November 11, 2002

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Monday, November 11,2002

Thunderstorms High 70, Low 49 www.chronicle.duke.edu Vol. 98, No. 56

The Chronicle i

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Knocked Out The field hockey team lost its ACC championship bid. in the semifinals Friday night to No. 3 Wake Forest See Sportswrap, page 4

THE INDEPENDENT DAILY AT DUKE UNIVERSITY

Kappa Sig dissolves itself By WHITNEY BECKETT The Chronicle

Faced with impending sanctions from its national headquarters and the University, Kappa Sigma fraternity decided to dissolve its Duke chapter

Saturday. Although it will lose its on-campus housing and recognition from the University, group leaders said they plan to continue social and rush activities. “We do not see this as our group breaking up,” Kappa Sig President Jeff Adams said. “We see this as our group breaking from our nationals.” The group was supposed to have gone “dry”—or alcoholfree—last spring after a pledge was hospitalized for alcohol poisoning. After an intoxicated member fell out a section win•

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JEAN O’BARR, founder of the Program in Women’s Studies, speaks at a Woman’s College 30th anniversary ceremony Saturday on East Campus.

University celebrates merger anniversary By JENNIFER HASVOLD The Chronicle

Although East Campus was full of women once again Saturday morning, the University wasn’t about to reinstate the Woman’s College 30 years after its demise.

Rather, alumnae gathered to celebrate the tradition of the Woman’s College by reflecting on the impact it has had on Duke University. The weekend-long commemoration opened with a speech by President Nan Keohane on the role of gender in higher education that drew a standing ovation from the largely female audience. The Woman’s College—which got its start in 1930 after Washington B. Duke gave Trinity College a $lOO,OOO gift with the condition that women be given the same caliber education as males—was progressive in many respects because it set in place parallel student organizations in which women could take on leadership roles that were normally filled by men. After the school merged with the once allmale Trinity College in 1972 these leadership opportunities See WOMEN on page 8

KAPPA SIGMA FRATERNITY, facing pressure from the University and from its national headquarters, chose to disaffiliate itself Saturday night. dow earlier this semester, both

day outlining sanctions that

the chapter’s leadership Thurs-

See KAPPA SIGMA on page 12

the University and the fraterni- they would have to abide by the ty’s nationals became aware rest of this year and all next the fraternity was not dry. Nayear. The sanctions dictate that tionals subsequently e-mailed

Theta Chi considers options By MEGAN CARROLL The Chronicle

As Kappa Sigma fraternity dissolved its Duke chapter this weekend, another fraternity, Theta Chi, is facing similar administrative pressures and could follow the same track in the upcoming months, members said this weekend. Due to a combination of alcohol and hazing violations, Theta Chi was placed on probation last semester, preventing the fraternity from having

all but one party or any brotherhood events. This semester Theta Chi was caught violating its probation when a residence coordinator found several members playing a drinking game in their section. “The RC came in and saw them playing Beirut,” said David DiPietro, a senior in Theta Chi. Theta Chi has since submitted a proposal to the administration that specifies the way in which they believe they should be punished for the incident. If

the administration does not accept this recommendation, Uni-

versity officials will give Theta Chi three options. “They can revoke our charter, prevent us from having a rush class or we can lose our housing,” DiPietro said. “Any of the three things kills the fraternity.”

Some brothers offered alterviewpoints about whether dissolution would then be inevitable. native

See THETA CHI on page 10

Reporter panel discusses impact of midterm elections By CINDY YEE The Chronicle

Three political journalists met in a panel discussion Saturday to discuss the causes and effects of last week’s historic midterm elections, in which the president’s party broke a long-standing trend by gaining seats in the U.S. House of Representatives and Senate during the administration’s first midterm elections. Participating in Saturday’s discussion, held in the Sanford Institute for Public Policy, were national political correspondent for CNN Aaron Brown, national political correspondent and columnist for the Los Angeles Times Ronald Brownstein and national political editor for The Wall Street Journal John Harwood. Although the three panelists differed slightly in their predictions for future election trends, all agreed that Nov. 5 was not an indication of an ideological shift for the nation as a whole. Brown attributed Democrats’ poor showing to InoiHo InslU e

an inability to frame a campaign for a post-Sept. 11 nation captivated by the Washington, D.C.-area sniper attacks and the prospect of military action in Iraq. The anxiety associated with these concerns explained why factors such as a faltering economy

did not work against the Republicans, he said. “It’s not that people don’t care about the economy. People do. Or that people don’t care about prescription drugs. People do,” Brown said. “But in virtually every close race, what people did was say, ‘What does the commander in chief need?”’ Harwood was slightly less willing to discount the importance of the economy in last week’s elections. Rather than completely ignoring the issue, he said, voters considered the economy and weighed it against the many other issues in which the president’s party is currently involved. In the end, however, the issue took a back seat to more pressing concerns.

Duke Student Government led groups on four safety wa|ks Thursday night to find out ways to make the campus safer. See page 4

See MIDTERMS on page 7

JEFF BURLIN/THE CHRONICLE

AARON BROWN (left), RONALD BROWNSTEIN AND JOHN HARWOOD discussed why the Republicans gained seats in last week’s midterm elections.

A social group summit of student leaders found that students have plenty of social options on campus, but just do not know about them. See page 5

Someone stole a purse from a woman last week in the parking lot at the Medical Center and knocked her to the ground. See Crime Briefs, page 6


World & Nation

PAGE 2 �MONDAY, NOVEMBER 11, 2002

NEWS BRIEFS •

Gunman kills 5 in Israel farming community

At least one Palestinian gunman broke into an Israeli farming community late Sunday and went on a shooting rampage, killing five people, including a woman who tried in vain to protect her two children •

CNN may postpone news merger with ABC

Negotiators of the proposed merger between CNN and ABC News reported that new questions arose over whether the leadership of CNN’s parent, AOL Time Warner, would delay any deal as it coped with other issues troubling the company. •

Airplane crashes into Manila Bay

An airplane with 34 people on board crashed into Manila Bay, Philipines shortly after takeoff early Monday, killing at least three people. Officials said 17 survivors were found and 14 others remain missing. •

United Airlines strikes deal with union

United Airlines has reached a tentative cost-cutting agreement with its flight attendants union as part of an effort to avoid bankruptcy, the carrier announced Sunday. •

Atomic experts ready to resume inspections

U.N. atomic experts have finished detailed plans for a “full court press" of fast-moving inspections that will quickly uncover any major nuclear weapons program Iraq has undertaken in the last four years. News briefs compiled from wire reports.

FINANCIAL MARKETS

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“If we value the pursuit of knowledge, we must be free to follow wherever that search may lead us. The free mind is not a barking dog, to be tethered on a 10-foot chain.” —Adlai Stevenson

The Chronicle

Arab nations back U.N. resolution The Arab League of foreign ministers says the U.S. should not invade Iraq By NEIL MacFARQUHAR

New York Times News Service

BEIRUT, Lebanon Arab governments voiced collective support Sunday for new weapons inspections inside Iraq, although they want Arab experts added to the inspection teams and warned that the latest U.N. resolution should not be considered a free pass for Washington to invade. A resolution of support that was approved during a meeting of Arab League foreign ministers in Cairo, Egypt, reflected the underlying sense that most regional governments remain perfectly happy to see Saddam Hussein defanged, political analysts said, yet they fear the repercussions ofanother war in the region.

day by Syria’s foreign minister, Farouk al-Sharaa, on the sidelines of the meeting. He said Syria’s decision to join the unanimous 15-0 vote in the Security Council to pass the resolution demanding renewed weapons inspections was designed to spare the Iraqis being hit by the United States. “This resolution stopped an immediate strike against Iraq, but only an immediate strike,” he said. “Now America cannot strike Iraq under U.N. auspices, although of course the United States can strike Iraq unilaterally outside international law. If this happens, the world will not be with the Americans, it will have to

The action by the Arab league emphasizes that the Security Council vote “is not a pretext for another military action against Iraq,” said Naji Sabri, the Iraqi foreign minister, speaking at a news conference after the Arab League meeting. Iraq appeared to be bowing toward the inevitable, with Saddam Hussein planning to convene a special session of parliament Monday to discuss the issue of renewed inspections—the usual choreography for a simulated public stamp of approval for a decision the regime finds distasteful. The extent to which governments in the region are concerned about the impact of any action against Iraq on regional stability was expressed Sun-

See RESOLUTION on page 9

GOP victories give Bush political capital By RICHARD STEVENSON

New York Times News Service

WASHINGTON With his party in control and his political standing solidified, President George W Bush has new freedom to confront the weakened economy on his terms and has put his advisers to work developing an ambitious agenda for the next two years. It is sure to include making permanent the 10-year tax cut passed last year, securing new tax cuts for investors, holding down spending in areas other than national security and moving slowly toward overhauling the tax code and Social Security. The president is eager to take advantage of the Republican majority on Capitol Hill, his aides say, adding that he has long since absorbed the lesson of 1992, when Bill Clinton beat Bush’s father partly by casting him as

out of touch on the economy. But after two years in office, Bush faces added pressure to get good economic results or pay a steep price when it comes to his own repolitical strategists election, and economic policy-makers in both parties say. Bush used the economic downturn, which began around the time he took office, to build support for the $1.35 trillion tax cut that he signed into law 17 months ago. In that way, the economy’s current weakness could be an opportunity for the White House to assert that expanded tax-cutting would again give the economy the lift it needs. Even though the Democrats are sure to put up a fight, in Congress and in the presidential campaign, they are in disarray on economic policy—and deeply split over tax cuts in particular.

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The Chronicle

MONDAY, NOVEMBER 11, 2002 �

PAGE 3

Students DSG locates safety hot spots on walk tutor Asian immigrants By MOLLY NICHOLSON The Chronicle

Bundled up in jackets, hats and mittens to brave the cold weather, students and administrators searched the campus last Thursday night for possible safety risks. On the annual safety walk—organized by Duke Student Government’s facilities and athletics committee—participants split into four student-led groups touring Central Campus, East Campus, Science Drive and the WestEdens Link and Blue Zone. All groups identified overgrown shrubbery and lack of lighting and blue lights—-

Global Grasp, a new Duke student group, is teaching the English language to immigrants new to North Carolina. By GABRIEL CHEN The Chronicle

Although some Duke students spend their Saturday afternoons catching up on sleep or homework, a dozen of them do something different—tutoring immigrants from Hong Kong and China in the English language for about two hours every week. The student volunteers are members ofGlobal Grasp, a student-run organization that aims to raise awareness of global challenges and crises through programs involving people from other cultures and backgrounds. The group’s first project this year is the New Immigrant Program, in which tutors commit themselves to five Saturdays a semester. They usually work with 20 immigrants at the Faith Alliance Church in Goldsboro, N.C.—a 90-minute drive from Durham. “I met one of the families in Goldsboro in July,” said sophomore Margaret Wat, president and founder of Global Grasp. “I suggested that we tutor them in English because most of them had

which identify emergency phone loca-

tions—as the most glaring impediments to campus safety. Near the WEL, students labeled burnt-out lights, loose tiles and uneven pavement as potential hazards. DSG President Joshua Jean-Baptiste and junior Donald Wine, a DSG legislator, suggested increasing latenight patrols in the Blue Zone, especially in the back lots. Lieutenant Richard Hathaway of the Duke University Police Department said he thought a lack of manpower prevented the police department from increasing

those patrols.

Hathaway recommended replacing emergency phones and blue lights with the new technology installed near the WEL, where a phone call activates a strobe light at the top of the pole. “I can sit up here on the bike by the comer of Wannamaker and Towerview and see those strobes going.... it draws JANE HETHERINGTON/THE CHRONICLE attention Hathaway said. The WEL is one of four Duke Government accompanied groups on the orgaRICHARD Student HATHAWAY . , . . state-of-the-art as far as lighting and annual ™lkThursday mght. nlzatlons security. While they’re dom| this stuff [with the WEL], now’s the time to do it.” the Blue Zone causes more problems, to find the right combination of equipGroup members also supported Hath- “Lighting is not the issue,” Reeve said, ment and planning,” Jackson said, The Central Campus group also Joe Jackson, manager of grounds and away’s suggestion to convert a beaten path behind the parking lots near Wal- sanitation, said a city ordinance—re- found that lighting was a big issue. “I lace Wade Stadium into a bicycle path quiring a certain amount of shrubbery was trying to take notes, and I couldn’t in parking lots—made it difficult to in- see the page in some ofthese lots,” said that would be both paved and well-lit. Catherine Reeve, director of park- crease visibility by removing bushes. Cliff Davison, a senior and DSG vice ing and transportation services, dis- “But it doesn’t mean that we shouldn’t See SAFETY WALK on page 10 agreed, and said the long walk from have a safe environment. We just have

just [emigrated] here. They expressed interest immediately.” The majority of the immigrants come from Hong Kong and China to work at poultry farms in Goldsboro. Wat said that while most are content just to improve their command of the English language, some eventually work towards a General Education Diploma. “The tutors are really helpful. I can-

..

