Friday, November 22,2002
Partly Cloudy High 56, Low 31 www.chronicle.duke.edu Vol. 98, N0.65
The Chronicle f
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THE INDEPENDENT DAILY AT DUKE
Coming next week Look for updates of the public policy studies external review and of the athletics department’s vision statement in next week’s Chronicle.
UNIVERSITY'
Scott quits
Durham top cop job The resignation of Douglas Scott, set to become police chief, means Interim Chief Steve Chalmers may get the position. By RYAN WILLIAMS The Chronicle
Durham is once again lacking a permanent police chief after the latest nominee for the job, Douglas Scott, announced Thursday that he would no longer accept it. Scott, currently an assistant inspector general with the U.S. Department ofthe Interior and former police chief of Fairfax, Va., e-mailed a letter to City Manager Marcia Conner Wednesday explaining that he would not take the position as Durham chief ofpolice. His reasons for declining the offer included what he considered inadequate health insurance coverage and the turmoil surrounding the city manager’s office, The Associated Press reported. Conner called Scott around 6 a.m. Thursday and told him that the City Council was still trying to work out a deal, but Scott did not change his mind. City Council Member Lewis Cheek explained the primary reason Scott will See CHIEF TROUBLES on page 10
KEVIN PENG/THE CHRONICLE
CAMPUS COUNCIL MEMBERS vote Thursday night on a resolution recommending security cameras at dorm entrances. The measure, which provoked heated campus discussion for the past week, failed by an 8-5 margin.
Campus Council rejects cameras By ROBERT MORRIS The Chronicle
After a prolonged discussion of a
controversial
resolution recommending installation of security cameras at dorm entrances, Campus Council voted down the recommendation by a 8-5 vote Thursday night, citing doubt of the cameras’ effectiveness. “Most people want to do something about sexual assault but think cameras were not the way,” said Few Quadrangle representative Jacob
Flomenberg, a sophomore The idea that most sexual assault is perpetrated by members of the Duke community played a primary role in the discussions. “We can’t keep blaming sexual assault on people coming on campus to attack us,” West-Edens Link representative Pasha Majdi said. Many representatives agreed, claiming that since dorms are largely connected, cameras would do little to help identify perpetrators of sexual assault.
While many West Campus representatives felt their quads were evenly divided or opposed to security cameras, East Campus representatives had differing views. “East Campus is overwhelmingly in favor of cameras,” said Alexandra Oliveira, East Campus Council representative. However, ECC’s other representative, Chris Kallmeyer, took a more reSee CAMERA DEBATE on page 14
EKEND F FACE OFF AT HOME IN By TYLER ROSEN The Chronicle
fans dream of weekends like this om ten’s soccer team, football team and tail teams all have important games mg the season, end the season with a ( ;he season with gusto, rt at 6 p.m., a Duke fan can wa' Stadium and watch the men’s S' •7-1) host No. 25 William & Mary ( first round of the NCAA Tournam ay back from the game, the Duke e: stop at Cameron Indoor Stadium second half of the top-ranked worn II team’s opener against East Carr >s off at 7 p.m. a few precious hours’ sleep, a true i tailgate outside Wallace Wade Sta< ihould, however, make it inside the e noon kickoff between Duke (2-9, 0 and UNC (2-9, 0-7). After the battl See SPORTS on page 24
fnstrfo itdiUc
Provost Peter Lange announced that, as expected, the B[ack p acu |ty strategic Initiative reached its goal of doubling black faculty a year ahead of schedule. See page 3
McKlnney& Silver became the fourth business to sign on for the American Tobacco project, through which Durham leaders hope to revitalize downtown. See page 4
Latino Access to Coordinated Healthcare hopes to show Durham’s burgeoning Latino population how to get the most out of the public health system. See page 7
World & Nation
PAGE 2 �FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 22,2002
NATO accepts 7 nations at summit
NEWS BRIEFS •
Police arrest Bali bombing suspect
A man who learned bomb making in Afghanistan was arrested Thursday in the search for the mastermind of the Bali nightclub bombings, the biggest breakthrough yet in a case that is fast exposing an al Qaeda-linked web of terror in Southeast Asia. •
Miss World article triggers Nigeria riot
Angry mobs stabbed and set fire to bystanders in
a riot Thursday after a newspaper suggested Islam’s founding prophet would have approved of the Miss World beauty pageant. At least 50 people were killed and 200 injured. •
Oil spreads from tanker onto Spanish coast
Fierce winds blew oil slicks, left by the shipwrecked tanker Prestige, closer to the coast of northwestern Spain, where fuel oil washed up on beaches south of the 150 miles of coastline already contaminated. •
New life form raises questions
By modifying a microbe, scientists hope to create a new form of single-cell life that could lead to new and cleaner energy and play a role in biological warfare. But there are safety and ethical concerns, experts say. •
Kuwaiti seriously wounds 2 U.S. soldiers
A Kuwaiti policeman shot and wounded two American soldiers Thursday in the latest violence against U.S. troops preparing for a possible showdown with Iraq. News briefs compiled from wire reports.
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The Chronicle
Leaders unite behind Bush to condemn Iraq’s failure in meeting U.N. demands The 19 current members of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization The Boston Globe also voted unanimously to transform PRAGUE, Czech Republic At a the alliance so it can confront a secuhistoric NATO summit here that rity environment that presents new changed the strategic map of Europe threats from international terrorism with the admission of seven new naand rogue states that might use tions, the alliance vowed Thursday to chemical, biological or even limited take “effective action” if Iraq fails to nuclear weapons against the West. comply “fully and immediately” with a But critics of NATO said they U.N. resolution to disarm. doubted that the changes will create The statement of unity on Iraq was a more responsive and cohesive milissued on what European and Ameriitary organization. Rather, they precan diplomats agreed was a day of dicted that NATO will grow more didramatic change for the 53-year-old vided and less relevant and that its military alliance, which invited memmost powerful member, the United bership by nations that once formed States, will simply pick and choose part of NATO’s original enemy, the its allies. former Soviet Union. The Iraq statement, adopted at the ByANNEKORNBLUT and CHARLES SENNOTT
start of the two-day summit, left the alliance open to such criticism. The four-paragraph document, drafted by the United States, was carefully worded to avoid a clear commitment to collective military action and did not imply that NATO would play a formal role in the event of a war against Iraq. That allowed European countries that remain skeptical of a war against Iraq to sign on for now. Germany has opposed any involvement in the war, and France has cautioned the United States against unilateral action. But the statement left open the possibility of a contentious, possibly See NATO on page 10
Officials catch U.S.S. Cole mastermind By JOHN LUMPKIN The Associated Press
WASHINGTON U.S. counterterrorism officials are interrogating a newly captured top operative of Osama bin Laden in hopes of gaining information that might thwart terrorist attacks. Abd al-Rahim al-Nashiri, al Qaeda’s chief of operations for the Persian Gulf and a suspected mastermind of the USS Cole bombing in October 2000, was taken in an undisclosed foreign country during the last several weeks. The Saudi is now in U.S. custody, U.S. government officials said, speaking on condition of anonymity. Officials declined to comment on the circumstances of his capture. He is probably the highest-ranking lieutenant of bin Laden seized since the March capture of Abu Zubaydah, al Qaeda’s chief coordinator of terrorist cells around the globe.
However, the capture of al-Nashiri did little to quell fears of a resurgent al Qaeda that is plotting new terrorist attacks. Since last week, U.S. officials had said a senior al Qaeda leader had been caught, but they had declined to identify him. On Sunday, Homeland Security Director Tom Ridge said the prisoner was providing information to his interrogators. The questioning of other senior figures, such as Abu Zubaydah and Omar al-Farouq, bin Laden’s Southeast Asia operations chief, have provided a wealth of information—often of unknown reliability—of planned terrorist operations. Their words have led to several public alerts in the last year. In the Cole attack, U.S. officials have said al-Nashiri See AL QAEDA on page 10
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The Chronicle
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 22,
2002 � PAGE 3
Retirement tops full Academic Council meeting Black faculty initiative meets goal ahead of schedule, provost tells meeting of faculty senate By ANDREW COLLINS The Chronicle Academic Council got back to business after celebrating its 40th anniversary last month, packing Thursday’s meeting
with presentations on retirement, black
faculty development and athletics. Professor of Sociology Angela O’Rand presented the long-awaited report of tha Provost’s Committee on Retirement Policy, which concluded that the University should continue to approach retirement negotiations on a case-by-case basis, rather than develop a formally structured and uniformly applied plan. “Retirement policies cannot be made in a vacuum,” O’Rand said. “To establish
some kind of universal retirement plan for the University quickly became a nonsensical option from the point of view of the committee. We’re small enough and varied enough that you really need that kind of sensitivity at the top, and thatkind of heavy hand doesn’t really work.” Both O’Rand and Provost Peter Lange expressed some concern about the baby boom generation approaching
retirement age. “Longer-term,” Lange said, “we may have some issues that may require us to pursue some more aggressive retire-
ment policies.” The report also recommended subsidizing faculty financial planning. O’Rand said she and Vice President for Human Resources Clint Davidson began meeting with financial services
CORRECTION In a page three story in the Nov. 20 edition, a quotation incorrectly stated that reports of mental disorders under the student health plan are 400 times the national norm. They are 400 percent of the national norm.
firm TIAA-CREF to consider setting up a series of planning workshops. But Lange said subsidizing retirement planning seemed to be an unwise allocation of resources. He also offered a tempered response to the committee’s suggestions for possible emeritus benefits that included an administrative staff member for emeri-
tus faculty, fixed-period nonrenewable research accounts, Duke identification cards and computer accounts and highspeed Internet connections. Lange said most of the requests would not be workable given limited resources. Following the unanimous approval of the retirement report, the council turned its attention to Lange for his annual progress report on black facul-
ty development. He presented the anticipated news that the Black Faculty Strategic Initiative had reached its goal one year ahead of schedule. The BFSI, which began in 1993, aimed to double the number of black faculty members in University schools—excluding the School of Medicine and, until recently, the School of Nursing—from 44 to 88. The total percentage of black faculty currently rests at 3.7 percent, which somewhat obscures variation among schools. The Divinity School is tops for black faculty, where black faculty occupy 15.2 percent of all positions. The Nicholas School of the Environment, by contrast, has not hired a single black faculty member since the BFSI went into effect. “The Nicholas School, I have to admit, stands out as not having much success,” Lange said.
He also expressed concern about the declining number of black students matriculating into University doctorate programs. Total enrollment jumped in 2002, however, after dropping last year to its lowest point since 1994. While Lange said he was pleased with the BFSI’s premature achievement, he
ANDREA OLAND/THE CHRONICLE
PROVOST PETER LANGE reports to the Academic Council Thursday afternoon that the Black Faculty Strategic Initiative has reached its goal a year early. stressed that efforts must be maintained gy professor Kathleen Smith, who pre“An effort which would flag on the sented the report. side of mentoring or on the side of reThe Academic Council will debate the measure in greater depth at its Dec. cruiting would probably cause a downturn in a relatively short period of time,” 5 meeting, and, if approved, the policy he said, adding thatthe next step was to statement will appear before the Board of Trustees later in the month. tackle diversity at a broader level. The meeting’s final report was a polPresident Nan Keohane said that last year, the Trustees gave their inforicy statement on intercollegiate athletics that advocates sustaining the commal support to continuing the Universimitment to athletics. The report’s ty’s athletic commitment. “I basically asked [the Trustees] in a significance stems from the fact that it is the first formal revision of former secret straw poll how they felt about inPresident Terry Sanford’s 18-year-old creasing Duke’s involvement, decreasguidelines for the athletics department. ing Duke’s involvement or keeping it “The larger intent is that we do constant,” Keohane said. “They feel it’s studies like this on a more frequent important if we’re going to do athletics basis, and not wait another 20 years,” at Duke, we should do it well, in a numsaid Athletic Council Chair and biolo- ber of ways.”
The Chronicle
PAGE 4 � FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 22, 2002
Advertising firm joins downtown development By MELISSA SOUCY The Chronicle
The vision of a rejuvenated downtown Durham filled with shops, restaurants, luxury offices and residences now looks more hopeful since a national advertising agency committed Thursday to join the future American Tobacco Campus. After five months of consideration, the firm McKinney & Silver signed a letter of intent to relocate its offices from the Fayetteville Street Mall in downtown Raleigh to the Bull Durham district. Boasting a list of national clients that includes Audi ofAmerica, the NASDAQ Stock Market, Lands’ End and XO Communications, the company will find the new home it has been seeking in the new downtown industrial center, said Janet North, McKinney & Silver’s director of agency communications. Joining three other prominent tenants—Duke University, Compuware and GlaxoSmithKline—the 32-year-old firm will bring 140 employees to the Reed Building, one of 12 warehouses in the one-million square-foot campus. The company will have a 35,000 square-foot space custom designed to allow the agency to provide optimal creative services to its clients. “Advertising firms don’t work in traditional office space anymore,” North said. “We require integration of thinking and collaboration. Multilevels of office space don’t work. “Overall the agency has been in about a three- to five-year hunt for the perfect space for McKinney,” she added. “Probably in late spring we were invited to come look and we were intrigued. It is such a spectacular space.” Officials from project developer Capitol Broadcasting Company, said they believe they have found a marketing asset in McKinney & Silver. “There are several attractions [of McKinney & Silver],” said Peter Anlyan, general manager of CBC Durham Real Estate. “[McKinney & Silver is] a solid company, they’re creative, they fit the downtown renovated factory office space model. We also see a very
ANTHONYKANG/THE CHRONICLE
THE AMERICAN TOBACCO CAMPUS has sat nearly empty for years, but with four major tenants now secure, developers plan to begin work in February. As one of the major tenants, Duke will eventually move into over 100,000 feet of space in the complex. visionary [chief executive officer] in Brad Brinegar.” Renovation of the new office space is set to begin this February and officials are expecting the firm to relocate to Durham in May 2004 with the completion of the project’s first phase—the southern two-thirds of the campus. Anlyan said the end ofthis phase will create the opening of new office space, as well as a coffee shop, a deli and other restaurants yet to be named. Additionally, 100,000 square feet of the first phase’s territory portion will be finished and remain
unclaimed. CBC is looking for more major tenants. “We’re talking to a couple of other companies,” Anlyan said, adding that the project is still financially secure. He said the second phase, including residential space and a hotel, is targeted for completion in 2006. From the onset, officials expected the American Tobacco project to be worth $l6O million, contributing to long-term prosperity in both Durham and the entire Triangle area.
