October 25, 2002

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Showers High 60, Low 53 www.chronicle.duke.edu Vol. 98, No. 45

The Chronicle

Hide in your shell The football team will face defending ACC champion Maryland at home at 1 p.m. Saturday. See page 17

THE INDEPENDENT DAILY AT DUKE UNIVERSITY

Duke names genomics director work with the faculty,” Lange said. Willard said he was attracted to the position because of the IGSP’s unique Two years after the launch of the Inmission, as well as the Duke name. stitute for Genome Sciences and Policy, “The vision for the IGSP is the University announced the instiand Computational Biology really what I think the field of and the Center for Genome tute’s first director Thursday. genomics and genetics needs Huntington Willard, director and Ethics, Law and Policy to be right now—which is be“The combination of his president of the Research Institute of yond just the science,” the naUniversity Hospitals of Cleveland, will superb credentials in the tive New Englander said. “It his immediate take the helm of the IGSP on a partand and field is one of the first and only intime basis next week and permanently strong embrace of the kind of stitutions to really address underlying conceptual pursometime after the new year. the IGSP a those issues.” of made “Pm phenomenally excited about pose him Willard spent his underthis great opportunity,” Willard said. terrific candidate,” Provost graduate years at Harvard “There are some great people that I’ve Peter Lange said. He deand completed his University . scribed very perthis is a to Willard as a met at Duke, and chance Willard doctoral work at Yale Universimake a real difference in the field of sonable, thoughtful and Huntington ty. His research focuses on the straightforward leader. genomics.” The $2OO million IGSP was “He understands what managing organization of the genome, as well as launched in 2000 to conduct research and leading a research institute in a areas connected to medicine and society. strong academic institution is all in genome science and study its impliSee IGSP DIRECTOR on page 11 about, especially how you interact and cations on ethical, legal and policy isBy ALEX GARINGER The Chronicle

sues. It is composed of the Center for Human Genetics, Center for Human Disease Models, Center for Genome Technology, Center for Bioinformatics

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Employees react to high medical costs

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......

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D.C. sniper attacks end in arrests

By MIKE MILLER The Chronicle

Although this year’s health insurance increases for University employees are lower than the national trend, employees have reacted with emotions ranging from understanding to frustration. The University recently mailed employees an announcement of the changes—including monthly premium hikes of $5 for individuals and $37 for family members under the most popular of the three University plans, Duke Select, which covers 80 percent of employees. The premium changes represent a hike of approximately 8 percent, compared with national increases of about

� Police arrested two men found in possession of the rifle used to kill 10 people, ending weeks of Washington, D.C.-area terror. By FRANCIS CLINES with CHRISTOPHER DREW New York Times News Service

12 percent.

Employees had the option of changing their insurance for next year during an open enrollment period from Oct. 7 to 19. No information is available yet on how many chose to change their plans. The most significant increases under the plans are in co-payments, the amount individuals themselves pay for certain medical services. For example, this year’s changes add co-pays of $250 for inpatient care, $125 for outpatient surgery and $lOO for magnetic resonance imaging scans. , “Duke was able to keep its premium increases below the state and national averages by balancing the increased cost between monthly premiums and out-ofpocket costs for specific services,” wrote Lois Green, director of benefits at the Medical Center, in an e-mail. “This balance helps keep premiums more affordable for employees and their families.” The health plan’s structure now places a greater burden on patients See HEALTH PLAN on page 27

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PRESIDENT NAN KEOHANE delivers her annual faculty address before the Academic Council

Keohane addresses moral authority of universities By ANDREW COLLINS and JENNIFER HASVOLD The Chronicle

President Nan Keohane discussed when a university president should speak out on an issue and, more generally, a university’s societal responsibilities at an annual address to the faculty prior to Thursday’s meeting of the Academic Council. The speech examined the role of a university president as a keeper of the moral authority and the university as a safe haven for ideas and viewpoints of all kinds. “Should the university president be

Undergraduate tuition increased about 4 percent this the rise was below the national average, even for four-year private universities. See page 5

A harrowing ROCKVILLE, Md. three-week ordeal came to an end Thursday as police officers arrested two suspects in the sniper shooting spree that left 10 people dead, three wounded and the capital region terrified. The two suspects, identified in a cross-country stroke of basic detective work, were not immediately charged with homicide as detectives interrogat-

judiciously contemplating whether an issue necessitates a statement by a university president. “I have no desire to be a wimp, but I have no illusions about being a moral arbiter,” Keohane said. She added that although there are no clear-cut criteria for determining when it is prudent for a

ed them into the night. But investigators confirmed that the car in which they were arrested early Thursday morning contained the weapon used in the killings, a high-powered, .223-caliber telescopic assault rifle. Leaders of the investigation said Thursday night that ballistics tests had showed the rifle matched the weapon used in the meticulous sniper attacks that spread hit-and-run havoc across the Washington metropolitan region. “We have the weapon; it is off the street,” said the head of the investigation, Montgomery County Police Chief Charles Moose, his face a mask of exhaustion and relief. The men arrested were John Allen Muhammad, a 41-year-old Army veter-

See KEOHANE on page 12

See SNIPER on page 12

silent?” Keohane asked the audience, saying the president has a responsibility to use the authority of the university to speak out on certain compelling issues. She emphasized the importance of

A new Alumni Affairs program to mentor black sophomores will try to match students with alumni living in the Triangle area. See page 6

A Candidates Forum this Sunday will give community members the chance to hear from Congressional and local politicians. See page 7


World & Nation

PAGE 2 �FRIDAY, OCTOBER 25, 2002

NEWS BRIEFS •

U.S. concerned over North Korea arsenal

North Korea’s cryptic comment that it has “more powerful” weapons highlights U.S. worries that Pyongyang may be hiding potent biological weapons like smallpox or advanced nuclear weapons. •

Study reveals storm patterns in Northeast

According to a new study, four times since the last ice age, at intervals 3,000 years apart, the Northeast of the U.S. has been struck by cycles of storms more powerful than any in recent times. The region appears to have entered a fifth era of superstorms •

Google censors some versions of its index

The Internet search engine Google has excluded more than 100 websites from the French and German versions of its index, including many devoted to white supremacy, under pressure from those governments •

IBM sets new record for size of logic circuit

Using a novel computing technique, IBM scientists have created the world’s smallest logic circuit. The entire circuit covers an area less than a trillionth of a square inch. •

Suspects traveled, lived as destitutes Muhammad’s former wife and children may have drawn him to D.C. suburbs By TIM GOLDEN and BLAINE HARDEN

New York Times News Service

WASHINGTON John Allen Muhammad was known to friends for his crushing handshake, his deft touch in repairing fast cars and his temper. He met his 17-year-old traveling companion, John Lee Malvo, an illegal immigrant from Jamaica, when he dated the teenager’s mother in the state of Washington. Relatives said the teenager called Muhammad his father and followed a strict diet of crackers, honey and vitamin supplements that the older man prescribed. The two lived almost as destitutes early this year in a Lighthouse Mission in Bellingham, Wash., a small

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“It is a man’s own mind, not his enemy or foe, that lures him to evil ways.” Buddha f

city in the far northwest corner ofthe killings, what guided the seemingly country. They traveled this summer random selection of innocents, and and early fall through Louisiana, even what drew to Muhammad, 41, New Jersey and finally to the nation’s and the boy to the Washington area capital. They were arrested together is far from clear. Some federal officials speculated that Muhammad, early Thursday morning at a Maryland rest stop while sleeping in a who converted to Islam in 1985 and later changed his last name from used undercover police car with nearWilliams, had been motivated by miles on it. ly 150,000 After being arraigned in federal anti-American sentiments. Late last year, the lives of the two court in Baltimore Thursday afterare held connecmen seemed to spin out of control. in being noon, they Just before Christmas, the police tion with the 13 sniper attacks that terrorized suburban Washington for in Bellingham responded to a report the past three weeks. Federal officials of a domestic dispute involving said they were confident that the Muhammad and Malvo’s mother, murderous rampage, which killed 10 TJma James. The woman and her son people, had come to an end. See SNIPER PROFILES on page 11 But what precipitated the

Chechen rebels hold hostages in Moscow

SEC seeks to fill head spot of oversight board

A divided Securities and Exchange Commission has offered the job as head of a new accounting oversight board to William Webster, after rejecting an early choice opposed by the accounting profession. News briefs compiled from wire reports.

The Chronicle

By DAVID FILIPOV The Boston Globe

MOSCOW The dramatic takeover of a theater in central Moscow this week is among the most brazen assaults that Chechen rebels have carried out against a Russian target in their increasingly desperate 10-year conflict with Moscow. But the capture of hundreds of spectators and performers—just 2 1/2 miles from the Kremlin—and the rebels’ threat to blow them up appears to show how extreme their separatist movement has become as it has closely aligned itself with radical Islam. When Chechens declared their independence after the fall of the Soviet Union in 1991, their rallying cry was the nationalism of a people whose acceptance of Russian rule in the 1860s came only after decades of

conquest by the Czars. The rebels were Muslims, but theirs was a local version of Islam that served more as proof of their non-Russian identity than proof of membership in an international jihad. Russian forces invaded Chechnya in 1994 to put down their independence drive. They suffered costly and embarrassing setbacks, but by early 1995 had pushed the separatists deep into the Caucasus mountain foothills in southern Chechnya. Tens of thousands of people died. In the rebels’ most desperate moment, 150 Chechen fighters disguised as Russian police set off for Moscow with a plan to storm the Kremlin. The ruse worked until police outside the southern Russian town'of Budyonnovsk demanded a bribe the rebels thought was too large. So instead, the Chechens took over a hospital, and held over 2,000 people.

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The Chronicle

FRIDAY, OCTOBER 25,2002 � PAGE 3

With end in sight, Campaign tries to fill holes Filling the Buckets of By WHITNEY BECKETT The Chronicle

With just over a year left in the seven-year, $2 billion Campaign for Duke and 96 percent of the goal met, the University is shifting its focus from the 10 major divisions—the seven schools, athletics, the library and Universitywide initiatives—to individual areas within the divisions. Fundraisers are specifically concentrating on meeting their goals for over $3OO million for financial aid, over $250 million for faculty support and over $4OO million for facilities areas, said Peter Vaughn, director of communications and donor relations for the Office of University Development. Together, these three areas comprise almost half of the total Campaign goal. “Parts are important,” Vaughn said. “We never thought the Campaign would be successful until every division and every target within the divisions’ needs w&fe met.” He added that the University’s needs exceed the Campaign’s goal and that fundraising for different areas, or “buckets” as fundraising officials call

them, would continue past $2 billion. “We’ve always approached the Campaign from two different ways, dividing each division into different areas,” Vaughn said. “As individual additions meet their total goals, that does not mean each of their [individual area]

The Campaign for Duke

With Campaign strategies targeting the demands of very specific areas, fundraising officials said they have adjusted how they approach donors and what gifts to propose. “When I go to talk to potential donors, I always have several different arrows in the quiver, so to speak,” President Nan Keohane said. “Part of that is in assessing their interests, but increasingly I’ve been pulling out particular arrows that match our needs, including faculty support.” As one of the three areas now receiving greater attention, faculty support may grow with the help of gift challenges, for which a primary donor pledges to match the gifts of other individual donors.

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Hail to the chief City Manager Marcia Conner (right) introduced Durham’s new police chief, Douglas Scott, during the City Council’s

proceedings Thursday. His appointment, ending a ninemonth rollercoaster search, was announced Wednesday. Scott, currently assistant inspector general at the U.S. Department of the Interior, will officially begin Dec. 1. He said that among his first priorities will be getting to know the people and leaders of Durham’s communities. Calling Scott “hopefully” the new head of the police department, Conner answered questions about the end of the search and noted that Scott’s appointment is technically subject to state approval. Duke University Police Department Chief Clarence Birkhead (background, left) joined other community members in welcoming Scott. DAVE INGRAM/THE CHRONICLE

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PAGE 4 � FRIDAY, OCTOBER 25, 2002

The Chronicle

Pastor, activist discusses link between war, poverty By KAREN HAUPTMAN The Chronicle

Jim Wallis, a pastor and political activist, urged nonviolent alternatives to the war in Iraq and criticized the situation’s impact on poverty to a group of Duke and Durham community members Thursday night. Recently named one of “50 Faces for America’s Future” by Time magazine, Wallis founded Sojourners magazine and now helps organize “Call to Renewal,” a faithbased anti-poverty coalition. The speech was part of the Divinity School’s annual Unity in Action conference, which aims to address issues of division within the church and the Divinity School, and how to make unity within the church a reality. “We face deep and profound questions as to what this war will do to us,” he said, speaking both about the possible war in Iraq and the larger war against terrorism. “We cannot let them drive us away from being the people God has taught us to be.” Wallis urged his audience to remain hopeful that a nonviolent solution could be reached. “The real battle for us as Christians is not the battle between belief and secularism,” he said. “The battle today is between hope and cynicism.... Hope is believing in spite of the evidence and watching the evidence change. The time calls not just for resistance, but for a radical declaration of our hope.”

SAM MORGAN/THE CHRONICLE

JIM WALLIS, a pastor and social activist, tells attendees of the Divinity School’s annual Unity in Action conference that the potential war with Iraq is harming anti-poverty efforts.

Nonviolence, he said, does not mean submission to terrorism, but rather a more thoughtful response. “Religious people are often accused of being soft and unrealistic,” he said. “But a true religious response to evil should be powerful enough to uproot, defeat and overturn evil. The fact is that we wildly

underestimate what we are up against.” Wallis said the possibility of war with Iraq is rooted in the United States’ role as a world power, adding that US. interest in Iraq is about maintaining global military superiority. He said that Christians worldwide do not want to put the decision to intervene in the hands of just one nation, because both inside and outside the United States, few people are actually clamoring for war. As a political activist, Wallis has worked extensively with Senate leaders on welfare reform. Before Sept. 11, Senate leaders from both parties were nearing an agreement on welfare reform that would have vastly improved US. social conditions, Wallis said, but the focus on terrorism pushed that issue to the back burner. “The poor are always the first victims of war,” he said. “Until we have economic sustainability, the imbalance will create more and more instability that leads to violence. We have to keep our eyes on the goal of systematic social change.” . Divinity student Chris Rice, a member of the task force that planned the Unity in Action conference, said Wallis spoke earlier in the day at Duke Chapel and at a lunch forum, but his evening speech was aimed toward the public and the wider Duke community beyond the Divinity School. “He raised a lot ofrelevant issues about our eagerness to go to war and the patience we need to have, and also just to remind Christians they are a people of peace,” said senior Kathryn House. “Just the way he makes a statement ofhope versus cynicism is very important. People are trying to understand that the opponents to war have a different point of view, and they do it because ofhope and they don’t give up.” '

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The Chronicle

FRIDAY, OCTOBER 25, 2002 � PAGE

5

Tuition grows relatively slowly Trinity, Pratt costs increase at lower rate than other schools’ By JENNIFER HASVOLD The Chronicle

The bad news is that a Duke education is pricey. The good news is that, at least this year, Duke is becoming less expensive to attend relative to other in-

He added that the lower tuition hike was not a strategic attempt to increase the applicant pool, but was rather based on budgetary projections and expectations of what peer institutions would do. The University was surprised that other schools raised their tuition by 5.8 percent for the academic year, Chafe said. Although the struggling economy adversely impacted most universities’ fiscal budgets, Duke administrators said that the fiscal markets’ perform-

stitutions. The University hiked tuition for this year by a conservative 4 percent—almost two full points lower than most other four-year private schools and nearly 6 points lower than four-year public schools. Undergraduate tuition and fees for both Trinity College and the Pratt School of Engineering totals $27,844 for the 2002-2003 academic year, which “Many schools are struggling financialclosely resembles tuition at peer institutions. With ly, as are we, but since we were conroom and board, the total figure increased 3.9 perservative with our funds over the last cent for the school year to reach $35,765. Faced with an impending budget shortfall for the five years we have some slack” foreseeable future, Arts and Sciences is considering different options to balance its budget—including Joel Huber, chair of the President’s Advisory fewer faculty searches that could reduce the faculCommittee on Resources and professor at the Fuqua ty’s size by up to 50 members. School of Business The Arts and Sciences Council Budget Task Force highlighted that move when it recently considered what faculty costs could be reduced in light of finanance was not a consideration in setting the 4 percent cial strains. The task force was charged with priorituition increase. Over the last five years, stock market returns tizing faculty size and compensation, research support and doctorate research support, of which it have been averaging about 15 percent a year. While Duke has spent its funds as if it were only receiving recommended only the former two. “That really is a worst-case scenario and nobody a 5 percent return on investment, other schools have really expects that to happen,” said Philip Cook, pronot been quite so frugal. fessor of public policy studies, who headed the task Mark Nichol, a Brown University spokesperson, said most universities use a rolling average—which force. “I think that the powers that be will find anaverages returns out over three years or some simiother way.” Included in these other ways would be a higher lar time frame—so that a dip or a spike in the martuition increase. A 5 percent tuition hike—just 1 ket is not exacerbated. Many other universities have percent more than this year’s increase—would add made higher projections than Duke, which also uses a rolling average. $1 to 1.3 million to the school’s endowment. The Uni“Many schools are struggling financially, as are versity has projected a $1.7 million shortfall for the we, but since we were conservative with our funds next fiscal year. over the last five years we have some slack,” said “If no other arrangements are made, we’re looking at a $6 million deficit in three years,” Cook said. Joel Huber, chair of the President’s Advisory Committee on Resources and professor at the Fuqua William Chafe, dean of the faculty of Arts and Sciences, said that if tuition increases were held at 4 School of Business. “We may be in a better position percent each year, the University could compensate to absorb a lower tuition hike.” He added that if the market continues to perform through increased undergraduate enrollments, expansion of federal grants, lower salary increases or poorly, the University will have to change its policies. “Now the markets are dropping, but there’s still a a decrease in the number of total faculty. large we be to the “I am confident that will group of funds that in a sense we owe ourable address selves,” said Huber, who also sits on the Board of problem through a combination of these approachTrustees Committee on Business and Finance. es,” Chafe wrote in an e-mail.

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The Chronicle

pAGE 6 �FRIDAY, OCTOBER 25, 2002

Black mentoring program aims to help sophomores “I’d like to learn about some ofthe things alumni did to get the most out of their experience and learn from their mistakes—from the things they did right and wrong,” said sophomore Gabriel Wilson, program participant. “Most of the people I’ve talked to think it’s beneficial. It’s also a good gesture by the alumni to share their time.”

By CHRISTINA NG The Chronicle

A new mentoring program aims to help Duke students navigate their four-year journey through the Gothic Wonderland. Sponsored by the Office of Alumni Affairs, the initiative will pair black students in the Class of 2005 with one of 50 available alumni mentors living in the Triangle area. Matches will be made based on survey questions answered by both the students and alumni about their background and life experience. Thirty sophomores have already responded. The program began this year in response to a request from President Nan Keohane and interest on the part of the alumni to share skills and experiences with undergraduates. “We received feedback both from the alumni and students that both groups would find this program beneficial to making the experience ofAfrican-Americans at Duke more memorable,” said Chris O’Neil, director of the mentoring program and

JANE HETHERINGTON/THI

;hronicli

It’s the Great Pumpkin Man, Charlie Brown West Campus’ newest resident greets (or scares) passers-by in front of Clocktower Quadrangle—one of many signs around campus that Halloween is approaching.