See TUTORING on page 10

,

Spring 2003

Muslim Cybernauts? Yes. Islam has become a major presence on-line, yet Muslim networks have a long history that precedes and informs the Information Age. This upper level seminar is intended not only for geeks and history buffs but also for curious students who want to know more about the deep background to 9/11 as well as its consequences for our collective future. Taught by Bruce Lawrence and miriam cooke. w *Tx-<*■ A'»i J«*■/*’• ,

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PAGE 4 � MONDAY, NOVEMBER 11,2002

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The Chronicle

MONDAY,

NOVEMBER 11, 2002 � PAGE 5

Social life summit finds on-campus options exist By MOLLY NICHOLSON

ize that the social life at Duke is changing. “Most of us were upperclassmen, and I think we had the same stereotypes that everyone goes to parties and gets drunk on the weekends... but when we really spoke about the different options on campus... I’ve realized Duke is in a transition period right now.” Students discussed, among other topics, the difficulties of finding facilities and publicizing events, high technical fees, increased collaboration among groups, the alcohol policy and a lack of social space on East Campus. Participants also found that collaboration among different groups, advertising, providing food and a central location all contributed to well-attended events. “More people will go to an event if people from a broad spectrum feel that they have ownership in that event,”

The Chronicle

Despite rumors that social life at Duke is dwindling, student leaders who gathered Saturday to discuss the social scene found that is not the case. At a social life summit-organized by the Duke Student Government student affairs committee—students from DSG and about 15 cultural, religious and unaffiliated organizations discussed the current state of social life and how to create an ideal social scene at Duke. “Some people say that social life has died, but... once we got those people around the table, we saw that there real-

ly are a lot of social options,” said senior Troy Clair, DSG vice president for student affairs. “We’re dealing with the perception that there’s not a lot of things to do but... people maybe aren’t aware that there are [other] things to do.” For senior Richard Rivera, Mi Gente president, the meeting made him real-

Clair said. Increasing social space was also a

concern, and students mentioned the Bryan Center, Gilbert Addoms Dormitory and the West-Edens Link’s McClendon Tower as possible spaces. Duke Vice' President for Student Affairs Larry Moneta is currently planning a renovation of the Bryan Center and surrounding buildings to create more social space in a “student village.” “There needs to be space on campus, and we’re going to need to find the space before the student village is finished, space where you can go with a diverse group of friends and know that other people will be there,” Clair said. Jesse Panuccio, president ofthe Duke University Union and a senior, said he was concerned that many students “seem to think that there’s nothing to do on campus,” pointing to recent weekend events, including Awaaz, multiple bands and movies, as examples of “how much there is to do on campus if people would just go ouTthere and look for it.”

Jeremy Morgan, president of the Interfraternity Council and a senior, agreed. “Whenever people think of fraternities, I think they often think of them as providing the social scene on campus,” Morgan said. “I don’t think that it should be the fraternity system’s responsibility to provide a social scene for the entire student body.” To increase awareness of social options on campus, students discussed having a freshman orientation to social life to “orient people to the possibilities of what they can do on week-

ends,” Clair said. Many people blamed the administration for diminishing social life on campus, said senior Andrew Nurkin, Campus Council president. “That’s probably true, but I think the major problems are that people are less willing to take charge of their social lives and want to have parties. Someone actually has to host those parties,” he said.

Davison Council, GPSC to work more closely together By MARGAUX KANIS The Chronicle

Student leaders in both the School of Medicine and the overall graduate and professional school community are searching together for ways to bridge a long-standing systemic divide between two student governing bodies. Michael Bernstein, a medical student and Graduate and Professional School Council representative, said the conflict that emerges for active medical stu-

dents is whether to look for a leadership in the Davison Council—the medical school’s student body—with more immediate effect on medical student issues, or in GPSC, which takes a necessarily broader approach to graduate and professional students concerns in general. “Anyone with such a strong passion to become involved will run for Davison Council, not GPSC,” said Bernstein. “This is what creates the so-called division.” He added that because many second-year medical

students are involved with clinical rotations, they become less involved with medical student governance issues and so third-year students often lack the experience to run for leadership positions within either council, especially in GPSC. Bill Wood, another medical school representative to GPSC and former president of the Davison Council, still believes a good relationship exists between See MED STUDENTS on page 9

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PAGE 6 � MONDAY, NOVEMBER 11, 2002

Confession

CRIME BRIEFS From staff reports

also a white male. She said she heard one of the suspects say, “Roll dog, roll

Man steals purse from lady

When a visitor was at the PRT lobby of parking garage 2 near the vending machines across from the Medical Center Traffic Office around 1:39 p.m. Nov. 6, she said she observed a subject approaching her as she was walking with the assistance of her walker which has a basket on it, with her purse in the basket. Sensing subject was about to take it, she grabbed her purse. The subject then jumped at her and grabbed the purse, but she would not let go. He yanked hard on the purse, pulling her down. She did not let go of the purse and he dragged her six to eight feet across the floor. She finally let go of the purse and he ran off with it. She gave chase but he was able to get away with the purse. She suffered a bloody nose and minor abrasions as the result of her fall but did not require medical attention. She said a second subject who she only saw from behind was either chasing or running with the subject. Her $5O purse contained $l2 cash, a

out” right before the incident.

Students confront car thief

As three students approached the vehicle of one of the students in the metered parking area on Science Drive Nov. 9 around 1:12 p.m., they noticed a male in the back of one of the students’ vehicles. They confronted the male, who got into his own vehicle and tried to leave the scene. One of the victim’s friends jumped into the window as the male was driving away. He grabbed the male by the neck and was dragged a few feet before letting go. He suffered minor scrapes to his foot and elbow, but refused medical treatment. The following items were stolen; a $l6O skateboard, $6O cash and a credit card. The subject was described as a

white male in his 30s, operating a 1980s white Chevrolet Caprice.

Man tries to enter student’s vehicle

As a student walked to his vehicle parked near Epworth Dormitory at 8:15 a.m. Nov. 5, he was approached by a male, who told the student that his car was parked two blocks away and he would appreciate it if the student would give him a ride and give him $l3 because he was locked out of his house. The student told the male that he could not give him a ride and suggested he take the bus. The student had already unlocked his the doors to his vehicle and was about to get in when the male got in on the passenger side. He attempted to

$350 endorsed check from lowa Bank, credit cards, a drivers license, a $1;000 silver Casio 30 MHz digital camera with four batteries, a $l5O Nokia 5165 cellphone in a black case and keys. The suspect was described as a white male, 18 to 21 years old, 5’6”5’9”, average to medium build, short dark hair, wearing Khaki cargo pants and a grey hooded sweatshirt. A witness who followed the subjects toward the escalator to Fulton Street and saw them running toward Elba Street reported the second subject was

complicates

leave his vehicle, but the tone and demeanor of the male made him feel he had to do as he was told. He got into his vehicle and drove the male to Brightleaf Square where he again asked him for money. The male saw the student’s wallet in the ashtray of his vehicle, grabbed it and took $6 to $8 cash from it. The male then exited his vehicle and he drove off. The subject is described as a black male, 25 to 30 years old, 5’10”, 160 lbs., average to medium build, rough facial skin, wearing a toboggan, black sweat jacket, black sweats with a knit pattern shirt.

sniper case By JAYSON BLAIR

New York Times News Service

Evidence that WASHINGTON John Lee Malvo, the younger ofthe two men charged in the Washington-area

sniper shootings, was the gunman in most of the attacks could complicate the case against the other suspect, John Allen Muhammad, senior law enforcement officials said Sunday. Defense lawyers for Malvo, 17, have statements their client made late last week to the police in Fairfax County, Va. Lawyers close to both men’s defense teams said that those statements could be used to help Muhammad, 41, in Prince William County, Va., where he has been charged with murder and terrorism. “There is some concern that the juvenile’s statements could be used as exculpatory evidence to clear Muhammad of being the gunman in Prince William,” one local law enforcement official said Sunday. Attorney General John Ashcroft last

Employee struck by vehicle

A vehicle traveling north on Research Drive struck an employee pedestrian who was crossing Research Drive in a legal crosswalk Nov. 5 at 6:53 p.m. She was transported to Duke Emer__gency for treatment. The operator of the vehicle said that she did not see the pedestrian. Duke University Police has been receiving complaints from pedestrians about near-misses while using legal crosswalks.

Woman charged with gun possession

Tracey Dawkins Burke was charged with having a weapon on campus. The .38 derringer was observed in her purse while being scanned in the Emergency Department Nov. 9 at 1:54 p.m. Her court date is set for Dec. 18. Burke could

week ordered both men transferred to the authorities inVirginia, where there was the greatest chance of obtaining death sentences, he said. Malvo was sent to Fairfax County, where he is to be tried in the killing of

not be reached for comment. See CRIME on page 12

See SNIPER on page 12

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The Chronicle

MONDAY, NOVEMBER 11,

Scientists study sickle-cell pain By WARREN LEARY

New York Times News Service

WASHINGTON The painful episodes, suffered by people with sickle cell disease, appear to be caused by excess hemoglobin in the blood from damaged red blood cells, researchers say. Studies found that the hemoglobin rapidly destroyed nitric oxide, a gas known to relax blood vessels and contribute to good circulation, said the report, to be published in Monday’s issue of the journal Nature Medicine. The destruction of nitric oxide begins a cascade of events leading to constricted blood vessels, high blood pressure in the lungs and the restricted flow of oxygen and nutrients to vital tissues and organs. This causes the episodes of intense pain, known as crises, experienced by sickle cell patients, said the researchers, most of them from the National Institutes of Health. The scientists said the findings pointed to new approaches that might cancel the hemoglobin effect and relieve some of the suffering, which some patients say is more agonizing than the pain of childbirth or terminal cancer. “We think this is an important mechanism leading to the painful symptoms of sickle cell disease and, perhaps, other conditions that involve damaged red cells,” said the National Institute ofDiabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases’s lead researcher, Mark Glawdin. “But more work is needed to prove it.” Robert Hebbel of the University of Minnesota, a sickle cell blood researcher not connected with the study, said the work—once confirmed—might help explain some of the pathology of the disease. “This is an important observation, one that resonates as making sense,” Hebbel said. Jack Lancaster of the University of Alabama at Birmingham, another prominent researcher in the field, called the study “a beautiful piece of analysis” that has direct therapeutic implications. Sickle cell disease is in a family of inherited blood disorders caused by a flaw in the gene that makes hemoglobin, the component of red blood cells that carries oxygen. When low on oxygen, this flawed hemoglobin causes blood cells' to stiffen and contort into jagged sickle shapes. These distorted cells block small blood vessels and cause vascular inflammation and other changes that interfere with blood flow. The disease afflicts millions worldwide, primarily

those with ancestors from Africa, the Mediterranean and India. In this country, an estimated 80,000 people, mostly African-Americans and people from the Caribbean, have the disease. Gladwin said the new work connected several facts already known about the disease, including that the distortion of red blood cells into sickle shapes destabilizes their membranes and prematurely destroys 10 percent of a patient’s total red cells each day, causing anemia. Rates of red cell disruption rise even higher during crises, he said. This cell destruction dumps cellular hemoglobin into the bloodstream, a phenomenon that took on new importance as researchers started paying more attention to the role of nitric oxide in the body. It has been known for decades that hemoglobin is a potent scavenger of nitric oxide and a constrictor of blood vessels, experts said. Laboratory work more than a decade ago showed that free hemoglobin in solutions destroyed nitric oxide 1,000 times as fast as hemoglobin confined in blood cells. Nitric oxide, a short-lived gas produced by cells lining the blood vessels, is now known to be a primary regulator of blood flow, Gladwin said. Among other things, it prevents the aggregation of platelet cells that promote clotting, and it protects cell membranes. The gas is also a major part of the system to protect the body from excess hemoglobin. In the latest study, the researchers tested blood from 27 sickle cell patients and 28 healthy volunteers and found that plasma from the patients rapidly inactivated nitric oxide. When free hemoglobin was removed in j;he laboratory, the plasma consumption of nitric oxide fell to nearly normal levels, the researchers found. They concluded that excess hemoglobin in the blood of sickle cell patients quickly overwhelmed the body’s system for neutralizing it.

MIDTERMS from page 1 “Voters didn’t feel badly enough about the economy to punish [President George W.] Bush’s party,” he said. “The security situation felt more frightful than what they were feeling economically.” Brown added that the sniper attacks captivated the nation’s attention, creating an incredibly distracted audience for an already hazy Democratic campaign. The Republicans did not encounter the same problem, he said, because there is guaranteed coverage whenever the president goes on the road, which is precisely what Bush did right up until the elections. Like Brown and Harwood, Brownstein attributed Republicans’ success to factors unrelated to an ideological shift toward the right. For instance, the depth of Bush popularity and the intensity of his supporters drew more Republicans to the polls than in recent years, he said. “Where George Bush is strong, he is very strong,” he said. “What he showed was that he could translate

2002 � PAGE 7

that approval into bodies getting off the couch, turning off the TV and walking into the polling place.” The panelists agreed that the midterm elections do not guarantee a second term for Bush. “It’s like eating Chinese food,” Brown said. “It’s not satisfying for very long.” The audience responded to many of Saturday’s comments with laughter as the panelists conducted a relatively informal discussion. Sophomore Philip Kurian said he was glad he made it out to Sanford on a Saturday afternoon. “It was really interesting to get the perspective of a journalist who is out there every day, and of academics who were clearly very knowledgeable about the subject,” he said. Senior Chris Chandler also said he enjoyed the event—the annual John Fisher Zeidman Memorial Colloquium on Communications —but wished the panelists had elaborated on the consequences of last week’s elections. “I really got a feel for why the country voted how it did, but I was really interested in getting more [analysis] about what impact it will all have on the future,” he said.

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� MONDAY, NOVEMBER 11,2002

When you dine at these participating restaurants on Tuesday, November 12, they will donate 10% of your check to Durham's Community Kitchen. Amante Gourmet Pizza Anotherthyme* Babette’s Bamboo House Bandidos Mexican Cafe Ben & Jerry’s Ice Cream Bennett Pointe Grill Cafe at the Regulator Cafe Momo* Coleman’s El Custaleco Restaurante Elmo’s Diner El Rodeo Mexican Restaurant (Brightleaf) El Rodeo Mexican Restaurant (University Dr.) Fishmonger’s Restaurant & Oyster Bar Fortune Garden Francesca’s Dessert Caffe Greenhouse Cafe* Joe & Jo’s Downtown Magnolia Grill* Mariner’s Cove Nana’s* Neo-China* Ninth Street Bakery Ninth Street Sushi Bar*

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SAM MORGAN/THE CHRONICLE

PRESIDENT NAN KEOHANE spoke at the Woman’s College 30th anniversary celebration Saturday morning on East Campus.

