October 28, 2002

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Monday, October 28, 2002

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THE INDEPENDENT DAILY AT DUKE UNIVERSITY

Registration begins enforcing pre-reqs By ANDREW COLLINS The Chronicle

This fall, a new component of the course registration system will allow economics professors to enforce prerequisites for the first time. Soon, other departments may follow the economics department’s lead, using the online registration program to ensure that students enter their courses fully prepared.

ANDREES LATIF/REUTERS

7th Heaven Anaheim Angels closer Troy Percival is congratulated by teammates (left to right) Troy Glaus, Bengie Molina and Scott Spiezio following the Angels’ win in Game 7 of the World Series. See SportSWiap, page 6

be denied access to the course. Dean of Trinity College Robert Thompson said course prerequisites at the University have long been “variably

enforced.” “In terms of the technology we’ve developed, no one has ever done this before,” Nechyba agreed. Nechyba, director of undergraduate studies in economics, decided computerized enforcement The technology, was necessary to proposed by Associknowing whether students entering ate Professor of 105D—Intermediate Economics Thomas Economics ll—had Nechyba and developed by Student Thomas Nechyba sufficient backInformation Sysground in mathetems and Services, will scan matics to excel in the course. the record of any student who “We’ve attempted to make attempts to register for a class sure the .people going into that has prerequisites. If the [IOSDI don’t get killed by the student has not taken the reSee PRE-REQS on page 15 quired classes, he or she will

Students protest possibility of war � Duke students decried economic incentives and the possible death of innocent civilians that would result from a possible war with Iraq. By ANDREW CARD The Chronicle

While most students prepared for the arrival of parents this weekend, a small group of their classmates piled into cars and chartered buses, heading for Washington, D.C. to join a non-violent protest against war in Iraq. About 180 members of the Triangle community joined 200,000 other demonstrators at the Vietnam War Memorial in Washington to voice their opposition to the Bush administration’s resolve to use military force in Iraq. The demonstration, which coincided with similar protests in Berlin, San Juan, Tokyo and Mexico City, featured addresses by the Rev. Jesse Jackson, political activist A1 Sharpton and activist Susan Sarandon. “The event brought together people from all over America who oppose war in Iraq for a wide variety of reasons,” said Mark Higgins, a Duke graduate student who organized the trip. “We completely filled the streets ofD.C. with everything from Christian pacifists, to people who oppose American imperialism, to those who believe the war is principally about elite economic interests.” The demonstration reflected a growing sentiment among many Americans that the primary motivaSee IRAQ PROTEST on page 13

Inside

ROBERT TAI/THE CHRONICLE

MEDICAL STUDENT BILL WOOD (LEFT), AND DIVINITY STUDENTS ASHLEY WILKINSON AND JEAN-LUC CHARLES talk at a quad dinnerfor Few Quadrangle residents this fall.

Quad dinners find mixed success By TYLER BROWN

quad, faculty members and a select group of graduate students. In an effort to enhance group dynamics and commuWhat makes these dinners unique is their sit-down, nity within campus quadrangles, Student Affairs and family-style setting, said Deb Loßiondo, assistant dean ARAMARK Corp. have begun organizing and subsidizof residential life and housing services. The tables are ing quad-wide dinners during the fall semester with well-adomed, the food—the same as in the rest of The varying degrees of success. Great Hall—is served in a buffet fashion and the meals The main goal of the program is to generate quad come with salad, bread and dessert. interaction and conversation by bringing together “It is a great deal and a super event,” said Wannastudents from a different quad each Sunday evening maker Dormitory resident and sophomore Paul Novick, from 6 to 7:30 p.m. for dinner and informal discus“I usually pay $l2 every night for a meal like this.” sion. The meals, which take place in a sectioned-off While the dinners attract some students, the real area of The Great Hall, are a $5.95 ticket for food See QUAD DINNER on page 12 and engagement between students ofthe designated

Former U.S. poet laureate Robert Pinsky spoke about poetry, American values and the role of poetry in American culture Saturday. See page 3

The Chronicle

The University’s Coordinating Council on Work and Family Issues is looking into making lactation rooms more friendly and clean for mothers at Duke. See page 4

Sen. Paul Wellstone’s untimely death in an airplane crash Friday left Minnesota Democrats looking to an old pro to take his spot on the ballot. See page 6


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World & Nation

28. 2002

Russian troops gas Moscow theater

NEWS BRIEFS Oklahoma teen kills 2 in shooting spree

116 hostages die from side-effects but Russian officials claim gas was non-lethal

In Sallosaw, Ok., Daniel Fears, 18, was apparently upset by complaints about his driving and shot four neighbors, including a two year-old girl. He then went on a 20-mile shooting spree, apparently targeting people at random, police said. Two victims died. •

By STEVEN MYERS

New York Times News Service

MOSCOW The light gray gas filtered down like a mist in the theater hall before sunrise Saturday, and the effect on hostages and hostage-takers alike was nearly instant. Most simply lost consciousness, as their breath and blood slowed and Russian security troops began to

Mexico refuses to support Iraq resolution

President George W. Bush left a summit conference in Cabo San Lucas Sunday without a pledge from Mexico to support the U.S. resolution in the U.N. Security Council to disarm Iraq. •

Bin Laden terrorist cells remain intact

surge through the theater. Some of Russia’s top health officials said Sunday night the gas was a nonlethal anesthesia, like the ones used in general surgery. But in the chaos of a predawn commando operation against heavily armed guerrillas, the result was all too lethal. Of the 117 hostages con-

The terrorist network that Osama bin Laden has steadily built up in Southeast Asia over the past decade is still largely intact, intelligence officials in several countries said in interviews over the last week. •

Painkillers may increase blood pressure

The popular pain relievers ibuprofen and acetaminophen, contained in scores of over-the-counter remedies, may increase the risk of high blood pressure, a Harvard study in women suggests. •

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agent that ended with disastrously unintended consequences. Andrei Seltovsky, the chairman of the Health Committee of Moscow, said Sunday night he did not even know the name of the gas, parrying questions toward what he called the “competent authorities,” strongly suggesting that the gas was developed by the military or security forces as part of some secret program. More than a day and a half after the raid, officials refused to either confirm

A man sought as a material witRICHMOND, Va. ness in the Washington-area sniper shootings was arrested Saturday, and prosecutors announced plans to charge

the two suspects in Virginia, the second state where 17year-old John Lee Malvo could face the death penalty. Virginia prosecutors will file charges Monday to cover two woundings and at least two of the three killings there, said William Neely, Spotsylvania County, Va., Commonwealth’s Attorney. Neely said he will seek the death penalty for John Allen

FINANCIAL MARKETS Up 126.60 at 8443.90

What unfolded in the theater appears to have amounted to a risky test of a previously undisclosed chemical

The Associated Press

News briefs compiled from wire reports.

DOW

of the gas.

By ADRIENNE SCHWISOW

Separatist guerrillas are suspected of killing 22 villagers in northeast India just after midnight, officials said Sunday. Another 12 were wounded in the attack on Dadgiri, a village near the India-Bhutan border.

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firmed dead so far by Russian officials, all but one diedfrom the effects

or identify the gas, rebuffing a direct request from the U.S. Embassy. Experts in Russia and the United States said that use of such a gas— and the official silence enveloping it—raises troubling questions about Russia’s compliance with the international treaty banning chemical

weapons. Lev Fyodorov, who once worked in the Soviet chemical weapons agency and is now the president ofthe Social

and Ecological Union for Chemical Safety, said the gas appeared to be a valium-based agent—developed for the military during the Soviet era—and still a state secret. See MOSCOW on page 10

Sniper suspects may face death penalty

22 die in remote Indian village

;

The Chronicle

NASDAQ Up 32.42 at 1331.13

Muhammad. Malvo could face death, but Neely said his sentence would depend on his role in the shootings. Virginia and Alabama—where the pair are charged

“Isn't it strange how we move our lives for another day? Like skipping a beat, what if a great wave should wash us all away?” -Dave Matthews Band

with killing a woman outside a liquor store in September—allow the death penalty for crimes committed at age 17. Earlier Saturday, a third man, believed to be the co-owner ofa blue Chevrolet Caprice the suspects were found in a day earlier, was arrested and held as a material witness. Nathaniel Osbourne, a man of Jamaican descent who has lived in Camden, N.J., was arrested at a home in Flint, Mich. He was to appear in court Sunday but was not considered a suspect in the shootings, FBI Agent Barry Maddox said. Osbourne was visiting a woman in Flint, according to the Rev. Charlie Byrd, who lives on the same street. Byrd

told The Flint Journal that Osbourne and the woman, who See SNIPER on page 10

Halloween ieawn... Bead Come Back to Life!!

nge Downstairs at

Cosmic Cantina is reopening in November

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 mral epidemic confronted this strange mapping of sexuality and stereotype by offering new kinds of maps that told different stories about place, AIDS, and citizenship.

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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, AquaDuke, DukeOUT, Department of Political Science, Theatre Studies, Institute of the Arts Duke University Student Affairs encourages individuals with 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. 684-6607 or lgbtcenter@duke.edu.


The Chronicle

MONDAY, OCTOBER 28, 2002 � PAGE

3

Candidates talk U.S. poet laureate discusses writing about Duke issues By MEGAN CARROLL The Chronicle

By RYAN WILLIAMS The Chronicle

Three candidates seeking North Carolina’s Fourth District seat in the U.S. House of Representatives and three Democratic contenders for a spot on the Durham County Board of Commissioners addressed issues of concern to the Duke community in the Bryan Center Sunday night. Several dozen students and employees attended the forum, which was sponsored by the Duke chapter ofthe National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, the Student-Employee Relations Committee and Latino Life. Each candidate was given the opportunity to express ideas that were most important to them, and the issues they felt were most important to Duke and Durham. Republican Congressional candidate and flight instructor Tuan Nguyen said he is running because he believes many politicians in Washington have lost touch with average Americans and the issues they care about. “What we need in America today is for ordinary citizens to go up to Washington,” Nguyen said. Libertarian candidate Ken Nelson said he was running because the federal government had overstepped its constitutional bounds. His platform includes legalizing drugs, lowering taxes and allowing taxpayers to opt out of the Social Security system ifthey so desire. “The way things are going now, we’re going to have a situation where people who have paid into the system will not be able to take out [of Social Security],” he said. Representative David Price, the incumbent and a professor of political science on leave from Duke, said that improving education at all levels was one ofhis top priorities, including educating and paying the 2.5 million teachers who will be needed in the public school system over the next 10 years. He also said he wanted to help create an environment conducive to private investment throughout the Research Triangle Park area. “We need to make certain that research is funded, and that ideological issues do not interfere with the research,” he said, referring in part to recent debates about cloning. County Commissioner Philip Cousin, who is seeking reelection along with three other members ofthe board Nov. 5, said that providing for the menSee FORUM on page 13

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In a speech preceding the men’s basketball BlueWhite Scrimmage that attracted thousands of fans, former U.S. poet laureate Robert Pinsky spoke in a smaller but still filled Page Auditorium, saying Americans value larger-than-life performance arts such as

college basketball. Poetry, by its nature, is on an individual scale unlike mass events, Pinsky said. He added that after Sept. 11, many people turned to poetry to counteract the immense images of destruction and catastrophe. “[Mass scale] can be good, but we crave it on an individual, human scale,” he said. Pinsky, the ninth U.S. poet laureate, highlighted two of beliefs about poetry and its role in American culture. First, he said the medium of poetry is not words, thoughts, images or lies but rather centers around the breath ofindividual who is reading the poem. “The medium of poetry is the human body” Pinsky said. “Poetry is the most bodily of all the arts.” Secondly, Pinsky said Americans—from custodial staff to Board of Trustees members—love poetry and can speak about it intelligently. His “Favorite Poem Project”—in which tens ofthousands of Americans submitted their thoughts about their favorite poems and read them aloud to the Library of Congress—embodied this belief. The video included people of all ages and ethnicities and some were read in foreign languages to represent the diversity of the United States. Pinsky compared writing poetry to “doodling on a piano.” Students and parents observed this as he drafted a poem about death. He concentrated on the audio components of death and other words and relationships

that are associated with death. “Poetry sounds great when it’s said aloud,” Pinsky said. “Most people underestimate getting the equivalent for sound [when they translate poems].” Students said they were wowed when Pinsky drafted a poem right in front of them. “He’s a really musicalminded guy,” said freshman Ben Dach. Rebecca Pomeroy, another freshman, said she left the speech with a new understanding about how both sound and words are important factors in poetry. “I understand both sides of writing and sound,” Pomeroy said. “Words and sounds make a more complete body of work.” After reading three of his poems, Pinsky invited audience members to ask questions. During this time, he further discussed his thoughts on being a poet laureate of the United States. Former president Bill Clinton’s poet laureate showed

JANEHETHERINGTON/THE CHRONICLE

FORMER U.S. POET LAUREATE ROBERT PINKSY compared poetry to “doodling on a piano” during Parents’ Weekend. humility when he discussed his prestigious role from 1997 to 2000 and said compared the title poet laureate to being complemented on your hair. He said the less glamorous but more noble and democratic part of the title was consulting the Library of Congress. Pomeroy, however, admitted the title ofUS. poet laureate attracted her to the speech in the first place. “I would never say I’m seeing Robert Pinsky. I would say I’m going to see the poet laureate,” she said. Freshman Edward Douglas said Pinsky showed appreciation and respect for poetry without being consumed by the laurels he attained. “[Pinsky] said that poems are not snippets ofexpression that are recited but real means ofcommunication,” Douglas said. “Poetry in America is not an art form itself but has a political and social structure.”


The Chronicle

PAGE 4 � MONDAY. OCTOBER 28. 2002

Work council calls for lactation rooms review cations and amenities for the rooms “The fact that the coordinating council has identified lactation rooms as an important issue—and that they sought the help of Parents @ Duke—shows that they think this is an important issue,”

� A council on work and family issues wants to make Duke’s six lactation rooms on campus more conducive to mothers who are breast feeding. By CINDY YEE The Chronicle

Although the University prides itself on being a family-friendly workplace, on-campus lactation rooms uninviting, unkempt and few and far between—suggest ample room for im-

provement. The Coordinating Council on Work and Family Issues is currently re-

viewing the University’s lactation rooms, following a report from a subcommittee dedicated to the problem. Ideally, lactation rooms provide a comfortable, private setting where nursing mothers can pump breast milk while away from their babies. The subcommittee toured the six lactation rooms on campus and present-

JANE HETHERINGTON/THE CHRONICLE

Whatever floats your boat Senior members of the rowing team race dressed up on Class Day, which fell during Parents’ Weekend this year.

ed their findings at the council’s most recent meeting this month. To ensure that the subcommittee’s recommendations reflect nursing mothers’ true needs, the council has asked Parents @ Duke—a relatively new group of faculty and staff whose aim is to improve family related policies at the University—to suggest lo-

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said Pegeen Reichert Powell, co-founder of Parents @ Duke. “More generally, what it suggests is a willingness on the part of the University to improve the climate for people trying to integrate family with work life.” At the Oct. 23 meeting of Parents @ Duke, the group created a tentative list of locations and amenities for the new or revamped lactation rooms. Once prioritized, the lists will be presented to the coordinating council, which will eventually make recommendations to

President Nan Keohane. Currently, there are six on-campus lactation rooms—two in the Duke Clinical Research Institute, one each in the Sands Building, the Carl Building, Perkins Library and Duke South. Most notably absent are rooms on East and

North Campuses, said members of Parents @ Duke. Ideally, they said, there would be rooms scattered throughout campus so that faculty and staff could access and use them without taking too much time out of their workdays. The group also created a list of necessities and amenities for the rooms. “Even in the See LACTATION on page 12

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October 28 and 29 Monday and Tuesday 10:00 am 4:00 pm -

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The Chronicle

MONDAY. OCTOBER 28, 2002 � PAGE 5

CRIME BRIEFS From staff reports

Suspected thief escapes An employee reported finding an unidentified man going through her desk in the Duke Clinic Oct. 24 at 12:18 p.m. The man ran off when he saw the employee.