Glenda Richardson, another sophomore, saw the program as a helpful addition to the current advising system. “I’d like to get advice on what to do because I’ve been talking to advisors here and they haven’t been exactly as helpful as possible,” she said. “This seems like a good idea since they’re from Duke and they’re obviously doing something with their lives.”

Organizers hope the program will expand to include all interested students. For now, however, the sophomore class has been targeted for the pilot program. “We wanted to start with a contained group and decided on the sophomore class because they’re starting to think about careers and that sort of thing O’Neil said. “Also, the new change for sophomores residing on West together [makes] ”

field coordinator for alumni affairs. During the program’s planning process last year, the Division of Student Affairs asked black students to identify potential program goals. “Students said career development, internships and networking were important, but they were also looking for someone to talk to about how to maximize the Duke experience,” said Andrea Caldwell, assistant dean of students for leadership development. Current sophomores echoed the sentiments voiced last year.

them a good target audience.” Starting this year, all sophomores, per last year’s residential life plan, are required to live on West Campus. Although many students will focus on career mentoring, organizers hope they will go beyond job preparation and use the program to identify other important life opportunities, Caldwell said. Students meet their mentors at the program’s kick-off event Nov. 20.

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The Chronicle

FRIDAY, OCTOBER 25, 2002 � PAGE 7

Congressional, local candidates to speak at forum By CINDY YEE The Chronicle

With less than two weeks until the November elections, voters will have the opportunity to interact with local politicians Sunday night at a Candidates Forum in Von Canon C. The forum—co-sponsored by the Student-Employee Relations Committee, Duke’s NAACP chapter and the Community Service Center—will include Republican Tuan Nguyen and Democrat David Price in the race for North Carolina’s 4th Congressional District seat in the U.S. House of Representatives. Although Democrat Erskine Bowles and Republican Elizabeth Dole were both invited to participate, neither of the U.S. Senate hopefuls will be able to attend. The forum will also feature six ofthe 10 county commissioner candidates: Democrats Joe Bowser, Philip Cousin, Becky Heron and Mary Jacobs, and Libertarians Hal Noyes and Michael Owen. Starting at 7 p.m., candidates will briefly present their platforms and answer a facilitator’s questions before addressing questions from the audience. Organizers said they hope the forum—which is open to the general public—will encourage political vri P

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participation in students, employees and members of esting, even though she is not registered to vote in North Carolina. “Since we’re living here, it would be the broader Durham community. “We wanted to give employees and the community nice just to have some idea of what the issues are and an opportunity to learn about candidates, especially to hear the candidates’ responses to other people’s those that typically do not access political information questions,” she said. However, other students not registered in the state in this form,” wrote senior Brandilyn Dumas, Duke NAACP member and one of the forum organizers, in said they would not attend because the information an e-mail. would not be directly useful to them. A number of employees said they wanted to attend Senior Andrea Hamilton, a member ofSERC as well the Candidates Forum but that their work schedules the added that oras CSC programming committee, ganizers hope the forum will also serve to bridge gaps would not allow it. Others said they probably would between the Duke and Durham communities and benot attend, citing reasons such as reluctance to spend tween students and University employees. a day off back at the workplace and a lack of interest “We hope that students and employees will get a in the represented political races. Some employees said they were simply not interestchance to interact with each other outside of day-toed in what the forum had to offer. she said. day contact,” “I wouldn’t go to the forum because most of the inSo far, organizers said the forum has met with posformation I want to receive about them is on TV and in itive responses from both students and employees. Although many students may be occupied with Parents’ the debates,” said Saundra Norwood, a Dining Services employee. Weekend activities, Hamilton said she hoped attenHowever, senior Donnel Baird, a forum organizer and dance would meet the room’s maximum capacity of 100 people, but she noted the venue would “work whether a member of SERC, stressed that the interaction beit’s a small intimate environment or a large audience.” tween candidates and forum attendees would be “much Junior Julie Flom said the forum sounded inter- more important than listening to stump speeches.”

•■>*>

N.C. NEWS THIS WEEK From staff and wire reports

Ride operator killed at State Fair A ride attendant was killed Thursday when he fell and was struck by part of the ride’s machinery, state officials said. In addition, a teenage girl on the ride was also slightly injured. The victim, a Philadelphia native and longtime midway operator for Amusements of America, was an attendant on the “Banzai” ride—a swinging, pendulum-type ride with seats at the bottom of a column. He was hit in the head by a steel footrest after he slipped from a platform, said Mike Blanton, spokesman for the state Agriculture Department.

The incident occurred shortly before 11 a.m., and the victim died instantly, Blanton said. The Banzai ride and several rides and concession stands nearby

were closed. The girl, who was in the seat that hit the ride operator, suffered a minor leg injury—possibly a sprained or broken ankle—and was taken to a hospi-

tal, Blanton said. Amusement rides are required by state law to pass inspection by the state Labor Department’s Elevator and Amusement Device Bureau before they can operate, agency spokesman Juan Santos said. The Banzai ride was inspected Oct. 16.

Bush makes campaign stop in Charlotte President George W. Bush stopped in Charlotte Thursday to stump for Republican Senate candidate Elizabeth Dole. Motivated by the prospect of returning Senate control to Republicans, the President also made stops in South Carolina and Alabama to endorse GOP candidates. In his third campaign appearance on Dole’s behalf, Bush spoke admiringly of retiring Sen. Jesse Helms. “[There’s] no finer gentleman in the United States See N.C. NEWS on page 13

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The Chronicle

PAGE 8 � FRIDAY, OCTOBER 25, 2002

Union seeks greater interaction through Fortnight By JENNI HAINSFURTHER The Chronicle

Last Friday, hundreds of students filled the Chapel Quad, eating, mingling and checking out crafts booths at Oktoberfest.

Later that night a film festival marked the firstever Duke screening of The Wizard of Oz synchronized to Pink Floyd’s Dark Side of the Moon, and students packed into Armadillo Grill to listen to the sounds of a band called The Sames. These events marked the beginning of Union Fortnight, two weeks of fun-filled occasions during which Duke students and community members can party on the quad, relax at midnight movies, and listen to a speech by a US. poet laureate, all organized by the

Duke University Union. In between the events of Oktoberfest and the Broadway at Duke series debut of The Scarlet Pimpernel, Union committees have scheduled a variety of programs for the Duke community, including concerts and movies. “I would encourage students to get out and enjoy the events we have planned the next few weeks,” said Union President Jesse Panuccio, a senior. The Union consists of an executive committee and 10 programming committees—including the University’s television and radio stations—each responsible for planning various events and programs. Committee membership is open to everyone in the Duke community. Freshman Calvin Rung called Oktoberfest a wel-

JANE HETHERINGTON/THE CHRONICLE

LAST FRIDAY’S OKTOBERFEST drew hundreds of students and kicked off the Duke University Union Fortnight. The two-week period of programming includes films, speakers, plays and other events. the campus-wide calendar of Duke events is back online at www.union.duke.edu. Following Oktoberfest, Freewater Presentations, another Union committee, screened the movie Run Lola Run and followed the film with a midnight showing ofDark Side of Oz. Cold weather forced Union officials to move the event from Clocktower Quadrangle to Griffith Film Theater. Panuccio said over 500 people

come change on campus. “I had been waiting for a large, well-publicized cultural festival and I thought it was nice how many different ethnic groups were represented,” said Rung, who did not know the event was organized by the Union. One of the primary goals of Union Fortnight is to raise awareness about the Union’s activities. “A lot of students go to events on campus and don’t even know the Union is behind it,” said Calisa Smith, an executive board member and a senior. Union members publicized the events through a campus-wide e-mail, flyers and posters. In addition,

attended the movies. The success of Dark Side of Oz prompted Freewater Presentations to plan five more midnight films this semester. During Union Fortnight, and throughout the rest of the year, Freewater Presentations will show films five nights a week. A Halloween Midnight Movie screening of Evil Dead 2 has also been scheduled.

During Parents’ Weekend, Duke students and their parents may opt to hear US. Poet Laureate Robert Pinsky speak in Page Auditorium Saturday. “I wanted to start off with something nonpolitical. Politics for a Parents’ Weekend speaker can be tricky,” said Major Speakers committee chair Charlotte

Vaughn, a sophomore. Parents and students can also check out an exhibit in the Bryan Center by artist Randy Polumbo, whose controversial work uses materials such as condoms. “We’re not only exhibiting traditional art like painting but also provocative art,” said junior Justin Gilanyi, chair of the Union’s Visual Arts Committee. On Oct. 28, Polumbo will visit Duke and attend a reception in the evening.

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The Chronicle

FRIDAY, OCTOBER 25, 2002 �

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Janet Ewald 1065.01 TuThu 10:55-12:10 History Carr 229 Maritime communities and ships at sea are the focus of this Foundational Seminar. Ships changed history; voyages transformed individuals. Using a treasure chest of primary sources, students explore how different kinds of historical writing employ such sources, build an argument, and tell a story. For a class project, the seminar will create an imaginary but plausible voyage, and will collectively research and narrate its cast ofcharacters. Janet Ewald teaches African and Trans-Atlantic History. By permission.

The Global War, 1939-1945

Claudia Koonz TuThu 2:15-3:30 Carr 241 History 1065.05 The greatest global war in history occurred in the middle of the Twentieth Century. Can one view that war from the vantage point of all its participants? What motivated the wars, how were they sold to the peoples of each country, what moral claims did each side advance? How were the wars experienced by those who went through them? The course concludes with current “memory wars”—Holocaust Denial, calls for apologies to exploited “comfort women,” dispute over justification & criticism of the Atomic Bomb. Claudia Koonz’s forthcoming book is on “The Nazi Conscience.” By permission.

WARS AND HOMEFRONT IN HISTO The History Department welcomes back distinguished military historians Alex Roland and Charles Carlton. Prof. Roland returns from a year of teaching at the Naval Academy. Prof. Carlton, author of eight books including Going to the Wars, taught at Duke last year. Elizabeth Fenn has written a pioneering book on the impact of smallpox on the American Revolution. Peter Wood tells the story of three centuries of Indian wars in his new one-semester Native American History course. James Barker is a scintillating teacher of Civil War military history. Simon Partner has written a new book on the transformative impact of World War II on post-1945 Japan. John Richards leads an in-depth probe of the global war on drugs. ClaudiaKoonz has just finished a book on The Nazi Conscience.

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Gerald Wilson 11:50-12:40 Social Sciences 139 97D.001 MWF History fears, actions, American and dreams and hopes What are the central myths that have shaped GeraldWilson examines five longthe Twentieth Historian and Dean particularly in Century? standing myths that defined the American character from European settlement to the present; America as a City on a Hill, as a Frontier or Agrarian society, as an unparalleled Success or as a Foreign Devil. Gerald Wilson has inspired generations ofDuke students as a teacher and advisor.

Third World and the West

Vasant Kaiwar Soc/Psych 127 TuThu 9-10:25 History 76.01 between inequalities regions of wealth and great did the modem world become one great How of the globe? What have been the human consequences ofWestern dominance—for all those in the global civilization that has emerged? Can we understand the current world-wide crisis from stockmarket turbulence to September 11th —as a function of historical forces set in motion by a world constructed in the 19th century? Does a different relationship of the ‘Third World and the West” lie before us? Vasant Kaiwar brings the vison of a gifted comparative historian to his teaching at Duke.

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American Business Bistory History 158AD.001

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Peter Wood 5-6:15 Art Museum 105 MW 945.04 History is the historical to current events? Work backwards from deep background today’s What headlines to the deep meanings of the news around us. Historical perspective will come through energetic research, disciplined questions, and informed interpretation. Guiding the venture from the present to the hidden currents of the past is Peter Wood- author of a sweeping new synthesis of American history, “Beyond Equality Open to first year students.

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US Legal Bistory History 125A.01

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The Chronicle

PAGE 10 �FRIDAY, OCTOBER 25,2002

CRIME BRIEFS From staff reports

Police still searching for sexual assault suspect More than two weeks after a female student reported being physically and sexually assaulted in a Wannamaker Dormitory bathroom, University police said they have made no arrests in the case. When the woman entered the second-floor bathroom in Wannamaker Dormitory at 5:20 a.m. Oct. 9, she was grabbed by a young man who was already inside the bathroom. A struggle ensued, and the woman attempted to ward off her attacker with a penknife she kept on her keychain. The attacker grabbed the penknife and cut the woman on the face, chest, arm and thigh. The man then allegedly tried to sexually assault the woman, but she was able to escape to her dorm room and call the police. The woman was taken to the Duke Hospital emergency room and later released, Universi-

ty officials said.

The assailant was described as a white man, 18 to 25 years old, between STO” and 6’ tall, with a stocky build and longish brown hair. He was wearing a red shirt and jeans.

Student reports assault at West Campus party

Police charge visitor with hospital assault A visitor to Duke University Hospital reported she was assaulted in a patient’s room Oct. 21 at 12:13 p.m. The victim reported that her boyfriend came into the room, threatened her and pushed her down. Officers charged Jose Linto with domestic assault on a female. Linto was held without bond, and his court date is set for Dec. 9. He could not be reached for comment.

Police arrest impaired driver Patrol officers stopped a vehicle driving erratically on Buchanan Blvd. Oct. 18 at 11:09 p.m. Officers charged Edgar Lopez, who has no known Duke affiliation, with driving while impaired. Lopez was transported to the Magistrate’s office and placed under a $l,OOO secured bond. He could not be reached for comment.

Visitor reports stolen ATM card, money taken

A visitor reported that her ATM card was stolen from her purse while she was visiting a patient at the Duke University Hospital Oct. 22 at 10 a.m. She said she left her purse on a stool for a short while and noticed the purse had been moved when she returned. When she contacted her bank to report the theft, she found that $4OO had been withdrawn from her account.

A student reported that he was assaulted by two or three men while attending a party at a West Campus dormitory Oct. 20. The victim reported that the susEmployee’s car broken into Someone broke into an employee’s car while it was pects who assaulted him were students from University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, but he did not parked in the “H” lot on Erwin Road and Yearby Street know them. between 7:30 a.m. and 3 p.m. Oct. 21. The victim re-

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Edens resident reports damage to car

Someone broke the rear wiper blade off a vehicle when it was parked in the Edens parking lot between midnight and 4:20 p.m. Oct. 20, causing $2OO in damage.

Bryan Center vending machine damaged

A housekeeping employee reported finding a dam-

aged vending machine in the Bryan Center Oct. 20 at 3:48 p.m. Responding officers found the snack machine with the front glass panel pushed in. Some of the items in the machine were reported stolen. The cash box in the machine was not entered, but damage totaled $2OO.

Wallet stolen from Wilßec A student’s wallet was allegedly stolen from the side of the basketball court at the Wilson Recreation Center Oct. 21. The student said he left his belongings on the court between 4 p.m. and 4:35 p.m. while playing basketball. The wallet and its contents are valued at $l5O.

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.

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The Chronicle

FRIDAY, OCTOBER 25, 2002 � PAGE 11

IGSP DIRECTOR from page 1 “[Hel is one of America’s premier geneticists, and his record for leadership at a local and national level is superb,” said Dr. Sandy Williams, dean of the School of Medicine, in a statement. “He is a perfect fit to lead the IGSP, and he brings the requisite stature, energy and vision to the task.” IGSP draws from multiple disciplines at the University and Medical Center, and includes scientists, engineers and physicians, as well as scholars in law, business, economics, public policy, ethics, religion, environmental studies and other humanities and social sciences. Two new buildings to accommodate the institute are currently under construction, and a third is still in the planning stages. “My short term goals are to pull together the group of people who have already been engaged on the IGSP... and figure out the two or

three key areas that we want to work on,” Willard said. “I’d like to focus pretty heavily on faculty recruiting as soon as these new build-

ings are ready.” A year of administrative inaction followed IGSP’s launch, but Williams’ arrival in July 2001 allowed the genomics initiative to gain momentum. Williams and Lange soon offered the directorship to Dr. Lewis “Rusty” Williams, Medicine ’7B, Ph.D. ’77. After long consideration, however, he declined the position to stay in California for family reasons. The search committee then set its eyes on appointing a director by this fall, hitting their mark by hiring Willard. Lange, Williams and Willard will now turn their attention to filling the director vacancies at the human disease models, genome technology and bioinformatics and computational biology centers. Willard said he is optimistic that those positions will be filled within six months.

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were arrested for being in the country illegally. After they were freed, the boy disappeared from high school. In February, Muhammad, a decorated Gulf War veteran and a combat engineer, was arrested on shoplifting charges in Tacoma, Wash., where he had lived on and off since leaving the military in 1994. He skipped a court appearance and a warrant was issued for his arrest in March. By midsummer, the two men were halfway across the country in Baton Rouge, La., where they dropped in unexpectedly on some of Muhammad’s relatives and former in-laws. They apparently came to the East Coast sometime in late summer, picking up a 12-yearold Chevrolet Caprice for $250 in Trenton, N.J. Less than two weeks later, on Sept. 21, the authorities say, Malvo fled on foot from the police after an attempted robbery at a liquor store in Montgomery, Ala., where one employee was killed and another wounded. It is possible that what drew Muhammad to the Washington suburbs was the presence of his second former wife, Mildred Muhammad, and their three children. They live in Clinton, Md., not far from where many of the shootings occurred.

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The Chronicle

pAGE 12 �FRIDAY, OCTOBER 25, 2002

SNIPER from page 1 an with an expert’s rating in marksmanship, and 17-year-old John Lee Malvo, a Jamaican citizen traveling as

Muhammad’s unofficial ward. Muhammad was arraigned Thursday evening in Baltimore on a preliminary charge of violating federal weapons laws. Malvo was held as a material witness and a juvenile in the investigation.