WOMEN from page 1

cy of the college. The panelists reminisced and paid homage to some of the

were more difficult to come by. “What would a truly co-educational institution look like?” Keohane asked the audience. “It is exhilarating to envision such a place. It would be a world in which gender and sex do not spill over into every avenue of life. Gender does matter greatly, and we will not bring about a better world unless we recognize that fact and deal with it.” In her keynote address at the kickoff plenary session in Baldwin Auditorium Keohane praised the Woman’s College and those instrumental in its administration for playing a significant role in promoting educational eq-

Woman’s College like Dean Mary Grace Wilson and Alice Mary Baldwin, first dean of the Woman's College, for their contributions and leadership. “I remember convocation for [the] Woman’s College. It was as if the world had opened up,” reminisced panelist Dara DeHaven, Woman’s College ’73 and past president of the Law Alumni Association. “The legacy [of the Woman’s College] is that no matter how you educate women we always come out on top,” she said. “You go girl is a pretty good summary 0f... the Woman’s College.” Alumnae were enthusiastic about the opportunity to gather and remember the college. Some said they thought the Woman’s College surpassed the academic experience a co-educational institution could have offered them. “I really treasure the experience we had as a separate campus and college,”

influential

uity at Duke. Keohane said that while there has been much progress since the two colleges merged, women still face many hurdles in higher education. She noted that high-power leadership positions at Duke are still dispropor-

tionately filled by males and that males tend to dominate the composi-

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said Patricia Heath, Woman’s College ’72. “I do not think [merging the schools] has been a real gain in the atKeohane also emphasized the pressure on female undergraduates at titude toward women.” Duke to conform to unrealistic norms, Missi McMorries graduated in the ranging from body-image and dress to first co-educational class of Trinity Coldating and relationship patterns. lege and said that the tensions of fully “The structures and expectations in merging the schools were complex. place at Duke today are channeling “Back then we thought that the only women into a narrowed notion of femitrue equality could be attained by ninity,” she said, stressing the impormerging the two universities. Now I retance of Duke’s gender initiative, alize we probably would have been betwhich Keohane launched last spring to ter off [had the schools not merged].” evaluate the influences of gender on She noted that even after the mergstudents, faculty and staff at Duke. er the women were subject to more The plenary session also featured a rules than the men and that their parpanel of Woman’s College graduates ticipation in student organizations from different eras of its 42-year durawas initially limited. “I was a real tion who shared their memories of the lippy broad so I was kind of hard to inschool and their thoughts on the legatimidate,” she added. tion of engineering departments.

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Weekend

The Chronicle

Sportswra

IE 2 �MONDAY, NOVEMBER 11, 2002

In this week’s issue

Inside the ACC The North Carolina women's soccer won its 14th-straight ACC championship with a 6-0 victory over No. 12 Clemson. UNC's Catherine Reddick led the way with a pair of goals and an assist, in the Tar Heels' largest conference win during their title run. The Wake Forest field hockey squad captured its first ACC Conference Field Hockey Championship with a 4-0 win over third-seeded Maryland. The Demon Deacons had a 1-0 lead at halftime before Heather Aughinbaugh dumped a pair of goals to give Wake a cushion and the eventual win. •

team,

Mike Corey, Neelum Jeste, Robert Samuel 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, Adam Schmelzer, Brian Smith, Catherine Sullivan, Matt Sullivan, C.K. Swett, Jeff Vernon, AdamYoffie

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

NCAA Top 25

in 1983, Sportswrap is the weekly sports supplement published by

Founded

Texas A&M 30, No. 1 Oklahoma 26 No. 2 Miami 26, Tennessee 3 No. 3 Ohio State 10, Purdue 6 No. 4 Texas 41, Baylor 0 No. 5 Wash. St. 32, No. 15 Oregon 21 No. 6 lowa 62, Northwestern 10 No. 7 Georgia 31, Ole Miss 17 Syracuse 50, No. 8 Virginia Tech 42 (OT) No. 9 Notre Dame 30, Navy 23 No. 10 DSC 49, Stanford 17 No. 11 Alabama 28, Mississippi St. 14 No. 12 Kansas St. 58, No. 21 lowa St. 7 No. 13 Michigan 41, Minnesota 24 Maryland 24, No. 14 N.C. State 21 No. 16 LSU 33, Kentucky 30 No. 17 Florida St. 21, Georgia Tech 13 No. 18 Colorado 42, Missouri 35 No. 19 Penn State 35, Virginia 14 North. 111. 26, No, 20 Bowling Green 17 No. 22 Pittsburgh 29, Temple 22 No. 23 Florida 21, Vanderbilt 17 California 55, No. 25 Arizona St. 38

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 sports@chronicie.duke.edu

Game OF THE

Women'sTennis *ASU Champion

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Sophomore Saras Arasu won a tournament at Arizona State over the weekend.

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Thursday, 3 p.m. SAS Soccer Complex. Cary, N.C. The Blue Devils take on the Cavaliers in the first round of the ACC Tournament Thursday afternoon. Duke fell to UVa earlier this season, but has improved its game •thanks to better health and a more productive, revamped offense.


The Chronicle

Sportswrai

PAGES

IONDAY,

Duke wins 1 of 2 of ACC games over weekend Blue Devils fall to arch rival North Carolina, then trounce in-state foe N.C. State LEHMAN

leading 7-2, but the Wolfpack fought its way to 11-11 tie. Led by Maya Mapp and Rebecca Anderson, State kept the game within one or two points until the very end when the Blue Devils finally capitalized, taking the game 37-35. Even so, Duke dommated in hitting percentage, assists, service aces and digs, With the Duke offense overwhelming the Wolfpack, the younger Blue Devils saw some playing time. The team said that it was reassuring, especially at the end of the season, to see the growing potential of the younger team. ‘We were able to get playing time for

The Chronicle

3 As fall sports come to the end of their sea0 sons, each win beN.C State comes more important and each loss _

more heart-wrenching. This weekend, the volleyball team (22-7, 10-4 in the ACC) was delt one of each. In a tough match against long-standing rival UNC (24-2, 11-1), the Blue Devils went down in three games only to shut out N.C. State (3-28, 0-13) less than a day later. Saturday night against N.C. State, the Blue Devils looked like the team that has been winning game after game for the past few weeks. After Sonne opened the contest with an ace, the bleachers in Cameron once again came alive. Having regained the fans’support, the Blue Devils averaged a hitting percentage of .206 and dominated the first and second game. The third game started off in the same manner, Duke beginning strong

many of our younger players tonight and it was exciting to see them on the court,” said head coach Jolene Nagel after the match, However, Friday’s match against UNC was a different story, “[UNC] played better than us [FriSee VOLLEYBALL on page 7

ANTHONY CROSS/THE CHRONICLE

ERIN NOBLE and the volleyball team lost to UNC before beating N.C. State

Women sweep, men split for Ist win of season After successful weekends, swimming teams prepare for upcoming meets versus North Carolina By ROBERT SAMUEL The Chronicle

Winning 10 events at a tri-meet against Old Dominion and Towson Universities, the men’s swimming and diving team (1-4) triumphed to its first win of the season after defeating ODU 143-94. The men, however, lost to Towson 143-91, while the women’s team (43) swept the Monarchs and the Tigers, winning 149-92 and 155-82, respectively. “It was a big win for us,” said sophomore Kevin Ko about the men’s win. “It was good for us to finally get the monkey off our back so to speak.” The men won eight of their ten victories against Old Dominion. Sophomore Teddy Heifers touched the wall first in the 200 butterfly in 1:59.27, while junior Trevor Yates won the 200 freestyle (1:47.13). Sophomore John Humphrey placed first in the 100 free (48.40), and swam his best time in a dual meet to win the 200 individual medley (1:53.90). Freshmen Cooper Moore and See SWIMMING on page 7

JUSTIN WARD and the men’s swim team won their first meet this weekend,

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The Chronicle

PAGE 4 �MONDAY, NOVEMBER il, 2002

Field hockey drops ACC semis to Wake Forest Duke must now wait for Tuesday’s NCAA tournament selection to see if season continBy JAKE POSES The Chronicle

The field hockey team fell Friday to No. 1 seed Wake Forest 2-1 in the semifinals of the ACC tournament at Williams Field Friday night. The Blue Devils came in with confidence following Thursday’s victory over Virginia, but failed to counter two second half goals by the Demon Deacons. Ranked third nationally, Wake Forest went on to win the tournament, shutting out Maryland 4-0 Sunday. While they know that a few different bounces could have yielded a different outcome, the Blue Devils were proud of their play and displayed only limited disappointment about the loss. “Overall I thought the team effort was great,” head coach Liz Tchou said. After a scoreless first half that saw six total shots on goal, sophomore Chrissie Murphy gave Duke a 1-0 advantage when she slammed a shot from three feet out into the left side of the net during the first minute of the second period. Johanna Bischof assisted on the goal after her pass skimmed off Wake Forest’s keeper and bounced right to Murphy. The Demon Deacons evened the match midway through the period when Ariel Meyers connected on a Maria Whitehead pass. The shot rattled past a diving Christy Morgan. With 10 minutes remaining in regulation, Wake Forest’s Kelly Dostal scored what was ultimately the winning goal off a penalty corner. The play developed quickly, and Morgan was barely able to see a low shot into

the right corner of the net. The match up was a defensive struggle, a change for Duke following the previous day’s 5-2 victory over Virginia. Specifically, Wake Forest focused on shutting down Duke’s biggest scoring

threat, freshman Katie Grant. Grant was coming off a huge threegoal, two-assist effort against Virginia. The freshman talent had a few runs during the first half but, facing double and triple coverage, was not able to get off a shot. Grant was named ACC Rookie of the Year and—along with sophomore Suzanne Simpson—a member of the All-Tournament team Sunday. “She is just a solid player,” Wake Forest head coach Jennifer Averill said about Grant. ‘We knew the moves. I’ve had enough nightmares about her. You are either going to take a tranquilizer or throw another cover back there. “I felt both teams did a really good job of clogging the midfield so that you didn’t get too many breaks,” Averill said. Like Averill, Tchou was happy with Duke’s defensive effort. She felt like goals were just as much a result of failure to stop the ball in the midfield as they were defensive mistakes. “They are a strong team,” Tchou said. “You can’t really hold them. We just made a few defensive mistakes.” Both squads left more players than usual on defense and consequently had trouble threading the ball through the midfield. The Demon Deacons countered Duke’s defensive game plan, leaving extra players in the backfield to prevent a long pass and quick score by the Blue Devils.

CHRISSY ASHLEY takes the ball downfield during theBlue Devils’ ACC tournament matches. make it or not,” Tchou said. “I think we On the bubble for the NCAA toumament, the 13-8 Blue Devils remain un- have a good chance but at the same sure whether they have played their time there have been so many upsets final game of the year. The Blue Devils in the country.” will learn their fate Tuesday when the Wake Forest 2, Duke 1 brackets are announced. One positive is 1 2 F that North Carolina fell beneath .500 final 0 2 2 after losing to Maryland in the other n\ke m sf (15 2) 0 1 1 u e semifinal and thus will not be considForest-Meyers (Whitehead) 36:00. Wake 53:47 G oAL s. Duke-Mu rphy ered for postseason play. r J Postal (Aughmbaugh) 60:33. 1 I have never been this questionabout able whether we are going to .

SAVES: Duke 3 (Morgan). Wake Forest 2 (Ridd)

Attendance—3oo

stadium: williams r?w.

Despite loss, once ailing field hockey program now respected among nation’s elite The play was eerily similar. Katie Grant, the Blue Devils freshman forward, the team leader in points and the ACC rookie of the year, was streaking with the ball down the right side of the field in the first half Saturday night against Wake Forest in the ACC semifinals. After practicing this action over and over Wednesday—she had made this run five times in the previous game against Virginia, scoring each time en route to setting the tournament record for most points in a single contest—Grant beat the last Wake Forest defender and shot the ball. The shot hit the goalie, who had rushed Grant and taken away her angle, in the leg and rolled out ofbounds. The first time around, the Cavahers had no answer for Grant. This contest, the Demon Deacons were ready for her. No goal, no assist, nothing. “She’s just a solid player,” Demon _

Deacon head coach Jennifer Averill f said. “We knew the moves... There’s Jesse a reason we’ve been to this campus 10 times in the last two weeks. They

Colvin

are just an awesome team.” That play made a statement. Wake Forest blanketed Grant all game, doubling and even tripleteaming her at times. The Blue Devil offense struggled for most of the first half, as the Demon Deacons controlled play. With the exception of Grant’s two runs—she had another chance later but her pass across the goalmouth was cleared out —Duke did not have any serious scoring chances. Wake Forest was not dominating Duke, but it was definite that they had the momentum. Coming out of half-time, however, the Blue Dev-

ils responded. JOHANNA BISCHOF was one of the team’s offensive leaders during the course of the season.

Less than minute into the second half, sophomore Chrissie Murphy finished off a Johanna Bischof cross that had deflected off the Demon in the goal. Just like that, Duke was up a point.

Indeed, after Duke’s goal, Wake Forest charged back. Despite the extra Blue Devil defender in the back—Duke played four defenders throughout the game instead of the usual three—the Demon Deacons were able to send a through-ball past the Duke line of defense and score. “The momentum shifts throughout the game, and I thought we had the upper hand in the first half,” Blue Devil head coach Liz Tchou said. “[ln the] second half there was a period of 10 minutes or so [when] Wake Forest came at us, and I was wanting to call a time-out at that point they had scored a goal.” A few minutes later, the Deacons scored off a penalty comer to end the scoring at 2-1. Wake Forest had beaten a team that had put together a full game of inspired hockey. “I felt more in the last four games like a team, like a unit, than I have all season or with any team I’ve ever played with,” junior defender Kim Gogola said. “And when you have a unit and you have so much confidence in each other and you know that everyone is going to go out and play for each other, it’s really exciting. I knew it was going to be a battle, and I thought it was a great game.” After the game, the Duke players and coaches were disappointed but proud, while the Demon Deacons were happy to come away with a win. The Blue Devils did not express frustration, understanding that this was not their only chance to win an ACC tournament. After the game, there was a feeling similar to the mutual respect boxers show after wailing away on each other for 15 rounds en route to a -

disputed decision. In the end, as frustrating as defeated may have been for the Duke squad, it was unimportant that it lost. Instead, after many years of disappointing losses and first round conference-tournament exits, it was both important and clear that Duke field hockey had the respect of its peers.