When other employees in the area attempted to stop the suspect, he dropped a bookbag containing a purse stolen from an employee in the Bell Building. The purse was returned to the owner. In a related report, at 12:06 p.m. Oct. 24, a man matching the description of the suspect tried unsuccessfully to remove a laptop computer from the Bell Building.

Students report harassing phone calls Residents of Pegram Dormitory reported receiving suspicious phone calls Oct. 21 and Oct. 25. The caller claimed to be a police officer wanting to ask some questions. Duke University Police Department officials suggest that students who receive such calls should report them as soon as possible to police at 684-2444.

The McGovern Award Lectureship

Cameras stolen

Someone stole a visitor’s unprotected $1,500 Minolta 35mm and Minolta Digital cameras from 5500-D Duke North between 9 and 9:20 p.m. Oct. 26. An employee reported that a $1,050 Nikon Digital Camera and flash attachment were stolen from an unsecured office in the Duke Clinic. The theft occurred sometime between 6:30 p.m. Oct. 17 and 1 p.m. Oct. 21.

Clothes snatched

The Search for Meaning in a Medical Life

Someone stole a student’s unattended clothes, worth $331, from the laundry room in Blackwell Dormitory between 1 a.m. and 10:30 a.m. Oct. 25.

Wallet pilfered

An employee’s wallet was stolen between 8:45 a.m. and 5:30 p.m. from her office in the Eye Center. The employee reported that she was in and out of her office during the day and that the office was left unlocked. The wallet and contents were valued at $175.

Cash filched Someone took $7O from a student’s wallet, which was in an unsecured locker at the Brodie Gym on East Campus, between 4 and 5:30 p.m. Oct. 16. 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.

Abraham Verghese, M.D., D.Sc (Hon.) is Professor of Medicine and the director of the Center for Medical Humanities and Ethics in the School of Medicineat the University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio. Dr. Verghese is a nationally recognized and award-winning author of two books,

Abraham Verghese, MD Monday, October 28, 2002

5:30 PM Reception to Follow

My Own Country, about a doctor’s

work with the then new AIDS epidemic, and The Tennis Partner, a tragic account of one man’s struggle with addiction. He has published extensively in the medical literature,

Searle Conference Center Seeley

Duke

G. Mudd Building

University

Medical Center

and his writing has appeared in The New Yorker, The Atlantic Monthly, Esquire, Granta, The New York Times Magazine and ■elsewhere.

The McGovern Award was Established by Duke Alumnus and Philanthropist John P. McGovern, MD . to Recognize, Stimulate and Encourage Those Whose Life and Work Epitomize the Humane and Healing Dimensions of Medicine. *

In this lecture, Dr. Verghese will

talk about the arrival of HIV in rural East Tennessee, a community unprepared for AIDS and its metaphors. Using short readings

from his book My Own Country, he will examine how patients found meaning from their experiences, and how this led to a parallel insight into where meaningresides in a

physician's

life

For More Information Contact the Duke Center for the Study of Medical Ethics and Humanities AT

919.668.9000

OR CSMEH@MC.DUKE.EDU

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PAGE 6 �

The Chronicle

MONDAY. OCTOBER 28, 2002

Investigators probe fatal Wellstone airplane crash By MIKE WILSON

The Associated Press EVELETH, Minn. Federal investigators searched the wreckage of a small plane Saturday for clues in the crash that killed Sen. Paul Wellstone, DMinn., as colleagues mourned the death of the liberal congressman. Carol Carmody, acting chairperson of the National Transportation Safety Board, said the first priority for the 16member NTSB team that arrived at the crash site late Friday was finding the chartered plane’s cockpit voice recorder. “This is a serious accident,” Carmody said. “Eight people were killed. Sen. Wellstone was a very important national figure. Of course we want to send a full team to do everything we can to find

out what happened.” Carmody said Saturday that the NTSB team would be at the site for four to six days, but it could take months to determine the cause of the crash.

The twin-engine plane carrying

Wellstone, his wife, daughter and five others went down in a swampy, wooded area about two miles from the tiny Eveleth-Virginia Municipal Airport in northeastern Minnesota’s Iron Range.

the wreckage was not on the usual approach to the runway, suggesting the pilot might have aborted the landing.

“It’s just terrible. Say a prayer,” said Lisa Pattni, an- aide at the crash site. Wellstone’s death brought an outpouring of grief from both supporters and opponents of the 58-year-old Democrat, known as one of the foremost liberals on Capitol Hill. “Everybody who knew him has a clear picture of him, bouncing around, jabbing, saying his piece, standing up for the underdog and the unspoken-for,”

said Garrison Keillor, the writer and satirist who hosts the “Prairie Home Companion” radio show. “A lot of people voted for him who didn’t really agree with him—they just liked him so much.” In St. Paul, thousands of mourners stood in the cold rain to pay tribute at the Statehouse and outside the senator’s headquarters. “It doesn’t seem real,” said Tom Collins, who had done volunteer work for Wellstone’s campaign. “It’s a nightmare.” All eight people aboard the 11-seat King Air A-100 were killed, said Greg Martin, spokesperson for the Federal Aviation Administration. Campaign officials confirmed the victims included Wellstone’s wife, Sheila, 58, and daughter, Marcia, 33; three campaign staff members; and two pilots. The last senator to die in office was Sen. Paul Coverdell, a 61-year-old Georgia Republican who died of a stroke two

Wellstone was headed to the funeral of a state representative’s father when the plane crashed Friday morning in freezing rain and light snow. The wreckage was still smoldering several hours after the crash, which was several hundred yards from the closest paved road and about 175 miles years ago. north of Minneapolis. “Today the state of Minnesota has Carmody said only the tail of the suffered a deep and penetrating loss,” plane was intact. Investigators will exGov. Jesse Ventura said. “With all of us amine trees for indications of the angle suffering from the numbing experiences of the plane’s descent, and will review ofour nation’s recent tragedies, this loss records to determine if the weather was seems especially cruel.” a factor in the crash, she said. Two years ago, Missouri Gov. Mel The terrain will make the job harder. Carnahan, his son and an aide were “It’s a complicated site, very marshy, killed in a crash three weeks before lots oftrees,” Carmody said. Election Day as he campaigned for the The National Weather Service had is- Senate. His name remained on the balsued an advisory to pilots that morning lot and he beat Republican Sen. John that icing was possible, and the airport’s assistant manager, Gary Ulman, said See WELLSTONE CRASH on page 11

ANDY KING/REUTERS

FORMER VICE PRESIDENT WALTER MONDALE speaks to supporters of the late Sen. Paul Wellstone outside Wellstone campaign headquarters in St. Paul, Minn., after news of Wellstone’s death.

Sen. Wellstone’s family endorses former Vice President Mondale as Democratic candidate By BRIAN BAKST The Associated Press

ST. PAUL, Minn.

Sen. Paul Well-

stone’s oldest son has urged former Vice President Walter Mondale to step in as his late father’s replacement on the Nov. 5 ballot, Democratic leaders said Sunday. Mike Erlandson, chairperson of the state’s Democratic-Farmer-Labor Party, said David Wellstone asked Mondale to run in his father’s place. He and other surviving family members were not immediately available to comment, the late senator’s campaign staff said. A group of up to 875 Minnesota De-

mocrats will meet Wednesday to officially choose the substitute candidate for Wellstone, who died Friday in a plane crash.

Erlandson refused to say whether Mondale would be the nominee, although he has said the family’s choice would weigh heavily in the party’s decision. He said he believes Mondale will run if nominated. If Democrats succeed in drafting Mondale, it will give them a powerhouse candidate for a six-day campaign

against Republican Norm Coleman, the former St. Paul mayor who entered the race at the urging of President George W. Bush. The race had been tight between Coleman and Wellstone and was a top target ofRepublicans trying to regain control of the Senate. See MONDALE on page 12

pick up an application for the Bassett Fund at the Bryan Center information desk.

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E-mail questions to

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A Duke Unhmiy Undergraduate Fubttcatiom Bim-d Service


The Chronicle

MONDAY, OCTOBER 28,2002 � PAGE 7

Community Service Week

UNIVERSITY BRIEFS

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From staff reports

Cady to manage executive education John Cady was named associate

dean of executive education at the Fuqua School of Business, Fuqua Dean Doug Breeden announced last week. Cady succeeds Richard Staelin, who is now deputy dean of the busi-

focus on the study, invention and creative use of digital technologies to enhance the way people think, express and communicate ideas and explore scientific frontiers. Negroponte is also the Jerome B. Wiesner Professor of Media Technology at MIT.

ness school.

Cady will manage Fuqua’s non-degree, open-enrollment executive education operation. Its courses range from the four-week general management courses to the specialized courses focused on strategy and leadership, finance and accounting. In total, Fuqua offers eight short courses and a series of learning-on-demand courses for students worldwide.

Negroponte to speak on digital technology Nicholas Negroponte, co-founder and chair of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology Media Laboratory, will speak Nov. 1 about technological developments since the publication of his book, “Being Digital.” The free public lecture, “Beyond Being Digital,” begins at 7:30 p.m. at the Richard White Lecture Hall on East Campus. The MIT Media Laboratory, which opened in 1985, is known for its pioneering collaboration between academia and industry and has led in the

McNeill to lecture Environmental historian John McNeill will speak about “Forests and War in World History” Nov. 5 at 4 p.m. in the White Lecture Hall. The lecture is free and open to the public. A reception will follow. McNeill, Graduate School ’Bl, and professor of history at Georgetown University, will address connections between forests and warfare in history, focusing on both the impacts of war upon forests and the role of forests in warfare. The lecture is sponsored by the Forest History Society, the Nicholas School of the Environment and Earth Sciences and the department of history as part of the Lynn W. Day Distinguished Lectureship.

Hiwar hosts Zunes Stephen Zunes, an associate professor of politics and chair of the Peace Justice Studies Program at the Uni-

versity of San Francisco, will lecture Tuesday at 7 p.m. in the White Lec-

ture Hall. The lecture, “The Case against a U.S. Invasion of Iraq,” is sponsored by HIWAR.

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October 2F-November 3, 2002

Sunday, October 2?: 7:00 Candidates Forum, Von Canon C (in the BCJ 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 Student-Employee Relations Committee (SERC) and the Duke NAACP.

Monday, October 28: 8:00 Keynote Address: 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 Band.

Tuesday, October 29: 7:30 Duke in the Community: A Forum of Student Service Groups, Multicultural Center (in BCJ 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!

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

1:00-2:00 Community Service Successes and Failures: A Historical Perspective, Rhodes Conference Room [Sanford Institute) Bruce Payne, public policy professor and director of Duke in New York Leadership in the Arts, will discuss the Community Service Movement. Co-sponsored by the Hart Leadership Program.

4:00-6:00 Halloween Carnivalfor Durham Youth, Cast Campus Quad

THE NICHOLS DISTINGUISHED LECTURE SERIES

Games, crafts, costumes, an inflatable obstacle course, and a haunted house, followed by trick-or-treating in East Campus dorms! 7:00-8:00 Party of Champions, Round Table Commons Join Durham County Special Olympics athletes and Round Table residents for a send-off party before the November 9th North Carolina Fall Games. Co-sponsored by Round Table.

presents

Thursday, October 31:

development of areas such as digital video and multimedia. It continues to

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

12:30 Brown Bag Lunch with Dr. Brenda Armstrong, Mary Lou Williams Center Dr. Brenda Armstrong, Dean of Admissions at Duke Medical Center, will speak about her involvement with the Durham Striders, a youth track team that has been a major success in helping children in the community.

Friday, November 1: 10:00-6:00 Shop at One World Market on Ninth Street! Show your DukeCard and receive a 10% discount on all merchandise from this international craft store dedicated to fairtrade.

Death and the Birth of Civilizations: Ancestors, Art, and Culture in Early China and Early Greece

Saturday, November 2: 8:00-12:00 Habitat for Humanity

Volunteer with other Duke students to help build a Habitat for Humanity house in Durham. Signups on the BC Walkway all week.

Sunday, November 3:

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

7:00 Acapella Concert to benefit Project Share, GA Down Under Great music for a great cause! Hear your favorite acapella groups while contributing to Project Share, a holiday gift-giving campaign for Durham families. Admission is $3 or $2 with a canned good.

All Week: "Donate canned goods for Urban Ministries of Durham Community Kitchen and the Alliance ofAIDS Services at the CSC table on theBC Walkway "Make Halloween cards and crafts for patients at Duke Children’s Hospital at the

Marketplace from 5:00-?:30 Sunday-Wednesday! "Pika, Deke, SigEp, Delta Sigma Theta, and Kappa Alpha Psi will be working with the CSC at various times to make sandwiches for donation to the Durham Rescue Mission.

All events sponsored by the Community Service Center and are free unless otherwise noted. For questions or more information, call 684-43?? or email Beth Brantley (eab@duke.edu) or Loree Lipstein (Ibl3@duke.edu),


The Chronicle

PAGE 8 � MONDAY, OCTOBER 28, 2002

Leftist challenger da Silva wins Brazilian presidency By HAROLD OLMOS The Associated Press

SAO PAULO, Brazil Former union boss Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva won Brazil’s presidential election runoff by a landslide Sunday, marking a historic shift to the left for Latin America’s largest country. Ruling party candidate Jose Serra

conceded defeat, hours after Silva’s

Workers Party had declared their candidate the winner.

“The voters have decided that Brazil,

during the next four years, will be governed by my rival,” Serra told supporters at his campaign headquarters in a statement broadcast live on national TV. “I wish the winner good luck in leading the destiny of Brazil,” a somber-looking Serra said. With 95 percent of the vote counted, Silva—a former shoeshine boy who rose to become the head of a labor union—had 61.5 percent to Serra’s 38.5 percent, the government Supreme Electoral Tribunal announced.

Thousands of Silva supporters gathered in the streets of Sao Paulo and Rio de Janeiro, waving his party’s red flag in celebration. “This is our opportunity to consolidate our hopes for a Brazil which should be more just and care more about the needs ofthe people,” said Marcos Xavier, a university professor who stood amid some 1,000 Silva supporters on Sao Paulo’s main pvenue.

While the votes were still being counted, the White House offered its congratulations to the winner. “The president congratulates the winner of the election and looks forward

to working productively with Brazil,” said press secretary Ari Fleischer, speaking to reporters aboard Air Force One, while returning from an economic summit in Mexico. Silva’s criticism of free-market policies is at odds with Washington. His election could complicate President George W. Bush’s goal of creating a hemispheric free-trade zone by 2005,

but the administration has been careful not to criticize Silva during the campaign, aware that any comment could be seen as interference. Silva, popularly known as “Lula,” just missed a victory in the first-round election on Oct. 6, forcing a runoff against Serra, a former health minister with the ruling party. Silva’s election marks a historic shift to the left for Brazil, which has never elected a leftist president. Its last leftist leader was Joao Goulart, a vice president who assumed power in 1961 when the centrist presidentresigned. Goulart served 2 1/2 years before being deposed by a right-wing military coup.

