High 48, Low 26 www.chroivcle.duke.edu No.
9f
1
1
m
Last-Second
1
The Chronicle
Mostly Sunny
Vol.
I
f
h 3,2003
Ma
Monday,
Luck
The men’s basketball team lost to St. John’s
on
a
last-second free throw in Madison See
110
Garden.
Square
Sportswrap
page 4
THE INDEPENDENT DAILY AT DUKE UNIVERSITY
Keohane to step down in 2004 DAVE INGRAM
By
The Chronicle
After almost
10
of
years
leading
still-young University through formative
most
this weekend her
down from the
step
to
President Nan
stages,
Keohane announced
plans
a
of its
one
University’s
in June 2004.
top post
Keohane said she had been considerthe
ing
after
since
move
of
Trustees
before
the decision
She
personally
announcing
publicly
yesterday.
“We have in
col-
of the
December.
waited to tell the full Board
Saturday
and
leadership
in
and
summer,
friends
informed the
leagues, Board
last
with
speaking
excellent strategic plan
an
place. Our
will
Campaign for Duke
conclude in December. Our
successfully
administrative
team couldn’t be better.
And so,” Keohane said, “I think the time is right for Duke to
and for
to
me
into the next
move
stage of its history with
leadership,
new
to the next
move on
stage
of my life.” Joined
Sunday
afternoon
Chair Harold “Spike” Yoh for
conference that had been
press
in
organized
yet clandestinely
Board
by
45-minute
a
hastily
the
Trinity Room, Keohane expressed sire to return to
PRESIDENT NAN KEOHANE, with Board of Trustees Chair Harold “Spike” Yoh dential
post by
June 2004. She will have served
as
the head of the
on
her
right,
Sunday
announces
her
to
plans
University
de-
James B. Duke
litical science—will take
a
By
of po-
professor
sab-
one-year
said she'has not
eighth president
s
for her sabbatical,
yet established plans
would be
only that she
from the
away
University. She expressed intentions
to
seeks
and I both enjoy it
science
political
field,
must be at the
be
an
an
excellent
of the
one
in the
departments
ed
16-
to
on
KEVIN LEES
18-member
Although ly
the
snow
out of commission
kept
the Board ofTrustees most-
during
its last
meeting
full plate
of
retreat
proposals a
venue
power
at its
meeting
over
in Winston-Salem
“Then it’s off to the
work
Board,
which
an
summer
ty
Management the
chaired
Company.
2
bills
characteristics
of the
of
a
film school of minus
$33,500
iff
Pratt School Trinity College and the
weigh
in
enda
calling
on
two
$27,844
to
will
increase
$29,345. The total
ever, will be
by
5.4
of
niCHDLDS SCHOOL Of T«E
W
in
y so
the DSG
crease
5.9%
cost to attend
Duke,
$37,555, including
room
Incidp illblUC
The
president’s
on
of
$ll
requesting
an
in-
for its per semester
fee portion.
92
though,
33
percent
hiccups and runoffs, roughly
student body have centage of the
4.0%
that per-
participated
in the
$29,34-5
5.4%
See REFERENDA
6*
on
paged
page 9
announcement to
|
rumor
5.0%
and board.
her future years Qf specu ation about the
an
per semester
portion of the fee.
tween election
1
/ S
executive elections.
minus iioo pratt See TUITION
./
the
beIn past years, of the student body needs to vote.
from how-
/V
For either referendum to pass,
$31,194
also
4.7%
tnvißonmEni m earth scats
SCHOOL Of (OEOICint
in
increases
One referendum proposes
increase of $8.50
_
DD
will
they
student activities fee.
