October 7, 2002

Page 1

Monday, October 7, 2002

Isolated T-storms High 81, Low 53

www.chronicle.duke.edu Vol. 98, No. 33

The Chronicle

Hawks* prey The 17th-ranked men’s soccer team lost Sunday to the unranked Lehigh Mountain Hawks. See Sportswrap page 3

THE INDEPENDENT DAILY AT DUKE UNIVERSITY

ECGF considers attrition rates This is the first story in a five-part series examining attrition among graduate students.

Trustees hold light meeting

By WHITNEY BECKETT The Chronicle

The Executive Committee of the Graduate Faculty is trying to discover why a third of graduate students leave the University without what they came for—a doctorate. Concerned with both the human and financial implications of student attrition, the committee will study the more successful graduate departments and determine what they are doing in four areas that many agree could greatly affect the situation: the admissions process, student meeting space, faculty mentoring and career advising. “As the Graduate School sees it, it’s a no-brainer,” said Lewis Siegel, dean of the Graduate School. “[Attrition] is the overwhelming major problem with doctoral education in the U.S The Graduate School is currently graduating students at about 63 percent—a higher rate than that of the nation’s graduate schools as a whole, which is less than 50 percent. The University’s interest in the topic coincides with a similar national conversation. Attrition rates account for both students who drop out entirely and students who switch to master’s programs along the way. Two-thirds of attrition occurs in the second or third years. Another 20 percent happens after the sixth year, leaving only minimal attrition in year one and between years three and six. From human and financial perspectives, the costs of attrition differ at each ofthese drop-out points. “If you look at it from a pure human point of view, if you take the course work and then drop out after a year, you’re probably better off” Siegel said. “But no one believes if you stay here five, six, seven years and then drop out that that is a good thing.” The financial perspective, Siegel added, is much dif-

� Duke’s Board of Trustees heard updates on several University initiatives this weekend, including The Campaign for Duke, but Trustees passed few official resolutions. By DAVE INGRAM The Chronicle

ferent. Since the first few years of a graduate education incurs many costs for the University and the last few years generate research that “gives back” part of the University’s investment, it causes the University fewer financial difficulties when a graduate student drops out late in their career. “To the extent thatit is our fault, we’re wasting our resources,” Provost Peter Lange said. “To the extent that we’re not doing our job well, we’re devoting resources of time and energy of some very smart and

With The Campaign for Duke about $BO million from its $2 billion goal, the need to meet the fundraising effort’s smaller targets is becoming much more pressing than the overall goal, Peter Nicholas, Campaign co-chair, told the Board of Trustees this weekend. During the Trustees’ regular session Friday, Nicholas pointed to individual fundraising goals that remain unfilled. For example, donations for graduate student doctoral fellowships and for University-wide faculty chairs have reached only 58 percent and 32 percent of their respective goals. In addition, while some schools—including the School of Law and the Pratt School of Engineering—have surpassed their targets, other divisions such as the library system and Arts and Sciences will require more time. “We want to benefit all areas that we’ve identified as strategic,” said Nicholas, also vice chair of the Board. “Until we do that, we can’t call the campaign a success.” Nicholas said fundraising efforts are on a $5.5-mil-

See ATTRITION on page 10

See TRUSTEES on page 9

Cavalier 4th quarter push denies football 3rd win Officials dedicate Yoh Center amid Homecoming festivities

By ROBERT SAMUEL The Chronicle

Virginia 27 In the week leading up to the Virginia game, the Blue Devils were Duke 11 still dwelling on their 26-21 loss at Northwestern Sept. 14. Duke will have more chances to gripe for the rest of the season with the Blue Devils’ 27-22 loss to the Virginia Cavaliers Saturday afternoon in Wallace Wade Stadium. As in every close loss, “what-ifs” flooded the team’s thoughts. The subject most discussed by the coaches and players after the game was Duke’s handling of its last two downs of a drive with about eight minutes left in the fourth quarter. Duke had the ball on Virginia’s two yard-line on third down when Adam Smith threw an incomplete pass to wide-receiver Lance Johnson. Smith ex-

By NEELUM JESTE The Chronicle

pressed his disappointments when he immediately

realized he should have thrown to a wide-open Khary Sharpe instead. “I tried throwing it to the underneath guy when Khary Sharpe was wide open in the endzone,” Smith said. “If we had those extra four points, it would have been a tied game, and it might have gone into overtime or we might have won.” On fourth and two, head coach Carl Franks, who is known for his liberal attitude on attempting fourthdown plays, decided to go for the field goal. Brent GarSee UVA in Sportswrap page 6

InSldS

YOAV LURIE/THE CHRONICLE

LINEBACKER JIM SCHARRER leaps out to tackle Virginia running back Alvin Pearman Saturday afternoon in Wallace Wade Stadium.

A broad based coalition of student groups has joined together for a voter registration effort that has already registered 150 people. See page 3 '

Friday night’s dedication of the Yoh Football Center represented another step in Duke’s commitment to producing a winning football team. President Nan Keohane began the ceremony by thanking all of the donors, about half of whom were former Duke football players. “It is a tremendous day for Duke football,” she said. “If you can’t get them with this, you can’t get them anywhere, and we are going to get them with this.” Despite interruptions in her speech due to PA system troubles, Keohane acknowledged the campaign’s co-chairs Dr. Frank Bassett and Leo Hart. She was followed by Director of Athletics Joe Alieva, who paid tribute to Rob Lenoir. Lenoir, the former Blue Devil defensive tackle who died on Sept. 11, has an office on the fourth floor named in his memory. Keohane then took the podium again to present gifts to the lead donors of the center. She introduced Spike and Mary Yoh. Mary, who is accredited with the idea of supporting the center, sits on the Athletic Advisory Board, and Spike serves as chair of the Board of Trustees. Keohane presented Spike with a customized version of the East Campus sower statue, this one

A succession of file-sharing programs have replaced Napster in the past year, and KaZaA has become one of the most popular at Duke. See page 4

See YOH in Sportswrap page 8 North Carolina’s jobless rate fell slightly in August, according to revised figures, but officials are urging caution. See page 5


World & Nation

PAGE 2 �MONDAY, OCTOBER 7, 2002

Run-off calms Brazilian markets

NEWS BRIEFS •

Explosion cripples French oil tanker

Election’s outcome will allow new government to focus on faltering economy

A French oil tanker was set on fire off the southeastern coast of Yemen after an explosion Sunday morning as it headed for an oil terminal in the Gulf of Aden. French diplomats were quoted as saying that the explosion was the work of terrorists. Yemeni and American officials, however, are classifying the incident as a ship-board accident. •

complished technocrat and the markets’ favorite, in a run-off ballot in With the three weeks. SAO PAULO, Brazil outcome of Brazil’s election leaning “It’s a cliffhanger result, but astoward a second round between the suming there’s a second round, I left-wing front runner, Luiz Inacio think we might see some good news Lula da Silva, and the governing in the market,” said Doug Smith, coalition’s candidate, Jose Serra, chief economist for the Americas at markets were expected to call a Standard Chartered Bank in New truce Monday and give the country’s York. “On the other hand, if Lula embattled currency and bonds a ends up winning in the first round, chance to recover. people will resign themselves to thinking he won’t be as bad as they Depending on the final result, investors will be mulling whether da thought.” “There is some goodwill in the Silva, a former metalworker, will move swiftly to assuage market market for him,” he added. “For the nerves through the naming of a credsake of Brazil, everybody wants ible economic team, or what chances things to work out.” Nervousness about just how radihe will have against Serra, an ac-

Attacker stabs Paris mayor at city hall

Israeli army attacks Palestinian town

Israeli tanks backed by helicopters raided a neighborhood in the Gaza Strip town of Khan Yunis early Monday, killing nine Palestinians and wounding more than 50. •

KaZaA faces suit for copyright infringement

A group of recording and motion picture companies have asked a federal judge in Los Angeles to find the custodians of KaZaA, a internet media exchange program, liable for contributing to copyright infringement and financially benefiting from it. •

By SIMON AVERY

In response to the passing of U.S. congressional legislation declaring Jerusalem to be the capital of Israel, the Palestinian Parliament ratified a similar bill Sunday designating the city as the capital of a future Palestinian state.

The Associated Press

The second week of a West Coast LOS ANGELES port shutdown will cause a noticeable increase in plant closings, job losses and financial market turmoil, say analysts and business leaders who are increasingly skeptical of a quick end to the labor dispute. Already, storage facilities at beef, pork and poultry processing facilities across the country are full, crammed with produce that cannot be exported. With nowhere to move their product, plant operators will begin shutting down Monday and layoffs will follow, said Mary Kay Thatcher, public policy director of the

News briefs compiled from wire reports.

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cal da Silva’s economic policies would be has severely punished currency, stock and bond markets in recent months. Brazil’s currency, the real, has slumped to nearly 4 reals to $l, worth less than the peso of Brazil’s bankrupt neighbor, Argentina, while the benchmark C-bond has plumbed depths of less than half its face value, levels normally reserved for a country about to default. Smith said that a second round would rally markets because it would allow Serra, a former health minister, accomplished technocrat and President Fernando Henrique Cardoso’s hand-picked successor, to

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New York Times News Service

The mayor of Paris, Bertrand Delanoe, was out of danger after being stabed in the abdomen in city hall early Sunday by a man who said he disliked politicians and homosexuals. Delanoe is one of France’s few openly gay politicians. •

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The Chronicle

MONDAY, OCTOBER 7,2002 � PAGE 3

Groups combine for voting drive

Losing My Religion Freshmen Question the Role of Faith in College Life By Becky Young The Chronicle

P College Republicans, Duke Democrats and other groups have banded together for a massive voting registration drive, which will last through Thursday. By ANNE BERRY The Chronicle

In an effort to promote political activism among undergraduates, various student organizations are collaborating on a two-week voter registration drive. The initiative began last summer when the Office of Student Affairs suggested to Duke Student Government to take an active interest in organizing a drive. Duke is federally mandated to offer voter registration on campus, Assistant Vice President for Campus Life Zoila Airall said. She added that her office is pleased this year’s drive includes more campus-wide collaboration than in years past. Along with DSG, other student organizations have joined together to conduct the registration campaign, including the College Republicans, Duke Democrats, Progressive Alliance, Duke NAACP, Black Student Alliance, Interfraternity Council and the Panhellenic Council, as well as the nonprofit organization Vote For America. Coalition leaders said they hope the variety of interest groups involved will help students recognize the importance of voting in local elections. “By combining with other groups, we are promoting the fact that this is a nonpartisan drive,” said sophomore Chasity Roberts, BSA chair of public affairs. “By not promoting a particular candidate, we are basically trying to attract every type of student.” The voting drive’s leaders hope the initiative will help quell voter apathy among students. “I hope that given the opportunity, Duke students See VOTING on page 12

CORRECTION A page one story in the Oct. 3 edition of The Chronicle misspelled the name of a Raleigh lawyer who tries malpractice cases. The lawyer is Judy Tseng.

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Chapel, towering over recruits new members, said the the center of campus as a Rev. Anne Hodges-Copple of the beacon for churchgoers and Episcopal Center. tourists alike, serves as the center “It’s almost like a ‘religious ofreligious life for many students. rush,’” she said. “Freshmen are so But for freshmen just released overwhelmed by organizations. from the comforts of home, the There’s an inundation of invitaChapel’s bells are not always so tions [from religious groups].” welcoming and religious services Religious leaders on campus are not always accommodated by also cite freedom from parental college life.

Students first arriving on campus have a variety of decisions to make, including how they choose to integrate religion into their lives. Pulled in all directions by time constraints, a new social atmosphere or a desire to be different, students all make that choice differently. “The biggest challenge for most students is time,” said the Rev. Will Willimon, dean of the Chapel. “For a freshman, you walk into Duke and you are con-

fronted with this. You have to make choices, and sometimes religious life loses out.” While attempting to make the transition easier, some religious groups can actually complicate things for students. Students often receive invitations from religious countless campus groups, each ofwhich aggressively

watch as a reason why religious life becomes secondary to other activities. “There are several transitions,” said Fr. Joe Vetter of the Newman

Catholic Student Center. “One of them is that [students] probably got some subtle expectation from a parent when they were at home, and now it takes more personal initiative.” Muslim students explained they are in a particularly tough situation because so few of their peers participate in their traditions, which rely on support from others. In particular, practices such as fasting and praying five times each day may require peer support that is not necessarily available to freshmen immediately. “To be a Muslim is a very outward thing. Often, when you are away from family, it is a lot harder to do [things like fast] because

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not a lot of other people around you are doing it,” said Omar Chaudhary, co-president of the Muslim Student Association. “It’s a bigger struggle here.” In addition to the absence of parents’ watchful eyes, the college atmosphere does little to foster students’ spiritual development, religious leaders said. “The environment of many families encourages participation [in religious activities], but the environment of the dorms do not,” Vetter said. “The social pressure is somewhat reversed.” Students agree that they face a variety of new social pressures when they arrive at Duke. Leksa Chmielewski, a freshman who is active in the Catholic student center, said many of her peers are tempted by liberation from parental watch. “There are lots of challenges to the morals we’ve always held. As

soon as we get to college, with the new freedom we have, it’s really easy to compromise,” she said. Religious leaders are hardpressed to develop unique approaches to religious life for students of all backgrounds. Vetter

See RELIGIOUS LIFE on page 12


The Chronicle

pAGE 4 � MONDAY, OCTOBER 7,2002

Students adjust to Napster alternatives for media By ROBERT MORRIS The Chronicle

The Napster website is a little stripped down these days—instead of MP3 music files, the once-dominant file-swapping service now only offers novelty tee-shirts. Almost six months after Napster ended its operation, however, file-sharing continues on campus, as music enthusiasts have ridden out the rise and sometimes fall of several other sendees, including Morpheus, AudioGalaxy, and more recently, KaZaA—the new sendee of choice for Duke students. “It’s nice to be able to [also] download movies and TV shows, which I don’t think Napster could do,” said Margi Brooks, a senior who uses KaZaA, “but Napster seemed faster.” Brooks is not the only student who misses Napster. “I like KaZaA pretty well, but I get annoyed with the pop-up ads,” said Steve Poliner, a sophomore. Students are using music download sendees in a number of ways. Some, like Poliner, create extensive music libraries with the files they download. His collection boasts an impressive 2,500 songs and thirty movies. In some cases these collections are replacing the traditional home CD library. “The only thing that makes me buy CDs is I have an elaborate sound system in my car,” said freshman Bryce Walker. Not all students have bought into the downloading craze, however, and some have burned out on it altogether. “I get frustrated with [the newer music services],” said Daidree Tofano, a freshman. “Napster was much easier.” Vinny Eng, a senior and former Napster user, explained that he has avoided the newer services even though he is familiar with them. “It’s too easy to get caught at your computer for an hour,” he said. Other students have found ethical reasons to stay away from Napster and its clones. “I really do feel like it’s stealing,” said Jamalyn Peigh, a student in the Divinity School. “It would be different if it was okay with the musicians.” Emily Wren, a freshman, claims a more legitimate use

JEFF BURLIN/THE CHRONICLE

SAJID ANWAR downloads a file from his computer using the KaZaA file-sharing network. KaZaA and other servers have become popular among Duke students.

for KaZaA. “I preview a CD, and ifI like it 111 support the artist,” she said. “I try to find underground stuff.” Napster’s online service disappeared in the midst of a series of ongoing legal battles with recording companies regarding its members’ use of copyrighted material. In late 1999, record companies began filing lawsuits against the service. In Sept. 2000, attorneys for recording artists Dr. Dre and Metallica asked university presidents, including President Nan Keohane, to ban access to the service from college campuses. Keohane refused, citing legitimate uses for Napster. Napster then attempted to convert to a fee system, but its beta version was put on hold indefinitely this spring. Others services emerged, but some have already succumbed to pressure from the music industry—including the popular Audio Galaxy service this summer. But students are hardly sympathetic to the arguments of the music industry.