Brazilians are caught between hopes that Silva will reverse rising unemploy See DA SILVA on page 11

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The Chronicle

MONDAY, OCTOBER 28, 2002 � PAGE 9

North Korea, Iraq continue to concern diplomats Bv RON FOURNIER The Associated Press

JEFF MITCHELL/REUTERS

CHINESE PRESIDENT JIANG ZEMIN watches as U.S. President George W. Bush waves to the crowd at a joint press conference at Bush’s Crawford, Texas, ranch.

m

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A CABO SAN LUCAS, Mexico weekend of urgent diplomacy produced some modest gains for President George W. Bush, although he left this sportsfishing resort Sunday with a string of disappointments in his bid to disarm North Korea and Iraq. The two-day Asian-Pacific Economic Cooperation forum yielded the United States a show of unity against North Korea’s nuclear weapons program, a fresh round of promises to combat terrorism and a valuable opportunity to lobby 21 Asian leaders on Iraq. But Bush’s toughest challenges went unmet. Many Asian leaders still reject Bush’s zero-tolerance approach to Iraq, and administration officials grimly acknowledged that a strong UN. resolution to force Saddam Hussein to disarm may elude them this week. South Korea and Japan still oppose Bush’s isolation policy for North Korea. U.S. officials still have reason to question the commitment of Muslimdominated Pacific Rim nations to the war against terrorism.

And APEC, created by the first Bush administration to liberalize trade, became a forum for Asian leaders to accuse the second Bush White House of protectionist practices such as agricultural subsidies. The weekend got off to a shaky start when Bush, a stickler for punctuality, was forced to cool his heels for 30 minutes while Chinese President Jiang Zemin arrived late for Friday talks at the president’s ranch in Crawford, Tx. After more than an hour of talks, Jiang handed Bush a diplomatic success in the campaign to rid North Korea of its recently disclosed nuclear weapons program. “We Chinese always hold the position that the Korean Peninsula should be nuclear weapon-free,” Jiang said. But the Chinese leader failed to deliver a stern condemnation of North Korea’s actions. U.S. officials said they expect to endure weeks of negotiations before Beijing might be more forceful. It did not become much better for Bush at APEC. In the summit-ending See APEC on page 15

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The Chronicle

PAGE 10 � MONDAY, OCTOBER 28,2002

SNIPER from page 2 is a member of his church, had met at a truck driving school in Indianapolis. Byrd said the two were considering marriage, and came to him briefly

Wednesday for counseling. “He seemed like he was a nice young man to me,” Byrd said, adding that he had met him only once. According to the New Jersey Department of Transportation, Muhammad and Osbourne bought the blue Caprice from Sure Shot Auto Sales Inc. in Trenton on Sept. 10. Authorities say a hole cut in the car’s trunk could have allowed a sniper to fire at unsuspecting victims

from the concealment of the car’s interior, leaving no evidence. Neely said Virginia prosecutors have been rushing to file charges to discourage federal authorities from filing their own. “We’re having to go in in a hurry becuase we don’t want to be supplanted by the feds,” Neely said. “The ball is in their court. They have physical custody.” Justice Department officials were still deciding whether to bring their

RUSSIANS laid flowers at the Nord Ost theater in Moscow Sunday after 115 hostages were killed in a government raid that used an unnamed gas against the hostages’ Chechen captors

MOSCOW from page 2 Vil Mirzayanov, a former colleague ofFyodorov’s at the chemical weapons agency who was twice imprisoned for reporting in 1991 that the Soviet Union had continued to develop and test chemical weapons after publicly denouncing them, said that in 1988 the agency had altered the molecular structure of a hallucinogenic agent, BZ, which the United States studied extensively in the 19605. The agency—known as the State Scientific and Research Institute of Organic Chemistry and Technology—discovered that the new substance proved to be an effective anesthetic after tests at

Moscow’s main military hospital, Mirzayanov said in an interview Sunday night. Neither he nor Fyodorov could say definitively what type of gas was used, however, based on the limited information released. They and others said it was possible it would fall into a gray area in the chemical weapons treaty. The treaty, which Russia signed and ratified, bans all forms of lethal gas and strictly monitors dozens of chemical components that can be used to make them. It does allow the use of some chemical agents, like tear gas, for “law enforcement, including domestic riot control.” At the same time, however, it explicitly requires that “riot control agents” have effects that “disappear within a short

own charges. One official, speaking on condition

of anonymity, said federal prosecutors could use the Hobbs Act, which allows the government to seek the death penalty in murders where killers try to extort money. Letters left behind demanded $lO million. Authorities in Maryland were the first to file charges Friday, covering

the six deaths in their area. They said they would seek the death penalty against Muhammad; Malvo would be tried as an adult, but the

time following termination of exposure.”

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death penalty could not be applied there if his reported age of 17 is verified. Montgomery County State’s Attorney Douglas Gansler said Saturday he hopes to continue discussions with other prosecutors about where the suspects will be tried first. “My understanding is that it will be resolved this week,” he said, but added that no meetings were scheduled. With suspects in custody, communities terrorized by the shooting spree gleefully welcomed the end of school lockdowns and cancellations of out-

door events. “The kids are loving it. They’ve been going crazy locked up,” Vicki Edwards said as she watched her 9-year-old daughter’s soccer game, which had been canceled the previous two weekends. “Once they announced the charges, that’s when I really started to relax,” said Mark Rogers, a retired police officer whose daughter couldn’t wait to get back on a soccer field in Rockville. “After that, we could all kind of let our

hair down and get back to life.” The last of the sniper’s victims, bus driver Conrad Johnson, was mourned Saturday at a service in Silver Spring, where two dozen buses carrying transit workers joined the funeral procession. The 35-year-old father of two, gunned down Tuesday as he prepared to start his route, was the 10th person killed in the attacks in Maryland, Virginia and Washington, D.C. Three other people, including a 13-year-old

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2 �Monday, October 28,

this week’s issue In ffIMiOWBO® Inside Duke Weekend

The women's basketball team was a unanimous pick to win the ACC Championship as voted on in the ACC women's basketball preseason poll by members of the press. Duke received all 48 first place votes and Alana Beard and Iciss Tillis were all named to the preseason All-ACC team. Following Duke was North Carolina, Virginia, N.C. State, Clemson, Georgia Tech, Maryland Florida State and Wake Forest. Coretta Brown of UNC, BrandiTeamer of UVa and Chrissy Floyd of Clemson were joined on the team by Beard and Tillis. If Duke were to win the conference it would be the third-straight title for the Blue Devils and the fourth in five years. The Blue Devils have also been ranked No. 1 in the country in numerous preseason magazines. •

1 Miami 40, West Virginia 23 3 Virginia Tech 20, Temple 10 4 Notre Dame 34, No. 18 Florida State 24 5 Georgia 52, Kentucky 24 6 Ohio State 13, No. 20 Penn State 7 7 Texas 21, No. 22 lowa State 10 8 Washington State 21, Arizona 13 9 lowa 34, No. 15 Michigan 9 No, 10 N. C. State 38, Clemson 6 No. 11 USC 44, No. 19 Oregon 33 No. 12 Alabama 34, No. 25 Tennessee 14 No. 13 Colorado 37 Texas Tech 13 No. 14 Kansas State 44, Baylor 14 No. 16 Arizona State 27 Washington 16 Auburn 31. No. 17 LSU 7 No. 21 Bowling Green 38, Ball State 20 No, 24 Colorado State 37 Brigham Young 10

Editor: Paul Doran Managing Editor: Tyler Rosen Photography Editor: Robert Tai Graphics Editor: Brian Morray Sr. Associate Editor: Evan Davis Associate Editors: Nick Christie, Mike Corey, Neelum Jeste

Writers: Jesse Colvin, Paul Crowley, Abby Gold, Gabe Githens, Michael Jacobson, Colin Kennedy, Paula Lehman, Robby Levine, Ted Mann, Assaad Nasr, Sarah O'Connor, Jake Poses, Shane Ryan, Robert Samuel, Adam Schmelzer, Brian Smith, Catherine Sullivan, Matt Sullivan, C.K. Swett, Emily Vaughan, Jeff

Vernon, Adam Yoffie Special thanks to Chronicle editor Dave Ingram and managing editor Kevin Lees

Founded

in 1983, Sportswrap is the

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

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

NCAA Top 25 No. No. No. No. No. No. No. No.

Sportswrap

sports@chronicle.duke.edu

Game OF THE Women's soccer

Battle at Fetzer

3

The women's soccer team played second-ranked North Carolina to a ti’e.

Men's Soccer

Carolina two-step

3

The men's soccer team split a pair of games against in-state foes.

Men's basketball Dahntay's house •

5

Dahntay Jones lit up the Blue-White Scrimmage, dropping 28 points in as many minutes.

World Senes

City of Angels

By beating the Giants 4-1 Sunday night the Anaheim Angels won their first World Series

Friday, Nov. 1, 7 p.m. Kosklnen Stadium

Field Hockey Appalachian Trail •

The field hockey team continued its winning ways, beating Appalachian State 4-1.

Volleyball

Men's soccer vs. Wake Forest

Demonized

7

The Blue Devils got revenge from an earlier season loss to Wake Forest.

The streaky Blue Devils (9-4-1, 3-2 in the ACC) host conference rival Wake Forest (90-3, 3-0-1) in matchup that could seriously affect ACC standings and seedings for the conference's upcoming tournament in Cary. If Duke can topple the only undefeated team in ACC play, the Blue Devils are virtually assured a safe seed for the tournament.

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Spoitswrai

The Chronicle

October 28.

Women’s soccer holds No. 2 UNC goal-less in draw By GABE GITHENS The Chronicle

0 CHAPEL HILL After 110 minutes of fast-paced play at Field, the UNC ~0 women’s soccer team Fetzer (6-7-2) drew a 00 tie from No. 2 North Carolina (13-1-3) Sunday afternoon in their first meeting since losing to their arch rivals in the NCAA tournament last season. The Tar Heels’—the countries most storied program—last ACC loss at home came to the Blue Devils in 1994, and Duke pushed UNC to the limit again Sunday. After the first half featured a measly seven shots by both teams, the second half began at a feverish pitch. The Tar Heels pushed the ball into their attacking zone several times, as All-American Candidate Susan Bush blasted a shot on net just inside the penalty area with 38 minutes remaining in the half. Duke quickly counter-attacked and used Gwendolyn Oxenham’s speed on the right side to serve the ball into UNC’s 18-yard box. Carolyn Riggs connected on a cross and volleyed a shot toward UNC netminder Aly Winget. Head coach Robbie Church was pleased with his team’s effort after a lackluster performance in Wednesday’s 2-0 loss to Virginia. “When you come to Carolina and play on their field, it’s a tough game,” Church said. “They have some ungodly records on this field. What a great effort the girls put out today. It was unbelievable.” Duke’s best scoring opportunity of the match came briefly after Riggs’ volley was stopped in the 52nd minute. Forward Brigid Bowdell snuck behind the UNC defenders and beat Tar Heel keeper Winget on a volley Duke

from 12 yards away. It looked as though Duke would take the game’s first lead before UNC midfielder Sara Randolph ran behind her own keeper and cleared the ball off the goaline to prevent a 1-0 deficit. Blue Devil goalie Thora Helgadottir, who made several game-saving plays Sunday, said her team’s mentality was confident. “Last year after we lost to them in the second round [of the NCAA tournament] we swore that we would never lose to them again,” Helgadottir said. “We prepared in the same way as usual, but I think our minds were working differently because it was a big game.” The Duke keeper put on a display of excellence in the latter stages of the second half while keeping all 14 of UNO’s second half shots out of the net. With 12 minutes left, the Tar Heels made a persistent attack that culminated with a scramble in Duke’s penalty box. Alyssa Ramsey blasted a shot to Helgadottir’s left and the Duke goalie made a spectacular kick save. Just seconds later the ball ricocheted to UNC forward Anne Morrell who tried to beat Helgadottir to the left. Once again, she made a kick save but this time the ball was cleared out of Duke’s defensive zone. Despite UNO’s high powered offensive attack, Church was not willing to adjust his team’s playing style. Both overtimes were characterized by a much slower pace since neither team wanted to lose on a golden goal after 90 minutes of exhausting play “We’re upset with only getting a tie but with the way things have been going the last two games we’re happy about the shutout,” Helgadottir. “We have to win the next two games to make the tournament and that’s what we’re going to do.”

FRESHMAN CAROLYN RIGGS played a large role in helping draw North Carolina this weekend.

Men’s soccer beats Greensboro, falls to Charlotte 1-0 By MIKE COREY The Chronicle

The men’s soccer team improved on 1 last year’s 0-2 finish at the Big Four Duke 0 Tournament by defeating UNC Greensboro 2-1, before falling to host UNC Charlotte 1-0 Sunday afternoon. “We came out ofit 1-1,” coach John Rennie said. “We wanted to be 2-0, but Charlotte played a very good

UNC-C

game and came away with it.” In what Rennie considered one of his team’s better overall performances, Duke was simply unable to score against the otherwise outmatched 49ers. The Blue Devils (10-5-1) outshot Charlotte 8-5, controlling the game’s tempo by consistently maintaining possession. “We played very well—played great defense—but you can’t win if you don’t score goals,” Rennie said. Duke’s defense was so dominant, in fact, that the 49ers didn’t get a shot off on goalie Justin Trowbridge until the 54th minute of the game. Unfortunately, one was enough for Charlotte (9-5-1) as the indirect kick from just outside the penalty box sailed into the goal. The Blue Devils countered by penetrating the 49er defense and creating opportunities, though 49er goalie Lucas McKanos collected four saves on the day. A handful of other Duke strikes sailed into the outside of the net. “We just couldn’t finish our chances, and they finished their first one,” Rennie said. Trevor Perea, an All-ACC performer who missed most of last season due to injuries, was the impetus of

SENIOR CO-CAPTAIN SCOTT NOBLE helped lead the men’s soccer team to a 1-1 record over the weekend.

Duke’s best chance to score. He fired a low shot on goal, but it was kicked off the line by a 49er defender, giving Charlotte its second consecutive 1-0 upset victory over the Blue Devils in two years. “It waS a game we felt we had to win,” Charlotte coach John Tart said. “Duke is a great team. I am proud of this win and our players for our effort this en-

tire weekend.” The host 49ers ended up winning the tournament, having defeated N.C. State 2-0 Friday. Duke’s play was consistent throughout the weekend, as Owoicho Adogwa tallied his team-leading sixth and seventh goals Friday evening in a defeat of UNC Greensboro in the opening round of the tournament. Though the Spartans captured an early lead with a goal in the second minute of play, their defense was unable to slow Adogwa, who has scored six of his goals in the past six games. Duke knotted the score in the 16th minute when Adogwa lifted a ball over Spartan goalie Jay Benefield who had slipped about 10 yards outside of the penalty box. Rennie’s squad took the lead for good in the 34th minute, when Jordan Cila found Adogwa for the game-winning goal. For Cila, who trails Adogwa with six goals, leads Duke with eight assists and 20 points in 2002. Though the Blue Devils garnered just one of two possible victories this weekend, the team’s improvement continued unhindered. Duke will look to continue the trend Nov. 1 when it hosts ACC foe Wake Forest.

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Sportswrai

4 �Monday, October 28, 2002

Resurging Maryland clobbers Duke Not much has changed in a year from the Duke-Maryland series, despite Duke’s rise and Maryland’s fall from last season.