□.9%
en-
Engi-
percent
separate
for
Tuesday,
the DSG and the Duke Univer-
6-9%
fM
-
,
neering. Tuition
page 11
refer-
sity Union’s components of
cost of tuition, fees,
undergraduates
elections
executive
4.2%
—
rolled in
on
MOLLY NICHOLSON
By
to President Nan
'
for
stopwhat
to
activity fee hikes
ment □
component.
and board by 5 percent
as
we
qualities
added,
of speculating
See COMMITTEE
The Union is
room
and
also
11
Trustees increased
to what
as
are,” Steel
position
short
ping
of
people
lots
think the
2003-2004
planned
after two years of im-
the entire
meetings
When students vote in the Duke Student Govern-
the plan’s fiplementation and considered the future of nancial
or
Students to decide
increase
the
2004
February
opinion of
selected
addition to the Washington Duke
Inn, reviewed the strategic plan
for further consideration.
lot of
a
Steel
:hat
forced the Board to
a successor
and
the chair of the
committee
top
Trustees at its
and into the fall,”
said Steel, who is also
also raised Keohane, who will step down in June 2004,
tuition, approved
the
one
present
“The first step is to really invite the
to do
the week-
announced the formation
search committee to find
over
races
to
candidates to the Board of
and
Universiboard of directors of the Duke
presidential
a
neighboring Greensboro. The
Duke
the
Morton
The Chronicle
in the Trustees’
outage
of
several
Thruston
presidential search
expected
committee is
of
possibly
President
three years ago. The
Hi lEREHSES APPROVED ffl 1 ffliO OF Klffi
in Decem-
ber, the rain did not stop the Board from considering
end—even if
members
other
also creat-
Paying
The Chronicle
comprised
be
will
DUMAC
the
Durham community—by May.
Trustees approve tuition By
hopes
committee,
convene
students, non-academic employees
Board of Trustees Vice Chair Robert
page 11
to
top
search committee. See KEOHANE
search
ad-
internationally
30,2004, the University
a
the
and Trustees, faculty members,
renowned reputation
June
he
group
President Nan Keohane will step down
Keo-
here,”
said
—which
university
With the announcement Sunday that
hane said. “We have tenure in best
her
or
ministrator and have
return to Duke afterward.
“Bob
president;
new
of his
and
research
Wanted: Top-10
will chair
Steel
ALEX GARINGER The Chronicle
batical after she steps down. The Univer-
sity
presi-
s successor
T;
She said she and her husband—Robert
Keohane,
down from her
step
for 11 years
Old
a
and research.
teaching
ANTHONY CROSS/THE CHRONICLE
mill. See page 3
step
down
follows
circulating through
Candidates for DSG
president
dent discuss the issue of ernment. See page 3
and executive
restructuring
vice
presi-
the student gov-
Laura Whitehorn will
Hope Franklin
Center
speak today
at 4
p.m. in
the John
from studespite drawing scrutiny
dent groups and the national media. See page 4
PAGE 2
flip) •
3,
World & Nation
2003
NEWS BRIEFS
Pentagon restricts ‘non-lethal weapons’
The Pentagon is lethal
drafting such
weapons,”
concerned violates
•
MARCH
�MONDAY,
a
rules for the
as
tear gas, in
such weapons
using
as
a
of “non-
use
Iraq. They
on
resign
Kuwait, Bahrain support U.A.E. resolution; Iraq calls the Emirates
‘tool of Israel’
are
By
combat tool
ings,
a
Revolutionary
for
more
than 100 bomb-
war,
including four Americans—begins today in Greece.
•
20 civilians killed
in
while Iraq
a
helicopter gunships
attacked
Bin-Houye,
20 civilians and
killing
The CEO
Ward, resigned
hope
Beethoven’s
lost concerto
next
posi-
in
anticipation
6.09
US.
[
of
The
cannot interfere
they
Saudi Arabia,
to
Iraq
press
Iraq
military
was
action,
is
acceptance of the is
A1
Zayed
information
the
Nahyan,
told
minister,
The Emirates
“is
proposal
the only
Arab way out to protect Iraq and spare
in
its
people
and
threats”
of
quoted
the
the whole
war,
to
the
a
tion to
a
Eyup Fatsa, deputy head
Press
liamentary
member of Turkey’s gov-
top
country
a
quick
to
war
“Trust
the main thing
Turkey
to
new
a
open
vote
on
letting
northern front war
after
agency
king,
Sheik
Khalifa,
as
saying.