Further charges will be discussed Friday by federal, state and local prosecutors from the seven jurisdictions scattered across the region where the sniper killed random individuals as they pursued the routine tasks of daily life. It was not immediately made clear whether Muhammad would be charged with all the shootings or whether the two suspects might have taken turns in the attacks. Residents across the region exulted that the haunting case had, the authorities said, suddenly been cracked. The sniper had repeatedly evaded a largescale manhunt. The last of his victims, a bus driver, died Tuesday morning here in Montgomery County, where five earlier victims had been cut down. Leaders of the police task force emerged Thursday night through a smattering of applause outside Montgomery County police headquarters to announce success, although the authorities would not speculate about the motive for the string of shootings. After fitful days of attempting to send cryptic messages to the sniper, Moose could finally address his own community and emotionally declare, “We have not given into the terror.” The two suspects were sleeping in

their car at a highway rest stop off Interstate 70 near Frederick, Md., when a traveler responded to a police alert broadcast for the car, a dark 1990 Chevrolet with New Jersey plates. A powerful force of armed and helmeted police crept up and surrounded the car, arresting the two at 3:30 a.m. with no resistance offered. Inside the car, investigators said they found the high-powered Bushmaster XM-15 .223-caliber rifle with scope and bipod. The roving sniper had used a .223-caliber rifle in each of his singleshot attacks, preying with dead-eyed accuracy from Washington to the outskirts of Richmond, Va. In unraveling the sniper’s manner of stalking, detectives said that modifications to the suspect car’s backseat and trunk area suggested it could have been used as a sniper’s perch with the gunman hidden flat in the car and firing out through a hole that had been bored in the trunk lid. Forensic experts pored over the car for evidence of the powder blast that would confirm its use as an attack vehicle. Detectives of the manhunt were tight-lipped about such critical subjects as the possible motive for the attacks. But law enforcement officials said Thursday night that one theory they were pursuing is that at least one of the sniper suspects had displayed a hatred of the United States, possibly inflamed by the Sept. 11 attacks. Muhammad made “angry statements about the United States” and “many statements indicating that he sympathized with the 9/11 hijackers, according to witnesses who knew him,” a senior law enforcement official said Thursday night. “He said things like, ‘The United States had it coming to them.’”

lined major Academic Council discussion topics of the past year and previewed several upcoming issues. university president to take a stand, it She said this year would be marked is important to consider the impact of by discussions of faculty retirement, salary equity, the progress of the Black the issue at hand, the university’s proximity to the issue and whether or not a Faculty Strategic Initiative and the university statement would lend any President’s Gender Initiative. Plans for possibly merging the Presbenefit to the situation. Advisory Committee on Recomes several ident’s Thursday’s speech sources and the Faculty Priorities Comweeks after Keohane declined to endorse a statement cautioning against mittee are still under consideration and the intimidation and mistreatment of the issue may be addressed this year, Jewish students, which was sent to she added. Allen, the first member of the cliniuniversity presidents and chancellors the reasoned cal sciences faculty to chair the councountry. Keohane across cil, said she also hoped to foster that the statement was too specific, fogreater unity between the medical cusing on just a small group. community and the University as a She also reminded faculty and administrators of the upcoming 100th anwhole. She cited parking and interdisniversary of the Trinity College Board ciplinary faculty instruction as particof Trustees’ decision to support Profesular challenges. “A veil—or a wall of Duke stone, desor of History John Spencer Bassett, who pushed the envelope of accepted pending on your perspective—may make limits on academic freedom by praising it difficult for some faculty to function in the life of Booker T. Washington in the interdisciplinary ways,” she said. face of popular racist sentiment. After Allen’s remarks, the special faculty meeting adjourned and a perKeohane cited the decision as a turnfunctory meeting of the council coming point in the state of academic freedom in American universities and menced. Keohane answered a question called on Duke to maintain the tradithat had been submitted in writing before the meeting, about why the Unition of intellectual inquiry and discussion, even when the pursuit of truth is versity did not release its NCAA infractions to the public, like other Atlantic unpopular or unsavory. “Money, students, and trends are not Coast Conference schools. Keohane said to be weighed for one moment,” the the University had only committed president said of a university’s pursuit three minor infractions this past year, and she believed they were too minor to for truth. She commended the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill for merit public disclosure. She outlined challenging ideals and promoting disthe incidents in detail,-however, in recussion through its required freshman sponse to the question. Allen closed the meeting by narratreading this year of a book that including a chronological overview of the ed selections from the Qur’an. After Keohane’s speech, Dr. Nancy council’s achievements to commemoAllen, chair of the council, briefly out- rate its 40th anniversary this month.

KEOHANE

from page 1

The Duke University Union Major Speakers Committee Presents

Robert Pinsky U.S. Poet Laureate 1997-2000

Saturday, October 26 PARENTS' WEEKEND 3:3opm, Page Auditorium Reception and book signing to follow

Tickets are FREE Available on BC Walkway and at the door


The Chronicle

FRIDAY, OCTOBER 25, 2002 � PAGE 13

CAMPAIGN from page 3 “It requires quite large gifts to endow [faculty] positions, and [gift challenges] let people, endow a professorship with a little less money,” Vaughn said. The goals for both faculty support and facilities increased in 2001, when the University’s optimism that it could corral funds grew. If the facilities goal had not approximately doubled, Vaughn said that area would have already been full. Undergraduate financial aid, however, is another story. The fundraising goal for undergraduate need-based scholarships is almost met, but merit-based scholarship goals and graduate student goals still need funding. “It’s a bucket

that is never filled,” Vaughn said. Of the 10 divisions, the library system lags the furthest behind with less than 90 percent of its goal filled. Following after is Arts and Sciences at 90 percent. Representatives from both said they are confident they will meet their goals. Both the School of Law and the Pratt School of Engineering have already exceeded their goals. Of the over $1.9 billion pledged so far, 83 percent has actually been paid—a percentage consistent with the Campaign over time. Of the library’s four sub-areas and total $4O million goal, it has exceeded both its $9.5 million endowment and $1.5 million Annual Fund goals. It is still behind, however, in both its $2O

N.C. NEWS from page 7

million building and $9 million program/services goals. “Something working in our favor now is we finally have detailed designs for spaces in the library [addition] that we can show donors,” University Librarian David Ferriero said. “In the beginning, we were just describing the rooms.” Donors, with sufficiently large gifts, can name rooms or even the entire addition. Of the three-phase addition plan, only the first phase is included in the capital campaign. With only $4l million remaining of the $4OO million Arts and Sciences goal, Associate Dean for Advancement Colleen Fitzpatrick said the division would not need to actively change its strategy for the last stretch of the Cam-

Residents to get nuclear protection pill

Senate [than Helms]

Bush said. “He represented North Carolina well, he’s a credit to our country and the right person to follow Sen. Jesse Helms is soon-tobe-Senator Elizabeth Dole.” By election day, the president will have made campaign appearances in over two dozen states in what has been a record fundraising campaign for Republican candidates across the country. Some Democrats attended the rally in Charlotte to pass out statistics showing that 100,000 more people in the Carolinas and Alabama are without jobs since the president first took office.

Starting Nov. 1, people who live within 10 miles of a nuclear power plant south of Raleigh will begin receiving pills for protection in case of radiation leaks. Residents of Wake, Chatham, Harnett and Lee counties who live near the Shearon Harris nuclear power plant will be given two potassium iodide pills for each family member. After reviewing studies of the 1986 Chernobyl dis-

aster and also taking into account the increased risk of terrorist attacks following Sept. 11., state officials decided to hand out the pills. Gibbie Harris, community health director with the Wake County Department of

paign. “We’re right on target,” she said. Of the seven Arts and Sciences areas, the $6 million Student Affairs goal and the $94.5 million for programmatic sup-

port have been reached and exceeded, and 95 percent of the $64 million Annual Fund goal has been met. In its last year, the Arts and Sciences campaign will focus on the four yet-unfilled areas: slOl million for undergraduate scholarships, S3O million for graduate fellowships, $65 million for faculty support and $39.5 million for facilities. Athletics may be the next to finish its goal, with 98 percent of its $l3O million goal completed. Following athletics is the Nicholas School for the Environment and Earth Sciences and University-wide initiatives, both at 97 percent.

Human Services, said the pill only provides protection for the thyroid gland against one form of radiation—it does not protect against whole-body radiation.

Earnhardt fans have road to remember Gov. Mike Easley signed a bill Wednesday to renumber a state road “N.C. 3” in honor of NASCAR legend Dale Earnhardt, who wore the number when he raced. The 28-mile stretch of road—currently numbered N.C. 136—runs through Cabarrus County, where Earnhardt lived, and Iredell County, where he worked. The road’s number 136 will be swapped with the current N.C. 3, which is in Currituck County.

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The Chronicle

PAGE 14 � FRIDAY, OCTOBER 25, 2002

Academic FRIDAY, OCTOBER 25 University Program in Ecology Seminar: 12:45pm. "Some economic dimensions of climate change and the future of forests,” Brian Murray, Research Scientist, RTF A247-LSRC.

EOS Seminar Series: 4pm. “Responses of Coastal Wetlands to Rising Sea Level,” James T. Morris. 201 Old Chemistry Building.

Duke Department of Music Lecture Series: 4pm. “Rethinking the Siena Choirbook; A New Date and Implications for its Musical Contents,” Timothy Dickey. 101 Biddle. Lecture: 4pm. Kate Wolfe-Quintero, Department of Second Language Studies, Director, University of Hawai’i English Language Program University of Hawai’i at Manoa will speak on Principles of Pedagogical Grammar. Carpenter Boardroom, 223 Perkins Library. A reception will follow the talk in the same location. For more information please contact Professor Hae-Young Kim at haeyoung@duke.edu or call 660-4364.

SATURDAY, OCTOBER 26 Duke

University Union Major Speakers Presents: 3:3opm. ROBERT PINSKY, United States Poet Laureate 1997 2000, PBS Lehrer NewsHour. Commentator, Discussing poetry and modern American culture. Page Auditorium, Duke University’s West Campus. Admission is FREE and the public is invited. Tickets are General Admission and will be available to the public at the door. -

Religious

Freewater Films: 7, 9:30 p.m. “Kissing Jessica Stein” with Jennifer Westfeldt. Free to students, $4 for employees and $5 for the public. Call 6842323. Griffith Film Theater, Bryan Center, West Campus.

The 20th Annual Duke University Jazz Festival: Bpm. Guest Artist; Joanne Brackeen, Piano. The Duke Jazz Ensemble, under the direction of Paul Jeffrey, will be joined by pianist Joanne Bracken. Baldwin Auditorium, East Campus. Tickets may be purchased at the door or by calling the University Box Office at 684-4444. Argentine Tango Social Dance and Tango Performance: Bpm. Performances by Luciana Valle and Alex Krebbs. Free tango lesson by Luciana Valle, 8-9pm. Social Dancing, 9pm12am. Call Gulden Ozen at 402-9562 or events@triangletangueros.org. Doris Duke Center at Sarah P. Duke Gardens.

Hoof N Horn Presents; Bpm. The Mystery of Edwin Drood. Tickets $7 students $9 general, musical murder mystery to be presented by Hoof N Horn in the Emma Sheafer Theater, Bryan Center. Duke University Department of Theater: Nightly at Bpm., Sunday at 2pm. “Cloud Nine” by Caryl Churchill. Jeff Storer directs a student cast in a topsy-turvy play about race, class and sex. Caryl Churchill uses the backdrop of the 19th century colonial Africa and 20th century contemporary life to explore the hypocrisy of “normative” social expectations. Tickets are $9 for the public and $7 for students/seniors. Performance at 2 p.m. on Oct. 27. Call 660-3343. Reynolds Theater, Bryan Center, West Campus.

SATURDAY, OCTOBER 26

FRIDAY, OCTOBER 25 Wesley Fellowship Bible Study: Fridays. Wesley Office.

12noon,

Shabbat: 6pm, Fridays. Invite your family to experience the joy of Shabbat at Duke. Let us know if you are coming for dinner by Thursday at 5 pm. Email jewishlife@duke.edu. Freeman Center for Jewish Life.

SUNDAY, OCTOBER 26 University Service of Worship: 11am. This is an ecumenical worship service. All are welcome. Chapel Docents provide tours of the Chapel after the worship service. Live audio and video available at www.chapel.duke.edu. Duke Chapel. Episcopal Student Center: spm, Sundays. Service of Holy Eucharist followed by fellowship dinner. Located at the Episcopal Student Contact Anne Center, 505 Alexander Ave. Hodges-Copple at annehc@duke.edu for more

information.

Social Programming and Meetings

FRIDAY, OCTOBER 25 P-FLAG (Parents, Families & Friends of Lesbians & Gays); spm. The ultimate allies! Invite your parents! Bring your friends! 201 Flowers Bldg.

Hoof N Horn Presents: 2pm, 9pm. The Mystery of Edwin Drood. Tickets $7 students $9 general, musical murder mystery to be presented by Hoof N Horn in the Emma Sheafer Theater, Bryan Center. After Hours: 6pm. Duke University Museum of Art: A moving experience. Dances choreographed to DUMA works. Reception and performance, cash bar. Extended parent’s weekend hours, Saturday 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. and Sunday 12 p.m. to 5 p.m. Call 684-5135. DUMA, East campus.

Quadrangle Pictures: 7, 10 p.m. “About a Boy.” $4 for Duke students and employees and $5 for the public. Call 684-2323. Griffith Film Theater, Bryan Center, West Campus. Duke

Parents Weekend Concert: Bpm. Duke Chorale, Duke Symphony Orchestra, Duke Wind Symphony. General Admission: $5, Students free with ID. Duke

Featuring Chapel.

Duke University Department of Theater: Nightly at Bpm, Sunday at "2pm. “Cloud Nine” by Caryl Churchill. Jeff Storer directs a student cast in a topsy-turvy play about race, class and sex. Caryl Churchill uses the backdrop of the 19th century colonial Africa and 20th century contemporary life to explore the hypocrisy of “normative” social expectations. Tickets are $9 for the public and $7 for students/seniors. Call 6603343. Reynolds Theater, Bryan Center, West Campus.

SUNDAY, OCTOBER 27 In The Spotlight: 2pm. Solo and small ensemble performances by students. Nelson Music Room, East Duke Building. Hoof N Horn Presents: 2pm. The Mystery of Edwin Drood. Tickets $7 students $9 general, musical murder mystery to be presented by Hoof N Horn in the Emma Sheafer Theater, Bryan Center.

Organ Recital Series: 2;3opm & spm. Performances by David Arcus, assisted by "Kristen Blackman and Justin Jaworski. Memorial Chapel, Duke University Chapel. Community Service Center: 7pm. Candidates Forum, Von Canon C (in the BC). Don’t miss this opportunity to hear candidates running for Durham County Commissioner seats and the U.S. House of Representatives as they vie for YOUR vote! Co-sponsored by the StudentEmployee Relations Committee (SERC) and the Duke NAACR Quadrangle Pictures: 7, 10pm. “About a Boy." $4 for Duke students and employees and $5 for the public. Call 684-2323. Griffith Film Theater, Bryan Center, West Campus.

Duke University Department of Theater: Nightly at Bpm, Sunday at 2pm. “Cloud Nine” by Caryl Churchill. Jeff Storer directs a student cast in a topsy-turvy play about race, class and sex. Caryl Churchill uses the backdrop of the 19th century colonial Africa and 20th century contemporary life to explore the hypocrisy of “normative” social expectations. Tickets are $9 for the public and $7 for students/seniors. Call 660-3343. Reynolds Theater, Bryan Center, West Campus.

Faculty Recital: Bpm DON EAGLE, comet featuring historic instruments from the Eddy Collection at Duke. Baldwin Auditorium, East Duke Campus. ADMISSION: FREE. Scrieen/Society Presents: Bpm. “Last Year at Marienbad,” directed by Alain Renais, French with English subtitles. Richard White Auditorium. Free and open to public. For more information, or go call 660-3031 to www.duke.edu/web/film/screensociety/. Focus: Bpm. “Last Year at Marienbad,” directed by Alain Renais. Call 684-1975. Richard White Lecture Hall, East Campus.

Upcoming

Events

how ideals of beauty have changed over the course of history and why women are painted in particular ways. RSVP to Becky Griesse at becky.griesse@duke.edu or 668-0997. Duke University Museum of Art. Service Center Keynote Address: Bpm. Kevin McDonald and the TROSA Musical Ensemble, Social Sciences 139. Guest speaker Kevin McDonald is the CEO and Founder of one of Durham’s most unique and successful community organization, Triangle Residential Options for Substance Abusers (TROSA). Learn about his story with the Durham community and experience the music of the talented TROSA Musical Ensemble. Community

Westminster Presbyterian/UCC Fellowship: 9-1 Opm, Mondays. “Haphour,” informal time of refreshments and fellowship, begins at B:3opm. All are welcomed. Unitarian Universalist: 9-1 Opm, 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.

TUESDAY, OCTOBER 29 In, Out, and In-Between: 4-s:3opm, Tuesdays. In, Out, and In Between: A Confidential Discussion Group About LGBT People and Issues An all new format! New people! All gay men, lesbians, bisexuals, trans, allies welcome. Duke Women’s Center Lower Level Lounge SAFE on Campus: 4-6pm. (Students Administrators & Faculty for Equality). 201 Flowers Bldg. Sign Up in Advance, http://lgbt.studentaffairs.duke.edu/safe.html

TAIZE Prayer: s:lspm, Tuesdays.

Memorial

Chapel.

Community Service Center: 7:3opm. Duke in the Community: A Forum of Student Service Groups, Multicultural Center (in the BC). Come learn about the different issues facing the Duke community, what students are doing about them, and how to get involved. Speakers include representatives from Break for a Change, SERC, LEAPS, Duke Red Cross, Latino Life Connection, and more!

Djembe Ensemble: Bpm. Bradley Simmons, director. West-African drumming. Admission: Free. Nelson Music Room, East Duke Bldg., East Campus

MONDAY, OCTOBER 28

WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 30

The Nichols Distinguished Lecture Series: 3:3opm. David N. Keightley will speak on Death and the Birth of Civilizations: Ancestors, Art, and Culture in Early China and Early Greece. Alumni Commons Room, 022 New Divinity School, Duke University West Campus. For more information please contact Paula Evans t 684-2604

Duke Campus Club Annual Luncheon and Guest Day: 'll:3o3l7l-I:3opm. The Honorable Kevin Foy, Mayor of Chapel Hill will speak on “Living and working side by side: two university communities face growth and harmony.” Ticketss2l each may be ordered by dues paying members and their guests. To order, send check and SASE to: Bailey Farrin, 10 Gaitlin Court, Durham, NC 27707. For more information call Rebecca Fisher, 493-2324. Hope Valley Country Club.

or paula@duke.edu. Speaker: 4pm. Meredith Raimondo SouthernStyle AIDS: Sex, Citizenship, and Region in Representations of the AIDS Epidemic. Mary Lou Williams Center for Black Culture (Part of Sexualities in the South). -

Tour of DUMA: 4:30-s:3opm. “Depictions of Women in Art,” discussions and commentary on

Community Service Center: 11:30-1:00. Brown Bag Lunch with President Keohane, Griffth Board Room. Join President Keohane for a discussion about Duke-Durham relations and community service efforts at Duke.


The Chronicle

FRIDAY, OCTOBER 25, 2002 � PAGE 15


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Sports

The Giants creamed the Angels 16-4 to come within one game of the World Series title.

See page 21

� Luol Deng, the nation’s No. 2-rated recruit, visits the Duke campus this weekend. See page 18 The Chronicle � page

FRIDAY, OCTOBER 25, 2002

i?

