January 21, 2003

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Tuesday, January 21,2003

Rain and Snow High 39, Low 22

www.chronicle.duke.edu Vol. 98, No. 81

The Chronicle I

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Skinning the Cats The fourth-ranked women’s tennis team defeated Northwestern 5-2 Saturday in Evanston. See Spoitswrap page 3

THE INDEPENDENT DAILY AT DUKE UNIVERSITY

BAA set for downsizing University proposes to cut faculty from 17 to 6 By KEVIN LEES and KELLY ROHRS The Chronicle

Administrators in Arts and Sciences and the School ofMedicine announced in meetings late last week that the probable reorganization of the Department of Biological Anthropology and Anatomy will include a drastic reduction of the depart-

-KEVIM LEES/THE CHRONICLE

The teeming masses Potential new sorority members line up in the Bryan Centerto meet with their recruitment counselors. Students received their bids Sunday afternoon.

ment’s faculty size. Richard Kay, the department’s chair, told faculty members at a meeting Friday afternoon that through attrition and retirement, the department’s full-time faculty would be reduced to just four from its current 10 and its temporary positions cut from seven to two. The reductions come as the department moves entirely within Arts and Sciences. The natural sciences department—which split with what is now the more humanist Department of Cultural Anthropology in 1988—has been jointly administered by the School of Medicine and Arts and Sciences. Most of the faculty teach and conduct research in Arts and Sciences, but have historically taken on the teaching duties of human gross anatomy

for first-year medical students as well. Consequently, the department’s faculty were dispersed between the Biological Sciences Building, the Sands Building and other locations in the Medical Center. Carel Van Schaik, professor of BAA and director of graduate studies, expressed similar concerns about the proposed cuts. “We believe that it would really jeopardize the mission of the department,” he said. “It would really threaten to bring us below critical mass—which may mean losing the undergraduate department, the graduate department and quite likely the Primate Center.” Although the Primate Center is not directly linked to the department, many anthropology faculty members rely heavily on the center’s prosimian primates for their research, and a substantial amount of the department’s grant money from the National Science Foundation is invested in joint projects between the two units. Kay, who was away on a trip to Japan, was not available for

comment.

maintain the status quo, to move entirely within Arts and Sciences, or to divide the department into two. Dean of the Faculty of Arts and Sciences William Chafe would only confirm that a meeting took place last week to discuss BAA’s future, and that the meeting included Kay, Dean of Natural Sciences Berndt Mueller and officials from the School of Medicine. Kay then met with faculty Friday afternoon. “We’re going to meet with faculty ourselves about it in two weeks,” Chafe added. “I will do that with them directly, not through The Chronicle. I can only confirm that the issue of future lines was part of the

discussion.”

Mueller said the administration is discussing several options. “I think we’ve taken the steps in the order they need to be taken, to talk with the department chairs first,” he said. “We have started conversations with the department about what would be our options.” Dr. Sandy Williams, dean of

Last spring, Kay said the department’s options were to

See BAA on page 13

A win and a loss for No. 1 teams over weekend Women defeat No. 9 Tar Heels in overtime

Men’s team suffers first loss to Maryland

By TYLER ROSEN

By EVAN DAVIS

78 CHAPEL HILL With the game tied UNC 67 61-61 and the game clock reading 0.0, referee Sally Bell blew her whistle, calling a foul on Wynter Whitley and sending North Carolina’s Chrystal Baptist to the line to shoot two free throws—either of which could have ended Duke’s 28game ACC winning streak, 16-game overall winning streak and the Blue Devils’ top ranking. But Baptist never shot the free throws, because Bell examined the end of regulation on replay and decided the foul was committed after time had expired. Duke (17-0, 5-0 in the ACC) then surged out to a 78-67 overtime victory over No. 9 North Carolina (15-2,5-1) before a capacity crowd of 10,180 in

87 COLLEGE PARK, Md. Duke was deDuke 72 termined not to suffer a repeat ofits 14-point loss at Maryland a year ago. On Saturday, the Blue Devils succeeded—they lost by 15 points instead. Led by Drew Nicholas’ 24 points and Ryan Randle’s 17 rebounds, the No. 17 Terrapins (10-4, 3-1 in the ACC) overcame a six-point halftime deficit to upend the No. 1 Blue Devils (12-1, 3-1) 87-72 in the first meeting between the two schools at Maryland’s new Com-

The Chronicle

The Chronicle

Duke

Maryland

cast Center.

Carmichael Auditorium. See UNC in Sportswrap page 7

Irmrlp lllotllc

ROBERT TAI/THE CHRONICLE

ALANA BEARD shoots over a North Carolina player in Monday’s game. Beard scored 26 points and made 12 rebounds to lead the Devils to victory over the No. 9 Tarheels.

A student accused ot acquaintance rape disputed the C| a jms jn g br jef filed with the Durham County Superior Court. See page 4

University officials weigh in on the cloning controversy begun by a claimed successful cloning by the Raelians.

See page 6

“Maryland played like a veteran team today, and we played like a young team,” Duke head coach Mike Krzyzewski said. “Drew Nicholas was sensational, and Randle I think had more rebounds than all of our big guys See MARYLAND in Sportswrap page 4

President Nan Keohane argued for higher academic standards for athletes in a column co-written with the president of Stanford University. See page 7


World & Nation

PAGE 2 �TUESDAY, JANUARY 21,- 2003

NEWS BRIEFS •

Landmark Roe v. Wade ruling turns 30

The Supreme Court ruling legalizing abortions turns 30 Wednesday, an anniversary shadowed by speculation that the possible retirements of Justice Sandra Day O’Connor and Chief Justice William Rehnquist could shift the balance of power in abortion politics. •

British police arrest possible terrorists

Police using ladders and battering rams raided a London mosque—a known center of radical Islam led by a suspected terrorist—and arrested seven men early Monday in connection with the recent discovery of the deadly poison ricin. •

Marijuana activist faces trial in California

Marijuana celebrity Ed Rosenthal, author of a dozen cannabis self-help books and a magazine advice column, goes on trial today in San Francisco on charges of marijuana cultivation and conspiracy. •

Cold weather wave hits South Asia

As a month-long cold wave hammers parts of South Asia, the poor have fared the worst in the fight against cold temperatures. By Monday, over 1,600people, many of them homeless, had died of the cold. •

Congress cuts Washington worktime

Republican leaders in Congress have opted to spend less time working on Capitol Hill this year. The recently issued House calendar designates 104 Washington workdays this year, compared with 131 last year and 151 in 2000. News briefs compiled from wire reports.

O

The Chronicle

Powell urges U.N. to disarm Iraq Responding to several foreign ministers, Powell speaks of war as real option By BARRY SCHWEID The Associated Press Secretary UNITED NATIONS of State Colin Powell, faced with stiff resistance and calls to go slow, bluntly told other nations Monday that the United Nations “must not shrink” from its responsibility to disarm Saddam Hussein’s Iraq. “We cannot be shocked into impotence because we’re afraid of the diffi-

Germany’s foreign minister took a

saying it might have “negative reper-

cussions” for the international fight against terrorism. His French counterpart called war “a dead end.” Powell, speaking at a UN. conference on terrorism and at a news conference, urged reluctant nations to focus on Baghdad’s failure to disarm and to prepare to weigh the consequences by the end of the month when UN. inspectors file a report on 60 days of searches in Iraq for illicit

cult choices ahead of us,” Powell told members ofthe UN. Security Council. Directly responding to qualms registered by several foreign ministers in weapons. “If Iraq is not disarming, the Unittwo days of talks, and with only Britain explicitly standing alongside ed Nations cannot turn away from its the United States, Powell spoke of responsibilities,” Powell said, He said the UN. Security Council, war as a real option.

By FABIOLA SANCHEZ The Associated Press

Former President Jimmy CARACAS, Venezuela Carter renewed efforts to mediate Venezuela’s political crisis Monday even as violence surged again between sup-

porters and opponents of President Hugo Chavez. Gunfire during a protest march left one dead and 15 wounded, officials said.

DOW

nent, said Chavez supporters attacked an opposition

Down 111.47 31 8,586.40

I

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“A hero is no braver thsn 3n ordinsry msn, but he is braver five minutes longer.” Rslph W3ldo Emerson

See IRAQ on page 13

Venezuelan crisis leads to more violence

FINANCIAL MARKETS NASDAQ Down 47.56 31 1,376.19

which is due to consider the report Jan. 29, must come to grips with a regime that he said has acquired, developed and stocked weapons of mass destruction and trampled human rights at home. “So no matter how difficult the road ahead may be with respect to Iraq, we must not shrink from a need to travel down that road,” Powell said. “Hopefully, there will be a peaceful solution,” he said. “But if Iraq does not come into full compliance, we must not shrink from the responsibilities that we set before ourselves” when the Security Council called for the disarmament of Iraq.

strong stand against military action,

Miranda state Gov. Enrique Mendoza, a Chavez oppo-

march in Charavalle, about 20 miles south of Caracas, on the 50th day of a strike against Chavez. Raul Gonzalez, 38, said he and other Chavez supporters blocked a road as opposition marchers approached and both sides began tossing rocks and bottles. “I heard shots and fell down,” Gonzalez said at Hospital

General de Ocumare del Tuy, where he was being treated for a bullet wound in his leg. “There were shots from all over. Everything was in confusion.” Gonzalez said he did not know where the gunfire came from. Opposition marcher Mayordina Morales, 52, said both sides were throwing objects at each other when police started shooting. The shooting victim was identified by officials as Carlos Garcia, who is about 30 years old. Fifteen people were wounded gunfire, said Milagros Toro, an official with the state epidemiology department. Twelve people suffered other injuries. Six people have died in protests since Venezuela’s oppoSee VENEZUELA on page 11

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The Chronicle

TUESDAY, JANUARY 21, 2003 � PAGE

3

Guinier pushes audience to heed King’s lessons By CHRISTINA NG The Chronicle When Harvard Law School Professor Lani Guinier, asked her eight-year-old son what he would say if someone called him an “ugly n he told her he wanted to be white. “If I were white,” he said, “I would-

n’t be called an Her son had attended a Quaker school where the approach to teaching about the subject of race was “let silence prevail,” Guinier explained. But Sunday afternoon in Duke Chapel, as the keynote speaker at the Service of Celebration and Commemoration for Martin Luther King, Jr., she refused to allow herself to fall into a similar trap. Guinier challenged a receptive audience to learn from the methodology of King to be “perpetually engaged for the struggle of racial inequality.” She first entered the public eye in 1993 when President Bill Clinton rescinded his nomination of her to head the Department of Justice’s Civil Rights Division before a

confirmation hearing. She paraphrased from a 1959 speech by King and said the struggle for black rights would make America better not just for the blacks, but for all people. “We need to not only follow in [King’s! footsteps,” Guinier added, “but also walk with those who are at the margin of society and learn from their experience so we can reinvigorate the center and remake this great ROBERT TAI/THE CHRONICLE country to reflect all of our images.” HARVARD LAW PROFESSOR LAN! GUINIER spoke Sunday in the Chapel on the application of the teachings of Martin Luther King, Jr., In her address, Guinier linked the experience of to today’s issues with racial equality. Guinier’s speech was the keynote event of the University’s celebration of King. people of color to that of a “miner’s canary”—miners would often send canaries into mines to check the atmosphere before entering themselves. “The answer to this situation ofintolerance is not to not talk [about the issue]... or to try to ‘fix’ the canary... By CHRISTINA NG King’s experience with labor to issues today, each panThe Chronicle but to heed the lesson so we can fix the atmosphere in elist spoke about their experience working with labor the mine,” she said. Diversity was the name of the game as the Martin groups, including immigrant labor groups and the rise The example Guinier used of a “canary in action Luther King, Jr. celebrations on campus reached their of unions here at Duke and in North Carolina as well today’ was the 1996 decision of the Fifth U.S. Circuit climax yesterday with panel discussions, cultural peras at Harvard. Court ofAppeals regarding affirmative action. formances and a poetry slam. “Roona, a student leader in the Harvard living wage The court ruled it was unconstitutional for the King’s birthday celebrations began this morning campaign, talked about how her group worked with with a discussion sponsored by the Student Employee employees at Harvard—the security guards and dinUniversity of Texas at Austin to take race into account for admission decisions. She criticized the use Relations Coalition called “Martin Luther King, Jr.: ing staff—talking one-on-one with them to build up of standardized tests for admission since the scores Poverty and Labor Issues.” Speaking to almost 50 stuthe movement to increase wages,” said senior Andrea can be correlated with socioeconomic status and dents, administrators and community members were Hamilton, an SERC member. “The whole panel was more wealthy students can afford test preparation panelists Charles Payne, professor of history, Roona great—inspiring and thoughtful.” courses. Another panel discussion followed, called “ScholarRoy, a student activist from Harvard University, David “The ‘testocracy’ system kept out not only blacks Winstead, a UE465 union steward for maintenance ship and Activism in a Time of War.” Panelists includand Latinos, who only got in because of affirmative acworkers and Nick Wood, a label organizer for the Farm ed people who traveled to Washington, D.C., Saturday tion, but also poor, working-class whites,” Guinier said. Labor Organization Committee, which sponsored the to protest the possible war against Iraq.

Duke community celebrates King with discussions, poetry

See GUINIER on page 10

Mt. Olive Pickle boycott. After Payne gave background information to link

See MLK on page 10


The Chronicle

PAGE 4 � TUESDAY, JANUARY 21. 2003

Student, SAE nationals challenge rape charge Lawsuit cites several charges against former SAE member for December 2001 incident By KEVIN LEES The Chronicle

Sigma Alpha Epsilon, Inc., and a member of the former Duke chapter of the fraternity are contesting a female Duke student’s claim of acquaintance rape, in briefs filed with Durham County Superior Court. Junior Nora Kantor, who is on leave and studying at The Ohio State University, charges senior James Thompson in a civil suit with civil assault, civil battery, infliction of emotional distress and civil seduction, and charged the national SAE organization with negligence, following an alleged sexual assault after an SAE Christmas party in December 2001. No criminal charges were filed, and Kantor is seeking compensatory damages of at least $lO,OOO. Kantor said in an e-mail that she had experienced a lot of physical and emotional pain and is pursuing the lawsuit as away to bring about “closure.” In filing the charge of civil seduction, Kantor’s motion claims that Thompson

“wrongfully seduced and debauched her... through persuasion, deception, enticement and artifice.” Kantor, a member of Delta Delta Delta sorority, said that prior to the incident she was “chaste, innocent and virtuous.” The national SAE organization responded in a motion filed by lawyer Dave Lewis that it “does not possess the right to control the day-to-day activities of any chapter and does not exercise control over such activities.” Nevertheless, Lewis contends that Kantor “failed to exercise due care and circumspection for her own safety... in the same manner as a reasonable and prudent person would act in similar circumstances to protect herself from harm.” Kantor’s motion notes several reported incidents of acquaintance rape, alcohol violations and other problems at Duke’s SAE chapter and other SAE chapters nationally and claims that “it was widely related among female students at Duke that the acronym ‘SAE’ stood for ‘Sexual Assault Expected.’” She also said that, as a result of the

Pop’s, a restaurant in Durham, a incident, she suffered from extreme psychological distress, left school before fingroup ofher friends and Thompson enishing her exams and did not do as well gaged in more drinking before taking a bus to the SAE Christmas formal, as she had hoped in her classes. In addition, Kantor claims that which took place in a “big barn in a when she went to visit the Women’s remote location.” Center on the Monday after the inciThe party, Kantor’s motion noted, dent, it was closed. was “characterized by widespread Duke’s SAE chapter disaffiliated just drunkenness and alcohol abuse,” and ina month after the alleged incident. In cluded a self-serve hard liquor bar, two January 2002, leaders of the chapter kegs and no age identification. Kantor said the group then proceedsaid that pressure and sanctions from both the University and alumni made it ed to the off-campus house again beimpossible for the group to continue its tween 2:30 and 3 a.m., where the alexistence in a form its members were leged incident took place. Thompson’s response varies significomfortable with. The group lost housing at the end oflast academic year and cantly with Kantor’s story. Thompson now exist as an off-campus group, Delta denied that he was “very intoxicated,” as Kantor described him. He also Phi Alpha. The motion filed by Kantor paints a claimed that they engaged in “volunvivid picture of a night out with an SAE. tary, consensual sexual intercourse,” and that when she asked to stop, he According to Kantor’s motion, several SAE members gathered at the offstopped. Kantor also claims that after campus house on 203 Watts St., where the incident, he took her back to her both she and other SAE members took dorm room, while he claims she reshots of Goldschlager, a cinnamon mained with him that night, sleeping schnapps liqueur, before dinner. At with him in his bed.