Turkey’s
in the
troops
planners
parliament
was
in disarray, torn between
popular opposi-
and fears of possible lasting damage to the histies with
said
“The decision is the U.S.-Turkish
Turkey
and
is
in
Huseyin Bagci, professor of Internation1
V,
good
Middle Flnct
for
Turkeys
TWbnical
democracy,
University. 'ut
Dad
rox
strategic relationship.”
governing party’s
Saturday
in
a
possible
rejected
Justice
placed
on
quick
par-
revote
war
U.S.
against neighborthe
party’s
over-
a
and
the
and
seriously jeop-
northern front against Iraq, war
Development
Party had
legislators defected, raising the possibility of disunity
aud
political instability in
as
the United States prepares for
neighboring Iraq.
to
study abroad
this summer?
for the June exam!
Durham Cla
to
undergraduates
submit the
foliowing
Duke-approved
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trademark of the Law
School
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Council
also
line, with leaders pressing legis-
362
Planning
Last chance to prepare
a
strategy,
lators to vote for the motion. But almost 100 of the party’s
a war
Duke
a
combat
parliament.
crucial part of the American
its prestige
no
failed to approve
despite
The decision stunned Washington
The ruling
United States
for
move was
ardizes U.S. planning for
Washington.
between the
of the
motion to allow 62,000
country
ing Iraq. The
doubtful
there would be
said
group,
government-backed
revolt in its ranks Saturday, the Islamic-rooted
torically close
at 1,337.52
good mind;
A
access
days.
After
Rene Descartes
a
the
region
Emirati
Bahraini
Hamad bin Isa A1
whelming majority
■•
*LSAT is
re-
war,” Sheik
to
led by Egypt and
want
Sunday that
The Associated Press,
domestic affairs.
Several nations,
a
Emirates
however, have rejected Hussein
support for
to leave
which maining option, Abdullah bin
pressuring
Syria,
war.
way to avert
by the U.A.E.
fellow Gulf nations. Other
quit, saying
against Iraq—a second harsh blow to U.S.
Up 13.58
J
the
use
troops
breakdown,”
it well."
the
backing
sought
staunch
by
“Rejecting these ideas put forward
refused to
Arab nation for
an
HELICKE
erning party Sunday rejected
MARKETS
4
at 7,891.08
use
by
Emirates
idea
Iraq’s
possi-
Associated
ISTANBUL, Turkey
NASDAQ
is to
in
the
from wire reports.
DOW
to have
the
military The
ruling party
enough
a
of Bahrain also is
By JAMES
pieced together
compiled
FINANCIAL
“It is not
troops
of
neighboring Iraq.
Beethoven’s lost
in two
Up
news
Gulf island
U.S.
year.
oboe concerto from scraps discovered in the 19605.
<T>
The
agency said.
of thousands of U.S.
territory
tiny
for the first time in 210 years.
Two Beethoven enthusiasts
News briefs
call
open
only
the
was
led
The Emirates insisted
U.S. threats of war.
de-
disarmament
bloc,
pressuring Saddam
Hussein to into exile. go
Kuwait has allowed the U.S. to de-
pertormed
symphony peformed
Saturday
concerto
to fill the
begin
tion before the Athens Games
A Netherlands
first
another
Ward took the post in
October 2000. USOC officials
•
the
Kuwait’s agency.
news
ble invasion of
Olympic committee, Lloyd
Saturday.
said he backs
with
mands;
divisions in the
Saturday
U.N.
comply
Iraq and reject any
how to deal with the
proposal, which
the
discuss
a
wants to express
proposal—first made
deep
Arab leaders
the
on
among its
its
of the U.S.
over
Arab nations,
ploytens
Olympic committee CEO resigns
Arab world
Cabinet also backed the measure, the
officials said rebel armies attacked first.