By NICK CHRISTIE The Chronicle

45 After three consecutive narrow loses to Duke 12 top-flight ACC competition, the football team entered Saturday’s contest against Maryland hoping to finally come through and earn its first conference victory in three seasons. From the opening snap, their hopes never materialized. The Terrapins simply annihilated the Blue Devils, dominating almost every possible facet on their way to a 45-12 victory. Scoring touchdowns off the ground, through the air and via punt and interception, the Terrapins (6-2, 2-1 in the ACC) dealt Duke (2-7, 0-5) an embarrassing loss in front of a Parents’

Maryland

Running back Chris Douglas took the football on the first play from scrimmage and SMACK! Maryland’s All-American Linebacker E.J. Henderson’s vicious hit on Douglas knocked back the Duke football team’s significant progress this season to where the Blue Devils were a year ago. “The defense fed off [my hit],” Henderson said. “Everybody wants to make a big play on the first play of the game.” A few weeks into of the season, it appeared Maryland and Duke were heading toward the same middle-ground: the Terrapins falling from last year’s surprising ACC championship team and the Blue Devils ending their 23-game losing streak to establish themselves as a legitimate force in the ACC. It was clear from the beginning ofthe game that not much had changed since Maryland’s 59-17 win last year, and that maybe the separation between the two football programs had grown even more. The Terrapins dominated every facet of the game, showing no mercy to the de-

Weekend crowd. Stunned and struggling for answers, the Blue Devils tried to put Saturday’s debacle behind them as fast as possible, so they could focus on next week’s game. “I’m going to coach and figure that it was an anomaly,” said head coach Carl Franks. “That’s not the way we play. That’s not the way we’ve played all year... We did not play well anywhere today.”

pressed Blue Devils. “I can sum this game up pretty quickly: We simply got out-played, out-hit,

Maryland All-American linebacker

E.J. Henderson established Maryland’s dominance on the game’s first play from scrimmage, a Duke handoff to Chris Douglas.

out-run,

The 6-foot-2 250-pound junior Hen-

«

derson found himself unblocked and put a ferocious hit on the 190-pound Douglas, driving him backward into the ground after a one-yard gain. “It kind of set the tone, didn’t it?” Maryland head coach Ralph Friedgen said. “I loved it, loved it. I said, ‘Oh boy, here we go.’” From the opposite sideline, Franks could tell his side was in trouble. “When [they] kicked the ball off today I could tell we weren’t there,” Franks said. “We didn’t have the same intensity that we usually have, especially on that first offensive series.” Saturday saw the season debut of Maryland running back Bruce Perry, who, although a star for the 2001 Terps, had yet to play because of a torn groin muscle. The junior showed excellent speed on a 19-yard run—Maryland’s first offensive play—but left the game immediately with yet another injury, this time to his shoulder. The Terrapin running attack never missed a beat, however. Friedgen shuffled a a number of different backs in and out with great success, as Maryland finished with 151 rushing yards on 40 carries. Conversely, the Duke offense struggled mightily for the majority of

the afternoon. Only in the fourth quarter—by which they trailed 45-o—could the Blue Devils find the end zone, as backup quarterbacks Chris Dapolito and Chris Wispelway each threw touchdown passes.

For starter Adam Smith—who threw for a career-high 353 yards against No. 12 N.C. State, but managed only 109 against Maryland on 12of-23 passing—Saturday’s defeat proved sickening. “It feels terrible, to be honest,” he said. “To come out here on Parents’ Weekend where there are a lot of people in the stands and play as poorly as you possibly could, it hurts,”

Robert

f

out-passed,

out-tackled,” Franks said. “We couldn’t get our offense together, our defense together or

even our kicking game. That was a sloppy Samuel game. We’re a lot better

Game Commentary

than that. Maryland

started

the season 1-2, being blown-out by both Notre Dame and Florida State. Injuries KEVIN PENG/THE CHRONICLE

KENNETH STANFORD AND DEONTO McCORMICK sandwich Maryland tailback Mario Merrills during the Terrapins 45-12 demolition Saturday afternoon. Smith struggled for an explanation for Duke’s poor performance. The sophomore said that for some reason the Blue Devils felt unsure of

themselves. “Sometimes it just seems like not

everybody has their mind and their

heart 100 percent into it,” Smith said. “Today it just seemed like everybody was out there not really sure what was happening. We just seemed confused.” The Duke defense, which last week managed to hold national passing efficiency leader Phillip Rivers and the Wolfpack offense to just 24 points, had problems. Maryland ran and passed the ball with ease. All told, Maryland racked up 428 yards, almost 100 more than the Blue Devils. Facing little to no defensive pressure, quarterback Scott Mcßrien finished the day with 264 yards through the air, with most of his completions going to surprisingly wide open Maryland receivers. The Blue Devils were less then eager to dwell on their disappointing performance. “This game is behind us, there’s no doubt about that,” said defensive tackle Matt Zielinski. “When I say it’s east to fix, it is—the leaders are going to turn this thing around. There going to talk about attitude.... We didn’t have a swagger, we didn’t have the confidence in ourselves to go out there today and

do what we needed to do.”

Maryland 45, Duke 12 FINAL Maryland (6-2, 2-1) Duke (2-7,0-5)

1 10 0

2 21 3

3 14 0

4 0 12

F 45 12

First Quarter 10:10 (MD) Novak 51-yard FG. 8:14 (MD) Suter, 63-yard punt return. Second Quarter 10:21 (MD) Allen, 11-yard run (Novak). 9 plays, 77 yards. 4:02. 6:17 (MD) Cox 9-yard int. return. 0:25 (MD) Mcßrien-3 yard run (Novak). 8 plays, 80 yards, 3:20 Third Quarter 13:42(M0), Mcßrien 69-yard pass to Harrison (Novak). 3 plays, 80 yards, 1:18. 4:59 (MD), Mcßrien 16-yard pass to Monroe (Novak). 9 plays, 80 yards, 4:39. Fourth Quarter 4:49 (DU), Dapalito 14-yard pass to Sharpe. 13plays, 93 yards, 6:35. 0:47 (DU), Wispelwey 2-yard pass to Johnson. 8 plays, 61 yards, 3:11. First downs Rushes-yards (net) Passing yards (net) Passes (att-comp-int) Total Offense (plays-yards) Fumble retums-yards Punt returns-yards Kickoff returns-yards Interception retums-yards Punts (number-average)

Fumbles-lost

Maryland Terrapins

20 151 277 24-17-1 64-428 6-104 1-27

3-9 3-43.3

Duke Blue Devils

129 202 34-19-3 68-331 3-36 5-108 1--5 7-41.1

forced new players into positions, and after the early growing pains, the Terrapins have hit their stride, winning five consecutive games by an average of over 30 points. “I think we’re coming together as a team, as a unit,” Henderson said. Duke, on the other hand, has fallen off its horse. After Blue Devils 24-22 loss to No. 10 N.C. State last week, Duke hoped the final nail was hammered into the coffin

of the team’s dreaded recent past. Last week’s near upset even opened Maryland’s eyes. “I talked to the team [Friday] night about how football is a crazy game,” Maryland head coach Ralph Friedgen said. “I said ‘Did you see the game with Clemson and N.C. State? State looked pretty good. The team you’re playing [Saturday] should have beaten State. So if you don’t come to play, it’s going to happen.’ We came to play.” But the ghosts of last season were

Penalties-yards

Possession-time Sacks by (number-yards) RUSHING: Maryland—Downs 16 att, 60 yards; Harrison 3-31; Parson 5-24; Perry 1-19; Allen 2-16 yards, Merrils 3-1; Fiddler 1-4; Kelley 2 3; TEAM 2-- 4; Mcßrien 5-- 7. Duke—Ruff 9-44; Douglas 10-38; Wade 5- 22; Dapolito 3-6; Wispelwey 1-7; Smith 4-5; Elliott 1-4; Landrum 1- -1 yards. PASSING: Maryland—Mcßrien 16-21,264 yards, 2 TD, 1 INI; Kelley 1 3,13 yards. Duke—Smith 12-23,109 yards, 2 INT; Dapolito 5-8, 67 yards, ITD, 11NT; Wispelwey 2-3, 26 yards, 1 TD. RECEIVING: Maryland—Harrison 3 rec, 103 yards; Monroe 3-42 Melendez 3-37; Downs 2-13; Williams 1-28; Lynch 1-18; Dugan 1-14 Merrils 1-13; Parson 1-6; Allen 1-3. Duke —Johnson 7-69; Sharpe 462; Douglas 4-41; Elliott 2-12; Powell 1-12; Landrum 1-6. INTERCEPTIONS: Maryland—Foxworth, 1 INT, 0 yards; Williams 1-0; Cox 1-9. Duke—Stanford 1--5. -

Stadium: Wallace Wade Stadium Officials: Courtney Mauzy (referee). George Burton (umpire), Tyrone Davis (linesman), JackWeiland (line judge), Lewis Ryan (back judge), Ronnie Stewart (field judge). Van Golmont (side judge) Temperature: 65 degrees/clear. Wind: West, 3 m.p.h.

readily apparent with Duke falling behind 45-0 mid-way through the third quarter before scoring two garbage touchdowns with trashy extra point attempts, making the final score 45-12. Conversations of losing streaks, something Duke hoped to put in the casket, have re-emerged, with the Blue Devils breaking their own record of consecutive ACC losses with 22. The team was convinced that the effort was a shift from the norm, and that it will be able to get back on track. “We stress playing as a whole and coming together, but that’s something we just didn’t do today,” junior defensive tackle Matt Zielinski said.


The Chronicle

October 28,

White crushes Blue 72-50

White 72, Blue 50 FINAL Blue White

1 53

Blue Horvath Redick Sanders

1

Ewing Dockery

Means Team

F 50 72

R PF PIS A TO BLK S HP 35332 0 0 23 10222 0 1 30 0 24 7 4 14 11 t 2 4 17 3 4 0' 1 3CI 526 450 330 8 5 8 0 0 Oi 0 IT 0 0 0 0 0 012

Thompson

Totals

2 15 19

35

2

22-59

2-4

28 20

50

13

14

«

150

Three-pointers; Horvath (1-3), Redick (0-7), Ewing (3-7], Doctery (04)

Technical fouls; None White Melchionni Williams

R PF PTS A TO BLK S 1 41202 3 0 7 2 IB 0 t 1 4 8 0 16 3 3 2 32 8 93 0 2 6 2 28 1 3 11 01021 I 1

Randolph

Duhon Jones Buckner Team Totals

JEFF BURLIN and ANTHONY CROSS/THE CHRONICLE

(clockwise from top left) DANIEL EWING (blue) tries to get past senior Dahntay Jones. JONES, who led all scorers with 28 points, drives to the hoop as J.J. Redick tries to defend. CHRIS DUHON (white) and Sean Dockery get into a little friendly one-on-one competition out in the perimeter. DOCKERY drives (blue) past senior Andre Buckner. CASEY SANDERS takes to the ball over freshman Shelden Williams.

MP 24 29 29 28 26 12

2

27-51

16-20

30

8

72

15

13

7

15#

Three-pointers: Melchionni (0-3), Williams (0-1), Randolph (0-1) Duhon (1-4), Jones (1-2), Buckner (0-1) Technical fouls: None

Arena; Cameron Indoor Stadium Officials: Woods. Pitts, Spainhour

Attendance—9.3l4


PAGE 6 �Monday, October 28, 2002

Sportswrai

Heavenly finish: Angels capture World Series Anaheim receives sterling start from rookie hurler, pitching on three days rest, to win crown By BEN WALKER

The Associated Press

Angels

4 ANAHEIM, Calif.

This World Series is fit Giants 1 for the silver screen and the stars are the never-say-die Anaheim Angels. They came out ofnowhere. They win Game 7 with a rookie pitcher. They beat the best hitter in the world. And they did not need help from a monkey. John Lackey, Garret Anderson and the Angels made it all come true, beating Barry Bonds and the San Francisco Giants 4-1 Sunday night for the franchise’s first championship in 42 years. “These fans have been waiting a long, -long time for this,” MVP Troy Glaus said. “And I know we’re all happy to be part of the team to bring it to them.” A day after it blew a 5-0 lead in the seventh inning, San Francisco never got close to winning its first title. “The turning point was basically they came back last night,” Giants manager Dusty Baker said. Bonds closed out one of the most dominant overall Series performances ever, yet it wasn’t enough. When it was over, all he could do was watch from the corner of the dugout as the Angels celebrated. “I went l-for-3 with a walk, that’s a good day. Am I supposed to go 3-for-3 with three home runs?” Bonds said. “What do you want from me?” The highest-scoring Series in history came down to pitching, as it always seems to do in October. Behind Lackey and the bullpen, Anaheim had too much to win baseball’s first all wild-

card matchup. “I can’t believe it, man,” Anderson said. “It’s been a long year—a testament to the guys who never gave up.” Anaheim won 99 games during the regular season, got the wild card into the playoffs, and rode their non-stop pressure offense to a world championship. “I’ve been in this game for a long time and have never been around a group of

guys so passionate,” said Anaheim manager Mike Scioscia, a member of the Dodgers’ 1981 and 1988 World Series’

championship teams. “It’s much better as a player. I’m enjoying it, but what these guys have done—they’re going to enjoy it for a long time.” The Angels became the eighth straight home team to win Game 7 ofthe

World Series. History was on their side from the start and so was an omen a skywriting plane put a gigantic halo over Edison Field before the first pitch. The Rally Monkey was ready, but only showed up a couple of times on the

video scoreboard. “We love the monkey because ofwhat it does for us. It’s a good-luck charm,” Lackey said. “But it’s good not to see him because that means we’re winning.” Lackey, pitching on three days’ rest, became only the second rookie to win Game 7 of the Series. He joined Babe Adams, who pitched Pittsburgh past Ty Cobb and Detroit in 1909. Bonds wound up 8-for-17 (.471) with four homers, a .700 on-base percentage and 1.294 slugging percentage. When it ended, Bonds walked down the dugout and picked up his glove. He walked back, tapped his son on the back and walked down the runway as the Angels celebrated on the field. “You want the results to be different,” Bonds said. “They outplayed us, they deserve it. They beat us. They’re

world champions.” Lackey wasn’t even with the Angels, stuck in Triple-A, when they went 6-14 for the worst start in team history. But with both staffs worn down, the 24-yearold righty gave Anaheim exactly what it needed with five innings of one-run ball. “It’s not bad. This is where you want to be,” Lackey said. “It’s a long way from Salt Lake.” Anderson, finally due to get the recognition he’s always deserved, hit a threerun double off Livan Hernandez in the third for a 4-1 lead. The monkey mascot made a brief,

MIKE BLAKE/REUTERS

TROY GLAUS and the Anaheim Angles celebrate their shocking World Series triumph early appearance, then sat back and let the sellout crowd of 44,598 bang their ThunderStix like crazy. “Well, I just wanted to get into a situation where I’d be able to hit my pitch, not do too much,” Anderson said. Hernandez seemed uncomfortable from the start, constantly pawing at the mound while trying to find his control. He looked nothing like the MVP of the 1997 World Series for Florida and instead resembled the pitcher who tied for the NL lead in losses this season, which he did with 16. A surprising lapse by Eckstein, who

took offAnderson’s liner to center field

and was doubled off, enabled Hernandez to overcome two walks in the first. Hernandez was not so lucky the next inning when he walked Scott Spiezio with two outs and Bengie Molina followed with a double that tied it at 1-1. Molina added another double, and the hits were his way of honoring his father who was faraway. Earlier Sunday, former amateur outfielder Benjamin Molina Santana was in Puerto Rico, where he was inducted into the island’s

hall of fame. The Giants took a 1-0 lead in the second on singles by Benito Santiago and J.T. Snow and a sacrifice fly by Sanders.

*

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The Moit

Mh-Myin? Locals Read all about them in the

October 31 Issue of

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Sportswrai

The Chronicle

October 28,

Volleyball downs Wake Forest 3-1 By PAUL CROWLEY The Chronicle

The volleyball team downed Wake Forest 3-1 Friday, earning a crucial Wake Forest 1 road win that extends Duke’s winning run to five. Freshman Sarah Salem and junior Arielle Linderman both turned in career performances, which improved the streaking Blue Devils to 19-6 on the season and 7-3 in the Atlantic Coast Conference. Duke won the first two games of the match, 30-20 and 30-19. The Demon Deacons came back to win the close third match, 30-25. The Blue Devils ended any hometown hopes of victory with a 30-21 win in the fourth game of the match. The win was important for the Duke squad, which is aiming for the conference championship this year. “Now, we’re playing every game like it’s the ACC tournament,” junior Krista Dill said, explaining the recent streak. “We’re practicing and playing with a purpose.” Duke

CHRISSY ASHLEY and the field hockey team used a second-half charge to win.

