach the Advertising Office at 101 West Union Building call 684-3811 or fax 684-8295. Visit The ChronicleOnline 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.

1; IT'S

Letters to

b'PRBB

the editor

Students have scant options when sick on weekends I write this letter primarily as a warning to other unsuspecting freshmen and the Duke community at large: Avoid, at all costs, falling ill on a weekend. Thanks to a baffling system for student health emergencies and a sore throat, last Saturday, I learned that lesson the hard way. I woke up in the early

afternoon with a red and very irritated pharynx. Fearing strep throat, I located the Student Health Clinic

on East Campus (unmarked on any map I could find) and found that it was open only

Monday through Friday. I returned to my dorm, talked to a residential advisor, and learned that the Student Health Center on Flowers Drive would be able to help. I rode a bus to Trent Drive Hall, on her advice, and found no signs present to indicate the Student

Health Center’s existence. Trudging aimlessly through the pouring rain, I eventually decided to enter one of the structures in a large complex at the top of the hill that I soon found to be the Duke University Medical Center. After nearly 20 minutes of bumbling through the abandoned building, I ran into a kind woman who directed me, in the sub-basement, to the Student Health Center. But my hope of getting medical attention was

short-lived—we looked on,

both of us in surprise, at the abandoned reception area, a metal gate in front of it. My only recourse, she told me, was to reach a distant area of the building and take a special bus to Duke Hospital North (which I had never heard of) and go to the emergency room. Deciding this plan to be a tad excessive for a sore

throat, I thanked her and went to the ground floor, prepared to head back to East. To my shock, however, nearly every marked “exit” turned out to be a locked emergency exit. I ended up escaping the labyrinth through a first floor

window, unsuccessful, back into the rain. Maybe I missed something during orientation or maybe I just don’t know my way around campus well enough. But as far as I can tell, the clinic on East was closed; the center near Trent, out of service; and the emergency room, extraordinarily remote. This situation poses a real problem for anyone unfortunate enough to get sick on a Saturday, and it needs to be fixed as soon as possible. Andrew Gerst Trinity ’O6

Flyer policy needed, but DSG will find alternatives Last year while riding the bus to East Campus, I could not help notice a list entitled “The Axis of Evil at Duke” and sure enough the newly enacted flyer policy was right up there. As a representative of the student body, I feel a

tremendous disappointment for seeing this policy go through and cause such confu-

sion. Undoubtedly, this frustration arises out of misinformation. With that said, let me try to clear this up. The official flyer policy is

nothing new. In actuality it has been around since 1997. It was only last year through a University-wide collaboration that we decided to enforce it. In the end, we wanted to bring

Letters

means finding the funds to install digital displays on the Bryan Center walkway and

about a cleaner campus for all. The clean-up and damage costs of flyering Duke stone became so tremendous that it was time to stop it. I don’t know about you, but not having to worry about tripping over flyers taped to the ground or not seeing bits and pieces of paper scattered everywhere is a welcomed

relief.

However, I greatly

v

markets itself as a tourist haven and a mecca for fun and entertainment. Unfortunately, the whole state continues to be a punchline. Echoing the voting and vote-counting controversy of the 2000 presidential election, last week’s Florida primaries were fraught with irregularities. Almost immediately after voting began Tuesday, reports arose of short-staffed polling stations and malfunctioning voting machines, which, in some cases, were not turned on until 5 p.m. Officials had to turn away possibly thousands of potential voters and Governor Jeb Bush had to extend voting by two hours. As in Nov., 2000, when the nation waited impatiently for Florida’s election officials to announce a presidential wiriner, this year’s turmoil has left the Democratic gubernatorial nomination uncertain. Tampa lawyer Bill Mcßride barely leads former U.S. attorney general Janet Reno, but Reno has rightly not yet conceded. This is a national embarrassment, and the blame belongs with Jeb Bush and Congress, neither of which have taken strong enough steps to ensure proper voting procedures. Jeb Bush and the Florida legislature agreed on a $32 million upgrade of the voting system after the 2000 election, but their efforts were obviously not sufficient. They should have tested their new systems more thoroughly before expecting them to work for millions of voters. They also should have ensured full levels of staffing and trained the poll workers on use of voting machines. This would have required significantly greater resources, but considering how essential proper voting is to democracy, Jeb Bush and other Florida officials need to act. The U.S. Congress should then follow suit. After a widely supported bipartisan effort in 2001, the push for broad election reform has fallen by the wayside. Florida is the most high-profile case of improper voting mechanisms, but other states are also sub-par. Just as barriers to suffrage caused Congress to act 40 years ago, national leaders need to establish a uniform system of voting in all states. Only a committed, national initiative will prevent similar debacles from happening again and again. Decades after voting rights legislation was supposed to ensure suffrage for everyone, voter disenfranchisement is simply unacceptable. America ought to be the model for democracy worldwide, but when voters are turned away from the polls, machines malfunction and reform is held hostage to partisan bickering, American democracy is tainted. Through new technology and more resources, Florida and Congress need to ensure that everyone who wants to vote can and that their votes will actually be counted

empathize with the publicity

chairs of the multitude of clubs and student organizations we have out there. I want to emphasize that this is a learning process for everyone and that advertising on campus is a serious issue that needs to be completely reassessed. Whether that

on buses or just simply installing more flyer locations near bus stops, rest assured that we are paying close attention to the problems that are developing. For more information regarding stipulations on removing your posters by 3 days after your event, locations approved for flyering

and general rational refer to http://dsg.duke.edu/archive/f orms/Posterpolicy.doc