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The Chronicle
FRIDAY,
NOVEMBER 22, 2002 � PAGE 5
GOP gains promise to make N.C. assembly more lively Republicans hold the state House by 61-59 margin, slim Democrats’ Senate hold to 28-22 By JOSH NIMOCKS The Chronicle Reflecting a nationwide trend, North Carolina state elections saw Republican legislators take control of the state House by a 61-59 majority and narrow the Democrats’ margin of power in the state Senate. In addition, Republican gains on both sides of the General Assembly may force legislators to adopt a more bipartisan law-making process, something the Democrats have not had to do in recent times, some ex-
perts said. Over the 2001-2002 session, House Democrats held a. 62-58 margin. After election day, the House results showed a 60-60 split for the next session, but Republican candidate Louis Pate from Wayne County gave the Re-
publicans a simple majority when the following Friday’s updated vote totals were released, showing a win over House Majority Leader Philip Baddour. Republicans narrowed the margin in the Senate from 35-15 to 28-22 and have hopes of supplanting President Pro Tempore Marc Basnight, a Democrat, with a new president pro tern, said Senate Minority Leader Patrick Ballantine. Andrew Taylor, associate professor of political science at North Carolina State University, said there may not be enough Republicans in the Senate to give them a chance of replacing Basnight. “It’s much less likely that the Senate will have a leadership tussle,” he said. House Republicans recently held an internal caucus
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[the Republican caucus],” Taylor said. Another Republican representative could try to become speaker by gaining Democratic support, he added. “It’s a very fluid situation,” said Thad Beyle, professor of political science at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. He said although legislators generally stick to party lines, some party stances can drive them to the opposition. “In 1989, 20 Democrats broke away and See ASSEMBLY on page 9
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The Chronicle
PAGE 6 � FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 22,2002
Law students premiere N.C. death row art show By KIYA BA JPAI The Chronicle
For her birthday this year, third-year
law student Kendra Montgomery-Blinn received a package in the mail last February containing two chalk drawings on folded handkerchiefs. One depicted a mouse in a field, and the other showed a mouse blowing out a candle and read “Have a wonderful day Kendra.” This gift—from North Carolina death row inmate Randy Atkins —sparked something in Montgomery-Blinn, who had worked with Atkins since her internship at the Center for Death Penalty Litigation after her first year of law school. She and second-year law student Emily Marroquin, who worked with the Death Penalty Network at the law school over the past year, then transpired to create a ‘death row art show,’ which is now on display in the School of Law’s student lounge. “It is important for us to see art like this,” said Jim Coleman, law professor and senior associate dean for academic affairs. “The people on death row are people—human beings.”
JANE HETHERINGTON/THE CHRONICLE
The Holiest Month Adnan Siddiqui, a senior, says the opening prayer during a dinner Thursday evening celebrating Ramadan, the Muslim month of worship and contemplation.
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others in gratitude for their help. Booker has also set up a trust fund from the proceeds for his victim’s family. Montgomery-Blinn and Marroquin wanted the show to be a catalyst for discussion about the death penalty rather than a specific statement on the death penalty itself. While they have received some criticism from other media sources comparing their show to a VHI program that paid inmates to sing about their crimes, Montgomery-Blinn and Marroquin said they just wanted to find an outlet for the beautiful artwork that so few people had seen. They also wanted to emphasize the attorneys and assistants who worked so hard for their clients for little or no money. “[This art show] is as much about the attorneys and what they’ve done as the
artists,” Montgomery-Blinn said. She added that the artwork—one of the only things an inmate can give—demonstrates the gratitude the inmates have for those
who have cared about them.
The artwork in the show includes poetry, cartoons, drawings and paintings. Cornelius Nobles, a North Carolina Coleman, who spoke at the art show’s death row inmate, wrote a poem, “A opening reception Wednesday night, Prayer,” dedicated to his deceased wife, said he felt many of the inmates were on and sent it to Sohini Chatterjee, a secdeath row because their lawyers had ond-year law student who works with failed to depict them as real people his lawyer. “All my efforts have gone in rather than as abstractions. One of vain, and/ the thirst of all this pain reColeman’s clients, Stephen Todd Booker, mains/ unquenched, so filled with diswrote and dedicated a book, “TUG; A See DEATH ROW ART on page 9 collection of poetry,” to his lawyer and
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FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 22, 2002 � PAGE
7
LATCH aims to bring health care to Durham Latinos By MIKE MILLER The Chronicle
To meet the needs of the rapidly increasing population of Latinos without
medical insurance, the Medical Center
has received a one-year, $835,911 grant from the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services to coordinate a comprehensive health care improvement program for uninsured Latinos in Durham County. Through improved physical and
mental health services, as well as health education aimed at greater awareness of proper health care system use, Latino Access to Coordinated Healthcare intends to improve the overall health of a Latino population that increased 729 percent in Durham County between 1990 and 2000. Currently, Latinos account for approximately 40 percent of the uninsured in Durham. To plan and now implement LATCH, the Medical Center has partnered with Durham County and several local health care institutions. Susan Epstein, chief of the division of community health and a coordinator
of the program, explained that one of the greatest obstacles for Latinos—many of whom have recently immigrated to the United States—is a lack of knowledge about how to utilize the health care system. For example, many Latinos will only go to the emergency room because it is often the only option they know is available, Epstein said. “At Duke, there’s an enormous amount of care being given
to Latinos, but at the most expensive end,” she said. “We thought, ‘Let’s start at the Susan Epstein beginning.... Let’s teach them about the health care system. Let’s teach them how to take care of themselves.’” With that in mind, the program will coordinate neighborhood outreach programs and initiate health education classes at El Centro Hispano, a health care
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LATCH that currently treats many Latinos. Social workers will also ensure that patients eligible for state Medicare benefits are receiving them. To avoid common time conflicts with work, the program will fund a nighttime clinic for infectious disease testing at Lincoln Community Health Center,
another LATCH partner.
The program, which plans to begin enrolling patients in January 2003, also recognizes the need to overcome Latinos’ language barrier. “The big majority of Latinos in Durham County are first-generation. Spanish is their first language. They’re making an effort to learn the [English] language, but it doesn’t happen overnight,’,’ said Ivan Parra, executive director of El Centro Hispaho. “The services that Spanish-speaking peoples were receiving was clearly not up
to that of others.” To meet this need, all staff hired
through LATCH will be bilingual, including a mental health social worker and a nurse practitioner for medical care, who will work at Lincoln. “What is significant is that these systems didn’t
exist before these projects,” Parra said. “A lot of [the programs’ benefits] are services people usually take for granted, and that Latinos didn’t have access to. This program will make it possible for Latinos to get the same quality of health care as everyone else.” Parra felt the program was a huge step forward for an underserved population. “This is clearly the largest and most comprehensive effort this county has had for Hispanics... in terms of medical care,” he said. By emphasizing non-emergency room options, the program will also attempt to ease some of the stress placed upon Lincoln, which faces the brunt of the uninsured Latino population. Of the 33,000 different patients the center treated in 2001, 26 percent were Latinos, and the ratio has increased every year, said Evelyn Schmidt, executive director of Lincoln. “Since the early ’9os, we’ve seen an increase in the number of Latinos getting care at Lincoln,” Schmidt said. “I think the outreach can really help the patients.... It’s important they learn how to use services in the community.”
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PAGE 8 � FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 22, 2002
AL QAEDA from page 2
N.C. NEWS THIS WEEK From staff and wire reports
Congress’ special session set to end Tuesday Although the General Assembly ad-
journed in October, the special session that began last spring to redraw the state’s district maps is just now reaching its end. Legislators agreed to terminate the lame-duck run session in which Democrats hoped to adjust voting districts favorably for their party before Republicans gained Congressional control. In the preceding months, GOP lawmakers filed protests and unsuccessfully attempted maneuvers designed to close the session down earlier, while the Democrats claimed the session needed to remain alive due to pending redistricting litigation. Both the House and the Senate
have now agreed to end the session.,
Peanut farmers file federal suit North Carolina and Virginia peanut farmers have filed a federal lawsuit in protest of a contract change that cut crop insurance from 31 cents a pound to 17.75 cents a pound. “The farming industry is getting hit in so many ways,” said Dan Boyce, a Raleigh lawyer who filed the lawsuit in U.S. District Court in Raleigh. “We believe we have a very simple cause of action here. It’s a simple breach of contract.” The option for farmers to join the plaintiff’s side of the suit will remain open for a month, at the cost of $1 for every acre on which the farmer grows peanuts. The lawsuit filed Tuesday represents more than 400 farmers and 40,000 acres from across the sandy peanut belt in southeastern
Virginia and northeastern North Carolina. This year, as in others, farmers had a March 31 deadline to sign crop insurance contracts. Since the old farm bill was intact at the time, they were guaranteed 31 cents a pound, based on a price-support figure of about $6lO a ton. When the new farm bill was signed in May, legislators in Washington changed the figure on the crop-insurance policies and reduced the payment to 17.75 cents a pound.
Anti-death penalty tour spans the state The People ofFaith Against the Death Penalty-sponsored tour—consisting of meetings in Wilmington, Fayetteville,
Raleigk, Charlotte and Greensboro—-
began Wednesday night in Kinston, N.C. Although partly a rally, the meeting provided therapy for relatives of one of two men condemned to die this month. Supporters of Ernest Basden, sentenced to death for his role in a 1992 shotgun slaying as part of a murder-for-hire plot, said that he is a changed man and does not deserve execution. “We never said that my brother didn't deserve punishment,” said Rose Clark, one of Basden’s four sisters. “But we never
said he didn’t deserve equal treatment,
which he didn’t get.” Basden's lawyers have said he received a much harsher punishment than two others in the case who received prison sentences and could be released in several years. His lawyers said the 49-year-old Jones County man was lured into a murder plot by the promise of drugs and did
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not have adequate legal representation at his 1993 trial. After the state tour’s first stop, Stephen Dear, executive director of PFADP, said the tour gives people “a rare opportunity to meet and hear compelling messages from the families” of the condemned men.
Bacteria outbreak hits elementary school children Health officials said Thursday they are trying to control the spread of a bacteria that has made about 200 people sick in three counties. Shigellosis—a disease transmitted when infected fecal matter is transmitted from an infected person to the mouth of another person by direct contact with food or objects—has infected 200 people, most under the age of nine, in Cumberland, Hoke and Robeson counties. Symptoms include diarrhea, vomiting, headache, fever and stomach cramps, although there are pre-
scribable antibiotics. “What happens is usually it gets started in a daycare center,” said Dr. Jeff Engle, chief of the state’s communicable disease control branch. “These kids get sick, they go home... and give it to older siblings,” he said. State and county health officials and representatives of Fort Bragg advised that daycare workers wear gloves while changing diapers, infected children stay out of school and daycare and other students wash their hands properly. Health department officials will also conduct random surveys at daycare centers to ensure compliance with hygiene rules.
gave telephone orders to the bombers from the United Arab Emirates and may have provided money to the plotters. He went to Afghanistan after the bombing, which killed 17 sailors. Born in Mecca, Saudi Arabia, al-Nashiri is believed to be in his mid-30s, officials said. “He has a reputation as a ruthless operator,” said one U.S. official. “He is a very committed fol-
lower of Osama bin Laden.”
Al-Nashiri oversaw the purchase and transport of explosives, the leasing of safe houses and the planning and financing of at-
tacks, officials said. He has also traveled under a number of other names, including Umar Mohammed al-Harazi and
Abu Bilal al-Makki. U.S. officials believe he was in Ghazni, Afghanistan, around the time the war began there in October 2001. He is thought to have
moved to Pakistan when the Taliban fell, and he may have gone to Yemen in recent months. Some tribesmen in Yemen, however, said he had gone to Malaysia. In addition to the Cole attack, al-Nashiri is suspected of helping direct the August 1998 bombings of U.S. embassies in Nairobi, Kenya, and Bar es Salaam, Tanzania. He recruited his cousin, Azzam, to train in Afghanistan and serve as one of the suicide bombers in the attack on the U.S. Embassy in Nairobi, officials said.
The Chronicle
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 22,
ASSEMBLY from page 5 joined the Republicans, and they ran the state House.” In addition to nursing such a slim majority, Republicans will also have to deal with a Democratic governor. Governor Mike Easley’s agenda is more liberal than what most Republicans want, Taylor said. “He’ll be coming up for his re-election soon,” Taylor said. “He’ll want to make sure he can show that there is some accomplishment, and that he can deliver on his agenda.” To aid him in that mission, Easley has at his disposal a method available only to him and previous governor Jim Hunt—veto power passed by a referendum five years ago. Easley exercised the authority for the first time ever earlier this month to strike down a bill designating dozens of appointments to boards and commissions. “He signed it the Sunday before the election and didn’trelease it to the public until after the election,” Beyle said of the controversial veto decision. Ted Arrington, professor of political science at the University ofNorth Carolina at Charlotte, said that as a former attorney—Easley served as Attorney General before his election as governor in 2000—Easley is not used to the give-and-take ofthe legislative arena. “Nationally, policy experts agree that a veto means the president has lost,” Arrington said. “[The vetol means he didn’t influence the legislative
process enough.” Taylor predicted that even before any bills reach the governor, there will be large legislative battles in Raleigh next year. “There’ll be plenty going on and plenty of fireworks,” he said.
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DEATH ROW ART from page 6 may and/ dejection,” he wrote. Ricky Lee Sanderson, who was executed Jan. 30, 1998, drew “Portrait on the Eve of My Execution,” a simple picture of a gray-haired man with sad blue eyes, which he dedicated to his lawyer. “It’s overwhelming to stand here and see [the art],” said Cindy Adcock, a senior lecturing fellow at the law school. ‘The art evokes something within yourself, causes you to ask questions.” Adcock is currently working on the appeal for Ernest Basden, whose execution is scheduled for Dec. 6. Speaking at the opening reception, she displayed a card drawn by Basden with five roosters that read “Duke’s Starting Five” in order to make fun of the rival of his favorite team, the University of North Carolina Tar Heels. Adcock condemned the death penalty for its arbitrary nature. “[Basden’s] case typifies the problems of the system,” she said. “If he were to be tried today, he
2002 � PAGE 9
would [only] have a life sentence.” Tyrone Wallace, whose brother is scheduled to be executed on Dec. 10, is traveling around North Carolina with Basden’s family to raise consciousness about the death penalty. After participating in a rally Wednesday outside of the Duke University Chapel, Wallace came to see the show. “People that are behind the wall are ‘thrown away,’” Wallace said. “It means a lot to know that people care who are on the outside.” The art show, which will be up until mid-December, consists of nearly 100 pieces from about 20 different people. The inmates all created the work while on death row; since then, three have been executed, three died of natural causes and five were given a life sentence. All of the pieces were gifts to lawyers and friends. Montgomery-Blinn and Marroquin are happy with the way the show turned out and hope to find some way for the show to travel. “It has been a lot of work for Emily and 1... but it was important enough for us to see it done,” Montgomery-Blinn said.