“That’s just capitalist society. They’re just going to make as much money as they can,” Peigh said. Alex Perez, a graduate student in the English department, took a different approach. “It’s a misconception that musicians make money off their music,” he said. “They make more money off promotional industries.” For other students, the legal question is simply unimportant. “It doesn’t bother me that much,” said Poliner. “It’s better just to ignore the issue.” Until many of the pending cases are resolved, the future of free music is still in the air. Faced with the prospect of one day paying for the music they download, students are largely unworried. Most students said they probably would be willing to subscribe to a new service if that was the only option, but felt that free music will always be available to them. But nostalgia remains for the original online music service. “I have very fond memories of Napster,” Brooks said. “It was my first.”

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The Chronicle

MONDAY, OCTOBER 7, 2002 � PAGE 5

State officials report jobless rate drop By JOSH NIMOCKS The Chronicle

before. “It’s kind of an anomaly,” he said. “We’re still creating jobs, just not at the pace before,” despite the unemployment rate. Thomas White, Trinity ’76 and Chamber of Commerce president, said the recent recession had been unusually difficult for North Carolina because

North Carolina’s unemployment rate fell in August, a positive sign for the local economy, even as some officials downplayed the drop’s significance as an indicator of economic recovery. In a report released last week by the Employment Security Commission of North Carolina, the seasonally-adjusted unemployment rate in the Triangle was 5.2 percent, down from 5.4 percent in July. The July 2002 statewide rate also decreased, to Durham County 6.3 percent from July’s 6.8 percent, “a pretty big drop,” said Michele Orange County Walker, an ESC spokesperson. Wake County Although some officials said the local economy is headed toward re- August 2002 covery, they did not want to place too much emphasis on monthly data as Durham County

-

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CRIME BRIEFS From staff reports

Student charged with possession

self is becoming service-intensive.” As the need for lawyers, managers and other service personnel in production has increased, the demand for actual pro-

duction workers has decreased

Duke University Police Department officers responded to a marijuana report in room 303 Edens 1-B Oct. 4 at 12:50 a.m. Subsequent investigation resulted in junior Samuel Fleder being charged with possession of marijuana. His court date is Nov. 7. Fleder could not be reached for comment.

with

growing demand for services. Technological change has likewise limited the need for more production workers, once the base of North Carolina and other state economies. “It’s cheaper to manufacture products in [places like] China and Canada,” Walker said, citing cost as yet another reason pro6.0% duction is disappearing nation3.4% wide. She added that although the decreasing demand for work5.6% ers is a national trend, it has especially hurt North Carolina, which still has the largest manu5.8% facturing employee base in the

Student harasses tenters A student reported that around 4:30 a.m. Sept. 29, while she was at the graduate and professional student temporary campsite on Wanna-

maker Drive, a drunken student

forcibly entered her recreational vehicle. She reported that he pushed one of her female friends against the wall as he entered. He urinated on a bed and would not leave when asked to do so. Officers arrived, identified the male student and escorted him out of the RV. No one wished to pursue criminal charges.

an indicator. country. Orange County3.3% “I don’t feel that knowing the White said the Triangle has Wake County 5.3% suffered less than many rural specific unemployment figure... tells me a whole lot,” said Lewis Cheek, a areas in the state because it has Durham City Council member and in the past, the state has avoided large attracted manufacturing in pharmaceumayor pro tempore. spikes of unemployment. He said that ticals, environmental technology, adOne of the City Council’s top projects although the region is still creating vanced textiles and the laboratory equipment business. has been to attract clients to long-stalled jobs, that growth has been counterbaldowntown development projects such as anced by layoffs and plant closings More locally, White said the new the former American Tobacco warehouse. across industries. Streets at Southpoint mall has signifi“We want businesses to look at cantly helped the city by adding to State employment and local comDurham and regard it as an attractive merce officials agreed that much of sales tax revenue, attracting traveling area to be, and that way... we can afthe change in the state’s workforce customers and creating retail sales has come through a shift in jobs from jobs, providing Durham with a net infect the availability of jobs for our citthe manufacturing sector to the servizens,” he said. crease in jobs. Carey Greene, research director for ices sector. Experts also cautioned not to draw too “Employment in manufacturing has optimistic a conclusion from the monthly the Greater Durham Chamber of Commerce, said that in spite of the past been going down since the ’4os,” said drop. “Monthly drops don’t mean much,” Pietro Peretto, an associate professor Peretto said. “You cannot make a stateyear’s slump, more people are employed in the Triangle now than ever of economics at Duke. “Production it- ment based on a few little points.”

Bicycles stolen DUPD officers responded to a call in reference to a larceny of bicycles at the Southgate Dormitory bike rack at 1:01 a.m. Oct. 1. Three men were observed by a student who saw them cutting locks on bicycles. They had left the area on stolen bicycles prior to the arrival of officers. Two cut locks were located. The three subjects were described as: a black man, of light complexion, slender, wearing a red Dew-Rag, See CRIME on page 8

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The Chronicle

PAGE 6 � MONDAY, OCTOBER 7, 2002

Police search for answers in D.C. sniper slayings Kim Rossmo, a new sort of criminologist who will apply his specialty as a “geoThe police profiler” to try to pinpoint the killer’s ASPEN HILL, Md. chief, his offerings of fresh information likely home neighborhood. Using a computer technique develrunning thin, finally could only offer a guess Sunday that the elusive, dead-aim oped in Canada, Rossmo will work in sniper “may be gloating” nearby in a Montgomery County with the federal Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and suburban enclave much like this one. Kevin Boink, a local resident bucking Firearms by inserting all known data, the mood of fear as he went shopping from crime scenes to hundreds of tips once more, had to agree as he skirted a and known criminal behavior patterns, gas station where the rifleman killed into the program. Geo-profiling manages information, one victim from afar Thursday with a but it does not solve crimes, Rossmo emsingle shot. “I feel like most people—that this phasized. He said it could be a reliable guy’s our neighbor,” Boink said, taking a tool to solve “the needle-in-the-haystack casual look about him. problem” when investigators are flooded As he spoke, he stood in the sort of round the clock with information, suspiprosaic shoppers’ parking lot that the cions and tips, as in this case. Rossmo said the technique had been police theorize the sniper has favored. Since Wednesday, the shooter has used in Canada and Britain, with relastalked and killed six people at random tive success, in investigations ofmultiand wounded a seventh in lethal rounds ple murder, rape, theft, fraud and other felonies. across a 50-mile swath of the Washington suburbs. “On average we can determine where “I tend to think he lives a few miles an offender lives within the top halffrom here and he’s more meticulous square-mile” of a crime scene measuring than the usual thrill killer,” said Boink, 10 square miles, once the data is fed in joining in the wave of speculation that and cross-referenced, Rossmo said. He has been flooding the region in lieu of added that the computer system would hard facts. “I don’t think he’s done; he’s not be stymied by the fact that the going to do something else.” sniper here ranged 50 miles farther This was the fear, too, of Chief afield Friday when he wounded a Charles Moose of the Montgomery woman in Fredericksburg, Va. Moose quickly stepped in to emphaCounty police when he imagined the killer safely gloating. In a news confersize that he was trying geo-profiling only as one more tool in a difficult inence Sunday morning, the first of four, the chief called on the public once more vestigation. “We’ll see how helpful it is,” the chief declared. to call in with any fresh bit of information at all. The police still searched for a white ‘We remain convinced someone in cargo truck that the one known witness our county knows who’s engaged in told detectives had sped away from a this,” Moose declared, suggesting that a shooting scene Thursday morning durnoticeably altered routine, a touch of ing a two-hour rampage in which five strange behavior, could signal someone people were shot at separate locations as a suspect. in a five-mile area of Montgomery CounThe suspicion that the gunman rety. The sixth victim was killed Thursday mains nearby was bolstered Sunday See SHOOTINGS on page 12 evening when Moose introduced Dr. By FRANCIS CLINES

New York Times News Service

ALEX GARINER AND ANTHONY CROSSYTHE CHRONICLE

BLAZ KRTALIC (TOP) and his dog Scout sit in front of the Chapel, while MARY GOLLADAY (BOTTOM RIGHT) and her horse Little Red and ANOTHER PET OWNER (BOTTOM LEFT) celebrates with her dog during Sunday’s Blessing of Animals service.

We’re Opening the Doors to Special Collections!

fl\ f W r

A Showcase

of Highlights

and Recent Acquisitions

Wednesday, October 9, 2002 2:00 5:00 PM Mary Duke Biddle Rare Book Room Perkins Library -

Refreshments

will be served. Door prizes will he awarded.

Come to our open house where outstanding materials from many collecting areas will be on display. Staff will be available for consultation about potential use of the collections for all levels of research. Drop in for a taste of what we offer, and see how our resources can work for you.

All are welcome!


The Chronicle

MONDAY, OCTOBER 7, 2002 � PAGE

7

Supreme Court set to open term � With key justices nearing retirement, a score of high-profile cases are due to make their way before the Supreme Court bench. By ANNE GEARAN The Associated Press

WASHINGTON

The freedom to burn a cross, the post-prison privacy rights of sex predators and copyright protection for lingerie will occupy the Supreme Court as the justices step from behind red velvet drapes and into their courtroom next week. The term’s biggest news, however, may come from cases still making their way to the high court. “There are some elephants here, but the elephants are standing in the wings,” said court scholar David Garrow, a law professor at Emory University. The court soon may face its first case testing the government’s power to limit traditional civil liberties and legal rights in the name of combating terrorism. Fights also loom over affirmative action on college campuses and the new campaign finance law. The court term that begins Monday may also be remembered as the final one for Chief Justice William Rehnquist, who has passed his 30th anniversary on the court, or for one of the other justices thought to be close to retirement. None of the nine justices has indicated immediate plans to leave. The court is taking a look at whether states went too far in passing child-protection laws commonly known as Megan’s laws and whether California’s “three-strikes-you’re-out” sentencing law is unconstitutionally harsh. “This is about locking people up for the rest of their lives for taking $l5O worth of children’s videos,” American Civil Liberties senior lawyer Steven Shapiro said about the California law, the nation’s toughest. The law allows up to a life prison term for a third felony, even for a nonviolent crime. The cross-burning case evokes a mostly bygone era in the South, when nightriders set crosses ablaze as a symbol ofintimidation to blacks and civil rights sympathizers. Virginia and other states tried to outlaw the practice, but the laws have run into trouble on free-speech grounds. Two cases ask whether some registries of convicted sex offenders, some posted on the Internet, are unfair to criminals who already have served sentences or who may have committed crimes such as

exposing oneself in public. Every state has some form of Megan’s law, named for a New Jersey child killed by a sex criminal who moved into a home across the street. The laws are supposed to make it easier for neighbors and parents to keep tabs on potential sexual predators, but civil liberties defenders complain the laws can make targets of people who have paid their debts to society. An abortion case pits abortion clinics against protesters who blocked doors and threatened or intimidated patients. Sometime this term, the justices almost surely will be asked to look at one or more cases arising from the treatment of immigrants and potential terror suspects swept up as a result of the terrorist attacks of Sept. 11, 2001. The court may choose not to get involved right away, but if it does, most lawyers predict a law-and-

order majority would allow the government great leeway to order secret deportation hearings or hold noncitizens indefinitely. It is less clear whether the court would approve of the treatment of at least two U.S. citizens now held without charges and without access to lawyers. On affirmative action, white students denied admission to the University of Michigan and its law school have petitioned the high court to declare the university’s race-conscious admissions policy unconstitutional.

It is unclear whether the justices want to revisit a deeply divisive issue about which several of them hold strong opinions, said the former Clinton administration’s top Supreme Court lawyer and Duke Pro-

fessor of Law Walter Dellinger.

CHRIS MADDALONI/ROLL CALL PHOTOS

FRANK LAUTENBERG, along with Senate Majority Leader Tom Daschle, may have his case brought before the Supreme Court, as Republicans have promised to put the controversy over the New Jersey Senate election before the bench.


The Chronicle

PAGE 8 � MONDAY, OCTOBER 7,2002

CRIME from page 5

from the bicycle rack located on the east end of Blackwell Dormitory between 8 p.m. Sept. 23 and 12

light-colored shirt and baggy dark colored pants; a black man, of light complexion, slender, wearing a black Dew-Rag, dark-colored shirt and baggy darkcolored pants; and a black man, of medium complexion, medium afro haircut, slender, wearing a green shirt and baggy pants. Police request students to check the bicycle rack for their bicycles and to call 684-2444 if they were victimized. In addition, someone reported stolen a student’s $4OO silver Mongoose/Rockadile bicycle between 10:30 a.m. Sept. 30 and 10:50 p.m. Oct. 1. He reported that the bicycle was secured to the rack at Southgate Dormitory with a cable lock. The incident may be related to the incident reported Oct. 1 regarding bicycles being stolen from this area, said Maj. Robert Dean of DUPD. In a separately reported incident, someone stole a student’s $1,500 green and black Jeep mountain bike

p.m. Sept. 29.

Chairs vandalized on East Campus

Duke University Police responded Sept. 28 at 11:56 p.m. to the East Union front patio in reference to two men who had thrown and smashed two $4O wooden chairs. They then walked over to Brown Dormitory, pushed over the barbecue grill and turned over the flower pots. Officers were unable to locate the two subjects.

Missing doorknob reported Someone reported around 5 a.m. Sept. 29 that knocking from the inside of a women’s restroom in

Edens 3-A was heard. When the door was opened, a drunk white man, of heavy build, brown hair, wearing khaki pants and sandals came out and departed the area. It was discovered that the doorknob to the restroom was missing shortly after the man left.

CLEARANCE MANY ITEMS HAVE BEEN DRASTICALLY REDUCED!

Cash, phone nabbed

Two students living in Building M reported that between 5 a.m. and 2 p.m. Sept. 29 someone entered their room and stole $lOO cash and a $l5O Kyocera cellular phone. The cellular phone’s owner reported that messages had been left on his phone’s voice mail instructing him to call a certain number about his cellular phone. He did and a subject identified himself as Darrius before terminating the call.

Electronics snatched Someone gained entry to a student’s vehicle and stole the $65 face plate to his CD player and a $135 Cobra radar detector between 2:30 a.m. Sept. 26 and 3:30 a.m. Sept. 29, while his secured vehicle was parked in the Blue Zone. There were no signs of forced entry.

Signs vandalized in Few Quad

When Duke police responded Sept. 29 to Building HH-1 in reference to damaged property, the officer was informed that there had been a party in the dorm the night before and that around 11:30 p.m. a floor went dark. The officer checked the area and found a $l5O third floor exit sign pulled down from the ceiling and a basement level exit sign that was not secured into the ceiling.

Police respond to vandalism

Duke University Police officers responded to 114 South Buchanan Blvd. Sept. 30 at 12:22 p.m. in reference to a subject spraypainting portions of the building with “West End” in blue paint and painting over portions of the Liggett Myers sign. Brian Stevons, of 711 Gerad St., was located and charged with damage to real property by writing graffiti on Duke property. His court date is set for Oct. 28. Stevons could not be reached for comment.

Vehicle entered, belongings taken

AND MORE ON SELECTED MERCHANDISE INCLUDING: Sweatshirts Sweatpants Polar Fleece Vests Mugs T-shirts Shorts Golf Shirts Children's Clothing Car Flags Pins Key Rings •

Someone entered an employee’s vehicle while it was parked in the Washington Duke Inn parking lot between 5 and 6 p.m. Aug. 16 and stole $2O cash, a credit card, a $l6O personal check, stethoscope and white physician’s coat. The employee has since learned that the personal check had been cashed and purchases were made on her credit card.