Clifford Davison Trinity ’O4 DSG Vice President for Facilities & Athletics

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 684-4696

Fax: (919)


Commentary

The Chronicle

MONDAY, SEPTEMBER

16 2002 �PAGE 15

Attacking the beloved South

American by birth. Southern by the grace of God. Having lived in the South most of my life, I have heard that refrain hundreds of times. I have seen it plastered on bumper stickers and written in large print upon friends’ walls. Southerners are incredibly proud of

Southern culture. They dismiss, sometimes in jest and sometimes not, the arrogant, fasttalking Yankees from the North. They rave about Southern hospitality, Southern food, Southern women and just about everything else that lies below the

notorious Klux Klux Klan and other assorted bigots. The tendency is to argue that it has always been the acts of extremists, of a small percentage of Southerners who did not represent the honor and high moral fiber of the rest. Despite its ardent efforts, however, the South will never be able to wash its hands clean of the atrocities that took place routinely throughout its lands. In reality, the South’s history is one of barbarous cruelty. Its long heritage is nasty, brutish and repellent, and its crimes against humanity cannot be pinned on some fringe minority. For those of you eager to defend the beloved South, I direct your attention to “Without Sanctuary ,” a collection of photographs and postcards taken in the late 19th and early 20th-century depicting lynchings of Southern blacks and the huge crowds that attended them. The collection is available both in book form and also online at www.journale.com/withoutsanctuary. The graphic brutality depicted in these images sickens the stomach. Corpses burned, mangled and cut into pieces dangle in city streets. Most appalling of all, though, are the crowds. Dressed in their Sunday best,

BL r

‘l*^INick

Christie

Glossy Sheen Mason-Dixon line. In particular, Southerners take special satisfaction in venerating their rich heritage, from the War of Northern Aggression (more commonly known as the Civil War) up through to the present. The Confederate flag still flies all over the South, a beacon not of racism, many argue, but of Southern individuality and culture. In the South, embarrassing truths are smoothed over. Slavery, Jim Crow

laws and segregated schools are simply ugly little isolated instances, events that took place long ago in a different time. The current attitude is that the modern South now represents the best ofAmerica. It is a land of gracious hospitality, a land where people still smile and talk to one another and whose people demonstrate true patriotism and

the thousands of onlookers stand around the bodies, smiling and chatting while a life has been tragically

destroyed. Let’s examine one ofthese pictures. On May 16, 1916 in Waco, Texas, Jesse Washington was hanged and tortured in front of a massive crowd. A mentally-retarded 17-year-old farm laborer accused of murder and then convicted in a Texas courtroom in a one-day trial, Washington found himself in front

love for the United States. The South’s ugliest facets are blamed on extremists, including the

of 15,000 onlookers. Men, women and including ears, teeth and fingernails, children upon their father’s shoulders to were cut off and taken home. One could write for years about the get a better view cheered as the mob horrific brutality that took place all went to work on the young man. After bludgeoning the victim with over the South. One can extend the bricks, men hoisted Washington up with lens beyond the thousands of lynchings and murders to an iron chain. the civil rights They cut off his ears and then Ihe souths history or mur- movement of the 1950s and 60s, castrated him. Still screaming, where crowds of fhouens Washington was 1 r i i sands dipped into and strong depicts guilty a or L tjhmifpd “Wa 1k out of a huge bonNigger, walk” at fire. Anxious to a the student moveescape 1 flames, he tried to ture to ton ments and where not climb the chain. the police turned 11 #ll The mob soon ture and an entire race orr firehoses upon its own populace. remedied that sitHaving seen uation by cutting these images in off his fingers. film and in print these What over and over photographs it. eager to again from the reveal is how thousands of nortime I was a litmal Southern tle boy, I am citizens reveled in the horror taking absolutely astounded at anyone still place in front of them. People smile magically enchanted with Southern and laugh, and, even with the shrieks heritage. The South’s history of murof a dismembered man and the smell of der, cruelty and hatred depicts a culture guilty of atrocity after atrocity, a charred flesh, they smile. This is only one of many photoculture willing not only to torture and graphs depicting similar atrocities kill an entire race of people simply that took place all over Southern because of the color of their skin, but states, including, of course, North also eager to enjoy it. Carolina. Corpses hang from light There is no grace in being born a posts near train tracks so as to show Southerner. them off. Other times they simply hang from the branches of trees on some Nick Christie is a Trinity senior and an deserted farmyard. Then after the bodassociate sports editor for The ies had hung for a sufficient time, the Chronicle. His column appears every crowd often took souvenirs. Body parts, other Monday.