The Chronicle
PAGE 10 � FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 22, 2002
NATO from page 2 divisive debate within NATO if Iraq defies the United Nations resolution calling for its disarmament. President George W. Bush was scheduled to leave Friday for St. Petersburg to meet President Vladimir Putin of Russia and then was to go on to Lithuania.
DAVE INGRAM/THE CHRONICLE
MARCIA CONNER (RIGHT), DURHAM CITY MANAGER, introduces Douglas Scott as the new police chief at a City Council session earlier this month. City Council members said Thursday that they did not know when police officers would have a new boss.
CHIEF TROUBLES
«
not be Durham’s next police chief is that the health insurance provided by the city government falls short of the federal government’s insurance coverage. As a current employee of the federal government, Scott and his family will continue to be covered under a group health insurance plan after he retires, while the city can make no such promises.
Since a member of Scott’s family has a particularly expensive medical condition, he wanted the optimal coverage. “It might have been possible to [work out a solution), but not in the time frame Doug Scott was comfortable
with,” Cheek said. “He wanted more than we can guarantee at this point.” In addition, Scott told The Associated Press that recent problems between Conner and the City Council also contributed to his decision. Conner was reprimanded by the City Council Tuesday because she breached policy in granting city contracts. The Council cut her pay and must now approve every contract she signs. Cheek said he did not know who would become police chief, but that Conner, who controls the selection process, is considering current Interim Police Chief Steve Chalmers. However, Chalmers was once selected as a candidate for the position and then rejected
EXPRESS^— YOURSELF
because of controversy surrounding allegations of domestic violence. The search firm doing a background check on Chalmers said he lied when he contended that he was never charged with domestic abuse. Chalmers said the firm had asked him if he was ever convicted of domestic abuse, and he truthfully said no. Kansas City Police Chief Gregory Watkins was also removed from the running in August due to allegations of domestic abuse in his past. Cheek said it was within the city manager’s authority to order a new search, though Durham has been without a permanent police chief for nearly ten months.
He will conclude his trip with a speech in Romania Saturday. U.S. officials downplayed the vague wording of the NATO statement on Iraq, which stated that NATO “allies,” rather than the NATO alliance as a whole, are united on the issue of Iraq’s need to comply with U.N. inspections. “The alliance made this very powerful statement,” National Security Adviser Condoleezza Rice said. “It is really too early to talk about what military action will be needed or what military contributions might be needed. “The important thing right now is that this is, along with the U.N. Security Council resolution, a strong statement to the Iraqis that the world is united in the demand that Iraq disarm,” she said. Bush said he was very pleased by the NATO expansion. The alliance accepted plans to add seven new member nations: Bulgaria, Romania, Slovakia, Slovenia and three Baltic states, Estonia, Latvia and Lithua-
nia, which were once considered un-
touchable by NATO since they were
part of the Soviet Union. In Russia, Bush will thank Putin for clearing the way for NATO’s expansion and stress the view that NATO is now a partner with Russia.
Duke/Oxford Summer 2003
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The Chronicle
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 22, 2002 � PAG£II
Cultural Anthropology
Space is still available in the following classes. Don't miss out!
205.01
*
Economy, Culture, and Anxiety TuTh 9:10-10:25AM
Friedman
ACES 9561 Examine how people experience psychological and cultural stress and anxiety when faced with economic upheaval.
205.02
Global Feminism
104.01
Anthropology and Film
2;20-3:3OPM WF Settle ACES 12419 This course considers the emergence of feminism as a global phenomenon in the world today.
Jackson
9:10-10;25AM MWF ACES 12421 This course will serve as an introductory excursion into the intersections between anthropological theorizing and filmic representations.
113.01 Silverblatt
MW
126.01
Muslim World
Gender and Culture
3:55-S:IOPM ACES 9573 Examine how various peoples (including ourselves), living at different times, have fashioned social distinctions based on gender. 10:55-12;10PM TuTh ACES 12422 Ewing Examine the diversity of social practices within the community of Islam.
143A.01
9:10-10:25AM to the emerging field
Julia Clancy-Smith Associate Professor, Department of History University of Arizona
Women And Gender Along a Migratory Frontier:
of "cyborg anthropology."
11;50-12:40PM ACES 12427 At the end of this century, ideas about race, culture, and identity still shape strategies American empowerment and securing the ideals of democracy in the United States.
Friday, November 22, 2002
MWF
180.01
Sexuality in Global Context
Uygun
WE
for African
2:20-3:35PM ACES 9575 sexuality and globalization and the sexual
This course will explore the relationship between politics of nationalism.
180.03 Contemporary Culture in Cuba and the Caribbean ACES 9579 9:10-10;00M Roland MWF Explore anthropological theories relevant to the Caribbean. 191H.01
%
Presents
North Africa, circa 1800-1881
ACES 8468
African American Intellectual History
175.01 Baker
<tr
Lecture Series
Europe's 'Others' in 19th century
Cyborgs
Nelson TuTh This course is an introduction
<°
1:00 p.m. Asian And African Language and Literature Building 2101 Campus Drive Duke University Sponsored by The Franklin Humanities Institute, The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation, The Mediterranean Research Institute and Asian & African Literature Department
Free and Open to the Public
The African Diaspora
3;50-S;OSPM ACES 10030 TuTh Concept of the African Diaspora studied through works on history, culture, aesthetics and literature, and materials taken from Africa, the Caribbean, the United States and Europe.
Thomas
For more information, please contact Mindy Marcus at 684-4309 or mmarcus@duke.edu
Sexual Harrassment And Rape Prevention Are you concerned about rape and sexual assault on campus? Do you want to make a difference by empowering yourself and other individuals? Come be part of the leading edge of peer education^
and miss early ad deadlines First Issue after Thanksgiving published Monday, Dec. 2
Deadline; TODAY! Exam Break Issue
published Monday, Dec. 9 Applications to be a Healthy Devil peer educator '■4>Duke Women's Center
available now at; The Women’s Center, Student Health, CAPS and
healthydevil.studentaffairs.duke.edu (Men are encouraged to apply!) Applications due by 11/27/02
Deadline: Tuesday, Nov. 26
Ji
Call 684-3811 and place an ad today!!
The Chronicle The Duke
Community’s Daily Newspaper
The Chronicle
PAGE 12 � FRIDAY. NOVEMBER 22.2002
Academic FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 22
Popßio SuperSpeaker Seminar: 11:30am. Sarah “Sally” Otto, University of British Colombia. “Limits on the rate of evolution.” 144 Biological Sciences. UPEcology Seminar; 12:45pm. Jim Kitchell, University of Wisconsin. “Fisheries and food
webs in the Lake Superior ecosystem.” A247LSRC. Duke English Department presents; 12pm. ‘“Like Umbrellas in Java’: Wallace Stevens’World of Tea”, a talk by visiting professor NICO ISRAEL, regular contributor to *Artforum* and author of ‘Outlandish: Writing between Exile and Diaspora* (Stanford UP, 2000.326 Allen Building (refreshments served).
Panel Discussion: 4-6pm, Upper East Side (above the marketplace). “East Meets South: Asian American Issues in North Carolina and the South.” Where do Asian Americans fit in the South? Where does the South fit in Asian America? Why Asian American Studies—why at Duke. Come hear our panelists present their research on Asian American communities in North Carolina and discuss the prospects of starting Asian American studies programs in the South. Brought to you by the Asian American Undergraduate Working Group. Studies Questions? Contact n.lee@duke.edu EOS Seminar Series: 4pm. “Control of Atmospheric CO2 and Climate Through Earth History,” Daniel Schrag. Griffith Film Theatre, Bryan Center.
Teer House. 7 p.m. Polycystic Ovary Syndrome 4019 N Pam Spaulding. Call 416-DUKE. Roxboro Rd.
SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 24 Masterclass: 10AM. Laura Barron, flute. Yoga for Musicians. Nelson Music Room, East Duke Building, East Campus. For more information, 660-3300, call www.duke.edu/music/events/masterclasses.
Social Programming and Meetings
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 22 Duke: 12noon-Ipm. Join us to discuss being a parent and a Duke employee or student. Bring a lunch. Children welcome. Women’s Center. Parents
@
Coffee Connection: Chapel basement.
12noon-Ipm, Fridays
Freewater Films: 7S 9;3opm. “La stanza del figlio (The Son’s Room),” directed by Nanni Moreti. Free to students, $4 for employees and $5 for the public. Call 684-2323. Griffith Film Theater, Bryan Center, West Campus. Duke Dance Program: Bpm. November Dances 2002: Beating the Holiday Rush, an exciting, varied program of modern, ballet, African and Indian classical dance. Reynolds Industries Theater, Bryan Center, Duke West Campus. Tipkets available at 684-4444,
Religious
http://tickets.duke.edu or at the door on the night of performance. See more dance this weekend!
For more information, call the Duke Dance Program, 660-3354.
Collegium Musicum: Bpm. Chorus Directe'd by Craig DeAlmeida. Instrumentalists directed by Stephanie Vial, joined by the Duke
Duke
Viol Consort, led by Prof. Alexander Silbiger. Nelson Music Room, East Duke Building.
SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 23 Quadrangle Pictures: 7, 10pm. “Road to Perdition.” $4 for Duke students and employees and $5 for the public. Call 684-2323. Griffith Film Theater, Bryan Center, West Campus. Duke Dance Program: Bpm. NOVEMBER DANCES 2002: Beating the Holiday Rush, an exciting, varied program of modern, ballet, African and Indian classical dance. Reynolds Industries Theater, Bryan Center, Duke West Tickets available at 684-4444, Campus. http://tickets.duke.edu or at the door on the night of performance. See more dance this weekend! For more information, call the Duke Dance Program, 660-3354. Recital: BPM. Laura Barron, flute, with Jane Hawkins, piano. Nelson Music Room, East Duke Building, East Campus. For more information, 660-3300, call
www.duke.edu/music/events/masterclasses.
Performance: Bpm. Come see Bao Phi, awardwinning poet, spoken word artist, and activist! Feature event of Duke ASA’s Fall Political Series. Opening act by Local Colour. Also, OPEN MIC before the big show. Free admission. For more information, email mapll@duke.edu. The Hideaway. Theater Studies Workshop Presentation: Bpm. “Macbeth” by William Shakespeare. Dave Worster of the Theater, Studies faculty directs a student cast in Shakespeare’s timeless story of desire and loss. Call 684-4444. Sheafer Theater, Bryan Center, West Campus.
SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 24 Duke Opera Workshop: 2pm & Bpm. The Sweetest Sounds, A Richard Rodgers Revue, directed by Susan Dunn. Two performances. Baldwin Auditorium, Duke University East Campus.
Theater Studies Workshop Presentation: 2pm. “Macbeth” by William Shakespeare. Dave Worster of the Theater Studies faculty directs a student cast in Shakespeare’s timeless story of desire and loss. Call 684-4444. Sheafer Theater, Bryan Center, West Campus. Concert: 4pm. Jonathan Bagg, viola. Randall Love, piano. Nelson Music Room, East Duke Building.
Handel’s Messiah sing-along: 7pm. Scores will be available for purchase ($10) at the door or you may bring your own. For information, call 684-2572. Duke Chapel, West Campus. Quadrangle Pictures: Bpm. “Road to Perdition.”
$4 for Duke students and employees and $5 for the public. Call 684-2323. Griffith Film Theater, Bryan Center, West Campus.
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 22 Wesley Fellowship Bible Study: Fridays. Wesley Office.
12noon,
Shabbat: 6pm. Connect with Jewish tradition, get spiritual, eat a dinner that’s like your mom makes! If you’d like to join us for Shabbat Dinner, rsvp by 12 pm Friday to jewishlife@duke.edu.
SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 24 Episcopal Student Center: spm, Sundays.
Service of Holy Eucharist followed by fellowship dinner. Located at the Episcopal Student Contact Anne Center, 505 Alexander Ave. Hodges-Copple at annehc@duke.edu for more information.
Ongoing Events Duke Police offers following services: Crime prevention presentations, Rape awareness prepresentations, Alcohol Law sentations, Workforce violence educational programs, Personal property engraving. Please contact Lieutenant Tony Shipman at 668-2627 to schedule these programs/services.
In support of breastfeeding mothers: Duke Lactation Services and the Duke Hospital Auxiliary are pleased to announce that the Bouncing Ball Gift Shop now has available breastpump sales and rentals, breastcare products and breastpumping accessories. First floor, Duke Children’s Health Center. Monday-Friday 9-4, 668-4112. Payroll deduction is also available for some sales. Allen Building Lock-In: Do you like the Diversity Initiative? Do you feel safe on campus? Do you care about the war Iraq? Do you like to have fun? If any of these questions interest you, help plan the Allen Building Lock-In. The lock-in aims to promote fun and constructive dialogue in an uncommon format on Duke’s Campus. Please contact TeMeka for more info at tcw3@duke.edu.
Orthodox Weekly Vespers/Fellowship: Christian Student Fellowship. Duke Chapel
Basement. Father Edward Rummen, 919-7827037, fatheredward@mindspring.com. 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 6842572.
Exhibit: Through Dec 20. “One Family, Three Generations of Duke Women, 'l9ll, 1935 and 1964.” Photographs, letters and artifacts from the family of Betsy Alden related to their lives at Duke and afterwards. Lilly Library, East Campus. Exhibition Continues: “Russian Collection ReInstallation,” From the Permanent Collection. Exhibition runs through December 20, 2002.