Football hosts streaking Terrapins Saturday By TYLER ROSEN The Chronicle

Parents’ Weekend is all about showing off in front of your parents. You show how much cleaner your room is than last year’s was and how much better you’re doing in classes this semester. Saturday, the football team (2-6, 0-4 in the ACC) will be trying to show off the progress it has made since last season when it hosts a resurgent Maryland (4-2, 1-1) at 1 p.m. in Wallace Wade Stadium. The 2002 Blue Devils are markedly different from last year’s team. They have been competitive in six games already this season—triple the number of times they threatened during last year’s 0-11 campaign. They are, however, coming up just short of victory. “The difference [between winning and coming close] is execution of a few critical plays in the game,” head coach Carl Franks said. ‘You don’t know when those plays are going to be, so you’ve got to be sharp and play every play as best you can—know what you’re doing on every play—so you give yourself a chance to execute on those plays.” The Blue Devils failed to execute on too many plays against No. 12 N.C. State last week, Wake Forest the week before and Virginia the week before that, as they lost each game despite outgaining their opponents. The Wake Forest and N.C. State losses

saw the Blue Devils enter the red zone five times in the first quarter. The Blue Devils were actually outscored 7-3 on these possessions—the Demon Deacons blocked a field goal and returned it for a touchdown and the Blue Devils missed a field goal, failed on a field goal fake, got sacked on a 4th and short play and made a field goal on the other four possessions. “Good teams are going to play well in

the red zone,” Franks said. “Good defenses will play well on the goaline. Good offenses are going to get the ball in the endzone when you get that chance.” Focusing and executing in the red zone have been focuses in practice this week. Against Maryland, the Blue Devils

will need to make the most of their opportunities. The Terrapins’ stingy defense has held opponents to just 15.9 points per game—the lowest average in the ACC. The biggest worry for Duke is AllAmerican linebacker E.J. Henderson. “He’s really good,” Blue Devil quarter-

back Adam Smith said. “He’s got a nose for the ball. He’s fast and he’s strong. I’ll probably be seeing a good bit of him.” The Terrapins struggled early in the

season, losing badly to Notre Dame and Florida State in the first and third games of the year. After being the surprise team of 2001 in the ACC, the Terrapins were sitting at 1-2. Since then, they’ve rolled off See FOOTBALL on page 24

ALEXWADE and the Duke running attack hope to flatten Maryland Saturday.

For women’s soccer, it’s do-or-die against Tar Heels By MIKE COREY The Chronicle

Anson Dorrance, the 24-year head coach of No. 2 North Carolina, held a book signing Wednesday for what has been dubbed “the Bible of women’s soccer.” Dorrance’s book, “The Vision of a Champion: Advice and Inspiration from the World’s Most Successful Women’s Soccer Coach,” highlights his philosophy and coaching style—a philosophy that has led the Tar Heels to 17 national championships since 1979. In that span, North Carolina has

GWENDOLYN OXENHAM and the Duke women’s soccer team face a must-win game against archrival North Carolina.

||P| %.

dropped just 23 games. Duke (6-8-1, 1-3-1 in the ACC), under the tutelage of second-year head coach Robbie Church, will travel down Tobacco Road Sunday afternoon to square off against the heavily-favored Tar Heels (13-1-2, 3-1). The Blue Devils will be under the gun, needing at least a tie to remain eligible for a NCAA Tournament invitation. Despite North Carolina’s superior record, the Blue Devils, who have picked up just one win in their last eight games, anticipate a great game against their rivals. “I think pretty much the entire team is looking forward to playing UNC,” co-captain Rebecca Smith said. “In years past we’ve come close to beating them... I’m pretty sure we can beat them [Sunday].” The Blue Devil offense has suffered since the loss of freshman phenom Carmen Bognanno, sidelined

Aquatic home openers

Ex-Packer: I’m gay

The Duke swimming and diving teams host East Carolina this weekend. The men are looking for their first victory of the season, while the women hope to improve on their 1-2 record

Esera Tuaolo, a defensive lineman for nine years in the NFL, told HBO Real Sports he contemplated suicide while a player, saying he felt miserable having to hide his homosexuality.

TB ;

• |

A-Rod, Bonds honored Alex Rodriguez and Barry Bonds were named the winners of Major League Baseball's Henry Aaron award, given annually to the best hitters in each league.

with an injury that has kept her out of action since after a loss to Clemson Oct.. “Carmen’s a sparkplug,” Church said. “She’d really just settled in and she’d just played her two best games of the year... so losing Carmen in the midfield has changed our formation in the midfield some, and you know it’s hurt us. Carmen adds a lot of intensity [to our team] In her absence, however, Casey McCluskey, last year’s leading goal scorer, has done her best to carry the offensive load for the Blue Devils. The sophomore has tallied eight goals and an assist for Duke, scoring four times in the past five games. McCluskey’s recent outburst has created a conundrum for Duke’s offensive attack. As Virginia showed in a 2-0 victory Oct. 23, an opponent’s zeroing in on McCluskey gives Duke myriad problems. “No question about it, people are really keying on Casey,” Church said. “She is being attacked and brought down, with at least one player or two players with Casey. We need more people to score goals; we need more people to step forward.” Duke is hardly short on talent, however. Early season wins over No. 15 Tennessee and No. 14 Florida are testament to that fact. “I think we have a lot of outstanding players that also contribute a lot to our offense, and they also play ”

See SOCCER on page 24

Raider Rookie on IR After a promising opening to his rookie season in which he caught two interceptions and returned a punt for a ID, Philip Buchanon is likely out for the season with a broken wrist.

National Hockey League

J|

Senators 2, Bruins 2 Islanders 5, Panthers 3 Flyers 6, Canadiens 2 Sharks 2, Predators 1 Wild 3, Blackhawks 2 Blues 2, Oilers 1 Stars 3, Flames 3


Sports

PAGE 18 �FRIDAY. OCTOBER 25. 2002

The Chronicle

International phenom makes visit to Duke From staff reports Luol Deng, the No. 2 men’s basketball recruit in the high school class of 2003, will make an official recruiting visit to Duke this weekend. Duke is the final school in a long string of recruiting weekends for Deng, who visited Indiana last weekend—a visit he had to push back a week because he wanted another crack at the SAT even though he has already qualified academically. Deng is also considering George Washington, Missouri, Virginia and

Indiana, although many experts say Duke and Missouri are the favorites. A Sudenese native, Deng moved to Egypt at age six, before settling permanently in London, England. He subsequently came to the United States for high school at Blair Academy in New Jersey. The 6-foot-7, 216-pound Deng is considered by many to be the top available prospect in next year’s freshman class since Sports Illustrated cover boy Leßron James, the consensus No. 1 high school player, will almost certainly forgo college in favor of the NBA.

Top national recruits arrive to meet with Goestenkors By JEFF VERNON The Chronicle

Two highly-regarded prospects visit Duke this weekend, Alison Bales and Brittany Hunter. Either Hunter, a 6-3 center from Brookhaven High School in Columbus Ohio, or Bales, a 6-6 center from Beavercreek, Ohio, could provide the all-ready loaded Blue Devils with a quality low-post presence. Both come to Duke highly-decorated; Hunter is ranked no. 1 by All Star Girls’ high school rankings, while Bales was selected Student Sports’ national Sophomore of the Year after leading her team to a state championship two years ago. Both show an unusual degree of versatility for their size. Although Bales’

stature might be her most noticeable characteristic, her all-around skills have earned the praise of several scouts and basketball aficionados. “She can do a little bit of it all,” said All Star Girls’ Report recruiting expert Brett McCormick. “She can put it on the floor, she can shoot the jump shot, she runs the floor well.” Her high school coach, Ed Zink, agrees. “Of course she can play inside... but she might be our best three-point shooter,” opines Zink. “Duke is an up-tempo team... if she went there maybe she could get that kind of opportunity.”

VICTOR CHANG/THE CHRONICLE

What up Alana? How are you Iciss? The Duke women’s basketball team, preseason favorites to win the National Championship, hosted ‘Meet the Blue Devils Night’Thursday inside Cameron Indoor Stadium.

See RECRUIT WATCH on page 25

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Maryland Record:s-2, 1-1 in the ACC

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Maryland running back Chris Do' ns ran wild last week against Ge Tech, rushing for 212 yards ak touchdowns He won’t find as running room this week again l smothering run defense. .

Maryland quarterback Scott averaging 167 yards per gam the air, probably drooled in filr this week. Duke’s secondary! after allowing N.C. State’s Phi to throw for 364 yards last we

Dominique Foxworth. Though he badly missed a 65-yard field goal last week, the fact that it was even attempted shows the faith Duke has in placekicker Brent G|rber. Maryland’s kickoff and punt coverage teams lead the ACC, though.

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Duke, as it has so often this season, should control the time of possession in this game by running Wade and Douglas all day long, their troubles will start in the red zone. Maryland hold opponents no further than the 20-yard line, as it ranks first in the ACC in red zone defense. Conversely, Duke has had trouble scoring, converting only 11 touchdowns in 26 trips inside the red zone. Garber will get his field goals, but Maryland will get it’s touchdowns. Maryland beats Duke in another heartbreaker, 24-23. —by Andy Hartzler

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PAGE 20

Sports

�FRIDAY. OCTOBER 25. 2002

Grid Picks

@ Duke I\I.C. State @ Clemson Notre Dame @ FSU UNC @ Wake Forest Virginia @ Georgia Tech lowa State @ Texas Texas Tech @ Colorado Nebraska @ Texas A&M BC @ Pittsburgh Penn State @ Ohio State lowa @ Michigan Wisconsin @ Michigan State USC @ Oregon Cal @ Oregon State Stanford @ UCLA Washington @ Arizona State Alabama @ Tennessee LSU @ Auburn Mississippi @ Arkansas Rutgers @ Syracuse

To serve ANAHEIM, Calif. as a buildup to the highly anticipated Blue-White game, the grid pickers decided to travel to the West Coast for the first-ever wild card World Series. After voting which venue to attend—each person having only one vote, because otherwise it would be unfair like those daggone Japanese—the Chronicle staff decided to head to Edison Field. Nick “Anaheim is in Southern California” Christie was in abstentia, as he protested the rebellious staffers and opted for the northern confines of Pac

Maryland

@ Duke N.C. State @ Clemson Notre Dame @ FSU UNC @ Wake Forest Virginia @ Georgia Tech lowa State @ Texas Texas Tech @ Colorado Nebraska @ Texas A&M BC @ Pittsburgh Penn State @ Ohio State lowa @ Michigan Wisconsin @ Michigan State USC @ Oregon Cal @ Oregon State Stanford @ UCLA Washington @ Arizona State Alabama @ Tennessee LSU @ Auburn Mississippi @ Arkansas Rutgers @ Syracuse

“ving in a” van “down by the

staggered in from the concession stand, sporting a beer helmet and a monkey of his own. “I be swervin’,” Samuel said. “You know? YOU KNOW! I just be punchin’ my fingers and they toss me a couple Buds. It’s off the sheazy-heazy-fuh-leazy, yo. This is an e-mail.” Midway through the first

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(113-47) Terps 28-24

(113-47) Terps 24-22

(112-48) Terps 24-20

(112-48) Terps 27-17

(112-48) Duke 30-27

N.C. State

N.C. State Notre Dame Wake Forest

N.C. State Notre Dame UNC

N.C. State Notre Dame UNC Georgia Tech Texas Texas Tech Nebraska

N.C. State

I\I.C. State

FSU

FSU Wake Forest Virginia Texas Colorado Nebraska Pittsburgh Ohio State

N.C. State Notre Dame UNC

FSU UNC Virginia Texas Colorado Texas A&M Pittsburgh Ohio State

Michigan Wisconsin Oregon California UCLA Arizona State

Tennessee LSU

Mississippi Syracuse

Virginia

Virginia

Texas Colorado Texas A&M

Texas Texas Tech Nebraska BC Ohio State

Pittsburgh Ohio State Michigan Michigan St Oregon

Wisconsin Oregon California Stanford

Washington

Washington

Tennessee LSU

Oregon California

UCLA Washington Alabama LSU

Arizona State Tennessee

UCLA LSU Mississippi Syracuse

Davis

Rosen

(109-51) Duke 15-13

N.C. State

N.C. State

N.C. State

Notre Dame Wake Forest Ga. Tech Texas Colorado Texas A&M

FSU Wake Forest Virginia Texas Colorado Nebraska Pittsburgh Penn State Michigan Wisconsin

Pittsburgh Ohio State Michigan Michigan St

Oregon

Oregon

Oregon St. UCLA

Arizona State Tennessee LSU Arkansas

California UCLA Washington Tennessee Auburn Arkansas

Syracuse

Syracuse

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Bikes for the whole family

Texas Colorado Nebraska

Wisconsin

(109-51) Terps 10-0

Clark

Virginia

Michigan

(110-50) Terps 24-21

&

Wake Forest

Michigan

California

Mississippi Syracuse

-

Pittsburgh Ohio State Michigan

FSU Wake Forest Virginia

Texas Colorado Texas A&M

Pittsburgh Ohio State lowa Wisconsin

Ohio State

Texas Texas Tech Texas A&M

Pittsburgh Penn State Michigan

Wisconsin

Wisconsin

Oregon

Oregon

California

California

UCLA Alabama LSU

UCLA Arizona State Tennessee LSU

Wisconsin Oregon California UCLA Arizona St Tennessee

Mississippi Syracuse

Mississippi

Mississippi

Mississippi

Syracuse

Syracuse

Rutgers

Corey (108-52) Duke 30-21

Free Traders

Ingram

Samuel

(108-52) Terps 56-0

(108-52) Terps 31-10

(108-52) Terps 35-17

N.C. State FSU Wake Forest Ga. Tech Texas Colorado

N.C. State Notre Dame Wake Forest

N.C. State FSU UNC

FSU Wake Forest

Virginia

Virginia

Virginia

Texas Texas A&M

Texas Colorado Texas A&M

Pittsburgh

Pittsburgh

Ohio State Michigan

Ohio State Michigan Wisconsin

Nebraska BC Ohio State Michigan Michigan St

Texas Colorado Nebraska Pittsburgh

Ohio State Michigan

UCLA

California UCLA

Wisconsin Oregon California UCLA

Washington

Washington

Washington

Alabama LSU Arkansas

Tennessee LSU

Tennessee LSU

Mississippi

Rutgers

Syracuse

Mississippi Syracuse

Oregon Oregon State

Virginia

Michigan

Oregon

inning, Kenny Lofton fouled off a ball in the staff’s direction. The trajectory of the ball appeared to be heading directly at “Quick” Whit-ney Beckett and Dave “Bling Bl” Ingram. “Yo, you’re name is tizzy-tizight,” Samuel mumbled in a drunken stupor, halfway through his first beer. Fortunately, Bill English was on a hot date with Faran Krentcil. The lovely Krentcil did not remain in her chair for long, however, which failed to meet her lofty standards. “The seats don’t even have a Prada symbol or Etienne Aigner logo,” Krentcil lamented, just seconds before being pummelled with the ball. Krentcil then collapsed, landing at English’s feet. “Nice shoes,” she said, rising from the Quick-Dry Concrete surface, wiping off Cracker Jack popcorn and generic nacho cheese from her Vera Wang dress. “Oh, no! The dress of the girl who doesn’t resemble Julia

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Sullivan

(117-43) Terps 24-10

Lois

MATCHUP

Bell Park. Even though* the October Classic wasn’t quite the same without the Duke of major league baseball—the Yankees—the Chronicle staff was giddy upon arrival. Tyler Ro “wing girls tower over me” sen had to hold back Paul Do “you know if I can vote the Red Sox into the World Series?” ran. The spirits of Catherine Sul li

river” could not be raised, however, since choking like Greg “Norman” Veis in the Masters by blowing her once insurmountable lead to John “Quacken” Bush. So the rest of the staff settled comfortably in their seats among all of the rally monkey-toting fans. Robbie “Yosemite” Samuel

Bush

(118-42) Terps 34-13

MATCHUP

Maryland

The Chronicle

LSU

N.C. State

Colorado

Wisconsin

Oregon Oregon St

Oregon California UCLA Washington Tennessee LSU

UCLA

Washington

Mississippi

Tennessee LSU Arkansas

Syracuse

Syracuse

Area 51 (111-49) Terps 28-17 N.C. State FSU Wake Forest Virginia Texas Texas Tech

Nebraska BC Ohio State Michigan Wisconsin Oregon California UCLA Arizona St Alabama LSU Arkansas Syracuse

Doran (104-56) Duke 37 tol N.C. State Notre Dame Wake Forest Virginia Texas Colorado Texas A&M BC Ohio State Michigan Michigan St

use California UCLA Arizona State Alabama LSU Mississippi Donovan

Githens

(111-49) I can’t believe that I forgot to

send in my

grid picks again. Surely I will learn

some day, won’t I? Oh, well, guess I’m just losing my short term memory again so I’ll have to take a bad score and drop lower than Paul for the week. Murray

(103-57) Wow, I’m in last place. Flow’d I end up here?

Oh yeah. I never send in my grid picks

on time. Sigh. I’ve got to stop hanging

out so much with Gabe. Maybe I should just go back

to Seattle

and drink $2O java at a Seahawks game.

Stiles—or anyone else remotely famous except maybe Chelsea Clinton—is ruined!” exclaimed Kevin “P” Lees “stand up, please stand up.” The staff of The Daily Terrapin began to hoist full bottles of beer at the grid pickers, to which Alex “us is my car of choice” Garinger responded by flexing his mammoth biceps, scaring the Maryland writers into silence. “Hey, that reminds me of my first date with my girlfriend at a Philadelphia Eagles game,” Evan “Hubert” Davis “is another example of a terrible UNC basketball player” said. As the situation calmed, Brian “Wilson said” Morray spotted Michael Jordan striding down the steps two rows over from where the Chronicle staff was sitting. His Airness went all the

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Sports

The Chronicle

FRIDAY. OCTOBER 25. 2002 �PAGE 21

Giants pound Angels 16-4 in Game 5 of Series By BEN WALKER

The Associated-Press

16 SAN FRANCISCO Teased and taunted 4 for tiptoeing around Angels Barry Bonds, the Anaheim Angels decided to challenge him. Whack! Bonds lined an RBI double that sent the San Francisco Giants zooming to a big lead that not even these pesky Angels could overcome, winning 16-4 in Game 5 Thursday night to take a 3-2 lead in the World Series. Jeff Kent sealed it with a pair of tworun homers, starting the party in full force at Pac Bell Park and putting the Giants on the brink of their first World Series title since Willie Mays & Co. won it for New York in 1954. Rich Aurilia’s three-run homer in the eighth gave the Giants the most runs by a team in a Series game since the New York Yankees walloped Pittsburgh 16-3 in 1960. It was the 17th homer overall by the Angels and San Francisco, tying Giants

Now, Russ Ortiz will try to clinch San Francisco’s first crown when he starts Game 6 Saturday night at Edison Field against Kevin Appier. Both made early exits in Game 2, an

11-10 win by the Angels. A sellout crowd of 42,713, tense when the Angels climbed back from a 6-0 deficit and brought the tying run to the plate in the middle innings, erupted when Kent connected in the sixth and again in the seventh. “We never give in. We started ahead right away but these guys never give up, either,” said Benito Santiago, who drove in three runs for the Giants. Bonds added another double and a single and Kenny Lofton sprinkled in a two-run triple as the Giants pulled away to delirious chants of “Beat L.A! Beat L.A.!” The fans’ geography may have been a bit off, but their math was right on. Everyone got in on the act, too. Several bat boys, sons of Giants, kept running to the plate to retrieve lumber, a Series record, and set off a fog horn turning Pac Bell into the country’s blast and shots from water cannons on coolest day care center. top of the right-field wall. All in all, it was a dramatic turnOnce again, it took only one big around in the Series. Just a few days swing by Bonds—Mays’ godson—to ago, with Anaheim’s hitters going wild, swing the momentum in this Series. some thought they would run away with But, really, the Angels were caught in a the title. But by the time this one ended, it was the Giants who had the Angels on lose-lose squeeze from the start. They pitched to Bonds in the first the run. Chad Zerbe got the win, relieving inning, and the Giants got three runs. They intentionally walked him in the when Jason Schmidt was pulled in the second, and San Francisco scored fifth, one out short of qualifying for his three more. second win of the Series. Schmidt struck Halloween was still a week away, but out eight, yet Giants manager Dusty the big guy in orange and black had plenBaker took no chances after Troy Glaus’ RBI double made it 6-3. ty oftricks and few treats for Anaheim. -

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MIKE SEGAR/REUTERS

ANGELS MANAGER MIKE SCIOSCIA hangs his head during his squad’s loss in Game 5

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Sports

PAGE 22 �FRIDAY.