Students organize against war The Students Against War with Iraq inaugurated its first weekly meeting Monday night in 111 Social Sciences. The group comprises about 50 students and was founded last semester. The students hope to increase their activity this semester with weekly planning meetings as well as a full ledger of activities planned for the future. Several members attended this weekend’s demonstrations in Washington, D.C., and hope to raise the level of political awareness among the student body. Among the activities planned include panel discussions, teach-ins and tabling on the Bryan Center walkway. —By Charles Lin PHOTO BY JEFFBURLIN/THE CHRONICLE

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The Chronicle

TUESDAY, JANUARY 21. 2003 � PAGE 5


The Chronicle

PAGE 6 ďż˝ TUESDAY, JANUARY 21, 2003

Duke in Lcndcn Drama June 29 to August 9, 2003

2 nd lnformation Meeting Tubs., Jan. 21

5:30 p.m. 328Allen Building Scholarships available to qualified undergraduates, currently receiving financial aid. Applications are available onsite, online or in the

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The Chronicle

TUESDAY, JANUARY 21,2003 � PAGE

7

Keohane pushes higher standards for athletes University president joins colleague in calling for less practice time, higher graduation rates By WILL ROSENTHAL The Chronicle

In an op-ed piece published last Tuesday in the San Jose Mercury News, President Nan Keohane called for university educators to push for aggressive steps to improve the academic standards of college sports programs. Writing with President John Hennessy of Stanford University, Keohane declared that “those of us charged with leading our nation’s major universities have a responsibility to restore the primacy of academics in the lives of student athletes.” Highlighting the low graduation rates of many college sports teams and the increasing time demand of voluntary practices on athletes, the two presidents made several specific proposals for measures that

lated activities” to 20 hours a week. “When the NCAA created the 20-hour rule, there was a huge outcry from students,” Kennedy said. “So I would expect a lot of resistance to cutting back voluntary workouts.” In addition, Duke officials said measures described in the article are unlikely to have much effect on schools like Duke and Stanford, which already have high academic standards for their athletes relative to other schools. “Duke’s [athlete] graduation rates are usually pretty close to those of non-athletes and are traditionally among the top five in the country,” Smith said. For this reason, educators at schools with less rigorous academic requirements may oppose these measures, which would raise the NCAA’s standards closer to those of Duke and Stanford. “I think more emphasis should fall on institutions to regulate themselves,” Perkins said.

program to Division I, said such an approach would be misplaced. “I don’t think we should penalize bad schools. I think we should reward good schools,” he said. In addition, Perkins questioned the way graduation rates are calculated since schools are punished for students who transfer to other schools or leave early to play professional sports. The last major step that the two presidents proposed is to limit the voluntary workouts of studentathletes in order to combat increasing practice requirements. “We need to look at redefining voluntary workouts, [because] the wT ord ‘voluntary5 is a joke,” said Kathleen Smith, professor of biology and chair of Duke’s Athletic Council, a group of professors, administrators and other community members that advises on University athletics policies. Current NCAA rules limit “required athletically re-

would combat the problems.

Those controversial steps, however, could draw resistance from officials in the college athNan Keohane letic community, said Christopher Kennedy, associate director of athletics at Duke, who helped Keohane draft the article. “Whenever there is a proposal for change at the NCAA, you’re going to get some surprising responses and some unpredictable opposition because of the diverse range of the [NCAA’s] constituency,” Kennedy said. The first proposal made in the article is to toughen the scholastic requirements of college-bound athletes when they are still in high school. Under NCAA rules, students must complete 13 core courses in high school to be eligible to play college sports. There currently is an NCAA initiative to raise the number of required classes to 14, and Keohane wrote that number should be increased to 16.

The 2003 Kenan

Distinguished

Lecture

Privatization and the Public Good BY

Professor Martha Minow Harvard Law School

“Many of the NCAA’s efforts have brought the

standards closer to what Duke’s already are,” Kennedy said. Perhaps most controversial proposal in the article is to punish schools with low graduation rates. “We must develop sanctions with real teeth for programs that fail to achieve reasonable graduation rates,” the presidents wrote. Punishments could include disqualification from bowl games or post-season tournaments and a reduction in athletic scholarships. Lew Perkins, athletics director at the University of Connecticut, which only recently upgraded its football

Interested in writing for The Chronicle? Please e-mail Kevin at kal6 or call us at 684-BOND

Friday, January 24, 4:30 p.m. Geneen Auditorium, Fuqua School Duke University Reception

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Business

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Martha Minow has been called “one of our nation’s wisest and most engaging public philosophers.” Her work focuses on the treatment of women, children, persons with disabilities, and members of ethnic, racial, or religious minorities. A professor of law at Harvard Law School, Minow was a member of the

International Independent Commission on Kosovo. Professor Minow’s latest book, Partners, Not Rivals: Privatization and the Public Good explores what happens when private companies, nonprofit agencies, and religious groups manage what government used to —in education, criminal justice, legal services, and welfare programs. ,

This event is open to the public. Sponsored by the Kenan Institute for Ethics at Duke For

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The Chronicle

PAGE 8 � TUESDAY, JANUARY 21,2003

UNIVERSITY BRIEFS From staff reports

DCU sponsors lecture on campus speech The Duke Conservative Union is sponsoring a lecture by Alan Charles Kors, a professor of history at the University of Pennsylvania, today at 4 p.m. in the Weston Laßarre Auditorium in the Social Sciences Building. The speech, which is free and open to the public, is entitled “The Betrayal ofLiberty and Dignity on American Campuses.” Organizers said it will “address the totalitarian tactics of university administrators all across the United States.” Kors is co-director and president of the Foundation for Individual Rights in Education. He defended a Penn student from prosecution in the “Water Buffalo” case there—a case prosecuted in part by Duke’s current Vice President for Student Affairs Larry Moneta.

Pratt center receives funding from NSF A University center is being funded to start a special twoyear graduate research education curriculum. It will teach students how to use engineering principles to explore natural materials and processes in ways that could lead to biologically based products of societal benefit or to basic laboratory discoveries about living structures and systems, Duke will receive about $2.9 million from the National Science Foundation to begin the Graduate Training in Biologically Inspired Materials program through the interdisciplinary Center for Biologically Inspired Materials and Material Systems, which is based at the Pratt School of Engineering

Photos of Afghan life on display The University is sponsoring an exhibit of pictures by two photographers—one American, one Afghan—that create a portrait of Afghanistan from the days ofthe mujahedeen to the postSept. 11 society struggling to recreate itself, organizers said. “Afghanistan 1982-2002” features photographs by Edward Grazda* an American who began taking photographs in Afghanistan in 1980 and has returned nearly every year since. The exhibit, which is free and open to the public, will be on display at the John Hope Franklin Center for Interdisciplinary and International Studies, at 2204 Erwin Road until Feb. 5.

Students robbed at gunpoint From staff reports Duke police are searching for the suspect in a reported armed robbery on East Campus Saturday evening. Officers responded to Pegram Dormitory at 8:42 p.m. Jan. 18 in reference to three students’ report that they were held up after they left the Ninth Street area and were walking to Pegram. They said that around 8:35 p.m. they were walking on the path to the side of Pegram between the Biddle Music Building and Baldwin Auditorium. A man approached them from behind and grabbed one of the victims by the shoulder and pressed what was believed to be a gun to his right side, and yelled, “Stop!” Two of the victims ran toward the front ofPegram. As they were running, they heard the suspect yell, “Stop! Or I will shoot him!” referring to

the victim that he had grabbed by the shoulder. One of the students returned to where his friend and the suspect were. The suspect ordered them to hand over their wallets. One of the students took out his wallet and handed the suspect $95. After taking the money he told the students to run, which they did. The suspect was last seen running in the direction Markham Street. He is described as black, 25 to 30 years of age, 5’9”, 180 pounds, wearing a black hooded sweatshirt with the hood pulled over his head and dark pants. There is no description ofthe gun because the suspect had it covered with a black bandanna. Anyone with knowledge about the crime can contact Lt. Davis Trimmer of the Duke University Police Department at 684-4713 or Durham CrimeStoppers at 683-1200.

Shootout ends in police chase From staff reports A shooting on Broad Street early Monday morning eventually carried over to Duke’s Emergency Department and ended in an unsuccessful police chase on campus, leading Durham Police Department officers to begin a search for the suspects. The shooting began around 1:06 a.m. in the 1100 block of Broad Street, near Bully’s. A group of teenagers reported to the Durham police that someone fired at them with a shotgun. Two of the teenagers were transported by ambulance to Duke’s Emergency Department for minor wounds. The rest of the group followed in another vehicle. While the teenagers were at the Emergency

Department, members of the group that shot them arrived. Friends of the victims spotted them, and there was a confrontation. The suspects then sprinted toward the parking lot, got into a car and fired several shots at the others as they drove away. No one was injured. Duke officers pursued the suspects, who were operating a dark blue Ford Taurus, but lost them on Flowers Drive near the traffic circle. Due to the fact that the incident originated in the 1100 block of Broad Street, Durham Police Department officers will be the lead investigating agency. Anyone with knowledge about the crime can contact Lt. Norman Blake of the Durham Police at 560-4322 or Durham Department CrimeStoppers at 683-1200.

Dealing With The Flu The Flu (Influenza) affects the nose and throat down to the bronchial tubes and lungs. While uncomfortable up to a week or so, the flu usually resolves completely on its own and is not dangerous to healthy people. It is easily spread by direct contact with an infected person after they cough or sneeze. You can lower your chances of catching or transmitting the flu by washing your hands frequently with soap and water, and by keeping your hands away from your face. Flu symptoms may also include: Sore throat Nasal congestion and/or runny nose Dry cough, or a cough with phlegm

Flu symptoms usually include: Fever 101°-103°, often with chills Rapid onset of symptoms over several hours Muscle and joint aches

Fatigue

Headache Sensitive eyes

Now is the season the Duke Student Health Center begins to see large numbers of students for flu symptoms. In the majority of people, your own immune system will adequately combat the infection within 5-10 days. Here are some things to do to relieve the symptoms of the flu: Fever, headache, muscle aches: For fevers over 101° use ibuprofen (Advil, Motrin, etc.) or acetaminophen (Anacin 3, Tylenol, etc.) Fatigue: Get plenty of rest; it is the most important treatment of all. Fatigue may be the last symptom to subside. Nasal congestion: An oral decongestant (Sudafed) may decrease nasal congestion. Breathing moist air can soothe inflamed nasal -

-

-

-

-

-

passages. Sore throat Gargle (don't swallow) with a solution of 1/2 tsp salt in an 8-oz glass of warm water every 2-4 hours to help reduce swelling, cleanse the throat, and lessen pain. Lozenges or throat sprays can also be helpful. Cough: A cough syrup may help; however, don't overuse a cough suppressant because some cough is helpful in clearing your infection. Never use prescription strength cough syrup without a doctor's recommendation. Drink plenty of fluids. Poor appetite: Drink plenty of liquids to soothe the throat, loosen secretions, and help relieve nasal congestion. Drink 6-8 oz glasses of water per day. Eat and drink small amounts more often of healthy foods that appeal to you; food and liquid should not be forced. Call the Student Health Clinic at 681-WELL if you have: Symptoms lasting over five days without signs of •

improvement.

Fever persisting for more than two or three days or any fever over 103° not relieved by acetaminophen or ibuprofen. Severe cough or cough producing large amounts of phlegm. Severe sore throat and difficulty swallowing. •

Behavior changes, including disorientation and severe drowsiness. Wheezing, shortness of breath, or chest pain. Severe headaches. Vomiting lasting over 12 hours.

JUtudent Health Center


The Chronicle

TUESDAY, JANUARY 21, 2003 � PAGE 9

CRIME BRIEFS From staff reports

Pellet gun seized, student arrested

Duke police officers arrested an undergraduate last week and charged him with having a weapon on educational property after confiscating a pellet gun from him. Alexander T. Nichols, a 20year-old freshman of 208 Randolph Dormitory, was placed under a $3,000 bond and given a Feb. 13 court date.

Officers had responded to Randolph at 11:42 p.m. Jan. 14 in reference to a student being struck by a pellet. Police said that subsequent investigation revealed that Nichols and another student living in Randolph had been firing a pellet gun out of their dorm window. Nichols could not be reached for comment.

Man charged with larceny

Gary B. Willoughby, 45, of 6007 Big Oak Dr., was charged with larceny at 11:45 p.m. Jan. 15. Police officers said he stole credit cards, $2l in cash and keys from an employee in Duke Hospital North. He was placed under a $1,500 bond and given a Feb. 26 court date. Willoughby could not be reached for

comment.

Student charged with larceny Armond Schwartz, a 20-year-old sophomore of Room 04 in Building HH1, was observed by Duke officers in Few Quadrangle at 2:50 a.m. Jan. 18 with a fire extinguisher and a white marker message board that had been taken from a dorm. He was charge with larceny and possession of stolen property and given a Feb. 3 court date.

Schwartz declined to comment,

Over $4,000 in CDs stolen

A student reported that between 2:30 p.m. Jan. 16 and 2:30 p.m. Jan. 17, someone broke into his vehicle parked at the rear of Baldwin Auditorium.

Someone broke out a $lOO window and stole his $l5O Sony CDXL 300 CD player, 200 re-burned CDs worth $l,OOO, 200 CDs worth $3,000 and a $2O CD storage binder.

Man charged in kidnapping

At 12:48 a.m. Jan. 19, a Duke officer was approached by a male in the Emergency Department who reported that he had been kidnapped in Raleigh by two men. He said one of the suspects forced him by gun to take the other into the Emergency Department for treatment. Gerson David Noriega, 17, of 1913 House Ave., Apt. 28, was charged with

neer/KEHP CD player. A visitor reported that between 9 and 10:25 a.m. Jan. 12, while his vehicle was parked in Parking Garage I, someone broke out a $l5O window and stole his $lBO Alpine CD player and caused $175 in damage to the dashboard/gear shift console.

Belongings snatched

Someone broke into an employee’s vehicle parked at Duke Forest, Gate

Student charged with possession Duke officers were in the area of House P at 2:30 a.m. Jan. 18 when they observed a student attempting to conceal a can of beer. Ikenna Mbanefo, an 18-year-old freshman of 316 Pegram, was charged with underage possession of a malt beverage. His court date is Feb. 3.

Vehicle damaged

Monitor stolen

Vehicle entered

Duke police responded to House M in reference to students causing a disturbance Jan. 18. Upon arrival it was learned that a fire extinguisher had been discharged causing the fire alarm to activate. Subsequent investigation resulted in Shane P. Ryan, a 20-year-old sophomore, ofHouse N, room 211, being charged with discharging a fire extinguisher. Ryan declined to comment.

An employee reported that between 8 a.m. and 2:30 p.m. Jan. 12, while her vehicle was parked in Parking Garage I in the Medical Center, someone pried out the key cylinder on the door causing $lOO in damage and stole her $7OO Pio-

comment. Sometime between Jan. 10 and Jan. 13, someone removed the security cable and stole a $9OO 15” Dell computer monitor from the School of Law library.

Student charged with discharging fire extinguisher

CD players taken

An employee reported that while her vehicle was parked on LaSalle Street, near the rear of the Central Carolina Bank, between 8:40 a.m. and 4:14 p.m. Jan. 13, someone broke out a $2OO window and caused $2OO in damage to the window molding and door frame. Nothing appeared to be missing.

assault by pointing a gun. He was given a Feb. 3 court date. The Raleigh Police Department was notified and Noriega was released into their custody for additional charges. Noriega could not be reached for

credit cards was used at a BP gas station for an undetermined amount.

23, sometime between 1:15 and 3:45 p.m. Jan. 16. When the employee returned, he found the $4OO window broken out, $4OO in damage to the ignition and a Duke gate card stolen.

Mbanefo declined to comment.

Possessions pilfered

Someone stole a student’s unprotected $3O pocketbook, with $l5 cash, $lOO cellular phone, $l2 wallet, Duke Card, driver’s license, credit card and keys from the commons area of Wannamaker 1 between 5 and 5:30 p.m. Jan. 11.

A student reported that between 11:45 p.m. Jan. 11 and midnight Jan. 12, someone stole her unprotected $2O pocketbook,

Crime briefs are compiled from Duke University Police Department reports. Anyone with knowledge about those responsible for these or other crimes at the University can contact Lt. Davis Trimmer at 684-4713 or Durham CrimeStoppers at 683-1200.

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PAGE 10 �

TUESDAY, JANUARY

The Chronicle

21. 2003

GUINIER from pages In response to the affirmative action decision, a group of black and Latino activists, educators and lawyers helped spark the initiation of a system called the Texas 10 Percent Plan, which takes the top 10 percent of state high school students for admission to the two flagship schools, the University of Texas at Austin and Texas A & M University. These students admitted under the plan ended up achieving higher freshman GPAs than those admitted with high SAT scores. “The plan was initiated because of race, but it became [more than that]. Because of a linked fate [of fighting against racial injustice, the advocates] created a system more democratic than the ‘testocracy,” Guinier said. John Hope Franklin, James B. Duke professor emeritus of history, said he hoped Guinier’s speech helped shed some light on the effects of affirmative action. “I hope students will see and will be enlightened and be urged to understand the importance behind the whole movement of affirmative action,” he said.

MLK from page 3 The annual afternoon Cultural Extravaganza continued the theme of diversity by celebrating King’s birthday through performance selections showcasing the various ethnicities and talents of University students. The student groups ranged from Dance Black and United in Praise to Speak of the Devil, Sabrosura and an Indian dance group.

JANE HETHERINGTON/THE CHRONICLE

ANDY YUN/THE CHRONICLE

PROFESSOR OF HISTORY CHARLES PAYNE spoke at a panel discussion Monday on the relation between King’s labor activities and current labor issues,

DANCERS participate in the Cultural Extravaganza, performed by several student groups, to celebrate the Martin Luther King, Jr. holiday.

“I was really pleased with the performances. They went exceptionally well, better than we could have imagined, and the turnout was good too,” said senior Thaniyyah Ahmad, a student representative on the King Commemoration Committee, one of the hosts of the Extravaganza and Duke Student Government vice president for community interaction. One of the selections by Dance Black, set to aremake ofthe song “What’s Going

On” originally recorded by Marvin Gaye, especially highlighted King’s work. “The song talked about problems faced by society and considering the legacy of Dr. King, I think our piece was especially fitting,” said junior Melanie Ragland, president of Dance Black. Students who attended the extravaganza also appreciated the range of cultural groups represented. “It was very diverse and so it was a good way to celebrate Martin Luther

King Day,” said sophomore Khalil Tribie. Senior Lucia Stoisor, who also attended the Poetry Slam, another cele-* bration event, was surprised at the diverse talent displayed by the groups. “It was unexpectedly pleasant—l didn’t expect it to be so good,” she said. The Poetry Slam, which ended the day’s events, showcased Saul William, the 1996 Nuyorican Poet’s Cafe Grand Slam Champion and lead performer in the film “Slam.”