der, cruelty and hatred

culture atrocity after atrocity, willing only °

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kill

.

people simply because of the color oftheir skin, but also enjoy

THE SECOND GUNMAN parks in the fire lane Before I get started, I have an announcement to make. THE SECOND GUNMAN is turning pro after this season and would prefer to be called “Jay” from now on. Jay will refer to himself in the first person plural from here on out. Professional athletes and egomaniacs commonly refer to themselves in the third per- w' son, but we would like to set a stanJP 1 dard of originality. Last night, we were bored and decided to solve the Duke parking f problem. We didn’t know who to conyur irLL tact about this, so we searched the for to SECOND “bureaucracy” Duke website pop up. GUNMAN see what would people at Unfortunately, the Microsoft got a little ahead of themselves when they made Windows XP. Monday, Monday After typing the letter ‘b’, the search field completed itself, reading “britney spears xxx.” Apparently, we have searched for this before. Although this is not what we originally wanted, the parking problem suddenly seemed insignificant. We decided that Windows knows best, and that we really would rather check out the latest, greatest fake Britney pom. Besides, doesn’t Catherine Reeve work full-time on solving the parking problems? Her new plan is to create a community in the Blue Zone by hiring full-time “parking coordinators” to permanently reside in the best spot in each lot. Additionally, only those students who purchased a Blue Zone pass will be allowed in the lots. This eliminates the threatening presence of “non-dnvers” and poor people. Remember, they made a conscious choice to not participate in the Blue Zone community. Back to porn, which reminds us our hard drive is nearly full. We ordered a new one a month ago, so it should be here any time soon. The lady with the big hair at the East Campus Post Office said it wasn’t in yet, but she seemed very excited about a new idea they were trying out to speed things up a little. She called it the “Pony Express.” Catchy name. I hope the '

'

So we clicked on a promising link in one of the pop ponies don’t drop my hard drive. The Olsen twins and disk I’ll need the space. up windows called, “See total prostitutes do what they will be legal soon, Damn attention deficit disorder! Why is it that I do best,” expecting to at least see some action shots. can sit upstairs in Brodie Gym for hours watching Turns out it’s just a picture of two cops standing by a Randolph dormitory girls change their clothes, but I row of ticketed cars. We were wondering what kind of can’t sit still long enough to write my column, even weird fetish site this was until we looked at the URL. For those of you computer novices, URL is the web when it’s about porn? Now I’m all tired, but I have so much work to do. address that you are viewing. It stands for “yoU aRe Can you believe my sociology professor assigned us Located.” Some of the engineers aren’t too social, but they are willing to share useful 15 pages to read this week? knowledge like this, if you show Neither can I. I thought she them your calculator, preferwould ease up after last week’s cannot TI-89 or equivalent. ably 10-page reading and one-page the was Anyway, URL of this Any more and response. www.duke.edu/parking. The I’m dropping the sociology prostitutes in action were major all together. I heard as a ignoring the alarms going off in public policy is easier anyway. the dirt lot in favor of ticketing On a side note, I wrote a paper it so every car in the Beta Lot. about how proud I am to attend On an unrelated note, we a University that refuses to sell to publicly had would like to out to corporations. I mock/apologize to a freshman our asses three Starbucks double drink who was horribly duped on the shots to crank that one out D’oh! We got so caught up in nerve bus last week. He was sitting in one of those sideways seats other matters that we forgot at the front of the bus, you to our new pronoun game. This know, the ones that face each could take some getting used other. So he’s looking around, to. At least using the plural one of his first weeks enjoying for sights, Britney taking in the keeps us original. So we were looking standing An in the aisle upperclassman blink screen. at Duke. onto the online and about forty pop-ups We usually close these, but our roommate is in the looked behind the kid and read the “PLEASE Teer Building for the night, so we might as well RESERVE THESE SEATS FOR SENIORS AND check out a few new sites. What an idiot! We still PERSONS WITH DISABILITIES” sticker, then seized the opportunity. “Hey man, those seats are cannot understand why people would choose engifor seniors. I’ve paid my dues, now I’d like when know it so reserved involves they neering as a major much math and science. What really chaps our asses to sit there. You can have it back in three years.” is when they have the nerve to complain. Just like The kid swifty rose to his feet, vacating the seat. when freshmen eat at the Marketplace and complain Apparently the admissions office was a little lenient that the food sucks. Never mind, that’s different. It’s with this year’s crop. a valuable part of the freshman experience. Time and time again, it has been shown that groups of THE SECOND GUNMAN broke four gate arms last week. people bond when they are collectively bent over.

understand We still why people would choose major, when engineering they know involves much math and science. What really chaps is when they have the complain.


PAGE 16 � MONDAY,

The Chronicle

SEPTEMBER 16, 2002

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