U.S.
scorn
an
the
Iraq crisis and
a
tool of Israel.
a
of the
Arab summit—further
highlighted
official Kuwaiti
injuring many others, said rebel leaders. Government
•
Sad-
call for Hussein to go, according to the
Ivory Coast
rebel-held Ivory Coast town,
it
king
The Bahrain
Emirates state Government
poured
Emirates, calling
at
Saturday
sup-
won
dam Hussein to quit power to avert
of armed robberies and 23 murders,
string
The Emirates’
Persian Gulf
for President
its call
the base
hosting
ally,
American sth Fleet.
Emirates
port Sunday from several
U.S.
key
Press
Emirates
The United Arab
trial
members of the November 17
FARUQI
DUBAI, United Arab
nations in
Organization —blamed
ANWAR
The Associated
The trial for Dimitris Koufodinas and 18 other
alleged
[OE
Gulf nations ask Saddam to
1997 chemical weapons treaty.
Greek terrorists go
The Chronii
9
The Chronicle MONDAY,
Keohane decision confirms The
Sunday
down
she
that
plans
2004 ended months—in
speculation regarding As
successful
a
academic
ed
to
Keohane sparked
her future.
regular
Keohane
said
until last
fall,
tle
more
an-
early
speculation
were
lit-
was
that
rumors
some
premature from
point of view,”
said. “I said
any
of them
the end of the
and that
of
the
was
she
[capital]
going
was
Keohane’s
the
to
1993
mean
month,
Massachusetts —as
quickly
won
arts
however, surviving major
in
as
battles
residen-
was
rumors
citing struc-
current
PRESIDENT NAN KEOHANE contemplates which she revealed plans for resuming her
a
question
career
as
a
during Sunday’s
press conference,
the
as
months after she revealed her decision to
At
that
point,
Keohane
however,
Harold “Spike” Yoh and the rest of the
ing
plans. Acknowledging during
Board of Trustees’ executive commit-
central
interview that
tee of her decision.
platform. Wang
her
Boston Globe called her But
a
front-runner.
in the middle of
Keohane,
a
billion-
dollar capital campaign, expressed ration
for
quick
was
her to
“I’m not
its search to a
by in
a
I
am
as
couple of things
our
replace
Neil a
quite intrigued
we
have
going
on
planning exercises.”
Even
as
recently
as
February
figures
had
many campus
her
approached
about
the
possibility of her stepping down, she said she had
no
career
plans
after The Cam-
ends Dec.
2003.
31,
time to
about
Keohane said
last
we
launch
that’s
one
a
leadership,”
new
month.
and how quickly I soon,
“But
move
search—all those
of those
things
I
how
on, when
things—-
really need
to think about. It’s conceivable it could be
last month—two
think
2004,
2005,
would be 2012.”
2006.
I
Yesterday, silence
don’t think
Keohane
regarding her
people
urday treat,
career
be
change
On
the to
an
annual
others to
Still, yond
student
many
goal
re-
moment,” and
the
imminent end
organization
Shaomeng
said he
hopes
to
imple-
restructuring
ticket system
a
the
is
Wang’s
creation
during
of
a
new
executive
the
making
board
efficient and increasing the orga-
nization’s overall financial and advis-
ing support for
signs—be-
of the
junior
and
“The
saw
as
spectrum, creat-
of
system
Jean-Baptiste’s
of
more
word.
people
issue
chancellor position—with the ultimate
leaders, alumni and
spread the
to
elections
Sunday morning began calling faculty members,
new
plan—including
a
the among
Board’s
“emotional
end of the
one
a
ment
to know. She told them Sat-
during the in
Chair
attributed
that the Trustees
wish first
“Once the campaign is over, it will be
Harvard
commitment to
also
a
career
paign for Duke
lot of people that I want to stay through the campaign.
ture
moving,” Keo-
August 2000,
beginning
and
discussion.
interested in
Rudenstein. “I made
ado-
institution
dispel such
hane said in was
current
The
away;
informed Trustee
the
seeing
to
had
already
on
largely irrelevant.
the Board of Trustees
leadership—Keotight-lipped about any fu-
stances
the subject ranged from supporting the
hane remained
might lure
m
candidate
Presidential
during
scholar and teacher.
that other universities involved in pres-
University,
last
source
idential searches,
particularly Harvard
to
government,
restructuring
flurry of
a
the
of inefficiencies and ineffectiveness.