Tools filched from Kilgo Quad

An employee reported that between 3 p.m. Sept. 30 and 11 a.m. Oct. 3, someone entered the maintenance room in Building P and stole a $5O wheel grinder, a $3O needle nose pliers set with three pliers, $6O Makita cordless screw driver, two $260 Makita drills and $l5 channel locks. There were no signs of forced entry into the room, but a locker containing some of the stolen tools had been forced open.

All clearance items can be found on the Textbook Store level.

University „

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Someone entered a student’s secured office in the Terry Sanford building between 6:30 p.m. Sept. 28 and 3 p.m. Sept. 30 and stole her $2OO Walkman tape player, $lOO Wen Qu Xing electronic dictionary and a key. There were no signs of forced entry.

Employee reports vehicle break-in While an employee’s vehicle was parked in the H parking lot at Anderson and Erwin Roads between 2:15 and 5:08 p.m. Oct. 1, someone stole her keys, $lOO JVC/KDS-580 face plate for a JVC in-dash receiver, $2O Kyocera car charger for a cellular phone and $3O Kyocera ear piece for a cellular phone. She reported she accidentally left her front passenger side window open.

Extinguishers vandalized during fire alarm

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A student reported that between 1:30 and 1:45 a.m. Sept. 29 he placed his $199 Verizon cellular phone on a table in the doorway ofthe Devil’s Den. When he returned, his phone had been taken.

Electronics snatched

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Cell phone taken

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A fire alarm occurred Oct. 6 at 2:43 a.m. inside Blackwell Dormitory. There was no sign of a fire, but evidence showed that two fire extinguishers had been vandalized, causing $6O damage, inside the commons room.

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.



Sportswrai

PAGE 2 �MONDAY, OCTOBER 7,

Weekend

Wlnsmsm

The Chronicle

In this week’s issue

Inside Duke After three wins in the first three rounds of the 2002 ITA Men's All America Prequalifying Tournament men's tennis player Ryan Heinburg fell to Ohio State's Vince Ng 6-7 7-5, 6-1 in the round of 32 Sunday. Freshman Ludovic Walter was eliminated by Pete Stroer of Texas in the third round, 2-6, 7-6, ret. Walter was unable to carry on after becoming ill. Freshman women's tennis star, Julie Smith battled her way through the prequalifying rounds of the ITA Riviera All America Tournament Sunday and will now face Oregon's Daria Panova in the first round of the qualifying stage. Smith will join teammates Katie Blaszak, Saras Arasu and Julie Deßoo in the qualifying stage, and team up with Katie Granson, who lost in the finals of prequalifying, on the doubles side of the draw. •

Editor: Paul Doran Managing Editor: Tyler Rosen Photography Editor: Robert Tai Graphics Editor: Brian Morray Sr. Associate Editor: Evan Davis Associate Editors: Nick Christie, Mike Corey, Neelum Jeste Writers: Jesse Colvin, Paul Crowley, Abby Gold, Gabe Githens, Michael Jacobson, 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, C.K, Swett, Emily Vaughan, Jeff Vernon, Adam Yoffie

Special thanks to Chronicle editor Dave Ingram and managing editor Kevin Lees

in 1983, SportSWiap is the weekly sports supplement published by

Founded

The Chronicle. It can be read online at www.chronicle.duke.edu To reach the sports department at 301 Flowers Building, call 684-2663 or e-mail

NCAA Top 25 No. 1 Miami 48, Connecticut 14 No. 2 Oklahoma 31, Missouri 24 No. 3 Texas 17 Oklahoma State 15 No. 5 Ohio State 27, Northwestern 16 No. 6 Georgia 27 Alabama 25 No. 7 Oregon 31, Arizona 14 No. 8 Notre Dame 31, Stanford 7 No. 9 Florida State 48, Clemson 17 No. 10 Tennessee 41, Arkansas 38 No. 12 Washington St. 30, No. 20 USC 27 No. 15 Penn State 34, No. 23 Wisconsin 31 No. 25 Mississippi 17 No. 16 Florida 14 No. 17 lowa 31, Purdue 28 No. 18 LSD 48, Louisiana-Lafayette 0 Colorado 35, No. 19 Kansas State 31 No. 21 Air Force 48, Navy 7 California 34, No. 22 Washington 27

Sportswrap

sports@chronicle.duke.edu

Game OF THE Men's soccer

3

Lehigh's high

The men's soccer team let through a last minute goal and was upset by Lehigh 2-1.

Women's soccer Free falling The women's soccer team's stock

4

Volleyball

4

kept falling as Duke dropped its fourth straight, losing to Clemson. •

Snapping turtles

The volleyball team won its second ACC contest, beating Maryland 3-2.

Women's golf •The crudest month

The Blue Devils closed a long September with a win at the Tar Heel Invitational.

5 Sunday, Oct. 13,2 p.m. Crystal Palace National Sports Complex

7

Football Mistake central •

Due to a plethora of key mistakes, Duke dropped another could-have-been toVirginia.

8

Women's golf International flavor •

Head coach Dan Brooks has given the women's golf team a more worldly feel.

•spot

Duke Students, Faculty, Staff and

Men's basketball vs London Towers

The men's basketball team kicks off its season with four games in London against the London Towers and other teams of the British Basketball League. Win or lose, the games will give some extra experience to a young Blue Devil squad that must be ready for a grueling ACC and NCAA schedule in less than a month.

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Sportswiai

The Chronicle

MONDAY. OCTOBER 7, 2002 �PAGE 3

Mountain Hawks upset men’s soccer in Durham Lehigh utilizes defense, counterattack and last minute goal by Fisher to top No. 17 Duke By SHANE RYAN The Chronicle

Lehigh

2 Coming into Sunday’s

Duke

1 team had

worry about.

game, the men’s soccer little to

Ranked 17th in the nation, playing on their home field, and facing an unranked opponent, the Devils seemed to have an easy path to victory. The Lehigh Mountain Hawks, however, had different ideas. On the strength of a dramatic 84th minute goal, Lehigh staged a huge

upset, defeating the Blue Devils 2-1 Sunday afternoon at Koskinen Stadium. With the game knotted at one and time winding down, two Duke defenders were unable to clear a slow roller across the box. Lehigh junior Steve Fisher, playing opportunistically, stepped up and blasted the ball past goalkeeper Justin Trowbridge to seal the victory for the Hawks. “They took advantage of our defensive miscues today,” said head coach John Rennie. “They played a typical underdog game, mostly defending and taking their chances on the counterattack. You have to give them credit for capitalizing when they had to. They

did exactly what they came to do.” Despite controlling the pace of play, Duke found themselves in a hole early on. In what was to become a theme for the day, the Duke defense had a breakdown in the first 11 minutes, allowing Lehigh senior Evan Bruno a breakaway on the left side. Bruno executed a perfect cross, and fellow senior Dan Perciballi sent it home to give Lehigh the early lead. Duke attacked relentlessly the rest of the half, and the ball rarely crossed into the Duke defensive end. Unfortunately for the Blue Devils, they were unable to get past Mountain Hawk goalkeeper Ryan Grzeszczak, who played solidly all game. Despite allowing only two shots on goal, the Devils went in to the half down 1-0. The second halffeatured more of the same with Duke pressuring and Lehigh keeping at least eight men behind the ball at all times. At one point, senior standout Trevor Perea took five corner kicks in an eight-minute span, but the Blue Devils were unable to capitalize. The Lehigh defensive wall finally See LEHIGH on page 9

LEHIGH GOALIE RYAN GRZESZCZAK blocks a Duke attempt to find the back of the net

Field hockey drops 5 7th straight contest to Tar Heels Blue Devils bounce back with 2-0 win over William

&

Mary Sunday at Williams Field

By JESSE COLVIN The Chronicle

2 The 12th-ranked L ce field hockey team played twice at home this weekW&M 0 end, winning one contest and almost reversing 19 years of history in the other. The end result was a 2-0 victory against William & Mary Sunday afternoon and a thrilling 5-4 double overtime loss to No. 7 North Carolina Saturday, which extended the Blue Devil’s losing streak to the Tar Heels to 57 straight games. For a while Saturday, it looked like Duke was going to beat North Carolina for the first time since 1983. When junior forward Stacy Tsougas collected sophoDuke

more Johanna Bischofs cross and slammed the ball past the Tar Heel goalie with a little more than five minutes left in the game to put Duke up 4-3, the Blue Devils appeared to be on their way. But it was not meant to be. Less than two minutes later, North Carolina freshman Naomi Weatherald’s straight shot from the top of the arc hit a sprawled out Duke goalie Erica Perrier and bounced up and over her to tie the game at four AILIAN GAN/THE CHRONICLE

STACEY TSOUGAS tries to get away from a William fielder and push the ball upfield

&

Mary mid-

and force overtime. “We were playing for the win in overtime,” head coach Liz Tchou said. “We weren’t going to hold back.” Despite the Blue Devils’ best efforts, however,

they couldn’t avoid falling to the nation’s seventh best team, as the Tar Heels’ Meredith Keller finished off a fastbreak to end a game that had started 97 minutes earlier. North Carolina drew first blood, as freshman forward Karen Mann deposited a Kelsey Keeran pass past a diving Perrier fifteen minutes into the game. Duke was quick to respond. After Tar Heel goalie Amy Tran drew a foul for sitting on the ball, Bischof sent the subsequent penalty stroke low, hard and right past Tran to tie the game at one. Coming back from a deficit was something the Blue Devils were forced to do all day, and Tchou was very happy with the way her side fought from behind. “I am so proud of my players,” she said. “Fm just really happy that they continued to fight and had the opportunities that they did.” The Tar Heels were very successful on their penalty corners, converting two of their four attempts. The Duke players and coaches knew coming into the game how lethal North Carolina was in

those situations. “We watched video this week, and we adjusted our corner defense for their comer attack, but you never know what they are going to do,” Gracie Sorbello said. See TRIBE on page 9


PAGE 4 � MONDAY, OCTOBER 7. 2002

The Chronicle

loitswiai

Tigers send women’s soccer to 4th straight loss

Clemson’s speedy Deliah Arrington rings up 2, dropping the Blue Devils to a sub-500 record

scored on rebound shots. Ford, a central defender, tallied her fourth goal of the

By GABE GITHENS The Chronicle

women’s soccer Clemson 3_ The team relinquished a 22 0 lead and lost its Duke fourth consecutive match with a 3-2 loss to Clemson in overtime Saturday night at Koskinen Stadium. The Blue Devils dominated play for the third straight game but could not convert their opportunities in the second half or overtime. Head coach Robbie Church was satisfied with his team’s performance at the onset of the match but noted a pivotal time period when Duke could have taken advantage of Clemson’s defense. “I thought we started out great,” Church said. “We found a real good rhythm of play early. Right after the first goal I thought there were some key things that happened where we missed our opportunity to get a second goal to

season just eight minutes into the game as she found the ball inside the six yard box and beat Tiger keeper Lauren Heos. After Ford’s goal the Blue Devils’ defense was challenged by Arrington on several plays. Duke’s netminder, Thora Helgadottir, scrambled around the box to prevent any goal-scoring chances in the early going of the match. Duke quickly counterattacked from a Clemson

offensive possession and earned a corner kick, which would result in its second goal. After a commotion in the box, the ball bounced back toward the Blue Devil defense and Bognanno ripped a left-footed volley from 30 yards away. Her shot barely cleared the heads of the players inside the box before hitting the top left corner of the goal. Bognanno, who left the game with a sprained MCL in the them,” second half, made sure she was going to bury The Tigers’ Deliah Arrington scored put the ball on target. “In a situation like that you want to two goals, including the golden goal with make sure your body is over the ball be6:22 left in the second overtime. Arringcause the velocity ofthe ball will take it ton’s speed at the forward position al0-2 where you want it to go,” Bognanno said. lowed her to beat the Blue Devil (5-6, runs on sev“I just concentrated on keeping my body the defense on timed in ACC) eral occasions during the game.This time, over the ball and struck it.” Duke’s two goal lead was short-lived, she was able to get free on the right side as a brief mental lapse allowed Arringvictory field and lift her team to ofthe “She’s so quick and so fast,” Church ton to get behind the Blue Devil defense said. “She has a lot of soccer savvy and for her first on the night. The Blue Devil’s took a 2-1 lead into half-time and could finish her opportunities. We needed to limit our mistakes and finish some started the second half with several opportunities from Casey McCluskey. things at the end.” outstanding Clemson advanced the ball upfield and finishing looked Duke’s in the first 45 minutes of play, as CarSee CLEMSON on page 9 olyn Ford and Carmen Bognanno both (7-4, 2-1)

.

CAROLYN FORD tries to work the ball forward during Duke’s 3-2 loss to Clemson

Volleyball sneaks by Maryland for 2nd ACC win After getting back on winning track, Blue Devils now ready for ACC rivals UNC, N.C. State By ADAM SCHMELZER The Chronicle

3 Based on Friday night’s volleyball game in Duke Cameron Indoor Stadium, a bystandard might 2 have already through! it was basketball season. Maryland The volleyball team outlasted conference rival Maryland 3-2 (32-34, 30-27, 30-22, 25-30, 15-13), in a five-game thriller at Cameron Indoor Stadium Friday night. The Blue Devils (14-5, 22 in the ACC) used improved blocking, digs and a strong offense to overcome the Terrapins (11-7, 0-3), who had four players with double figures in kills. All five games were characterized by intense, back-and-forth play that saw numerous lead changes and extended volleys. Head coach Jolene Nagel said that she was very pleased with the performance of her Duke team under pressure. “It was a really good win for our team,” Nagel said. “We had to maintain intensity throughout the entire match, especially because we didn’t come out strong in game one. Of course, we still have some things that we want to work on to make sure that we can be a stronger team. This is a great win for us in a

competitive setting.” Junior Katie Gilman, who had 27 kills in the victory—her previous career best was 11—sparked Duke’s offense to end the match with an overall hitting percentage of .214, compared to Maryland’s .167 percentage. However, Gilman said the entire team came ready to play. “Everyone came out here tonight with intensity,” she said. “We feed off each other. That’s how we’re going to win, when everyone comes out fired up.”

Duke dominated the beginning ofthe first game, going on a 5-0 run midway through that eventually led Maryland to call a timeout with the score at 20-12. The Terrapins scored four straight points immediately after play resumed and fought back to tie the score at 29, before taking the game, 34-32. The Blue Devils came back and won the next two games on the strength of several key blocks and drilled spikes. However, Maryland countered in the fourth game with good blocking of their See TERRS on page 11

KATIE GILMAN tries to get a kill over a pair of Terrapin defenders in Friday night’s nailbitting win.