Sportswrai

The Chronicle

MONDAY, NOVEMBER 11, 2002 »PACE 5

Streaking Blue Devils drop Ist contest in 4 tries Women’s soccer falls in semifinals of ACC tournament, now waits for NCAA selecBy GABE GITHENS The Chronicle

Clemson Duke

2 The women’s soccer team (9-9-2) ended its 1 three-game winning

streak and ruined any chance for an ACC tournament championship with a 2-0 loss to Clemson (14-6-0) Friday. Continuing play in this weekend’s tournament at the Florida State Seminole Soc-

cer Complex, the Tigers scored two goals in the final period for their second consecutive victory over the Blue Devils this season. “We played well tonight,” Duke head coach Robbie Church said. “The first goal is always key. We had our opportunities, and we had a lot of shots. We just did not capitalize on them.” Clemson got on the board in the

THORA HELGADOTTIR and the women’s team were halted in their tracks by the Tigers,

53rd minute of the match when freshman Lydia Vandenbergh served the ball in the box for teammate Lindsay Browne. After timing the play perfectly, Browne headed the ball past Duke goalkeeper Thora Helgadottir to give the Tigers a 1-0 lead. Church thought the match’s first score was crucial for both teams. “Like in every game, the first goal is so important,” Church said. “We got a little tentative on their first goal and they took advantage of that. We didn’t pressure the ball tight enough or do a good job of marking in the box.” Helgadottir, a first-team All-ACC selection, was once again incredible in goal for the Blue Devils, making six saves on 20 shots from the Tigers. Despite her superb play in net, the Blue Devil defense could not stop Clemson’s second goal, as Church moved one player forward in order to create more offensive opportunities. His decision backfired in the 79th minute when ACC Player of the Year Deliah Arrington netted her 17th goal of the year. Midfielder Allison Mitchell fed Arrington a ball up the middle as she sprinted past Duke defenders and beat the Blue Devil netminder one-on-one. “We started to change our formation when they got the second goal,” Church said. “We took numbers out of the back and put them forward to try and tie the game. It was do-or-die. We didn’t care if we lost by one goal or if we lost by four goals.” The Blue Devils had their chances on the offensive end, compiling 22 shots in the match. Similar to many previous games, the Blue Devils could not finish their

opportunities on the offensive end of the field. Tigers’ goalie Lauren Heos, a second-team All-ACC goalkeeper, had nine saves in the match on 22 shots by the Blue Devils. Helgadottir thought the game was well-played by both schools. “It was a good game,” she said. “There were a lot of shots for both teams. It just was not our day. It was Clemson’s day today.” After a pivotal tie at North Carolina earlier in the season propelled Duke to three consecutive wins, the Blue Devils find themselves with a .500 record. Since Duke was the only team to receive an at-large bid with a record under .500 last year, the NCAA decided to change the rule this season disallowing teams with a losing record to compete in the tournament. The Blue Devils will barely be eligible for an at-large bid with a 9-9-2 record on the year. The selection committee will decide the pairings for the competition which begins next week. Based on key wins over Tennessee, Florida and Virginia Church is confident his team deserves a bid but he will have to wait until Monday afternoon when the brackets are released. “There’s no question in my mind and other people’s minds that I’ve talked to that think we deserve a bid,” Church said. “I’m fairly confident we’ll get one but we’ll see what happens.”

Clemson 2, Duke 0 FINAL Clemson (14-6) Duke (9-9-2)

1 0 0

2 2 0

GOALS; Clemson-Browne (Graham, Vandenburgh) 52:03, Arrington (Mitchell) 78:59. SAVES: Duke 6 (Helgadottir), Clemson 9 (Hoos).

Stadium: Seminole Soccer Stadium

McCain beat in semis of National Indoor Champ Teammate Saras Arasu topped fellow Blue Devil Katie Blaszak to win Arizona State tourBy CATHERINE SULLIVAN The Chronicle Women’s tennis star Kelly McCain may have just missed a chance to become the first women’s tennis player in school history to win two collegiate grand slams in a single season, but the sophomore nevertheless had a strong showing at the Omni Hotels National Indoor Championships in Dallas, Texas. McCain, who earned the No. 1 seed in the elite 32-player field by virtue of her undefeated fall season and her victory at the Riviera All-American tournament in October, fell 6-3, 6-4 in the semifinals to No. 3 seed and eventual champion Agata Cioroch of Georgia. Cioroch’s victory marked a reversal from their last meeting at Riviera, when McCain came away with 6-4, 6-1 victory en route to the title. “Agata was serving well in tournament, and it helped against McCain, who uses the whole court,” Georgia assistant coach Debbis Beck said. “Agata moved well and was very solid from the baseline. She controlled play with her forehand and was mentally tough on

relatively easy 6-3, 6-1 triumph over No. 12 Lindsay Dawaf of Florida in the

quarterfinals. McCain was the only Blue Devil to compete at the National Indoors, although Amanda Johnson received an atlarge bid, but had to withdraw because of a knee injury. Several other players saw action at the Arizona State Thunderbird Invitational, and, in a surprising all-Duke final, third-seeded sophomore Saras Arasu defeated eight-seeded teammate Katie Blaszak in 7-5, 6-3. Blaszak, a transfer from Vanderbilt, entered the tournament ranked 87th nationally, but was able to knock off No. 49 Jieun Jacobs of California and No. 21 Dora Krstulovic of Arizona State before falling to Arasu. Arasu, ranked 47th nationally, had the biggest upset of the tournament, defeating hometown favorite and ninth-ranked Adria Engel of Arizona State, 7-5, 6-4. Arasu also haunted Engel in doubles, as she and sophomore Susie Abromeit upset Arizona State’s third-ranked duo of Engel and Krstulovic before falling in the finals. big points.” This weekend marked the concluWith the defeat, McCain closes out sion of the individual fall season for 8-1 record. She the fall season with an and the Blue picked up solid wins in the earlier the women’s tennis team, for a their firstquest begin Devils will rounds, highlighted by a, 6-3, 7-5, vicin January championship ever team PennPirsu of tory over No. 14 Alice sylvania in the second round and a against Northwestern.

SARAS ARASU won the Arizona State Thunderbird Invitational

F 2 0


PAGE 6 �MONDAY,

Sportswrai

ieb h,

The Chronicle

NFL Uodate i From wire reports 34 PITTSBURGH Falcons Outstanding perforSteelers 34 mances by Tommy Maddox and Michael Vick, combined with two blocked field goals in overtime, resulted in the 16th tie in NFL history and the first in five years. Vick rallied Atlanta from 17 points down in the fourth quarter, and the Falcons withstood Maddox’s franchiserecord 473 yards passing to tie Pittsburgh 34-34 Sunday. After Pittsburgh’s Todd Peterson and Atlanta’s Jay Feely had overtime

field-goal attempts blocked, Pittsburgh still nearly won it. With only one second on the clock, Maddox lofted a 50-yard pass that Plaxico Burress caught at the Falcons one-yard line. Half of Burress’ body was in the end zone, but the ball was not, and the Steelers did not have enough time to run another play. It was the NFL’s first tie since the Giants and Redskins played to a 7-all stalemate on Nov. 23,1997. Pittsburgh’s last tie was 35-all against Denver in 1974, and Atlanta hadn’t tied since a 2020 game against the Rams in 1971, long before the NFL went to overtime. Maddox was 28-of-41 for 473 yards, easily breaking Bobby Layne’s 1958 club record of 409 yards. Burress made nine catches for a team-record 253 yards and two touchdowns, but Pittsburgh still couldn’t hold a 34-17 lead in the fourth quarter. Both teams remained unbeaten in their last five games and are 5-3-1.

Rams 28, Chargers 24

ST. LOUIS

The Rams lost four

fumbles—two of which were returned for touchdowns—but used two late touchdowns and a successful onside kick to defeat San Diego and win their fourth straight game. St. Louis (4-5) was led by Marc Bulger’s 453 yards passing—the fourth-most in franchise history—and Isaac Bruce, who lost two of the fumbles but caught three touchdown passes, including the sevenyard game-winner with 1:14 to play. Bulger and Pittsburgh’s Tommy Maddox became the first pair of NFL quarterbacks to throw for 450 yards in the league on the same day. Bruce also caught TD passes of 27 and 34 yards, the latter an acrobatic grab that cut the Chargers’ lead to 2421 with 3:06 to go. He finished with 10 catches for 163 yards. Having burned all three timeouts in the third quarter, the Rams were forced to try an onside kick, and Dre’ Bly recovered at the St. Louis 46 to set up the winning score.

Giants 27, Vikings 20

MINNEAPOLIS Kerry Collins threw for 300 yards and two touchdowns and Tiki Barber ran for 127 yards on 24 carries to lead the Giants. New York (5-4) moved within a game of first-place Philadelphia in the NFC East. The Vikings are 2-7 for the first time since 1984. Daunte Culpepper was pulled for Todd Bouman in the third quarter, and Bouman nearly rallied the Vikings. Culpepper was just 9-for-20 for 91 yards. Michael Bennett rushed 15 times for a career-high 167 yards, his third straight 100-yard game. He scored on a 78-yard burst through the line that gave Minnesota its first lead, 20-19 with 8:36 remaining.

Colts 35, Eagles 13

PHILADELPHIA Peyton Manning threw for 319 yards and three touchdowns, and James Mungro ran for 114 yards and two TDs, leading the Colts past the Eagles. The Colts (5-4) snapped a three-game losing streak. Philadelphia (6-3) had won three straight. Indianapolis coach Tony Dungy, in his first season with the Colts after six in Tampa Bay, lost playoff games to the Eagles at the Vet the last two seasons. He was fired two days after Philadelphia beat the Buccaneers 31-9 in an NFC wild-card game last January. Mungro, making his first career start because Edgerrin James and Ricky Williams are out with hamstring injuries, had TD runs of six and 10 yards. Marvin Harrison finished with six catches for 137 yards. Donovan McNabb threw for 281 yards and one TD and ran for 62 yards, but he dropped a pass on a critical fourth-and-one in the third quarter and also lost a fumble.

Packers 40, Lions 14

GREEN BAY, Wis. Brett Favre’s sprained left knee gave him no problems in his second start since getting hurt, as he threw for 351 yards and two

touchdowns.

The Packers improved their NFL-

best record to 8-1 while taking a fivegame lead over second-place Detroit (36) in the NFC North.

Ahman Green (12 carries for 50 yards) didn’t play after halftime with a mild concussion. Najeh Davenport gained 73 yards in 10 carries before hurting his ankle in the third quarter. Favre had 295 yards passing by halftime and was taken out in the third quarter.

Donald Driver caught 11 passes for 130 yards, and Ryan Longwell kicked four field goals in Green Bay’s seventh straight victory—their longest streak in the regular season since 1963.

Saints 34, Panthers 24

CHARLOTTE

Aaron Brooks threw

a seven-yard touchdown pass to Donte Stallworth with 31 seconds to play Sun-

day, and Charles Grant returned Rodney Peete’s fumble 34 yards on the final play to preserve the Saints’ victory. The Saints are 7-2, their best start since 1992, and have won five straight over Carolina.

The Panthers (3-6) dropped their sixth straight game. Five of the losses have come in the final four minutes. Bolstered by the return of Peete—he missed two games with a knee injury—the Panthers took a late 24-20 lead on his 15-yard touchdown pass to Wesley Walls with 3:31 to play.

Titans 17, Texans 10

NASHVILLE, Tenn. Steve McNair threw for two touchdowns, and Eddie George rushed for 86 yards as Tennessee defeated the Texans in the firstever meeting between Houston’s current and former teams. At least the Texans (2-7) signaled that this might soon become an interesting rivalry, as David Carr threw a 10-yard touchdown pass to Jarrod Baxter with 3:05 left. The Titans (5-4) did not seal the victory until Lance Schulters intercepted Carr’s pass at the Tennessee 46 with 1:11 left. It was the fourth straight victory

JASON COHN/REUTERS

STEELERS QUARTERBACK TOMMY MADDOX scrambles out the pocket during yesterday’s game, for the Titans, who stayed atop the AFC South.

Ravens 38, Bengals 27

BALTIMORE Adalius Thomas returned an interception 25 yards for a touchdown, and rookie Lament Brightful scored on a 95-yard punt return in Baltimore’s victory. Brightful also returned a kickoff 54 yards to help the Ravens boost their lead to 24-14 at halftime. Jamal Lewis ran for 135 yards and two touchdowns as the Ravens (4-5) snapped a two-game losing streak and denied Cincinnati a second straight victory.

Patriots 33, Bears 30 Tom Brady hit CHAMPAIGN, HI. David Patten on a 20-yard TD pass with 21 seconds left—on a play that was upheld by video review—and the Patriots overcame a 27-6 second-half deficit to win. The Bears’ seventh straight loss was one they will never forget. Twice in the final minute, video replays did not go their way in a wild and disheartening finish Chicago (2-7) took a 30-19 lead with 5:22 left on Paul Edinger’s 32-yard field goal, and the Bears thought they had stopped New England’s final drive when defensive lineman Brian Robinson stepped in front of Brady’s pass with just under a minute left for an apparent interception.

But Robinson juggled the ball as he was going down before losing it. Officials initially ruled that he would intercepted the pass and fumbled before teammate Rosevelt Colvin recovered for the Bears. But officials reviewed the play and said Robinson never had possession, resulting in an incomplete pass. That gave the Patriots one final chance with a fourth down at the Bears 30 with 54 seconds to go. Brady completed 36 of 55 passes for 328 yards for New England (5-4).

Jaguars 26, Redskins 7

JACKSONVILLE, Fla.