(DUMA) Exhibition Continues: “‘Shroud’ from Anya Belkina.” Exhibition runs through February 2, 2003. Duke University Museum of Art Exhibit: Through Feb 2. “Pedro Figari (18611938): Lines of Uruguayan Life, A Student Curated Exhibition.” North Wing gallery. DUMA, East Campus. Touchable Art Gallery: Art and crafts by people with visual impairments. Main Lobby, Duke Eye Center. Carved in Wood: hand-worked hardwood carvings from six continents. John Hope Franklin Center Gallery, 2204 Erwin Road. Gallery hours vary; call 684-2888. Excerpts from Mao II: by Scott Lindroth and William Noland. Lower Level Art Space. John Hope Franklin Center Gallery, 2204 Erwin Road. Gallery hours vary; call 684-2888.
Haiti & Memory: photographs by Phyllis Galembo. Perkins Library, West Campus. Hours vary; call 684-6470. Sports photographs: “Four Horseman of the Apocalypse #1” and “Three Studies for Figures at the Base of a Crucifixion.” from Paul Pfeiffer.
Volunteer Ronald McDonald House: 506 Alexander Ave, http://ronaldhousedurham.org. Chris Hill, 286-9305. Women’s Center: 126 Few, Box 90920. Program Contact Shannon Johnson, Coordinator, 684-3897 Sarah P. Duke Gardens:
Chuck Hemric,
668-1705 or chemric@duke.edu. Sexual Assault Support Services: 126 Few, Box 90920. Contact the SASS Coordinator at the Women’s Center, 684-3897
Duke Volunteer Services: Duke Univeristy Medical Center: •
http://volunteer.mc.duke.edu •
Best Buddy: Jane Schroeder, 668-1128 Cancer Patient Support Program Susan Moonan, 684-4497 Caring House: Meg Harvey, 490-5449 Children’s Health Center: Edith Rosenblatt, 668-4107 Children’s Classic: Lucy Castle, 667-2567 Duke Ambassadors: Kay Satterwhite, 684-3835 .
demonstration: Weekdays, 12:30I:3opm. 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.
Organ
Exhibit: Through December 13. “ThirteenMonth Crop: One Year in the Life of a Piedmont Virginia Tobacco Farm.” Rare Book, Manuscript, and Special Collections Library’s hall gallery. Call 684-3009 for hours.
•
•
•
•
•
•
Hospital Auxiliary:
•
Diana Getzelmann, 684-3646 Teer House: Monica Taylor, 477-2644
The Chronicle
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER
22, 2002 � PAGE 13
You've heard most of the other conversations: If you think slavery ended in 1865, think again. Sudan is currently fighting a 19-year civil war in which slavery, rape, and starvation are tacts of life To date 2 million are dead and 4 million displaced.
"You'll never believe what I did!" "I was soooo wasted.”
"Yeah, we were kinda f**cked up."
You've heard them, maybe you've been part of them. But now you've got more to say.
Then why aren't you a member?
Francis Bok, born in southern Sudan, was stolen in 1986 at age seven and taken to northern Sudan as a slave. He was beaten every morning and made to sleep with animals every night. He finally escaped ten years later.
Come hear Francis speak about his experiences Sunday Nov. 24 th 4pm Von Canon Sponsored by; Kenan Institute of Ethics, Humanitarian Challenges Focus Program, Voices of Freedom Focus Program, PS 200: Ethics and International Relations
PAATY
(Promoting Alcohol Responsibility to You)
Become a Healthy Devil Peer Educator! We're a group of students committed to providing clear, real, honest information about alcohol and other drugs.
Interested? Contact Becky Griesse at 668.0997 for more information and an application.
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The Chronicle
PAGE 14 � FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 22, 2002
CAMERA DEBATE from page 1 served view. “Whenever we talked to someone, people’s first reaction is that they don’t like cameras, but after we talk to them, they support it,” he said. Ray Rodriguez, coordinator for health promotion and student health at the Healthy Devil, presented both sides of the issue but ultimately pointed to the need for a change in campus attitude toward sexual assault. Although he agreed that installing cameras would send a positive message, he also made clear that “the sexual assaults that could be stopped by the cameras [would be] a minority.” Rodriguez said sexual assault happens every weekend at Duke but cited Monday’s all-male discussion about sexual assault in Wannamaker Quadrangle as an example of changing campus attitudes toward the issue. “Most of the discussion tonight seems to imply
some educational stuff that needs to happen,” Rodriguez said. After moving to consider the campus safety resolution and the security camera issue separately, Campus Council passed the less controversial portion by a vote of 13-2.
This part of the resolution included recommenda-
tions for Duke Card bathroom access, increased activity by the SafeWalks program, better lighting across campus and increased availability and promotion of self-defense classes. After the meeting, council members defended the decision to vote against security cameras. “I just don’t know if there’s enough proof that they would be effective,” said council member Brandon Jamison, a junior. The council also unanimously passed a resolution concerning sexual assault and harassment. The resolution primarily addresses acquaintance rape and recommends new, small-scale resident adviser-led awareness programs for freshmen; the compilation of
Duke-specific statistics about sexual assault; and a review of judicial procedures in sexual assault cases. “We definitely want to do something [about sexual assault],” said Gerald Oliver, council secretary. “We’re still in the process of figuring out what that something is.” Student response to the council’s decision has been mixed, although students primarily responded to threats to their privacy by increased surveillance. “It’s probably the better decision,” said sophomore Abigail Weliver. “Although [cameras] might have given us some sense of comfort at this time, it’s really just an invasion of privacy.” “I’m not a fan of Big Brother,” agreed sophomore Michaela Kerrissey.
Some students, however, said the potential bene-
fits of cameras outweighed the risks. “Security cameras would have been okay,” said sophomore David Hsu. “It’s not that much of an invasion of privacy if they’re just on the quad,” he added.
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Miami bounced back from a slow start to beat Pittsburgh and maintain their No. 1 ranking. See page 16
Sports
� Find out how Duke and North Carolina stack up in football this weekend. See page2l The Chronicle
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 22, 2002
� page is
Duke tackles UNC No. 1 Duke fights Tenn. in rivalry matchup Nation’s best 2 teams preview March at Jimmy V � Duke tries to win back the Victory Bell for the first time in 12 years in a game that will determine last place in the ACC. By NICK CHRISTIE The Chronicle
In 1989, the bowl-bound Duke football team annihilated arch-rival North Carolina 41-0. It was the final year of Steve Spurrier’s triumphant threeyear reign in Durham, and when Spurrier took off to the University of Florida, he took his undefeated record against the Tar Heels with him. The Blue Devils hope to exclude the prefix of baker in front of their wretched losing streak to North Carolina Saturday at noon at Wallace Wade Stadium. In the last 12 years, no team other than the perennially State powerful Florida Seminoles has dominated Duke over the past decade like archrival North Carolina. The last time Duke kept the margin of defeat under 22 points was in 1996. During current Duke head coach Carl Franks’ three-
year tenure the Blue Devils have been outscored 149-38. Despite the Tar Heel’s recent supremacy, the 2002 Blue Devils are eagerly anticipating Saturday’s season finale. Both schools possess identical 2-9 records, including 0-7 marks in conference, and Duke badly wants a victory. “Right now everybody’s real excited to get out and play,” said sophomore quarterback Adam Smith. “I think a lot of people are feeling like me that Saturday can’t come quick enough. We want to get out there and show everybody—we want In play the best game of the year.” Adding to Blue Devils’ enthusiasm are North Carolina’s glaring vulnerabilities. Defensively, UNC doesn’t even look like a shadow of its former self. With standouts like Julius Peppers and Ryan Sims gone to the NFL, the Tar Heels are dead last in the ACC in total defense, and are giving up 465 yards per game. UNC allows 229 rushing yards alone, which should allow the Blue Devils’ successful running duo See FOOTBALL on page 21
By CATHERINE SULLIVAN The Chronicle
Since 1995, the Jimmy V Men’s Basketball Classic has helped raise nearly $450,000 for the V Foundation for Cancer Research in honor of the late Jim Valvano, the legendary North Carolina State Basketball Coach and ESPN broadcaster who lost his battle with cancer in 1993 at age 47. The annual four-team tournament has become one of the most competitive in men’s college basketball, and this year, for the first time, the women will hold their own version of this charitable event. The inaugural Jimmy V Women’s Basketball Classic will be held Sunday at the RBC Center in Raleigh and will feature three teams from last year’s NCAA Final Four. In the first game, No. 1 Duke will battle No. 2 Tennessee, followed by No. 6 Connecticut against North Carolina State. “It is an honor for all of us to be involved in the inaugural Jimmy V Classic,” Duke head coach Gail Goestenkors said. BROOKE SMITH is one of the many freshmen on the women’s basket! >ail team
See JIMMY Von page 17
New look Blue Devils ready for Ist game Men’s soccer returns to NCAAs
Krzyzewski, Duhon heal in time for opener against Army Knights By GABE GITHENS The Chronicle
The Army Black Knights head into Cameron Indoor Stadium Saturday evening without a win against Duke since 1939. In that game, the final score was 37-27. Needless to say, The Black Knights have their work cut out for them in the Blue Devils home-opener against head coach Mike Krzyzewski’s alma mater and
By MIKE COREY The Chronicle
Duke looks to be crowned king of collegiate men’s soccer world for the first time in 16 years when it starts the NCAA tournament against No. 25 William & Mary at 6 p.m. tonight at
Koskinen Stadium. The Blue Devils are coming off a rare drought from the postseason, as the program struggled through 2001 to
former coaching grounds. Army graduated eight players last year and could possibly start four players who have never been on the court for an NCAA tip-off. Duke also lacks experience, but its superior quickness and athleticism should overpower the Black Knight’s presence on the court. Junior Nick Horvath, who looks to see a more prominent role this year, said he thinks the Blue Devils’ depth will be displayed in Saturday’s contest. See ARMY on page 18
#
an uncharacteristic 8-10-1 record. Duke began 2002 with a vengeance, however, storming to a 9-3-1 record that included victories over then-No. 2 Clemson and defending national champion North Carolina. And though the Blue Devils have tapered off since then due to an influx of injuries, the swagger has returned
HEAD COACH MIKE KRZYZEWSKI will be back in action tonight after an injury last game
Girls game ends 115-2
Shaq may return Friday
Rumors about NBA trade
Barkley pays piper
Wakerville High defeated Lakeshore Public Academy 115-2 in a varsity girls basketball playoff game. Laskeshore athletic director complained of poor sportsmanship.
It will be a game time decision if Shaquille O’Neal makes his season debut against Chicago, Friday. O’Neal has been recovering from surgery on his arthritic big toe.
Former Duke players Mike Dunleavyand Jay Williams may be reunited as Chicago Bulls. Rumor has Dunleavy being traded to the Bulls, though GM Jerry Krause denies the story.
NBA analyst Charles Barkley promised to kiss the buttocks of colleague Kenny Smith if Houston Rockets center Yao Ming scored over 19 points in a game. Ming netted 30 Thursday night.
See TRIBE on page 21
NHL scores
• Bruins 3, Hurricanes 1
Senators 3, Canadiens 2 Wild 4, Capitals 3 Islanders 7, Lightning 2 Rangers 4, Devils 4 Sharks 2, Flyers 2 Blue 3, Kings 2
Sports
PAGE 16 �FRIDAY. NOVEMBER 22. 200:
The Chronicle
DUKE
vs
SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 24TH No. 1 Duke Coach Gail Goestenkors Guard Vicki Krapohl, Jr. Guard Atana Beard, Jr. Forward Sheana Mosch, Sr. Forward Iciss Tillis, Jr. Center Michelle Matyasovsky, Sr.
lEXX.
RBC CENTER. RALEIGH
•
No. 2 Tennessee Coach Pat Summitt Guard Loree Moore, So. Guard Kara Lawson, Sr. Forward Tasha Butts, Jr. Forward Shyra Ely, So. Center Gwen Jackson, Sr.
fefH
SIS Gwen Jackson already presence in Tennessee’s No. 23 Oklahoma. Duke mtcourt, but the likes of Iciss 'erpowered, by a stronger
MIAMI RUNNING BACK WILLIS McGAHEE stiff arms a Pittsburgh defender.
No. 1 Miami sustains late run, tops No. 17 Panthers Miami
28 MIAMI
Willis
McGahee dived into Pittsburgh 21 the end zone, jumped to his feet and placed his fingers in the shape of a diamond—a pop-culture symbol that represents a dynasty. The gesture might have been appropriate for No. 1 Miami, but it definitely was premature—for the game and the season.
McGahee ran 19 times for 159 yards and scored two touchdowns as the Hurricanes overcame another slow start and a frantic finish to beat 17th-ranked Pittsburgh 28-21 Thursday night at the Orange Bowl.
in the country, and with ive scorer herself, the most I be on the wing. Quiet but for Duke and Loree Moore but if one of the two can mce. lyer
:,
In a nationally televised game that gave Miami (10-0, 5-0 Big East) a chance to showcase Heisman Trophy teammates Ken Dorsey and McGahee, the sophomore running back had the majority of the highlights. “McGahee was great. He was the key guy in this game,” said coach Walt Harris, whose Panthers (8-3, 5-1) lost for just the third time in 17 games and had their conference winning streak snapped at nine games. The defending national champions extended their nation-best winning streak to 32 games, their Big East-record streak to 22 games and moved two victories
,Ie bench, with sophomore being thrown into a quick Lindsey Harding played well (rings life to her team with a mid be a factor this early in
'
By MARK LONG
The Associated Press
jid a new motion offense ;ee team comes into the 1.
)t
1 ranking away from Duke
to prove with an untested
Tillis. With a close fan base
edge.
;rb the loss of scorer Monique Currie and is and confident Tennessee squad. Alana Beard, the load for the Blue Devils. She’ll have to, as irt. If she shoots lights out, Duke will have a Tennessee wins 86-77. —by Matt Sullivan
See BIG EAST on page 24
SEASON OPENER TONIGHT
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Sports
The Chronicle
JIMMY V from page 15
Also dangerous for the Lady Vols in 6foot-2 sophomore forward Shyra Ely, who
“More than anything we feel honored to be invited and included. We are looking forward to a great weekend.”