Sportswrai

The Chronicle

lONDAY, OCTOBER 7, 2002 �PAGE 5

Women’s golf edges OSU in Tar Heel Invitational Freshman Liz Janangelo’s 6-under par wins first ever collegiate tournament for Conn, native By NICK CHRISTIE The Chronicle

CHAPEL HILL

Despite struggling Sunday with a final round score of 300, Duke held off Oklahoma State for a one-stroke victory at the three-day Tar

Heel Invitational. Liz Janangelo posted the team’s lowest individual score, as her six-under-par total earned the freshman her first collegiate title. It was the second straight competition that Janangelo finished as the low Blue Devil. The runner-up at last weekend’s ACC/SEC Challenge, the freshman placed a greater degree of importance on the team’s success, although she did add that garnering a victory of her own brought her a bit ofredemption. “It was nice to come through myself and to win,” she said. “Last week I learned a lot. I learned I could make nine birdies [in one round] and I learned I could fall apart on one hole. So this week I just kept plugging along and played steady.” Janangelo is the third straight Blue Devil to win in-

dividual honors at the annual tournament held on UNC’s Finley Golf Course. “Yeah, it was a bit of deja vu,” Leigh Anne Hardin said, who placed first as a freshman two years ago. “Last year Kristina [Engstrom] won, so every year it’s been a Devil since I came here.... We get to play here a lot, so we feel really comfortable. It’s like our home away from home.” Indeed, the Duke’s team victory marked its sixth consecutive title at the event. The Blue Devils were without Virada Nirapathpongporn, the 2002 NCAA individual champion who is currently representing her native Thailand in the Asian Games. “She’s obviously a great player, [but] I don’t really spend a lot of time thinking about [not having her],” head coach Dan Brooks said. “I feel that we’ve got a great bunch of players and you just go into each [tournament] with whoever you’ve got.” Although pleased that his side managed to fend off

the charging Cowgirls, Brooks noted that his team played only “mediocre golf.” He emphasized that the fall tournaments are mostly opportunities to improve, as winning at all costs matters only at the Collegiate National Championships held each spring. “The whole thing is to keep your mind on development, getting better,” Brooks said. “If you ever get to hung up on [success], then you won’t have it for very long. The only way to keep it is to keep trying to get

iIF

yL Hp

better.... I think I’ve seen the [competition] improve over the years, so we’ve had to keep getting better.” With Duke having three weeks off from competition before it heads down to Alabama to compete in the Auburn Tiger-Derby Invitational, Brooks hopes to use the rest of October to help his players focus their attention on correcting flaws in their swings. In particular, Brooks thought that the Blue Devils’ See GOLF on page 11

University Transit Notice Airport Shuttle Bus Service

||||

Make a reservation to guarantee a ride to the airport!

M Jkfe jL»i

n

JANEHETHERINGTON/THE CHRONICLE

LIZ JANANGELO, who won the Tar Heel Invitational, lines up a putt.

First issue after Fall Break

Transportation Services will be operating free shuttle service to and from RDU International Airport for Fall Break. Reservations are needed for rides from West, Trent, and East to RDU and may be made up to 9 days in advance by calling 684-2218. For reasons of safety, convenience, and courtesy to others, each student is strongly encouraged to bring only one piece of luggage onto the shuttle. Anticipated arrival at RDU is 25 minutes after departing East Campus. Trips from RDU are filled first come first served and will pick up passengers at Terminal A Pre-Arranged Transportation Island (Purple Booth across from baggage claim) and at Terminal C (outside baggage claim).

Published: Wednesday, October 16th Ad Deadline: Wednesday, October 9*

For more information visit Transportation Services online at http://parking.ciuke.edu or call 684-2218.

Duke University Transportation Services


The Chronicle

iGE 6 �MONDAY, OCTOBER 7. 2002

Cavalier attitude: Duke out

UVA from The Chronicle page 1 -ber was successful on the kick, dwindling Virginia’s lead to 20-16. Franks said he kicked the field goal because of the confidence he had in his defensive unit. The Duke defense held Virginia to minus-four yards and zero points in the third quarter. The plan seemed to work, with the Blue Devils forcing the Cavaliers to punt after three plays. Things fell apart for Duke, however, when it regained possession. Smith’s first pass attempt was deflected, and instead of batting the ball down, Smith caught the ball for a 12-yard loss. The Blue Devils went from a first and ten on the Duke 45 to second down-and-22 from their 33. Smith’s next two passes were incomplete, and Duke was forced to punt. “That’s never happened to me before,” Smith said about his deflected pass. “You’ve got to just bat that down. That’s a mistake I made and that ended up putting us in a bad situation and killed our drive.” The Blue Devil defense that had been so reliable all game succumbed to Virginia on its next possession. On second down-and-15 Virginia had an illegal participation penalty, bringing up third and long, however Wahoo quarterback Matt Schaub completed a 35-yard pass to star wide-receiver Billy McMullen, sneaking the ball between a trio of Duke defenders. “It was a good throw,” McMullen said. “There were like three defenders there, and I just had to go get it.” The play was followed by a fleeflicker to Michael McGrew for 54 yards, putting the Cavaliers on the two yard-line. “Sometimes if you follow one big play with another one, it increases your chances,” said Virginia head coach A1 Groh. “We knew we had to be bold in the second half, and take our shot at them.” Alvin Pearman ran the ball in on the next play, putting UVa up 27-16. The Blue Devils continued to fight, going 80 yards in 11 plays, highlighted by Smith’s 15-yard pass to Sharpe with 1:28 left in the game. Duke was unsuccessful in its attempt at a two-point conversion, and decided to kick-off to Virginia, rather than attempt a risky onside kick. “We had two timeouts left,” Franks said. “There was 2:50 something left on the clock. The odds of us getting the ball back that way are a lot better than getting the ball on an onside kick. We kicked it deep and they were at the 20. Eventually we got the ball back, just not soon enough.” The Duke defense forced a punt from the Cavaliers after five plays, but Virginia still managed to take two minutes and eighteen seconds off the clock. When Duke finally regained possession of the ball, there was only 29 seconds left in the game. With no time-outs left, the Blue Devils ran out of time when Almondo Curry intercepted Chris Dapolito’s pass at the end ofregulation. It was Duke only interception in a 26-

for-44, 256-yard performance, turned in mainly by Smith—his first game with

more than 200 yards passing. Smith was not the only bright spot in Duke’s close loss, with junior Chris Douglas having a breakout performance, running for 125 yards and receiving for 89.

Fullback Alex Wade, who had taken

over Douglas’ roles as featured back since the junior was hampered by in-

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juries, was forced to leave the game with ailments of his own. Wade, who was averaging nearly 100 yards a game was held to 53 yards on the day. “I definitely feel a lot better,” Douglas said. “Unfortunately sometimes it just takes a while to get over certain injuries, especially with a guy like me.” The defensive line also had its most impressive game of the season, netting two sacks and holding the Cavs to only two yards on the ground. “It hurts a lot worse than it did last year, or the year before, because we’re a lot better,” Franks said. ‘When you expect to win and you know you’re good enough to win, it hurts a lot more.”

.

Virginia 27, Duke 22 FINAL Virginia (4-2, 2-1 Duke (2-4, 0-2) First Quarter 13:05 (VA), Smith 32-yard FG 3:36 (DU), Garber 28-yard FG, 0:32 (DU). Garber 23-yard FG Second Quarter 6:35 (VA), Smith 30-yardFG, 2:03 (DU), Smith 5-yard pass ID pass to Douglas (Garber). 11 plays, 80 yards, 4:32. 0:25 (VA), Lundy 1-yard ID run (Smith), 12 plays, 80 yards, 1:38. Third Quarter Fourth Quarter 12:16 (VA), Schaub 18-yard TD pass to Snelling (Smith). 8 plays, 90 yards, 2:44. 8:04 (DU), Garber 20-yard FG. 4:26 (VA), Pearman 2-yard TD run (Smith). 4 plays, 86 yards, 1:03. 2:53 (DU) Smith 15-yard pass to Sharpe (pass tailed). 11 plays, 80 yards, 1:33. First downs Rushes-yards (ret) Passing yards (net) Passes (att-comp-int) Total Offense (plays-yards) Fumble returns-yards Punt returns-yards Kickoff returns-yards Interception returns-yards Punts (number-average)

Virginia

Duke Blue Devils

20-2 315 45-27-1 65-317

47-158 256 26-44-1 91-414

8-38.0

4-14 2-42 1-31 6-43.0

#

*

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Fumbles-lost

Penalties-yards

Possession-time Sacks by (number-yards) RUSHING: Duke-Douglas 23 att, 126 yards; Wade 14 att, 53 yards Landrum 3 att, 4 yards; Sharpe 1 att, 2 yards; Dapolito 1 att, -8 yards Smith 5 att, -16 yards. Virginia- Lundy 5 att, 14 yards; Pearman 10 att 9 yards; Hagans 2 att, 5 yards; Schaub 3 att, -26 yards. PASSING: Duke- Smith 26-42, 256 yards, 2 TD, 0 INI; Dapolito 1-0, 0 yards, 0 TD, 1 INI Virginia-Schaub 27-45,315 yards, 1 TO. 1 INI RECEIVING: Duke- Douglas 8 att, 89 yards; Love 6 rec, 67 yards; Powell 4 rec, 53 yards: Johnson 4 rec, 32 yards; Sharpe 1 rec, 15 yards; Landrum 1 rec, 6 yards; Scott 2 rec, 6 yards; Smith 1 rec, -12 yards. Virginia-McMullen 6 rec, 79 yards; Snelling 5 rec, 71 yards; Lundy 5 rec, 4 yards; McGrew 4 rec, 75 yards’; Anderson 3 rec, 26 yards; Luzar 2 rec, 3 yards; Pearman 1 rec, 33 yards; Sawter 1 rec, 24 yards. INTERCEPTIONS; Duke-Green 1 int, 31 yards. Virginia- Curry (no return) Attendance—l7,63B Stadium: Wallace Wade Stadium Officials: JeffFlanagan (Referee), Talbert Pearce (Umpire), Michael Samples (Linesman); Richard Misnard (Line Judge); Barry Hendon (Back judge): David Meslow (Field judge), Jim Corpora(Side Judge) Total elapsed time—3:l3 Temperature: 81 degrees/sunny and clear Wind: Var, 3 mph

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$

(clockwise from top reft) VIRGINIA PLAY-CALLER MATT SCHAUB threw for 315 yards and one touchdown agi TERBACK ADAM SMITH drops back for one his 42 throws on the day. Smith had the best day of his caret yards and two touchdowns. SAFETY ALEX GREENE returns Duke’s only interception for 31 yards. He also \ down by a pair of Cavaliers after catching one of his six balls on the day. Love finished with six receptions £


Sportswr

The Chronicle

MONDAY, OCTOBER 7,

7

ays Virginia but falls 27-22 � The Blue Devils were unable to seal the deal because of numerous mental errors in their game, despite beat-

ing Virginia statistically.

alii

If football games could be won based on stats alone, then Duke would be sitting at 3-3 heading into next weekend’s contest against Wake Forest with a chance to climb above the .500 mark for the first time in recent memory this late into the season. After all, a much improved Duke team outplayed Virginia in nearly every key category, earning more first downs (24 to 17), monopolizing the running game (158 yards to two yards), amassing more total yards (414 to 317), having a better thirddown conversion ratio (7-of-19 to 2-of-13) and dominating time of possession (35:59 to 24:01). However, rather than giving the homecoming crowd of over 17,000 a victory that would have seemed improbable, if not impossible, just one year ago, the Blue Devils sealed their fate with numerous mental mistakes that left fans groaning and the team thinking about what could have been. Example No. 1: Duke leads Virginia 13-6 in the first half after driving 80 yards on 11 plays for a touchdown with under two minutes remaining in the second quarter. Blue Devils appear to have the Cavaliers in a third-and-11 situation at their own 34-yard line, but defensive end Micah Harris, who had played a very strong first half, is called for a personal foul and Virginia has an automatic first down on the Catherine Sullivan 50-yard line. Later on that same drive it>s third-andGame Commentary six with one minute left before halftime. Virginia quarterback Matt Schaub throws an incomplete pass at the Duke 35-yard line. Instead of a fourth-and-long situation, Duke is again called for a penalty, this time pass interference. Automatic first down. Three plays later, touchdown. They could have gone into the locker room with a 13-6 lead, but the Blue Devils shot themselves in the foot twice and let the Cavaliers steal the momentum. “The defense played really well early,” Duke head coach Carl Franks said. “There were some key penalties that allowed Virginia to score on that last drive. We felt like if we could quit making some little individual mistakes we’d be in pretty good shape.” Unfortunately for Franks and his players, Duke’s mental lapses were far from over. Example No. 2: The Cavaliers hold a 20-16 lead with seven minutes remaining in the fourth quarter. Duke has good field position on its own 45-yard line after a key defensive stop. Quarterback Adam Smith has a pass tipped in the air by nose tackle Justin Walker. Rather than bat the pass down, which would have given Duke secohd-and-10, Smith catches the ball for a loss of 12 yards, setting up second-and-22 and effectively killing the drive that could have put Duke ahead. To his credit, Smith played arguably the best game of his college career, throwing for 256 yards to keep pace with Virginia’s Schaub, who came into the game ranked third in the nation in' passing efficiency. In the end, though, the junior Schaub made fewer key errors than his sophomore counterpart. “I made some mistakes that ended up hurting us,” Smith said. “You’ve got to just bat that ball down. That’s a mistake I made and that ended up putting us in a bad situation.” Smith’s blunder did indeed hurt the Blue Devils, who were forced to punt after a three-and-out series, and their mistakes continued on Virginia’s next possession. Example No. 3: Virginia has the ball with just over five minutes remaining in the game at its own 44-yard line. Schaub hands the snap off to running back Alvin Pearman in what appears to be a basic sweep to the right. After a few strides, Pearman tosses a lateral to Schaub, who then hits a wide-open Michael McGrew for a gain of 54 to the Duke 2-yard line. At a time when the Blue Devils desperately needed a defensive stand, they fell victim to the so-called flea-flicker play. “We were playing man coverage and the guy who was supposed to be covering slowed down,” Franks said. “He figured it was a run and didn’t stay in coverage like he was supposed to. Hopefully the young guys will learn from their mistakes. Unfortunately, their learning experience results in the other team getting opportunities.” The Blue Devils deserve credit for proving willing and able to fight back after such disheartening errors, something which teams in recent years could not seem to do. They managed to keep the game close by responding with a scoring drive of their own, but, when they need to stop Virginia on its final series, they were again hampered by a key penalty that allowed the Cavaliers to wind down the clock. Duke proved itself capable of competing with respectable teams like Virginia, but, if the Blue Devils want to start winning some ofthese close contests, they will have to avoid the type of mental miscues that doomed them Saturday.

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SCOWNG

CHARTS

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PS BORGES AND YOAV LURIE/THE CHRONICLE tiling Duke secondary. QUARiting 26-of-42 passes for 256 ckles. REGGIE LOVE is taken rds.

Final Score

mil 27

fflf 22


The Chronicle

Spoitswrai

PAGE 8 �MONDAY, OCTOBER 7, 21

N A T I INTER DELIGHTS BY ABBY GOLD The Chronicle

Glancing at the women’s golf team’s roster, one is automatically struck by the absence of Americans. In what has become a melting pot of cultures characteristic of most large cities, the Blue Devils have become a unique entity both at Duke and in the world of college golf. “Last year we had five foreigners and one Indianan on the team,” said head coach Dan Brooks. “Now we’ve got two Americans. I brought the American someone to hangout with With four countries represented among the team’s six players, the Blue Devils are by far Duke’s most geographically diverse athletic team. Duke differs from its competition in that the majority of its players are from overseas. The eccentric mix of Western European, East Asian and American cultures has created a distinct quality that when fused together has been strong enough to spark two NCAA titles—including one in 2002—and numerous No. 1 rankings. In a sport that has seen a recent influx of foreign collegiate players, the Blue Devils seem to have jumped head-first into the international pool. The Blue Devils have just two Americans on this year’s team, one up from last year’s national championship squad. “When we had five foreigners and one American it was probably more [diverse] than most [teams], but it’s very common to have at least half of the team be foreign. There are a lot of teams that have a good number of foreigners on their traveling team,” Brooks said. Since many foreign universities do not foster the same kind of alliance between academics and athletics that is so commonly found at American schools, many foreign players opt to come to the United States to pursue both their studies and athletic interests. “In Sweden you can’t combine golf and school. So you have a lot of Swedish players over here to play college golf,” said Djursholm, Sweden nativeKristina Engstrom. Duke maintains a strong appeal to junior golfers, American and foreign alike. Engstrom and fellow foriegn teammates Niloufar Aazam-Zanganeh and Maria Garcia-Estrada all agree that for international players seeking the right balance of academics and top-rate golf, Duke possesses this ideal combination. ”

“What better place to come to than Duke, where you have one of the top teams and a great education?” GarciaEstrada said. “There are hardly any schools that have such a good golf program and good education.” With many questioning the di pearance of American golfers, B maintains that his team’s international flavor is not the result ofactive, overseas recruitment but rather a byproduct of word of mouth. “It wasn’t really by design,” Brooks said “I didn’t set out to recruit foreign players. We had a few foreigners that came before this most recent era. I have always paid attention to the people on my team as far as who I am going to recruit.” Many of Brooks’ current-and former recruits have come from recommendations from his players. It is these recommendations that are largely responsible for shaping the foreign nature of the Duke team. “The neat thing about golf is that people get to know one another,” Brooks said. “In junior golf they’re actually walking with each other on the fairways so you have this great opportunity to have character bring in character if you just listen to them and listen to who they have walked the fairways with and who they have enjoyed being with. So low and behold you have a lot of foreigners on the team before you know it.” The small, especially diverse women’s team has a unique character that is the direct result of the fusion of the various languages and cultures of its players. The Blue Devils agree that their diverse backgrounds have created a special environment that brings more to the table than just golf. “I have the opportunity to learn about so many different cultures,” said freshman and American Liz Janangelo. “You can truly understand what [foreign playersl have to go through in order to achieve what comes so easily to Americans.”