Outplayed

on the field, outcoached on the sideline,

the Washington Redskins lost Steve

Spurrier’s homecoming,

Mark Brunell threw for 194 yards, and Fred Taylor ran for 82 yards and a touchdown to help the Jaguars (4-5) snap a four-game losing streak. It was a victory Jacksonville coach Tom Coughlin dearly needed—in a matchup against the guy many in Jacksonville felt should have gotten his job after last season. The Redskins (4-5) saw their twogame winning streak snapped. Shane Matthews directed a 77-yard touchdown drive to open the game, but Washington did not score again. Matthews finished 27-for-51 for 256 yards with two interceptions.


The Chronicle

Sportswra

VOLLEYBALL from page 3 day], but we’re very capable of being successful against them,” Nagel said. Beyond impressive Carolina power attacks, fueled by outside hitters Molly Pyles and Laura Greene, Friday night’s match was marked mostly by Duke errors. After falling to the Tar Heels in the first game, the frazzled Blue Devils canceled their kills with attack errors, leaving Duke with a hitting percentage of 0.00. By keeping it close in the third game, the Blue Devils 3-0 loss to Carolina was unlike most shut-outs. Duke was leading 25-22 before ultimately succumbing 30-28. Blue Devil Jill Sonne made three crucial blocks against Carolina power-hitter Greene, they were then echoed by teammate

MONDAY,

tER 11,

Katie Gilman whose two consecutive blocks brought the game to 27 all. Still, Duke came up short and lost on a kill by Pyles. “We waited too long to come up,” Gillman said. “We have to come up from the beginning and be aggressive throughout the whole game... We’re going to use this as motivation for tomorrow night.” Duke still has to face Clemson and Georgia Tech before the ACC Championships in Atlanta. The results this weekend have clearly laid out the team’s strengths and its weaknesses, and the team feels the upcoming games will undoubtedly be hard fought with unparalleled determination. “We need to go into each game with motivation, and practice with purpose,” Sonne said. “We still haven’t reached bur goal, yet.” Shane Ryan contributed to this story.

PAGE?

ANDY YUN/THE CHRONICLE

JILL SONNE had a few crucial blocks during this weekend’s matches

SWIMMING from page 3

TEDDY HELPERS won the 200 butterfly this weekend

the 50 freestyle (24.61) against Old Dominion and 200 breaststroke (2:22.19) against both teams. “Towson and Old Dominion have Andy Storm creamed Old Dominion in the 500 freestyle (4:50.39) and 100 been old competitors,” Cornet said. “We breaststroke (2:10.22), respectively. match up really well. We wanted to Sophomore Dave Peck, freshman Ben beat those two because of our freshRowland, Humphrey and junior Chris man class. We have a really good freshBrede got things rolling for the Blue man class.” Halligan finished the 200 IM in Devils when they finished first in the 400 medley relay in 3:32.63, who Heifers 2:09.17 and 200 butterfly in 2:06.85. Juswam a season best 9:49.66 to win the nior Lauren Hancock won the 1000 1000 freestyle for two of the Blue Devils’ freestyle in 10:31.50. Lewis placed first in the 100 wins against both Towson and ODU. The women dominated the meet, win- freestyle in 54.54 versus Old Dominion ning 11 of their 13 events. Juniors Katie and was a member of the winning 400 Fay, Lauren Comet, Amy Halligan and free relay in 3:36.48, which also featured freshmen Nora Stupp, Katie freshman Julia Lewis won the 400 medNess and Allison Sundberg. ley relay in 3:55.07. Fay also claimed vicStupp also won two individual events, tory in the 200 backstroke in 2:05.78. Cornet, coming off of two weeks of the 200 freestyle (1:55.93) and 500 pneumonia, won individual events in freestyle (5:09.88).

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Job Search Techniques for seniors

Monday, November 11 s:3opm Meeting Room A, Bryan Center

Infrasource Meter Services is a drug free workplace. •

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Co-sponsored by Community Service Center

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Questions: career@duke.edu

rt

Web: http://career.studentaffairs.duke.edu


8 �mommy.

Sportswr

lER 11, 21

Is the World Running Out of Oil? An Assessment of Global Oil, Gas, and NGL Resources

The Chronicle

EXPRESS fcurm*

YOURSELF

Devil Speak

Thomas S.

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Ahlbrandt

Check out our online

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For information, call 919-613-8003 NICHOLAS SCHOOL OF THE ENVIRONMENT AND EARTH SCIENCES

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UNIVERSITY 02-0932

The Duke Honor Council is pleased to sponsor a visit by

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t;x:p

Speech and Q&A at 2:3OPM on November 11th Rhodes Conference Room, Sanford Institute •

"Iraq, the European Union and Ethical Foreign Policy" A reception will follow. This event is free and open to the public.

bout Ulrik Federspiel Her Majesty's Ambassador Official Representative of the European Union Presidency in Washington, DC (July December 2002) -


The Chronicle

MONDAY, NOVEMBER

11,2002 � PAGE 9

MED STUDENTS from page 5 the two. “After serving* on both, I know we worked real well with everyone,” said Wood, who was named one of three finalists, but not selected, in the contest to select a graduate and professional student young trustee

last winter. Audrey Beck, GPSC vice pres-

ident,

con-

curred with Wood. “We’ve done a great job integrating the schools. It’s very social and we all have

friends in the provarious grams here,” she said. “We just like to maintain friendly relations.” Bernstein said that although GPSC is useful to medical students for finding professional contacts and developing relationships with other graduate students, many issues that GPSC considers—such as tuition, campus parking, stipends, teacher as sistant positions and research funding—have no relevance to medical students. “[Furthermore,] what Davison does is of no help to the majority of the graduate students,” he added. “I have no doubt that GPSC would han-

Bill Wood

EDUARD PESOV/REUTERS

RUSSIAN FOREIGN MINISTER" IGOR IVANOV (right) talks with Syrian foreign minister Farouk al-Sharaa at a meeting in April. Both Russia and Syria supported a tough U.N. resolution last week demanding Iraq rid itself of all weapons of mass destruction.

:

dle an issue of ours if necessary, but

there are very few that are of their concern.”

Wood pointed to the co-sponsorship of a new undergraduate mentoring program, designed to provide informal advising to undergraduates interested in graduate or professional study. “It’s rare that we are working together on a program of this magnitude, especially one that is academic,” he said. “Normally, we just provide [representatives! from our council like the business or law schools.” Bernstein added that among his goals as a GPSC representative this year also include implementing informal social and service events together.

RESOLUTION

from page 2

deal with all those demonstrators from Los Angeles to the Far East and the Arab countries.” “This resolution was for the immediate effect,” he said. “It avoided an inevitable strike against Iraq.” Iraq’s government controlled newspapers started out calling the U.N. Security Council resolution 1441, on disarmament of Iraq, “bad and unfair.” But by Sunday, officials and the news media were hailing it as an international effort to thwart the American desire for war. Although Iraq has until Nov. 15 to declare that it intends to comply fully with the terms of the resolution, Sabri noted that Iraq had agreed to renewed inspections previously and thought there was no need to alter the U.N. guidelines about the way they worked. “The problem is that we need experts who work in a professional, objective way,” Sabri said, adding that, as the Arab League communique noted, the new inspection teams should not “try to provoke or incite clashes as they have previously.” Sabri said that if inspectors worked that way, they would expose the “great lie” promulgated by the United States. “It is the lie about the existence of weapons of mass destruction in Iraq,” he said. The Arab League resolution also restated the long-stand-

m frubiii

ing Arab position that Iraq must work with the U.N. inspectors, and emphasized that only the Security Council should evaluate the reports from the inspectors. Such cooperation should lead to the lifting of sanctions against Iraq since it invaded Kuwait in 1990, the League said, adding that ordinary Iraqis had suffered because of the sanctions. In addition, the League proposed that the United Nations pay equal attention to Israel’s weapons of mass destruction and stressed that Arab League members were committed both to maintaining Iraq as a united country and to maintaining the stability of all Arab countries. “They reiterate the absolute Arab rejection to striking Iraq and consider it a threat to the national security of all Arab countries,” it said. Although an Arab League meeting in Beirut last March issued a statement that an attack on Iraq would be considered an attack on all Arab countries, commentators dismissed that as empty posturing. The underlying concern remains that any such conflict will rearrange the existing relations both among countries in the region and between those countries and the United States. The official Iraqi news agency reported Sunday that Sabri, the Iraqi foreign minister, had sought assurances from the Arab governments that they would take specific steps in the event of an attack.

IUHUiTiB msnniTE

The WEDNESDAY CONVERSATIONS Series At Duke’s John Hope Franklin Humanities Institute Presents ...

Charlotte Pierce-Baker Discussing "Women and Violence"

Stanford

university

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

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

Application deadline January 15th 2003 for: •

p

2003-2004 fellowships Early decision for 2004-2005 fellowships

Apply Online

http://innovation.stanford.edu

Finalists will interview at Stanford University

Hi''

.?!


The Chronicle

PAGE 10 � MONDAY, NOVEMBER 11,2002

*

i Duke Career Center f

CAREER HAPRKRN& November 11-15 Sign up for our mailing lists and receive regular updates on our events! Visit our website at http://ccU-eer.studentafFairs.duke.edu

Multicultural Career Conference This Week!!! The Career Center, Duke's Center for Multicultural Affairs, ASA, BSA, and Mi Cente, 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://coreer.studentaffairs. duke, edu/undergrads/mcc. Html There will be free giveways and door prizes! Don't miss this great learning and networking opportunity! 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) Career Center will be OPEN from ,5-7pm in the Resource Room in The 217 Page. Come during that time to get an informal resume review, register for BlueDevilTßAK or Internship Exchange, schedule counseling appointments, do self-assessment tests, browse through our many hard-copy resources covering many fields.

Events this Week: Summer Job/lnternship Search Monday, November 11, 10:00am, 106 Page Student Conservation Association (SCA) Info Session The Student Conservation Association (SCA) is the nation's leading provider of conservation service opportunities, outdoor skills and leadership training for young women and men. Learn about job opportunities at this info session!

www.thesca.org Monday, November 11, 3pm, 106 Page

Non-Profit

Job Search Techniques for Seniors

Not interested in corporate finance but still want to change the world? Worried about whether you should have a job right now? Calm your fears and get your questions answered by coming to this non-profit workshop. Duke alumni will be present to present their perspectives on non-profits. Co-sponsored by the Community Service Center. Monday, November 11, s:3opm, Meeting Room A Bryan Center -

Professional

Job Search Essentials for Grad Students

For graduate students beginning a job search in the business, non-profit or government sectors. Topics will include networking and researching organizations, finding openings, preparing resumes/cover letters, interviewing, and negotiating salary/benefits. Registration is required!

http://career.studentaffairs.duke.edu/grads/index.php Tuesday, November 12, spm, Page 217

Agilent Info Sessions Thursday, November 14, 106 Page For Graduate Students: s:3opm

For Undergrads: 4:3opm

Sponsors for Educational Opportunity (SEO) Info Session The SEO offers minority internships in a variety of industries. Attend this info session to learn more! Friday November 15, 3pm, 106 Page

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

THETA CHI from page 1

Jared Bryant, a sophomore in Theta Chi, agreed.

“Losing housing or losing a pledge class will eventually lead to us dissolving,” said sophomore Elias Parisca, a Theta Chi brother, adding that the loss of a pledge class would take a year of membership out of their fraternity, and the removal of their residential space would eliminate the fraternity’s campus presence. Others said brothers support different decisions depending on their year. Many seniors, for example, said they might be more willing to dissolve as they already choose to party in Chapel Hill bars or in off-campus houses. “As... seniors, [dissolving is] an option we’re considering,” DiPietro said. “When [the administration] figures out our punishment, we will make a decision to either comply [with what the University mandates] or dissolve.” Theta Chi President Joel Yancey de-

can’t continue the way you want to operate,” he said. Some fraternity members said the administration has even discouraged Theta Chi from dissolving. “They tell us they don’t want us to dissolve because they’re supposed to be supporting greek life,” DiPietro said. The brothers said they are unaware of Theta Chi’s official standing and how they are recognized by the University—suspended or on probation. They noted that they cannot decide on their future plans until they hear back from University officials. “Basically we’re going to wait and see what the administration says,” Fong said. “The administration tends to work a little slowly. We don’t know what they’re going to do with u5.... We’re kind of in the dark right now

clined to comment, and said the fraternity had no official comment. Sophomore Andrew Fong, also a member of Theta Chi, said he is frustrated because he cannot take advantage of everything that fraternities are normally allowed to do and said he wants Theta Chi to have all the privileges of being a fraternity. “Personally I would like to avoid [dissolution],” he said. “I want to come back in five or 10 years and have a section to visit. We’re not going to let Kappa Sig’s [decision] influence us in any way.”

TUTORING from page 3 not form sentences well and yet they are patient with me,” said Li Mei Zeng, speaking in Mandarin. Zeng came to North Carolina from China two years ago to look for a job and for the chance to give her son a “good education.” “I’ve made many friends too,” she added. “A few weeks ago, they invited me to visit Duke. Your school is so beautiful.”

Freshman Jules Bruno said although the immigrants are diligent and enthusiastic, the tutoring requires

concentration and dedication. “I was teaching a lady how to bake a cake. I could not understand what she was saying and she had to resort to hand gestures,” he said. “Later, I realized she was telling me about kneading the dough.” Bruno said he hopes to inspire them to love the language, and at the same time, teach them something about his culture.