The Chroniclf.

Mets hire former Oakland Athletics skipper Howe By RAFAEL HERMOSO and MURRAY CHASS

Selig was said to be fuming over the developments, and a baseball official New York Times News Service noted that the Brewers and the Cubs, The Mets hired Art also searching for managers, adhered to NEW YORK Howe as their manager, reaching an his edict not to make announcements agreement Wednesday night with the during the World Series. man the Oakland Athletics were very willThe Mets and the Devil Rays, who ing to let depart and in essence ending a agreed on a managerial contract with three-week-and-one-day search by hiring Lou Piniella Wednesday, blamed Alan a polar opposite of Bobby Valentine. Nero, the agent for Howe and Piniella, The Mets, meanwhile, are facing for spreading the word of their hiring probable disciplinary action from and overshadowing the World Series. Commissioner Bud Selig for word of But Selig will probably not hold the Howe’s hiring being leaked to the news teams blameless for a violation of an media Wednesday night. edict he reiterated this week.

The Athletics, meanwhile, were believed to be completing a deal to promote the bench coach, Ken Macha, to manager. The Mets said Thursday that they were unlikely to have any news conference before Monday, the day after a possible Game 7 of the World Series. Howe, the Athletics’ manager the past seven years after five seasons as the manager for Houston, agreed on a four-year, $9.4 million contract and inherits a larger payroll than he ever had in Oakland. With it comes a troubled clubhouse, an underachieving roster and a general manager, Steve Phillips, who added several high-priced players this season only to see the team finish in last place in its division.

Howe will have to confront all this

with a laid-back style that will be a stark contrast to Valentine, who often found himself embroiled in controversy. Although Howe is leaving a stunning run of victories in Oakland that includes three consecutive postseason appearances, the Athletics were apparently willing to show him the door. In reaching terms with Howe, the Mets sprang a surprise in a managerial search that began with potshots by Valentine after his exit, early courtships of the New York veterans Buck Showalter, Willie Randolph and Chris Chambliss, the embarrassing

ICON SPORTS MEDIA

ART HOWE will now spend his days in the New York Mets’ dugout

(for Duke

failed attempt to land their top choice, Piniellaj and the nonpursuit of the Giants’ manager and pending free agent Dusty Baker, who the Mets feared was not serious about coming to New York. The Mets finally came to the realiza-

tion that they had almost no chance of speaking directly with Piniella, because they were unwilling to offer as compensation any player comparable with Randy Winn, the All-Star outfielder whom the Devil Rays will send to

Seattle. So they turned back to Howe. As the Mets’ search stalled—they also met with Macha and the Texas Rangers coach Terry Francona— Phillips took up Athletics General Manager Billy Beane on his offer of allowing Howe to be interviewed even though he had a year remaining on his contract. Beane and Phillips are close

Instructional friends—they were League teammates in the Mets’ organization in the early 1980s—and Phillips understood that Beane would be willing to free Howe from his contract and promote Macha. On Oct. 12, Phillips secretly flew to Houston, where HoWe lives, and they

met for about three hours. Each came away impressed by the other. “I was looking at it as a good opportunity, financially mostly,” Howe said a week later when it was learned he had

met with Phillips. Still, the Mets were waiting for Piniella to initiate his departure from Seattle, which he did in a meeting with Mariners executives in Tampa on Oct. 11. Piniella was granted freedom from his contract three days later, with strings attached. Teams could only speak to him if they satisfied Seattle’s compensation demands. Sensing that the Mets’ wanted Piniella, Howe asked Beane to withdraw him from consideration for the Mets’ job.

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Sports

The Chronicle

FRIDAY,

SR 25. 2002 � PAGE 23

Wolfpack pummel Tigers in Death Valley, move to 9-0 By PETE lACOBELLI The Associated Press

S.C North Now that 6 Carolina State has Clemson achieved the best start in school history, the Wolfpack are trying hard not to think about where this special season might lead them. “We can’t afford to look at the big picture and look past people. That’s how you get beat,” said safety Terrence Holt, who had a fumble, an interception and returned a blocked punt for a touchdown in N.C. State’s 38-6 victory over Clemson last night. The Wolfpack not only improved to 9-0 (4-0 in the ACC), they firmly established themselves as a team to be taken seriously in the Bowl Championship Series race. “We’ll let everybody else analyze all that BCS talk, about us being 9-0 and about us being the first team at N.C. State to do that,” Holt added. “We can’t N.C. State

38 CLEMSON,

worry about that.”

He’ll leave the worrying to North

Carolina State’s opponents. Freshman T.A. McLendon ran for a

career-high 178 yards and two touchdowns for the Wolfpack, who are tied with Florida State for first place in the conference. Philip Rivers, the nation’s highest rated passer, also ran for a touchdown, and the team’s defense held Clemson (44, 2-3) to a season-low point total. With wins over Division I-AA East Tennessee and Massachusetts, N.C. State was one of the most overlooked unbeatens in the country. Surely, the thinking went, the Wolfpack would crack in prime time at Death Valley, where they had lost eight of their last 11 games. But- the Pack were more than ready for the spotlight.

“All I know is, we’re one of eight football teams that are undefeated at this juncture of the season,” said N.C. State coach Chuck Amato, a linebacker on the 1967 team that opened 8-0. “And that’s not easy to do.” Amato’s club team has chance to accomplish what the Wolfpack couldn’t during his senior year—win a conference title and challenge for a national championship. It won’t be easy. N.C. State closes with Georgia Tech, Virginia, Maryland and the Seminoles. But the Wolfpack have exceeded expectations all year long. Lament Reid returned the opening kickoff 56 yards before many of the 74,000 fans had even taken their seats. And while that drive fizzled when Adam Kiker’s 32-yard field-goal try thumped the left upright, it was about the only thing that didn’t go according to plan for N.C. State. Manny Lawson blocked a first-quarter punt—the Wolfpack’s seventh blocked kick this year—and Holt scooped it up for his TD. On N.C. State’s next drive, McLendon got the call on fourth-and-1 and went untouched through the left side of Clemson’s stacked-up line for a 31-yard score. Three plays later, Clemson quarterback Willie Simmons fumbled a shotgun snap. Holt recovered at the Tigers 15, and five plays later Rivers bulled his way in for a 1-yard TD run and 22-0 lead. Clemson tried to rally in third quarter, driving to the Wolfpack 17 on its first possession. But with 1 yard to go for a first down, the Tigers were stuffed for no gain on runs by YusefKelly and then Simmons.

RICH GLICKSTEIN/KRT

N.C, STATE’S!. A. McLENDON forced his will upon the Clemson defense during last night’s game

McLendon followed that with a 65yard gain as the Pack regained momentum. Kiker finished the drive with a 26-yard field goal. McLendon added a 4-yard TD run—his 14th of the season—in the fourth quarter, and Jerricho Cotchery took an onside kick 42 yards for the Wolfpack’s final TD. When the game ended, Wolfpack fans rushed the field, waved signs and chanted “9-0, 9-0,” on the Tiger Paw at midfield. Rivers said winning at Clemson proved the Wolfpack could compete with anyone. “To me, that was the biggest thing

we accomplished tonight,” he said. Simmons had two fumbles and an interception. When he was pulled in the second quarter, backup Charlie Whitehurst threw an interception on

his second play. Even when the Tigers scored, it was

comical. Derrick Hamilton fumbled a

kickoff, then while lying on the ground shoved the ball to teammate Justin Miller, who went 80 yards for the touchdown. “I didn’t have my team ready to play,” Clemson coach Tommy Bowden said. “They had their team ready and I didn’t.”

THE NICHOLS DISTINGUISHED LECTURE SERIES presents

David N. Keightley Professor Emeritus, Department of History University of California Berkeley -

Death and the Birth of Civilizations: Ancestors, Art, and Culture in Early China and Early Greece Monday, October 28, 2002 3:30 p.m. Alumni Commons Room, 022 New Divinity School Duke University West Campus

Sponsored by Asian/Pacific Studies Institute and Department of Religion FREE AND OPEN TO THE PUBLIC For more information please contact Paula Evans at 684-2604 or paula@duke.edu

Monday, October 28, 4 PM Mary Lou Williams Center West Union Bldg. Lower Level -

When news reporters began to try to explain the “spread of AIDS” to an anxious American public in the first years of the epidemic, they often began to explain who might be at risk of HIV infection. Increasingly, however,, where seemed an equally signficant issue, especially as the nation confronted an emerging rural AIDS crisis in the early 19905, This presentation examines images of the South in mass media attempts to describe the impact of HIV on the United States, tracking the relationship between images of the region as backward and premodern and geographies of sexuality that described AIDS as a “big city problem.” Activists seeking to confront the rural epidemic confronted this strange mapping of sexuality and stereotype by offering new kinds of maps that told different stories about place, AIDS, and citizenship

Meredith Raimondo is an assistant professor in Women’s Studies at California State University Fullerton. She is the the coeditor of the special issue of Feminist Media Studies on Women, HIV, Globalization, and Media and is completing a book manuscript on representations of the geography of AIDS in the United States with a special focus on the rural South. Sponsors: Center for Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and Transgender Life, Women’s Studies Women’s Center, English Department, Cultural Anthropology, Mary Lou Williams Center for Black Culture, Aqua Duke, DukeOUT. Department of Political Science, Theatre Studies, Institute of the Arts Duke University Student Affairs encourages individualswith disabilities to participate in Its programsand activities. If you anticipate needing reasonable accommodations or have questions about the physical access provided,please contact us in advance of your participation.

084-6607 or Igbtcentertiduke.edu.


PAGE 24 �FRIDAY. OCTOBER

Sports

25. 2002

FOOTBALL from page 17 four straight victories, finishing with convincing routs of West Virginia and Georgia Tech in the last two weeks. “Maryland seems to just be hitting their stride in everything,” Franks said. “They’re hitting their stride on offense. The quarterback’s coming around. They’ve gotten a bunch of yards in their last four games.” For the Terrapins, the name of the offense is Chris Downs. The senior running back emerged from the special teams unit after an injury to Bruce Perry, the expected star tailback. Downs has rushed for 600 yards in seven games—2l2 of which came last week against Georgia Tech. “I personally get excited to play against a good running team because I

know they’re going to try to run it,” Duke linebacker Ryan Fowler said. “And I like to stop the run. I feel like I have a bigger part in stopping the run than I do in the pass.” If the Blue Devils—who have held opponents to an average of 121.8 yards per game on the ground—are able to put the brakes on Downs, Maryland’s fate will be determined by the arm of junior quarterback Scott Mcßrien. The West Virginia transfer has been reasonably productive for the Terrapins, passing for six touchdowns, four interceptions and 1169 yards. “I don’t think their passing attack is as potent as N.C. State’s was,” Fowler said. “They have a good running game, but that’s what we specialize in.” The Blue Devil defense is excited for another physical game—the kind in which it flourishes.

“Our defensive backs are tough,” the junior co-captain said. “These guys like to come up and stop the run too. Even when they’re having a bad day in the passing game, they’re an integral part of our run stop. Everyone wants to go and hit somebody.” Convinced they can play with anyone, Duke will look to show the Parents’ Weekend crowd that moral victories are no longer the standard for the team and that success will be measurable in the standings. Maryland, which is trying to recover the glory it lost in its early losses, has seen enough on film to not

story.

CALEN POWELL and the football team will need to be firing on cylinders to beat Maryland.

SOCCER from page 17

squad is in desperate need of wins, which are hard to come by in America’s premier soccer conference, the ACC, four members of which rank in the top 25. North Carolina, of course, heads the list. Though the contest against the Tar Heels has dire imputations, the Blue Devils will approach Sunday’s game as if it were any other. “Nothing [will be] different,” Smith explained. “We go into every game pretty much with the same mentality. We’ll have a higher intensity level, but we’re not going to change how we play or anything like that.” North Carolina’s offense iias produced 51 goals this year, while the defense has allowed a mere 11. The majority of the scoring has come f Alyssa Ramsey and Lindsay Tarpley, who have combined for 22 scores. The onus of stymying the duo will ultimately fall on the shoulders of

goalie Thora Helgadottir. Though the junior from Iceland is widely considered one of the top goalies in the country—she spent the first half of her season representing her home nation in international competition—her performance thus far may not rank her as even the top goalie on her team. Church recognizes that Helgadottir has had a good year, but also admits that the transition from international play to college competition has been difficult. “Mentally and physically it’s been a tough year for her,” Church said. “I think she’s handled it well, though. I think she is feeling comfortable now, and getting into a groove.” Church’s optimism extends far beyond individual performances. “We feel confident in going to play Carolina,” he said. “We’re going to go over there and we’re going to play very, very hard, and we expect to win.”

a big role in putting pressure on their defense,” Smith said.

LIZ WAGNER and the Blue Devil defense hope to contain the high-powered Tar Heel attack.

The Chrqniclf.

Recently, however, the team’s inability to put together a solid 90 minutes of soccer has neutralized Duke’s offensive attack. Of the team’s eight losses, seven have been decided by one goal. The Blue Devils played No. 17 Florida State close as well, battling to a 1-1 tie. “We just have not done our part of finishing,” Church said. “In almost every game we’ve had a lot ofchances.” The Blue Devils will have to start winning soon if they want to return to the NCAA tournament in 2002. A year removed from advancing to the NCAA tournament with a 7-9-1 record, Duke now faces a new NCAA rule preventing teams from qualifying for the postseason without a winning record. The

SPORTS CLUBS

look past the Blue Devils.

“I think [Maryland is] coming together as a football team and I think we are too, so that ought to make it a pretty good football game,” Franks said.

Robert Samuel contributed to this

Hj

October

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Games

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Sports

The Chronicle

GRID PICKS from page 20

FRIDAY. OCTOBER 25. 2002 � PAGE 25

ground and stomping on it relentlessly. Matt Atwood “y woodpecker” began to stomp his feet as well, starting the Angels’ crowd in a boisway to the first row, handed a random woman a blank terous rendition of “We will rock you.” check, and went back up the steps. The game wore on, however, with both teams “Wow, it looks like he just paid her off,” Neelum unable to break the tie. As the Angels rushed off the Jest “Do It” e said. field before the top of the 10th, Samuel mustered Samuel didn’t quite catch the reference, already enough common sense to utter a joke. “Hey, looks like the Angels aren’t in the outfield. Homer Simpson-ized by his second beer. Roll “in’ with the hom” y Miller and Ken Hahaha! Get it? Like the movie? Only the Angels “was better than Barbie” Reinker led the crowd aren’t in the outfield because they’re in the dugout... in the seventh inning stretch, with the score knotted This is an e-mail.” at two apiece. The game finally came to a conclusion-sort of. With Meanwhile, Mike “won’t you please give me a both bullpens depleted, commissioner of baseball hack massage” Corey seemed uninterested in the Robert “the game has ended in a” Tai marched Series, as he was tuned into his Walkman listening to onto the field at the end of the 11th evening and his beloved and undefeated No. 4 Ohio State football declared the game over. Samuel, wearing a recently refilled beer hat, was team led by Heisman hopeful and superfreshman particularly excited. Maurice Clarett. “Well, at least we know who will win tomorrow, yo. Gabe “If you need eggs” Git hens pulled a' Woody Hayes, belligerently tearing the radio from Duke! They be swervin’, you know? YOU KNOW!” —Written by The Chronicle’s scandalous love duo. Corey’s scarlet and gray hands, throwing it on the

RECRUIT WATCH,™ page

,8

Perhaps even more impressive, Bales has shown the type of work ethic that has enabled her to improve her game over her high school career, slimming down every year and overcoming both asthma and early knee-difficulties. “She’s going to have to get stronger and get more aggressive.” said coach Zink. “She’s almost got a tendency to be too nice.” Still, with Bales, it is difficult to ignore her tremendous upside. She is described by many as being an impact player on both ends of the court. Hunter, meanwhile, has been frequently referred to as the most highly sought-after player in this year’s class. Scouts at the Nike All-American Camp described her as one of the “few consistently excellent players at the camp.” She is noted for her post skills, court vision, rebounding, intensity and basketball intelligence. As a junior, she averaged 19.6 points and

14 rebounds.

All Duke Employees, students and community members are invited to attend

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Candidates running for Durham County Commissioner seats and the U.S. House of Representatives will be in attendance. Sponsored by: The Community Service Center, Student-Employee Relations Committee(SEßC), and Duke NAACP Questions? Contact Brandilyn Dumas (613-3194 or byd@duke.edu) or Andrea Hamilton (613-3180 or aeh!2@duke


Classifieds

PAGE 26 � FRIDAY, OCTOBER 25, 2002

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The Chronicle

RELAPAID VOLUNTEERS FOR TIONSHIPS RESEARCH Recruiting dating couples for UNC-CH research. $l2O/couple. Two laboratory sessions and brief questionnaires at home for 10 days. English fluency required. . Contact datingstudy@yahoo.com or (919) 960-5927. Chronicle Business Office: Student to Work 10-12 hrs per week. General Office Duties, Data Entry. Call: Mary Weaver, 684-3811. Female researcher seeks women at least 20 years of age who spend little time between romantic relationships. If interested in finding out more about the study please contact Nicole Jalazo 919-667-0787, at njalazo@hotmail.com.

Chronicle Business Office: Student to Work 10-12 hrs per week. General Office Duties, Data Entry. Call: Mary Weaver, 684-3811.

MAXIM HEALTHCARE SERVICES has an immediate opening to work one on one with a developmentally disabled child M-F 3p-7p. Position involves working in the child’s home and community. GREAT PAY & experience for students interested in Psychology, PT, OT, Speech and Hearing. Call today! (919) 419-1484-ask for Brian. Needed Work-Study Funded Student to work in lab—tumor immunology reporting to Dr. Paul Mosca. The hours are flexible...needed for 19.9

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The Chronicle

FRIDAY. OCTOBER 25, 2002 � PAGE 27

Meetings DUKE IN SPAIN SUMMER 2003 Information meeting will be held Tues., Oct. 29, 7 p.m., 305 Languages. DIS celebrates its’ 29th year of language and culture study in Madrid & Malaga. Field trips to Granada, Sevilla, Cordoba, Toledo, Segovia and Salamanca are included this summer. An optional trip to Barcelona is offered. Applications available; Office of Study Abroad, 2016 Campus Drive. Questions? Call 684-2174.