ANDY YUN/THE CHRONICLE

THE LOGO OFTHEYOH FOOTBALL CENTER premiered at the center’s dedication Friday,

YOH from The Chronicle page 1

band, who stated that Duke’s excellence does not fall short in the football stadium. “What quality high school athlete holding a football instead of a bag of would not want ,to come if they knew seeds. Mary was given a painting of the Duke had a first-class commitment to Yoh center. winning,” he asked the crowd, which “What a beautiful night,” Mary said. consisted mostly of the Board of “It is so nice to see so many of you Trustees and Duke alumni. “This center come together and unite the communishows that commitment.” Next up to the podium was head footty to reestablish a winning tradition in football. Success does not come ball coach Carl Franks, who thanked overnight, but I can feel it coming. the donors on behalf of the entire team. Who -can ever forget the hundreds of The players were given a chance to walk students storming the field, tearing through the third floor, which holds a gallery dedicated to Duke football histodown goal posts and triumphantly carrying them onto campus. It brought joy ry. Franks attributed part of his team’s to our hearts, tears to my eyes, and emotion entering into the ECU game to the pride they felt for the strong founpride in our school.” Her speech was followed by her husdation ofDuke football.

JANE HETHERINGTON/THE CHRONICLE

Play ball! Again Duke Hanson, Trinity 75, walks around with a water jug during the annual Alumni Baseball Game at historic Jack Coombs field this weekend.


Sportswrai

The Ghronicie

TRIBE from page 3 “Now we have a better idea of what they like to do,” freshman Lindsay Shaw added. “But we will have a better feel for what UNC will do the second time around. We know we can win.” In the second half, it was Duke who scored first, as junior back Kim Gogola knocked home a Duke corner ten minutes into the half. The Tar Heels pulled ahead yet again on a penalty stroke for their third one goal lead of the game. Facing their third one goal deficit of the game, Duke roared back. Shaw scored two minutes after entering the game, and then Tsougas gave Duke its first lead ofthe day. In the first seven-a-side, fifteen minute overtime, neither team could manage a serious offense surge. But in the second period, the Tar Heels caught the Blue Devils forward, sending a long pass forward to Kerry Falgowski, who found herself one-onone with a Duke defender. Falgowski sent a pass around an incoming Perrier and Keller finished the play off. Sunday the Blue Devils rebounded against the Tribe behind goals from Kim Van Kirk and Sorbello. Van Kirk had the game winner, seizing a rebound off the

CLEMSON from page 4 forward Heather Beem took a chance from 30 yards away that carried over the outstretched arms of Helgadottir to tie the game at 2-2. Duke kept pressure on Clemson after the game was tied as Gwendolyn Oxenham had two great opportunities on passes from Bognanno. Oxenham tried to beat Heos from the right side of the box but could not find an angle into the net. About a minute later, she squarely hit the crossbar from just outside the penalty box. Bognanno knew her team

should have finished their chances to put away the Tigers. “We had great opportunities, but we’re just not finishing that final ball,” Bognanno said. “I don’t know if it’s a lack of concentration. We’re just

9

IQNDAY, OCTOBER 7,

NICOLE DUDEK and LINDSEY SHAW try to dislodge the ball from the Tribe goalie. left post and flipping the ball over the William & Mary goaltender Claire Miller for her eight goal of the season.

Duke 2, William FINAL William & Mary (3-7)

Duke (8-4)

&

ANTHONY CROSS/THE CHRONICLE

Mary 0 1 2 11 0 0

F 2 0

GOALS; William & Mary-none. Duke-Van Kirk (8); Sorbello (4). SAVES: William & Mary 9 (Miller), Duke 2 (Perrier) Stadium: Williams Field

unlucky in the final third.” Despite outshooting the Tigers and also creating far more goal opportunities, the Blue Devils lost their fourth consecutive one-goal game. Church and his squad have been practicing goalscoring plays, but they can not seem to get over the top in a game situation. “We missed a lot of opportunities and like the Clemson coach said, we deserved a better fate because we outplayed them both offensively and defensively,” Church said. “Right now it’s a cruel game and it’s punishing us.”

Clemson 3, Duke 2 FINAL Clemson (7-4, 2-1) Duke (5-6, 0-2)

or

1 2 11 0 2

F 13 0 2

GOALS: Clemson-Arrington 2, 27:37,103:38; Beem 65:40. Duke-Ford 7:56, Bognanno 22:22. SAVES; Clemson 7 (Heos); Duke 3 (Helgadottir). Stadium: Koskinen Stadium

LAN CAREY is slide tackled by Lehigh’s Manbaj GilI during yesterday’s game

LEHIGH from page 3

their opening goal. Perciballi led the first charge, snapping shot from 30 yards out that was barely tipped over broke down in the 66th minute. Taking the cross bar by a leaping Trowbridge. an indirect kick just outside the box, With nine minutes to play, Duke dePerea faked the shot and tipped the ball fender Mark Mattern save the Blue Devto Jordan Gila. Gila left it for midfielder ils by heading a cross out of the box and Donald Mclntosh, who ripped a beautiout of danger. Meanwhile, the Duke offul shot past a sprawling Grzeszczak fense lost a bit of its earlier momentum. After Fisher’s goal, Lehigh packed it and into the right side of the net. in, keeping 11 men behind the ball and “It’s a play we practice a lot.” Mclntosh said. “Trevor made a nice fake, and safeguarding their lead. Duke could not it was set up well. We haven’t had many manage any serious threats before the chances to use it this year, but it worked buzzer sounded “We completely outplayed them out to perfection today.” The momentum had clearly shifted there,” Mclntosh, a co-captain said. in Duke’s direction, and the offensive “They’re a team who plays for the counattack intensified. A Perea cross in the terattack, and they push the ball 68th minute was nearly headed home straight ahead when they have the before Grzeszczak leaped up and made chance. Today, they capitalized, and that a spectacular catch amidst several was enough.” Duke forwards. Lehigh 2, Duke 1 The situation seemed to repeat itself F 1 2 over and over for the next 15 minutes, FINAL 11 2 (7-4-1) with Duke getting several great Lehigh(6-3-1) 0 11 Duke them chances and Grzeszczak stoning GOALS: Lehigh-Perciballi (Bruno) 10:26; Fisher (Bruno) 83:05. Dukecold each time. Mclntosh (Gila) 65:50.

In the 77th minute, however, Lehigh

began to attack for the first time since

SAVES: Lehigh 3 (Grzeszczak), Duke 2 (Trowbridge). Stadium: Koskinen Stadium

Attendance—4oo

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10 �MONDAY, OCTOBER 7.

Sportsmai

The Chronicle

NFL Update From wire reports Raiders 49 ORCHARD

Giants 21, Cowboys 17

Redskins 31, Titans 14 NASHVILLE, Tenn.

Steve Spurri-

w

J&S:

er found a new quarterback in rookie

PARK, Patrick Ramsey, who relieved injured Phillip Danny Wuerffel and threw for 268 yards Rookie N.Y. 31 Buchanon returned an and two touchdowns. Bill7 The Redskins (2-2) bounced back interception by Drew Bledsoe 81 yards from Sunday minutes left two straight defeats behind their eight over with just as the Oakland Raiders defeated the first-round draft pick, who went 20-ofBuffalo Bills 49-31 to remain the NFL’s -34 and helped his team roll up 442 yards against the hapless Titans (1-4). only unbeaten team. Wuerffel made his first NFL start in Oakland improved to 4-0 for the first years, but he left after just one seand four sixth time in franchise history time since 1990, and the Raiders later ries with an injured right shoulder. became the only team with an unblem49ers 37, Rams 13 ished record when the San Diego ChargThe San FranSAN FRANCISCO ers were routed in Denver, falling to 4-1. With the Raiders clinging to a 35-31 cisco 49ers pounded their biggest rivals with delight as Jeff Garcia threw for a lead, Buchanon stepped in front of Bledsoe’s pass toward Peerless Price and ran touchdown and ran for another in a it back untouched up the left sideline. rout that left the defending NFC chamBuchanon had let a pass slip through pions 0-5. Jason Webster staggered the already his hands on the previous play. Buchanon’s interception came a roughed-up Rams when he intercepted week after the cornerback returned a a pass by backup Jamie Martin —startpunt 83 yards for a touchdown and had ing for the injured Kurt Warner—and an interception to set up another TD in returned it 37 yards for a touchdown and a 27-3 lead just before halftime. Oakland’s 52-25 win over the Titans. Garrison Hearst ran for 116 yards, Rich Gannon finished 23-of-38 for including the a 16-yard touchdown mid357 yards. The game featured two of league’s most prolific offenses, and the way through the fourth quarter for the 49ers (3-1). teams combined for 974 yards. Bledsoe had led the Bills (2-3) to two Jaguars 28, Eagles 25 victories in their three overtime games, JACKSONVILLE, Fla. Rookie but he couldn’t engineer another great finish. He threw for 417 yards but also John Henderson sacked Donovan McNabb three times, and Bobby Shaw rehad three interceptions. turned a punt 69 yards in the Jaguars’ Broncos 26, Chargers 9 close victory. Jacksonville (3-1) made the big plays DENVER Brian Griese threw for 316 yards and two touchdowns, and and the right calls, especially early in Denver held San Diego’s LaDainian the fourth quarter, when coach Tom Tomlinson to 48 yards, a week after he Coughlin took a gamble, going for it on tied the team record with 217 against fourth-and-1 from the Philly two with a 14-10 lead. Stacey Mack broke Barry New England. Denver (4-1) bottled up San Diego’s Gardner’s tackle for the first down, and running game, forcing the Chargers to scored from the one on the next play for go almost exclusively with the pass. a 21-10 lead. Drew Brees was 26-for-42 for 235 McNabb threw for 230 yards and ran twice for 100 more, but he was sacked five yards, but he was intercepted by times. He was so exhausted trying to Deltha O’Neal. San Diego (4-1) crossed midfield lead the Eagles (3-2) back late in the just four times, with one drive ending game that he had to pull away from cenon an interception by O’Neal in the ter while he threw up on the field. end zone. O’Neal, who was ejected for Saints 32, Steelers 29 bumping an official last week against Baltimore, also returned an intercepNEW ORLEANS Deuce McAllister tion 28 yards for a touchdown midway ran for 123 yards and scored two touchthrough the fourth quarter that put downs as the Saints improved to 4-1. Denver up 26-3. Steelers quarterback Tommy Maddox, making his first NFL start since Dolphins 26, Patriots 13 1992, played well in place ofthe benched Jay Fiedler threw two Kordell Stewart, but defense was again MIAMI touchdowns and ran for another—all the problem for Pittsburgh (1-3). on third down—as Miami defeated Maddox threw a 14-yard TD pass to New England 26-13 Sunday to take Terance Mathis with 1:26 left, then hit over sole possession of first place in Hines Ward for the conversion pass to the AFC East. cut the deficit to 3 points, but New OrThe Dolphins improved to 4-1, while leans recovered the onside kick. the Patriots fell to 3-2 with their second Buccaneers 20, Falcons 6 straight defeat. They’re 0-13 in Miami Keyshawn Johnson in September and October. ATLANTA Coming off a 48-30 loss at Kansas caught a 76-yard pass for his first City, the Dolphins regained their domitouchdown of the season, and the Bucnant form on defense. End Jason Taylor caneers got another defensive TD when had two sacks and forced a fumble by Warren Sapp intercepted a pass and latNew England quarterback Tom Brady eraled to Derrick Brooks. Tampa Bay (4-1) has allowed only 27 to set up Miami’s first score. The Dolphins led 16-0 at halftime, points in winning four straight games, and the Patriots’ first 21 plays netted and the defense hasn’t given up a touchdown on the road all season. just 17 yards. Ricky Williams gained 105 tough The Falcons (1-3) lost quarterback Michael Vick, who sprained his right yards on 36 carries—a Dolphins regular-season record. He already has four (non-throwing) shoulder early in the 100-yard games this season, one shy of third quarter and didn’t return. the team season mark set by Delvin Williams in 1978.

M

Kerry Collins, IRVING, Texas who entered the game leading the NFC in passing yardage but had

GARY WIEPERT/REUTERS

RAIDERS WIDEOUT JERRY PORTER grabs a pass just beyond the reach of Antoine Winfield thrown for only one score, threw three TD passes to lead the Giants. New York (3-2) took the lead for good when Collins hit Marcellus Rivers for a 17-yard score with 6:51 left. The Cowboys (2-3) had a chance to pull out a second straight late victory, but Quincy Carter overthrew Antonio Bryant on a long pass with less than three minutes left. Emmitt Smith scored his first TD of the season on a 30-yard run. He finished with a season-high 70 yards, leaving him 234 away from breaking Walter Payton’s career record.

Cardinals 16, Panthers 13 Bill Gramatica CHARLOTTE kicked a 50-yard field goal with 16 seconds left as Arizona improved to 3-2, its best start since 1991. The Panthers (3-2) clung to a 13-6 lead through the fourth quarter, until the Cardinals’ Goby Rhinehart intercepted a pass by Rodney Peete—one of four Carolina turnovers. Freddy Jones scored on a 15-yard run to tie the game, and Carolina couldn’t move the ball, giving the Cardinals a chance for the game-winner.

Chiefs 29, Jets 25

EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J. Chiefs running back Priest Holmes ran for 152 yards and a touchdown, and his 19-yard

touchdown reception from Trent Green with 27 seconds left handed the Jets their fourth straight loss. Holmes caught nine passes for 81 yards, and Green followed his fivetouchdown performance last week with 296 yards and two TDs to lead the Chiefs (3-2). John Hall kicked a 25-yard field goal with 2:54 remaining to give the Jets (14) a 3-point lead, but Kansas City marched 78 yards for the winning score. Chad Pennington, making his first career start after Vinny Testaverde was benched, was 23-of-30 for 245 yards, and Curtis Martin had 119 yards.

Colts 28, Bengals 21

INDIANAPOLIS Peyton Manning threw for two touchdowns and ran for smother, while Marvin Harrison caught nine passes for 145 yards and a touchdown as Indianapolis held off the winless Bengals. Indy (3-1) finally got its offense in sync. Edgerrin James scored his first TD in more than a year, and the defense also produced four turnovers. The Bengals (0-5) were just glad to hang around after getting outscored 119-23 in their first four games. Jon Kitna, Cincinnati’s third starting quarterback in three weeks, threw for 244 yards and Corey Dillon ran for 164 yards and two TDs.