SAFETY WALK

«

president for facilities and athletics. Troy Clair, DSG vice president for student affairs, said he and Bill Burig, assistant dean of residence life, are creating a memo to encourage residents to increase visibility by turning on their patio lights. Rob Saunders, Graduate and Professional Students Council president, recommended increased lighting in parking lots along Science Drive, his group’s route. Another concern was potential pedestrian accidents on Frank

“Dissolving is conceding defeat. You

and hoping for the best. Interfraternity Council President Jeremy Morgan said Theta Chi differed from Kappa Sig and also recently-dissolved Sigma Alpha Epsilon because it is in trouble with the University for its repeated violations—not with nationals or alumni. “This was a small thing, but it was really the last straw,” Morgan said. “[University officials! want to know why this continues to happen.” Todd Adams, director of the Office of Fraternity and Sorority Life, wrote in an e-mail that he has no information regarding Theta Chi. ”

“It’s a give and take situation,” said freshman Emily Antoon. “I learned how to say Tm a student at Duke,’ and the immigrants were interested about where I’m from. We make some really awesome connections despite the language barrier.” She added that while she has tutored kids in English before, this was a totally different experience as these English-learners were old enough to be her aunt or uncle. Although most of the immigrants are in their 40s, their teenage children also get tutored. Global Grasp is planning to continue the program next semester, and is also looking into reviving the World Club, a refugee-mentoring program for refugee high school students in the Triangle. Wat said that the group has been really blessed with the tutors they have now. “We continue to look for Duke tutors who are enthusiastic, open-minded and who want to work with people from other cultures,” she said.

Bassett Drive, which Saunders described as a narrow street with no pedestrian paths. On East, walkers examined the campus periphery and jogging path and noticed trees covering emergency lights behind dormitories. They also recommended installing lights on the path between the White Lecture Hall and Epworth Dormitory. Students can help increase safety on campus by notifying their resident advisors if they notice any lights burnt

out for more than a week, said Aurel

Selezeanu, assistant director ofelectrical services.

Is there an injustice you think needs exposed? Have a burning news tip? Call The Chronicle! Call Alex or Whitney at 684'BOND.


Classifieds

The Chronicle

http://www.aas.duke.edu/trinity/hou

secrs/hc.html. Deadline: November 15.

www.duke.edu/web/film/screenso-

Friday,

SUMMER SESSION 2003

ciety

Projected course offerings with meeting times now posted at www.learnmore.duke.edu/Summer Session. Other questions? 6842621 orsummer@duke.edu.

A child needs a mentor. Enroll in a Program in Education undergraduate course and learn how to tutor kids in reading and math. Check our spring semester Education ACES courses on or at

INFO SESSIONS

Nursery child care worker needed for Sunday mornings and Wednesday evenings. Trinity United Methodist Church. 215 North Church Street, Durham. Please call 919-683-1386.

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First-year students often enroll in Education courses. Come by and see us in 213 West Duke Building!

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A child needs a mentor. Enroll in a Program in Education undergraduate course and learn how to tutor kids in reading and math. Check our spring semester Education courses on ACES or, at www.duke.edu/web/education. First-year students often enroll in Education courses. Come by and see us in 213 West Duke Building!

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

An event you don’t want to miss! GENERAL ORGANIC AND CHEMISTRY STUDENTS! The CENTER FOR MULTICULTURAL AFFAIRS and the ACADEMIC RESOURCE CENTER invite you to attend a workshop on successful learning in chemistry at Duke University. Here’s your opportunity to discover approaches to studying that may improve your performance in chemistry (and to learn about ways to prepare for cumulative finals) —Come and hear about ways to become a skilled learner in your science courses. WHEN? Wednesday, November 13, 2002, 8:00 p.m. WHERE? Multicultural Center, 0010 Bryan Center. Questions? Call 684-6756.

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

Pretty Apt for Rent. Good Area! $525.00 Lg Kit, W/D, Bath, Living bedroom, private Duplex, 5 Rm min. to Duke, $525/ month. Call 4030289. +

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HOUSE COURSES SPRING 2003

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www.aas.duke.edu/trinity/hou secrs/hc.html for people wishing to teach a House Course in Spring 2003. DEADLINE for submission Friday, November 15, 2002

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jeh23@duke.edu. WORK STUDY STUDENT needed immediately to assist Division office staff with miscellaneous administrative duties. Contact Diane Frazier: 919-684-3729 or Email: frazioo6@mc.duke.edu.

1214 Broad Street., Beautiful & spacious IBR Apt. Near Campus. Newly renovated $515, 416-0393. 2 BR Homes near campus. Available Now $650-$825. 4160393.www.bobschmitzproperties.co Beautiful, transitional townhouse in Hope Valley, short commute to Duke (15 minutes), great and very quiet neighborhood, 1500 sqf, 2 levels, 2 bedrooms, nice open loft, 2.5 baths, very nice hardwood floors, high vaulted ceilings with skylights, private and very quiet backyard, dishwasher, washer/dryer ($3O extra), $lO4O month. Call: 403-2109 or email to hoal ©duke.edu. House for Rent: Minutes to Duke & Durham Regional Hospital. Nice 3 bedroom, 2 bath, alarm system. $825/month phone: 423-T430, 4897351. JUST A FEW LEFT!! Big Houses for next year, 4-6 BR, Gorgeous. 4160393.

Lovely 2BR/1.58A home near campQs. Fenced-in yard, full basement, hardwood floors, new appliances. Backs up to city park. Just blocks from Duke Forest. $950/month. 4900660. SWF 45 has rooms available in awesome 3400 sq ft. log home nestled on 18 beautiful acres in Bahama. Wraparound porch and massive stone fireplace. Exercise equipment, pool table, and gas grill. Three stone stall horse barn with riding pasture. 3BR each with private bath. Available immediately, 824-8661.

GREECE 111 SUMMER 2003 Want to study in Athens and the islands of the Aegean? “The Birth of Reason in Ancient Greece,” a 4-week, 1-cc philosophy program, will again be offered for summer 2003. Meet director Prof. Michael Ferejohn at an information meeting, Tues., Nov. 12, 6 p.m., 201 West Duke. Applications available onsite, online or in the Office of Study Abroad. Questions? Call 684-2174.

Laura W. Keohane

Attorney & Counselor at Law

DUKE YORK IN NEW ARTS/MEDIA PROGRAM FALL 2003 Find out more about this semester-long immersion in arts, media, and writing industries, which includes an internship for academic credit. Come to one of these information sessions (munchies provided); Tuesday, November 12th, noon to Ipm Wednesday, November 13, 10am-11am. Both in Bryan Center Meeting Room A (main level, diagonally across from the Information Desk.)

“Venice and its Civilization at its Apogee" and “Venetian Art of the Renaissance” are offered, with direction by Prof. Marcel Tetel. Learn more about summer study in this unique setting at an information meeting, Wed., 6:30 p.m., 305 Languages. Applications available onsite, online or in the Office of Study Abroad, 2016 Campus Drive. Questions? Call 684-2174.

Breast Pump for Sale. Medela Pump in Style. Hardly used. $l6O. Call 544-2882.

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

4 tickets needed. Duke v. Army November 23. Mid-court or good seating. Contact James at 4849079.

Need 4 good seats, any home men’s game. Contact me at OKIEDUKIEI @ hotmail.com. Duke Grad Student Needs to Buy 2, 4 or 6 tickets to the Dayton game December 29, 2002. Please email MikeFarrell3s@aol.com.

DUKE V. ARMY Tickets Needed Need 2 or More tickets for Nov. 23 Men’s Basketball Game. E-mail Nancy.james ©duke.edu

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Real Estate Sales SO CLOSE TO DUKE &VAM ONLY 3 HOMES LEFT BY SW @ SUGGS CONSTRUCTION CONVENIENT HILLANDALE COMMONS. ONE LEVEL TRANSITIONAL BEAUTIES LOADED W/CUSTOM FEATURES FROM THE 220’S CB/HPW REALTORS. CALL FOR INFO 919-220-1177 OR VISIT US ON THE WEB AT WWW.TRAMMELHOMES.COM

Roommate Wanted Duke student looking for housemate in beautiful Woodcraft. Private garage, room and bath, washer/dryer, kitchen amenities, roadrunner, TV/DVD, minutes from Duke and Chapel Hill. $4OO/month. 649-3101.

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deadline 1 business day prior to publication by 12:00 noon payment Prepayment is required Cash, Check, Duke IR, MC/VISA or Flex accepted (We cannot make change for cash payments.) 24 hour drop off location •101 W. Union Building or mail to: Chronicle Classifieds Box 90858, Durham, NC 27708 0858 fax to: 684-8295 e-mail orders classifieds @ chronicle.duke.edu phone orders: call (919) 684-3811 to place your ad. Visit the Classifieds Online!

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11, 2002 � PAGE 11

College Smokers Help yourself and others Researchers at Duke University Medical Center would like college smokers age 18-24 to share their opinions about smoking and quitting. If you complete this study you will be paid $3O. We can schedule at your convenience. For further information, and to see if you qualify, please call 919-956-5644.

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The Chronicle

PAGE 12 � MONDAY, NOVEMBER 11, 2002

Intoxicated man enters room

KAPPA SIGMA from page 1

CRIME from page 6

the fraternity increase dues to $3OO per member per month to cover higher insurance premiums; pay a $2,500 fine for any subsequent alcohol violations; lock the commons room indefinitely; create a campus group for students opposed to alcohol; and attend district and national fraternity meetings. Adding to the fraternity’s difficulties, any event with four or more Kappa Sig members in attendance would be considered a Kappa Sig event, making any off-campus events with alcohol illegal as well. After a two-hour meeting Saturday in which members discussed the implications of those restrictions, members voted nearly unanimously to disassociate from the national fraternity and the University’s Interfratemity Council. They notified their nationals and the University Sunday of their decision. “This was not an easy decision to make, but we all felt it was the right thing to do in light ofthe way University and national fraternities seem to be heading,” said Adams, a junior. “We felt we could no longer rush kids- or want to rush kids under those sanctions—they compromised what we were as a group.” Kappa Sig Vice President Mark Boyd added that he saw a common theme in the deactivation of three fraternities in the past three years—also including Phi Kappa Psi and Sigma Alpha Epsilon—and he suspected more will follow suit this year. “I can’t tell if the University is trying to get people like us off-campus or just get rid of us,” said Boyd, a junior.“They need to be frank with u5.... In my dealings with [Assistant Dean of Students Todd Adams], I have found him to be pretty duplicitous, with an agenda contrary to our own.” Todd Adams could not be reached for comment. Like SAE, which dissolved last January after facing similar pressures and restrictions from its nationals, Kappa Sig hopes to rush a pledge class informally this spring. Kappa Sig members said they would like to meet with leaders of SAE—which reined in 21 pledges after announcing its deactivation last spring—about

Man trespassed from campus

rushing as an off-campus fraternity. “What we did probably made their decision much easier because we proved we can have successful events off-campus without having a section or recognition from the University,” former SAE president Will Brown said. “It really helps us a lot too, especially with rush so that the freshmen can see being an off-campus fraternity is not just something we had to do last year but rather a continual issue.” Brown, a senior, added he would be interested in meeting with Kappa Sig leaders to discuss a rush plan for off-campus fraternities. Phi Psi —which did not rush a pledge class last year but took in more than 30 new members in spring 2001 when the University disbanded the group—would likely not partake in such discussions, former Phi Psi president Peter Meriachem said. Without the infrastructure of IFC, both groups will face challenges in the rush process, said IFC President Jeremy Morgan. “I think there is a changing tone where groups think they can make it without IFC recognition,” said Morgan, a senior. Unlike Boyd, however, Morgan did not expect more groups to share Kappa Big’s fate this year. Despite the move, Kappa Sig still plans to hold weekly meetings and host social events. “The negative side ofthis is that we parted with 130 years of tradition at this school,” Boyd said. “The positive thing is that nothing has really changed.”

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Student charged with taking Allen lot decal

Student Nadine Cheryl Tajirian was charged with possession of an Allen Building lot parking decal that was reported stolen Sept. 13. Her car was towed from the Allen lot, and the parking decal was recovered. Her court date is set for Nov. 23. Tajirian could not be reached for comment.

Monitor stolen from Old Chem

Someone entered room 01 of Old Chemistry between 5 p.m. Nov. 1 and 9:38 a.m. Nov. 4 and stole a $7OO black IBM flat screen computer monitor. 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 6844713 or Durham Crime Stoppers at 683-1200.

SNIPER from page 6

The official said that Malvo’s reported comments about pulling the trigger in several shootings did not necessarily complicate the prosecution of Muhammad Linda Franklin, 47, an FBI analyst who was shot because of the terrorism charges against Muhammad. Under that law, “you don’t have to prove who the Oct. 14 in a Home Depot parking garage in Falls Church. Muhammad was sent to Prince William trigger man was for the terrorism statute to kick in,” County, where he is to be tried in the Oct. 9 killing of the official said. Dean Harold Meyers, 53, outside a gas station in In Malvo’s case, other law enforcement officials Manassas. said Sunday that even if Malvo’s acknowledgments To obtain a murder conviction under Virginia law, were thrown out by a judge, who determined that he prosecutors must convince jurors that the defendant had been denied his rights to counsel and a guardian wielded the murder weapon, in this case a Bushmasat the time he was questioned, there is enough eviter rifle. But law enforcement officials said that Malvo dence, including computer files on a laptop that was told the police that he fired the bullets that killed recovered when the men were arrested, to convict him of killing Franklin. Meyers and two others, including Franklin. Both men are also charged under a Virginia antiLaw enforcement officials also provided more deterrorism law that could carry death sentences. But tails on evidence that suggests that Malvo was the law enforcement officials said that there is some congunman in all of the shootings from inside a 1990 cern that convictions on the new, untested anti-terrorChevrolet Caprice that investigators say was turned ism law might not stand up on appeal. into a “killing machine on wheels.” Justice Department officials who turned the case The officials also outlined evidence that suggests over to state prosecutors in Virginia last week said Sunhe was most likely the gunman in many of the shootday they were not tracking the day-to-day developments ings where bullets were fired from outside the car. in the investigation, like Malvo’s reported statements. The law enforcement officials said Malvo was ques“It’s a state case now, and we’re staying out of this,” tioned for seven hours Thursday afternoon by Fairfax said a Justice Department official. County police detectives.

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Someone entered the parking lot of 2707 Edmund Street between 5:30 p.m. Oct. 31 and 6:30 a.m. Nov. 1, cut a chain and drove off with a $6,000 blue Miller/Bobcat arc welder.