The Blue Devils, ranked No. 1 for the
first time in school history, will have a chance for revenge against six-time NCAA Champion Tennessee, which defeated Duke 89-68 in the ACC-SEC Challenge last December. However, such a challenging early-season contest will not allow Goestenkors the luxury of easing her five freshmen into Duke’s system. “Tennessee is a great team and I don’t know if we are ready for that with the five freshmen we have,” Goestenkors said. “They are going to be thrown into the fire. I’m not sure what to expect, but I’m hoping for the best. You never know what is going to happen with freshmen once they get on the floor.” Duke will have to contend with a strong Tennessee squad that has already handily defeated No. 23 Oklahoma, a Final Four team from last season. The Lady Vols are led by senior
Naismith candidates Gwen Jackson and Kara Lawson. The duo combined for 39 points in Tennessee’s victory over Duke last year, and they teamed up for 41 points in their opener against the Sooners.
averaged 9.3 points and 5.4 rebounds per game during her freshman campaign. Jackson, Lawson and Ely lead the Lady Vols’ new motion offense that
allows them to showcase their skilled three-point shooters, penetrators and post players. The revamped system also helps Tennessee dominate on the boards, something that has become a trademark of head coach Pat Summit’s teams. “We have to do an awesome job on the boards because Tennessee is such an incredible offensive rebounding teamf Duke senior tri-captain Sheana Mosch said. “Every time they shoot the ball they have four or five people crashing the boards extremely hard. We just have to make sure every time a shot goes up we’re blocking out so they don’t get 17 offensive boards like they did last year against us.” Mosch’s role will be particularly key for Duke after Monique Curry, who averaged 14.3 points per game as a
freshman last season, tore her anterior cruciate ligament in the team’s first preseason game and will be lost for the season. Mosch will replace Curry in the starting lineup against Tennessee. “The biggest thing that I have to step up with is my rebounding because [Monique! was such an incredible
FRIDAY. NOVEMBER 22. 2002 � PAGE 17
rebounder for us,” Mosch said. “She would get three or four offensive boards
for us every game.” Even without Curry, the Blue Devils should be able to match-up well against an experienced Tennessee team that returns nine players from last season. Duke’s offense will likely rely heavily on Naismith candidates Iciss Tillis and Alana Beard, whose versatile games could present problems for Tennessee defenders. Beard, who dreamed of playing basketball for Tennessee as a kid, has added strength and range to her game and should be even more difficult to contain than she was in the teams’ 2001 meeting, when she connected for 18 points, seven assists and four steals. “We’re going to have to execute and stay patient against Tennessee,” Beard said. “I think as a team we’re ready to play them some we can learn what we need to improve on.” Beard and the Blue Devils may be ready for Tennessee, but Summit believes that her squad is equally prepared for the contest. “This challenge has generated a lot of excitement on, our team,” Summit said. “If you’re playing against the best team in the country right out of the blocks, it gets everyone’s attention. And we think Duke is the best team in the country right now.”
MISTIE BASS will need to have a good game off the bench for Duke to win.
NCM
Tournament 1 st round: Duke vs. William
Friday, November 22
&
Mary
6pm Koskinen Stadium Tickets: $7/adults
$5/students, youth, seniors w/ valid
ID
J&ueSf 2002 /%LIP CVJLrtHODIST
PAGE 18 �FRIDAY.
Sports
NOVEMBER 22. 2002
ARMY from page 15
DUKE
“I don’t think it’s going to be like last year,” Horvath said. “I think you’re going to see a lot of different starting five’s because our team is more interchangeable this year. It’s going to make practice
ARMY
Cameron Indoor Stadium
•
Army Coach Jim Crews Guard Mike Canty, Sr. Guard Brendan McGann, Fr. Forward Josh Wilson, Jr. Forward Bill Mohr, Jr. Center Greg Wallace, So.
No. 6 Duke Coach Mike Krzyzewski Guard Chris Duhon, Jr. Guard —Daniel Ewing, So. Forward Dahntay Jones, Jr. Forward Shavlik Randolph, Fr. Center Shelden Williams, Fr.
Black Knight junior Josh Wilson, who averaged six points and three rebounds last season, is Army’s key returning player. Duke’s Dahntay Jones should draw the defensive responsibilities of stopping
THE
YSIS
i\OI)
mg a specific body type to train, over 6-foot-6. Six players K era) stand 6-foot-9 and above 'erne disadvantage for Army, wath, senior Casey Sanders, will show no mercy in the paint.
layer
CHRIS DUHON is expected to start despite hurt-
Williams to the NBA, in the off-season. Duhon is year, while Ewing and fresh;k will provide energy that last :o be as over-matched in lide shooting as it is in height 'ear Jay
ing himself last game. position while guarding Army’s Sean O’Keefe or Andy Smith. Sean Dockery will come off the bench for his mentor on the team, Duhon. On the same night that Duhon injured himself it looked as though Krzyzewski could be out for a few games with a muscle injury to his hip. After a week of practice, Krzyzewski should be roaming the sidelines Saturday against a team he coached to the NIT in 1978. The Blue Devils plan to throttle the Black Knights early in the contest and test their depth later in the game. Duke starts the season without the hype it did last year, and Randolph thinks the team will be able to improve without any ceiling on its potential. “We don’t want to set limits on ourselves,” Randolph said. “We’re not placing any numerical value on how good we want to become.”
one of the Blue Devils’ strengths and 1999 teams that finished ill go ten players deep for at least th has shown signs of vast is, and Sanders has meshed well )8
Thompson.
can you not give it to the Blue ice the Crazies have been in te newly air conditioned facility, le in many different environto not know what hit them we never played an NCAA game
;
Horvath as reserves. “I know I’m going to play 25 or 30 minutes a game,” Horvath said. “If I start or don’t start, it makes no difference to me.” Randolph said Chris Duhon is scheduled to start in the backcourt for Duke, despite a wrist injury in last week’s game. Daniel Ewing and freshman J.J. Redick should share time at the off-guard
vs
Saturday, November 23
more competitive.”
the Black Knights’ offensive threat. “He’s [Jones] always going to guard the other team’s best wing player,” freshman Shavlik Randolph said. “He’s got the strength to defend anybody; he’s got the quickness to defend anyone and he’s got great playing ability. He’s a tremendous offensive rebounder as well.” Unlike many games last year, the Blue Devils’ will have a size advantage at nearly every position on the floor. Army’s Greg Wallace, listed at 6-foot-B—the only player over 6-foot-6 on the Black Knight’s roster —will start at the center position. To stymie Wallace, Duke will most likely send the 6-foot-9, 230-pound freshman Shelden Williams inside to start the game alongside 6-foot-10 Randolph, who has lead the team in scoring in both of the preseason contests. Duke will be able to rotate several players in and out of the low blocks with Casey Sanders, Michael Thompson and
The Chronicle
1
m
n
from last year’s Duke team, but Army has lost rela,the Black Knights’ leading returning scorer is Josh a game. Heralded as the No. 1 recruiting class in iir official start after looking impressive in exhibition —by Robert Samuel Duke wins 95-62.
SPORTS CLUBS Games November 22 Women’s Rugby v. Charleston 1:00p.m. -4:00 p.m., West Grass
November 24 Men’s Soccer Game 1:00p.m.
vv vv vv vv vv vv vv
-4:00p.m.,
West Grass
AAA AAA AAA AAA AAA AAA AAA AAA AAA AAA AAA AAA
vv
Congratulations to all our amazing Delta Varsity Athletes! Cornet and Stephanie, you and the Varsity Swim Team are gonna rock the George Mason Invitational this weekend, we'll be cheering for you! Congrats Chrissie and Katie for leading Varsity Field Hockey to the elite eight, you guys are awesome! We are so proud of you for making it farther in the NCAA tournament than any Duke Field Hockey team yet!
Josie, you are going to be amazing at the Women's Varsity Volleyball ACC Championship this this weekend! Love, Your Tri Delta Sisters
AA AA AA
AA AA AA AA AA
The Chronicle
Sports
FRIDAY. NOVEMBER 22. 2002 »PA ;e 19
PAGE 20 �FRIDAY.
Sports
NOVEMBER 22. 2002
Grid Picks
@
Duke
Maryland
@ Virginia N.C. State Navy @ Wake Forest South Carolina @ Clemson Texas Tech @ Oklahoma Pittsburgh @ Miami Michigan @ Ohio State Michigan State @ Penn State Minnesota @ Wisconsin Cincinnati @ Hawaii Washington @ Washington St. USC @ UCLA Stanford @ Cal Oregon @ Oregon St. Arkansas @ Mississippi St
FSU
a few
DURHAM After botched trips, poor attempts at humor, bad stories and a general hiatus from both laughter and the football program, the Grid Pickers decided to remedy at least the latter by making their way over to Wallace Wade Stadium Saturday afternoon for what they hoped would be an ensuing Victory Bell celebration. Since it was many of the seniors last Grid Picks, they naturally expressed their bittersweet parting sentiments. “This f—ing sucks,” Evan der Holyfield” Davis said. “I can’t believe I have to cover one game this year—l’m going to try to call Chris Duhon back one more time.” “St.” Nick Christie would also have been depressed if he hadn’t passed out on The Chronicle couch, muttered sweet nothing to Robbie “M. Hunt?” Samuel in his sleep and taken an extra hour and a half before waking up and trying to do a graphic that had already been done. “Any time you can get” Paul “a Abdul into a lead, you’re doing well” Doran would have been particularly sad, but since his doctor had him all drugged up he really couldn’t feel much. “Wake up,” Brian “I’m good at grid picks when I actually pick” Morray said to Doran, making up for a comment that would have been Kevin “P” Lees’s “don’t get mad at me for booking the wrong date” if he hadn’t been in Indianapolis. “You’re missing Carl Franks throw his playbook on the sideline for what may be the final time.” “But look,” Dave “dumps like a truck” Ingram said. “At least “-
@
Mississippi
@
LSU
Auburn @ Alabama Yale @ Harvard Rutgers @ Notre Dame
@
Maryland FSU
@
@
N.C.
Virginia
State
Navy @ Wake Forest South Carolina @ Clemson Texas Tech @ Oklahoma Pittsburgh @ Miami Michigan @ Ohio State Michigan State @ Penn State Minnesota @ Wisconsin Cincinnati @ Hawaii
Washington
@
Washington St,
USC @ UCLA Stanford @ Cal Oregon @ Oregon St. Arkansas @ Mississippi St,
Mississippi
@
LSU
Auburn @ Alabama Yale @ Harvard Rutgers @ Notre Dame
Area 51 (148-72) Duke 20-17 Maryland
Davis
Atwood
Jeste
(154-66) Duke 31-13 Maryland
(153-67) Duke 21-17 Maryland
(152-68) UNC 27-25 Maryland
(150-70) Duke 37-4 Virginia
FSU
FSU
Wake Forest
Wake Forest
Wake Forest
FSU Wake Forest
Clemson
Clemson Oklahoma
Clemson Oklahoma
NCSU Wake Forest S.C. Oklahoma Miami
Michigan
Michigan
Michigan
Ohio State
Penn State Minnesota Hawaii Wash. St,
Clemson Oklahoma Miami Ohio State Penn State Wisconsin Hawaii Wash. St.
FSU Wake Forest Clemson Oklahoma Miami
Wisconsin
Penn State Wisconsin
use
use
Wash. St.
Penn State Wisconsin Hawaii Wash. St
Penn State Wisconsin
Hawaii Wash. St
Penn State Wisconsin Cincinnati Wash. St.
use
use
Cal Oregon Arkansas LSU Alabama Harvard Notre Dame
Cal Oregon St, Arkansas LSU Alabama Harvard Notre Dame
Cal
Cal
Cal
Cal
Cal
Oregon Arkansas
Oregon St Arkansas
Oregon St.
LSU
LSU Alabama Yale Notre Dame
Oregon St. Arkansas Mississippi Auburn Yale Notre Dame
Oregon Arkansas LSU Auburn Harvard Notre Dame
Veis
Corey (146-74) Duke 45-14 Maryland
Free Traders
Rosen
Githens
Photog
(146-74) Duke 10-27 Maryland
(146-74) UNC 38-0 Virginia
(144-76) Duke 20-17
(144-76) Duke 21-14
FSU Wake Forest S.C. Oklahoma
FSU Wake Forest Clemson Oklahoma Miami
N.C. State Wake Forest S.C. Oklahoma Miami
Maryland FSU
Maryland FSU
Ingram (143-77) Duke 13-7 Maryland
Wake Forest Clemson Oklahoma
Wake Forest Clemson
Miami
Miami
Ohio State
Michigan
Penn State Wisconsin
Penn State Wisconsin Hawaii Wash. St.
Maryland FSU
Oklahoma Miami
Ohio State
FSU Wake Forest Clemson Oklahoma Miami Ohio State Penn State Wisconsin Cincinnati
Miami Ohio State Penn State Wisconsin
Cincinnati Wash. St.
use
use
(147-73) Duke 13-0 Maryland
Duke
Christie
Clark
Bush
(157-63) Duke 24-21 Maryland
MATCHUP UNC
Lois
Sullivan
(160-60) Duke 24-10
MATCHUP
UNC
The Chronicle
Alabama Harvard Notre Dame
Pittsburgh Michigan Penn State
Wash. St.
Minnesota Cincinnati Wash. St.
use
use
Cal
Cal
Oregon Arkansas
Oregon Arkansas
LSU Alabama Harvard Notre Dame
LSU Alabama Yale Notre Dame
he isn’t stuck coaching high school football four hours west ofDurham.” Of the other senior, Robert “Jane Hetherington” Tai was nowhere to be found, but few (if any) ofthe part doubted that Tai was wearing a white T-shirt and light blue jeans wherever he was. However, there was no doubt about what Greg “My house is full of” Veis was wearing. Confused and still drunk from his 21st birthday, Veis had gone back on that cross-dressing binge. This time he wasn’t outside Cameron Indoor Stadium with Neelum Jeste “stop with this madness” flirting with freshman bas-
Cincinnati
Wash. St.
use
Cal Oregon Arkansas LSU
Alabama
Harvard Notre Dame
Miami Michigan Penn State
use
&
Hawaii
use
Arkansas LSU Alabama Harvard Notre Dame
(149-71) Duke 2-0 Virginia FSU
Pittsburgh
use Cal
Oregon St. Arkansas
Oregon Arkansas
LSU Alabama Harvard Notre Dame
LSU Alabama Harvard Notre Dame
Hawaii Washington UCLA Stanford Oregon
use
Stanford
Oregon Arkansas LSU Alabama Harvard Notre Dame
Arkansas Mississippi
Alabama Yale Notre Dame
Morray (139-81) Duke 2-10 Maryland
Doran
(141-79) Duke
21-13
Virginia FSU
FSU Wake Forest
FSU Wake Forest Clemson Oklahoma Miami Ohio State Penn State Wisconsin
Wake Forest S.C.