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Feb 11: “Test Assessment, Risk and Choice”

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

Questions: career@duke.edu

ft

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



Sportswrai

2 �TUESDAY, JANUARY 21, 21

Weekend

MjafMDODS

The Cl

In this week’s issue

Top 25 scoreboard Men's: No. 17 Maryland 87, No. 1 Duke 72 No. 2 Arizona 87, UCLA 52 No. 3 Pittsburgh 73, No. 25 Syracuse 60 No. 4 Texas 89, Texas A&M 61 No. 5 Oklahoma 70, lowa St. 60 North Carolina 68, No. 6 UConn 65 No. 7 Florida 77, South Carolina 75 No. 18 Indiana 74, No. 8 Illinois 66 Auburn 77, No. 9 Alabama 68 No. 16 Kentucky 88, No. 10 N. Dame 73 No. 24 OSU 76, No. 11 Missouri 56 No. 12 Kansas 81, Kansas St. 64 No. 13 Creighton 85, So. Illinois 76 No. 15 Louisville 87,TCU 74 No. 19Wake Forest 73, Ga.Tech 66 No. 20 Georgia 81, Arkansas 64 No. 21 Marquette 67 Charlotte 64 No. 22 Oregon 79, Oregon St. 68 Ole Miss 67, No. 23 LSU 57 Women's: No. 1 Duke 78, No. 8 UNC 67 No. 10 Arkansas 82, No. 2 LSU 72 No. 3 UConn 72, No. 21 Notre Dame 53 No. 4 Kansas St. 88, Nebraska 54 No. 5 Tennessee 94, Florida 53 No. 6 Stanford 77, Washington 63 No. 7 Texas Tech 95, OSD 45 No. 12 Minnesota 90, No. 9 Purdue 75 No. 13 Penn State 75, Michigan St. 70 No. 15 Miss. St. 69, Ole Miss. 60 Georgia 67, No. 14 South Carolina 59 No. 17 Vanderbilt 84, Kentucky 50 No. 19Villanova 58, Seton Hall 52 No. 20 Texas 70, Baylor 50 Syracuse 76, No. 21 Boston College 71 No. 22 Arizona 80, UCLA 61 No. 25 DePaul 63, South Florida 57

Sportswrap Editor: Paul Doran Managing Editor: Tyler Rosen Photography Editor: Robert Tai Graphics Editor: Brian Morray Sr. Associate Editor: Evan Davis Associate Editors: Nick Christie, Mike Corey, Neelum Jeste, Robert Samuel Writers: Jesse Colvin, Paul Crowley, Abby Gold, Gabe Githens, Michael Jacobson, Colin Kennedy, Paula Lehman, Robby Levine, Ted Mann, Assaad Nasr, Sarah O'Connor, Jake Poses, Shane Ryan, Adam Schmelzer, Brian Smith, Catherine Sullivan, Matt Sullivan, C.K. Swett, Jeff Vernon, Adam Yoffie Special thanks to Chronicle editor Dave Ingram and managing editor Kevin Lees.

Founded in 1983, Sportswrap is the weekly sports supplement published The Chronicle. It can be read online at

by

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

GAME

Men's Basketball N.C. State

OF THE

Women's basketball Fired up •

3

After an overtime contest against arch-rival North Carolina, have the Blue Devils regained their drive?

Women's tennis Win No. 1 •

3

The women's tennis team started the season with a bang, beating Northwestern, 5-2.

Wednesday, 9 p.m. RBC Center, Raleigh

5

Men's basketball The Wall •

In a tale-of-two-halfs game, the Blue Devils ran into a wall of problems in the second.

6

Men's tennis Inside time •

The men's tennis team had a strong showing in the ACC Indoors, with Ludovic Walter making the finals.

@

After crashing back to earth with a loss to Maryland, the men's basketball team faces its second tough test in a row with an away game against cross-town rival N.C. State, where the underachieving Wolfpack will be out for Blue Devil blood.

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

Questions: career@duke.edu

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


The Chronicle

Sportswiai

TUESDAY.

lARY 21, 2003 �PAGE 3

Women’s basketball regains spark Women’s

tennis tops Northwestern

CHAPEL HILL At the start of the 2002-2003 season, the women’s basketball team played with a fire and intensity that led to consistent blow-out wins against a wide range of opponents, from weak squads such as Hampton to perennial powerhouses like Tennessee. However, the Blue Devils’ hot play has slowed dramatically against ACC foes. Unusually tight games against Clemson and Georgia Tech, along with

By NEELUM JESTE The Chronicle

near-losses to Wake

Forest

Catherine Sullivan Game Commentary

and

Vir-

Sg "somewhat dazed and out-of-

synch. The team has been forced to rely on its All-American Alana Beard along with some beneficial calls at the end of games to keep its No. 1 ranking and perfect season alive, but the players’ confidence in each other seemed to be lacking. “We’ve had plenty of scares already,” head coach Gail Goestenkors said. “I think it’s good for us that we’ve already been in some very difficult situations.” Developing toughness in close games is undeniably beneficial, but continually being in trouble against substantially less-talented teams and at times lacking cohesiveness when it is needed most could not have been good for the Blue Devils’ psyche. All that changed Monday afternoon in front of a sold-out, hostile crowd at Carmichael Auditorium, where the Blue Devils’ revived passion and intensity to carry them to a 76-67 overtime victory against archrival North Carolina. “This game was a big step, especially when it comes to our team chemistry,” junior kiss Tillis said. “I felt like we really had [chemistry] this game. It was great; we were on the same page. Emotionally, I just felt a really tight bond out there on the court. I was really excited with how we meshed today.” At no point was Duke’s chemistry more evident than in overtime, when it outscored the Tar Heels 17-6.

The duo of Beard and Tillis stepped

5 The women’s tennis team began its spring N’western 2 campaign with a 5-2 victory over Northwestern Saturday. The fourth-ranked Blue Devils quickly jumped to a 3-1 lead over their hosts before struggling to wins four and five. Duke won the doubles point through wins at the No. 2 and No. 3 spots, an area of the game they have continually been improving. Eleventh-ranked Julie Deßoo and Amanda Johnson cruised to an 8-2 victory over the Wildcats’ Jamie Peisel and Stacy Kokx, while Duke’s Katie Granson and Julia Smith beat Ruth Barnes and Andrea Yung 8-4. Kelly McCain pulled a muscle during the warmups, and sat out her singles match after playing doubles. Head coach Jamie Ashworth said that he felt the team could win without McCain and wanted her to rest. Replacing McCain in the top spot was Johnson, who was pitted against Cristelle Grier. The Wildcat freshman won the first five games of the match en route to a 6-1, 6-4 victory. The Blue Devils were much stronger at the bottom of the lineup with straightset wins at the five and six spots. Granson struggled against Barnes in the first set but found her zone in the second winning 7-5, 6-0. Meanwhile, Smith, playing on 10 minutes notice, easily dominated in the second set of her 6-4, 6-1 victory. The Wildcats earned their final point of the day, though the match had already been awarded to Duke, when sophomore Andrea Yung sneaked past Saras Arasu. “I expected them to come out nervous,” Ashworth said. “They were a little defensive and played like a new team, but once they got comfortable on the court, and kept balls in play, they won fairly easily”

Duke

WYNTER WHITLEY fights for position inside during the Blue Devils win over North Carolina Monday. up their games in the final five minutes ils needed some sort of a wake-up call. with 12 combined points, but, unlike Perhaps the near-loss in regulation—the Blue Devils’ previous escapes, this which seemed almost certain when Whitwas hardly a one- or two-woman show. ley was called for a foul on Tar Heel junior Sheana Mosch, Wynter Whitley and Chrystal Baptist as time expired—was point guards Vicki Kraphol and Lindsey just the spark that Duke needed. Had referee Sally Bell not reversed Harding used sharp passes, fast breaks and smothering defense in the extra sesthe initial call on the court and ruled sion to aid theirAll-American teammates that Baptist was fouled after the clock in securing the hard-fought victory. ran out, the forward would have had Mosch converted a strong baseline two chances at the free throw line to drive to give the Blue Devils a nearly inbreak a 61-61 tie and upset the nation’s surmountable 75-67 lead with 47 seconds top-ranked team. remaining; Whitley grabbed two re“[Duke] is having all of their luck early bounds and made two clutch foul shots; in the season,” North Carolina head and Kraphol and Harding had solid comcoach Sylvia Hatchell said. “Sooner or mand of the ball as they alternated on of- later it has to run out.” fensive and defensive possessions. Whether the end of regulation was “Each one of us looked each other in luck or not, Duke certainly earned the the eye and we knew what we had to do,” victory with superior play in overtime. Beard said. “It’s just the confidence that “I really feel like we turned a comer,” we carry as a team.” Goestenkors said. “I think this was a Such unity and intensity that defined great game and I think Carolina’s a great Duke at the start of the season had been team. I feel very, very good about our spotty in recent games, and the Blue Devteam right now.”


The Chronicle

PAGE 4 �TUESDAY, JANUARY 21, 2003

Second-half collapse: Blue MARYLAND from The Chronicle page 1 together. He got every rebound and he played a great game. They just played better than we did. They deserved to win.” Despite their youth, Duke’s shooting accuracy helped it in posting a 43-37 halftime lead. The Blue Devils shot 17-of-33 from the floor in the first half, including freshman marksman J.J. Redick’s 3-of-4 performance from behind the arc. Redick scored the half’s final five points, as he stole the ball from Maryland’s Tahj Holden before converting a threepointer at the buzzer. “I thought that in the first half, when they shot 51 percent, that we played pretty good defense,” Maryland head coach Gary Williams said. “I thought Duke made a couple tough shots. Our players were doing exactly what we asked them to do. But good players do that. We just tried to keep the focus at the half that we were playing good defense.” Maryland didn’t just stay focused—the Terps got motivated. As quickly as Duke built its halftime lead, Maryland had wiped it away. After Nicholas opened the second half with two free throws and a layup to cut Duke’s advantage to two, Maryland’s Tahj Holden blocked a shot by Duke’s Shavlik Randolph, then converted a layup on the other end to knot the score at 43-43. The Blue Devils would never enjoy another lead for the rest of the game. “It would be a different game if we came out in the second halfwith some spirit and excitement and not let them get a quick 6-0 run on us,” Duke point guard Chris Duhon said. “I think then it could have been a different game.” But while Duke’s second-half efforts began to wane, Maryland’s only became more intense. “I thought that in the second half our execution on the offensive end was as good as its been any year against a quality team,” Williams said. “We were able to get the ball where we wanted to.” Duke, however, was not. After Jamar Smith followed a Steve Blake miss with a dunk to give Maryland a 61-56 lead with 12:17 remaining, the Blue Devils looked to their outside shooting to close the gap. But while Duke was 5-of-9 from three-point range in the first half, the final 20 minutes were a different story. Duke’s next five field-goal attempts were all from long range, and none found the basket. Two misses by Duhon, two from Redick, and one from Dahntay Jones—who led the Blue Devils with 26 points—highlighted Duke’s shooting woes. “I only got three looks [in the second half,] and only two of them were good,” said Redick, who scored 13 points before fouling out with 5:14 remaining. “They cut off my looks. I didn’t knock down the two I had, and on one Nicholas blocked my shot.” Duke’s field-goal drought ended nearly six minutes later, when Dahntay Jones converted a layup with 7:19 remaining. By then, however, Maryland had built a 75-62 lead, a margin that Duke was not able to reduce to single-digits for the remainder of the game. “When we did get the lead we had the patience to wait until we forced them into a couple of defensive situations where we either scored or they fouled us,” Williams said. The Terps made the most of their free throw opportunities, converting 29 of their 31 attempts for the game. Duke, meanwhile, struggled mightily at the charity stripe, going 9-of-20 for the game, including a 5-of-13 performance in the second half. “We have to come into hostile environments and knock down free throws,” said Duhon, who finished the game with seven points and three assists. “That’s a key to us becoming a good team.” While aware of Duke’s struggles at the free throw line, Krzyzewski maintained that his team has many other areas where improvement is needed. “We’re concerned about everything,” he said.

“We’ve got a team that still has a lot of development, and this is not a good effort on our part.” For Duhon, the Blue Devils’ lone captain, that development starts with him. “I’m responsible for these guys, and I didn’t do my job today,” he said. “I didn’t lead them, I didn’t give them the enthusiasm and excitement that they need from their leader. I let my team down.”

Maryland 87, Duke 72 FINAL Duke (12-1,3-1) Maryland (10-4, 3-1)

Totals

1 43 37

FG 110-18 25-10 31-2 13-7 0-0 20-0 0-2

FT 1-2 4-7 1-2 0-0 0-1 0-0 0-0 2-4 0-0 0-0 1-4 0-0

R PF 11 3 2 3 1 0 5 11 0 1 4 4

28-66

9-20

32

4

4

11 1 4 6 2 0 1 25

PIS 3 26 5 13 7 2 2 9 0 4 1 0

72

2 29 50 TO A 0 0 3 2 0 0 11 3 3 0 1 11 1 4 0 0 0 1 0 2 0 0

9

BLK 0 0 1 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 0 0

15

3

F 72 87 S 0

1 2 1 0 0 0 1 0 2 0 0

MP 13 31 21 24 38 3 15 21 3 13 13 5

7200

Three-pointers: Jones(2-6), Randolph (0-1), Redick (3-7), Duhon (1-4), Buckner (0-1), Ewing (1-2), Dockery (0-1), Technical

fouls: none

McCray Caner-Medley

FG 1-3 2-8 6-10 7-16 2-8 3-4 2-2 1-2 2-3

Team Totals

FT 0-0 6-7 3-4 8-8 2-2 2-2 2-2 4-4 2-2

26-56

29-31

Maryland

McCall Holden Randle Nicholas Blake Smith Gilchrist

R PF 0 2 3 3 17 2 5 2 3 7 6 2 11 0 2 11 43

18

PIS 2 10 15 24 8 8 6 6 8

A 0 2

TO 2 3 4 4 1 2 6 2 0 2 3 0 0 0 11

87

17

S BLK 0 1 3 0 11 3 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 1 0 2

16

6

9

MP

15 28 32 37 33 16 10 14 15 200

Three-pointers: Holden (0-2), Nicholas (2-5), Blake (2-5), Caner-Medley (2-3),

Technical fouls: none Arena: Comcast Center Officials: Valentine, Clougherty, Jones

Attendance—l7,9so

(clockwise from top left) THE DUKE BENCH watches as the team collapse GUARD STEVE BLAKE tries to drive past senior big-man Casey Sanders, up for an easy shot, but the finds a less than friendly Terrapin defender. D;


The Chronicle

Sportswrai

TUESDAY,

5

vils lose to Maryland 87-72 COLLEGE PARK, Md. With 13:10 left in the second half, Chris Duhon came off a screen at the top left center of the arc, received a pass from J.J. Redick and nailed an important three

i YOAV LURIE/THE CHRONICLE

the second half. MARYLAND’S RYAN RANDLE gets past Duke freshman Shelden Williams for two of his 15 points on the day. TERR POINT YLAND FANS storm the court at the Comcast Center after the second straight home win over a No. 1 Duke squad. J.J. REDICK tries to go AY JONES shoots an easy jumper.

for the struggling Blue Devils. With the score Duke crawled within one of Maryland, 5756, and I made a big asterisk in my notes. Making the mark, I guessed, albeit incorrectly, that Duhon’s shot would be the beginning of a patented Duke run. Despite his comparative low scoring, the junior literally picks his time to make shots. It happens about twice a game, and like most other things on the court, he’s pretty subtle about it. But for some reason, as soon as it looks like Georgetown, Virginia or Spl l in this case Maryland are about to deliver the V straw to break the young Blue Devils’ back, here comes Duhon making one of his few shots on the day. Paul Doran Here I figured it was just a long range Game commentary variation on the same situation. few and A minutes four missed trey’s later, I again looked at my notes. No Duke run. Maryland’s lead creeps to 10. A couple more minutes, same situation. Terps sneak to 71-57. Two more minutes down—nothing. No run. No field goals. Nothing. The only points Duke scored were a few free throws, and even then the Blue Devils were doing well ifthey went l-for-2. At the 7:19 mark, Dahntay Jones finally hit a layup breaking the nearly six-minute long field goal drought. “We didn’t take good shots, and when you shoot bad shots its hard to rebound,” Duhon said. “Everything went wrong for us tonight. I guess it happens—it shouldn’t happen, but we have to learn from it.” Despite whatever the dejected Blue Devils may have learned about themselves both personally and as a team, the numbers don’t lie. And thanks to the numbers, the rest of the college basketball world now has the same opinion they have had about other Duke teams: They have no inside presence, and they live and die by the three. Duke’s inside, a committee of Nick Horvath, Shavlik Randolph, Casey Sanders, Shelden Williams, and in this game Michael Thompson, was fairly terrible. They allowed Maryland’s Ryan Randle to down 17 boards, they missed easy layups, and for a while it looked like they were in close competition with the guards to see who could hack more Terrapins. “The numbers speak for themselves,” Randolph said. “They totally outplayed us.” As far as their shooting goes, the Blue Devils will be the first tell you they stunk out the Comcast Center so bad in the second half that it no longer has that “new building smell” everyone loved. In the final 20 Duke shot 33 percent from the floor, 15 percent from behind the arc and 39 percent from the line. The first number is okay—worse if you take away Jones’ and company’s late, junk layups when the Terps weren’t playing as tough. The second number’s wretched, but the third is abysmal: Under 40 percent from the line, after hitting 37-of-40 the game before. In short, Shaq averages nearly 20 percentage points better, and he’s only one player—Duke put up this number as a team. “They just played better than we did,” head coach Mike Krzyzewski said. “They deserved to win. I don’t think there was one turning point, or anything like that, I just think they played harder and better than we did.” Yes, the Terps played better. Yes, the numbers speak for themselves. Yes, the post-game criticism ofDuke is dead on—as Krzyzewski has said all season that he’s “coached No. 1 teams and this is not one ofthem.” But for some reason, the Blue Devils chose this game to display all their Achilles Heels in one rough second act. Maybe it was the atmosphere—4,ooo students out for blood, sporting shirts that say “F--k Duke” and sitting behind Duke’s second half basket in an almost completely vertical area called “the wall” can be intimidating for anyone. Although the freshman might have had some problems with the mental game, the veterans should have simply been thankful not to be in the projectile haven of Cole Field House. They should have seen “the wall,” realized it was going to be a long second half and stepped up to the challenge. Instead, for 20 minutes of basketball, Duke came out flat and played completely uninspired. They did nothing to answer their most accurate criticism—the young Blue Devils are untested and incredibly beatable, especially away from home. Even more miffed was Krzyzewski, who said he couldn’t figure out why his team started the second half poorly after ending the first half in the best possible manner. “We showed no confidence, no togetherness and no enthusiasm at all,” Duhon agreed.