Spoitswiai

The Chronicle

lONDAY, OCTOBER

TERRS from page 4 own, and the match went to a deciding fifth, where Duke finally put away the stubborn Terrapins. The win, combined with the Blue Devils’ earlier defeat of Virginia Thursday, helped inspire a new sense of confidence in a team that went 0-2 in its first two conference games. “We knew, starting out with the two losses to begin ACC play, that this weekend was going to be huge for us,” said senior outside hitter Jill Sonne, whose eight kills against Maryland left her one shy of 1,000 kills in her career at Duke. “We had to come out and play as hard as we could and get our confidence back...so that we can go into North Carolina and N.C. State with some positive energy.” The game against the Tar Heels Thursday will be the next major hurdle on the conference schedule, and the players recognize what needs to be done to prepare. “I think, even though we did have some big blocks, we need to work on our timing for our blocks a little bit and just keep working on our defense, because that will never be good enough,” Sonne said. RACHEL VANDERGRIEND kills the ball en route Nagel agreed that defense and block- to a 3-2 victory over Maryland. be the ing will two skills that the Blue Devils will focus on in practice this Duke also carries this mentality to week. That attention for detail has been its games, and as Nagel pointed out, a key element of practices all season, the team has to be careful not to look Gilman said. too far ahead. “We break it down and do all the lit“Every match in the ACC is so comtle things,” she said. “Everybody has petitive,” Nagel said. “We’ve really got to their name on a list with goals, and you be sure that we’re playing the match , . !•/>.? practice with a purpose.” that we re in—playing tor the moment. ~

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»

JANE HETHERINGTON/THE CHRONICLE

NILOUFAR AAZAM-ZANGANEH used a sixth place finish to help Duke win this weekend

GOLF from page 5 mechanics could need re-tweaking in order to better stand up to the pressure on competition Sundays. “One thing that I think is going to help us at nationals is to have our swings feeling really compact,” he s d ' h appen to have some swings ; t that tend to get a little long, so I just think that would be a nice thing to clean up, and that takes time.... You need a few weeks to get everything a bit more connected.”

f

All criticisms aside, however, Brooks

felt proud of the effort his side displayed. The Tar Heel Invitational . 11 n 1 rr marked the third out of four weekends, ,1

i

i

and second consecutive, that the Blue Devils faced off in competitive play. Afterwards, Brooks, weary from the grind of back-to-back events, summed up the busy month while getting into his car. “I need to find some place to get a beer,” he said.

We Tar Heel invitational ,

Sunday, Oct. 6,2002

Finley Golf Course—Chapel Hill Team Standings 1. Duke (290-287-300=877), 2. Oklahoma State (299-283-296=878) 3. Ohio State (297-296-295=888), 4. Tulane (299-296-294=889), 5. North Carolina(296-296-298=890), 6. Southern Florida (301-294301=896), 7. Wake Forest (306-293-300=899), 8. South Carolina (300-299-303=902), t9. Furman (308-303-295=906), t9. Florida Slate (300-293-313=906). Duke individuals 0), e. Aazam-&nganeh i• Hardin (71-74-76=221), 32. Engstrom (76-73-77=226), 72. GarciaEstrada (78-83-81=242).

Sports staff, don’t forget there will be no meeting Friday. Enjoy the break.

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7. 2002 �PAGE II

Visit us online at.

www. dukestores.duke.edu

9


12 �MONDAY,

I

Spoitswiai

lEB 7,

jg Duke Career Center

The Chronicle

J

HAPM& C/m 11 October 7

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

FREE PIZZA! The Career Center needs YOUR feedback in order to improve our services. Whether you have never used the Career Center or are a regular, we would love to know your thoughts! If you are interested in participating in a one hour Focus Group in late October, please email sean.vouna@duke.edu

Resource Room: Have you ever been to our Resource Room in 21 7 Page? We have plenty of books on a variety of career fields from health to non-profits to media. We also have books on what you can do with various majors and interests. Finally, there are several guides on resume writing and how to interview. Check us out from Sam spm! ~

You can also meet with our Fellows in the Resource Room anytime to learn how to register and use BlueDevilTßAK or have an informal resume review. See you there.

New Resources:

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Book of Lists 2002: Get key contact information and facts for thousands of top local businesses, industries, professions, governmental units, and non profit organizations in the following cities: Atlanta, New York, Washington DC, San Francisco, Los Angeles, Seattle, Chicago, Boston

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Cityscapes: Get the scoop on the above cities—all on one page. Find out about unemployment rates, hottest industry fields, weather, housing websites, and job search websites specific to that city! Located in the Career Center free publications rack.

Events this Week Faculty

Job Search Workshop

One-session workshop for doctoral candidates planning to look for faculty positions during 2002-03 or 2003-2004. Topics to be covered include: the application process and how to prepare for interviews. Bring a copy of your CV for review. You must register to attend this event! Please visit: http://career.studentaffairs.duke.edu/arads/index.php

Tuesday, October 8, 5pm, at 217 Page (Resource Room)

Interested in an Elite Teaching Program? Don't miss this opportunity in education! join students from Yale, Harvard, Vanderbilt and Duke to participate in a teaching program at jefferson County, one of the most diverse and best education counties in the US. This program features an MAT and two-year teaching position! Program is selective, so don't miss this info session on Thursday, October 10, 3:3opm at 106 Page

Finding the Right Career for You Freshman? Senior? No matter your year, if you are still confused about finding the right career for you, then come to this workshop to learn about some tools to find out. Thursday, October 70, s:oopm at 106 Page.

DUKE CAREER CENTER 110 Page Building (West Campus) Box 90950 Appointments: 919-660-1050

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The Chronicle

TRUSTEES from page 1 lion-per-week pace, which, if maintained, would put the Campaign over its goal in about three months. He told the Trustees to expect several large gifts in the near future and that, assuming the Campaign hits its individual targets, it would finish with around $2,244 billion raised. In the rest of the weekend’s quarterly meeting, the Board took few official actions. Trustees heard presentations on several ongoing University initiatives—including international growth and comrelamunity

tions—but

only Peter Nicholas

officially approved additions to the Bryan Center and the Vivarium. The $2 million Bryan Center addition, announced last year, will provide 5,400 square feet of rehearsal, classroom and shop space for the Department of Theater Studies and the Bryan

Center’s three theaters. The $l.B million Vivarium addition and renovation will net 4,000 square feet to advance neurobiology research, specifically a project to develop neuroprosthetic limbs and other devices to augment human performance. The space will be used for research labs and offices. In her address to the Trustees during Friday’s regular session, President Nan Keohane discussed a recent ranking by The Journal ofBlacks in Higher Education, which called Duke the most integrated of America’s top universities. She echoed other administrators in saying

BRAZIL from page 2 focus more on economic issues, widely seen as da Silva’s principal weakness. Lacking in personal charisma, Serra has failed to capture the hearts of many of Brazil’s 115 million voters. Analysts said that after months of writhing over the uncertainty of Sunday’s outcome, most of the markets’ worst fears had already been discounted in prices. “I think the panic will calm down as the uncertainty recedes,” said Walter Molano, chief Latin American economist at Greenwich-based BCP Securities. ‘‘You might even get a rally Monday.” In recent weeks, Molano has been one of the most vocal advocates of dumping Brazilian paper, predicting that the country was on a dubious slippery slope, heading toward defaulting on its debt.

Allan Conway, head of global emerging markets at WestAm, an asset management company in London, said that, “Brazil has been ridiculously oversold and should nevere have gotten down to these levels.” He confidentley predicted that its benchmark C-bond could recover to levels of around 60 cents or 70 cents, even if da Silva managed to clinched a firstround win.

Should da Silva triumph, though, he will have to move swiftly to name an economic team capable of winning over the markets and of persuading banks to keep open vital credit lines to Brazil and its exporters. Those credit lines have been drying up just as Brazil needs all the hard currency it can get to bolster its limited accounts. The names of top-level managers

MONDAY, OCTOBER 7,

that, although the ranking is encouraging, Duke should not become complacent. Keohane also called on Board members to recommit to a discussion of academic integrity—a theme highlighted this weekend during Founders’ Day and in a film shown to freshmen. In addition, she announced that Rotary International has chosen Duke and the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill together as one of two U.S. centers for the study of peace and diplomacy. Collaboration between the schools led them to stand out among 100 institutions applying, Keohane said. “I’m truly convinced that the growth and innovation of our interdisciplinary programs are gaining strength from other institutions in the Triangle,” Keohane said. Also at Friday’s regular session, Nancy Allen, Academic Council chair and professor of rheumatology and immunology, updated the Trustees on the faculty’s priorities, including rising medical benefit costs and faculty diversity, Rob Saunders, Graduate and Professional Student Council president, used his address to identify five specific needs among his constituents: parking and transportation, childcare, health insurance, housing and social space. Backed, he said, by 1,000 people who signed a parking petition earlier this semester, Saunders urged Trustees to push for a parking master plan. In his speech, Duke Student Government President Joshua Jean-Baptiste focused on the balance between creating an intellectual community and maintaining a fun on-campus social life. “Duke’s social environment is one of the unique advantages it has over its peer institutions,” he said. “We should work hard to make sure that this environment is maintained in a safe, healthy and friendly way.”

such as Henri-Philippe Reichstuhl, former chief of the state oil giant Petroleo Brasileiro SA, and Henrique Meirelles, former chief of global banking at Fleet Boston Corp., are making the rounds in Wall Street as possible candidates for da Silva’s team. But hardened party stalwarts such as Aloisio Mercadante and Guido Mantega, experienced economic aides who have dragged da Silva’s Workers’ Party toward the center in recent years, are also in the running. Despite that very public shift, da Silva worried many analysts by his recent rejection of extending the term of Armio Fraga as central bank president and veiled threats of heavy-handed intervention in state companies. “The old-style Workers’ Party is coming out of the woodwork,” said John Welch, chief Latin American economist at WestLß in New York. He predicted that da Silva would certainly be “horribly emboldened” by a first-round win and that he could attempt to raise the national minimum wage or loosen the grip on inflation, measures that could further destabilize Brazil’s already precarious finances. But even supporters of Serra pre-

dicted that da Silva would not adopt overly radical policies, partly because his party is unlikely to win enough votes for a majority in Congress and will be forced to rely on political dealmaking with pro-market parties. “There’s absolutely no feeling of panic—everything’s normal,” said Marcelo Lima, partner in Sao Paulo advertising agency EugenioWG and a former investment banker, who was voting in the city today. “Just four years ago, with Lula so far ahead, things would have been different.”

2002 � PAGE 9


PAGE 10 �

MONDAY, OCTOBER

The Chronicle

7, 2002

ATTRITION from page 1 busy people [faculty] and taking up a piece of someone’s life [students who do not get their doctorate] that is not very productive for them.” There is also an opportunity cost, particularly for small departments, who only have a handful of spots to fill each year. “When students leave without a degree, we worry we could have brought in someone who would have gotten through instead,” said Marcy Speer, director of graduate studies in the University Program in Genetics, whose 13 percent attrition rate is the lowest of the biological sciences. Although most agree that some students will drop out regardless, the University wants to make sure it is choosing applicants who are a good match for the school and who are likely to continue in the program to the end. It also wants to

encourage social interactions between students, mentoring from faculty and career advising, Siegel said. ‘The big worry is that there may be tools out there to help students get through that we may not be giving them,”

Graduate and Professional

Student

Council President Rob Saunders said. Chair of the graduate faculty’s executive committee Monty Reichert, however, said attrition may be an over-deter-

mined problem.

“We’re trying to figure out if this is the normal stress and strain ofgraduate education.... There’s a certain inefficiency built into every system,” said Reichert, who is also the director of graduate studies for biomedical engineering, which at 21 percent has the lowest attrition rate among engineering departments. “The question is, is there anything you can do about it?” he added. Some students who enter as doctoral

STRIKE from page 2 He said the PMA would keep pushing for an extension of the old contract, which specifically forbid the kind of work slowdowns the PMA said prompted the shutdown Sept. 29. The union has refused, holding out for a new three-year contract that would give it control over any jobs that come with new technology. Implementing labor-saving technology like electronic tracking devices puts only a small number of jobs at risk in the short term, but future jobs are at stake, as well as control of the flow of information at the ports. The PMA has always given the ILWU jurisdiction over new technology in the past, union negotiator Joseph Wenzl said Sunday. “The union feels we have offered a proposal that meets the employer in the middle,” he said. Both sides have agreed to resume shipping essential items to Alaska and Hawaii. They have also moved some cargo for the U.S. military.

The number of cargo vessels stranded at the docks or backing up at anchor points has risen to about 200 since the lockout, with dozens more still en route from Asia. According to American Farm Bureau Federation figures, between 20 percent and 30 percent of all U.S. agriculture products are exported, and a third of that goes to the Pacific rim—mostly through the West Coast ports.

A growing number of industry groups are calling

for White House intervention, including use of the Taft-Hartley Act, which would force an 80-day cooling off period. President George W. Bush has not said whether he would intervene. Wenzl says the PMA’s strategy is to encourage White House involvement to pressure the union, which has made the negotiations more difficult. “That’s not collective bargaining,” he said. Tom Edwards, a member of the PMA’s negotiating committee, called that “disingenuous,” noting that employers have offered wage increases atop six-figuresalaries and fully paid benefits.

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candidates do not drop out entirely but instead get a master’s degree, which typically takes less time to achieve than a doctorate. Because those students count in the attrition statistics, the drop-out rates are higher than many department heads might think, Reichert said. “We have to carry the debate into the departments,” he said. “I think most have no idea this is happening at this level.” The completion rate for disciplines as a whole is highest for the biological sciences and lowest for engineering. Within these broader areas, independent departments range from 40 to 90 percent completion rates. Reiko Mazuka, director of graduate studies in the Department of Psychology: Social and Health Sciences, hypothesized that more scientific fields may have better retention rates due to their “building block nature, so you can see the fruit of

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your labor each day” as opposed to more

theoretical humanities. Mazuka’s department has the lowest attrition rate of the social sciences, at 17 percent. Because some departments are so small—with only a few students per entering class—Siegel said the executive committee will focus on the departments that are large enough that the rates are statistically significant.

Because doctorates generally take between five and 10 years to obtain, the committee will examine attrition rates of the Graduate School’s incoming doctorate-track classes from 1991 to 1995, although the Graduate School has instituted many changes since then, including smaller class sizes and increased financial support. Over 90 percent of those incoming classes have left the program by now, either after getting a doctorate, master’s degree or dropping out entirely.

“We have never sought federal intervention because we have to work with our employees,” he said. For Steve Dunn, founder and president of Munchkin Inc., an importer ofinfant goods, an end to the port shutdown cannot come soon enough. He has already sent home close to a fourth ofhis employees,

and has said that he expects he will be forced to close down his business in two weeks time if the ports are not reopened. The Van Nuys, Calif.-based company imports 95 percent ofits goods from China, including such items as infant utensils, spill-proof cups and rubber ducks. One-third of its inventory is stranded on the Pacific. Munchkin has made plans to use air freight this week to avoid short-shipping key customers, but the cost will be far too high to continue shipping via air

for more than a few days, Dunn said. Like many observers, he expects President Bush to refrain from ordering an end to the lockout until the crisis worsens. “If there’s more of a crisis, then he’s more of a savior,” Dunn said.