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LONDON-DRAMA SUMMER 2003 Information meeting will be held

on Mon., Oct 28 @ 5:30 p.m. in 328 Allen. This 2-course program is designed for both drama majors and others who have an interest in theater. See and study over twenty productions during the six-week term! Applications available online or in the Office of Study Abroad, 2016 Campus Drive, 684-2174.

NEW NSEP SCHOLARSHIPS Summer or fall 2003, or spring 2004 undergraduate scholarships for study abroad are available through the National Security Education Program. Meet lIE/NSEP Deputy Director Chris Powers, at an information meeting Tues., Oct. 29, 4-5 p.m., 2016 Campus Dr. Preference will be given to applicants pursuing fields of study related to national security interests. Scholarships may be applied to programs in countries other than Australia, Canada, New Zealand or Western Europe. Integrated study of a foreign language is required. Application deadline: Jan. 31.

Looking for 2 or 3 Men’s Basketball Butler 1-30-03 vs. tickets, University. Please call 847-5678110 or email murph6l ©uicalumni.org. Looking for Duke-Butler Tickets or Jan. 30, 2003. Call Jeff at 317-402 6518. STUDENT BROADWAY AT DUKE SEASON TICKETS: Student subscribers to the Broadway at Duke series can pick up their tickets at the Bryan Center Box Offie. Please note: The Scarlet Pimpernel performance date has changed to November 1, 7:00 pm.

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

HEALTH PLAN.™ page 1

raise [in wage] go along with that,” he said. “Make it worthwhile to work here.” Chris Conover, director of the Sanford who require more expensive care. Institute of Public Policy’s health policy “Because the plan changes are based certificate program and also a member on usage of specific services, the changes of the Faculty Compensation Commitwill affect a much smaller percentage of tee, the group which helped advise the employees,” Green wrote. “Inpatient care, University on the health plan changes, for example, was necessary for less than said if Duke chose not to raise their inseven percent of those covered last year." surance rates, they would have to make Hikes in insurance rates have been up the difference in salary anyway. attributed to national increases in med“It would be irresponsible [for Duke] ical service costs—especially for pharmanot to make some changes,” he said. Thomas Metzloff, professor of the ceutical drugs and specialty services like MRI scans, a higher frequency of emerpractice at the School ofLaw and chair of the committee, said he considered the gency room visits and the rapidly increasing membership of both employees changes unfortunate but necessary. and family members under Duke’s plans. “Duke has the right approach,” he Duke’s coverage is predicted to exsaid. “They’ve done a pretty good job of pand to 43,545 members next year—an controlling costs so far.” increase of 12 percent over last year. CovMetzloff said the committee initially erage expansion and increasing costs are disagreed with the University on only a both contributing to the University’s prefew details, successfully recommending, dicted $75 million price tag for providing for example, that physical therapy and employee insurance in 2003, an increase drug co-pays stay at the same level. of nearly $3O million since 1999. Conover agreed the changes were Many employees, however, reacted modest in light of larger state and naunfavorably to the price raises. “I hate tional increases. “We’re not unusual in [the changes],” said Tammy Hope, manfacing these premium increases,” he ager of Chick-fil-A, who changed her said. “We should be grateful they’re not plan for next year because she could no increasing more than they are.” Duke is able to offer relatively cheap longer afford her old plan’s monthly rate. insurance because of its large size and Hope called the increases unreasonits ability to provide nearly all of its own able for someone earning an average income. “If you have a family, you have a medical care, Conover said. Shara Player, staff specialist in the variety of insurance [plans] and every one has gone up,” she said. “Half my department of mathematics, echoed check goes for insurance.” Conover’s sentiments. “The changes really don’t bother me Brad Simmons, department coordinator for electronics in the Duke Store that much,” she said. “The price for and a professor of percussion in the de- health insurance is pretty cheap here.” With no end in sight for cost increaspartment of music, expressed frustration that consistent increases in health es, the bigger issue lies in the future, said insurance prices and parking fees, erase Metzloff.“If it continues, it’s going to hurt raises in salary. “If you’re going to up more and more.... This is a huge dollar the health insurance, at least make the issue for the Medical Center,” he said.

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PAGE

The Chronicle

28 ďż˝ FRIDAY, OCTOBER 25, 2002

HOSTAGE

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UNION FORTNIGHT Continues Through November 4th With Great Events Like:

For More Event Information Check Out; www.union.duke.edu


Comics

The Chronicle

Blazing Sea Nuggets/ David Logan

&

FRIDAY, OCTOBER 25, 2002 � PAGE 29

Eric Bramley

THE Daily Crossword

STUDENT'S ACTE ROf\ST BEEF,

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Edited by Wayne Robert Williams

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The Chronicle

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Cures for the parent-less blues

exercise the University’s moral authority apply to be IGSP director: listen to the blues: enjoy ticket-less parking; enjoy line-less buses: read TowerView: hang pumpkin men from windows: watch the Golden Girls: attend Roily’s Halloween party:

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The Chronicle

p AGE 20 � FRIDAY, OCTOBER 25, 2002

The Chronicle

—sis

Transforming the tower The administration should follow a Campus Council proposal to place a bar and a game room in the WEL’s McClendon Tower.

With

the West-Edens Link residents settling in and the new dorm’s McClendon Tower becoming a hub of student activity, residential planners are considering how to fill the tower’s upper floors. These planners are faced with the exciting challenge of making the WEL’s currently open spaces into permanent, student-oriented spaces that make McClendon tower a center of student life at Duke. Although administrators have long-mused about what types of spaces would fit with their vision for the tower, the first formal, public discussion took place at last week’s Campus Council meeting. This discussion proposed that the tower include a game room, pool tables and also a bar. Obviously this plan cannot be immediately executed and administrators must still carefully review the Campus Council proposal, but on the surface, these ideas seem like excellent, choices with which to fill the tower. The game room and pool tables are probably relatively non-controversial additions —nobody can really object to adding these types of places where students can socialize. However, the suggestion that a bar should be added to the tower is sure to raise some opposition among administrators and even some students. Ultimately, though, the benefits of having an oncampus bar greatly out-weigh any negatives. Since the demise of the Hideaway, students have lacked a place on campus where they can gather to socialize and share a few drinks with their friends. Although the new bar will surely be more upscale than the Hideaway, the general idea behind it is still the same, that it should be an open space where students can mingle and hang-out without having to abandon campus for Durham. In terms of building community among students, the bar is wonderful idea. It will also vastly improve student safety. Currently, the lack of a bar on campus drives students to bars in Durham, which means that there will be more drunk drivers returning home from these bars. Adding a Hideaway-like location to the tower will help reduce this danger. The most important thing is that the McClendon Tower become a space where students can gather together and socialize, be it in a game room or in a bar. Campus Council has taken a significant step forward with its resolution, so it is now up to he administration to listen to students and make progress in developing the tower into the beacon of student life it has the potential to be.

On the record I have no desire to be a wimp, but I have no illusions about being a moral arbiter. President Nan Keohane, on the importance of judiciously contemplating when issues necessitate statements by a university president (see story page one).

The Chronicle DAVE INGRAM. Editor KEVIN LEES, Managing Editor WHITNEY BECKETT, University Editor ALEX GARINGER, University Editor KENNETH REINKER, Editorial'Page Editor PAUL DORAN, Sports Editor JONATHAN ANGIER, General Manager MATT BRUMM, Senior Editor

JENNIFER SONG, Senior Editor

REBECCA SUN, Projects Editor RUTH CARLITZ, City & State Editor RYAN WILLIAMS, City & State Editor BECKY YOUNG, Features Editor MIKE MILLER, Health <6 Science Editor MEG LAWSON. Recess Editor GREG VEIS, Recess Editor TowerView Managing Editor SAROWITZ, JODI MATT ATWOOD, TowerView Editor JOHN BUSH, Online Editor BRIAN MORRAY, Graphics Editor ROBERT TAI, Sports Photography Editor TYLER ROSEN, Sports Managing Editor AMI PATEL, Wire Editor KIRA ROSOFF, Wire Editor MOLLY JACOBS,Sr. Assoc. Features Editor MELISSA SOUCY, Sr. Assoc. City & Slate Editor Editor DAVIS, EVAN Sr. Assoc. Sports Editor NADINE OOSMANALLY, Sr. Assoc. University MATT KLEIN, Sr. Assoc. Photography Editor ANDREA OLAND, Sr. Assoc. Photography Editor SETH LANKFORD, Online Manager THAD PARSONS, Sr. Assoc. Photography Editor ALISE EDWARDS, Lead Graphic Artist SUE NEWSOME, Advertising Director YU-HSIEN HUANG, Supplements Coordinator BARBARA STARBUCK,Production Manager MARY WEAVER, Operations Manager NALINI MILNE, Advertising Office Manager

JANE HETHERINGTON, Photography Editor

The Chronicle is published by the Duke Student Publishing Company, Ine., 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 the Business Office at 103 West Union Building, call 684-3811. To reach the Advertising Office at 101 West Union Building call 684-3811 or fax 684-8295. Visit The Chronicle Online at http://www.chronicle.duke.edu. © 2002 The Chronicle, Box 90858. Durham, N.C. 27708. All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced in any form without the prior, written permission of the Business Office. Each individual is entitled to one free copy.

CTOObH

Letters to

HESTOR

~

NRA

the editor

Palestinians also suffer through horror of terrorism Unfortunately,

unlike

Eric Schwartz, I have never had the “privilege” of experiencing true terror. I have never been subject to extreme violence (if any violence is not extreme) and have always felt safe wherever I’ve lived. I consider myself blessed by this fact. My heart goes out to the

residents of the greater area of metropolitan Washington, D.C., and the fear that they must live with every waking moment. I pray for their safety. My heart also goes out to the Israeli who lives in fear every day of his life. I cannot fathom riding a bus or going shopping with the constant possibility of being blown up by a desperate, hopeless suicide bomber. I doubt these men, women, and children count themselves “privileged” to live in true terror.

And once again, my heart goes out to the despairing Palestinians. I cannot fathom sitting in my home, wondering if I’ll ever leave it again. I cannot fathom expecting my home to be hit by an Israeli missile at any time. I cannot comprehend how it must feel to be a Palestinian mother whose five-week-old twins are stuck in their home without food under an Israeliimposed curfew. I doubt this mother counts herself “privileged” to live in true terror. As free Americans, and especially as blessed and/or privileged Americans, we have problems with the month or so of terror in Maryland. How can we even compare that to the fear and absolute, sheer terror of living in such an environment for years, even decades as the Palestinians have done?

It is certain that there is a long and detailed political and quasi-religious history behind the problems in Israel, not the least of which is the violation of the human rights of the occupied Palestinian people. Certainly, this is neither the time or the place to address those issues. However, I would like to end with Schwartz’s concluding paragraph, slightly

modified: “Not until we as a community step forward from isolation and speakbout against the crimes >against humanity throughout the entire Arab (and Israeli) world will an Israeli (or Palestinian) —Muslim, Christian or Jewish—ever be free.” Sarah Hamilton Divinity ’O5

Obvious construction flaws plague West-Edens Link Being a political science major, I do not feel like I have any qualifications to talk about construction. But, being of average awareness, howev-

er, there are a few general items that I think most people

know about buildings (or at least take for granted); 1. Buildings should not move. 2. Standing water on buildings is bad. 3. New buildings should generally be in good working order. I bring up these three points in reference to the newly built West-Edens Link. Now, I am happy that the WEL exists. Rick’s Diner and the Beanery provide good social spaces and are welcome

additions to Duke’s dining options. Also, I think that the people in Edens can now feel a little more connected with the rest of West campus. Thus, my problem is not with the WEL as it should be. My problem is the WEL as it is right now. The WEL has moving parts that should not move. Anyone who has walked the upperwalkway to the Beanery or to

Rick’s has felt the treacherous rock slabs move at some point. I do not know if this is an alignment problem or something else, but I do not like it when the walkways provided to get to the wonderful new additions to West Campus prove treacherous to feet and ankles. Also, for some odd reason, different parts of the building as a whole have moved. In the walkway behind Few Quadrangle, for example, one cement slab has shifted down a inch or so and in doing so has eroded the concrete finish and exposed some of the wooden support. I don’t know construction, but I do know that things shouldn’t really move like that outside of earthquakes. 2. Water is everywhere in the WEL and on Duke’s campus. Agreed, it has been very wet these past weeks. Also agreed, there is only so much Duke can do, since it cannot control the weather. But I submit that one thing Duke could have done was make sure that any new buildings had no

standing water. Alas, this was too much. I suppose the multiple large puddles on the newly built walkways are all a part of integrating the WEL into West Campus. 3. The WEL works in that the lights turn on and the water runs, but never in my existence either on East, on Central or in Few Quad have I had disgusting water running into my room. Enough said. I only hope that those who got wet in the WEL enjoyed thendean’s excuses, as they will probably be the only ones they ever get. The WEL has great possibility. It already has pulled through in providing more rooms (albeit wet ones) and more dining options. I just hope that at the very least the administration will take into

account some ofthe failures of this building when the plan the next building, and maybe make the walkway to the Beanery stop moving.

Ben Marsh Trinity ’O4


Commentary

The Chronicle

Slippery Bush A few days ago, The Washington Post’s Dana Milbank wrote an article explaining that for George W. Bush, “facts are malleable.” Documenting “dubious, if not wrong” statements on a variety of subjects, from Iraq’s military capability to the federal budget, the White House correspondent declared that Bush’s “rhetoric has taken some flights of fancy.”

Paul Krugman Commentary Also in the last few days, The Wall Street Journal reported that “senior officials have referred repeatedly to intelligence... that remains largely unverified.” The ClA’s former head of counterterrorism was blunter: “Basically, cooked information is working its way into high-level pronouncements.” USA Today reports that “pressure has been building on the intelligence agencies to deliberately slant estimates to fit a political agenda.” Reading all these euphemisms, I was reminded of Monty Python’s parrot: He’s pushing up the daisies, his metabolic processes are history, he’s joined the choir invisible. That is, he’s dead. And the Bush administration lies a lot. Let me hasten to say that I don’t blame reporters for not quite putting it that way. Milbank is a brave man, and is paying the usual price for his courage: He is now the target of a White House smear campaign. That standard response may help you understand how Bush retains a public image as a plain-spoken man, when in fact he is as slippery and evasive as any politician in memory. Did you notice his recent declaration that allowing Saddam Hussein to remain in power wouldn’t mean backing down on “regime change,” because if the Iraqi despot meets U.N. conditions, “that itself will signal that the regime has changed”? The recent spate of articles about administration dishonesty mainly reflects the campaign to sell war with Iraq. But the habit itself goes all the way back to the 2000 campaign, and is manifest on a wide range of issues. High points would include the plan for partial privatization of Social Security, with its 2 plus 1 equals 4 arithmetic; the claim that a tax cut that delivers 40 percent or more ofits benefits to the richest 1 percent was aimed at the middle class; the claim that there were 60 lines of stem cells available for research; the promise to include limits on carbon dioxide in an environmental plan. More generally, Bush ran as a moderate, a “uniter, not a divider.” The Economist endorsed him back in 2000 because it saw him as the candidate better able to transcend partisanship; now the magazine describes him as the “partisan-in-chief.” It’s tempting to view all of this merely as a question of character, but it’s more than that. There’s method in this administration’s mendacity. For the Bush administration is an extremely elitist clique trying to maintain a populist facade. Its domestic policies are designed to benefit a very small number of people—basically those who earn at least $300,000 a year, and really don’t care about either the environment or their less fortunate compatriots. True, this base is augmented by some powerful special-interest groups, notably the Christian right and the gun lobby. But while this coalition can raise vast sums, and can mobilize operatives to stage bourgeois riots when needed, the policies themselves are inherently unpopular. Hence the need to reshape those malleable facts. What remains puzzling is the long-term strategy. Despite Bush’s control ofthe bully pulpit, he has had little success in changing the public’s fundamental views. Before Sept. 11 the nation was growing increasingly dismayed over the administration’s hard right turn. Terrorism brought Bush immense personal popularity, as the public rallied around the flag; but the helium has been steadily leaking out ofthat balloon. Right now the administration is playing the war card, inventing facts as necessary, and trying to use the remnants of Bush’s post-Sept. 11 popularity to gain control of all three branches of government. But then what? There is, after all, no indication that Bush ever intends to move to the center. So the administration’s inner circle must think that full control ofthe government can be used to lock in a permanent political advantage, even though the more the public learns about their policies, the less it likes them. The big question is whether the press, which is beginning to find its voice, will lose it again in the face of one-party government.

Paul Krugman’s column is syndicated by the New York Times News Service.

FRIDAY, OCTOBER 25,2002 �PAGE 31

Hate-speech double standard When Jesse Jackson spoke at the Greater Bethel African Methodist Episcopal Church in Athens, Ga., on Sunday, he utilized his favorite tactic—divisiveness. This time, Jackson used the old standby to attack Secretary of State Colin Powell. “He’s not on our team,” said the Reverend. “If he wins, Trent Lott | , wins. We’re not on that team. If he | *g wins, we lose.” Though Jackson, A1 Sharpton, and other demagogues Nathan have, for decades, used such us-ver- p i Uaneton sus-them rhetoric to attack practiGettingDown cally all conservatives, it seems that they have shown themselves to be to Business especially harsh towards Powell. I despise racism, and I know that most Americans do too. So to those of you who rightly wish to eradicate it, I pose a question; why is Colin Powell such a frequent target for radical liberals like Jesse Jackson? Is it because he’s so conservative that he poses a grave threat to their ideologies? Of course not. Powell, who supports gun control, affirmative action the right to choose, and once criticized Newt *

*

Gingrich’s “Contract with America” for not being compassionate, is probably more liberal than most Americans. If Jackson’s primary goal were to advance liberalism, he would be better off attacking some of the many public figures more conservative than Powell. So why is Powell such a target for liberals? It’s because he’s black. Tell me that’s not a clear-cut example ofracism. Black conservatives are some ofthe most derided and hated people in America today. They are constantly assaulted with racist attacks. Earlier this month, singer Harry Belafonte provided a glaring example of such hate speech. Said Belafonte on a San Diego radio talk show, “There’s an old saying in the days of slavery. There are those slaves on the plantation and there were those slaves who lived in the big house. You got the privilege of living in the house to serve the master. Colin Powell was permitted to come into the house of the master.” Belafonte is not the first entertainer to use an offensive and racist metaphor to describe a black conservative. Director Spike Lee once called Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas a “handkerchief-head, chicken-and-biscuit-eating Uncle

Tom.” I don’t think I’ve ever seen a better example of racist hate speech. There is a glaring double standard when it comes to race and politics. If a white person who seemed to show affection for blacks were called a “n— lover,” there would justifiably be an uproar to condemn the racist who called him it. But a black person who seems to side with the white man? An Uncle Tom. A sellout. A traitor. A white woman is allowed to believe whatever she wishes without being called a backstabber. But a smart, qualified leader like Condoleezza Rice? Well, according to Belafonte, she poorly represents her race. It is interesting that such a high percentage of blacks identify with the Democratic Party. The Republican Party’s first nationally elected candidate was Abraham Lincoln, a great man who should be admired by all for ending the abominable practice of slavery. The segregationist and Jim Crow movements of the 1960s were led by Democrats. Members of the Republican Party were more likely to support the 1964 Civil Rights Act than were members of the Democratic Party. As far as presidents go, it was the Kennedy administration that, along with stalling civil rights legislation, gave the FBI permission to tap Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.’s phone line. It was the Nixon administration that implemented a goal-based affirmative action program. And it was during the Reagan administration, when Americans of all ethnicities prospered, that blacks enjoyed a greater decrease in adult and teenage unemployment than did whites. My intention is not to criticize black liberals. We thankfully live in America, where people should be allowed to believe whatever they want. Along those lines, people like Colin Powell, Condoleezza Rice, Clarence Thomas, Walter Williams, Larry Elder and Alan Keyes are also Americans, and they have the right to believe what they wish. It is reprehensible that any Americans, let alone Americans as qualified and talented as these, must endure racial

epithets, condescending laughs, and slavery metaphors, all because of the color oftheir skin. If race is truly arbitrary, then it should not obligate a person to think in a particular way. Maybe Jackson will one day end his quest of personal ambition and use his appeal and oratory skills to further this message. Nathan Carleton is a Trinity sophomore. His column appears every other Tuesday.