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A Duke University Police officerresponded to Duke Hospital North in reference to a suspicious person in the lobby Nov. 4 at 9:56 p.m. Subsequent investigation resulted in Wilford Eastwood being charged with trespassing. His court date is set for Dec. 17. It was discovered Eastwood had an active warrant for failure to appear on an indecent exposure charge from the Pitt County Sheriff Department, and he now is being held in the Durham County Jail. He could not be reached for comment.

A student reported that around 6 a.m. Nov. 9, as she was sleeping in her unlocked room in House M, an intoxicated white male in his 20s entered her room, pulled the covers off her bed and laid down on the floor. The male said he entered the wrong room and was from James Madison University and was visiting a Duke student. The girl was not harmed. Investigation continues in this case to determine if the victim wishes to press criminal charges.

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Comics

The Chronicle

MONDAY, NOVEMBER 11, 2002 � PAGE 13

Blazing Sea Nuggets/ Da id H. Log n and Eric M. Bramley ■findi +V«t\r

from

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Edited by Wayne

Robert Williams

ACROSS

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10 Strong wind 14 Consumes 15 Surgical

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17 Creepy

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19 "Beloved" author Morrison adjuster 21 Relating to the

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20 Sound

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23 Author of 'Foucault's Pendulum'

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Adams

...AND I NEED IT THIS AFTERNOON

FORGET IT! I'lA A SHORTTIIAER.

I PLAN TO SIT IN THIS CHAIR AND NOT lAOVE KY ARIAS OR LEGS FOR A WEEK. AFTER THAT, I'LL NEVER WORK ANOTHER DAY!

I HESITATE TO ASK THIS, BUT I HAVE AN ITCH IN AN AWKWARD //

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Founder of genetics 30 Guy with a simple weapon 35 Sandwich cookie 36 Competent 38 Addis Eth. 39 Kind of stick? 40 Trepidation 42 Composer

Vital statistic Florida key London subway Cote d’ Government in

Khachaturian 43 Stage a coup 45 Basilica area 46 Animation

47 Most annoying 49 Wet impacts 51 Letter after zeta 52 Be unwell 53 Practice 58 Emulate Cicero 63 On the peak of 64 Pane store? 66 Stable denizen

67 Action starter? 68 Meadow

mouse 69 Arcturus or

Rigel, e.g.

Doonesbury/ Garry Trudeau

Leesburg, GA

On the

way

Journalist Ernie

DOWN 1 Nuisance 2 Honolulu's island 3 Knock senseless

Punta del Uruguay

power Formal dance on Skid Row?

Hebrew zither

Filmmaker Reifenstahl

13 Viking redhead

18 Shade source 22 Honor student's grades? Dressed Tidy any loose ends 27 Irregularly notched 28 Mulled wine 29 30 31 32

Key personnel?

Napped

Pod populace "West Side

44 Pocket bread 48 Solicit persistently 50 Farm

Story" song

implement

33 Sternward Appellations Lingerie pieces Lucy's love

52 Priscilla's dear John

55 Dance circle 56 Chinese: pref 57 Opposed to 59 Letters on an

60 61

invitation

Nautical shout Travel charge 62 Fencing sword 65 Part of NATO

53 NFL squad 54 Coup d'

The Chronicle Other things editors don’t understand

oxTrot/ Bill Amend

What “dumps like a truck” means: Why Eminem is so fascinating: Why Kevin’s not going to Harvard Law:.. Why Brian keeps singing Sinatra:

....dave and kevin alex and whitney

Paul’s gastrointestinal problems;

.jane and andrea

How we can sleep 15 hours on Friday:... The fascination with Tetris on Game Boy Robert Tai’s strange sexual appeal: Roily C. Miller:.

ken

paul

...dave and kevin john and matt .jane, yoav, thad, drew roily

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

Submissions for the Duke Events Calendar 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* at Box 90858 or calendar@chronicle.duke.edu.

Academic MONDAY, NOVEMBER 11 Biology/EEOB Seminar: 4pm. Donald Waller, University of Wisconsin. “Do small populations purge, or fix, genetic load? Experiments with Brassica rapa.” 111 Biological Sciences. TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 12 Teer House. 6-7pm. Health Holiday Cooking Demo, Cathie Ostrowski. Limited registration, $5 fee. Call 416DUKE. 4019 N. Roxboro Rd.

Religious MONDAY, NOVEMBER 11 Westminster Presbyterian/UCC Fellowship: 9-1 Opm, Mondays. “Haphour,” informal time of refreshments and fellowship, begins at B:3opm. All are welcomed. Unitarian Universalist: 9-1 Opm, Mondays. Social time, dinner, worship. It’s a religious community for people who question, look for life’s meaning, and believe that truth doesn’t begin with one particular religion. Basement of Duke Chapel. Patty Hannenman, hanneOOl @earthlink.net.

TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 12

TAIZE Prayer; s:lspm, Tuesdays. Memorial Chapel

Duke Events Calendar Social Programming and Meetings MONDAY, NOVEMBER 11 Free Vegetarian Feast: 5-7pm, Mondays. Multicultural Lounge, Bryan Center. Event is sponsored by the Hindu Student Association. 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 Jewish Life, dining area.

Screen/Society: Bpm. ‘Tenda de Milagros” (Tent of Miracles). Griffith Film Theater, Bryan Center. Screen/Society presents a retrospective of the films of Nelson Pereira dos Santos. More information about the found at series can be film

www.duke.edu/web/film/screensociety.

TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 12

In, Out, and In-Between: 4-s:3opm, Tuesdays. In, Out, and In Between; A Confidential Discussion Group About LGBT People and Issues An all new format! New people! All gay men, lesbians, bisexuals, trans, allies welcome. Duke Women’s Center Lower Level Lounge. National French Week Events: 5:30-B:3opm. French wine tasting. Wellspring. National French Week, through Wednesday, Nov 13.

Freewater Films: 7, 9:3opm. “Jules et Jim (Jules and Jim),” directed by Francois Truffaut. Free to students, $4 for employees and ssfor the public. Call 684-2323. Griffith Film Theater, Bryan Center, West Campus.

Duke Police offers following services: Crime prevention presentations, Rape awareness presentations, Alcohol Law presentations, Workforce violence educational programs, Personal property engraving. Please contact Lieutenant Tony Shipman at 668-2627 to schedule these programs/services.

Ongoing Events

In support of breastfeeding mothers: Duke Lactation Services and the Duke Hospital Auxiliary now has available breastpump sales and rentals, breastcare products and breastpumping accessories. The Bouncing Ball Gift Shop is located on the first floor of the Duke Children’s Health Center, open MondayFriday, 9am-4pm. 668-4112.

National French Week: Through November 13. The French Department is pleased to give you a taste of France every day of this week. Join us to celebrate this event. See the daily calendar for each day’s events.

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

Write for Talking Drum: Submission Deadline; Monday, November 18, 2002. Write for The Talking Drum: The Official Newsletter of The Black Student Alliance. For more info e-mail; adl4@duke.edu OR mnb3@duke.edu.

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

French Table; 7pm, Tuesdays. Everyone is welcome if you wantto speak French and have a nice dinner. Great Hall.

XVI Latin American Film and Video Festival: Through November 19. This year’s festival is a retrospective of Latin American cinema that ranges from early silent films to contemporary postmodern works from a variety of Latin American countries including Mexico. Argentina, and Brazil. Website: Cuba, Chile, Bolivia, http://www.unc.edu/depts/ilas/filmfest.html For information please contact Sharon S. Mujica. Email: la_films@unc.edu Phone; 919-843-8888, 919-962-2414. Class of 2003 Freshmen Dorm Reunions: Free Food and Drink. Alspaugh/Pegram. Thur, Nov 14, 6pm, Reunite Randolph/Blackwell, 7:3opm, Bi with freshmen buddies at Armadillo Grill, Bryan Center.

Organ demonstration: Weekdays, 12:30-1:30pm. A daily recital of mostly sacred music on the Flentrop organ, which both tonally and visually reflects the techniques of Dutch-French organs of the 18th century. Duke Chapel, West Campus. Schedule subject to change. For information, call 684-2572. Exhibition Continues: “Reinserting Myself into a History; Academic Eye III; Cathy N. Davidson Presents Photographs by Tammy Rae Garland.” Photography. Exhibition runs through November 7, 2002. (DUMA).


The Chronicle

PAGE 14 � MONDAY, NOVEMBER 11, 2002

The Chronicle

Letters to the

Diversity at Duke should be an outcome, not a goal

An equal education

This

weekend, the University commemorated the 30th

anniversary of the merger of the Woman’s College and

Trinity College, providing the Duke community an opportunity to reflect upon the progress toward gender equity that has been made at the University and the work that remains to be done in order to ensure equity between the sexes. During its 42-year existence, the Woman’s College provided women with an opportunity to attain an excellent higher education at a time wThen many top institutions did not provide avenues 1 for women’s education. This was provided for by a visionary bequest from Washington B. Duke, who recognized the need for female education. The 1972 merger ofTrinity College and the Woman’s College has obviously led to huge benefits for women and men, giving women an equal footing with men and placing them in direct competition with one another, showing that women are every bit as capable as men. Additionally, the social benefits of men and women not only taking classes but also living together far outweigh the potential benefits from single-sex education. Equally as important as the educational opportunities that the Woman’s College provided were the extracurricular and leadership positions that the separate administrative structure allowed women to hold. One negative aspect of the merger between the Woman’s College and Trinity College is that it may have deprived women of the opportunity to serve in leadership positions that, to this day, are still dominated by men. Although women have made tremendous strides towards equality, with some recent Duke Student Government presidents being female, for example, there is still more work to do in order to balance the field between men and women and their access to leadership roles. Additionally, as President Nan Keohane pointed out in her opening speech for the celebration Saturday morning, integrating men and women has placed new pressures on women such as sexual pressures and pressures about how women should look and what fields they should enter into. These types ofproblems must be addressed by the University community today. Thirty years ago, Duke took a large step toward gender equity by merging the Woman’s College with the formerly all-male Trinity College. Today, the University and Keohane are trying to take a similar step by refocusing the community’s attention open issues of the importance gender through Duke Inquiries on Gender and other efforts of the president and her deans. ,

On the

editor

record

I was a real lippy broad so I was kind of hard to intimidate Missi McMorries, graduate of the first co-educational class in Trinity College, on how she interacted with the men (see story, page one).

The Chronicle DAVE INGRAM, Editor KEVIN LEES, Managing Editor WHITNEY BECKETT, University Editor ALEX GARINGER, University Editor KENNETH REINKER, Editorial Page Editor PAUL DORAN, Sports Editor JONATHAN ANGIER, General Manager MATT BRUMM, Senior Editor JENNIFER SONG, Senior Editor JANE HETHERINGTON, Photography Editor REBECCA SUN, Projects Editor RUTH CARLITZ, City & State Editor RYAN WILLIAMS, City & State Editor MIKE MILLER, Health & Science Editor BECKY YOUNG, Features Editor MEG LAWSON, Recess Editor GREG VEIS, Recess Editor MATT ATWOOD, TowerView Editor JODI SAROWITZ, TowerView ManagingEditor JOHN BUSH, Online Editor BRIAN MORRAY, Graphics Editor TYLER ROSEN, Sports Managing Editor ROBERT TAI, Sports Photography Editor AMI PATEL, Wire Editor KIRA ROSOFF, Wire Editor MOLLY JACOBS, Sr. Assoc. Features Editor MELISSA SOUCY, Sr. Assoc. City & State Editor NADINE OOSMANALLY, Sr. Assoc. University Editor EVAN DAVIS, Sr. Assoc. Sports Editor MATT KLEIN, Sr. Assoc. Photography Editor ANDREA OLAND, Sr. Assoc. Photography Editor THAD PARSONS, Sr. Assoc. Photography Editor SETH LANKFORD, OnlineManager ALISE EDWARDS, Lead Graphic Artist SUE NEWSOME, Advertising Director YU-HSIEN HUANG, Supplements Coordinator BARBARA STARBUCK,Production Manager MARY WEAVER, Operations Manager NALINI MILNE, Advertising Office Manager The Chronicle is published by the Duke Student Publishing Company, Inc., a non-profit corporation independent of Duke University. The opinions expressed in this newspaper are not necessarily those of Duke University, its students, faculty, staff, administration or trustees. Unsigned editorials represent the majority

view of the editorial board. Columns, letters and cartoons represent the views of the authors. Toreach theEditorial Office (newsroom) at 301 Flowers Building, call 684-2663 or fax 684-4696. To reach the Business Office at 103 West Union Building, call 684-3811. To reach the Advertising Office at 101 West Union Building call 684-3811 or fax 684-8295. Visit The Chronicle Online at http://www.chronicle.duke.edu. © 2002 The Chronicle, Box 90858, Durham, N.C. 27708. All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced in any form without the prior, written permission of the Business Office. Each individual is entitled to one free copy.

the

sents a balance between these two sets of criteria. This approach is not without precedent. After all, physics departments don’t just hire any old physicist, they look for someone whose area of interest and professional links to other department members will make him or her a valuable contributor to the work of the department as a whole. But these other criteria usually have some relation to physics and they are usually defended explicitly and specifically. Unfortunately, our current preferential hiring policies are rarely defended in this way. The usual tactic is to hold up “diversity” as a self-evident

Look first at strategy two, hiring for diversity. Since the best physicist available will be from the West only half the time, it follows that 50 percent of the time Duke will hire less than the best physicist available. Even if there are more good physicists in the West say 70 percent—hiring with diversity as the goal will cause Duke to miss the best 30 percent of the time. Hiring for diversity will eventually achieve the 50:50 goal, but at some inevitable cost in terms of quality. In short, hiring for diversity is necessarily in opposition to hiring for excellence.

debate Professor of Economics Roy Weintraub and Dean of the Faculty ofArts and Sciences William Chafe, I want to support Weintraub. The argument against selecting for In

ongoing

between

diversity is an example of a more general principle: Even if ability is equally distributed, if you limit your search you will often fail to hire the best per-

son available.