Classifieds

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John McCurley’s Auto Centre 957-9945 94 Jeep Wrangler 4x4 Auto w/Hard Top-Red with White Top Alloy Wheels, Local Trade, New Tires $4995.00 Cash 96 Jeep Grand Cherokee Limited V-8 4x 4, Green Over Tan Leather, Moon Roof, Alloy Wheels, CD, Keyless Power Seats, New Tires $9995.00 92 Civic LX Honda SSPD A/C 1 Owner All Records $3495.00 Cash 97 Nissan Frontier Xtra Cab Truck XE Auto, A/C, Alloys, Bed Liner, 99K miles $5995.00 Cash 96 Olds Cutlass Ciera 4-Door, Full PowerLoaded, Only 48K miles, Showroom Brand New $4995.00 97 Toyota Tacoma PickUp Auto, A/C, Miles Over, Nice Shape, Excellent Price Give us a Call for $5495.00. Courteous Professional and Service!

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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. 3 Blocks from Duke. Furnished 2 bedroom, 2 bath apartment, washer/dryer. $650/month 919- 2702717.

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The Chronicle

PAGE 12 � MONDAY, OCTOBER 7, 2002

SHOOTINGS from page 6

RELIGIOUS LlFE.ro.pages

Willimon said some students embrace negative religious stereotypes to be different. “There is a kind ofcounter-culture resistance for some

night just across the county line in Washington and the Virginia woman was wounded the next afternoon as police investigators conceded that the manhunt would have to cover a far larger part of the Washington

explained that the Catholic center makes services readily accessible by having Mass on East and West Campuses twice each Sunday. “Having mass at nine at night is an unusual time for church, but not an unusual time on campus,” he said. In addition to religious services, groups offer a variety of programming to make the transition easier for

students,” he said. “They think, T want to look at the world differently than we do in 95 percent of my classes.’ They don’t mind doing something different because there’s a kind of edge to it.” However, campus religious leaders said they see no patterns of participation during students’ four years at college. Some students dive head first into religious life when they arrive. “Others roam away, and around junior year they have a ‘coming home’ experience,” Willimon said. And so, somewhere between Alpha Omega small group sessions, Lunch and Learns, Friday night Shabbat dinners, Friday evening prayers, bagel brunches and trips to the beach, a religious community can flourish despite students’ over-committed schedules. And for many, that is exactly what makes religious life on campus exciting and special. “We work where people are extremely busy,” Willimon said. “I kind of like that because it means when people are there, they are really there.”

commuter area.

Moose again played down the arrest on an unrelated auto theft charge of Robert Baker, a 33-year-old Montgomery resident who was the subject of phone tips about his possible involvement with guns or a militia movement. He is not a suspect, the chief repeated, even as more tips about possibly suspect gun fanciers poured into the police hot line. On this clear, sunny day, residents moved gingerly about town in a mood summed up by Doug Duncan, the Montgomery County executive. “Every day you wake up and there hasn’t been another reported shooting is a good day,” Duncan said. Puzzlement vied with grief at the funeral Sunday morning of Premkumar Walekar, a 54year-old cabdriver who was shot Thursday as he fueled his taxi here at the Mobil station,

across from a parking lot. “I don’t know what the killer gained,” said Lazarus Borge, a relative at Walekar’s funeral in Takoma Park, Md. “I don’t know how he profited by killing an innocent, God-fearing person who has a loving family at home.” The police theorize that the sniper used a long-range hunting or military assault rifle to fire from safe cover and sped away from the crime scenes without being seen or leaving evidence. His victims were shot just once, with six dying almost instantly and the seventh, a woman shopper in Fairfax, Va., severely wounded in the back. “Smoking-gun type leads maybe aren’t there,” Moose said at a news conference, but detectives have more than 800 tips to pursue and are asking for more. He warned against simplistic labels that could cause tunnel vision in the search, saying that the terms

“terrorist,” “thrill killer” and “serial killer” did not seem to fit the sniper’s pattern. Wary residents tended to agree. “This guy is much more meticulous than the typical spree killer,” Boink maintained, sounding as authoritative as anyone else in the target zone ofthe killer and now of the geo-profiler.

students. “One of the key things we do is give them a broad spectrum of entry,” said Jonathan Gerstl, the new director of the Freeman Center for Jewish Life. “We do social programs, religious programs and educational programs. We really just try to find comfort zone levels for people.” Groups make a conscious attempt to reach students without interfering with other aspects of their college experience.

For example, freshmen can use their Marketplace meal plan to have dinner at the Freeman Center, allowing them to be active in Jewish life without prohibiting participation in other standard freshman activities.

VOTING from page 3 set a precedent for other people our age by voicing their opinion with a vote,” said sophomore Elizabeth Dixon, DSG director of student services. Lack of political initiative has increased among the college-aged demographic group, according to American Demographics Magazine. In the last presidential election, only 32 percent of all eligible 18-to-24 year-old voters cast ballots. “It is important that students become more visibly involved in politics because that is the way to get politicians to consider our preferences on policy issues,” said senior Tyler Will. This year’s election will take place Nov. 5, and the last day to submit registration to the Board ofElections is Oct. 11. Registration takes less than five minutes, and a student needs his dorm address, mailing address, telephone number and driver’s license. After the student completes the form, DSG will submit all forms to the Board ofElections. A student from out-of-state has the option of voting as a North Carolina resident, or in their home state’s election. “Students choose to vote in the North Carolina election because they are electing officials who will represent them and their interests for their four years at

Duke,” said DSG President Joshua Jean-Baptiste. “This helps students get the most out ofthe government and feel connected to the voting system.” However, many other students, such as freshman Philip Lea, have opted to receive an absentee ballot from their home state. “I have followed Louisiana politics much longer than those ofNorth Carolina, so I feel I’d be a more informed voter in the Louisiana election,” Lea said. After registering, student voters also have the option of filling out a Vote For America pledge card. DSG will use these pledges to form a database ofregistered voters. They will contact these voters about various political issues, polling locations and future speakers. After only one week of campaigning, the leaders of the drive are satisfied with participation. Some 150 have already registered, and officials hope a total of 500 to 600 will register by the end ofthe campaign. “I have seen a sense of understanding among students as to why it is important to vote,” said sophomore Mary Ellison Baars, College Republicans representative for Vote For America. “The drive’s easy registration allows a student to show dedication to the political system,” she added. The voting drive, which lasts through Thursday, takes place from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. on the Bryan Center walkway, and from 5:30 to 8:30 p.m. at the East Campus Marketplace.

See sports happening? Call Paul at 684'2663. Oh, and recycle this newspaper.

Stanford

university

Medical students, interns, Seeking residents, fellows and postdocs with the ability to invent new biomedical technologies

FELLOWSHIPS IN BIODESIGN INNOVATION The Stanford Biodesign Innovation Fellowship is an intensive, year long, project-based experience in biomedical technology invention. The program is designed to accelerate development of the skills and knowledge required to create new biomedical technologies. Fellows will be trained in needs finding, brainstorming, assessing market potential, identifying regulatory and reimbursement pathways, prototyping and strategic planning for funding and implementation. Medical and engineering fellows work together to invent, develop and launch new biomedical technologies. Successful applicants will be awarded a named fellowship.

lication deadline January 15th 2003 for 2003-2004 fellowships •

Early decision for 2004-2005 fellowships

Apply Online

http://innovation.stanford.edu

Finalists will interview at Stanford University

&

Stanford

.

Biodesign Innovation Program

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Comics

The Chronicle

MONDAY, OCTOBER 7, 2002 � PAGE 13

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B. 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

Academic MONDAY, OCTOBER 7 Biology/EEOB

Seminar/SuperSpeaker:

Duke Events Calendar Memorial Common Room in Duke Divinity School. The Catholics at Duke Divinity School sponsor the lecture.

calendar@chronicle.duke.edu.

4pm.

“Natural selection and sexual selection in bird speciation,” Trevor Price, University of California, San Diego. 111 Biological Sciences.

TUESDAY, OCTOBER 8 Distinguished Speaker Series; 10:30am. Sir Deryk Maughan, Vice Chairman, Citigroup, Inc. Hosted by the Dean’s office of Fuqua School of Business. Greene Auditorium, Fuqua School of Business. Master Class: 11am. Darrett Adkins, Cello with the assistance of the Duke Symphony Orchestra. Baldwin Auditorium, East Campus. For more information, call 660-3300, www.duke.edu/music/events/masterclasses.

Biology/EEOB Seminar/SuperSpeaker: 11am. “Cultural inheritance, phenotypic plasticity and genetic assimilation,” Trevor Price, University of California, San Diego. 023 Biological Sciences. Biology/EEOB Seminar: 12:30pm. “Population genetic approaches to common disease and genetic function,” David B. Goldstein, Gallon Laboratory at University College, London. 144 Biological Sciences. Public Lecture: 2pm. “Love in Fundamental Moral Theology," David Matzko McCarthy. In the Alumni

snuffleupagus:

paul ....jeff and dave .Brian and whitney

andrew ,yoav, jeff, anthony, alex roily

Account Representatives: Monica Franklin, Dawn Hall, Account Assistants: Jonathan Chiu, Kristin Jackson Sales Representatives: Katherine Farrell, Will Hinckley, Johannah Rogers, Ben Silver, Sim Stafford Sales Coordinator: David Chen Administrative Coordinator Brooke Dohmen National Coordinator Chris Graber Creative Services Courtney Crosson, Charlotte Dauphin, Andrew Fazekas, Lauren Gregory, Megan Harris, Deborah Holt Business Assistants:.. Chris Reilly, Melanie Shaw Classifieds Coordinator: Sallyann Bergh

TELL.

cr.

Brett the Fish; Stanley Fish: Triumph, the insult comic dog the Sea Nuggets: Yoav: Bob Newhart:

.Dave and Kevin malavika ken

Perkins Library Reception and Panel Discussion: 6pm. “Thirteen-month Crop: One Year in the Live of a Piedmont Virginia Tobacco Farm.” In conjunction with the exhibit. Call 660-5822. Rare Book Room, Perkins

Library. Teer House: 7pm. “Preparation for International Travel,” Karen Angelichio. Call 416-DUKE. 4019 N. Roxboro St. Teer House: 7pm. “Non-lnvasive Facial Treatments,” Julie Woodward. Call 416-DUKE. 4019 N. Roxboro St.

Religious MONDAY, OCTOBER 7

Social Programming and Meetings MONDAY, OCTOBER 7 Tour of DUMA; 4:30-s:3opm. “Depictions of Women in Art,” discussions and commentary on how ideals of beauty have changed over the course of history and why women are painted in particular ways. RSVP to Secky Griesse at becky.griesse@duke.edu or 6680997. Duke University Museum of Art.

Documentary: 7pm. “Body: The Value of Women." A documentary about body image and self-esteem in the US, exposing the levels of self-hatred imposed by our culture and the media. Contact Becky Griesse for more information, becky.griesse@duke.edu, or 668-0997. Richard White Auditorium, East Campus.

Westminster Presbyterian/UCC Fellowship: 910pm, Mondays. “Haphour,” informal time of refreshments and fellowship, begins at B:3opm. All are welcomed.

TUESDAY, OCTOBER 8

Unitarian Universalist: 9-10pm, Mondays. Social time, dinner, worship. It’s a religious community for people who question, look for life's meaning, and believe that truth doesn’t begin with one particular religion. Basement of Duke Chapel. Patty Hannenman, hanneool @ earthlink.net.

Ongoing

TUESDAY, OCTOBER 8 TAIZE Prayer: s:lspm, Tuesdays. Memorial Chapel

Department of Music Faculty Recital: 11am. Darrett Adkins performs the cello. Call 660-3300. Baldwin Auditorium, East Campus.

Events

Duke Police offers following services: Crime prevention presentations, Rape awareness presentations, Alcohol Law presentations, Workforce violence educational programs, Personal property engraving. Please contact Lieutenant Tony Shipman at 684-4115 to schedule these programs/services.

Weekly Vespers/Fellowship: Orthodox Christian Student Fellowship. Duke Chapel Basement. Father Edward Rummen, 919-782-7037, fatheredward@mindspring.com.

Carillon Recital: Weekdays, 5 pm. A 15-minuteperformance by J. Samuel Hammond, University carillonneur. He also gives a recital before and after the Service of Worship each Sunday. Duke Chapel, West Campus. For information, call 684-2572.

Organ demonstration: Weekdays, 12:30-1:30pm. A daily recital of mostly sacred music on the Flentrop organ, which both tonally and visually reflects the techniques of-Dutch-French organs of the 18th century. Duke Chapel, West Campus. Schedule subject to change. For information, call 684-2572. Exhibition Continues: “Missing: Documenting the Spontaneous Memorials of 9/11,” Photography. Exhibition runs through October 27. Duke University Museum of Art Exhibit: Through October 27. “Thinking Outside the Book: New Forms by Women Artists.” Perkins Library. Call 684-3009 for hours.

Photograph exhibit: Reinserting Myself into a History; Academic Eye 111, by Tammy Rea Garland. Through Nov 23. Foyer Gallery, Duke Museum of Art. Exhibit: Through December 13. ‘Thirteen-Month Crop: One Year in the Life of a Piedmont Virginia Tobacco Farm.” Rare Book, Manuscript, and Special Collections Library’s hall gallery. Call 6843009 for hours.


The Chronicle

PAGE 14 � MONDAY, OCTOBER 7,2002

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Cheating democracy

Under

a cloud of ethical questions and scandal, embattled Senator Robert Torricelli, D-N.J., withdrew from this year’s Senate race, as polls indicated with little more than a month left before election day that his campaign was in trouble. Last Wednesday, the New Jersey Supreme Court ruled that in the wake ofTorricelli’s exit it would acceptable to replace him with another candidate, former senator Frank Lautenberg, who retired in 1996. The court’s decision is troubling for two reasons. First, although state law sets 51 days before an election as the deadline for making ballot substitutions, the court said it was acting in the best interests of voters in this case by allowing the substitution. However, in essentially overturning the results of a democratic primary election, the court risks making a mockery ofvoters’ interests. And second, unless the U.S. Supreme Court steps in and reverses the decision, it will set a dangerous precedent for the future. American democracy is based on the sanctity of elections. If a nominee duly elected by voters in a primary can resign and a new nominee can be dictated by party leadership, it necessarily undermines democracy and the concept ofvoters’ choice. For example, if a presidential nominee were trailing in the polls after Labor Day, it would be unfair for the nominee to withdraw from the race and allow the nominating party the power to choose the nominee’s replacement. The court decided that setting this precedent and overturning a primary election was less troubling than allowing a candidate to run unopposed. Yet whether Torricelli’s name remains on the ballot—as it probably should, since absentee ballots have already been mailed— Democrats have the time and ability to stage a write-in campaign for Lautenberg. Last summer, Washington, D.C., Mayor Anthony Williams successfully waged a write-in campaign after his name was removed from the ballot because his campaign staff included fraudulent names on petitions to qualify him for the election. A write-in campaign for Lautenberg still gives voters a choice between two major party candidates while maintaining a disincentive in order to prevent future candidates from pulling the same tpye of switch that the Democrats are trying to pull in New Jersey. When a major party nominee withdraws from the race after the deadline, there must be a disincentive so that voters and not national politicians dictate the Senate’s members, as required by the 16th amendment to the Constitution. The U.S. Supreme Court should reverse the state ruling and Lautenberg should wage a credible campaign as a write-in candidate prior to the November general election.

On the

record

“The environment of many families encourages participation [in religious activities], but the environment of the dorms do not. The social pressure is somewhat reversed.” Father Joe Vetter of the Newman Catholic Student Center on the difficulties of religious participation at Duke (see story, page three).