Duke downs Mountaineers

3

The added purpose was evident in the play of both Salem and Linderman. Salem logged a match-best 24 kills and a .396 hitting percentage. “That was definitely the best volleyball I’ve played in college,” Salem said. Linderman weighed in with career highs in blocks and kills with four and nine, respectively. She also recorded a match-high .429 hitting percentage and 29 assists. “I really wanted to block well and create a balanced offense,” Linderman said, “and I think I was able to.” The five-game streak has come entirely against conference competition, and has been credited to hard work earlier in the season and a change in attitude. The victory was sweetened by the three-game drubbing the Blue Devils had received at the hands ofWake Forest in Cameron this September. “[That loss] really motivated us,” Dill said. “Wake is a good opponent, but we’re a tough opponent for other teams, too.”

CLEARANCE MANY ITEMS HAVE BEEN DRASTICALLY REDUCED!

By NEELUM JESTE The Chronicle

AND MORE

An offensive resurgence in the second Duke 4 half led to the field hockey team’s (11App. St. 1 6) 4-1 victory over Appalachian State (4-13) yesterday. Duke netted three goals after entering halftime tied with the Mountaineers at one goal apiece. “Our mistake was taking the first half too lightly,” senior captain Sarah Wright said. “In the second half, we just shot the ball and got good corners. We played

smarter overall.” The No. 12 Blue Devils started off the contest when junior Kim Van Kirk dribbled through a herd of Appalachian State defenders and drove a shot into the goal at the 14:15 mark. Van Kirk leads the team with 10 goals on the season. The Mountaineers’ Nara Brooks tied the game less than five minutes later by sneaking past a Duke defender and directing a shot into the back of the cage near the post, off a Bridgette Burkhardt pass. The Mountaineers, however, failed to get past Duke’s freshman goalkeeper Christy Morgan the rest of the day. Burkhardt led Appalachian State with four assists. “We didn’t play the best we could have in the first half,” senior captain Chrissy Ashley said. ‘We really stepped it up in the second. We focused on the simple things and increased the tempo and overall intensity. We came out with a win and that is what matters.” Duke dominated the second half with 17 shots, limiting Appalachian State to none. The Blue Devils notched 21 total shots for the game, while the Mountaineers’ sole shot of the day came before halftime. Just over a minute and a half after halftime, sophomore back Suzanne Simpson scored the go-ahead shot past Mountaineer goalkeeper Kate Ryno that eventually gave Duke the victory. In a five-minute stretch, the Blue Devils earned six penalty comers, and went on to earn five more in the second half. They totaled 16 for the afternoon, while not allowing Appalachian State to gain a single one the entire game. At the 60:58 mark, junior forward Stacey Tsougas scored to give Duke a 3-1 lead. The final score of the day came with Jessica Pluck’s breakaway dive that redirected the ball into the top of the goal, with 36 seconds left in the game. Grant, credited with the assist, led the team with nine on the day. “They were better than we thought they were going to be,” Wright said. “One thing coach said was that we did not give them enough respect, which is true. We did not show that we needed to play to a certain level.”

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October 28.

The Chronicle

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The Chronicle

DA SILVA from page 8 ment and economic stagnation and fears that the former radical union leader could worsen the country’s economic woes. “Lula is the only who can bring about the changes that the country needs to reduce unemployment and improve the standard of living of the people,” said Eloisa Marques, 38, who was laid off earlier this year from a drug store. But standing next to Marques in a voting line in an industrial suburb of Sao Paulo, Waldir Conde said he

preferred Serra. “Lula doesn’t have experience to govern,” Conde said. ‘To rule a country like ours, which is dominated by the United States, it is necessary to have a lot of experience and a firm hand. Serra showed he has that.” Brazil’s next president will have to pull the world’s ninth-biggest economy from the brink of recession, create more jobs and try to lift nearly 50 million Brazilians from poverty.

MONDAY, OCTOBER 28, 2002 � PAGE 11

As he voted in a school in a working class neighborhood of Sao Paulo, Silva spoke of those Brazilians, and the millions of others who live a hand-to-

mouth existence. “I want to dedicate this election to the suffering poor of our beloved Brazil,” Silva said as some 200 supporters outside waved Brazilian flags and small plastic banners with the slogan “Now it is Lula.” Despite a 36 percent showing in a recent pre-election poll, Serra appeared upbeat as he voted in a fashionable neighborhood of Sao Paulo, a city of 16 million. “I am confident,” Serra said. “We believe that today, we are going to surge ahead at the moment of voting... The result comes not from the polls but from the voting

machines.” But Silva hoped to celebrate his 57th birthday, which fell on election day, with a victory, capping his rise from the son of a poor farmer to leader of Latin America’s biggest and most populous nation. Silva has criticized current President Fernando Henrique Cardoso’s free-market policies but is considering fiscal conservatives for his economic team.

WELLSTONE CRASH Ashcroft. Carnahan’s widow, Jean, was appointed to serve in his place and is now running in a special election against Republican Jim Talent, with the winner completing the six-year term originally won by Mel Carnahan. Jean Carnahan called Wellstone’s death “heartbreaking news.” Wellstone was up against Republican Norm Coleman, a former mayor of St. Paul and President George W. Bush’s choice to challenge the two-term incumbent. “The people ofMinnesota have experienced a terrible, unimaginable tragedy,” Coleman said. At the site, FBI spokesperson Paul McCabe said there was no indication the crash was related to terrorism. He also said it would take time to recover the bodies, which remained in the wreckage. “He was a plainspoken fellow who did his best for his state and for his country” Bush said. “May the good Lord bless those who grieve.”


The Chronicle

PAGE 12 � MONDAY, OCTOBER 28, 2002

MONDALE from page 6 White House spokesperson Ari Fleischer said Sunday the administration would wait until the Democrats formally name a replacement before commenting on the race. “It’s still appropriate to let the people of Minnesota grieve,” he said. State Republican officials have said they will attempt to cast a MondaleColeman race as a choice between a reluctant placeholder and someone who is eager to do the work. “Walter Mondale is a good man,” Coleman said Sunday, declining to comment further on his potential opponent. “There will be a campaign, but now is not the time.” Mondale, 74, has not returned calls to reporters or answered the door at his Minneapolis home. Those close to Mondale said he is not expected to comment publicly on a potential candidacy until after Tues-

QUAD DINNER

day’s memorial service for Wellstone, his wife, daughter and three campaign workers who died in the plane crash. Relatives ofthe six passengers and two pilots visited the northern Minnesota crash site Sunday. A reconstruction

of the flight showed everything appeared normal

as the pilot made his approach, Carol Carmody, acting chairperson ofthe Na-

tional Transportation Safety Board said Sunday. She said they still do not know why about a minute after the last radio contact, the aircraft began drifting south, away from the airport, and slowing down before it crashed.

Erlandson said the blessing of Wellstone’s surviving family members makes Mondale the clear favorite. “He is certainly the public sentiment front-runner, among activists, among party leadership,” Erlandson said. “We’ve had hundreds of phone calls and e-mails.”

from page 1

focus is the interaction they have with their peers and the faculty. When Loßiondo and Campus Council made plans for the dinners, they came up with a theme of ethics and integrity to be the center of discussions. Graduate and professional students come from varying fields of study—from sociology to medicine—to moderate discussion. They bring in case studies from their areas of interest and present different perspectives on the issues. Audrey Beck, a sociology graduate student who organizes the graduate student presence at the dinners, said they are trying to expand their role with the undergraduate student body, possibly to include one-on-one mentoring. With the guidance of the graduate students, the undergraduates can talk about issues they normally would not, Loßiondo said. “[The discussions] are low-key and

LACTATION

from page 4

best rooms, there are inadequacies,” said Shannon Johnson, a member of Parents @ Duke and one of the appointed members of the coordinating council. The lactation room subcommittee’s evaluation noted some of the deficiencies of the existing rooms—unclean pumps, poor lighting and no door locks, to name a few. “I visited the lactation room in Perkins. It did not look sanitary and there was no lock on the door,” said Michelle Danis, who is expecting her

first child in November. She also indicated a scarcity of information for new mothers. “It was hard to find information on where lactation rooms were on campus, and even once I found a room I wasn’t happy with its condition,” said Danis, a visiting instructor in economics. Deirdre Gordon, program director of

the Divinity School, noted similar dissatisfaction with the existing rooms. “I had difficulty finding a room, and I couldn’t find anyone to tell me what kind of attachments I would have to get to use the pump that’s provided,”

she said. “A lack of information was a real impediment to me using those rooms.”

As a result, Gordon said, she opted to buy her own electric pump—a luxury that many employees can not afford. In addition, she has a private office with a locking door, which she said was necessary in providing a comfortable environment in which to pump milk. “I am lucky, but some folks on campus don’t have those means,” she said. “For those who choose to breast feed, it’s a very important thing to

them. It would be great for Duke as an employer to make that easier on nursing moms because it shouldn’t be be-

tween coming back to work and nursing your child.”

not structured, with no forced interaction,” she said. “I think the students appreciate that.” There does not seem to be any worry that only friends will attend and negate the goal ofhelping students get to know other members of their quad. “I don’t think all of these people are friends,” said sophomore Anthony Vitarelli, treasurer of Campus Council. “There’s definite mixing. In such a small space, you can’t have five groups of friends sitting alone.” The average turnout has been around 40 students, in addition to the graduate students and faculty members. So far, four quads and Trent Drive Hall

their resident advisers that they would be attending. Organizers said students may simply not know what they are missing, either because RAs and RCs are not publicizing the events or because students ignore their email invitations. Beck does not feel that this is a serious cause for concern. “It’s too early to be hypercritical,” she says. “If we’re at this stage in a year or two then we may say it’s time to move on.” While the fall semester is a test period, Loßiondo has plans to expand the program in the spring if enough interest is shown. She said it is difficult to quantify the have had their own dinners. With the exception of success of the quad dinner program beyond attendance since the goals are to create interaction. Originally the Homecoming and Fall Break weekends, a quad dinner has been scheduled each Sunday since Sept. 15. plan was only to include West Campus quads. However However, Craven Quadrangle, which was scheduled Trent and Central Campus have already been involved. for Sept. 22, was forced to cancel due to a lack of inLoßiondo would like to invite the East Campus links—terest. Moreover, the past two weeks there have been for example, Randolph Dormitory with the West-Edens as many as 20 no-shows from students who notified Link—in the spring.

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The Chronicle

MONDAY, OCTOBER 28, 2002 � PAGE 13

IRAQ PROTEST

«

tion for attacking Iraq has become a monetary rather than moral one “In the name of fear and fighting terror, we are giving the reigns of power to oil men

Jackson said. “In two years, we’ve lost two million jobs, unemployment is up, the stock market down, poverty up. We need regime change in this country.”

During the speeches at the looking for distraction from Vietnam Memorial, organizers distheir disastrous economic perplayed bar graphs that depicted formance, oil men more interspending for military mobilization ested in the financial bottom eclipsing spending on domestic edline than a moral bottom line,” ucation and other public services. Sarandon said. After the conclusion of the speechHer comments echoed the es, demonstrators marched opinions of several members of around the perimeter of the White the Duke delegation, who agreed House and to the Washington that unilateral intervention on Monument. the part of the United States Mainstream discussion fowas indicative of a new wave of cused on criticisms of a unilaterAmerican imperialism in the al war effort, but there were Middle East. those who moved to offer alterEmily Antoon, a freshman, native policies to the Bush adfelt obligated to attend the ministration. protest on behalf of children in “A lot of people proposed liftIraq and other Middle Eastern ing the existing sanctions on nations with whom she has Iraq. They have been prevented been communicating for the from receiving food and health past year. care for too long. Through the “I see the war in Iraq as moUnited Nations, the United tivated by racist and imperialist States must pursue a diplomatopinions,” Antoon said. “We need ic solution,” said freshman lan to realize the consequences a Faerstein. war would have on the civilian “What I got from all of this population of the country. Rewas that there are similarities moving Saddam [Hussein] will between Iraq and the United destroy hundreds of thousands States. Death is death. A of lives in the process.” woman’s belly turned inside out While many protesters fois the same color no matter cused on the international imwhere you are,” concluded freshpact of the war, several demonman Jules Bruno. “We need to strators, including the Rev. Jesse rethink our strategy.” Jackson, pleaded with governThe Associated Press conment officials to consider the do- tributed to this story.

DAVE LEWIS/THE CHRONICLE

TUAN NGUYEN (left), U.S. REPRESENTATIVE DAVID PRICE AND KEN NELSON, the Republican, Democratic and Libertarian nominees for North Carolina’s fourth Congressional district, speak at a Duke forum Sunday night

FORUM from page 3 tally ill of Durham was his top priority. “I feel a strong moral obligation to provide services to those who need them,” Cousin said. He said the state government is withholding funds due to the state budget crisis and may force the county to spend up to $4 million more annually on mental health care. Though he did not outline specific remedies to this problem, he encouraged anyone interested to attend the board’s Monday meeting, when the issue will be discussed in detail. Commissioner Becky Heron said that dealing with the budget crisis was also her top priority. “We’re going to have to find additional sources of revenue so we don’t have to cut services,” Heron said. Former City Council member Mary Jacobs, who is seeking her first term on the board,

stressed economic development as the key to success for Durham. “There needs to be an improvement of the tax base,” said Jacobs, who added that more tax revenue meant more funds for education and other services. She cited her support for The Streets at SouthPoint mall as an example of what the board should be doing to improve the quality of life in Durham. However, Heron said she believed many of the jobs and tax revenues created by SouthPoint were present at the old South Square mall, which closed around the time SouthPoint opened. She said that SouthPoint did not real-

ly represent economic growth, but instead the movement of jobs and income from one place to another, at the cost of the environment. Jacobs countered that SouthPoint is a much higher quality mall than South Square, which was declining in popularity, and that SouthPoint improves the quality of life ofits customers and

Durham as a whole.

New and Notable Biology Courses for Spring 2003 INTRO TO MATHEMATICAL BIOLOGY

Dr. John Mercer <jmercer@duke.edu> TTh 9:10-10:25AM Applying mathematics to biological problems drawn from cell and molecular biology, molecular evolution, enzyme catalysis, biochemical pathways, and developmental biology. Prereq; Math 103 or equivalent. NS, M, QID

EVOL/SYSTEMATICS/SOCIAL RELEVANCE

Drs. Lutzoni

&

Pryer <pryer@duke.edu>

810 142

12:30PM

“Pastoral Care to the LGBT Community,” York Chapel (Divinity School)

L

PLANTS;

Thursday, October 31, 2002 at The Divinity School

810 105

TTh 2:15-3:3OPM

+

Lab

Phylogenetic principles and methods of analysis used to recognize more than seventy major families of vascular plants, with a focus on those that have altered human civilizations. STS

4:OOPM

MOLECULAR PLANT PHYSIOLOGY

“Confronting Injustices through

Christian Social Action,” Alumni Commons Room

810 152 TTh 10:55-12:10PM

Drs. Sun and Pei <tps@duke.edu> Principal physiological processes of plants, including photosynthesis, water relations, growth and development, stress responses and disease resistance. Also, current applications using transgenic plants and molecular biology techniques.