Sportswrai

r, lIMOABY 21.

The Chronicle

James drops 32 points, dominates in Greensboro Even with all the hype, St. Vincent-St. Mary’s phenom Lebron James is as good as advertised—and then some. I squandered an GREENSBORO opportunity to s6e Lebron James play during his sophomore year of high

school, and afterward, vowed never to pass up the chance again. Already the talk of Ohio—James had averaged 18.1 p,f points per game as a

freshman while leading his Fighting Irish to a Division 111 state title—he and his team■m Mike Corey mat es were going on Game commentary the road for the first time, traveling to my hometown of Columbus to play against the nation’s top-ranked team, Oak Hill Academy. What I missed was James’ national coming-out party. He scored 33 points in a game that has since been dubbed one of the greatest high school basketball games ever. “He is really, really, really good—he’s almost impossible to guard one-on-one,” Oak Hill coach Steve Smith told The Columbus Dispatch. “What a future that young man has in front of him.”

That was when James was a 15year old sophomore. Now, at age 18, James has become the most highlytouted—and coveted —high school athlete in history. Though others have accomplished great feats at young ages (see Jennifer Capriati in tennis, Nolan Ryan in baseball, Tiger Woods in golf and Wilt Chamberlain in basketball), James’ star has shined under more publicity, more criticism, more moneygrubbing and more expectation. Whether or not James’ name will be legendary in the future remains to be seen, but yesterday afternoon, watching James play basketball in front of 15,000-plus in Greensboro Coliseum, I was just grateful to witness him play. So was everyone else—fans, sportswriters, opposing players and teammates alike. Each time James touched the ball gasps resonated in anticipation throughout the arena; his pair of alley-oop dunks were met with awestruck cheers. Only his mother seemed unimpressed. “Let’s go, baby,” his mother scolded from the sideline in the first quarter, her son having just missed a shot from the sideline. She was wearing a Notre Dame basketball jersey, which is remarkably similar in design to the Irish’s jerseys. Her name—“Lebron’s Mom”—was stitched on the back. “Step up, baby, step up!” James left the game with three minutes remaining in the fourth quarter, having accumulated 32 points and a new group of fans and admirers. From the bench, James remained the centerpiece of his team and of the arena’s attention. He was shouting out orders and praises to his teammates on the floor, particularly the young man who has been tabbed by St. Vincent-St. Mary’s head coach Dru Joyce to fill James’ shoes next year, freshman Marcus Johnson. “That’s water, Marcus,” James yelled as Johnson drained a three from the baseline. “That’s what I’m talking about, boy!” For now, however, the voices of the sports world are chattering about James, and barring injury, will remain so for many years to come.

By ROBERT SAMUEL The Chronicle

85 GREENSBORO— While the rest of the 56 state celebrated MarReynolds tin Luther King Jr., Day Monday, the 15,000 plus fans—the largest ever to see a high school basketball game in North Carolina —inside Greensboro Coliseum were exalting King James. The 6-foot-7, 240 pound Lebron James scored 32 points in St. VincentSt. Mary’s (Akron, Ohio) dominating 8556 win over R.J. Reynolds (WinstonSalem, N.C.) yesterday. Matched-up with the University of North Carolina signee Reyshawn Terry, James and his St. Vincent-St. Mary’s teammates struggled early to only a 1916 first quarter lead against the massive Reynolds squad. There was no exception to the rule that the cream always rises to the top in the second quarter, however, as St. VincentSt. Mary’s full-court press and James’ dominance dismantled Reynolds, one of the best teams in North Carolina. While Terry and the Demons struggled to get the ball past half court, James effortlessly picked apart any defense thrown at him. ‘We were concerned about getting into a half-court game because of their size,” St. Vincent-St. Mary’s head coach Dm Joyce said. “Fortunately we were able to get into an up-tempo game. We frustrated them with our pressure.” Playing in Air Jordans instead ofthe Adidas shoes the rest of his team wears because he “was in North Carolina,” James started the second quarter with an easy tip-in, which seemed to brew the confidence he needed for the more spectacular plays he would later make. Three plays after hitting an impressive three-pointer in the face of Terry, James outdid himselfwhen he caught the ball on the baseline and leapt to finish just as three Reynolds players, who were all at least 6-foot-7, surrounded the hoop. Instead of trying to rise over the giants—a viable option for the ultra-athletic Akron super-star—James maneuvered under his opponents while in the air and flipped the ball onto the other side of the backboard for a spectacular basket. St. Vincent

HIGH SCHOOL STAR LEBRON JAMES led St. Vincent-St. Mary’s past Reynolds in Greensboro. James sprinted back on defense as if it were a daily ritual. James’ only other highlight of the half was a drive that baited Terry into his third foul. Struggling to find his game against James’ unusual talent and with foul trouble, Terry finished with an un-

impressive eight points. “He’s a great player and you can’t take anything away from him,” Terry said. “I hope he does well in the NBA.” Entering the third quarter with a 4024 lead, James improved on his excellent play by mixing highlights worthy of Sportscenter with fundamental moves. When a lowly Reynolds guard decided to challenge James’ inside presence with 3:45 left in the quarter, the No. 1 high school player in the United States squashed the ball into the ground. While the Reynolds players huffed-and-puffed down the court after this set-back, James sprinted like a deer to the other end of the court, where he caught and dunked his second alley-oop from Joyce.

As the third quarter came to a close, James decided to give the crowd one more highlight. As he tried to drive to his right, a Reynolds defender finally had success as James’ progress stopped. Instead of letting his opponent bask in his glory, James switched directions by putting the ball between his legs and pulled up for a jump shot. The Reynolds player recovered in time to put a hand in James face. James, who appeared to

be annoyed by the pressure, faked the shot, making his defender fly by him. James then made an easy 18-footer at the buzzer. James had 30 points and St. Vincent-St. Mary’s had a 60-41 lead at the end of the quarter. James spent most of the fourth quarter on the bench where he enthusiastically cheered for his teammates as one ofhis other teammates lackadaisically drank a Pepsi while watching the blow-out. “That’s just me,” James said. “I am a humble guy. Yeah, sometimes I get cocky on the floor, but offthe floor I’m humble.”

Walter downed in finals of ACC Indoors By JAKE POSES The Chronicle

The men’s tennis team put on a strong showing at this weekend’s ACC Indoor Championships played at Wake Forest University in Winston Salem. Freshman Ludovic Walter, the secondseed in singles competition, was the Blue Devils’ top competitor, losing to top-seeded David Loewenthal of Wake Forest in the finals of the singles competition, 6-3, 6-4. After just an hour rest following a difficult semifinal against Florida State’s Matt Cloer, Walter took the court again to face Loewenthal. Walter got off to a slow start, failing to hold serve en route to dropping the first three games

of the match. His play picked up, however, and continued into the second set. Walter came out firing, matching Loewenthal strokefor-stroke to four games a piece, when Loewenthal broke Walter’s serve after facing a love-40 deficit in the game. Loewenthal, ranked 35th nationally, went on to serve out the match and claim the singles title. “I think he is capable of beating that guy,” head coach Jay Lapidus said. “If he

was really fresh mentally he would have beat him the majority of the time. I have no concerns about his mental ability during the season.”

third-seeded Doug Stewart of Virginia.

Blue Devils Stephen Amritraj,

Stefan Rozycki and Yorke Allen were all eliminated in the first round of In the semifinal, Walter struggled to the tournament. a 6-4, 7-5 victory over Matt Cloer of In doubles, Amritraj and Shults Florida State. The two played a tight ousted a Seminole tandem, 8-6, and match, with each player booming then lost to a pair from Wake Forest by serves and playing opportunistic tenthe same score. Brown and Rozycki fell nis. Walter came through with a pair of to a duo from Florida State. Duke’s top breaks, however, and was able to outdoubles tandems were unable to comduel the Seminole. pete, however, because of injuries. “My serve was really good,” Walter Sophomore Jason Zimmerman, who said. “He started to make some mistakes was paired up with Stokke, was injured and forced to withdraw from the and I broke him.” In other action, freshman Jonathan singles and doubles draws of the tourStokke reached the round of 16 where nament. The tandem was the top-seed he was defeated by Florida State’s in the competition. Junior David GoldChip Webb in three sets. Classmate stein was also injured and forced to Christopher Brown also won his first pull out, thus eliminating his doubles two matches but fell to Loewenthal in partnership with Walter. the quarterfinals. “All the guys played against good Sophomore Peter Schults eeked out players and didn’t have bad matches,” a victory over Virginia’s Darrin Cohen Walter said. “Everyone was fighting in three sets before succumbing to well. I think everyone is ready for the Wake Forest’s Brett Ross in another season now.” three-set marathon, losing 6-4, 6-7, 7The squad will be back in action at 6. Junior Ryan Heinberg also split a 2:30 p.m. Thursday when they begin pair of matches, downing North Carolidual match play at the Sheffield Indoor na’s Andy Metzler prior to losing to Tennis Center.


The Chronicle

Sportswra

TUESDAY, JANUARY 21, 2DD3 �PAGE 7

UNC from The Chronicle page 1 Alana Beard led the Blue Devils with 26 points and 12 rebounds, despite scoring just three points in the first half. “We’ve watched all their other [ACC] games and they’ve all been pretty close up until the end, then Beard basically takes over,” UNC head coach Sylvia Hatchell said. “It’s the Alana Beard show the last couple of minutes. She’s producing.” Beard and fellow junior Iciss Tillis, who had 23 points and 14 rebounds, powered the Blue Devils to victory in the last few minutes of regulation and overtime. Together, they scored Duke’s last 22 points in regulation. When the Blue Devils trailed 56-49 with 5:40 remaining, Tillis connected on a midrange jumper sparking the Blue Devils on a 12-2 run. After Beard swished a free throw to give Duke a 61-58 lead with 45 seconds left, Leah Metcalf launched a desperation, off-balance three-pointer as the shot clock ticked down. The ball caromed off the backboard and through the hoop. “Metcalf hit a great shot. I was like, ‘whoa.’” Beard said. The Blue Devils brought the ball across half court and called a timeout. With the Tar Heels playing excellent denial defense on Beard, Tillis held the ball at the top of the key. With about 10 seconds left on the game clock, Sheana Mosch made a backdoor cut on her man and caught a pass in stride on her way to the basket. But her layup attempt was blocked all the way across halfcourt by Candace Sutton. Metcalf collected the ball in the cor-

ner, drove and handed off to Baptist who was fouled on an unsuccessful layup attempt just as the clock expired. Bell signaled a foul and the RA. announcer said the foul was charged to Whitley, and the arena erupted—expecting a Tar Heel victory. But Bell began examining the television monitor at center court, and after huddling with the other two officials, told the coaches the game would be going to overtime.

ROBERT TAI/THE CHRONICLE

(left) SHEANA MOSCH jumps on Alana Beard following Duke’s win over UNC. THE REFEREES debate the final, controversial call in regulation “I think my head was about to pop aged to emerge with a 27-26 lead Duke 78, UNC 67 off, because it was spinning,” Beard largely through the efforts of Whitley FINAL 1 2 OT F said. “It was really intense.” who finished with her first career dou- Duke (17-0, 5-0) 27 43 78 17 The Blue Devils hit 6-of-10 shots from ble-double—l3 points and 10 reNorth Carolina (15-2, 5-1) 26 46 6 67 the field and 4-of-5 from the line—im- bounds. Whitley’s 37 minutes were Duke FT R PF PTS A TO BLK EG S MP Matyasovsky 1-6 0-0 3 1 0 0 15 2 0 2 pressive figures considering the shooting seven more than she played in the pre2-2 14 1 22 2 4 4 2 44 Tillis 9-26 percentages for the whole game were vious four ACC games, 11 Bass 3-5 2-8 4 4 8 3 20 2 6-9 26 3 0 37 2 12 2 2 Beard 10-18 less than 40 and 57 percent respective“This was a good opportunity, espeKrapohl 0 2 37 0-0 1 4 0 1 0 0-4 ly—and pulled away in overtime. dally against a good team, to just go out Whitley 5-11 2-2 10 2 13 0 11 1 37 0 5 1 2 27 3-8 1-2 4 2 7 “We were granted five extra min- and basically just play,” the sophomore Mosch 1 Harding 0-0 0-0 0 1 0 0 0 0 8 Team utes to try to improve ourselves,” Tillis said. “My main emphasis, and we em6 12 11 9 11 225 31-78 13-23 54 17 78 said. “We try to have similar situations phasize this, is rebounding, and I think Totals Three-pointers: Tillis (2-6), Whitley (1-3), Krapohl (0-4), Beard (0-3) rebounding and we had confidence this was best games.” in practice, in my Mosch (0-2), Matyasovsky (0-1). As a team the Blue Devils matched Technical fouls: None what we could do. It’s like, ‘five minFT R PF PTS A TO BLK utes, it’s time to get down to business.’” the Tar Heels with 54 rebounds and UNO FG S MP Thomas 0-2 0-0 3 2 0 0 2 0 9 1 Tillis opened the scoring with a barely outshot the home team. The win Bell 0-3 5 1 6-18 3 30 12 11 0 1-4 fadeaway jumper and added a three was Duke’s second overtime game of Sutton 3-9 6 3 7 0 0 11 28 Brown 0-0 4 3 5 9 5 0 0 41 2-10 pointer, and Beard helped put the Tar the season. Metcalf 18 5 5 0 3 40 6-17 2-3 4' 2 Atkinson 0-0 11 3 6 2 1 “We’ve had plenty of scares al3-8 0 0 25 Heels away with a three-point play 1-3 11 2 5-7 0 0 31 11 1 2 when she drove from the corner, collid- ready,” head coach Gail Goestenkors Baptist Davis 0-1 0-0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 Mcßee 4-6 0-0 3 5 8 0 0 0 0 sank think it’s us 18 good for ed with La’Tangela Atkinson and said. “I that we've Sell 0-1 0-0 0 0 0 0 0 0 both layup and free throw. That basket put the Blue Devils up 73-67 and UNC never again challenged, Despite 2-of-16 shooting from Beard and Tillis in the first half, Duke man-

Exciting

already been in some very difficult situations. It is helping prepare us. I feel like when we get in these situations we’re very comfortable and very confident—and we’ve been successful ”

Team Totals

33-69

4-13

6 54 21

67

1 20 17

0

1

8 225

Three-pointers: Metcalf (4-8), Brown (1-8), Atkinson (0-2), Sell (0-1)

Technical fouls: None Arena: Carmichael Auditorium Officials: Bell. Mattingly, Spence

Attendance—lo,lBo

New Course for Spring 2003 Only Time Offered LIT 161.01

A New Civilization In The

Making:

INTRODUCTION TO THE LITERATURE OF THE ENGLISHSPEAKING CARIBBEAN (CALL #8553) G. LAMMING

-

MW 2:20-3:35 PM

-

1

ART MUSEUM 110

The Caribbean is a unique combination of European institutions built on African and Asian labor, and planted in the Americas. All branches of the human family have met in this archipelago. The purpose of this course is to examine a sample of novels which evoke worlds of childhood and adolescence, and at the same time reveal the tensions and creative potential experienced by people who derive from a great diversity of cultural origins. The Literature Program’s Visiting Professor Program offers undergraduates the opportunity to study with distinguished professors from universities around the world These courses are offered for one semester only. For complete course descriptions, visit our website at http: / /www. duke .edu/literature /ugrdso3 .html


Sportswn

8 �TUESDAY, JANUARY 21,

The Chronicle

Duke University Stores® is proud to present our

CLEARANCE TFF WMUT 6AU OF TFF UFA? January 21 January 24 in Von Canon Hall located in the Bryan Center on West Campus -

35% 70% -

off selected merchandise from The University Store, The Terrace The Hotel ShopGift and The Diet & Fitness Center Store ,

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Dates and Times Tuesday,January 21 Thursday, January 23 Friday, January 24 -

9am 6pm 9am Ipm

Great Prizes Stop by and register for great prizes! Raffles will be held daily and raffle items will include Cameron and Metrodome floor pieces, sweatshirts and more.

ALL SALES FINAL! NO REFUNDS! NO EXCHANGES!