At the risk ofbelaboring the obvious, an example may help. Let’s first move away from the controversial topics of gender and race diversity-—the thrust of current efforts—and look at something more neutral: regional diversity. Let us assume that Duke is as rich as Croesus—or, at least,. Harvard—and can attract any potential faculty member it wants. And, to be specific, consider just two regions, East and West of the Mississippi, and a single discipline, physics. Now suppose it turns out that there .are equal numbers of-able physicists on both sides of the country but only 20 percent of current Duke physicists come from the West. We can deal with this disparity in two ways: (1) Ignore it, and just hire the best possible physicist, or (2) address the problem directly by hiring only the best physi-

Now consider strategy one: Because ability is assumed to be equally distributed across regions, hiring for excellence will eventually result in a 50:50 mix of Duke physicists. Diversity will occur as an outcome, not as a goal, at no cost in terms of quality. This seems to many of us to be the proper course. There is of course another way to resolve this dilemma and that is to redefine excellence. Some might argue that an excellent physicist is not just someone good at physics but someone whose other attributes—region, gender, race—satisfy some nonphysics criterion. “Excellence,” in this new definition, repre-

-

cist from the West.

good. What we need is an explicit defense of the specific preference that is being advocated. What are the goals—-

social, political, cultural or whatever—to be served by restricting hiring to a particular group? How should these goals be weighed against excellence in the discipline? Let’s hear a real defense of the diversity policy, not just denials of the ineluctable conflict between diversity and disciplinary

excellence.

John Staddon James B. Duke Professor of Psychological and Brain Sciences

Http: / / www.chronicle.duke.edu / vnews / display.v /ART /2002 / 1110713dcal9164cb6d?in_archive=l

Previous letter contained erroneous information her, evidence has come to light that shows an error was made in filings to the Federal

In my Oct. 1 letter to the editor, I stated that President NanKeohane had broken her official policy of not financial-

Elections

ly supporting political organizations. Through my subsequent correspondence with

Because of these erroneous filings, President Keohane was listed as donating funds that

Http:

/ /

www.chronicle.duke.edu

/

were in fact donated by her

husband. That being said, I would like to retract my previous statement

Commission,

Mike Sullivan Pratt ’O3

vnews / display,v/ART/2002 /10/01/3d99b2e7ce101 ?in_archive=l

Diversity of types of students makes While Bill English’s most recent column was simply riveting, I feel that he forgot several important versions of “student.” There’s the student as future spouse, for example, And then there’s the student as lush—those kids who live for the weekend. Then, we can’t forget the student as prisoner. They’re here because mom and dad put enough pressure on them to make them come to a “good” school to “get ahead,” while all they want to do is live off the folks for a few more years. Of course there are different versions of students and none of us completely embodies one version! We’re not supposed to. We shouldn’t be at that point yet—or even ever—where we’ve stopped trying new attitudes and behaviors and have finished evolving into something new.

us better off

To try to limit ourselves to one approach to school would be to close our minds and discount all the opportunities that going to a university allows us. If I stuck to a student as scholar approach, I’d never experience the fun that is Franklin Street on Halloween. If I adhered solely to a student as consumer attitude, I’d never take the time to go a little further on my own and try an independent study project. By incorporating all attitudes and ways of viewing “student,” we become true students of the world,

ities all through their lives; we change them as we see fit, according to our present situation and what we see as needing remedy. By having diverse activities, we become more, not less, aware of the public good, because we become in touch with more of the public. We aren’t “fragmented” or “compartmentalized,” as English argues: Our social circles overlap with all types of people. Having various interactions with different people—consumers, scholars, trainees and lushes—gives us a wider appreciation for what

As for English’s comments on our inability to engage in the political because of our “jumbling of priorities,” he overlooks that all people have mixed and matched priorities—not just students. Few people hold to the same prior-

By admitting that he doesn’t experience this richness of diverse opinions, English is just demonstrating once again how closed-minded he is.

would benefit the public good.

Margi

Brooks Trinity ’O3

http: / www.chronicle.duke.edu vnews display.v/ARTI2OO2HI 04 3dc6l963B9923?in_archive=l /

/

/

/

/

Correction In the Nov. 8 edition of The Chronicle, a letter was attributed to David Marks, Trinity ’O4. In fact, the letter was written by David Marks, Trinity ’94.


Commentary

The Chronicle

The stren gth of a victim

MONDAY, NOVEMBER 11, 2002 �PAGE 15

Associating victimhood with weaknes s is society’s way of dealing with its cowardice I would rather be a coward than brave because people hurt you when you are brave.

E.M. Forster For those of you who read my column with any sort of regularity, my feelings on sexual are assault wellknown. I hate it. I hate BL it so much that just thinking about rape vSt-* mL, and other forms of sex-

ual violence literally makes me nauseated.

JNlck Given the passion Christie and voracity with Remov^tlle which Ive written G^ssy een about the issue here at Duke, you might be surprised to know that this wasn’t always the case. In fact, my physical disgust is a relatively recent phenomenon. For the majority of my life I frankly didn’t think much about sexu—

al assault.

As I revealed last spring in my column “The longest of weeks,” that all changed spring semester of my freshman year. I met a woman. I met her in passing at a local restaurant, a purely

random encounter for which I will for-

ever be grateful. She opened my eyes

to things that I had never seen before. She taught me so much about pain, about courage and about fragility. It was with her that I first became witness to the realities of sexual violence, that I saw its devastating impact upon a woman’s vitality. My first love also taught me about emotional scars, principally that most people try desperately to hide them. When I first looked into her eyes I saw so many things. I saw intelligence, playfulness, self-confidence and inten-

sity. What I didn’t see at first, however, was pain. Crippling pain, actually, the kind of pain so vicious that she relentlessly stuffed it down into the deepest depths of her soul, hoping she might manage some day to keep it locked up in a place where it wouldn’t hurt so much anymore. She was pretty successful too. Ninety-nine percent of people who knew her probably had no clue about

the scars she bore. No matter how much she opened up to me, there were always things she held back. She particularly avoided talking about the details. She would tell me where and when and who, but she never told me how. She never described what it felt like. To this day, I have no clue as to what happened. I did, however, see the mental breakdowns, the panic that results from post-traumatic shock and its never-ending flashbacks. I cannot ever shut out the things she and I talked about. Her words have left a permanent mark upon my character. Because of her, there is a fury inside of me that does not subside. Last Monday, The Chronicle included a guest commentary entitled “Sexual assault reality,” a first-person narrative about the Oct. 9 attack in Wannamaker Dormitory. Needless to say, the piece affected me in some very

I had opened my window, maybe if I hadn’t been listening to music, I might have heard something. You know, I would have given anything to have been able to stop that attack. One of the most sobering consequences of meeting my former girl-

friend three years ago is that I have felt so helpless ever since. I couldn’t protect her. I couldn’t protect her from the attacks that took place before I even met her and I especially couldn’t protect her from her own thoughts. No matter how hard I tried, I couldn’t take

away any of her pain. For three years I have wished for an opportunity for redemption. And yet while someone became imprinted with a lifelong scar, I played online chess. The Oct. 9 attack made me realize two things. First, no matter how desperately I want to change things, there’s surprisingly little I can do. Despite all my rage—as the song goes—l really am just a rat in a cage. That brings me to my second point. There are lots of other men like me in the world, men similarly affected by sexual violence. Clearly, however, there are not enough of us. Most men, of course, are cowards. They are scared little boys afraid and embarrassed at the notion that sexual assault happens everywhere around interesting ways. them. They must be. How else to we For starters, it reminded me of how reconcile the fact that only 5 percent of I felt Oct. 10, what a slap in the face it date rapes are reported? How else do was to hear about the attack. What we reconcile the fact that 10 percent of really hurt was that I was less than a all Duke women will face some sort of 100 yards away from where one of my sexual assault before they leave? fellow students lay struggling. I was Either most men are cruel and up then, too. In fact, I walked up the indifferent to the plights of their West-Edens Link firelane at 4:40 a.m. female friends, or they feel so uncomBut I heard nothing. I was up until fortable with the notion of sexual vioafter sunrise. I heard nothing. Maybe if lence that they are willing to bury

their heads in sand for comfort. Fm guessing it’s the latter. I’d like to end by referring to my opening quotation, which I’m including to make one final, difficult observation. When I read last Monday’s piece I was touched but also disappointed, disappointed because it had been written anonymously. I know that I am in the sharp minority of people who do not judge victims of sexual violence. I can write until my hands cramp up that one of the strongest people I’ve ever met was a victim of rape, but it’s not going to change how much people gossip and how fear and insecurity will make them label you as responsible for your suffering. I can say without a doubt how committed I am to stopping sexual violence only because of the physical nausea I feel every time I write a column like this. I have that feeling because someone offered me a glimpse into their most painful memories. Before my eyes were opened, though, I used to be ashamed and embarrassed about sexual assault just like everyone else. There is a conflict to be fought, a fight that only victims of sexual violence can wage, namely society’s dismissal of its victims as somehow responsible for the attacks made upon them. I wish I could wage that fight for you, but I can’t. People are going to hurt you for being brave, they are going to make you feel miserable and vulnerable and worthless. I’m so sorry for that, but we are going to need you to be brave all the same.

Nick Christie is a Trinity senior and an associate sports editor for The Chronicle.

THE SECOND GUNMAN finishes a miniseries 7:13 p.m. As our little expedition forged on with A note to the reader: This is the second part of a two-part series documenting my day of being a little loss of heart things picked up a little as we President Nan Keohane’s sidekick. strolled into The Great Hall. As we selected our Nan gestured toward the breast cancer selftrays, As you may remember from last f ] examination posters. She grinned and said to me, Monday, I had just spotted the prez spiking the football team’s fourth UsCvjsa “Hey Peter man, check out channel nine, it’s the breast exam! Whoo!” She then fell to the floor, conquarter Gatorade supply. I promwith laughter. ised her that I wouldn’t tell anyone f y vulsing 8 p.m. In order to maintain my anonymity, I'll about it. The main thing remaining need a disguise so nobody will know that THE SECon our schedule for the day was THE SECOND Dean Sue’s Birthday Bash.... OND GUNMAN is in their presence. I know! I can GUNMAN wear a wolf mask! Nobody will suspect me then. I , 6:15 p.m. Nan begins to defend 770 7 on liken the chances of a wolf being funny to those of a her actions. “Coach K made me do it. He’s afraid nobody will come to basketball games one-legged man in an ass-kicking contest. One of because the football team won twice and the my friends in Pegram Dormitory has a wolf mask, women’s team is ranked higher than the men’s. His so El Presidente and mysfelf decide to head that original idea was to have Wojo coach naked, to way. Once we get there, we decide to do a little improve female attendance. Wojo’s a little shy drinking. After all, you can’t spell “pregame” withthough, so he hired me to do his dirty work. He does out “Pegram.” 9:20 p.m. to 3 a.m. Time for Dean Sue’s party. As make more than I do, so I know he can afford it. arrive I cheaper.” on the scene, I take a look around the room, Besides, my parking pass isn’t getting any assessing the veritable smorgasbord of easy targets. 6:45 p.m. After a few rides on the thumbprint elevator and a razor-scooter tour of K’s office, I decide Great googily moogily! If this column doesn’t get me to let the little sabotage incident go. It’s time to get in trouble, nothing will. I spotted my portly redheaded friend tiptoeing about, boisterously cavorta little dinner. 7 p.m. As we trundled toward The Great Hall, Nan ing with cans double-stacked in his right hand, a Pauly Dog in his left. Supplying him was Chapel saw the Subway sign and began to get really excited. Dean Will “Pokemon” Willimon, an excellent barrubbing leg, she was pulling just my At first I thought it in that Subway was supposed to have been open tender and avid drinker in his own right. Willimon blessed every drink, “as the great Homer Simpson months ago, but then when she began helping the cononce said: ‘Here’s to alcohol, the cause of and solufor real. she be might struction crew I realized that Nan was all about the wallpaper and was putting up tion to all of life’s problems.’” Also working the bar was Head Line Monitor the fake brick pattern like no other when she turned Morgan, megaphone in hand, ensuring that Jeremy all sumdoing she been this to explain to me that had mer in the West-Edens Link. I finally explained to her people lined up for drinks in an orderly fashion. I man for being especially that it was no use waiting for Subway to open. really have to admire the As he overcame his sobriety, the ladies. with like that. smooth things Students had died ofstarvation from _

..

he became less conscious of the megaphone. Current Duke Stuedent Government president Joshua JeanBaptiste was also present, smiling and looking everyone in the eye while vehemently denying rumors that DSG has accomplished anything this year. Another corner featured Larry Moneta and Bill Burig, pointing fingers at everyone but themselves. I overheard Billy congratulating the vice president for student affairs on the Subway fiasco: “Yeah, I just love getting the student body all excited about something and then, boom, you drop the hammer and you can watch their little hearts just fall apart.” In the middle of the room, the birthday girl was performing a keg stand. A spectating Matt Christensen flexed and screamed with each passing second, which was pretty annoying. Nobody said anything though, because he’s been around so long, he is up for tenure next week. The Monster (English for El Monsterrio) was not the only annoying party guest, however. Also bothering the other guests was parking director Catherine Reeve. She must have been drunk, because she kept towing the other guests because they had not purchased permits. Todd Adams (sporting fluorescent green) was also making his rounds, holding beers hostage until proper ID was displayed. Coach Gail Goestenkors was stomping around, loudly proclaiming to anyone who would listen that she did not, in fact, have “dumps like a truck” and that Krzyzewski had made that up. Although she kept mispronouncing Krzyzewski, I believe she was sober. As we left the party, we heard housing head Fidelia Thomason crying to herself because the card swiper on the door kept red-lighting her Duke Card. Ahh, poetic justice.

THE SECOND GUNMAN is three degrees from Bacon


PAGE 16 �

MONDAY, NOVEMBER

The Chronicle

11,2002

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