Rules for dealing with parents The women of Room 302 have a rule.

Whenever a mom calls, they survey the closet. If the tightest top has been

know what to do. sorry,”a 1m roommate says

sweetly. ‘Tour daughter’s not here. She’s studying in

Faran

Krentcil You Write

Like a Girl

the library.” Then she hangs up, kicking the discarded Tevas into the comer. “I don’t want to lie,” says the said daughter later, “I just don’t think my parents are ready for my life. I mean, what am I supposed to say' —sorry Mom, I was out blowing my boyfriend?” She licks the lip-gloss off her lips and smiles. “I don’t think so.”

Starting today, parents are flooding our college bubble. They want to know how we’re doing, what we’re studying, our friends and our activities. And while parents’ inquiries are wholehearted, we know they’re halffull as well. After all, there are

some things a parent just doesn’t night conversations and tough want to know. decisions is really where the “That’s not true,” my mother's education comes in. And maybe voice crackles over the cell. “I’m our parents need to know some interested in your life. I’d just of what we’re learning. I climbed rather not hear about the parts the stairs to 302 and found one that belong in Playboy, okay?” roomie home, pulling on her Point taken. But at least my mothtightest top and wedge heels. er admits that maybe, just maybe, When I told her my new philosothe parts of my life that belong in a phy, she pointed to a picture on Maxim really do exist. Some parher wall. In it, a young woman sits on the hood of a Chevy, ents can’t. “Tell me about it,” groans a smoking a joint. “That’s my friend over coffee. “I am so hung mom,” she proclaimed before over, and I was supposed to meet popping a mint. “I think our parMom for breakfast. I told her I had ents know exactly what we’re to write a paper.” Fishing for doing. I think they did the exact Tylenol, I notice picture of her same things when they were in doing keg stands has vanished college. It’s not that we’re so from the wall. “If my father sees it,” scandalous and different from she warns, “he’ll stop paying my them that’s the problem. It’s the

tuition!”

“That’s right,” said my dad, looking up from his drafting table. “I’m not paying Duke for you to learn how to get a hangover. If you were learning how to drink without getting a hangover, that might be worth my money!” And even though I laughed, I figured he was right. In the long run, Intro to Western Art and Beginning Biology are just a small part of the Duke experience. Building our lives through relationships, social events, mid-

sameness that scares them.” She was about to leave when the phone rang. “Can you get that?” she asked as she flew out the door. It was her father. “Do you know where she is?” he asked. “I'm sorry,”

I answered sweetly, gazing at the old photo on the wall. “Your daughter’s not here right now. She’s studying in the library.” And then I hung up. Faran Krentcil is a Trinity senior and senior editor ofRecess. Her column appears every other Friday.


PAGE 32 �FRIDAY,

OCTOBER 25,2002

The

Chronicle



2

October

Parents'

2002

&

2002

Family

‘Parents’

The Chronicle

Weekend

&

family ‘Wedqmd We hope you enjoy your visit and the beautiful Carolina autumn. Grab your cameras and your walking shoes, and don't forget your Parents' & Family Weekend guide!

Duke University welcomes you to Parents' & Family Weekend 2002. This weekend provides an opportunity for your family to visit with your son or daughter and to share in his or her Duke experience. Discover what the University has to offer, in and out of the classroom, and learn about the organizations, people, and places that have become important to your student.

Duke University Student Affairs encourages individuals with disabilities to participate in its programs and activities. If you anticipate needing reasonable accommodations or have questions about the physical access provided, please contact the Assistant Vice President/Dean of Students Office in advance of your participation at 919-668-DUKE (3853).

In this issue, you will find a list of

this weekend's events complied by the Dean of Students Office. Please check your registration form for any events that may require reservations, some of these events are already filled.

A map of West Campus is included on page 7, a map of Durham on page 8, and a map of Chapel Hill on page 10.

npGHTLEAF

Information for the weekend can be accessed on-line at http://deanofstudents.studentaffair s.duke. edu/parents. html.

also

The TMangle’s Premier Shopping and Dining Experience

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Across the Street Hair Design Casey & Company Stationers

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El Rodeo Mexican Restaurant

Main Courses

JoJo’s Express Caf6

Chicken, Lamb, Fish, Beef, Pork (including Lambsteak)

Goldworks

Brightleaf Square 682-0043

Horizon Gallery

Mon-Sat

James Kennedy Antiques, Ltd.

1 lam—3pm spm~lopm

Millennium Music

Perfect Impression Nail Salon Satisfaction Restaurant and Bar Simply the Best Men’s Salon

Thverna Nikos Restaurant Theos Kellari

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CAMPUS FLORIST w 700 Ninth St. 286-5640 www.ninthstreetflorist.com Sat:9-3:30 SumCLOSED •

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The Chronicle

Parents'

Famliy

&

Weekend

October

2002

WE’RE YOUR HEADQUARTERS FOR EVERYTHING DUKE J T-shirts Sweatshirts Shorts Golf Shirts Windbreakers Hats Ties •

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SPECIAL PARENTS’ AND FAMILY WEEKEND HOURS:

Friday: B:3oam 7:oopm Saturday: B:3oam 6:oopm Sunday: 10:00am 3:oopm •

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University WHERE REAL DURE FANS

Upper Level, Bryan Center

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02-0946


4

•

Parents'

October 2002

&

Family

The Chronicle

Weekend

OCohr 2S University

Bryan Center Lobby 9 a.m. 5 p.m.

The Duke Museum of Art East Campus 11 a.m. 5 p.m

Duke Gardens Doris Duke Center, Anderson Street 9 a.m. 4 p.m.

The Duke University Museum of Art houses a collection of works ranging from Ancient to Modern and from Old Master and American to African and contemporary Russian art.

Registration -

-

-

Information regarding Duke Gardens is available at the information desk at the Doris Duke Center.

Study Abroad Information Table Bryan Center Lobby 9 a.m. 5 p.m. -

Financial Aid Office 2122 Campus Drive 8 a.m. 5 p.m.

The Office of Fraternity and Sorority Life Open House 07 Bryan Center 12 noon Parents, family members and students are invited to join the Greek Life staff for refreshments. Come see our office and learn more about the 37 organizations that make up Duke's Greek community.

-

The Financial Aid Office would be delighted to speak with parents about financial aid issues. Please call 919-684-6225 and make a 15 minute appointment.

"Opportunities for Study Abroad" Von Canon, Bryan Center 10 a.m. Duke Students may earn full semester/academic year credit while studying abroad. There will be a question and answer session on when; where, and how'to study abroad.

"Eating

&

Body Image

Concerns" Women's Center, 126 Few Fed, West Campus 10 a.m.

-

12 Noon

Representatives from the Interdisciplinary Eating and Body Image Concerns Treatment Team join parents, students, and friends to talk about eating and body image concerns at Duke.

"Sons, Daughters

&

Parents: Let's Talk about

Change" Von Canon, Bryan Center 12 Noon 1 p.m. -

A panel of Duke undergraduates and parents will respond to the above questions. The audience will have the opportunity to join an ensuing dialogue comparing the perspectives and identifying how each can be helpful to the other in addressing this interesting family transition.The program will be moderated by Jim Clack, Director of Counseling and Psychological Services (CAPS), and John Barrow, CAPS Assistant Director for Outreach Services.

"Bringing Meaning to Information Von Canon, Bryan Center 1 2 p.m. "

Dean of Students Office Open House 200 Crowell Building, East Campus

Doris Duke Center (DDC)

2-4

1 p.m.

Come join us for afternoon refreshments and informal conversation.

Volunteer docents will conduct a guided tour. Participants will gather by the iris fountain in front of the DDC (See Registration Form)

Meet with the Career Center's director to learn how Duke students (and alumni) can use the unique Duke network to explore unlimited career prospects.

Student for a Day Lecture "Failure Analysis: The Other Side of Engineering

Design" Griffith Film Theater, Bryaa Center, West Campus 1 2 p.m. -

This lecture will look at how the study of engineering failures provides the basis for obtaining a better understanding of the relationship between performance and the impact of system configuration, materials, and operating environment. Professor Phillip L. Jones.

Student for A Day Lecture "The Ethics of Orphans" Griffith Film Theater, Bryan Center, West Campus 2:30 3:30 p.m. -

Library"

A review of the pedagogical, curricular, and co-curricular dimensions of undergraduate education at Duke by Robert J. Thompson, Jr., Dean of Trinity College of Arts and

p.m.

From College to Work: Making the Most of the Duke Network 139 Social Sciences 1-2 p.m.

"Guided Tour of Perkins

-

Sciences.

Guided Tour of the Gardens Sarah R Duke Gardens,

Perkins Library Lobby 2-3 p.m. and 3-4 p.m. Tours will include highlights of the Special Collections Library and the On-line Reference Resources of Perkins Library.

This lecture will look at the historical, psychological, emotional, and material treatment of orphans, with particular interest in assessing the achievements and failures of the contemporary foster care system. Professor M. Kathy Rudy.

m James Kenned; mt

Antiques, Ltd.' at Historic Brighdeaf Square

19th C. Apothrecary

Your Source for:

19th C. Brass Sextant

Antique Estate Jewelry Sterling, Turquoise & Amber Jewelry Chinese Furniture, Porcelains, Antiquities African Art, Masks, Sculptures, Textiles Scientific, Medical, Nautical Apothecary Instruments and Associated Antiques &

&

&

&

Ghan Tribal Figure

JamesKeimedyAiitiques.com

Victorian Gold Pendant

Main at Gregson, Durham

18thC. Russian Icon

raeel e,

19th C. Brass Telescope on Tripod

White Gold Sapphire & Diamond Ring

919-682-1040


The Chronicle

Parents'

Cfddau,

&

Family

Weekend

2002

Continued

Service Opportunities in Leadership (SOL) Reception

Women's Center Open

Wesley Fellowship

House

Rhodes Conference Room, Sanford Institute of Public Policy 3-4 p.m.

Women's Center, Few Fed between FFI and Roundtable,West Campus 4-6 p.m.

Ronald McDonald House 5 p.m

The Service Opportunities in Leadership (SOL) is an intensive twelve-month leadership program for Duke undergraduates that combines academic study, community service, mentoring, and leadership training. Please join the faculty and staff of the SOL program for a reception and informal presentation. This event is for current and former SOL participants and their parents, as well as those interested in finding out more about the program.

Hart Leadership

Distinguished Speakers' Series "Getting Engaged: Student Leadership Projects at Home and Around the World" Fleishman Commons, Sanford Institute 4 p.m. The growing disengagement of young people from public life is a serious issue facing American democracy. But students in the Hart Leadership program offer an encouraging contrast to the trend. Join us for a lively discussion about what it takes to make a difference. From community organizing in South Africa to funding inner-city baseball leagues in Durham, students are finding that leadership requires passion, purpose, and patience for dealing with chaos.

Parents, family members, and students are invited to visit the Women's Center, including the Office of Sexual Assault Support Services, and meet members of our professional and student staff. What is Safe Haven? Where on campus can my daughter (or son) learn about gender and become involved in empowering activities? Learn more about our programming and how we support students plus take a few minutes to browse the Women's Book Exchange, our 3600+ volume lending library.

The Nicholas School of the Environment and Earth Sciences Room Al5B, LSR Center (Note new room location!)

4 p.m.

The Nicholas School welcomes all parents and family of undergraduate students to visit with the Director of Undergraduate Programs for a question and answer discussion about the EN Program, followed by a reception.

Parents are invited to join Duke Wesley Fellowship students in preparing and serving the evening meal at the Duke Ronald McDonald House. Wesley Fellowship is the campus ministry of the United Methodist Church. Contact Reverend Jenny Copeland, at 684-6735.

Parents, Families and Friends of Lesbians and

Gays 201 Flowers Building 5 p.m Parents often silently deal with the knowledge that their son or daughter may be or is lesbian, gay, bisexual, or transgender (LGBT). Parents need to find information and other parents to talk to. Join us as we provide a safe, accepting, and affirming discussion with other parents who have LGBT sons and daughters.

Shabbat Services Freeman Center For Jewish Life 6 p.m.

Reform, Conservative and Orthodox Service

The Nicholas School of the Environment and Earth Sciences Meet the Dean Wine & Cheese LSRC Courtyard 4:45 p.m. -

Savvy Duke p

invest housing dollars at Partners Plac � 3 bedrooms, 3 private baths, sunroom, study � 5 minutes from Duke at 929 Morreene Road � With 10% down and two roommates, you cover most (if not all) of your monthly expenses! �

October

Owner-occupied mortgage rates

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partners Place

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www.PartnersPlaceCondos.com

Freewater Films Griffith Film Theater, Bryan Center 7 and 9:30 p.m. "Kissing Jessica Stein."

Field Hockey vs. Davidson East Campus Turf Field 7:30 p.m. "The Mystery of Edwin Drood" Sheafer Theater, Bryan Center 8 p.m. Musical Whodunnit presented by Hoof 'n Horn.

"Cloud Nine" Reynolds Theater, Bryan Center 8 p.m. A play by Caryl Churchill, directed by Prof. Jeffrey Storer of the Theater Studies faculty. Produced by the Duke Dept, of Theater Studies.

Campus Crusade for Christ Dessert Reception Divinity School Student Lounge 9 p.m. Campus Crusade for Christ would like to invite all parents to a dessert reception. It will be a great opportunity to meet other students and staff involved with Campus Crusade as well as learn more about our ministry.

Duke University Improv Bryan Center Von Canon Rooms 9 p.m. Admission is free. Tickets may be picked up first served basis. at the door on a first come

-

5


6

Parents'

October 2002

&

The Chronicle

Weekend

Family

October 26 Registration Bryan Center Lobby 9 a.m. to one hour prior to game time.

-

One hour before the football game all tickets and registration packets will be taken to the Sheffield Center, Indoor Tennis Center.

Meeting with the Pre-Law Advisor 136 Social Sciences 9 9:50 a.m. and 10

-

will be followed by a question and answer period with Dean Gerald Wilson.

Study Abroad Information Table Bryan Center Lobby 9

Dean Keul and his staff will answer questions and concerns about academic or curricular matters or about their daughters' or sons' academic progress at Duke to date. Coffee and pastries will be available.

Prism Residence Hall

10:50 a.m. Discussion of the pre-professional program -

-

Open House at the PreMajor Advising Center East Campus 9 10:30 a.m.

Noon

Undergraduate Admissions Information Session

Public Policy Studies Continental Breakfast and

Undergraduate Admissions Office, 2138 Campus Drive

Open Forum Fleishman Commons, Sanford Institute, Science Drive 10 a.m. 12 Noon

10-11 a.m Parents and high school students are welcome to gather for the regularly scheduled group information session. Following the information session, a student-led tour of campus life will be offered (11:00).

-

of Duke" West Campus Clock Tower 10 10:50 a.m.

Markets & Management Studies Certificate Program "Coffee & Conversation" 129 Sociology-Psychology

Drop by for a continental breakfast and an

10

"The Changing Landscape

-

informal discussion with Julian Sanchez, of the Duke Center for Director Multicultural Affairs, and the co-presidents of Prism, Duke's first multicultural residence hall. For additional information, please contact the Duke Multicultural Center at 6846756.

-

11:45 a.m

Parents and students are invited to join Markets SrManagement Studies faculty, students and friends for a discussion about the focus of Markets & Management Studies at Duke, the M&M program curriculum, and career opportunities. Questions from students and parents are welcomed.

-

Public Policy Studies majors and prospective majors and their families are invited to a Continental Breakfast, to be followed by faculty and student remarks that focus on the PPS curriculum, the required internship and career opportunities for PPS majors. Questions from parents and students are welcomed.

FOCUS Interdisciplinary Programs Reception GA Down Under, East Campus 10

-

11:30 a.m.

The FOCUS faculty and staff look forward to meeting FOCUS parents. The Student Advisory Council of FOCUS will have displays from each of the programs. continued on page 11

Welcome Duke Now

Balloons

Open Sundays Ipm-spm

ONE

WORLD MARKET On Ninth Street

Even though your son or daughter is away from home you can still celebrate birthdays send good luck wishes, say “Congratulations or “We Love You!” with a beautiful bouquet ofballoons!

FAIR TRADE NON-PROFIT VOLUNTEER OPERATED

,

Bouquets Available With: Birthday Cakes Gifts Care Packages •

m

919-967-3433 We’re Only a Phone Call Away!

1

811 Ninth Street Durham 919.286.2457 Mon-Sat 10am-6pm Sun lpm-spm

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Weekend

Famliy

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October 2002 7

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PARENTS’AND FAMILY WEEKEND 2002 Come visit our bright and sun-filled comer of the Doris Duke Center. Drop in to see our vast selection of merchandise including: •

Books abound, for reference or rainy day gardening Rosselini Jewelry sparkles with rainbow slivers of glass Tools for small hands or small places Bronzed replicas of wisteria and dogwood Prizewinning puppets to amuse the young-at-heart.