The Chronicle

TUESDAY, JANUARY 21, 2003 � PAGE 11

VENEZUELA« sition called the strike Dec. 2, crippling the world’s fifth-largest oil exporter. Carter was meeting with Chavez, opposition figures and Cesar Gaviria, secretary general of the Organization of American States. Gaviria has tried since November to mediate an electoral solution to Venezuela’s crisis. Carter was participating in a negotiating session Monday. “I have always hoped for a resolution, and I hope there will be one,” said the Nobel Peace Prize winner, whose Atlanta-based Carter Center is sponsoring the talks with the OAS and the United Nations. Chavez has threatened to abandon the talks. Sunday, he accused the opposition of trying to oust him even as its leaders sat at the negotiating table. “We don’t talk with terrorists,” Chavez said. Opposition parties, business leaders and labor

unions called the strike to demand that Chavez resign or call early elections. The National Elections Council accepted an opposition petition and agreed to organize a Feb. 2 nonbinding referendum asking citizens whether Chavez should step down. Chavez says the constitution only allows a binding referendum halfway through his six-year-term, or August. The Supreme Court is considering the matter. The strike has slashed Venezuela’s oil production by more than two-thirds and caused severe shortages of gasoline, food and drinking water. It has cost Venezuela $4 billion, according to the government, and contributed to the plummeting of the bolivar currency.

Six countries—Brazil, Chile, Mexico, Portugal, Spain' and the United States—began an initiative called “Friends of Venezuela” to help end the crisis. Chavez warned the six nations his government will not allow interference in domestic affairs. Trying to break the strike, Chavez sent soldiers to seize water, soft drinks and beer from two bottling plants, provoking an outcry from business leaders, human rights groups and U.S. Ambassador Charles Shapiro. One bottler was a Coca-Cola affiliate while the other belonged to Venezuela’s largest food and drinks producer, Empresas Polar. Both firms denied hoarding goods. The Venezuelan American Chamber of Commerce condemned the raids as “a grave rupture of the state of law.” It warned more than 1,000 affiliates that the army could commit more abuses and urged them to

report alleged violations.

Microsoft Corp. said Monday it was shutting down two Venezuela offices because it cannot guarantee employees’ security. The company has about 85 employees in Caracas and six in Maracaibo. Chavez has used troops to seize gasoline trucks, arrest striking oil tanker crews and keep strikers out of oil installations. He has fired more than 1,000 employees from the state oil monopoly. Before the strike, Venezuela was the world’s fifthlargest oil exporter and fourth-largest oil supplier to the United States. It pre-strike output of 3 million barrels a day was at 800,000 barrels, the government claims. Strike leaders put the figure at 627,000. The 48-year-old Chavez was elected in 1998 and reelected in 2000 on promises to redistribute the country’s vast oil wealth among the poor majority. His opponents say his leftist policies have driven the country toward economic ruin, citing 17 percent unemployment and 30 percent inflation. They also say his autocratic style erodes democratic institutions. The government Monday also notified private television stations Globovision and Radio Caracas Television that they faced administrative proceedings for allegedly supporting efforts to topple Chavez. The complaint alleges the stations illegally ran opposition advertisements supporting the 50-day-old strike and promoting anti-government marches,

Globovision reported The stations, which long have accused Chavez of trying to stifle freedom of expression, face fines or the losses of their broadcasting licenses.

RODRIGO ARANGUA/AFP

SUPPORTERS AND PROTESTERS of Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez fight Monday in Valles del Tuy, 18 miles west of Caracas. Several protesters were injured in the scuffle and one person was killed. The protests marked the 50th day of the nation’s general strike.

LITERATURE & WRITING CULTURE, HISTORY & THE ARTS UNDERGRADUATE COURSES OF SPECIAL INTEREST AVAILABLE IN SPRING 2003 LIT 205.01 (8547)

MAGIC, POLITICS & LITERATURE V. TUMA TU/TH 9:10-10:25 AM ART MUSEUM 110

LIT 205.02 (8548)

B-SIDES: CULT & CLASSIC R. FREY MWF 10:30-11:20 AM ART MUSEUM 103

LIT 205.04 (10006)

IDENTITY IN VISUAL CULTURE C. BAKER MWF 1:10-2:00 PM ART MUSEUM 103

LIT 205.05 (13928)

ASIAN AMERICAN LITERATURE A. DAYARATNA MWF 9:10-10:00 AM ART MUSEUM 105

LIT 205.06 (12890)

FOOD AND RACE J. KIM MWF 10:30-11:20AM ART MUSEUM 105

LIT 605.01

GILLES DELEUZE B. EKEN MWF 1:10-2:00PM ART MUSEUM 105

(10016)

LIT 605.02 (10017)

LIT 605.04 (12893)

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WOMEN, WRITING AND MADNESS E. POST MWF 9:10-10:00 PM ART MUSEUM 110 -

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COLLECTIVE AND COLLECTIVIZATION S. KRYSL MWF 11:50-12:40PM WEST DUKE 202 -

-

LIT 605.J7 POLITICS

WRITING ON THE FRONT: MODERNISM(S)

(12896)

L. HSIEH MWF 10:30-11:20 AM WHITE EEC 201

LIT 605.08

FRANCOPHONE WOMEN WRITERS A. FREE MWF 11:50-12:40 PM LEVINE RC D243

(12897)

LIT 605.10 (10007)

Please recycle this newspaper

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MARXISM & FREDRIC JAMESON R. PRINZO TU/TH 2:15-3:30 PM ART MUSEUM 04 -

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For complete course descriptions, visit our website at htto://www.duke.edu/literature/ugrdso3.html


Sportswrai

r, JANUARY 21,

The Chronicle

Duke University Stores速 is proud to present our

CLEARANCE TU VI&ZZtT SALB OF TFB k?AK January 21 January 24 in Von Canon Hall located in the Bryan Center on West Campus -

35% 70% -

off selected merchandise from The University Store, The Terrace Shop, The Hotel Gift Shop, and The Diet & Fitness Center Store .

Dates and Times Tuesday, January 21 Thursday, January 23 Friday, January 24 -

9am 6pm 9am Ipm

Great Prizes Stop by and register for great prizes! Raffles will be held daily and raffle items will include Cameron and Metrodome floor pieces, sweatshirts and more.

ALL SALES FINAL! NO REFUNDS! NO EXCHANGES!

03-0965


The Chronicle

TUESDAY, JANUARY 21, 2003 � PAGE 11

VENEZUELA from page 2 sition called the strike Dec. 2, crippling the world’s fifth-largest oil exporter. Carter was meeting with Chavez, opposition figures and Cesar Gaviria, secretary general of the Organization of American States. Gaviria has tried since November to mediate an electoral solution to Venezuela’s crisis. Carter was participating in a negotiating session Monday. “I have always hoped for a resolution, and I hope there will be one,” said the Nobel Peace Prize winner, whose Atlanta-based Carter Center is sponsoring the talks with the OAS and the United Nations. Chavez has threatened to abandon the talks. Sunday, he accused the opposition of trying to oust him even as its leaders sat at the negotiating table. “We don’t talk with terrorists,” Chavez said. Opposition parties, business leaders and labor unions called the strike to demand that Chavez resign or call early elections. The National Elections Council accepted an opposition petition and agreed to organize a Feb. 2 nonbinding referendum asking citizens whether Chavez should step down. Chavez says the constitution only allows a binding referendum halfway through his six-year-term, or August. The Supreme Court is considering the matter. The strike has slashed Venezuela’s oil production by more than two-thirds and caused severe shortages of gasoline, food and drinking water. It has cost Venezuela $4 billion, according to the government, and contributed to the plummeting of the bolivar currency.

Six countries—Brazil, Chile, Mexico, Portugal, Spain and the United States—began an initiative called “Friends of Venezuela” to help end the crisis. Chavez warned the six nations his government will not allow interference in domestic affairs. Trying to break the strike, Chavez sent soldiers to seize water, soft drinks and beer from two bottling plants, provoking an outcry from business leaders, human rights groups and U.S. Ambassador Charles Shapiro. One bottler was a Coca-Cola affiliate while the other belonged to Venezuela’s largest food and drinks producer, Empresas Polar. Both firms denied hoarding goods. The Venezuelan American Chamber of Commerce condemned the raids as “a grave rupture of the state oflaw.”

It warned more than 1,000 affiliates that the army could commit more abuses and urged them to

report alleged violations.

Microsoft Corp. said Monday it was shutting down two Venezuela offices because it cannot guarantee employees’ security. The company has about 85 employees in Caracas and six in Maracaibo. Chavez has used troops to seize gasoline trucks, arrest striking oil tanker crews and keep strikers out of oil installations. He has fired more than 1,000 employees from the state oil monopoly. Before the strike, Venezuela was the world’s fifthlargest oil exporter and fourth-largest oil supplier to

the United States. It pre-strike output of 3 million barrels a day was at 800,000 barrels, the government claims. Strike leaders put the figure at 627,000. The 48-year-old Chavez was elected in 1998 and reelected in 2000 on promises to redistribute the country’s vast oil wealth among the poor majority. His opponents say his leftist policies have driven the country toward economic ruin, citing 17 percent unemployment and 30 percent inflation. They also say his autpcratic style erodes democratic institutions. The government Monday also notified private television stations Globovision and Radio Caracas Television that they faced administrative proceedings for allegedly supporting efforts to topple Chavez. The complaint alleges the stations illegally ran opposition advertisements supporting the 50-day-old strike and promoting anti-government marches, Globovision reported. The stations, which long have accused Chavez of trying to stifle freedom of expression, face fines or the losses of their broadcasting licenses.

RODRIGO ARANGUA/AFP

SUPPORTERS AND PROTESTERS of Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez fight Monday in Valles del Tuy, 18 miles west of Caracas. Several protesters were injured in the scuffle and one person was killed. The protests marked the 50th day of the nation’s general strike.

LITERATURE & WRITING CULTURE, HISTORY & THE ARTS UNDERGRADUATE COURSES OF SPECIAL INTEREST AVAILABLE IN SPRING 2003 LIT 205.01 (8547)

LIT 205.02

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(8548)

B-SIDES: CULT & CLASSIC R. FREY MWF 10:30-11:20 AM ART MUSEUM 103

LIT 205.04 (10006)

IDENTITY IN VISUAL CULTURE C. BAKER MWF 1:10-2:00 PM ART MUSEUM 103

LIT 205.05

ASIAN AMERICAN LITERATURE A. DAYARATNA MWF 9:10-10:00 AM ART MUSEUM 105

(13928)

LIT 205.06

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(12890)

FOOD AND RACE J. KIM MWF 10:30-11:20 AM ART MUSEUM 105

LIT 605.01 (10016)

GILLES DELEUZE B. EKEN MWF 1:10-2:00 PM ART MUSEUM 105

LIT 605.02

WOMEN, WRITING AND MADNESS E. POST MWF 9:10-10:00 PM ART MUSEUM 110

(10017)

LIT 605.04 (12893)

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COLLECTIVE AND COLLECTIVIZATION S. KRYSL MWF 11:50-12:40 PM WEST DUKE 202 -

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LIT 605.07 POLITICS

WRITING ON THE FRONT: MODERNISM(S)

(12896)

L. HSIEH MWF 10:30-11:20 AM WHITE EEC 201

LIT 605.08

FRANCOPHONE WOMEN WRITERS A. FREE MWF 11:50-12:40 PM LEVINE RC D243

(12897)

LIT 605.10 (10007)

Please recycle this newspaper

MAGIC, POLITICS & LITERATURE V. TUMA TU/TH 9:10-10:25 AM ART MUSEUM 110

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&

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MARXISM & FREDRIC JAMESON R. PRINZO TU/TH 2:15-3:30 PM ART MUSEUM 04 -

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For complete course descriptions, visit our website at http://www.duke.edu/literature/ugrdso3.html


The Chronicle

PAGE 12 � TUESDAY, JANUARY 21, 2003

Duke Conservative Union Why did the '6os Free Speech movement on campuses spawn today's Speech Code movement? Why

is

religious freedom imperiled on campuses?

Why

is

Duke administrator Larry Moneta a threat to YOUR civil liberties? Find Out All This and More at a Lecture:

"The Betrayal of Liberty and Dignity on America's Campuses" By

Prof. Alan Charles Kors Department of History, University of Pennsylvania Co-Director and President, Foundation for Individual Rights in Education Co-Author of The Shadow University *****

Dr. Kors' foundation, FIRE, is the country's foremost defender of free speech and religious liberty on college campuses. Last month, it forced UNC Chapel Hill administrators to abandon their threats to deprive a Christian student group of its legal recognition and funding. Dr. Kors gained international attention for defending a Penn student from prosecution in the infamous "Water Buffalo" affair, which resulted in the abolition of Penn's speech code.

Tuesday, January 21 4:00 pm Weston Laßarre Auditorium 139 Social Sciences Building West Campus, Duke University Free and Open to the Public

1

Duke Conservative Union


The Chronicle

the medical school, confirmed in an e-mail that BAA will be consolidated within Arts and Sciences. “I have approved a transition plan that provides ongoing support from the [medical school] budget for all of the BAA faculty currently based in the School of Medicine. Most are tenured and are outstanding teachers in our Medical Anatomy course, which they will continue to lead,” Williams wrote. “As current senior faculty from BAA who teach Medical Anatomy retire, we may recruit individuals based in other [School of Medicine] departments to take up their teaching duties in Medical Anatomy.” An external team of reviewers examined the department in November 2000, a process that is routine for every Duke department about every five years. Its report, which was confidential until obtained by The Chronicle, noted on its first page that disinvestment was an option for the department, but quickly discounted it.

education and had produced “some of the brightest and most productive young scholars in the business.” Reviewers ultimately concluded that “reinvestment in the [department] is currently all the more inviting in view of research opportunities in human biology and evolution, and the central place that these sciences may assume in the development of Curriculum 2000.” At the heart of the issue is how the department will be funded—and by whom. Much of the department’s funding is shared between Arts and Sciences and the medical school. As BAA shifts fully into one school, Arts and Sciences will assume the responsibility for all of the department’s operational funding, even as the school confronts a multi-million dollar budget deficit. Additional funds come from NSF grants, but will not be enough to fund the department without medical school support. Steve Churchill, associate professor of BAA and director of undergraduate studies, said the department

“Disinvestment in these endeavors will represent frank abandonment of a part of [the University’s] inheritance as a center for science and scholarship. Duke would be forfeiting its international standing as a center for the study of human and non-human primate evolution, and in this light, disinvestment surely cannot be an option,” the report reads. The report further notes that in its first 12 years the department had developed “world-class programs” in undergraduate, graduate and postdoctoral

IRAQ from page 2 Casting aside diplomatic ambiguity, Powell spoke directly of war. “Iraq has a responsibility now to avoid a conflict, to avoid a war,” he said. The UN. inspectors, by contrast, have said they were making progress in their searches, may require months more of time, and have referred to the report due next Monday as only an interim report. Some 16 chemical weapons warheads have been di-

vulged by Iraq, a move taken by the inspectors as a sign of cooperation. But Powell brushed that aside. He said of the Iraqis: “We cannot let them dribble out this information, dribble these warheads out.” Iraq knows how many weapons of mass destruction it has hidden away, Powell said, “We will not allow Iraq to frustrate the will ofthe world.” Separately, Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld dismissed suggestions that U.N. weapons inspectors would need months of additional time to determine whether Iraq is meeting its obligation to disarm. “The burden of proof is on Iraq to prove that it is disarming,” Rumsfeld said in a speech to a Reserve Officers Association conference. “Thus far they have been unwilling to do so.” British Foreign Minister Jack Straw, in his U.N. speech, said it was important to “wait and see what the inspectors actually say,” but he emphasized that “time is running out for Saddam Hussein.” “This game of hide-and-seek has got to stop and there’s got to be complete, active, positive compliance by Iraq with the obligations imposed on Iraq by this Security Council,” he said. Straw spoke as Britain announced it was sending 26,000 troops to the Persian Gulf in preparation for possible military action against Iraq. Other Europeans said they had yet to be convinced war would not make things worse. “We have no illusions about the brutal nature of Saddam Hussein’s regime,” German Foreign Minister Joschka Fisher said during a daylong Security Council meeting on counterterrorism. But, he said, We are greatly concerned that a military strike against the regime in Baghdad would involve considerable and unpredictable risks for the global fight on terrorism.” French Foreign Minister Dominique de Villepin said he believed Iraq could still be disarmed through peaceful means. We believe that today, nothing justifies envisaging military action.... As long as you can make progress with the inspectors and get cooperation, there’s no point in choosing the worst possible so-

lution—military intervention.” Resolution 1441, crafted by Washington and London and passed by a unanimous Security Council in November, warns Iraq of “serious consequences,” if it fails to comply with inspections.

has nevertheless garnered more NSF funds than any other biological anthropology department in the nation, with the exception of the State University of New York at Stony Brook. Churchill expressed frustration that the deans’ cutbacks would predetermine the department’s decline and that scholars would shun the chance to come to Duke, given the signals the administration has sent. “I really love Duke. This is the fourth institution I’ve been at, and there’s something really special at Duke,” Churchill said. “I’m so motivated to do great things here, but every time I turn around, I have to deal with

these things from Chafe.” He also noted that paleontologists and organismal biologists situated in BAA are well-placed to contribute to the University’s genomics initiative and its strategic goal to build the sciences at Duke. “If one of the goals is to increase the sciences and the life sciences are already strong, why cut a demonstrably excellent department in the life sciences?” Churchill asked.

February 10

Readings presented by Department of Theater Studies faculty 7 pm. Sheafer Lab Theater

mm.

;

March 21

....

mmam

Ti

IM 4 pm, iOl Biddle Music Building

March??

A Special series of Lectures, Readings, and Performances Please call 660-3356 for a complete brochure.