ANTHONY CROSS/THE CHRONICLE
tial life and academic tenure. The result
plan
the ture
skeptics,
campus
such controversial issues
over
divided the
over
Joshua
change the student
risky hire. Keohane
a
many of her
over
each
the orga-
on
from
stems
proposed
saw
college
president
Jean-Baptiste’s
then-president of Wellesley College—-
small, all-female, liberal
government
President the
higher education, who
for
president have
which has
That issue, student
observers of
many
today, candidates
exec-
home
nization’s restructuring.
a
step down.” to
the
enter
thrown in their two cents
cam-
that Jan.
appointment
surprised
Duke and of
a
stretch
only firm thing
that to
campaigns
and executive vice
the other end. Softie scope at
people interpreted
presidency
utive
were
that I had said and meant. But that left
great deal
As Duke Student Government
time ago that I would
some
stay through
2004 I
MOLLY NICHOLSON
By
were
swirling around, and
1,
government should operate.
The Chronicle
lot
a
numer-
that
however,
Sunday,
sparked
for how student
proposals
ous
recently, for retirement.
such
has
Jean-Baptiste
that
rumors
than hot air.
“There
paign,
Current DSG President Joshua
fundraiser,
proven
other academic institution in her more
vary
restructuring
fact, years—of
she might leave the University—for
years, or,
PAGE 3
step
administrator, talent-
and
�
announce-
Duke’s eighth president in June
as
3,2003
DSG
on
Chronicle
President Nan Keohane’s ment
Stances
rumors
DAVE INGRAM
By
MARCH
more
from
cam-
student
executive]
organizations.
board
should
be
cohesive and not necessarily free
differing opinion,
but
free
from
it See SPECULATION
on
page 7
See RESTRUCTURING
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on
page 11
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PAGE
4 �
MONDAY,
The Chronicle
2003
3,
MARCH
From staff
reports
Whitehom to Laura
speak today
Whitehorn, targeted by
campus and national rorist after she
in
long-awaited
her
today.
As
Race, Teaching she
will
U.S.
appearance
of the
part
Gender”
on
cam-
“Teaching
speaker series,
HIV infection in
discuss
prison
will make
1985,
at
system
4
p.m.
in
the
and
January, national
criticized
associate
scheduled
invitation for her to lec-
from Dr. Becky
ture
commentators
Whitehorn’s
speech and the ing
campus
political
Thompson,
that,
in
addition
They noted
Whitehorn’s
to
volvement in the Capitol bombing, has
been
involved
in
as
week before
various
in-
she
violent,
left-wing organizations.
Now, point
potential fit
students
invasion
activities—-
of
Grenada,
citing
the
among
other events in American foreign
policy—although she has that others follow her
not advocated
example.
cision to
“While
inary
Tod
Laursen,
associate
in civil and environmental
studies
engineering
in the Pratt School of Engineering,
appointed the school’s
was
senior associate
dean for education last week. Pratt
Dean
Kristina
See BRIEFS
on
Johnson said
page 8
if
clear de-
a
wish
we
any,
studies in
feel that
we
our
we
are
formity
of the
current
simply
looking
well
things
for
traditional
gateway marks
and
for
the
doctoral canditransition from
“The
been
at
department—from
semester to
the
ent their dissertations. In the
signed
to
sciences,
measure
of knowledge critical
in
exam
can
the
the
you
prelim is
can
laboratory as
chemistry department is
failure of the
an
exam
check
uncommitted
serve
who
for students
their
to
semester
master’s the
a
student’s
unsure
of
case
exam
program instead,
Saper,
depending
everyone,”
graduate
texts,
sciences,
unstructured
the
quite
ar-
said Leslie
studies
in
as
a
by
most
month,
deans held roundtable
field to discuss
a
sciences
exam
could
is
ining
very
“In based
said.