:nts develop/molec genetics 205L PE Drs. Perz-Edwards & McClay <akperz@duke.edu> MW or TTh 1:10-5:10PM Learn about developmental biology using plant & animal model systems while acquiring lab skills. Pre-reqs: Prior or concurrent enrollment in 810 119. R 810 216L

LIMNOLOGY

Dr. Daniel Livingstone <livingst@duke.edu> MWF 9:10-10:00AM lab Lakes, ponds, and streams; their origin, development, geochemistry, energy balance, productivity, and the dynamics of plant and animal communities. Lab includes field trips. Prereqs: Bio 25L, Chem 12L or 22L, Math 32, and physics; or instructor consent. QID, R +

CONTEMPORARY ISSUES IN IMMUNOLOGY

810 2955.93

Dr. Donna Kostyu <ddkk@duke.edu> W 3:50-6:20 PM Explore two contemporary issues transplantation and vaccine development from both biologic and non-scientific perspectives. STS, R

(Divinity School) WITH RECEPTION FOLLOWING

Rev. Perry,

gay clergyman, AND FOUNDER/MODERATOR OF openly

Metropolitan Community Church,

(a Christian denomination with a PRIMARY, AFFIRMING MINISTRY TO LGBT PERSONS, THEIR FAMILY AND FRIENDS).

mM m

mm*m

Vf/ Sponsored

by:

-

-

www.biology.duke.edu

Sacred Worth (LGBT and Ally students in the Divinity School) DukeOUT (Association of LGBTQ Graduate and Professional Students), and Imani McChurch


Classifieds

PAGE 14 � MONDAY, OCTOBER 28,2002 The Michael W. Krzyzewski Human Laboratory, Performance Department of Sports Medicine, is considering applicants for a new

Undergraduate Internship Program. Interns will be involved in behav-

GET HIGH WITH THE CHAPEL DEAN OCT. 31-

ioral and medical research, and athlete performance testing protocols of the Duke Sport Performance Program. Not a paid position. An interest in sport pyschology and/or exercise physiology is especially desirable. Email letter of interest to Assistant Professor Marc Taylor,

www.chapel.duke.edu/dinner

WITH THE HIGH GET CHAPEL DEAN OCT. 31-

www.chapel.duke.edu/dinner

mktaylor@duke.edu.

JUNIORS

JUNIOR? TEACHING? MINORITY?

ESPECIALLY

IN THE Information available in 04 Allen Building for Josephine De Karman

HUMANITIES:

Information about the Rockefeller Brothers Fund fellowship program in 02 Allen Building.

Fellowships

competition. receive $16,000

Winners award for full senior year.

Beautiful 1 BR Apts (duplex) near Campus. Available Now $425-$525. 416-0393 www.bobschmitzproper-

Apts. For Rent

WHAT IS INFORMATION? A Multidisciplinary Faculty Roundtable David Brady, Electrical Fred Dretske, Engineering. Philosophy. Herbert Eldsbrunner, Computer Science. Scott Lindroth, Music. Stephen Nowicki, Biology. Sim Sitkin, Fuqua School of Business. Priscilla Wald, English. Wednesday, October 30, 2002. 7:30-9:00 PM Room 240 John Hope Franklin Center for International Studies. Kimberly Jenkins Chair in Philosophy and New Technologies Center for Reflection on Science and Technology (CReST). Information Science and Information Studies (ISIS).

27 FLOOR PLANS FROM $399* ON IBR APTS TO $499* ON 2 BR APTS— 2 BLOCKS TO DUKE. 4 MONTH FREElFlexible lease terms. Check our specials! Duke Apartments, 493-4509. Villa www.apts.com/dukevilla. ‘subject to change. EHO. 3 Blocks from Duke. Furnished 2 bedroom, 2 bath apartment, washer/dryer. $650/month 919- 2702717.

TWO CONVENIENT DURHAM LOCATIONS

IS YOUR HAIRDRESSER MIA?

2/BDR apartment, alarm system included: 907 Sedgefield Street; 1/BDR loft: 1202 Broad Streed. Call 490-5152.

Mia is now at C-squared, 811 Ninth St. North, Suite 130, 416-5000.

Laura W. Keohane

Attorney & Counselor at Law

BARTENDERS NEEDED!!!

ties.com

Job placeEarn $l5-30/hr. ment assistance is top prioriRaleigh’s Bartending ty. School. Call now for info about our Fall tuition special. Ask for details on how to save an extra $lOO off tuition. Offer ends October 2002!! HAVE FUN! MAKE MONEY! MEET PEOPLE!!! (919)-676-0774. www.cocktailmixer.com.

Beautiful, brand new one-BR apt on Onslow St., one block from East Campus. Private parking; central AC; washer/dryer. $7OO/month. 613-7247.

THE CLOSEST APT COMMUNITY TO DUKE. 2 MONTHS FREE! Academic leases available. Flexible lease terms. Walk or free shuttle bus to campus. Check our specials! CHAPEL TOWER APARTMENTS, 383-6677. www.apts.com/chapeltower. EHO.

Courier/General Assistant. Want a fun place to work? Call Pat Scott @

email 684-2631 pat.scott@duke.edu-Office of the Provost Campus deliveries/clerical duties, your own desk & computer available. Dependable, physically fit for light lifting, motivated & energetic. Hrs. negotiable. $7.00/hr.

Bedroom apartment in Fourplex on Vesson. Safe neighborhood off Anderson. Stove, refrigera-

Two

central heat tor, $450/month.4B9-4525.

and

The Chronicle

air.

WALK TO DUKE

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 at 919-667-0787,

OR STAY AND PLAY. Academic leases available. Flexible lease terms. Walk or free shuttle bus to FANTASTIC clubhouse campus. w/ fitness center. Student specials! Rates starting at $478. Duke Manor Apartments, 383-6683. www.apts.com/dukemanor. EHO.

njalazo@hotmail.com. Funded Needed Work-Study Student to work in lab—tumor immunology reporting to Dr. Paul Mosca. The hours are flexible...needed for 19.9 hours per week. Rate: $B/hr. Contact; Dr. Paul Mosca at 668-1426.

Part-time caregiver sought for lively, fun 1-year-old child, preferably in our Durham home. Must be energetic, progressive, dependable person who loves children. Please email bhitchings@intrex.net and include resume and references with cover note.

VOLUNTEERS FOR PAID RELATIONSHIPS RESEARCH Recruiting dating couples for UNCCFI research. $l2O/couple.Two laboratory sessions and brief questionnaires at home for 10 days. English fluency required. Contact datingstudy@yahoo.com or (919) 9605927.

College grads needed as part-time math instructors. Requires enthusiasm for teaching and working with kids. Fax resume and cover letter to 309-9766.

Artist’s Model $lB/hour. Painter seeks female model: Weekend and evening hours. 933-9868 email;

info@paulewally.com

Personal Injury Traffic Tickets Minor Criminal •

laura.keohane@verizon.net

www.keohanelaw.com

Full Service Salon Haircuts *l2°° Family

Houses For Rent 2 BR Houses near Campu;s. Available Now. $475-$770, 4160 3 9 3, www.bobschmitzproperties.com. Adorable Cape Cod, 1750sqft, 3BR 2.58A. Remodeled kitchen, new appliances, built-in bookshelves, 5 minutes from Duke or Durham $l3OO/month. Regional. 919.620.7936.

The Chronicle classified advertising

sm

-

LONDON-DRAMA SUMMER 2003

JUST A FEW LEFT! Big Houses for next year, 4-7 BR, Gorgeous 416-0393, www.bobschmitzproperties.com.

NEW NSEP SCHOLARSHIPS

TOWNHOUSE 2 bedroom, 11/2 bath. 5 minutes from Duke. Washer/dryer included. $750/ month. Call 469-2744.

Houses For Sale

Trinity Park Home For Sale 2966 sf, 4BR, 3BA, brick w/ hdwd floors. Screened porch, brick patio, detached garage. $325,000. 1014 Demerius St. 688-0577.

Haircut Center

8 Blvd. Plaza 4125 Chapel Hill Blvd. 489-0500 Tues. Fri. 8 am 6 pm Sat. 8 am 5 pm Walk-ins welcome

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.

House for Rent: Minutes to Duke & Durham Regional Hospital. Nice 3 bedroom, 2 bath, alarm system. $825/month phone: 423-1430, 4897351.

Summer or fall 2003, or spring 2004 undergraduate scholarships for study abroad are available through the National Security Education Meet Program. 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.

Beauty Quest Spa

Durham

DUKE IN SPAIN 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.

Free rent until 2003. 1300sqft 2bed/2-bath townhome. Hope Valley $995/month 919-401-9989 Ask for Laverne.

Best Service Best Prices

(919) 682-5529 301 West Main St., Suite 401

WORK-STUDY/LAB STUDENTS needed to participate in ongoing project on knock-out mice models for human genetic disorders. Opportunities to learn molecular and genetic techniques and participate in all aspects of academic and research training. Contact Dr. TV. Damodaran; 919-668-6196 or Email: damodOOl ©mc.duke.edu.

Attention Undergraduate and Graduate Students

'BALL SPECIAL

-

-

We accept MasterCard and Visa.

s

business rate $6.00 for first 15 words private party/N.R $4.50 for first 15 words all ads 10c (per day) additional per word 3 or 4 consecutive insertions -10 % off 5 or more consecutive insertions 20 % off special features (Combinations accepted.) $l.OO extra per day for all Bold Words $1.50 extra per day for a Bold Heading (maximum 15 spaces) -

Partial Highlights for only $55 (Regularly $95) Full leg, basic bikini, brow and lip wax for only $99 Waxing must be done in one visit. (Regularly $120)

-

Offer expires December 16 Must show Duke ID. Ask for Jenny.

-

$2.50 for 2 line heading $2.00 extra per day for Boxed Ad -

THE

deadline 1 business day prior to publication by 12:00 noon

IT’S SAFE. IT’S PRIVATE •AN

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

FINALLY

-

After years of safe, private, and effective use by women all over Europe, the abortion pill is finally available to American women through Planned Parenthood medical centers. This early abortion option can usually be used within the first seven to nine weeks of pregnancy.

or mail to: Chronicle Classifieds Box 90858, Durham, NC 27708 0858 fax to: 684-8295 e-mail orders classifieds @ chronicle.duke.edu phone orders: call (919) 684-3811 to place your ad. Visit the Classifieds Online! -

http://www.chronicle.duke.edu/classifieds/today.html

Call 684-3811 if you have any questions about classifieds. No refunds or cancellations after first insertion deadline.

ABORT!

if you store it anywhere else, you’re paying too much. 3822 S. Alston Ave. Durham, NC 27713

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Duke Students & Staff: Bring this ad for your generous Duke Discount!

Chapel Hill

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(91 9) 942-7762 (91 9) 286-2872 IJlabZpSy, P Planned Parenthood' IT’S about time. of Central North Carolina, Inc. WWW.PLANNEDPARENTHOOD.OR6/PPCNC


Classifieds

The Chronicle

R. mmate Wanted §

ffi

to . East Campus Large SBedroom home w/2 1 Law Undergrads (FM) Grad 1 (M)+ Student Student(FM). Call 668-9996

Walk

+

Looking for 2 or 3 Men’s Basketball 1-30-03 vs. Butler tickets, University. Please call 847-5678110 or email murph6l ©uicalumni.org. Looking for Duke-Butler Tickets on Jan. 30, 2003. Call Jeff at 317-4026518.

tlk@duke.edu.

WRITING: HELP WITH Dissertations, theses, term papers. Expert help with conceptualization, effective organization, forceful argument, engaging style. Retired UNC professor (Arts and Sciences), author of five books and scores of articles. 968-4259. Professional, non-smoking grad couple seeks house sitting opportunity January-May 03. Will care for your home and pets as if our own. Experienced and Responsible w/excellent references! Please call Wayne or Jen at 942-4937.

Duke and Michigan alums need two tickets to Duke/Michigan basketball game Dec. 7th. Please email mags-

gav@garlic.com.

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.

!DUKE Spring Break...AßE YOU GOING? Then GO DIRECT! Guaranteed LOWEST price, FREE Drinks/Meals/lnsurance! Campus REPS WANTED! Organize some friends-travel FREE! ZERO customer complaints! 1-800-367-1252

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111 Early Specials! Spring Break Bahamas Party Cruise! 5 Days $299! Includes Meals, Parties! Awesome Beaches, Nightlife! Departs From Florida! Get GroupGo Free!! springbreaktravel.com 1800-678-6386 111 Early Spring Break Specials! Cancun & Jamaica From $429! Free Breakfast, Dinners & Drinks! Award Winning Company! Group Leaders Free! Florida Vacations from $149! springbreaktravel.com 1-800-678-6386

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.

#1 Spring Break Vacations! 110% Best Prices! Mexico, Jamaica, Bahams, Florida, Texas. Book Now & Receive Free Parties & Meals Campus Reps Wanted! 1-800-2347007 endlesssummertours.com ***

MONDAY, OCTOBER 28,2002 � PAGE 15

PRE-REQS from page 1

imagine other departments wanting to

math,” said Nechyba, who was in charge of revamping the department’s undergraduate curriculum last year. In addition to enforcing prerequisites, the economics department will require most students to pass a new mathematics test to see whether their skills are up to par. The test will be administered in the economics department’s EcoTeach center and chosen computer labs beginning Monday. “Oftentimes, students have the formal prerequisites, but perhaps in their high schools they had a bad calculus course, or perhaps it’s been two years since they’ve done any math,” Nechyba said. “Part of [the reason for requiring the test! is to get back that basic math they did once know.” Nechyba presented his department’s plan for enforcing prerequisites at a meeting of directors of undergraduate studies in September 2001, and he said many of those in attendance were intrigued by the technology.

ACT NOW!

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Thompson said the new procedures

in the economics department could signal a shift in other departments. “If we work this out with econ... then I could

2626) / www.springbreakdiscounts.com.

SPRING BREAK ‘O3 with StudentCity.com!

APEC from page 9

Air, Hotel, FREE FOOD & DRINKS and 150% Lowest Price Guarantee! REPS WANTED! Organize 15 friends, earn 2 FREE TRIPS, VIP treatment, cash and prizes to promote StudentCity.com! Call 1-800293-1445 or email sales ©studentc-

statement, the leaders called on North

Korea to “visibly honor its commitment to give up nuclear weapons programs.” But the statement did not directly condemn North Korea for trying to build a nuclear bomb. White House press secretary Ari Fleischer said that declaration, and another made Saturday by the leaders of South Korea and Japan, were forceful.

ity.com today!

Teach in Japan! AEON Corp. is recruiting individuals to teach English in one of our 280 schools located through-

do this,” he said. Other directors of undergraduate studies have expressed interest in the plan for their departments, but some professors said they would ultimately leave the decision up to their colleagues. “I personally think the system is a great idea,” said Jerry Reiter, director of undergraduate studies in the Institute ofStatistics and Decision Sciences and an assistant professor of the practice. “Departments simply do not have the resources to check whether every student has the background necessary to do well in particular courses.” Other DUS’s agreed, but they said that the new technology would not be universally applied within their departments because some professors prefer to informally gauge whether

students are adequately prepared for a given course. “The professors would prefer the flexibility to simply suggest that students have some background in biology, for example, without actually specifying particular courses,” said Martha Putallaz, a professor in the Department of Psychology: Social and Health

Sciences and director of undergraduate studies in the department. In diplomatic language, “it doesn’t get much stronger than what they did,” he

said from Air Force One. Saturday, after meeting with Bush, South Korean President Kim Dae-jung and Japanese Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi called upon North Korea to “dismantle this program in a prompt and verifiable manner.” But they, like

Jiang, stopped short of condemning North Korea’s actions. Bush won no public expression of support of sanctions to punish North Korea.

out Japan starting from Spring 2003.