Our classic tulip t-shirt and iris appliqued sweatshirt

Special giftsfor special occasions: Mother’s Day, graduation, weddings or a souvenir of your garden visit. Stop by the Terrace Shop to make a selection. Doris Duke Center, Sarah P. Duke Gardens 684-9037 Monday-Saturday: 9am spm Sunday: 12noon spm VISA MasterCard, American Express, Discover, FLEX, Ms, Cash, Personal Checks •

-

Department of Duke University Stores®

02-095


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Parents'

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The Chronicle

Parents'

&

Famliy

October 2002 9

Weekend

Tvc._

r<>

LEARNING AT DUKE” A talk for parents with Dean Willlmon 9:45 a.m. Room 05 Old Divinity ■PBfouke Divinity School |p“ �

“RELIGION

&

Nt Lounge)

rk

Welcome Parents! Curious about study abroad at Duke? Special Presentation "Opportunities for Study Abroad" Fri., Oct. 25, 10 to 11 a.m Von Canon, Bryan Center

Visit our information table Fri., Oct. 25, 9 to 5 &

Sat., Oct. 26, 9 to Noon Bryan Center Lobby

Office of Study Abroad 2016 Campus Drive 684-2174

ets anagement D

U

E

S

An Interdisciplinary Certificate Program at Duke University

DUKE UNIVERSITY DEPARTMENT OF

DDMUSIC Parents Weekend Concert Duke Chorale Rodney Wynkoop, director

Parents and Students

Markets & Management Studies (M&M) invites you for

Coffee

andContinental BteaJzfait

Saturday, October 26 130 Sociology-Psychology Building

9:30 AM Followed by an open Forum at 10:00AM

Come speak with students and faculty about our program. Learn more about— §

Duke Symphony Orchestra Harry Davidson, conductor Duke Wind Symphony John R. Guptill, conductor

Saturday, October 26th, 2002 8:00 pm, Duke Chapel General Admission: $5 Students with ID; FREE

Duke’s approach to undergraduate business education

§

The M&M program curriculum

§

Career Opportunities for M&M graduates

Tickets available at the University Box Office in the Bryan University Center as well as one hour prior to the performance.


10

Parents'

October 2002

duvet Hill

&

Family

The Chronicle

Weekend

Weaver Dairy Rd

This map is not to scale and should only be used as a guide to general location.

sDr^L

tsJg

—"

15-501

to Durham

McCauley St

tn

$1

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UN % ICO

i^S^ißypass <QX

3 To Pittsboro

r ary

&

int*°

banquet facilities Vine Spectator Award of Excellence restaurant

&

1350 Raleigh Rd. (Hwy 54) Chapel Hill

919.942.2400

(reservations accepted)

Dinner M-F 6-10pm; Sat. 5:30-10pm; Sun. 5:30-9pm

www. AuroraResta ura nico m


The Chronicle

Parents'

SabmUm Continued' from page T

&

10 a.m. Speaker: Frederic M. Poses, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer of American Standard Companies, Inc.

Newman Catholic Student Center Open House 037 Duke Chapel Basement 10-11 a.m. Parents and students are invited to visit the Newman Catholic Student Center for an informal gathering. This will be a great opportunity to meet the staff and student leaders of the Catholic Student Center, as well as to learn more about our ministry.

Presbyterian Westminster/UCC Fellowship

October

Duke Wesley Fellowship

We will hold a brunch for students, parents, and family in honor of Parents' and Family

Weekend.

Men & Women's Swim Team vs. East Carolina Taishoff Aquatic Center 1:00 p.m.

Parents Brunch Divinity School Student Lounge 7

10 a.m. the United Methodist Church. Contact Jenny Copeland, 684-6735.

Duke Moms and Dads Read! CANCELLED AS OF

Duke University Museum of Art East Campus 11 a.m. 5 p.m.

10/21/02

11

Duke Lutherans Brunch Chapel Kitchen 10 a.m. 1 p.m.

Blue/White Scrimmage Basketball Game Cameron Indoor Stadium 6:15 p.m

-

Sheafer Theater 2 p.m. & 8 p.m.

Pre-Game Barbecue Sheffield Center, Indoor Tennis

University Union Presents: Robert Pinsky

Center 11 a.m. per

person,

Because Blue/White Scrimmage tickets are part of the season package, there will only be a very limited number of tickets available. It is the responsibility of Duke students to purchase these tickets. Parents cannot order or purchase tickets. Tickets are not available through Parents' & Family Weekend registration.

"The Mystery of Edwin Drood"

(See

The Pratt Engineering Barbecue LSRC Teer Backyard (Rain site: Pratt Dining Commons)

11:30 a.m.

Page Auditorium 3:30 p.m.

The Duke Lutherans will have their annual Lutheran Family Brunch in the Duke Chapel Kitchen in the basement of the Duke Chapel.

Attendance is free. Tickets are General Admission and will be available at the door.

Undergraduate Publications Board Wine Cheese Reception Readings By Our Writers and Editors

&

Women's Center Noon

Women’s Crew

3:30 p.m.

Falls Lake, Durham All Day

Football Duke vs. Maryland

West Campus, Cl Quad 6 p.m. 12 Midnight

Wallace Wade Stadium 1:00 p.m.

From jack-o'-lanterns filled with candy to luminaries and cobwebs lining the gothic

Parents and Family Weekend Mass ’

Sunday, October 27th

11AM Page Auditorium Mass will also be held in Duke Chapel at 9 pm.

All are welcome

Catholic

Student

Devil's Eve A Campus Council Event -

Welcome Parents and Families

NEWMAN

Acapalloza Baldwin Auditorium, East Campus 7 and 9:30 p.m. A limited number of tickets will be available at the door.

&

Tickets are $12.00 per person. This includes everyone: students, parents and children. (See Registration Form).

-

Minority Parents Mixer

Quadrangle Pictures Griffith Film Theater, Bryan Center 7 and 10 p.m "About A Boy."

Pub Board Office, Bryan Center

-

Father Joe Vetter Campus Minister

684-1882 joev@duke.edu •

Jessica Vollmer Business Manager

684-3354 •jvollmer@duke.edu

Catherine Preston Peer Ministry Coordinator 684-8959 cpp22@duke.edu •

AT DUKE UNIVERSITY

residential sidewalks, Devil's Eve is an event for all ages!

Wesley Fellowship is the campus ministry of

are $12.00 Registration Form).

10-11 a.m.

CENTER

2002

6

Tickets

Chapel Lounge

-

Weekend

_

Pratt Engineering Seminar Griffith Film Theater

10 a.m.

Famliy

-

"Cloud Nine" Reynolds Theater, Bryan Center 8 p.m. Showcase Concert Duke Chapel, West Campus 8 p.m. Duke Chorale (Rodney Wynkoop, conductor), Duke Symphony Orchestra (Harry conductor), Duke Wind Davidson, Symphony (Randy Gupti, conductor). (See Registration Form).


Parents'

12 October 2002 •

&

Family

The Chronicle

Weekend

Sl ula'l October* "

Brunch for Families of First-Year Students

ml

The Marketplace East Campus Seating 1: 9:45 10:45 a.m. Seating 2: 10:55 11:55 a.m. Seating 3: 12:05 1:05 p.m. Seating 4: 1:15 2:15 p.m. -

if

-

-

-

-

per person (First-Year Student admission is included in the Board plan). Each seating is limited to 400 people. Reservations required. (See Registration Form). $7.00

President's Coffee Reception

&

"Duke Students: A Alumni Commons, Divinity

9:45-10:40 a.m.

Any Questions? A Panel on Duke Griffith Film Theater, Bryan Center, West Campus 10 10:45 a.m. -

A panel of administrators answers all your Duke questions; moderated and with brief comments by President Keohane.

-

-

12 Noon

Sermon by William Willmon, Dean of the Chapel.

Catholic Mass and •

o'

Brunch Catholic Mass, Page

1

School Discussion lead by Dr. William Willimon, Dean of Duke Chapel.

Take your parents out to brunch art the fanciest place in town the CJL dining facilities. FREE!

11 a.m.

~r| ■f tfW- ‘t?- pi

Spiritual Awakening"

-

Service of Worship Duke University Chapel

Bagel

Von Canon Hall, Lower Level of the Bryan Center, West Campus 9:30 -10 a.m.

Freeman Center for Jewish Life Bagel Brunch FCJL Dining Facilities 10:30 a.m. 12:30 p.m.

Holy Eucharist Celebration and Brunch Episcopal Center, 505 Alexander Avenue, Central Campus 10 a.m. The Episcopal Center at Duke will hold a Celebration of the Holy Eucharist followed by a brunch. All students and their families are welcomed. Please RSVP to Elizabth at 919-286-0634.

Auditorium followed by Brunch in the Searle Center 11 a.m. To observe Parents' & Family Weekend, the Newman Catholic Student Center plans to celebrate a Catholic Mass, followed by brunch. Reservations are required. (See Registration Form).

Duke University Museum of Art East Campus 12 noon 5 p.m. -

In The Spotlight Nelson Music Room East Duke Building, East Campus 2 p.m. The concert features solo and small chamber ensemble performances instrumental and vocal from the students of the music department. It'is open to all and free of -

-

charge.

"The Mystery of Edwin Drood" Sheafer Theater 2 p.m. "Cloud Nine" Reynolds Theater 2 p.m.

Volleyball vs. Wake Forest Cameron Indoor Stadium 7:30 p.m.

Quadrandgle Pictures Griffith Film Theater, Bryan Center 8 p.m. "About A Boy."

Additional Weekend events are listed in the Duke Events Calendar in Friday's edition of The Chronicle.

The Freeman Center for Jewish Life welcomes families to join us:

yon around town

We

[Starting with a great place to find a great rental car.]

CallNowforßeservattons; Durham 2804 Chapel Hill Blvd.

(919)688-1147

1-800-THRIFTY* thrifty.com

SHABBAT 6 pm: Candle lighting followed by Reform and Conservative student-led services 7:15 pm: Delicious kosher di Bubbe’s Kitchen Make meal reservations by 2 pm F Cash/check/ points/ flex accepts

RDU Airport 1-40 & Airport Blvd.

Thrifty features quality products of

DalmlerChrysler and

Friday, October 25

other fine cars

A licensee ol Thrifty Rent-A-Car System, Inc,

(919)849-8583

Sunday, October 27

Call and ask for the Duke University corporate rate, refer to discount code 7213NL or Book on-line at www.durham.thrifty.com and enter 7770220246 in the corporate discount field.

BAGEL BRUNCH 10:30am-12:30 pm: Join students and staff for a free brunch! Introduce your parents to your Jewish friends.

Become a Thrifty Blue Chip Express Rental Member at www.thrifty, com/bluechip/7770220246.

imuiw

Carßenta! UC

ra El XX L>l ■■

111

HUM

684-6422 jewishlife@duke.edu fcjl.studentaffaiirs.duke.edu


The Chronicle

Parents'

(Beyond the

&

Famliy Weekend

October 2002

American Tobacco Trail Duke Homestead & Tobacco The American Tobacco Trail is a former Museum rail line which is being converted into a The museum chronicles tobacco probike/hike/skate/wheel/horsetrail. duction and cigarette manufacturing, Beginning near the old American which were the cornerstone of Durham Tobacco Company complex, the first 3.2 industry at the turn of the century. It miles of asphalt trail were opened to the includes information about cigarette public last June. The mile markers look packaging, advertising and other marlike the original railroad markers. The keting paraphernalia. This National paved mileage will be between 6 and 7 Historic Landmark features the Duke miles as it reaches NC Hwy 54. family's mid-1800s home, including its Ultimately the rail-trail will extend tobacco barns, and original factory. south for a total of 23 miles (mostly Located off Guess Road in Durham. For unpaved in the rural areas). The address more information call 477-5498. is 3727 Fayetteville Street in Durham. See the web site at www.ncrailcontinued on page 14 trails.org/trtc.

(Durham, Ninth Street A favorite Duke spot for dining, shopping, or just people-watching, this strip of shops and restaurants is within walking distance from East

TERRY

SANFORD INSTITUTE

Campus.

OF PUBLIC POLICY

Brightleaf Square

DUKE

A turn-of-the-century tobacco warehouse restored as a shopping center with unique shops and outstanding restaurants. Located on Main Street (near East Campus).

“The Public Policy major can't be summed up in a word or two, or even a sentence. It is a synthesis of ideas and theories designed to make students better aware of the world around them and help them

Erwin Square Across from Ninth Street, Erwin Square has many upscale shops and restaurants, and is a favorite place to take visitors or shop for unique gift items.

“The fieldof Public Policy has been more exciting, or more imp If you want to have an impact o world and you re thinking abou . ate education in public policy, I you to consider the Terry Sanfor Institute of Public Policy at Duke University. Its a great place to -

build a future”

N.C. Museum of Life

The T

Institute Poll

Science interactive This regional, science/technology center combines science with fun! It features aerospace collections with NASA spacecrafts, space-suits and artifacts. The Museum of Life and Science also features a wildlife sanctuary, a railway, the Aventis CropScience insectarium, the Mega Maze, and Magic Wings, a seasonal butterfly house. Located off N, Duke St. on Murray Avenue in Durham. For more information see the web site at www.ncmls.org or call 220-5429. &

Eno River State Park A great place for a good hike there are trails ranging from .2 to nearly 4 miles. In all, there are nearly 20 miles of good hiking trails. Located in Durham and Orange Counties northwest of Durham. Call 383-1686 for maps and campground rates.

41

□ One of Trinity College’s largest majors □ Master’s degree programs in Public Policy & International Development Policy □ Dynamic, relevant courses □ Internationally renowned faculty

-

□ The coolest building on campus

More

information:

WWW.PUbPOLdIIk6.GdU

13


Parents'

14 October 2002 •

&

Family

The Chronicle

Weekend

(Beyond the ijothlc Chapel 'ZfiUl Ackland Art Museum See displays of European paintings and sculptures exhibiting such masters such as Delacroix, Degas, and Pissarro. See Asian and African art, and even some traditional North Carolina pottery and folk art. Located at the corner of Franklin and Columbia Streets. For more information call 966-5736, or visit the web site at www.ackland.org.

N.C. Botanical Gardens The 600-acre North Carolina Botanical Garden is considered to be a great garden at a great university. In addition to the Botanical Garden, it also includes nature trails, aquatic and herb plants, and a carnivorous plant collection. Located on 15-501 bypass in Chapel Hill. For more information call 962-0522. See the web site at www.unc.edu/depts/ncbg.

Franklin Street With its shops, restaurants, pubs, and movie theaters, Chapel Hill's main drag blends active nightlife with the charm of an old-fashioned collegiate town.

Morehead Planetarium The Morehead Planetarium, one of the largest planetariums in the U.S., is located on the University of North Carolina campus. The facility houses the domed Star Theater and Zeiss Model VI Star Projector, scientific exhibits and classrooms, 24-inch Cassegrain reflecting telescope and observation decks, visitors' center, and art galleries. Located on Franklin Street in Chapel Hill. For more information call 962-1236, or www.morehead.unc.edu

Hi Parents Eating at Duke McDonald*s is not so bad!!

Big‘N Tasty $l.OO Fruit

Parfait

$l.OO

Dippin’ Dots! 5flavors Low-fat nutritional choices are available every day! ~

~

We have and always will passionately appreciate your business !!

G

One Year (7 issues)

$1 6.95

G Enclosed is my check (payable to The

G Please charge my G MasterCard or G Visa Card

#

-

-

-

Chronicle)

Exp.

Signatun

Mailing Name: Address: State:

Open daily: Monday Saturday Sam I am Sunday 9am lam -

YES, I would like to subscribe to TowerView and have it mailed to the address below!

Phone (Day):

-

-

smile™

Mail coupon to; The Chronicle, Attn: Subscriptions, Box 90858, Duke University, Durham, NC 27708, or fax to: (919) 681-5953.


The Chronicle

Parents'

fQaleiqii North Carolina State Fair Through Sunday, October 27 Join in the "Blue Ribbon Fun" at the North Carolina State Fair at the State Fair Grounds in For more information, go to Raleigh. www.ncstatefair.org.

African-American Cultural Complex

This complex contains a unique collection of items created by African-Americans who have contributed to the development and improvement of North Carolina. Admission is free, the center is open by appointment only. Located at 119 Sunnybrook Road. For information call 919-212-3598. See the web site at www.aaccmuseum.org.

Carolina Hurricanes The NHL team not only plays a tough game of hockey, but adds fast, upbeat music to their ice competition. Mascot Stormy shows up and the kids go wild! For more information see the web site at www.carolinahurricanes.com.

Carolina Cobras This arena football team plays fast and hard. For more information see the web site at

www.cobrasfootball.com.

Exploris Exploris is all about how the world works, and the part that each person plays in it. The mission is to encourage the respect of differences, appreciation of similarities, and making connections with people around the world. A 270seat IMAX theater is located at Exploris. 201 East Hargett Street, directly opposite City Market. For more information call 919-8344040

&

Famliy

Weekend

October 2002

N.C. Museum of Art Over fifty centuries of art from every corner of the Western World are represented here. The museum is home to permanent collections of 19th-century American and 18th-century British paintings, Renaissance- and Baroqueperiod pieces, Jewish ceremonial objects, and a gallery of African, Oceanic, and New World art. The museum presents music, theater, and dance performances. A gift shop and cafe are at the museum as well. Located off 1-40 at 2110 Blue Ridge Road in Raleigh. For information call 919-839-6262. N.C. Museum of History -The Museum of History tells the state's story through four creative exhibits that include chronological history, Women Making History

in North Carolina, Folklife, North Carolina Sports Hall of Fame, and a group of temporary exhibits. The museum's site also includes a gift shop and auditorium. Located on Edenton Street. For information call 919-715-0200.

N.C. Museum of Natural Sciences Live animals, models, videos, and recorded sounds in interactive displays tell the state's natural history story at the Natural Sciences Museum. Fish, birds, native reptiles, amphibians, and mammals are displayed, and an exhibit features the North Carolina wetlands. The museum also has a children's Discovery Room and a gift shop. Located at 11 West Jones Street, one block from the State Capitol. For information call 919-733-7450.

When clear vision is your goal, look to a leader in DUKE.

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Ben Silver, Sim Stafford Chris Reilly, Melanie Shaw

This supplement was produced solely by the staff of the Business Department of The Chronicle. For advertising information, call (919) 684-3811. ©2002 The Chronicle, Box 90858, Durham, NC 27708-0858. All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced in any form without the prior written permission of The Chronicle Business Department.

IN

Duke Center for Vision Correction A SERVICE OF DUKE UNIVERSITY HEALTH SYSTEM

www.dukelasik.com

15


4

October

Parents'

2002

&

Family

Weekend

The Chronicle

Welcome Parents Families

and

20% off Hardcovers 10% off Paperbacks •

The Campus Guide

Duke University

DUKE \

Slmrii t/

-

I'iji.'r

DtiikE

Chaps

Foreword by Tallman Trask 111 Includes slipcaie embossed with the Duke Crest

Duke Chapel Illuminated Available in hardcopy and paperback.

Duke A Shared Vision Foreword by Reynolds Price

Hard copy includes sounds ofthe Duke Chapel CD

The Launching of Duke University, 1924-1949 Lasting Legacy to the Carolinas

Robert F. Durden

The Dukes of Durham 1865-1929

The Duke

Endowment, 1924-1994

Robert F. Durden

Robert F. Durden

Robert Pinsky a

Poetry and Modern American Culture” Saturday, October 26 3:3opm Page Auditorium Book Signing and Reception to follow •

Sponsored by Duke University Union Major Speakers and Undergraduate Publications Board.

Parents’ Weekend Hours Friday 8:30 am-7 pm Saturday 8:30 am-6 pm Sunday 10 am-3 pm

senseIndependent Bookstores for Independent Minds

doHuc

booW'ho'p Gothic Bookshop Upper Level Bryan Center (919)684-3986 e-mail: gothic@informer.duke.edu

Monday-Friday 8:30 am-7 pm Saturday 8:30 am-5 pm

If Gargoyles Could Talk Sketches

of Duke University William E. King


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