REQUIESCANT”

Musical composition by SYDNEY HOCKINSON. written as a memorial for those deceased following the events of September U. 2001 Part of the series Encounters With the Music of Our Time 8 pm. Nelson Music Room

Presented by the Duke Institute of the Arts. Cosponsored by the franklin Humanities Institute's “Making the Humanities Central" Project

January

February 26 April 9 All screenings at 8:00 pm Griffith Film Theater (West) or Richard White Auditorium {East)

17

MP

'""WCiI

A senes of screenings and discussions curated by miriam cooke and Negar Hottahedeh

January 3-31

February 26. Griffith Film Theater (Iraq) A TIME FOR DRUNKEN HORSES (d. Bahman Ghobadi, 2000)

Lecture by DAVID WHISNANT 4 pm. 101 Biddle Music Building

k

~

mm

Exhibition of photographs by EDWARD GRAZDA John Hope Franklin Center. ?204 Erwin Rd.

January 30 and 31

FROM

March 5. Richard White Auditorium (Libya) LION OF THE DESERT (A. Moustapha Akkad, 19SO) March 19, Richard White Auditorium ( North Korea) PULGASARI (d. Chung Gon Jo, 1965) March 26. Richard White Auditorium

(Cuba) PUFF! DE MASIADO MIEDO A U VIDA (d. Juan Carlos Tabio, 1989)

Multimedia performance by Paul Berliner 7 pm. Sheafer Lab Theater

April 2, Griffith Film Theater (Syria) THE EXTRAS (d. Nabil al-Maleh, 1993) April 9, Griffith Film Theater

February 6

“PICASSO’S CLOSET’’

Reading of a new play by Ariel Dorfman, directed by John Dillon, with professional guest actors 7 pm. Reynolds Theater

(Iran) TEN

(d.

Abbas Kiarostami, 2002)

Sponsored by Asian and African Languages and Literature, Program in film/Video/Digital Program in Literature, and the Center for Study of Muslim Networks .

'

,

BAA from page 1

TUESDAY, JANUARY 21, 2003 � PAGE 13


The Chronicle

PAGE 14 � TUESDAY, JANUARY 21, 2003

*

I Duke

Career Center

CAREER HAPPtHK January 20

~

f

Free Research Study Testing BOTOX for those who suffer from Moderate to Severe Underarm Sweating

Associated with Fear or Anxiety in Social Situations

24,2003

Do you have unreasonable fear or anxiety in work or social situations?

SUMMER OPPORTUNITIES FAIR!!! Wednesday, January 29 Are you ready?

Public Speaking Meeting Strangers Talking to the Boss Giving Presentations

New Office Hours for Career Center! The Career Center will be open 9am-7pm on Tuesdays and Wednesdays, & regular hours (9am-spm) on Mondays, Thursdays, and Fridays. Take advantage of our later hours to meet with a counselor (either by drop-in or pre-scheduled appointment), stop by to ask a question, get your resume reviewed, or visit the Resource Room (21 7 Page) to browse our resources

Are you awake at night worrying about upcoming social events ? When taking part in social events do you have heavy underarm sweating? Does your underarm sweating interfere with your daily activities?

Summer Internship Strategies Finding a Summer Internship: Thursday, Jan 23, 4pm, 106 Page Exploring Duke Summer Service Internship Opportunities: Thursday, Jan 23, 6:30-Bpm, Mary Lou Williams Center Preparing for Summer Opportunities Fair: Friday, Jan 24, 11am, 106 Page

Do you find your underarm sweating difficult to tolerate?

Ifyes, you may be eligible for:

Interviewing Workshops Interviewing Workshops: Tuesday, Jan 21, 6:3opm, 106 Page Interviewing Workshop for engineers, Wednesday, Jan 22, s;3opm, 203 Teer

Free medication treatment for your social anxiety Chance of receiving free Botox injections for underarm sweating Up to $l4O Compensation

Call Rebecca Smith, RN (919) 684-4266 Resume Help Resume Workshop: Wednesday, Jan 22, 6;3opm, 106 Page Resume Reviews on the BC Walkway! Friday, Jan 24, 12pm-l :30pm

H

|||i| Duke University Medical Center Anxiety and Traumatic Stress Program Department of Psychiatry

STIPENDS for Community Service in the Summer! The Summer Service Program (SSP) is a program that encourages and enables Duke students to engage in full-time community service internships during the summer. Don't miss the info session on Tuesday, January 21, 4pm in 106 Page or visit our website for more details!

Alumni

&

Industry Mentoring Students (AIMS) Info Sessions!

AIMS is a career exploration program that provides students an opportunity to shadow a Duke alum for 1-5 days during Spring or Summer break. It is a quick and easy way to help determine your career interests and a great networking opportunity! Career fields ranging from art to business are all represented. DON'T miss this chance. Info sessions: Tues., 1/21, spm at 106 Page and Fri., 1/24, 3pm at 217 Page. Contact kara.heisey@duke.edu for more information.

Ventures Internship Program The VENTURES INTERNSHIP PROGRAM of Fall 2002 provides students with the opportunity to explore a variety of careers and to develop essential skills in industries they would like to learn more about. These internships are offered in organizations throughout the Triangle area. Attend an Information Session on Tuesday, January 21 at 11am in 106 Page, Resume submissions for VIP will take place Thursday, January 23 from 9am-12pm in 106 Page!

MetroLink: SENIORS! Want to apply for some full-time jobs in New York or DC? http://career.studentaffairs.duke.edu/undergrads/employment.html

isS® •

-

,i

DUKE CAREER CENTER

THE DUKE UNIVERSITY MUSLIM STUDENTS ASSOCIATION PRESENTS

ISLAMIC AWARENESS WEEK JANUARY 21ST JANUARY 21 TUESDAY

JANUARY 22 WEDNESDAY

JANUARY 23 THURSDAY

-

-

-

-

23RD

"A JOURNEY TO ISLAM" IMAM SIRAJ WAHAJ KEYNOTE ADDRESS REYNOLDS THEATER, 8 PM

"ISLAM: EMPIRE OF FAITH" SCREENING OF PBS DOCUMENTARY SOCIAL SCI 139,7:30 PM PIZZA WILL BE SERVED

SHARI FA AL-KHATEEB WOMEN IN ISLAM PANEL SOCIAL 5C1139, 7:30 PM REFRESHMENTS WILL BE SERVED

CHECK OUT OUR MUSLIM CULTURES TABLE FROM 10AM -2 PM EVERYDAY ON THE BRYAN CENTER WALKWAY

110 Page Building

(West Campus) Box 90950 Appointments: 919-660-1050

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

FOR MORE INFO, PLEASE EMAIL ORC@DUKE.EDU OR SYR2@DUKE.EDU OR VISIT OUR WEBSITE http://WWW.DUKE.EDU/WEB/MSA


The Chronicle

1

,

1

Announcements BE A TOUR GUIDE

Information sessions January 21 and 23 at the Undergraduate Admissions Office. 7:00 p.m. Questions? Kellie Pickett 6840166.

CLASSIFIEDS

.

Fraternities, Sororities, Clubs, Student Groups

Business Opportunities

Earn $1,000-$2,000 this semester with a proven Campus Fundraiser 3 hour fundraising event. Our programs make fundraising easy with no risks. Fundraising dates are filling quickly, so get with the program! It works. Contact CampusFundraiser at (888) 9233238, or visit www.campus-

UNC-CH Research on Life Goals: Couples who marry, become engaged, or begin living together 2001-2003. Two years, four sessions, $50-120/session. Contact Mike Coolsen, uncstudy@yahoo.com, 824-4442.

HOUSE COURSE REGISTRATION

Check out the 34 Exciting Topics offered this semester!! ON-LINE Registration Deadline: January 22, 2003. Descriptions of each House Course available a t

1

1

Taxes Online www.absolutetaxes.com for a mini-

@

mal fee of $9.95 for 1040EZ and $14.95 for 1040. FREE E-FILEI!

Spend your summer in a lakefront cabin in Maine. If you’re looking to spend this summer outdoors, have fun while you work, and make lifelong friends, then look no further. Camp Mataponi, a residential girls camp in Maine, has M/F summertime openings for Land Sports, Waterfront (small crafts, skiing, life guarding, WSI, boat drivers), Ropes Course, Tennis, H.B. Riding, Arts & Crafts, Theater, Archery, Gymnastics, Dance, Photography, Group Leaders & more. Top salaries plus room/board & travel provided. ON CAMPUS INTERVIEWS WILL BE CONDUCTED 1/29. Call us today toll free at 1888-684-2267 or apply online at

CIPRIANO CRAFT CENTER at Duke NEEDS YOU!!! Jobs available immediately for work study students, up to 10 hours per week. Afternoons & evenings only. Reliable people needed for low stress work in a friendly, creative atmosphere. Applications Available: Craft Center behind Southgate Residence Hall. Call 684-6213. APPLY TODAY.

East Duke Campus

vJ

i -t i

.

Coaching opportunities. Durham Academy is seeking an assistant JV lacrosse coach to assist with 9th grade team and is looking for someone interested in coaching boys tennis this spring. Must have

Furnished apt. near Duke, 1-2 peo pie. Hardwood floors, newly reno vated, upstairs. $440/month. 688 1284.

Autos For Sale

afternoons free, be reliable and organized. Reasonable compensation. Call Steve Engebretsen at 489-6569, ext. 440 or email at sen-

1988 Ford Bronco II. 130K miles, 4WD,

All

gebret@da.org.

Power, 5-speed manual,

1-owner, excellently maintained, & CJI c p CO Ncro

Dog needs home. Yellow lab-mixed.

DESPERATE WORK/STUDY

n

1HELH ROMCLE classified advertising

Experience/lnterest Preferred. 6-10 hours/week Contact Dee 684-3585 or Blankfard, dcb2@duke.edu

I

Inclusion Specialist needed to work with child with disabilities near East Campus. Weekdays 3:15 to 7:30. Call Tom or Betsy, 403-3482.

rates

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-

-

-

-

Part-time Secretary for retired, visually limited professor finalizing book on science and religion. Reorganizing home office. Flexible schedule. Short trial period at standard wage-subsequent salary

according to reliability,productivity, accuracy & loyalty. Email: SaulBoyar@aol.com. Up to $500/wk, part-time, preparing mailings. Not sales. Flexible schedules. Call (626)-294-3215.

IDAY, JANUARY 21, 2003 � PAGE 15

Swim Coach Wanted—Eno Valley Swim and Raquet Club is looking for a Head Coach for its summer swim team. Salary is competitive with other summer swim programs and based on experience. For more information call: 382-0403 or email

Estate setting carriage house plus garage for rent 12 minutes from CH for graduate student or professor $9OO per month plus utilities call/leave message/or speak to us after 6pm tel 919-960-0620.

cpakh@yahoo.com.

Hillsborough for Rent. 3/4 Bedrooms on 5 secluded acres pond with and separate studio/shop. Close to 40/85. $l5OO/month. Ca11:644-0716.

Sylvan Learning Center needs college grads as part-time math and reading instructors. Requires enthusiasm for teaching and working with kids. Fax resume and cover letter to 309-9766. Tutor wanted to work with teenage boy who has physical disabilities. Near Duke, flexible schedule, 3-5 hrs/week, $12/hr. Call Polly 4936333. Want CONSERVATION RESEARCH experience? Conservation ecology lab looking for responsible graduates and undergraduates to start immediately. Flexible schedule for 8-10 hours/week $10-12/hour. at Potential for summer research and travel,

RESEARCH TECH I POSITION AVAILABLE in Division of Pediatric Medical Genetics. Full-time tech needed for routine cell, molecular & genetic techniques in ongoing project for human genetic disorders. Duties include maintaining mouse colonies in Duke Vivarium; genotyping animals; gene cloning & other research related activities. Experience with global gene expression techniques as well as excellent computer skills are desirable. Contact Dr. TV. Damodaran: 919-668-6196 or Email: damodOOl @ mc.duke.edu.

Seeking a part-time individual to provide administrative support to the CEO and President of a digital marketing corp. This position supports with the handling of client

communication,

(ecology major not required; work-study preferred). Email Kimberley at ksm13@duke.edu.

Wanted: Work/study student to assist research lab in development of gene therapy for childhood diseases. This position would require monitoring of a mouse colony, and learning some molecular biology techniques to keep track of the mice. Hours flexible, in a fun environment. Call Dr. Amalfitano at 681 6356 if interested. -

Houses For Rent 1109 Virginia Ave. 2 BR house near Duke, appls., hdw floors, deck $995. Broker 489-1777.

Great communication and organizational skills are a must. Please submit resume to resume@21digital.com.

3 BR house near Duke. Large rooms, central heat and A/C, large fenced yard. $800/month. 6881284.

SEEKING FRENCH TUTOR:

3BF1/2.5BA, 1600 sq.ft.,, Southwest Durham. Great neighborhood, convenient to Duke. 490-4635.

help hard-of-hearing Francophile recover past French spoken language skills. Please call 490-1778

BIG HOUSES, JUST A FEW LEFT! Reserve one for you and your friends for the 03-04 school year. 46 BR, 416-0393.

$35/hr for 1-2 hrs/wk for private French tutor, native-speaking, to

and leave message for Marcia Angle, or please email Marcia

Angle at spring.com.

omahamaa@mind-

Panama City Beach Boardwalk Beach Resort $199 includes 7 Nights Hotel, 6 Free Parties! 24 Hours Free Drinks! Cancun & Jamaica! From $459 www.springbreaktravel.com

www.springbreaktravel.com

Large 3 BR, 2 bath home in Northgate Park. Hardwood floors, deck, gas heat. $895. Call 2865160 or egb@mindspring.com.

fs§ Total Hair

1.800.678.6386

Chronicle Classifieds Box 90858, Durham, NC 27708 0858 fax to: 684-8295

+

&

for

Rent,

3302

Coachman’s Way, 5 mins to West Campus, 2 BR, 2.5 BA, W/D, FP, all appliances. $B5O/mo. 787-0618.

Houses For Sale 3614 Bivins Rd., quiet, private 2.5 wooded acres surrounded by horse farms in N. Durham. Only 15 minutes from Duke. Beautiful, sunny home, 1600 sf, 3BRM, 2BA with huge deck , screened porch, and hot tub. Great place to live and be renewed by natural surroundings. $154,500. FSBO. 471-6685.

Meetings DUKE IN CUBA SUMMER 2003 Learn more about this unique program in Cuban culture and history at an information meeting Wed., Jan. 22, 5:30 p.m. in 129 Soc Psych. Directed by Dr. Nelson Valdes, Adjunct Professor in the Dept, of the Sociology, program will run from May 18 to June 29. Scholarships are available to qualified undergraduates, currently receiving financial aid. AH forms are online, onsite or in the Office of Study Abroad, 2016 684-2174. Dr., Campus Questions?' Contact nvaldes@unm.edu.

Nail Care

&

682-0207

ELDER CARE

/ —i

Tues. only

1209A W. Main St. Durham •

5 minute walk from East Campus, In theDomino's Pizza Building

LOCATOR A

Wax 7b Find Community Assistance far Seniors

1-800-677-1116

Pine Ridge Apartments

HOWARD K. ROSS

-

+

Discount

T-T

REPRESENTING DUKE STUDENTS, FACULTY, STIFF ANDALUMNI for allyour legal needs Since 1988

-

A

)

Hair Design

r

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

Rustic cabin in woods near Eno River for Rent: 8 minutes from Duke SMALL (900 square feet, 4 rooms tiny bathroom), unfurnished, very rustic cabin in Orange County, near Duke U. No appliances are included. You must have refrigerator, cooking stove and heat source—woodstove, kerosene stove, gas heater. Current tenant may have some of these items for sale to new tenant. Limited well water is included, but no washer/dryer hookups. $350 per mouth $350 security deposit: $7OO to move in. Available March 1,2003 or possibly before—current tenant may be leaving by 2/01/03. Single graduate student preferred-2 adults maximum. This is one of 4 closely located cabins at the same location. Current residents appreciate quiet, considerate, responsible neighbors. You must keep yard mowed, raked, etc. Landlord lives on premises. 1 small, well behaved and trained pet per house allowed. Send email with your complete biographical information plus previous rental references to epartp@aol.com. Townhouse

Work study student wanted in the Office of Research Support to assist with general clerical duties. Flexible hours 8:30am-5;00pm, MF. Contact Judy Cox at 684-3030.

travel arrange-

ments, scheduling meetings and maintaining the calendar. In addition, you’ll work on monthly reports, marketing projects, filing, and assist with special projects. Requires general computer skills.

1.800.678.6386

payment

Close to Streets at Soi Jt Southpoint •15 15 minutes from Duke 1,2, and 3 bedroom apartment a Pf homes available Undergraduates welcc >n welcome about our •

ATTORNEY AT LAW

e-mail orders classifieds@chronicle.duke.edu phone orders: call (919) 684-3811 to place your ad. Visit the Classifieds Online!

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

LAB ASSISTANT opportunity available for undergraduate work-study student. Will perform variety of basic tasks. Drosophila Genetics Laboratory (Dr. Hubert Amrein, Dept, of Molecular Genetics and Microbiology). 6-10 hrs/wk, flexible schedule. Contact Dorian Kimbro, 681-1517 ordjk9@duke.edu.

Spring break! Bahamas Party Cruise $279 for 5 Days, Includes 10 Free Meals, Free Parties & Drink Specials! Includes Port, Departure, Hotel Tax!

SPRING BREAK!

business rate $6.00 for first 15 words private party/N.P. $4.50 for first 15 words all ads 10p (per day) additional per word 3 or 4 consecutive insertions 10 % off 5 or more consecutive insertions 20 % off special features (Combinations accepted.) $1.00 extra per day for all Bold Words $1.50 extra per day for a Bold Heading (maximum 15 spaces) $2.50 for 2 line heading $2.00 extra per day for Boxed Ad deadline 1 business day prior to publication by 12:00 noon

Call 684-381 1 if you have any questions about classifieds. No refunds or cancellations after first insertion deadline.