Recruiting in Charlotte, NC Nov. 17-19

Fri. 8-5:30 8-5:00

.

286-4030 Northgate Shopping Center, down from Sears Auto, next to Harris Teeter Durham

Bruegger's Bagel Bakery

May’o3 grads earning BA/BS.

Dec’o2

in Durham is

&

hiring P/T counter help

Competitive salary,

housing assist, fum’d apt. Please send resume 1 page essay titled, “Why I Want to Live Work in Japan" by Nov. 1 to: AEON, 230 ParkAve., #lOOO New York, NY 10169 &

and bakers.

&

Apply in person at 629 9th Street. EOE

www.aeonet.com or email application materials to: eonnyc@aeonet.com.

Begins

10/22/02

whatdoyo Costumes Masks Accessories for adults and children •

NORTHGATE MALL 286-7857 Crabtree Valley Mall 919-789-9195 Four Seasons, Greensboro 336-299-6757

www.halloweenzone.com

&

Hp

au read:

for Franklin

Sponsored by the Center for LGBT Life and CAPS (Counseling Psychological Services) 684-6607 or igbtcenter@duke.edu More info, available on the World Wide Web at

http;//Igbt.studentaffairs.dnicc.cdu


PAGE 16 �

The Chronicle

MONDAY. OCTOBER 28, 2002

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Duke Career Center

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October 28

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November 1

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

Art Career Forum Sunday, November 3, 2-spm, Duke University Museum of Art (DUMA) Interested in a career in the Arts? Learn how to build your future in the Arts! Meet professionals from art-related industries all over the US (see below)! FREE to all Duke Students. Refreshments served. For more info, contact Adera Causey (aderas@duke.edu) or call 684-5135. Featuring: Christie's Auction House, Smithsonian Institution, Local Gallery Owner, Private Paintings Conservator, Boston Museum of Fine Arts, Art Lawyer. Co-sponsored by DUMA and Morris Williams ]r. Trinity '62.

Multicultural Career Conference Registration Opens! The Career Center, Duke's Center for Multicultural Affairs, ASA, BSA, and Mi Gente, invites you to attend the 2nd Annual Multicultural Career Conference Saturday, November 16, 2002, 8:00am-4:30pm Bryan Center, Von Canons Register TODAY at http://career, studentaffairs. duke, edu mderarads. fcc.htm Sponsored by: Cigna Corporation, Capital One, Credit Suisse First Boston, and Morgan Stanley.

Career Center Extended Drop-In Hours! Tuesdays & Wednesdays, 5-7pm, 217 Page (Resource Room) Starting this week, the Career Center will be OPEN from 5-7pm in the Resource Room in 217 Page. Come during that time to get an informal resume review, register for BlueDevilTßAK or get help with your account, schedule counseling appointments, do self-assessment tests, browse through our many hard-copy resources covering many fields.

Costumes Wigs Masks Accessories Santa Costumes & Party Supplies •

DURHAM

CARY

RALEIGH

5402 New Hope Commons Dr. Across from Walmart Hwy 15-501 & 1-40 (919) 493-7997

203 Crossroads Blvd Next to Toys R Us (919) 233-6777

4500 Falls of the Neuse Rd. Comer of Old Wake Forest & Falls of the Neuse (919) 790-2423

A Hallo (SH

Events this Week: Career Management for International.

Graduate Students: Tuesday, October 29, 5:15*6:30pm Introduction to general career planning and an overview of US education and faculty hiring. No registration required!

Job Search Techniques for

Seniors

Tuesday, October 29, 7:00-8:00pm at 106 Page Regardless of whether you plan on using On-Campus Interviewing or not, be aware of all your options! Don't miss this workshop.

Few

Quad Academic Fair

Tuesday, ; October 29, 8:00-10:00pm at 106 Page The Career Center will be having a booth during this fair; stop by for an informal resume review and to get your questions answered. Free refreshments. .

Nread Reynolds Price by

James B; Duke Professor of English

Inner-City Teaching Corps info session Wednesday, October 30, 5-6:3opm, 106 Page Interested in teaching in Chicago's inner city? Check out this info session! Visit http://www.ictc-chicaqo.org for more info. .

DUKE CAREER CENTER 110 Page Building (West Campus) Box 90950 Appointments: 919-660-1050 Questions: career@duke.edu Web: http://career.studentaffairs.duke.edu

Thursday, October 31 7:00-8:00 p.m. Lilly Library, Thomas Room Sponsored by the Duke University L’ibraries


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Submissions are published on a space available basis for Duke events. Submit notices at least 2 business days prior to the event to the attention of “Calendar Coordinator” Box 90858 at or calendar@chronicle.duke.edu.

Academic MONDAY, OCTOBER 28 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 or paula@duke.edu. Teer House: 4-spm. Diabetes and Eating on the Run: “Grab and Go” Meals and Snacks, Marilyn C. Sparling. Call 416-DUKE. 4019 N. Roxboro Rd. Teer House: 4:15-6:lspm. Helping your ADHD Child Improve Behavior. Jane Howard. Call 416-DUKE. 4019 N. Roxboro Rd.

TUESDAY, OCTOBER 29 The Global in Motion: 7pm. Duke student perspectives from Latin America. Students report back on their summer research opportunities in Chile, Peru, Venezuela, and Trinidad & Tobago. 2114 Campus Drive, Center for Latin American and Caribbean Studies.

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

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Oommunity Ssivics C6nt6r Keynote Address: Bpm.

UUKE INVENTS CALENDARs“m WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 30 Sarah P. Duke Gardens: 10-Noon. Mike Owens, 'The Use of Rock in the Gardens.” Owens explains difference in stonework and advises participants to wear comfortable walking shoes. $lO for friends and $l5 for the public. For information, call 684-3698. Doris Duke Center, Sarah P. Duke Gardens, West Campus. Duke College Bowl: Bpm-10pm, Wednesdays. General practice for upcoming intercollegiate academic and pop culture competitions, as well as organization for upcoming high school tournaments. No experience necessary. 107F West Duke Building. Emil Thomas Chuck, Ph.D. etchuck@yahoo.com.

Religious MONDAY, OCTOBER 28

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TUESDAY, OCTOBER 29 TAIZE Prayer: s:lspm, Tuesdays. Memorial Chapel.

Social Programming and Meetings MONDAY, OCTOBER 28 Speaker: 4pm. Meredith Raimondo

,heTROSAMo"calEnsOTtte

'

I

YOU'RE

YOU LOOK TOTALLY

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 Duke Women's Center Lower Lewi Lounge

SAFE on Campus: 44pm. (Students Administrators Faculty for Equality)!, 201 Flowers Bldg. Sign Up in Advance. lhWp:,Algbt.sludeinlaiaiiirs,duikejediufeaie..htmi &

-

Southern-Style

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 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 6680997. Duke University Museum of Art.

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

Free Vegetarian Feast; 5-7pm, Mondays. Multicultural Lounge, Bryan Center. Event is sponsored by the Hindu

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.

Israeli Dancing: 7-Bpm, Mondays If you enjoy rock, pop, salsa, you will love the high energy tunes and steps of Israeli dancing! Classes are held every Monday until Thanksgiving and are FREE to all students. Freeman Center for JewishLife, dining area.

Student Council.

1

wow; peter;

Dinner with Dean Sue: 7pm in the Great Hail Dining Room. For more information, please contact MM at mtw4@duke.edu.

Community Service Center; 7:3opm, Duke in 'tie Community; A Forum o< Student Service Groups., Multicultural Center (in the BC). Come learn about t» different issues facing the Duke comumuniljn wMt sludents are doing about them;, amid how to' gel Moliwd. Djembe Ensemble: Qpm, Bmflsy Simmons,, dkndtoß. Wesl-African drumming. Admission: Fire®, Natal Music Room, East Duke Bldg,. East Canopus Broadway at Duke; 8 pm. "The Scarlet Pimpemiair Tony Award nominee lor Best Musical and Best Book of a Musical. 684-4444, Page Auditorium. West Campus,


The Chronicle

PAGE 18 � MONDAY, OCTOBER 28,2002

The Chronicle

Letters to the

America loses Wellstone

Minnesota

has long been home to colorful politicians—from Harold Stassen to Hubert Humphrey and, more recently, Gov. Jesse Ventura. Minnesota and the United States lost one of that rare breed Friday—a pioneer of political originality—when an airplane carrying Sen. Paul Wellstone, along with his wife, daughter and some of his top aides, crashed amid a storm. Wellstone, who was running for his third term in the US. Senate in one of the closest midterm races, may well have been the most liberal Senator. A former associate professor ofpolitical science, Wellstone came to the Senate in 1990 in a grassroots campaign that brought back some ofthe 19605, radical-leftist spirit that the Reagan revolution, fiscal responsibility and the end ofthe Cold War had left behind. Whether or not you agree with Wellstone—a man whom both Democratic and Republican colleagues said was ofthe utmost passion and dignity—he was a refreshing public servant not afraid to step outside of the muddled middle ground to stand for issues he believed were important. A liberal to the end, he was the only Democratic senator running in a close race this year to vote against President George W. Bush’s resolution against Iraq. After aborting his own presidential exploratory committee in 2000 because of a bad back, Wellstone enthusiastically endorsed former senator Bill Bradley for president over establishment candidate A1 Gore. Wellstone did not fall in line. furthermore, Wellstone’s academic background gave the Senate depth and thoughtfulness in an age when the Senate has become a stepping-stone for ambitious US. representatives. Harkening back to an era when the Senate was a thoughtful chamber more insulated from day-today partisan squabbles, Wellstone provided the Senate a passionate, thoughtful voice, much as Daniel Patrick Moynihan ofNew York did in the 1980s and 19905. It now appears likely that former vice president Walter Mondale will step into Wellstone’s tragically vacant spot on the ballot, per state law. Much like in 2000, when Gov. Mel Carnahan’s plane crashed just days before the Missouri Senate election, Mondale may ride a crest of sympathy over Republican Norm Coleman in whatremains of the Minnesota Senate race. The Minnesota race, crucial to both parties in their quest to take control of the Senate, has now further muddied an election night that may go well into the morning before America knows which party will lead the Senate. The campaign, predictably, will remain subdued in respect to Wellstone. His untimely death is a loss to not just the liberal cause in America, but a loss from the ranks of honest public servants. His legacy, in the quirky, colorful Minnesota tradition, will live as an example of a passionate, thoughtful senator.

On the

editor

Athletic programs care about winning, In reference to columnist Nikyatu Jusu, and specifically Jusu’s recent comment that “Everything is about race”: Everything is not about race. First, you make the ludicrous assertion that black women somehow have it worse in the dating scene than the rest ofus (if I refused to cross racial lines, I’d be sitting at home on Friday nights, too). Now you propose the existence of a vast university conspiracy to keep black football coaches out of the league? Preposterous.

Carl Franks’ continued

I had difficulty finding a room, and I couldn’t find anyone to tell me what kind of attachments I would have to get to use the pump that’s provided. A lack of information was a real impediment to me using those rooms. Deirdre Gordon, program director of the Divinity School, oh her dissatisfaction with existing lactation rooms (see story, page four)

The Chronicle DAVE INGRAM, Editor KEVIN LEES. Managing Editor WHITNEY BECKETT, University Editor ALEX GARINGER, University Editor KENNETH REINKER. Editorial Page Editor PAUL DORAN, Sports Editor JONATHAN ANGIER, General Manager MATT BRUMM, Senior Editor JENNIFER SONG, Senior Editor REBECCA SUN, Projects Editor JANE HETHERINGTON, Photography Editor RUTH CARLITZ, City & Stale Editor RYAN WILLIAMS, City & State Editor BECKY YOUNG, Features Editor MIKE MILLER, Health & Science Editor MEG LAWSON, Recess Editor GREG VEIS, Recess Editor JODI SAROWITZ, TowerView Managing Editor MATT ATWOOD. TowerView Editor BRIAN MORRAY, Graphics Editor JOHN BUSH, Online 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 & Stale Editor NADINE OOSMANALLY, Sr. Assoc. University Editor EVAN DAVIS, Sr. Assoc. Sports Editor MATT KLEIN, Sr. Assoc. Photography Editor ANDREA OLAND, Sr. Assoc. Photography Editor THAI) PARSONS, Sr. Assoc. Photography Editor SETH LANKFORD, Online Manager ALLSE EDWARDS, Lead Graphic Artist SUE NEWSOME, Advertising Director YU-HSIEN HUANG, Supplements Coordinator BARBARA STARBUCK, Production Manager MARY WEAVER. Operations Manager NALINI MILNE, Advertising Office Manager The Chronicle is published by the Duke Student Publishing Company, lnc„ a non-profit corporation independent of Duke University. The opinions expressed in this newspaper are not necessarily those of Duke University, its students, faculty, staff, administration or trustees. Unsigned editorials represent the majority view of the editorial board. Columns, letters and cartoons represent the views of the authors. To reach the Editorial Office (newsroom) at 301 Flowers Building, call 684-2663 or fax 684-46%. Toreach the Business Office at 103 West Union Building, call 684-3811. Toreach the Advertising Office at 101 West Union Building call 684-3811 or fax 684-8295. Visit The Chronicle Online at http://www.chronicle.duke.edu. ® 2002 The Chronicle. Box 90858, Durham, N.C. 27708. All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced in any form without the prior, written permission of the Business Office. Each individual is entitled to one free copy.

leads to an entry barrier for black coaches. According to your logic, there wouldn’t just be no black coaches, there would be no new coaches. They would serve, retire and not be replaced because no one else has Division I experience. Please. If you want to fight for racial equality, why don’t you stop being a “black columnist,” and just start being a

columnist? You’ll do yourself and your readers a big favor. CORINNE Low Trinity ’O6

http: / / www.chronicle.duke.edu/ Imews / display, v/ART/2002 /10/24/3db7e3adaf7es?in_archive=l

Columnist’s

sex comment to

draw parents’ attention

I wanted to thank The In an article title guaran- gusto. BJs are only the Chronicle and more specifi- teed to draw the attention of beginning. most visiting parents, you cally Faran Krentcil for runThere’s a whole world of ning the “Rules for dealing have reinforced the refined, sexual creativity out there, with column educated tenor that per- and Chronicle readers parents” Friday. Given the context of vades this campus. deserve to hear about it. Parents’ Weekend, the lipMy only recommendation You go girl! gloss licking blowjob com- to future Sex and the City ment couldn’t have been wannabe columnists is that Ted Rosenwasser more appropriate. next time, really go for the Trinity ’O3 Http: / / www.chronicle.duke.edu / unews / display, v/ART /2002 / 10/ 25 /3db9so96eaflo?in_archive=l

Confused, naive rant debases true liberals’ goals Jessica Rutter’s naive and rant poorly-thought-out makes me embarrassed to call myself a liberal. While the 41

million uninsured Americans

grow in number every year, our military spending increases beyond the level of the next nine militaries combined. Meanwhile, our president cuts funding for homeland security because his regressive tax cut leaves no room in the budget,

But does Rutter have any ideas to solve these or any other specific problems? Apparently not. Her message seems to be; hold hands, trust each other and don’t trust authority. Then a revolution will somehow come about bringing true democracy. And by the way, don’t invade Iraq, even though I offer no peaceful solution to Saddam Hussein, because war is bad,

Such inane thinking allows conservatives to get elected by labeling liberals as out of touch. If, instead, liberals presented rational solutions to the problems that conservatives prefer to ignore, then perhaps they’d actually be elected and be able to change things. Zachary Klughaupt Law ’O5

Http:! www.chronicle.duke.edu vnews display, v ART /2002/10/24/3db7e3aed69la?in_archive=l /

record

Duke’s head coach has nothing to do with his race and everything to do with his contract. When ex-Indiana basketball head coach Bobby Knight’s contract ran out, he was replaced by (gasp!) a black coach. In the world of Division I sports, winning and losing matter, not race. Just look at the facts, You even go on to make the ridiculous argument that a candidate needs Division I coaching experience in order to have a chance for Division I jobs. Thereby, you say, this presence as

not race

/

/

Saddam must be ousted,

/

sooner rather

War is a terrible thing; one is important, that cannot be that will, inevitably, both our primary concern. For cause and sustain casualties. example, if Europe were urgSometimes, however, such a ing the United States to terrible course of action must invade Mexico, the United be taken to prevent yet a States would be wrong to worse one that would bring blindly follow that advice. We problems. Saddam need to heed advice but realmore Hussein is a threat. He has ize that we must be independlaunched missiles at Israel, ent, The war in Afghanistan invaded Kuwait and was supported because it was oppressed the Kurds, proving reactive rather than preemphimself an aggressive and tive, but that logic requires vicious leader. that Saddam kill thousands of We know ofSaddam’s maliAmericans before we attack. cious tendencies. We also Unfortunately, we don’t know that he has biological know exactly what a war weapons, because we helped would accomplish. We don’t him develop and use them know what would replace against Iran. His latest offer of Saddam, and we don’t know inspections is worth attemptexactly what he’s capable of ing, but what if he changes the doing. We’re often forced to offer, as he always has? make choices in times of While the support of allies uncertainty. Although the sur-

Letters

than later

vival of the United States is not at stake, we are playing a high stakes game nonetheless. Winston Churchill explained that, “If you will not fight for right when you can easily win without bloodshed, if you will not fight when your victory is sure and not too costly, you may come to the moment when you will have to fight with all the odds against you.” Saddam is not going to take over the United States. But there are people he is going to kill, and there are people he is going to oppress. At what point do we stop him? Must we wait for him to kill thousands of ours before we can act?