Clemson
Oklahoma
use
use
Cal
Cal
Cal
Oregon Arkansas
Oregon Miss. St.
Oregon Arkansas
Mississippi
LSU
Alabama Harvard Notre Dame
Alabama Harvard Notre Dame
LSU Alabama Yale Notre Dame
LSU Alabama
Wash. St. UCLA Cal Oregon Miss. St.
Cal
S.C,
Oklahoma Miami Michigan Penn State Wisconsin Hawaii Wash. St.
Miami Ohio State Penn State Wisconsin Cincinnati Wash. St.
Hawaii
Wash. St.
Wake Forest
Oklahoma Miami Ohio State Penn State Wisconsin Cincinnati Wash. St.
Oklahoma Penn State Wisconsin
Wisconsin Cincinnati
Maryland FSU
FSU Wake Forest Clemson Texas Tech Miami
Wake Forest Clemson Oklahoma
Michigan
Michigan Penn State
Samuel
(148-72) Duke 28-14
Cincinnati
Wash. St.
use
Harvard Notre Dame
in absentia, having given up his whole weekend for his girlfriend (who after lastyear I have no intention of bringing into Grid Picks). “Look guys after a total of seven fumbles, 10 interceptions, four missed field goals and six botched fourth-down tries, someone finally got on the scoreboard,” Mike “Bad to the” Corey said. “Duke scored.” After that the Grid Pickers left, and as they were walking away the sweet sounds of the Victory Bell could be heard all over campus.... —by Neal Morgan. Who else would write a fairy tale?
ketball players, instead Veis was walking around campus trying to find students who weren’t economics majors and didn’t want to go into investment bank-
ing/consulting. After interviewing all of the undergraduate population he had found three such people. One of those three people, Matt At “how far can a dog run into the” wood “s?” could not be reached for
comment. He and John “my gosh, there’s a burning” Bush were sleeping off their respective TowerView and archiving jobs. Tyler “Rocky Top” Rosen was also
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TRIBE from page 15
ROBERT TAI/THE CHRONICLE
DONALD McINTOSH and the men’s soccer seniors will play their final home game this weekend.
FOOTBALL
to the men’s soccer program, the former ACC tournament champions and 1986 National Champions. “We have to get Duke to what Duke used to be,” sophomore Owoicho Adogwa said. “We owe coach some victories.” A win over William and Mary will be a royal pain, as the Tribe has gone 13-71 against one of the toughest schedules in the nation. Most notably, William & Mary has played No. 1 Maryland, No. 2 Wake Forest and No. 4 Indiana. And while the Tribe lost all three games by the combined score of 8-2, they were able to do something Duke has failed to do twice this season—beat Virginia. The No. 11 Cavaliers defeated Duke in the regular season and most recently in the ACC tournament, a one-sided slugfest that has left many Blue Devils vengeful. Oddly enough, the winner of Friday’s contest will play Virginia in the second round of the NCAAs.
“If we win this game Friday we play Virginia at Virginia, which is going to be a brawl,” defender Adam Guren said. “It
from page 15
of Alex Wade and Chris Douglas to find open spaces. Although acknowledging the Tar Heels’ defensive struggles this season, the Duke coaching staff expects to face a tenacious North Carolina defense Saturday. “They certainly don’t have all those firstround draft picks,” Franks said. “But what they’ve got is some guys that are going to play very hard. Both teams are going to play very hard. It will be a war.” Having been physically manhandled over the past three seasons many Blue Devils are quick to point out that no matter how poor North Carolina looks on paper they still bring a certain physicality to every contest. “One thing I' notice is they come out ready to play,”
FRIDAY. NOV
would be a good game. We owe them big time after the games we’ve played so far.” Guren’s mentality is indicative of that of his teammates, as is his emphasis on the importance of playing one game at a time. “We can’t play Virginia unless we win on Friday, so we’ve got to keep Friday in mind and make sure we get that one done,” he said. “Virginia is kind of in the back of our minds, but we’ve got to stay focused on William and Mary.” Led by All-American candidate Ralph Bean, who has tallied 10 goals and 11 assists, the Tribe has outscored opponents 41-26 in 2002. Bean is supported by Carlos Garcia and Andreas Nydal who have combined for 17 scores 11 assists. The triumvirate runs a patient offense that tries to tediously break down defenses. In anticipation of this offensive scheme, Duke has altered its game plan. “We switched the formation up a little bit,” Guren said. “We’re going to play four in the back and we should be solid more defensively...Because they’re so good at possessing the ball, instead of letting them play through
Smith said. “They come out hitting hard, they come out fired up. You can’t ever take them lightly at all. So we’re going to have to come out and match their intensity. We’re going to have to come out and throw our weight around.” One area in which the Tar Heels do not look ripe for an upset is on offense. North Carolina boasts the ACC’s top passing attack and will undoubtedly be licking its collective lips when going up against the woefully poor Blue Devil secondary, which is once again ranked last in
conference.
Although UNC head coach John Bunting has publicly stated that the recently struggling C.J. Stephens will be Saturday’s starting quarterback, he has not ruled out the return of sophomore play caller Darian Durant. Durant had been posting All-ACC numbers
IBER 22. 2002 »PAGE 21
us we’ll probably sit a little bit and keep the ball in front of us so we can
counter more.” Adogwa and junior Jordan Cila have led Duke offensively all year, and will be expected to continue bearing the onus Friday. Their responsibility will be a little greater, though, as AllACC performer Trevor Perea is still hampered by a quad injury. His status is being evaluated on a daily basis, and whether or not he plays will be determined at game time. A seven-day layoff since Duke’s last game has allocated some recuperation time for Perea and his teammates to regroup and refocus. “We took a little time off over the weekend and just physically and mentally recovered,” coach John Rennie •said. “The practices this week have been very sharp. We’re just continuing to hopefully get our team better.” And according to co-captain Donald Mclntosh, to get one more shot at the vaunted Cavaliers. “We’re definitely not looking past the game Friday, but we would love to see Virginia again,” he said.
until breaking his wrist in mid-October.
Not knowing whom to expect, the Blue Devils
have been preparing for both potential signal callers. Saturday’s season finale presents an interesting oddity for the Blue Devils. Duke will field a team entirely devoid of seniors, as the team’s only graduating player, linebacker Jamyon Small, will miss the game with a torn ACL. Asked whether he thought a lack of senior leadership on the field would limit his side’s feelings of desperation, Franks shook his head. “I hope that’s not something that our guys are thinking about,” Franks said. “I don’t think it is. I think they realize the importance of this game. I think there’s a certain sense of wanting to play this game for Jamyon Small who’s not coming back, who’s not going to be able to play in the game.”
Hi DUKE vs NORTH CAROLINA Saturday, November 23
•
12:00PM
Series Record: UNC leads 49-35-4
RUSHING
rt*
Oft
SPECIAL TEAMS
The Tar Heels have been abominable at stopping the run since Ryan Sims left a 315-pound hole on the defensive line. With UNC allowing a league-high 228.5 rushing yards per contest, Chris Douglas and Alex Wade should be able to run wild.
In a miserable year, North Carolina has been content with sitting back in coverage, allowing an ACC-high nine yards per completion while managing just a league-low six picks. Adam Smith wants 2,000 yards, and he’ll get it. With Brent Garber still on the mend, Duke could have a serious weakness in its kicking game in what is bound to be a tight match. Khary Sharpe hasn’t translated well to special teams either, so Duke better watch out in a nailbiter.
Wallace Wade Stadium
UNC Record: 2-9 (0-7 in the ACC) Duke record: 2-9 (0-7)
TV/Radio: JR Sports/WDNC 620 AM
When Duke has the ball
•
RUSHING
PASING SPECIAL TEAMS
TH Boasting the worst running game in a league that has been defined by the run this season, UNC probably won’t rely on the ground game much. When they do, look for Ryan Fowler and Co. to cap off a superb year on the other end.
The Blue Devils will have some catching up to do on pass defense, as they’re sure to be chasing UNC’s Sam Aiken all the way to his I,oooth yard. If Darian Durant returns under center, Duke’s weak secondary might just ware out. Tar Heel John Lafferty is the ACC’s worst punter, averaging a meager 36.5 yards per boot despite being used the most often. With Duke set to hamper Carolina’s run, Lafferty could singlehandedly lose the field position battle.
The Blue Devils have been so frustrated this season with close loss after close loss—and a few blowouts mixed in—that they With an actuallv look more motivated then ever to take the ever-important Victory Bell back up 15-501 in the season finale.North Carolina, attack, Duke, once, against for comes as a favorite in passing established runnino aame and a steadily-maturing —by to Matt Sullivan remember, Duke makes it one 24-21. season. forgettable a a team that has lost its identity in
The Chronicle
pAGE 22 ďż˝ FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 22, 2002
Duke and Durham. Because weâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;re on the same te
Give to the Blue Devil Holiday Food Drive. November 11
-
December 21
More than 8,500 Durham children need a holiday meal.
Give your points, get a kiss! Thhling at the Bryan Center and the Marketplace with wrap-up at Duke-UNC football game on Nov. 23.
Look for canned food bins tied in red bows in every academic building, in East Campus dorms, and the medical center. 2002 GOAL;
30,000 cans to the Food Bank of N.C. Sponsored hy Facilities Management Department
and Duke Student Government
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Classifieds
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Child Care Afterschool childcare for 3 children 2:30-6:30 Chapel Hill must have childcare experience NS own car 408-0908 after 6:30 or leave message.
JUNIOR? TEACHING?
M,W,F
MINORITY? Information about the Rockefeller Brothers Fund fellowship program
in 02 Allen Building. Application Deadline: December 5, 2002.
Help Wanted
NOV AND DEC
HOLIDAY SPECIAL
BARTENDERS
25% off haircuts, highlights, perms, and colors performed by Denise. Mention ad when calling. Image 383-4602. 3702-4 works Hillsborough Rd.
NEEDED!!!
Earn $l5-30/hr. Job placement assistance is top priority.
Raleigh’s Bartending School. Call now for info about our half price tuition special. Offer ends soon. Have fun! Make money! Meet People! (919)676-0774. www.cocktailmixer.com.
SUMMER SESSION 2003 Projected course offerings with meeting times now posted at www.learnmore.duke,edu/Summer Session. Other questions? 6842621 orsummer@duke.edu.
Gourmet coffee bar at DUMC seeking PT enthusiastic Baristas. 15-20
UNC-CH Research on Life Goals: Couples who marry, become engaged, or begin living together
hrs/wk some weekends. Call Brian at 681-5884 or stop by EspressOasis in food court of North Building.
2001-2003. Two years, four sessions, $5O-120/session. Contact Coolsen, Mike uncstudy@yahoo.com, 824-4442
Graduate Research Assistant Office of Assessment—Trinity College. Duties include developing and analyzing surveys, graphing, report writing, and running basic statistical analysis such as frequencies, regressions, t-tests, etc. Skills required: basic SAS or other statistical programs, excel, word; Student will learn web-based survey software. 10-20hr/wk $l2/hr Starts ASAP Contact Matt Serra, Director of Academic Assessment 660-5762 serram@duke.edu.
Apts. For Rent 27 FLOOR PLANS FROM $399* ON IBR APTS TO $499* ON 2 BR APTS— 2 BLOCKS TO DUKE. 4 MONTH FREElFlexible lease terms. Check our specials! Duke Apartments, 493-4509. Villa www.apts.com/dukevitla. ‘subject to change. EHO. THE CLOSEST APT COMMUNITY TO DUKE. 2 MONTHS FREE! Academic leases available. Flexible lease terms. Walk or free shuttle bus to campus. Check our specials! CHAPEL TOWER APARTMENTS, 383-6677. www.apts.com/chapeltower. EHO.
Graduate Research Assistants Office of Assessment—Trinity College. Four assistants needed to evaluate undergraduate writing assignments. Researchers will be trained to score writing samples. Excellent writing and editing skills desired. 5 to 10hr/wk $l2/hr (approx. 2 months work with possiblity of more). Starts ASAP Contact Matt Serra, Director of Academic Assessment 660-5762
WALK TO DUKE OR STAY AND PLAY. Academic leases available. Flexible lease terms. Walk or free shuttle bus to campus. FANTASTIC clubhouse w/ fitness center. Student specials! Rates starting at $478. Duke Manor Apartments, 383-6683. www.apts.com/dukemanor. EHO.
serram@duke.edu
MOVIE EXTRAS/MODELS NEEDED Earn up to $l5O-450/Day! No experience necessary. Call Now for immediate exposure 1-800-8140277x1401.
Needed
Student—preferably Work-Study funded—to do filing and pulling patient charts for approximately 7 to 15 hours per week, flexible. Rate: $7.00/hr. Contact: Sheila Hyde at 684-3942.
Needed Student—preferably WorkStudy Funded—to do filing, copying, fax reports, make up charts, run errands, and perform general clerical duties. Flexible Hours...needed for approx. 10-15 hours per week. Salary; $7.50/hr Contact: Karen Koenig at 684-3271. Research Technician Position Biochemistry Department, DUMC A Research Technician position is available in a biochemistry research lab working on the genetics and molecular biology of DNA enzymes. A Bachelor’s degree in Biology or Chemistry, and research experience in these areas are required. Send CV and references to Dr. Tao Hsieh at hsieh@biochem.duke.edu. WantedOhristian musician for Pioneer Ministry in Durham Area. Call Pastor Andy at World Overcomers 919-402-9622. Pastor Andy can be seen on Sundays at 8:00am, Channel 28 UPN.
Work Study Student Needed Work Study Student needed immediately to assist Duke University Union with various office tasks. Contact union@duke.edu if interested.
rates
-
-
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
Nice, quiet owner-occupied duplex. 2BR/1 BA, lower, 2 miles from West all Campus, appliances, Washer/Dryer connection. Pets
negotiable
s6so+Deposit.
References required. 384-0064.
2 BR Homes near campus. Available Now $650-$825. 416O393.www.bobschmitzproperties.c
om. One'bedroom apartment near Duke $420 utilities included 919-9498034.
Houses For Sale
Meet director Prof. Lan Baucom, Dept, of English at an information meeting for Duke’s summer program at New College, University of .Oxford, Fri., Nov. 22, 4 p.m. in 305 Allen Bldg. Learn more about this rare opportunity to study at one of England’s oldest and most venerable universities. Scholarships are available to qualified undergraduates. Obtain forms onsite, online or at the Office of Study Abroad, 2016 Campus Drive. Questions? Call 684-2174. Application deadline: Feb. 14.