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. SeniorEditor JANE HETHERINGTON, Photography Editor REBECCA SUN. Projects Editor RUTH CARLITZ, City & Stale Editor RYAN WILLIAMS, City & Stale Editor MIKE MILLER. Health &’Science Editor BECKY YOUNG, Features Editor MEG LAWSON, Recess Editor GREG VEIS, Recess Editor MATT ATWOOD, TowerView Editor JODI SAROWITZ, TowerVtew Managing Editor JOHN BUSH, Online Editor BRIAN MORRAY, Graphics Editor TV LER ROSEN, Sports Managing Editor ROBERT TAI, Sports Photography Editor AMI PATEL. Wire Editor KIRA ROSOFF, Wire Editor MOLLY JACOBS, Sr. Assoc. Features Editor MELISSA SOUCY, Sr. Assoc. City & Stale Editor NADINE OOSMANALLY, Sr. Assoc. University Editor EVAN DAVIS, Sr. Assoc. Sports Editor MATT KLEIN, Sr. Assoc. Photography Editor ANDREA OLAND, Sr. Assoc, PhotographyEditor THAD PARSONS, Sr. Assoc. PhotographyEditor SETH LANKFORD, Online Manager 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. Toreach the Editorial Office (newsroom) at 301 Flowers Building, call 684-2663 or fax 684-4696. To reach theBusiness Office at 103 West Union Building, call 684-3811. To reach the Advertising Office at 101 West Union Building call 684-3811 or fax 684-8295. Visit The 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.

Common goal, alternate methods Demonstrations like the one some students have held to protest Duke’s decision to lift its boycott of the Mt. Olive Pickle Company shine the spotlight on issues that separate us. I think it’s important for all of us in the Duke community to recognize that our disagreements are about tactics rather than goals.

John Bumess

Guest Commentary

and affirm that they have no unresolved compliance issues that were cited in a past investigation. In addition, suppliers and their growers must notify Mt. Olive Pickle immediately if a federal or state agency initiates an investigation of their farm employment practices and immediately report any subsequent findings of non-compliance of farm employment rules and regulations. This information will provide Mt. Olive Pickle with the opportunity to react to any violations, to assess its dependence on the product, to assist the grower in resolving the deficiency and/or to terminate the contract. As a means of verification, Duke will periodically review the statements of compliance submitted by crop suppliers and growers and visit farms that supply cucumbers to Mt. Olive Pickle. Duke and Mt. Olive Pickle have also agreed to explore potential partnerships with government regulators and regional and national food suppliers who might help us implement strategies to improve conditions for North Carolina’s farm workers. Since August, there have been a number of positive steps. These included a meeting that President Keohane held with the president of the Farm Labor Organizing Committee and conversations with state officials in Raleigh and Mt, Olive Pickle to identify ways of working together to improve the regulatory process, such as by heightening public awareness and improving education regarding farm worker conditions. In other words, the agreement wqs only a first step. If we see evidence that Mt. Olive Pickle is not living up to its commitment, President Keohane would be prepared to reinstate Duke’s boycott. But we believe this approach has real potential to make a tangible improvement in the fives of the people we’re seeking to help. Our decision to take this approach was based not only on our activities of the past several months, but also on our experience working toward this general goal for many years in related arenas. Recall that Duke was the first university in the nation to require independent monitoring of the working conditions in factories around the world that produce products with the Duke name or logo. Duke was also a founding member of the Fair Labor Association because we believed the FLA had the potential to bring together workers rights advocates, business leaders and government officials in new ways to improve sweatshop working conditions. Our position then was controversial, with many students and advocates of workers’ rights saying it was a mistake for Duke to join the FLA. We believe subsequent events have shown that joining the FLA was the right thing to do, as was our subsequent joining ofthe Worker Rights Consortium. People of good faith, even those who share common goals, can agree to disagree. The Duke administration remains committed to working with Duke Students Against Sweatshops and others to achieve our common goals. We may not always concur about the best route to travel, but we will keep our eyes firmly on the ultimate destination, which is to help make fife better for North Carolina’s farm workers.

President Nan Keohane and the rest of us who have been involved in this process agree strongly with the fundamental goal we share with the protesters and many others in our community: to help improve working conditions for farm workers. Any disagreement that exists concerns how to achieve that goal. Over the past year, Duke officials have spent hundreds of hours doing research, visiting farms and meeting with Duke Students Against Sweatshops and others to learn about the complex issues that affect not only farm workers, but also growers, processors and others who produce much of the food we eat here in North Carolina. This past summer, Jim Wilkerson, Duke’s director oflicensing, and officials from the state department of labor toured two farms with a record of poor working conditions. Jim, who is a strong advocate for workers’ rights, also met with the staff of Legal Services ofNorth Carolina, an organization that assists farm workers, and spoke at length with experts from the U.S. Department ofLabor. President Keohane and several administrators also visited a farm and saw firsthand how some farm workers work and five. That visit and all of our discussions only strengthened our understanding and commitment in the administration to press forward in trying to ensure decent working conditions for the state’s farm workers. These efforts also gave us more perspective on the argument that this goal can be achieved only through collective bargaining of farm workers and leveraging a company like Mt. Olive Pickle to insist that its supplier farms go to the bargaining table. In contrast, we at Duke have said from the beginning that we recognize unionization as one possible answer but not necessarily the only answer. Even as the struggle over unionization continues, we think it makes sense also to try other approaches that might improve the living and working conditions for farm workers. This past March, when President Keohane wrote to Students Against Sweatshops that we planned to extend Duke’s boycott, she made this point explicitly and identified actions that Mt. Olive Pickle could take that would permit the boycott to be lifted. She also indicated a willingness to work with the company and other interested parties to develop approaches that could make a material difference in improving working conditions for farm workers. Since then, Mt. Olive Pickle has agreed to each of the conditions identified in that letter. Its crop suppliers and their growers must now sign and submit statements indicating that they comply with all applicable federal and state farm employment rules and regulations. They also must notify Mt. Olive Pickle if they are currently under investigation by regulatory agency regarding nonJohn Burness isDuke's senior vice president for compliance with these rules and regulations public affairs and governmental relations.

Letters

Policy

The Chronicle welcomes submissions in the form of letters to the editor or guest columns. Submissions must include the author’s name, signature, department or class, and for purposes of identification, phone number and local address. Letters should not exceed 325 words; contact the editorial department for information regarding guest columns. The Chronicle will not publish anonymous or form letters or letters that are promotional in nature. The Chronicle reserves the right to edit letters and guest columns for length, clarity and style and the right to withhold letters based on the discretion of the editorial page editor.

Direct submissions to:

Editorial Page Department The Chronicle Box 90858, Durham, NC 27708 Phone: (919) 684-2663 Fax: (919) 684-4696 E-mail; letters@chronicle.duke.edu


Commentary

The Chronicle

MONDAY, OCTOBER 7,.2002 �PAGE 15

The tr ouble with the women’s initiative

Projects on women’s is sues further only the administration’s politics, not the cause of women’s rights I like women, I really do. I have

come to the important conclusion, however, that I can still care about women and hot care at all about “women’s issues.” I think I am not alone in holding this view; indeed, I imagine many women may share it. When I say women’s

issues, though, I don’t mean things like the 19th amendment and spousal abuse. Those are human issues. All citizens should have the right to vote, and English no person should be beaten. Such issues The Critical Theory ultimately rest on an appeal to an individual’s status as human, not as woman. Rather what I mean by “women’s issues” is what this University takes to be women’s issues qua woman, namely those issues exemplified in the “Women’s Studies” program and stupid things like our new gender initiative. These women’s issues generally rest on dubious assumptions regarding the hostility between the sexes, and attempts to codify them as institutional concerns continually push the barriers ofridiculousness. For the enlightenment of the enviable majority of students on campus that have better things to do than follow the administration’s efforts at ideological self improvement, the “gender initiative” began last spring with Nan’s promise to perform a comprehensive review of gender inequalities at Duke. Nan herself is chairing the predominately female steering committee, which will oversee, direct and commission the various aspects of this top to bottom examination of women’s issues. Duke Student Government Chief of Staff Emily Grey is the head of the student task force constructed to aid the initiative. To get to the bottom of things, this group will host

“focus groups, forums and awareness that an honest committee wouldreveal is If there is a compelling reason for events” and examine dire women’s issues the devastation of men’s sports wrought treating women radically different like “hook up culture, social conformity by perverse interpretations and applicathan men it likely comes from the fact and classroom dynamics.” Nan has also tions of Title DC, the likes of which are that women do have the unique ability proposed commissioning a study of the documented in Jessica Gavora’s new book to bear children. I agree that issues “culture of gender” by a “trained ethnogTilting the Playing Field. Her conclusion, like maternity leave do constitute very rapher,” someone who I am sure will be an like the lived experience of so many othlegitimate considerations and should unbiased observer. ers, indicates that far from promoting be a concern of women and men alike. Admittedly this initiative sounds truly equitable treatment ofthe sexes, the Should we also make a detailed study innocent enough—after all, who can resulting policies of gender initiatives of sexual assault and try to underdisagree with “dialogue” these days. tend to simply discriminate against some stand aggravating factors? Absolutely. Along with Nan, Vice President for groups so that others of lesser merit can We should be concerned about the safeInstitutional Equity Sally Dickson has advance while the former are held back. ty of all members of the Duke commuobserved that women’s issues are not There is a presumption among the nity, and since women appear to be a on the proverbial table at Duke, and gender crowd that any difference in outparticularly vulnerable group in some indicated (surprise) a favorable come among the sexes indicates the areas their needs should receive parresponse to the initiative saying, existence of some sinister prejudice ticular attention. What we should not “What is the experience of women at along the way. The thought that differdo, however, is look down upon Duke? Now I think the president is ent people might have good reasons for Krzyzewskiville and call students sexgiving women a voice.” succeeding in or choosing to pursue difist because they don’t show the same However, I ask you women readers: ferent activities is simply anathema. enthusiam for any women’s sports. Does Duke really not give you a voice The answer is always to force an equaliRegardless, talented female athletes, right now? Are you being institutionalty of outcome regardless of the cost. like talented female engineers, are perly silenced? Or perhaps most imporLast week, April Brown, a female fectly able to excell without someone tantly, do you think that the voice of department chair in the Pratt School of holding their hand along the way. the gender initiative task force will at Engineering, took her outrage over the Finally I would note that from my all resemble your own? fact that young women are not choosown experience the most brilliant More than likely, this initiative, ing to become engineers like her to the female students at Duke do go into while not embodying the voice of the U.S. Senate, arguing that, “Title IX engineering/science/math fields with average woman on campus, will serve might be applied to increase the numgreat success and, interestingly, do not the administration’s agenda of increasber of women engineers and scien- seem to major in women’s studies. All I ing its control over all corners of this tists.” Translation: We can use the can offer is this modest proposal: Let’s institution in the name of progressive checkbook and coercive power of the stop treating women like they are necessity. One thing to note is what government to bribe more women into idiots unable to excel in math and sciwould be the prima facie awkwardness this field or hold back talented men ence as it is, realize that they are not of a gender initiative focused on men’s from advancing into positions earincapable of navigating the sometimes issues. There is no men’s studies marked for women. She was particurough world around us and respect the department, <io reservoir of concern larly keen on increasing the number of career and life decisions that they do about men’s issues and no attention women engineers so that they can make. Let’s call out unfair treatment paid to the many fields, academic and serve as role models, which she wherever it exists regardless of the sex otherwise, in which women dominate explained will, “show young women of the victim and not cripple one pormen by numbers and ability. that they, too, can become engineers tion of the population so that another Perhaps that is just because we are a and scientists.” Excuse me, but is any segment will appear artificially more misogynistic, patriarchal society in which woman undergraduate on this campus capable. And let’s call women’s issues men are always aggressors, or perhaps unaware that she, too, is allowed to what they actually are, a Trojan horse couching the gender initiative in the perbecome an engineer? Are you kidding for administrative politics. fect analogue of men’s issues indicates me? Is there some conspiracy over in how weird this project is. If there were a Pratt or are women just stupid? Bill English is a Trinity senior. His colstudy of men’s issues, one of the things Neither, I submit, is the case. umn appears every other Monday.

THE SECOND GUNMAN: Duke All-Stars Last Tuesday night I went out and got so wasted. I, THE PUPPETMASTER, was working such mad game all over campus. I am, like, the coolest and THE PATSY is just jealous. SHATSY: THE MUPPETMASTER was actually trying to hit on ugly girls all over campus and couldn’t even get a fake number from them, flj so I went back to my room. THE MUFFETMASTER: I love Carson Daly. Monday, FATSY: I was the coolest kid in my Monday room on West Campus that night.... Whoa! Sorry about that. Looks The Second Gunman like I got a little ahead of myself there. Did suicide rates really go up on Mondays last year? (Just kidding.) (I think.) Thank goodness the Sea Nuggets stepped it up; otherwise we would all have had a case of the Mondays. Still, I can dream of being great like the PATSYMASTER, can’t I? Look, for those of you who are still upset with me for bringing back those brutal memories of the MASTERBLASTER (oh, how sweet the unedited version of this would be) all I can say is: a. At least it wasn’t Faran again. b. If you are still looking to have an angry Monday, just take a peep at what the popularity kings that live above me decided to write about. Want a little sneak preview ofwhat the one-eyed, one-horned, flying, purple, people haters are up to on the flip side? Hi my name is Bill English, and, in a politically correct way, I hate homosexuals. Hi my name is Nick Christie. Right now every Southerner with a pitchfork is chasing me. *.

Get it? Got it? Good. Between the amounts of hate mail The Chronicle receives every week for those two and the desperately-seeking-advice mail that must be flowing to Faran from girls who desperately need more than advice, it is no wonder that the Duke post office takes a week to handle campus mail. Seriously, what kind of fine specimens do we have working in the mail department? With all the electronic wizardry they have going on in there, you would think that the brain benders back there would be able to find Box 95933 without the use of a GPS unit. Those first team Post Office All-Americans love to scan and slap labels on s— like it is going out of style, but they can’t “forward” my magazine subscription to my new box. The way things operate back there, you would think that our mail was coming priority from the moon. I am sure with a little training we could find a couple of grade A lemurs

The Hummus Is Among Us or Good Morning Campers! You know that those were the administrators who sat at their desks saying things like: “We had better order twice as many kegs for the quad this weekend. After all, those kids were looking sober by Wednesday this week, and I must say I feel like having a good time this weekend.” Or: “Hey, finals may start tomorrow, but how much could it hurt to bring the beer truck in early?” The prevailing attitude among the administration was said to be one of “Drink well, test well.” In earth and ocean sciences, that was a very short and often-overlooked geological period commonly referred to as the Dukiushappius Period of which beer can fossils can be found in abundance. So the All-Stars of the week award goes to the First Team All-Maintenance Peoples. Seriously these superpeople do deserve a round of applause and at least a good dose of ass kissing from administration. In the two that would increase productivity back there exponentially. Speaking of highly trained lemurs, would days before alumni weekend they were able to work someone please put Moneta back in his cage! (Burig, around the clock and re-hang almost every fraternity because you are no longer public enemy No. 1 and selective sign back up. It looks like those returning does not mean that you’re not next). alums will be donating this season after all. Speaking of So while we are on the topic, what do we think the which, if they can drop everything to put up signs like brain dynamos over in housing will come up with that... where the f— is Subway?!? But hey, thank goodthis year? Perhaps, once again, Burig will swear that ness after being here a whole half semester, we now no one will have to live in Trent this coming year. know where the hell we were living. Idiots. Like we Hopefully this time he will use the highly popular couldn’t tell where Beta was on our own. “read my lips” line. Could you just make it so the WEL stops smelling so weird? Willy, one more funny THE SECOND GUNMAN would like to make everymove out of you and I will take your head and give it one aware of the fact that Sheriff Carl Franks leads a nice swift kick right up your independent corridor. the ACC in arrests and, in a move to regain the limeI mean whatever happened to the administrators light, Duke was going to make him Honorary Parking of old, who came up with such wonderful names as Sheriff, but they ran out of safari hats.


The Chronicle

PAGE 16 � MONDAY, OCTOBER 7, 2002

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