Mike Lee Trinity ’O6

Policy

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

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


Commentary

The Chronicle

MONDAY, OCTOBER 28,2002 �PAGE 19

Unpaid and unappreciated Opening up The Chronicle each morning rarely surprises me anymore. After all, as a writer and editor for the paper, I usually read much of tomorrow’s news the night before. Last Thursday’s edition threw me for a bit of a loop, though. There, on' page six, was my father looking back at me. I knew, of course, that we were doing a feature on my father’s role Duke’s on Y

But this piece isn’t about me just realizing that my father’s a great man because of all he’s done professionally. No, this piece is about me realizing that my father is simply a great man, and, indeed, a great man least of all because of his accomplishments outside our home. I guess it’s important to point out that I have never been the best son, particularly when it comes to filial piety. I remember once in little league baseball I was struggling with my swing. As I walked back to the bench after yet another strikeout, my father offered a piece of friendly advice. My response? “Shut up, Dad.” My coaches and teammates sufficiently stunned, I rode the pine the next few innings. “Don’t you ever tell your father to shut up,” one of my coaches yelled. Turns out, of course, that my father’s advice—to slide farther to the front of the batter’s box—was entirely correct. My father, though, didn’t make much of the event. In all my life, he has never asked that I fear him. Other dads may demand their sons’ unwavering respect, but my father figured he’d just earn it. I’ve failed at a lot of things in life, and the litany is long. I’ve failed tests,

night wondering if I’ve done enough to earn my father’s respect. Even more importantly, I don’t toss and turn wondering whether I’ve earned his love. You know, in this age of post-modernism and encouraged psychoanalysis, today’s youth are taught to look at their childhoods for answers when it comes to their own faults. I used to blame my father for how weak I had once felt. After I skipped two grades when I was 10,1 got bullied and intimidated for the rest ofmiddle school and a good portion of high school.

Academic Council. wHu. Nevertheless, it was still more than a little I didn’t know how to fight back, and surreal to see a picture I certainly wasn’t very physically intimxj* t , of him taken 30 years idating. It would take me years in the Christie ago, in addition to a weight room to make the football team feature article on the and to get a job as a nightclub bouncer. Removing , Christie Report. 0L My dad being such a non-violent man, the Übssy Sheen T I figured I was easy prey mainly because Growing up as a kid, I never really knew much about my he failed to do his job. I was wrong, of dad’s accomplishments. Whenever we course. His emphasis on kindness and sat in a circle in elementary school and non-confrontation has served me well. I talked about our families, I just said don’t have a fierce temper, and I’m my mom’s a lawyer and my dad’s a teacher, he teaches law. Hanging out in his office, I never thought of the Duke Law School as any unusual place, it was just where my dad went to work in the mornings. I’ve never really thought much about my father being a James B. Duke professor of law. I’ve certainly never I’ve been cut from sports teams. I’ve called him that myself, and it’s not like neglected responsibilities. My father’s his business cards flaunt that title. responses have always been measured, But yet there he was Thursday but they didn’t have to be. morning, wearing that same placid My father rarely fails. When he was grin I’m- so accustomed to seeing. There 13 years old his own father died, but he was, reflecting on something he had my father didn’t flinch. He took care of done 30 years earlier, a decade before I his mother, allowed his sister to go off was born. to college without any other obligations Seeing my father actually talking and then proceeded to bust his ass getabout his accomplishments was the ting a full scholarship to Columbia. He has never framed himself in these greatest surprise of all. He doesn’t do much of that at home; I’ve always terms, however. Ever. Whenever I fail, he learned about his myriad of successes never states the truth, namely that he piecemeal. probably wouldn’t have. He’s never made So, it is only now as an adult that I me feel like I’m in competition with him. have ever really sat back and said, “Wow.” As a result, I don’t lay awake at *

,

,

strong enough to let insults slide by without feeling so insecure as to fight back. Thanks to my father, Fm smart enough to realize just how counterproductive violence is, no matter how much I may want to retaliate. I now realize that my father is an ideal, something he has always been,

actually, and always will be. His tremendous work ethic and kind heart are simply two of his most obvious

attributes.

My father’s biggest triumph is his lack of ego. Never has he needed to dazzle me with stories of his successes. Never has he inferred that his pride in me would come only ifI earned it. I realize now, at age 20, that my strengths are his, while my failures are all my own. Ask to see a great man, and I will show you my father. Nick Christie is a Trinity senior and an associate sports editor for The Chronicle. His column appears every other Monday.

THE SECOND GUNMAN feels bitter after the career fair As you may have noticed, there was a career fair a few weeks ago. Realizing a grand opportunity when I see one, I went. After a few seconds in the Bryan Center, I got that familiar sinking feeling. I was in the elevator again, too lazy to take the stairs to the Armadillo Grill. After some “steak” fajitas and three bottles of Miller High Life, it was time to scope the job market. Contrary to college students, corporate losers seem to take their work THE seriously. That must be what happens SECOND to pre-meds when they finally get GUNMAN done with school and realize that Monday being a doctor sucks. I must admit, though, that because of the nice suits everybody was wearing, I felt a little underdressed in my beerstained hoody and pink hot pants. Then I happened

upon the Microsoft table. Their representatives were wearing T-shirts, which kind ofturned me on I decided to check it out Me: Hi, my name is THE SECOND GUNMAN. I’m a PPS major and I write a lame humor column for an extremely liberal newspaper. If I were traded on the NYSE, my symbol would be TSG. Microsoft guy in T-shirt: We be MSFT on the NYSE

Que es PPS?

TSG: Public policy is mostly writing memos. Are you interested in hiring me? MSFT: No, we only hire computer science majors because they have useful skills. You should shoot your academic adviser for letting you waste so much of your parents’ money. Go home. I hastily walked away from the bitter realization that PPS is worthless. There may be cool promotional pens,

but the real world is a frightening place. A quick walk around showed me that most jobs are in the mysterious field of investment banking. I asked myself, “What the hell is investment banking?” This called for a reconnaissance mission. Switch to stealth mode. When one of the Goldman Sachs guys was busy talking to some shaggyhaired kid in a pastel polo shirt and Birkenstocks, I yoinked his cell phone from the table and copied down the number before replacing it. A few minutes later, I called the number: “This is Johnson, from payroll. The market went down again today. You’ve been let go. Just stay at Duke and try to have a good time on the weekend.” The poor guy fell for it like a drunk. He took off down the Bryan Center walkway, pulling at his hair. I followed on my scooter for a few seconds, only to see him plummet to his death, just outside the Hideaway. If these “have fun on the weekend” or “Hideaway” metaphors are beyond you, I hope you are enjoying your freshman year, you worthless runt. True to form, an Abercrombie-clad blonde glared at the dead man as she bitched into her StarTac about how the maintenance staff never cleans anything up around here. Feeling guilty and overwhelmed by the chain of events, I vomited on her. It was soothing. Men in safari hats were on hand soon thereafter to ticket the man $2OO for dying in a fire lane. After that little incident, I dismissed “future broker suicide statistic” as a viable career option. I went back to the Bryan Center, where I happened upon a firm called Schwarz, Schwarz, Putters and Butt: Ninja Consulting. At first I thought it was a hoax, but they were all wearing suits and they had real nunchakus. When I saw the nunchakus, I knew these guys were for real, and that’s where I wanted to work. I gave them my

e-mail address and asked for a job on the spot. They told me that with a public policy degree I had no actual skills and would fit perfectly into the consulting world. You see, they need people who can think outside the box. That’s something I’m really great at. For example, when I got my computer, I immediately threw the box away. Boom! Right there, thinking outside the box. And I didn’t even need nunchakus to do it. I could tell the guys were impressed, because they kept asking me to show my complex problem solving ability. I was about to do the thing where you rub your tummy and pat your head (thank

goodness for PPS 212 Advanced Worthlessness), but an official looking guy in a suit came up and asked the members of Schwartz, Schwartz, Putters and Butt to disperse, since they were disrupting the career fair. I grabbed the nunchakus and attacked the man, but I was quickly subdued. When I woke up, it was Parents’ Weekend. This was convenient in that I couldn’t think of any more stuff to write about career fair, but I still have a little space left. Cut me some slack; it’s 5 on Friday afternoon. I need to get to engineering kegs before the free booze is gone. So when I woke up, it was Parent’s Weekend. The whole campus had been transformed. The campus was clean, professors were smiling, the food was tasty, there was inflatable stuff to entertain drunk kids on the quad, Subway was open, the wolf cartoon was funny... Okay, so I went a little far. There’s only so much administration can do to make this place look good. It’s time we all realized that “Survival of the Fittest” will never be funny. -

THE SECOND GUNMAN’S parents called, hut he was out blowing his boyfriend.


The Chronicle

MONDAY, OCTOBER 28, 2002 � PAGE 20

Conscience odd Protcst in Historv

Do Europe AND GET THE History Aduan

Duke historians write often on the role of conscience and protest in the past. Raymond Gavins is author of the prize-winning Remembering Jim Crow. John French studies Afro-Brazilian culture. Peter Wood

Let’s Go Europe!

has just completed Beyond Equality. Thavolia Glymph does pioneering work on emancipation and American memory. Caroline Light probes how documentary films and photos shape social protest. Spencie Love is a gifted oral historian. Charles Payne is a foremost chronicler of the 20th century black freedom struggle. Steven Vincent writes about Revolutions in Europe.

Duke's prize-winning historians take you to landmark eras in Europe's past.

The Civil Rights Movement

History 133C.01

Raymond Gavins Carr 135

Afro-Brazilian History and Culture History 170C.01

John French

TuThu 12:40-1:55

East Duke 2048

MWF 11:50-12:40

Peter Wood East Duke 2048

Native American History History 119.01

Emancipation, Memory, and Southern History History 104.02

TuThu 2:15-3:30

Thavolia Glymph Franklin Center 028

History of Sexualities

Caroline Light

The Age of Jim Crow History 1965.03

TuThu 10:55-12:10

East Duke 204

C

TuThu 7-8:15

History 1065.04

Raymond Gavins Languages 208

But Now I See: Freedom Stories of the 20th Century History 1965.13

African American Activism

Spencie Love Lyndhurst 104

Thu 3:55-6:20

Since I9M)

Charles Payne

Tues 7-9:30

History 2995.01

Carr 229

Revolutions inFrance, 177*»-IB*tB

Steven Vincent

Weds 3:55-6:25

History 2995.02

Art Museum 110

TuThu 2:15-3:30

Warfare in the 20th Century History 1188.01

TuThu 10:55-12:10

The American Revolution History 11 18.01

TuThu 12:40-1:55

Native American History History 119.01

MWF 11:50-12:40

The Civil War History 163C.01

TuThu 3:50-5:05

Japan Since 1945 History 1965.02

Thu

3:55-6:20

The World Drug War in the 20th Century History 1965.02

Mon 3:55-6:20

The Global War, 1939-1945 History 1065.05

TuThu 2:15-3:30

D

British Isles in the Middle Ages TuThu 12:40-1:55

Mary jane Morrow TBA

Magic. Religion, and Science History 147.01 MWF 11:50-12:40

Thomas Robisheaux White Auditorium

Modern Britain

Mark Sheftall

History 1078.01

Modern European History 135A.01

MW 3:50-5 History TuThu 9:10-10:25

The Soviet

Experience History 180.01

TuThu 12:40-1:55

Leisure in Modern European History 1065.02 Age

History

Weds 3:55-6:20

of the Crusades

History 1965.10 History 2995.01

Carr 243 Claudia Koonz Carr 243 Allison Rowley Social Sciences 311 Laura Schlosberg Social Sciences 219

Joseph Shatzmiller

Thu 3:55-6:20

Revolutions in France. 1774-1848

IP£A$

Weds 3:55-6:25

Carr 229 Steven Vincent Art Museum 110

THAT OtAN6i£P

nt& wcKt-p

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. Janies 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. Claudia Koonz has just finished a book on The Nazi Conscience. History 149.01

Martin Miller East Duke 204

TuThu 10:55-12:10

Ideas h lAve f'or. Ideas fo Vie far

WARS AND HOMEFRONT IN HISTO

World Military History

from 1700 to the Present

History 22D.01

Alex Roland Sanford 04 Charles Carlton

White Auditorium Elizabeth Fenn Carr 240 Peter Wood East Duke 2048

James Barker Carr 137 Simon Partner Carr 241

John Richards Carr 242 Claudia Koonz

Carr 241

KobisheanS Spirited course Spans 'ideas of faith, occilt through <ti/ centvrieS. MadneSS weefc, its watch !m Martin Miller's new course. Kristen MeuSchel revitalizes the Middle AgeS. £r! c. Paul els recaptures the power of early hwerican thinkers. Phillip Trovtwan pluwbs the Secrets of hfrican-hwerican culture. Elizabeth Penn probes how hwericanS have reacted to to Jfll. Seywour Mauskopf traces the rise of hwerican disasters frow Science frow obscurity to global pre-emnence. Science, and the

Magic, Religion, and Science History 147.01

MWF 11:50-12:40

Madness and Society History 104.08

TuThu 2:15-3:30

Medieval Culture History 116.01

MWF 10:30-11:20

American Intellectual History, 1607-1860 History 104.10

MW 2:20-3:30

Slavery and African-American Culture TuThu 12:40-1:55 History 1965.12

Disasters in North America History 1065.03

Thomas Robisheaux White Lecture Hall Martin Miller Physics 113 Kristen Neuschel East Duke 204

D

TuThu 2:15-3:30

History 163E.01

European History

Eric Daniels Carr 103

Phillip Troutman Social Sciences 219 Elizabeth Fenn

TuThu 3:50-5:05

Carr 242

The Rise of Modem Science: The 20th Century

Seymour Mauskopf

History 1578.01

TuThu 12:40-1:55

Carr 103

Science, Technology, Society in the US, 1800-1950 Seymour Mauskopf History 1965.08

Weds 7-9:30

Social Sciences 133


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