VENICE SUMMER 2003 Meet Prof. Marcel Tetel, Dept, of Romance Studies and learn more about this 6-week, 2-cc summer study abroad program and its unique island setting. Information meeting is Mon., Nov. 25, 6:30 p.m., 305 Languages. Scholarships are available onsite, online or in the Office of Study Abroad, 2016 Campus Drive. Questions? Call 684-2174. Application deadline: Feb. 14.
2 bdrm, 1 1/2 bath two-level condo in Northeast Durham. $65,000 Contact Chris 596-9049.
Ride Needed
1214 Broad Street., Beautiful & spacious IBR Apt. Near Campus. Newly renovated $515, 416-0393.
THANKSGIVING TRANSPORTATION
1604 Valley Run, Durham. 3 bedroom, 3 minutes to Duke $lO5O a month 919-244-8965 or valleyrun_nc@yahoo.com.
MINUTES TO DUKE-Lenox Subdivision, 2 story, 3BR, 2.58A, won’t last, call shows like a model, Wendy Steiner today-(919)28138UY(3289), Keller Williams
7 Room (3 bedrooms), central heat/air, all appliances, screened front porch, hardwood floors, 2 car garage with enclosed storage, on 2 acres. Hillsborough area. 2 Minutes off 1-85/1-40. Professional quality. Call 919-732-8552 or 880-5680.
Realty.
TOWNHOUSE FOR SALE IN WOODCROFT AREA. 2 Bdr/2.sBath. All appliances included. Near Duke and UNC. Deck facing beautiful forest. $119,500. 4035833
JUST A FEW LEFT!! Big Houses for next year, 4-6 BR, Gorgeous. 416-0393.
BIGGEST PARTIES!
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Need a ride to the airport? Need a ride home for the Thanksgiving Break? Advertise with Chronicle Classifieds!! classifieds@chronicle.duke.edu.
Information meeting will be held Mon., Nov. 25, 5:30 p.m., 305 Languages. Meet new program director Prof. Francisco Adrian and learn more about this 6-wk., 2-course French language & culture program held in the magnificent of “City Lights.” Applicants qualify for the Mac Anderson summer language scholarships. program Applications available onsite, online or in the Office of Study Abroad, 2016 Campus Drive. Questions? Call 684-2174.
THANKSGIVING TRANSPORTATION
Willing to Be A Driver? Need company some for the Ride home? Thanksgiving Advertise with Chronicle Classifieds. classifieds@chronicle.duke.edu.
MACBETH TICKETS WANTED!
Need 2 men’s b-ball tickets for Jan 25 Georgia Tech game. 384-7497 or Inm2@duke.edu. Need 3 tickets to any Men’s home game. Contact Peter: 6134263 or pdm@duke.edu. Need tickets for Butler game. 1/30. Will buy or trade for Duke vs. UCLA game in Indianapolis, Indianapolis 500, or Brookyard 400 races. Call 317-490-8768 or email jgriffin @ wibc.emmis.com. Need two tickets to DUKE/BUTLER GAME! Please contact Carl at dukebluedevih 01 ©yahoo.com. Please help me out.
Seeking Duke-UNC
B-Ball Tickets Duke Senior seeking 2-4 tickets to Duke-UNC game at Duke 2/5 or Carolina 3/9 for Duke alum mom and family. Contact scb@duke.edu.
*VoUt *76 c 'M&ttet'c Aevufcat (Zl&pxtoxc
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1.800.426.7710 www.iuinplashtoun.com
DUKE IN PARIS SUMMER 2003
Ride Offered
Tickets to the Saturday or Sunday Macbeth performance WANTED. Please call Rae at 847-7318 ASAP!
FSBO-Woodcroft
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Oasis in the city. 3BR/2BA twostory home minutes from Duke, Chapel Hilll, and Southpoint. Light, spacious, vaulted ceilings, fireplace, roadrunner, large-screen TV. DVD, 2 porches, garage, lawn service. Over 6 miles of paved forest trails, optional swimming/tennis membership. Quiet, peaceful neighStarting borhood. December/January $llOO/month 649-3101.
DUKE/OXFORD SUMMER 2003
Beautiful home, 3 BR, 2 1/2 BA, 2143 sf. Many upgrades. Must see interior! Convenient to Duke & I-40. $192,900. 490-0560.
classified advertising -
Moreene Rd. 2800 sq ft, 4 Bedroom, 3 bath home. Fireplace, Washer dryer, Central HVAC, 2 Car garage, fenced yard, patio, quiet neighborhood. Prefer non smoking grads or professionals. $l4OO/mo 1 yr. lease 919-942-5356.
Houses For Rent
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FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 22, 2002 � PAGE 23
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Call 684-3811 if you have any questions about classifieds, No refunds or cancellations after first insertion deadline.
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Close to Streets at Southpoint 15 minutes from Duke 1,2, and 3 bedroom apartment homes available Undergraduates welcome Rent starts at $520
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And that’s no bull.
Sports
p A( \E 24 �FRIDAY. NOVEMBER
BIG EAST from page 16 away from a berth in the Jan. 3 Fiesta Bowl. They finish the season at Syracuse and at home against struggling Virginia Tech. “Our goal’s in sight, but no team’s going to give it to us,” Dorsey said. “We proved that last year against Boston College and Virginia Tech. No team is going to just hand it to us.” The Hurricanes also took oyer sole possession of first place in the Big East. But Pittsburgh, behind pesky and resilient quarterback Rod Rutherford, made it difficult. After falling behind 28-14, the Panthers had a chance to tie in the final minutes. Rutherford scored on a three-yard run with 4:37 to play, cutting the deficit to a touchdown. The Hurricanes had to punt, giving the Panthers the ball with 2:12 left. They drove to the Miami 25, and Rutherford misfired on two consecutive passes. Then he connected with Yogi Roth for a 5-yard gain to set up a fourthand-five from the 20. Roth was wide open again, this time on a slant pass at the goal line, but Rutherford’s pass sailed past his outstretched arms and through the end zone. “We gave a championship-type effort,
All are
invited
to
and we were very close to getting it done,” Harris said. “It was a tough game to lose.” Miami’s defense gave up 341 yards but left Pitt battered literally. Receiver Larry Fitzgerald left the game with a bloody nose and a swollen face, and receiver Roosevelt Bynes left the game after a crushing hit in the fourth quarter. Rutherford was sacked four times, all in the first half, but he continued to keep the Hurricanes off-balance with a good mix of running and passing. He finished with 68 yards rushing and completed 17 of 38 passes for 150 yards and two touchdowns. It just wasn’t enough. “He hung in there, made some good throws down the stretch and gave us a chance to win the game,” Harris said. Dorsey, wearing a soft cast on his left wrist, struggled in the first half. He missed receivers and was 5-of-15 passing for 13 yards with an interception that led to Pitt’s first touchdown. He bounced back in the second half, though, and threw two perfect fade passes to Andre Johnson—one for a touchdown and another that led to a score. Dorsey finished 14-of-26 for 163 yards. He was 3-for-3 for 58 yards on Miami’s first drive of the second half, including a 30-yard pass to Johnson that helped the ’Canes retake the lead 21-14.
a Sing-Along
of
G. R Handel’s
Rodney Wynkoop, David Arcus,
unday, Nov. 24» 2002 0
p.m. in Duke Chapel
Musical scores are available for purchase at the door for those who wish to sing the choruses Approximately half of the Messiah will be performed. There is no admission charge.
The Chronicle
ADAM SMITH hopes to lead the football team to victory over North Carolina this weekend Lawson, from last year’s team—which, from page 1 like Duke, lost in the national semifK nals (see preview, page 15). concludes, Bell a return The men’s basketball team, which the Victory trip to Cameron lets the ticket-holder lost three starters to the NBA since last year, has more questions to answer as it or student watch the No. 6 men’s basketball team open its season against looks to rebuild with the ‘super six’ class of freshmen. The questions will probaArmy at 7 p.m. But that’s not the end of the Blue bly not be answered Saturday as head Devils’ weekend. The women’s basketcoach Mike Krzyzewski faces his alma ball team travels to Raleigh for the mater (see preview, page 15). In football, Duke will try to win back Jimmy V Classic Sunday to play No. 2 Tennessee (1-0) at 2 p.m. Tickets for the the Victory Bell for the first time since game will be available at the RBC the 1980s, win an ACC game for the first time in three years and avoid last Center box office for as little as $l2. loss place in the ACC. The game could deterthe of sophomore Despite Monique Currie, the women’s basketball mine beleaguered head coach Carl team will have a good chance to improve Franks’ future at Duke (see preview, on last year’s Final Four campaign this page 15). In its 16th NCAA Tournament year. The drive to a title begins Sunday with what might well be a preview of appearance in the last 26 years, the the April 8 national championship game men’s soccer team faces a tall challenge in the Tribe. Led by Jordan Cila and in Atlanta. All-American Led by Alana Beard, Owoicho Adogwa, Duke would advance the Blue Devils will be tested by the to face Virginia in Charlottesville the Volunteers, who return four-of-five day before Thanksgiving if it defeats starters, including All-American Kara William & Mary (see preview, page 16).
SPORTS
Duke Photo Lab jOIN US FOR DINNER & WORSHIP Sunday, November 24 at 6:00 p.m.
Divinity School Lounge
Holiday Greeting Cards Select from more than a dozen colorful greetings
3 1/2 x 7-inch prints 25 Greeting cards featuring your favorite personal photograph for $ 18.25 plus sales tax.
THE WESLEY FELLOWSHIP AT DUKE UNIVERSITY
The Reverend Jennifer E. Copeland United Methodist Campus Minister 919.684.6735 jenny.copeland@duke.edu For more info, visit urwiu.duke.edu/web/wesley
Save more with the purchase of 50 or 100 cards! Photo, Graphics, and Imaging 684-6159 To place an order, come Duke Clinic (South),
to
Room 4314, Orange Zone Division of Educational Media Services
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FRIDAY. NOVEMBER 22, 2002 � PAGE 25
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pAGE 26 � FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 22, 2002
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Established 1905
Security bill incites concern
Members
of Congress will gather today to give final approval to the new homeland security department, a long overdue reorganization of law enforcement agencies that should eventually result in a safer America. First proposed by Democrats after Sept. 11, the bill evolved into a bipartisan effort that—while at times plagued by bickering and underhanded legislative moves—revolutionizes the government’s ability to gather and interpret security information. With a unified Congress and a president as powerful as ever, sponsors of the bill did manage to sneak in several positions that betray the bill’s intent. Under the version passed by the Senate earlier this week, for example, the president would be able to avoid certain civil service requirements. The provision is ostensibly to give more flexibility to a department with a particularly compelling national interest, but its work should not allow the unfair labor practices or the less effective government against which the civil service protects. Republicans have hinted that they will strike provisions—including to one that would suspiciously locate a security research center in the president’s home state from the bill, and the final version will hopefully not include them. Despite the importance of having a department to consolidate different security agencies, an important subject was noticeably lacking frorh’debate over the past several weeks; the infringement ofcivil liberties. The constant tension between security and liberty has become almost cliche since the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks, as President George W. Bush’s administration has incessantly and sometimes recklessly trotted the globe in search of terrorists. But the threat to Americans’ everyday liberties—such as freedom from wiretaps or unjustified detentions—are very real. The Congressional debate over homeland security lacked any indepth debate about such concerns. Part of the reason lies with Bush’s tactics in setting the agenda. The debate over invading Iraq overshadowed any discussion ofcivil liberties back home, and while Americans could have been hearing arguments about homeland security since before July, Bush has distracted them. Most of the fault lies, however, with Congressional leaders who were either too callous or too meek to broach the subject of civil liberties. One of the few bright spots has been Sen. Robert Byrd, D-W.V. Seven other Democratic Senators joined him in opposing the president’s version of the bill, but Byrd was the only one who spoke with the candor and forthrightness necessary for such a monumental decision. The idea of consolidating security agencies under one authority promises more effectiveness and accountability in preventing terrorism, and the bill that will likely pass Congress today goes a long way to fulfilling that idea. Yet, Congress’ unwillingness to ask necessary questions and the president’s unwillingness to give more answers tarnishes the legislative success. —
-
On
the record
We can’t keep blaming sexual assault on people coming on campus to attack us. Sophomore Pasha Majdi, West-Edens Link representative, stated at the campus meeting concerning camera usage (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
JENNIFER SONG, Senior Editor MATT BRUMM, Senior Editor REBECCA SUN, Projects Editor JANE HETHERINGTON, Photography Editor RYAN WILLIAMS, City & State Editor RUTH CARLITZ, City & State Editor BECKY YOUNG, Features Editor MIKE MILLER. Health & Science Editor GREG VEIS, Recess Editor MEG LAWSON, Recess Editor MATT ATWOOD. TowerView Editor JODI SAROWITZ, TowerView Managing Editor BRIAN MORRAY, Graphics Editor JOHN BUSH, Online Editor ROBERT TAI, Sports Photography Editor TYLER ROSEN, Sports Managing Editor AMI PATEL, Wire Editor KIRA ROSOFF, Wire Editor MOLLY JACOBS,Sr. Assoc. Features Editor MELISSA SOUCY, Sr. Assoc. City & State Editor NADINE OOSMANALLY, Sr. Assoc. University Editor EVAN DAVIS, Sr. Assoc. Sports Editor MATT KLEIN, Sr. Assoc. Photography Editor ANDREA OLAND, Sr. Assoc. Photography Editor SETH LANKFORD, Online Manager THAD PARSONS, Sr. Assoc. Photography Editor ALISE EDWARDS, Lead Graphic Artist SUE NEWSOME, Advertising Director YU-HSIEN HUANG, Supplements Coordinator BARBARA STARBUCK, Production Manager MARY WEAVER, Operations Manager NALINI MILNE, Advertising Office Manager The Chronicle is published by the Duke Student Publishing Company. Inc., a non-profit corporation independent of Duke University. The opinions expressed in this newspaper are not necessarily those of Duke University, its students, faculty, staff, administration or trustees. Unsigned editorials represent the majority view of the editorial board. Columns, letters and cartoons represent the views of the authors. To reach the Editorial Office (newsroom) at 301 Rowers Building, call 684-2663 or fax 684-4696. Toreach 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.