FOR

STUDENT, International

1989 Honda Accord LX, 4dr, 95K miles, all power, automatic. $255C obo. 806-3860.

Fixed male. Trained, kids/cats ok, 16-months, loving home, fenced yard. 220-7665.

|

Help Wanted

After School Care: Responsible female adult with car, to provide transportation for female teenager from Durham Academy to Crosdaile area. Must be non-smoker, references. M-F 3:30 pm-6:15 pm-time negotiable. Contact: day; 530-7060, evenings: 382-8025 or oldens2@aol.com.

Two charming one bedroom apartments in restored house (903 Clarendon). Central air, new appliances, quiet & light, second floor. Apt. C, $510.00, February 1, Apt. D, 575.00, March 1. Possible discount for light maintenance. References r

www.campmataponi.com.

m

|

DUPLEX ONE BEDROOM APARTMENT FOR RENT. SHORT BIKE TO DUKE. GOOD NEIGHBORHOOD. PREFER GRAD./PROFESSIONAL $435.00/MONTH. ED 919663-3743 (LEAVE MESSAGE).

ONLINE FILING Your

message.

Apartments. 2 blocks from East. Managed by Drucker & Falk (919)-682-3690.

www.aas.duke.edu/trinity/house

1

Child Care

Afterschool childcare for 3 children W,F 2:30-6:30 Chapel Hill must have childcare experience NS own car 408-0908 after 6:30 or leave

Downtown Lofts, West Village

crs/hc.html. Descriptions also located thru ACES on-line course listing. Course syallabi are available in 04 Allen Building and on Duke’s online ereserves.

Do

Apts. For Rent

real music business experience. Casual atmosphere. Deep South Entertainment, 844-1515.

Join the former CEO of Walmart in an exploding internet business. http://successcourse.com/ca.

fundraiser.com

Desperately seeking ticket to “RENT’ on January 24. If you bought a ticket that you can’t use, PLEASE call Susan at 2869579.

INTERNS WANTED! Work in the music business. We manage 5 national bands. No pay, but gain

ti JE

FIFTH FLOOR

UNIVERSITY TOWER

3100 TOWER BOULEVARD DURHAM, NORTH CAROLINA 27707 ■ m.

Rent starts starts at $520

i

TELEPHONE; |9I9| ‘tsO'/ODU

-M

Pine Ridge

Call move-in 484-1000

HP


1HE CHRONICLE

PAGE 16 � TUESDAY, JANUARY 21,20U3 Student needs 2-4 basketball tickets,for Jan 25 vs. Ga. Tech. Call Adam 919-451-1520.

Parents with 8 years of Duke students, but no game seen at Cameron. Will buy 2 tickets, any game. 904-953-2075.

Desperate and anxious Duke ‘94 grad needs 2 sets of 2 tickets for Feb.22 NC State game. 212-873-

Duke parents looking to buy 2-3 tickets to NC State game on 2/22. Please call 914-769-3071 or email

BBALL TICKETS Misc. For Sale

Want to study in Athens and the islands of the Aegean? “The Birth of Reason in Ancient Greece", a 1 -cc, 4-week philosophy program, will again be offered for summer 2003. Meet director Prof. Michael .Ferejohn at an information meeting. Tues., Jan. 21, 5:30 p.m., 201 West Duke. Scholarships are available to qualified undergraduates, currently receiving financial aid. All forms are available onsite, online or in the Office of Study Abroad. Questions? Call 684-2174. Application deadline: Feb. 14.

Meet new. program director Prof. Francisco Adrian and learn more about this 6-wk., 2-course French language & culture program held in the magnificent “City of Light." Information meeting will be held Fri., Jan. 17, 4 p.m., 305 Languages. Applicants qualify for the Mac Anderson summer language program scholarships. All forms are available onsite, online, or in the Office of Study Abroad, 2016 Campus Drive. Questions? Call 684-2174. Application deadline; Feb. 14.

LONDON-DRAMA SUMMER 2003 Second information meeting will be held on Tues., Jan. 21, 5:30 p.m. in 328 Allen Bldg. This 2course program is designed for both drama majors and others who have an interest in theater. See and study over twenty productions during the six-week term! Applications are available onsite, online or in the Office of Study Abroad, 2016 Campus Drive. Questions? Call 6842174. Application deadline: Feb. 14.

Total gym-barely used; excellent condition. Includes Manual, workout CD. $lOO cash and carry. MDSE@nc.rr.com.

Room For Rent

Duke Fan looking for 2-3 tickets to Feb. 22 NC State game. Please email Kevin at kdo@duke.edu.

LAKE VIEW

Duke parents looking to buy 2-3 tickets to NC State game on 2/22. Please call 914-769-3071 or email

Room in lakeside cottage, 20 minutes to Duke. 180 degree view of private 22 acre lake on 100 acres. $3OO/month. Includes electric/heat. Call Steve 919-201-0464 or Chris 919-304-2966.

to E. Campus, private entry/parking. Small refrig & microwave, TV. Vistiting professor/graduate student. 286-2285 or 220-0523.

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Travel/Vacation #1 Spring Break Vacations! Cancun, Jamaica, Bahamas, & Florida! Best Parties, Best Hotels, Best Prices! Space is limited! Hurry up & Book Now! 1-800-234-7007 www.endlesssummertours.com

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Father/son from Wisconsin need tickets for Duke/Clemson garni February 9. Call 920-712-4003.

ACT NOW! LAST CHANCE TO GUARANTEE THE BEST SPRING BREAK PRICES TO ALL DESTINATIONS. REPS NEEDED..TRAVEL FREE, EARN$$$. GROUP DISCOUNTS FOR 6+. ***

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INTERESTED IN BEING DUKE TOUR GUIDE??

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GREECE 111 SUMMER 2003

DUKE IN PARIS SUMMER 2003

Looking to buy 2-3 tickets to Wake Forest, NC State, Georgia Tech, Clemson or Butler Men’s Basketball. Call Peter at 6134263 or email pdm@duke.edu.

WWW.LEISURETOURS.COM/ 800-838-8203

Celebrity Spring Break brought to you by StudentCity.com! Book now and save up to $lOO on all International trips. Party like a rock star with MAXIM Magazine and Jackass’s Steve-O. Call 1-800for email details, 293-1445 sales@studentcity.com, or book online at www.studentcity.com.

Los Angeles alum flying 3000 miles to see Devils crush Heels. Need 2 tix. Please email at dhackney@san.lacity.org.

My parents have never been to Cameron! I need two tickets to any

home men’s basketball game. Call 949-2791 oremailmrj4@duke.edu.

SPRING BREAK! Panama City Beach Boardwalk Beach Resort $199 Includes 7 Nights Hotel, 6 Free Parties! 24 Hours Free Drinks! Cancun & Jamaica! From $459

Need tickets to Duke-Butler game

January msheetzdvm@aol.com.

972-262-

www.springbreaktravel.com 1.800.678.6386.

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If you are unable to attend one of theinformational meetings and are Mill interested in being a tour guide, please contact Kellie Pickett, Admissions Officer, at 684-0166 before Wednesday, January 22“ .

SCHOLARS PROGRAM

The Robertson Scholars

Collaboration Fund Funds are available to Duke and UNC-Chapel Hill faculty, staff and students. The Robertson Scholars Collaboration Fund has been instituted to support projects that have the potential to initiate or enhance collaboration between Duke and UNC-Chapel Hill. Faculty, staff and recognized student organizations on both campuses are eligible to apply. One-year grants of up to $5OOO will be awarded. For further information on the fund and the application process: visit http://www.robertsonscholars.org/collaboration/ or send e-mail to robertson@unc.edu requesting the call for proposals, or stop by the Robertson Scholars Office in 023 James M. Johnston Center for Undergraduate Excellence at Graham Memorial, UNC-Chapell Hill campus, or the Office of Undergraduate Scholars and Fellows (OUSF) in 103 West Duke Building, Duke East Campus or •

Plan ahead. Get ahead! Registration Begins March 261

TERM 1: May 15

TERM 2: June 30

-

-

June 26

August 9

www.learnmore.duke.edu/ SummerSession 684-2621

call 919-843-5494

All proposals are due on April 18, 2003. Classified Advertising works for you. And that’s no bull.


COMICS

The Chronicle

Boondocks/ Aaron McGruder

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The Chronicle What we did for our three-day weekend Pondered our humble existence: Brumm Read War and Peace... twice; Malavika Signed up to watchdog for The Chronicle; Kenny Avoided shootouts and police chases: Paul Realigned the dominant paradigm: Jane, Jessica Bought a car from the Toyota of Durham man: Brian Invaded another country: Charlie, Karen, Ami Heard Lani Guinier: Kevin, Robert, Jeff, Jane, Andy Missed Roily’s toothy grin; Roily

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Account Representatives: ...Monica Franklin, Dawn Hall, Account Assistants: Jonathan Chiu, Kristin Jackson Sales Representatives: Melissa Eckerman, Katherine Farrell, Johannah Rogers, Ben Silver, Sim Stafford Sales Coordinator: David Chen Administrative Coordinator: Brooke Dohmen National Coordinator Chris Graber Creative Services Rachel Claremon, Charlotte Dauphin, Laura Durity, Andrew Fazekas, Lauren Gregory, Megan Harris, Deborah Holt Business Assistants: Chris Reilly, Ashley Rudisill, Melanie Shaw Classifieds Coordinator: Sallyann Bergh Classifieds Representative: Emily Weiss

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

Academic TUESDAY, JANUARY 21 Lecture: 4pm. Lecture by U of Penn Prof. Alan Charles Kors. ‘The Betrayal of Liberty and Dignity on America’s Campuses.” Weston-Leßarre Auditorium, 139 Social Sciences Building.

THURSDAY, JANUARY 23 Population Biology Seminar: 7pm. Matthew Hahn, Duke University. 140 Biological Sciences.

FRIDAY, JANUARY 24 UPEcology Seminar: 12;45pm. Susan Alberts, Duke University. “Life in a constantly changing environment: baboon ecology in a tropical savannah.” A247-LSRC. Lecture Series with Fred Maus: 4pm. Three Songs by R.E.M. 101 Biddle Music Bldg; Duke University East Campus.

Religious TUESDAY, JANUARY 21 TAIZE Prayer: s:lspm, Tuesdays. Memorial Chapel.

WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 22 Presbyterian/UCC Ministry Bible Study: 12:15Ipm, Wednesdays. Bring your lunch and Bible. Chapel Basement, Room 036.

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THURSDAY, JANUARY 24 Presbyterian/UCC Campus Ministry Drop-in Lunch: 12-1 pm, Thursdays. Chapel Basement Kitchen. Wesley Fellowship Eucharist: 7:3opm, Thursdays. Wesley Office Chapel Basement. Christian Fellowship Weekly Gathering: 7;3opm, Thursdays. Duke Chapel Basement. Study the Bible and enjoy fellowship with Intercultural

friends from cultures worldwide. More info: www.duke.edu/web/icf/, contact: dsw9@duke.edu.

Social Programming and Meetings TUESDAY, JANUARY 21 Musical Performance: 12-1 pm. Commemorating Dr. King. Duke North Cafeteria. American Red Cross Blood Drive: 12:30-5:30pm. Duke University Bryan Center. For More Information, please contact the Central North Carolina Chapter of the American Red Cross, at 489-6541.

Speaker: Bpm. Come hear Muslim convert Imam Siraj Wahaj talk about his Journey to Islam. Q/A to follow. Reynolds Theater.

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Hoof ‘n’ Horn Presents: Bpm. Little Shop of Horrors! A rock musical comedy. Get your tickets at in the top level of the Bryan Center, on the BC Walkway starling January 9th, or at the Box Office Website: ww.tickets.duke.edu Questions about the show, contact producer Ethan Brown; edb@duke.edu. Sheafer Lab Theater, Bryan Center, Duke University.

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WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 22 Musical Performance: 12-1 pm. Commemorating Dr. King. Duke South Food Court. American Red Cross Blood Drive: 12:30-5:30pm. Duke University Bryan Center. For More Information, please contact the Central North Carolina Chapter of the American Red Cross, at 489-6541.

Screening: 7:3opm. Watch the screening of the PBS documentary “Islam: Empire of Faith” Free Pizza. Social Sci 139. Screen/Society-Cine-East: Bpm. “Red Dust” (dir. Yim Ho, 1990, 94 min, Hong Kong/Taiwan, Cantonese with English subtitles, Color, 35mm). Griffith Film Theater. In 1938, an impassioned Chinese novelist, her lover, and her best friend maintain their relationships amidst the political and emotional fallout from the Sino-Japanese war. Brigitte Lin plays writer Shen Shao Hua, and Maggie Cheung (In the Mood for Love) shines as her

Ongoing

Events

Exhibit: On display at FCJL until March 2003. “Horizons: an Aerial Photo Exhibit of Israel" Lent to FCJL by the Israeli Consulate in Atlanta, this collection of 28 breathtaking aerial photographs includes images of historic and religious sites in Jerusalem, Tel Aviv, Haifa, the Sea of Galilee and many other locations throughout the Holy Land. Two former Israeli Air Force pilots, who own the Albatross Aerial Photography Company, captured these dramatic scenes from a helicopter. The photos can be viewed free of charge in the downstairs dining area and upstairs hallways. 9am-Bpm, Monday-Friday and

9am-12pm, Sundays.

best friend and confidante.

THURSDAY, JANUARY 23 Performance: 12:20pm. Live at the Lampstand. Performances by Divinity School students, faculty and staff. Call 660-3400. Alumni Memorial Common Room, Divinity School.

Speaker: 7pm. Are women oppressed in Islam? Come hear speaker Sharifa Al-Khateeb share her experiences. Q/A to follow. Social Sci 139.

Weekly Vespers/Fellowship; Orthodox Christian Student Fellowship. Duke Chapel Basement. Father Edward Rummen, 919-782-7037, fatheredward@mindspring.com. Carillon Recital: Weekdays, 5 pm. A 15-minute performance by J. Samuel Hammond, University carillonneur. He also gives a recital before and after the Service of Worship each Sunday. Duke Chapel. West Campus. For information, call 684-2572.


The Chronicle

PAGE 18 � TUESDAY, JANUARY 21, 2003

The Chronicle A successful campaign With an effort that began in 1996, Duke’s capital campaign reached its overall $2 billion goal last week, capping a monumental achievement for the administration

The

Campaign for Duke reached its long-awaited $2 billion goal last week, bringing about the latest milestone in the ambitious capital campaign that began only a few very short

years ago

President Nan Keohane kicked off the quiet phase ofthe campaign in 1996, speculating privately that the campaign would bring in far less than it eventually did. By the time the administration was ready to go public with the campaign, its early success prompted the administration to raise the goal to $1.5 billion. Two years later, flush with cash in a campaign that had been even more successful in a charged economy, the University raised its goal again to $2 billion and raised many of the individual goals for each school and other key targets, such as athletics, libraries and financial aid. With more than 11 months left before the campaign ends in December, and some of those targets—such as Arts and Sciences and the libraries—not quite at their goals, it is nevertheless safe to declare that the campaign has been a sweeping success. All over campus, members of the University community can tell how the capital campaign has already made a difference—from the buildings that have been constructed to those that will soon be finished, to the rapidly growing faculties of many schools and the implementation of the strategic plan that will hopefully strengthen Duke’s sciences and engineering and make Duke more of an international player in higher education. No one deserves more praise for the campaign’s success than Keohane, whose tireless efforts have been the hallmark of her tenure as president. Virtually equalling her work is John Piva, senior vice president for alumni affairs and development, the architect of the campaign. Although Piva has remained firmly behind the scenes for the campaign, his planning has brought together every unit at Duke into a cohesive and marvelously efficient network. Impressively, none ofthe senior development officers have left the school in mid-campaign and Piva’s team has remained singularly focused throughout the entire process. In addition, Duke’s investment team has been incredible in its investment of the endowment—especially while the economy was still going strong —thus extending the power that Duke’s campaign funds have had. As the campaign pushes forward into its final thrust, it should work to fill the final buckets that it has not filled and even look toward raising funds for initiatives that have surfaced in recent years, such as renovations to West Campus student space and providing more fellowships for graduate students.

The Chronicle DAVE INGRAM, Editor KEVIN LEES, Managing 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 MIKE MILLER, Health & Science Editor BECKY YOUNG, Features Editor MEG LAWSON, Recess Editor GREG VEIS, Recess Editor MATT ATWOOD, TowerViewEditor JODI SAROWITZ, TowerView Managing Editor JOHN BUSH, Online Editor BRIAN MORRAY, Graphics Editor TYLER ROSEN, Sports Managing Editor AMI PATEL, Wire Editor ROBERT TAI, Sports Photography Editor MELISSA SOUCY, Sr. Assoc. City & State Editor KIRA ROSOFF, Wire Editor MOLLY JACOBS,Sr. Assoc. Features Editor MATT BRADLEY, Sr. Assoc. University 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 (he 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, slalT. administration or trustees. Unsigned editorials represent the majority

view of the editorial board. Columns, letters and cartoons represent the views of the authors. To reach the Editorial Office (newsroom) at 301 Flowers Building, call 684-2663 or fax 684-4696. 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. © 2003 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.

Old trustbusters now trust-trusters WASHINGTON You won’t find a movie nominated for an Oscar with the heroine fighting to expose the dominance of media conglomerates in the distribution of entertainment—crushed by the giant corporation that controls film financing, distribution and —

media criticism.