Letters to the editor
Clubs need
more
The Chronicle’s staffedito“Money entitled Troubles” calls attention to a problem that has faced clubs for far too long. As the president of a mid-sized club with “an established presence on campus, a sizable and dedicated membership and qualified leaders,” I am troubled by the inability of many worthy clubs in need of support to gain the aid they require. I am president of mock trial, where students simulate courtroom trials and compete nationally. For four years, I have been frustrated at the lack of administrative support for this academic extracurricular and at the lack of awareness ofthe prestige of the program. Despite tireless fundraising attempts
rial
funds
to encourage
by our members and notwithstanding generous donations from individual departments, we have still had to pay significantly out of pocket to
travel to tournaments and have in the past been forced to withdraw from events because of insufficient funds. Yet, I have been encouraged by the idea that a small group of dedicated and talented students could take the initiative to form a club—without money, without an advisor—and consistently compete at a high level with the best schools in the nation. The students who do mock trial take it upon themselves to compete. These are the types of students we should encourage—it is this type of student Duke seeks in enhancing its
students
academic reputation, and it is this type of student that Duke risks alienating by its burdensome administrative and funding practices. A word to those reviewing the plight of clubs: Please find away to keep highly motivated students like those in mock trial from having to scramble for existence. Though I am wary of The Chronicle’s willingness to cut certain clubs altogether, attention must be given to those clubs that have fallen through the cracks, clubs that, like us, are finding that talent and initiative can only take them so far when the cracks are not cracks but are major holes.
Rebecca Weksberg Trinity ’O3
http:! I www. chronicle, duke.edu /vnews/ display, v IART /2002111 /19 / 3dda4sdb6slaf?in_archive=l
Government should not support Sudanese regime Low and Jonathon Matthew Jordan’s recent letter proposes befriending the terrorist regime of Sudan. Until recently, it hosted Osama bin Laden and still continues to permit international terrorist training camps within its borders. In addition to being on the state sponsors of terrorism list, the northern Khartoum government of Sudan terrorizes its own people by waging a brutal civil war that has resulted in genocide, enslavement and forced displacement of the southern Sudanese. As the world’s only superpower and leader of the war on terror, the United States has the ability to prevent terrorism, both on the international front and within countries. Instead of engaging the
Sudanese government, which http:
only continue its acts of genocide and displacement. Using the revenues from the oil they take from the south, Khartoum is able to spend continually breaking cease$1,5 million a day on their fires and attacking humanimilitary campaign, perpetuattarian relief sites, Khartoum ing the idea that they can has proven itself to be eventually win the war. We untrustworthy. Clearly, the agree with Low and Jordan proposed policy, as well as the that peace is the primary objective in Sudan; however, a current US. policy, do not provide the necessary enforcepolicy engaging terrorists and ment mechanisms to deal alienating their victims will with such a rogue regime. The not facilitate the changes necUnited States must provide a essary for peace. In order for credible threat of retaliation Khartoum to realize that in order for Khartoum to see peace is the only option, the the benefits of peace. This United States must adopt a retaliation should include tough policy towards Sudan. implementing no-fly zones, military targeting and assasJohn Solomon Trinity ’O3 sinations of terrorist cells and increased economic sanctions. Ashley Ruff If pressures are not backed by these threats, Khartoum will Trinity ’O3 only condones the atrocious behavior, the United States must employ a tough strategy of pressures and incentives to force a peace settlement. By
www.chronicle.duke.edu / vnews / display.v /ART/ 200211112013ddbbl702dd26?in_archive=l
/ /
Letters
Policy
The Chronicle welcomes submissions in the form of letters to the editor or guest columns. Submissions must include the author’s name, signature, department or class, and for purposes of identification, phone number and local address. Letters should not exceed 325 words; contact the editorial department for information regarding guest columns. The Chronicle will not publish anonymous or form letters or letters that are promotional in nature. The Chronicle reserves the right to edit letters and guest columns for length, clarity and style and the right to withhold letters based on the discretion of the editorial page editor.
Direct submissions to: Editorial Page Department The Chronicle Box 90858, Durham, NC 27708 Phone: (919) 684-2663 Fax; (919) 684-4696
Commentary
The Chronicle
Reanalyze Iraq
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 22,2002 »PAGE 27
SAE chapter disbanded because...
I see it on walkways and I see it on bookbags. “No I read with deep regret two articles last week about blood for oil.” Are you kidding me? No blood for oil? the dissolution of Kappa Sigma fraternity, which has Just who, exactly, is advocating such an exchange? I’m been at Duke since 1873—about 50 years before Duke sorry, but the logic behind the antiwar movement on became Duke! The article spoke of a possible trend at
this campus escapes me. Let me be clear. I am in no way saying that anyone who opposes war with Iraq is an idiot. There are many people, even at Duke, who have legitimate problems with attack. Some think that we need more international support, some think that attacking will give Saddam Hussein a “nothing to lose” mentality that could lead him to cause harm more severe than he would cause now and some think that Nathan the time just isn’t right. I respectfully p t disagree with these people and do not —^arlcton GettingDom question their patriotism. My problem is instead with those to Business who lay on the bus stop benches in body bags and make chants insinuating that the president and vice president are killing children daily. Or how about the letter to The Chronicle last month saying that I shouldn’t ignore the lives of Iraqis just because they are cloaked in “dark skin?” As far as intentions go, everything is so black and white to these people. Because they believe that those who disagree with them are mean spirited, they refuse to analyze or consider their positions. And that’s the biggest problem. First and foremost, those in the “no blood for oil” movement seem to be under the impression that the United States views war as the first option in eliminating the threat it believes Iraq poses to the United States This is quite inaccurate. Though the United States has definitely threatened attack, it has shown itself to, in conjunction with the United Nations, to first favor inspection. So I would suggest that you hold off on that not-so-original chant, “Bush and Cheney what to do you say, how many kids did you kill today?”, for at least a little while because right now the answer is zero. And couldn’t an argument be made that a regime change would be the best way to protect Iraq’s children? This is a government that has made cuts in baby milk rations contracted by the United Nations and withheld medicine from children. It also runs military training courses for 10 to 15-year-olds that include 14hour days. Families whose children don’t attend are often denied food ration cards. And the adult population isn’t exactly treated very well either. Aside from raping women for political purposes, the Iraqi government, according to Amnesty International, also decapitates people in front of their family members and displays the victims’ heads “in front oftheir homes for several days.” Also, the Human Rights Alliance reported in 2001 that Hussein has “killed more than 500 journalists and other intellectuals in the past decade.” For some reason, I have a hard time sympathizing with arguments taped to body bags that say things like “Iraq’s military is only one-third the size of the United States’s. How is this fair?” I know it’s fun to think that your opposition is mean spirited, but in this case it’s not very realistic. Nearly all of us who support the United States’ policy do so for one simple reason. We don’t want there to be another Sept 11. That’s it. And before a productive debate about the United States’s policy can take place, those who oppose it need to grasp this. The question is not whether or not we should hurt people. The question is what the best way to protect them is. The current “no blood for oil” movement on our campus is just the latest demonstration of what’s wrong with the knee-jerk liberalism that runs rampant on college campuses, both with students and administrators. According to its tenants, all one has to do to appear noble and intelligent is care. Consequences don’t matter. Alternatives need not be offered. Rationality takes a backseat to. emotion. And there is no room for disagreement or discussion on how to do what’s right. According to this brand of liberalism, those who are not pacifists selfishly want to achieve their goals by hurting others. I propose that we stop the shouting, stop the tired and inaccurate slogans and intellectually discuss the best way to dead with the one person who actually does hurt people—Saddam Hussein.
Nathan Carleton is a Trinity sophomore. His column appears every other Friday. >
David Buckingham Guest Commentary Duke for national fraternities to become local fraternities and addressed the situation with Sigma Alpha Epsilon. Despite a number of newspaper articles earlier this year about the dissolution of SAE, I have refrained from addressing the SAE situation publicly, but now feel compelled to do so in light of the precedent it seems to have established. I wish to correct the factual background belying this “precedent,” which, judging from the news reports, the Duke community has misapprehended.
The unfortunate situation leading to the demise of SAE had been developing for some time. In May 2001, Deans Jim Clack and Kacie Wallace sent a letter to all SAE alumni of Duke University describing severe behavioral problems involving undergraduate members of the chapter. Despite the extreme sanction of a membership review in August 2001, the undergraduate members of the chapter, by January 2002, were wholly unable to engage in any meaningful behavioral modification or self-policing. In early January 2002, I was informed of the following by either students who were eyewitnesses or University officials: One undergraduate had attempted to break into the home of a professor and was subdued by the Durham police only with the use of a canine unit and then kicked out the window of the police cruiser transporting him to a magistrate’s office. Within 24 hours, another undergraduate member of SAE ignited himself after pouring kerosene on his arm in the presence of his “brothers” who did nothing to stop him. An undergraduate member informed me that he was arrested for possession of five different controlled substances. •
•
•
A former undergraduate member of the chapter struck a female undergraduate in the head and knocked the woman to the floor at an SAE function. At the time the disclosure was made to me, the undergraduate in question had already been suspended by the Alumni Commission on other grounds. The Alumni Commission responded by placing the chapter under a cease and desist order prohibiting all fraternity operations and suspending certain undergraduate members who had been involved in other misconduct. Duke expelled none of the students involved in the misconduct and only took limited disciplinary measures against the perpetrators of even the most egregious misconduct. Duke took action against the •
chapter independent of the Alumni Commission and without consulting us in advance. By letter, dated Jan. 18, 2002, Duke imposed severe restrictions on SAE’s upcoming rush activities. After the situation at SAE appeared to stabilize, the cease and desist order was lifted. On Jan. 24, 2002, the undergraduate members violated the terms of the University’s rush regulations as well as the rules and regulations of the Duke Interfraternity Council and the chapter’s own resolutions. On Jan. 25, 2002, a complaint was filed by another Duke organization at the IFC office against the Duke chapter of SAE. On Jan. 26, 2002, the SAE national organization recommended to the Duke SAE Alumni Commission that the chapter be closed. We agreed. We immediately issued a second cease and desist order, which signaled to the undergraduate members of SAE that closure was imminent given the egregiousness of the behavioral problems and our repeated warnings to close the chapter. We met with a University official the next day to discuss the mechanics of closing the chapter. The undergraduate members then met to attempt to “deactivate.” Those young men involved in the attempted deactivation were later expelled. We had already decided to close the chapter due to deplorable behavioral problems far beyond what is acceptable behavior for an SAE chapter. To the extent that the former members of Kappa Sigma have relied on SAE as a model, their reliance has been grossly misplaced and their resulting actions are a tragedy. The dissolution of a 130-year-old Kappa Sigma fraternity at Duke University is a very serious matter. The former members of Kappa Sigma know that they were responsible for the demise of a 130-year-old institution at an outstanding university. I urge the University administration to use this tragedy to reconsider its policy of extensive regulation of student life at Duke. Increased regulation in the 1990s and 2000s has led to an increase in the level of egregiousness of behavioral problems and, I suspect, the sheer number of behavioral problems. Treating students as adults rather than children is more consistent with the educational mission at hand and may induce them to rise to the occasion and act in a more responsible fashion. I also urge the University to reconsider its policy of taking action against living groups rather than the individual involved in misconduct. By failing to take meaningful action against the individuals committing the misconduct, the University dooms all greek organizations and other living groups to a future of uncertainty, thereby jeopardizing some of the oldest institutions at Duke University and permanently altering the heritage, traditions and fabric of this University. David Buckingham, Trinity ’BO and Law ’B3, chairs the Duke SAEAlumni Commission Board.
Thanksgiving: moment of truth for dating A long November, and there’s reason to believe it’s not ending anytime soon. Our primary dates are with our Apple I-Books, and, along with our new Le Sportsac totes, we’re sporting brand new bags below our eyes. Sneakers have replaced stilettos for stomping down the street, and everyone on campus pants Winter is hovering, and as it inches near, relationships (like students) enter a
H flEl
hibernation phase. “I’m ready to drop,” announces a fellow Boston girl, while Faran curling on my couch. “Papers, presentanails worn she Krentcil out,” are tions, even my moans, holding up her hands as proof. You Write “And let’s not even talk about the boy.” She’s been dating him since freshman year, but hasn’t seen him for a week. “We’ll talk before break,” she shrugs, “though I don’t know how much he’ll have to say.” My favorite Southern belle has lots to say. “Are we together? Are we just hooking up? Who knows!” she sighs while sipping tea. “I hate it how we never talk.” I tell her to try, but she shakes her head. “No way. I don’t want to be that angry b—, screaming at him on how he can’t commit.” But we all know he’s driving her mad, and if he won’t commit, shell soon be committed herself. “What do I do over break?” she moans. “Do we call? Do we say goodbye? Dammit, this is driving me nuts.” For this girl, impending break is judgment day—will he give her a proper farewell and validate his date? Or will they come back in January, ashamed, estranged or worse?
For this chick, break-time is the deadline for defining her boy bond. But for Duke girls like me, Thanksgiving
break is like a good night’s sleep—you fall into it confused and crazy, and when you wake up (or get smacked with the reality known as finals week), things make a lot more sense. Right now I’m so tired; I just can’t sleep, even when I’m wearing my new Only Hearts pajamas. My life feels like a walking dream, and it’s throwing everything off. Backstage during last night’s Macbeth, I got down on my knees and fixed a guy friend’s sword. “You look a little flushed,” he said. “What’s up?” I sat down on the set and blabbed about my life: My current boy is pulling away. I like him too much to let go, but I’m also sick of his immunity to the word “boyfriend.” Meanwhile, a long time crush has taken last year’s bait, and now the chase is on. Crushes to the left of me, current flames to my right, and here I am—stuck in the middle and too tired to move. “What are you going to do?” asks my acting bud before his opening scene. “I don’t know” I laugh, not knowing why. “I guess I’m going to sleep on it.” For some of my Mends, break is business as usual. For others, it’s a deadline for relationship definition. And then there are those of us who just need a good night’s sleep before we can go on with our lives. Maybe when we wake up, the world will make sense again. The weary days and sleepless nights are almost at an end. Hang in there, and sweet dreams.
Faran Krentcil is a Trinity senior and a senior editor of Recess. Her column appears every other Friday.
The Chronicle
PAGE 28 � FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 22, 2002
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