William Safire Guest Commentary You won’t find television magazine programs fearlessly exposing the broadcast lobby’s pressure on Congress and the courts to allow station owners to gobble up more stations and cross-own local newspapers, thereby to determine what information residents of a local market receive. Nor will you find many newspaper chains assigning reporters to reveal the effect of media giantism on local coverage or cover the publishers way induce coverage-hungry politicians to loosen antitrust restraints, Should we totally deregulate the public airwaves and permit the on dwindling of major media down to a precious few? Should we reduce choices

(The following figures were published by Gannett’s USA Today, which kind of blunts my point about big-media squeamishness, but its account of the FCC’s ruination of independent radio is damning.) Back in 1996, the two largest radio chains owned 115 stations; today, those two own more than 1,400. A handful of leading owners used to generate only a fifth of industry revenue; now these top five rake in 55 percent of all money spent on local radio. The number of station owners has plummeted by a third. Yesterday’s programming diversity on the public’s airwaves has degenerated to the Top 40, as today’s consolidating commodores borrowing public property say “the public interest be damned.” Granted, Rush Limbaugh’s views differ from those heard on liberal NPR, just as an indie movie producer can make money for a cookie-cutter conglomerate with a film going against the grain. But while political paranoids accuse each other of vast conspira-

My conservative eco-

nomic religion is founded the rock of competition, whichhas protected

available to cantankerous individualists who do

not want their information and entertainment

of all ideologies.

Does this make me

(gasp!) pro-regulation? Michael Powell, appointconed by Bush to be FCC chairman, likes to say “the market is my relito gion.” My conservative economic religion is founded on the rock of which—competition, since Teddy Roosevelt’s day—has protected small business and consumers against predatory pricing leading to market monopolization. One of the Democrats on the FCC, Michael Copps, is concerned that “we’re relying on institutions to cover this debate which have interests in the outcome of the debate.” That inherent conflict of interest is why I have long been banging my spoon against the highchair. Republicans in the House, intimidated by the powerful broadcast lobby, don’t admit that some regulation can be pro-business; neither does the D.C. Court, of Appeals, which wants further “granulating of evidence” that endless merging harms competition. In the Senate, Kay Bailey Hutchison, RTexas, grasps this. Perhaps Commerce Chairman John McCain will see T.R.’s trustbusting light and start heavy granulating in hearings—before merger mania afflicts TV and film the way it is debilitating local radio.

small business and sumers against predatory pricing leading market monopolization*

limited by increasingly massive mass media? “Luddite nonsense,” answer many merging movie mogul and media magnates, as they point to the seemingly fierce competition from the Internet and the proliferation of cable channels. Tell that to the purchasers of political advertising; The big bucks go into broadcast TV, with its unmatchable cost per thousand viewers. And stop to examine the highly hyped “competition” that consolidating media profess to fear: The leading 20 Internet sites and biggest cable channels are already owned by the expansive likes of GENBC, Disney, Fox, Gannett, AOL Time Warner, Hearst, Microsoft, Cox, Dow Jones, The Washington Post and The New York Times. (Is there anyone I haven’t offended?)

Ah, counter the trust-trusters, but most people want the conglomerates they trust to provide the content they watch and read. As for diversity—don’t 16,000 local radio stations provide much of the vaunted diversity of views and tastes that Americans want? Take a listen to what’s happened to local radio in one short wave of deregulation: The great cacophony of different sounds and voices is being amalgamated and homogenized.

On

cies, the truth is that media mergers have narrowed the range of information and entertainment available to people

William Safire’s column is syndicated through the New York Times News Service.

the record

We showed no confidence, no togetherness and no enthusiasm at all. Junior point guard Chris Duhon, criticizing his team’s performance after its recent humiliating loss to Maryland (see story SportSWiap page five).

Letters

Policy

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

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


Commentary

The Chronicle

Let’s forget for a moment the rhetoric coming from North Korea. All that talk about belligerent American imperialism and thinly veiled threats to turn its southern neighbor into a radioactive wasteland are not very helpful for constructive diplomacy, but they are also irrelevant. In the case of the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea—which is, incidentally, neither demoiPWIIk cratic nor a republic 1.only deeds matter, not words. What the DPRK % has been doing since last fall is illegal and inapPavel propriate, but the United States can offer a Molchanov straightforward solution z~r. Poll lcsand to the ongoing nuclear Other Means standoff. All Washington needs to do now is, quite simply, offer —

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Pyongyang a bribe. Some will label this appeasement. Some will call it negotiating under duress. And some will point out that Kim Jong-11 and his cronies have proven themselves untrustworthy. Of these arguments, the third is the most pertinent. There is no denying that the DPRK violated the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty, abrogated the 1994 Agreed Framework accord with the United States and defied the will of UN. nuclear inspectors. When Iraq committed only one of these offenses, it was threatened with “serious consequences” by Washington and the Security Council. The Bush administration has therefore been accused of a double standard for threatening war on Iraq but not the DPRK when both are blatantly in breach of international law. But in fact, the administration has rightly recognized that whereas Baghdad responds only to a stick, Pyongyang can be controlled by means of a carrot. It worked for eight years after 1994, and if the United States offers the right carrot this time, North Korea will be off the geopolitical radar screen for the foreseeable future.

TUESDAY. JANUARY 21, 2003 �PAGE 19

Let’s make a deal Unlike Saddam, Kim has no serious aspirations to regional hegemony. Stuck between most powerful country and one of America’s closest allies, even he knows that this would not be a feasible objective. Like any dictator, Kim wants to remain in power, for which he needs the help of the world’s fourth biggest military. The problem is that a chronically mismanaged economy has led to certain, shall we say, budgetary constraints for the DPRK defense establishment. In what bears some resemblance to the “more bang for the buck” theory of Eisenhower, current DPRK policy requires a nuclear deterrent to offset a degraded ability to wage conventional war. The key point here is that the only real purpose of such an arsenal would be to prevent a U.S. invasion. It’s not that the United States would want to invade in the first place, but Kim’s paranoia demands this extra bit of insurance. Of course, Washington is never excited about new members forcing their way into the exclusive nuclear club, particularly those that spout the rhetoric of Marx as their only justification for staying in power. In the case of the DPRK, there is the additional risk of a nuclear arms race on the Korean peninsula, not to mention the close proximity of North Korean ballistic missiles to Japan and the U.S. Pacific Fleet. Keeping the DPRK’s nuclear arms program from coming to fruition, therefore, is a sensible goal of this administration, much like the last one. President George W. Bush’s only miscalculation in handling this matter is his refusal to offer tangible concessions to Pyongyang. What might those concessions be? First of all, no one is seriously contemplating a US.-withdrawal from South Korea, not even Kim. A non-aggression pact would be a good start, along with a resumption of fuel oil shipments to bolster the DPRK’s energy-starved economy. These measures are neither expensive nor dangerous for U.S. interests in East Asia. On the other

hand, they represent a show of good faith and—here goes Kim’s paranoia again—reassure the Communist regime that it has nothing to fear from the United States, as long as it behaves itself. I’m not suggesting that we build our foreign policy around mollifying fears of the world’s tyrants, but if Kim really wants a peace treaty, he can have it. The administration has already declared its intention to deal with this matter peacefully, so a formal pact would be entirely consistent with current policy. The idea of signing another solemn agreement with a man who has broken the last one may seem distasteful, but it is far preferable to the alternative of continued nuclear tensions—or worse—in Korea. Such a peace treaty would also facilitate a final settlement of the Korean War, something our allies in the region have sought for decades.Both Tokyo and the new government in Seoul want nothing more than a quiet end to this whole affair—the quintessential Nixonian “peace with honor.” For Kim, such an outcome would also be a win-win proposition. He can avoid the

expense of building and maintaining an arsenal of nukes while winning invaluable propaganda points for respecting the will of the United Nations. The latter will be a necessity if he expects financial aid from his wealthy neighbors to rebuild his country’s decrepit infrastructure. The Bush administration has already announced that it is willing to enter into a dialogue with the DPRK on the nuclear issue. All it needs to do now is take the next step and declare that it would be amenable to some negotiated accommodation. There is much that Washington can offer Pyongyang, but it would also get something that is just as valuable in return. Talk, after all, is cheap. A major war on the Korean peninsula, on the other hand, would not be. Quite simply, pragmatism dictates that offering a small carrot is sometimes more effective than waving a big stick. In this case, there is certainly no shame in compromise. Pavel Molchanov is a Trinity senior. His column appears every other Tuesday.

Sound and silence Last November, the night before driving back to that sometimes, contrary to popular belief, things Duke after Thanksgiving break, my phone rang don’t happen for a reason but just occur. Look at the Planning to leave by five the next four Yale students killed by an errant tractor trailer morning, I snapped when I answered last week—like Maggie, these were smart kids with it and tersely asked whoever it was to bright futures, cut out oflife for no real reason. When please call me back in the morning; Fd I look at statistics regarding automobile death and have plenty of time to chat on the especially automobile death involving alcohol, I find road. I didn’t realize from the caller’s it difficult to believe that everyone I know hasn’t died in a car. voice that what she had to tell me couldn’t wait—our friend Maggie had Maybe if a butterfly had flapped its wings in the been hit by a drunk driver and was in Amazon—if the weather had been clearer, if the other Meghan a coma. She asked me to think of car had lingered at a rest stop—things could have been Valerio Maggie and shoot her some uplifting different. I’ve accepted that it didn’t—in Alice Sebold’s The F Word e-mails in the morning, for her to read “The Lovely Bones,” an “intake counselor” in heaven tells her newest charge to let go of the what-ifs with a when she woke up As most here know, she never did. Her friends at curt “get over it,” and I consider it sound advice. Duke and at the Marine Lab, where she’d been studyPerhaps what I’ve realized most is that this sort of ing, knew that if anyone could have survived such a thing happens all the time. massive trauma it would have been her, with her level I’ve accepted Maggie’s death. I haven’t accepted the offitness and positivity of spirit, and we convinced ourdriver who killed her. I don’tknow his name, where he lives, what he looks selves that the karma she’d built over the years could save her. Maggie lasted through the end of classes, but like, or even, come to think of it, that he’s a he. I do on the morning after Durham’s ice storm, when most of know that the strength of my hatred is probably a disWest was having an impromptu winter carnival on the honor to his victim, who was so willing to look at people’s strengths. So over break, in an attempt to follow quad, she passed away. A bit over a month later, with remembrances printthe example Maggie left behind, I tried to stop hating ed in this paper and memorials at Beaufort and the him. At home in my living room, when things would Chapel over and done, I’m left with her e-mail in my wind down and I was left with enough quiet to medionline addressbook and memories enough, but I’m also tate on death, I started doing research. His name, the left with something a bit less tangible and much less specific kind of car he drove, what he’s been charged with. They tell us that the Internet is a scary place, the fuzzy. I’m left with anger. It’s an anger that I can’t direct or properly way you can find things out, and I wanted very much describe. It’s not because I don’t know why I have it for it to be true. I didn’tknow why I exactly wanted the or because I’ve pent up my grief and refuse to share knowledge. I might be from New Jersey, but I don’t my feelings, or because I don’t understand or accept have any mobsters in my pocket that I could send to

pick him off—l just didn’t want him to be anonymous, to have a “white male, driving a pick-up” definition to hide behind. I didn’t want to run into him someday and not know what he’d done. Did my determined flipping through webpages mark some sort of obsession, an unhealthy desire to immerse myself in morbid information? I don’t think so. I began looking so that I could let go, but my quest makes me question our views on protection and privacy, and how the way we use them reflects our values. Why, for instance, do we keep the names of sexual assault victims under such wraps? We consider sexual assault an ultimate invasion of privacy and don’t want to display the victim’s invasion further; this I understand. There’s also the depressing truth that disclosure of the victim’s identity puts her or him at more risk. But by encouraging that sort of silence, we perpetuate the idea that sexual assault victims need to carry a burden of shame, because silence, to me, connotes guilt, or at least something to hide. We might have the Fifth Amendment to protect us, but anyone who takes it all but shouts their criminal complicity from the eaves. We’re about to go to war over Saddam’s silence about his supposed warheads. This is a country that values openness to the extreme. In away I appreciate the silence that surrounds that sloppy-drunk driver, because it tells us that he isn’t worth dealing with outside of his drunk-driver label. I’m beginning to realize that I don’t want to know his name or whether he has kids or if he takes good care of his dog. I don’t really want him to be human. And as long as I keep him shrouded, he’s not. Meghan Valerio is a Trinity junior and arts editor Recess. Her column appears every third Tuesday.

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PAGE 20 �

TUESDAY, JANUARY 21,

The Chronicle

2003

The Blind Boys of Alabama with harmonica legend, Charlie Musselwhite

■sac

co

Little Shop of Horrors

Legendary gospel singers, THE FIVE BLIND BOYS OF ALABAMA with the group’s leader, CLARENCE FOUNTAIN, perform a retrospective of gospel and spiritual music, including the foot-stomping, hand-clapping versions of old favorites and rare gems that are sure to move the spirit. For this concert, they will be joined by blues-harp (harmonica) master, CHARLIE MUSSELWHITE. January 24, 8 pm, Baldwin Auditorium, East Campus, $22 General Seating; $l2 Students.

HOOF ‘N’ HORN presents an

offbeat

musical about a meek florist, a mysterious plant in his shop, and the girl he loves. January 23-25 at 8 pm, 25 at 2:30 pm & 26 at 2 pm, Sheafer Theater, Bryan Center, $9 General Seating; $7 Students/Sr. Citizens; $6 Groups

PERFORMING ARTS

LECTURES/EXHIBITIONS

“RENT” RENT, the m and o handed I

is taking all major ng the 1996 Tony Award as well as the Pulitzer Prize, :ures the heart and spirit of a nation. 24, 8 pm, Page Auditorium. uary Mg

,

or' i|

tap!

The Tokyo String Quartet This distinguished ensemble makes annual visits to Duke’s Chamber Arts Society series. They are in high demand throughout North America and Europe and continue to push the envelope with their strict standards of musicianship. Program: Haydn: String Quartet in F Minor, Op. 20. No. 5; Joan Tower: String Quartet No. 2 “In Memory Smetana: String Quartet in E minor, “From My Life ”. January 25, 8 pm, Reynolds Theater, Bryan Center, $25 General Seating; $l2 Students. (Limited Seating Available)

ARTS EVENTS ON CAMPUS January 21-29, 2003 ON TAP! is coordinated by the Duke University Institute of the Arts in cooperation with participating campus arts departments and programs. For more information about performing arts events, call the Duke University Box Office, 684-4444 or view online at tickets.duke.edu. To inquire about this ad call 660-3356

New works by graduate student composers in the Department of Music. January 25, 8 pm, Nelson Music Room, East Duke Building, Free.

MLK EVENTS AT DUKE For more information, visit calendar.duke.edu. January 21-22 Instrumental Music. Noon, Duke North Cafeteria. January 22 MLK Commemoration: Conversation on Health Disparities. Featuring RODNEY G. HOOD, M.D., past president of the National Medical Association. 4 -6 pm, Medical Center Ampitheater. January 23 Medical Center Prayer Breakfast. 7:30 am, Room 2001, Duke North Hospital. January 23 MLK Commemoration: The Dream of Justice. Lecture by author DOROTHY ALLISON. 7 pm, Richard White Auditorium, East Campus. January 25 MLK Commemoration: Toni Morrison Discussion. African and AfricanAmerican Studies professor WAHNEEMA LUBIANO will discuss with teachers writer Toni Morrison and her novel “Beloved. 9:30 am 2:30 pm, John Hope Franklin Center. ”

-

Focusing on the cultural implications and artistic style of the drawings and painting of Pedro Figari. Thru Feb. 2, Duke University Museum of Art

Lecture: “Three Songs by R.E.M.” FRED MAUS, University of Virginia. Jan. 24, 4 pm, 101 Biddle Music Building, Free

For additions or changes, visit Duke’s Online Calendar calendar.duke.edu

Note: Students must show Duke I.D. for free admission to events.

duke arts youtwuurituito txperitHCb the- &KtrMrdinajry

Graduate Composers Concert

“Pedro Figari (18611938): Lines of Uruguayan Life, A Student Curated Exhibition.”

FILMS ON EAST Freewater presents

&

WEST

...

& 9:30 pm unless otherwise indicated, Griffith Film Theater, $5 Gen; $4 Employees January 24 Fast Runner (7 &10 pm) *Students Free

7

January 25 My Big Fat Greek Wedding (7 &10 pm) January 26 My Big Fat Greek Wedding (8 pm) January 28 Heavenly Creatures Screen Society presents

...

8 pm, Richard White Auditorium unless otherwise indicated, Free.

January 22

Red Dust.” Part of the East Asian Film Series.

TI

/l

Considerations From

Different Perspectives. Times, and Places

“Afghanistan: 1980-2002:An Exhibition of Photographs by Edward Grazda.” Thru Jan. 31, John Hope Franklin Center,

“What’s Left.” New Sculptures Out of the Heart of the Earth by Aaron Lee Benson.

(Griffith Film Theater)

January 26 “My Man Done Me Wrong” Part of the Southern Circuit series. Filmmaker will be present. January 27 Black Robe” Part of the North American Indian Film Series January 29 “The Isle “

Thru Feb. 8, Louise Jones Brown Gallery, Bryan Center.

Part of the East Asian Film Series (Griffith Film Theater)

Films at CDS

...

7 pm. Center for Documentary Studies, Free.

January 23 “Brilliant Fever: W. Eugene Smith and Pittsburgh” and “One Shot: The Life and Work of Teenie Harris.” Presented by director Kenneth Love. In conjunction with the exhibition “Dream Street: W. Eugene Smith’s Pittsburgh Project.”

“Dream Street: W. Eugene Smith’s Pittsburgh Project.” With the accompanying exhibition, “Our Streets: Photographic Portraits of an Evolving Triangle. ”

Thru March 30, Juantia Kreps Gallery, Center for Documentary Studies.


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