by creating
in
own
a
propos-
research
gain
or
grant-writing and
exam-
the examination
accomplishment
on a
project and defending the validity and of the
importance
project.
should take ownership
The student
of the
project,”
MacPhail said. Robert Keohane,
in
James B. Duke pro-
director of graduate studies
and
political
science,
said
his
depart-
ment’s prelim is tailored to individuals and their interests. The
both
a
exam
consists of
written and oral section
two subfields within the
covering
department
how different See PRELIMS
bad
on
page 9
*
and
the
,
is
seeking
Gourmet Candidates must
Full Time and Part Time counter
shop
possess
help for
our
located inside DUMC North.
great
transportation,
is
research
the
EspressOasis®
a
valuable
specific research problems.
chemistry... on
the
especially,
smooth transi-
a
doctoral education that is al-
He added that
departments could combat the problem.
-
lab
seamless,” Siegel
fessor
dinners with many graduate studies directors
the
tion to
on
ministrators began targeting earlier this Last
“In
preliminary
experience
a
problem that Graduate School ad-
year.
the school. Never-
departments
the fol-
Attrition of students out of programs a
said
mock proposal—students
mathematics. “It is better for both the
is
of
design
department,
efforts to standard-
no
across
Siegel
by
failure,
pres-
de-
prelim
theless,
attrition,” he said.
content and
widely
vary
waver-
necessarily the prelimi-
causes
al—either for their
ized early on.”
is
that
field of
circumstances.
“The graduate program is
director of
decision
a
that choice [of withdraw-
Although the
or
complete
to
opt
department and the
duous and not for
reality
a
present
in the
or
as
are
students may retake the
lowing
exam
nary
results
exam
administered earlier in
program could
such
other considerations.
it’s not
ing], but
to
already
learn from each other.
serious consequences for
the
had
they
“Some students who have been
ize the
con-
prepared students. Because
in
on
there have been
possible improve-
student and the program if this is real-
by answering
about academic
often be
one
if
contemplating
based
students
some
ideal opportunity
an
program
prelims
sidering administering the exam earlier
humani-
exam
sure
right and shows
on
Siegel, dean ofthe Graduate School.
to
been
think about research,” said Lewis
MacPhail said
a
said
School,
ing might make check to make
a
leave
coursework,
third
the student’s breadth
in the field
questions
while
various
right before students
ties and social
the
different
assesses
given
in
the
committees consist-
head is screwed
your
research. Al-
administered
exam
has
graduate
many
to dissertation
typically
by
by
to take
student elects
study. Sometimes,
“the prelim,” is the
as
Leigh Deneef, associate dean of the Graduate
find the prelim
administer the test.
future,
prelim-
works
process.”
The exam, known students
times
chemistry.
ca-
ing of department professors, often with
of the
do to enhance the rigor and uni-
can
skills
professor
to bene-
departments
examination process
third year, the
and director of undergraduate
considering
the
measure
dissertation work. a
ment the
graduate
to
supervisory
exam,
institute,” said Richard MacPhail, di-
rector of
though
associate dean
all
curricu-
exam
what changes,
on
dates that
names
stu-
“We have not yet reached
classwork
Pratt School
graduate
Graduate School.
we
U.S.
in
pin-
are
to the
changes
to
try
high,
are
committees
lum
designed
whom the student has had
administrators
in most cases,
other
late
as
the start of their
when and where
Whitehom defends her motives in the
Capitol bombing and
When
doctoral dissertations. as
pacity for
prelim-
sometimes
examination,
one
visit-
professor of African and
African-American studies.
inary
dent attrition rates
conservatives
prelim
past, graduate school students
could mosey their ways into the
the
John Hope Franklin Center. In
In the
is
exams
earlier to reduce attrition
move
research grant proposal. Either way, the
The Chronicle
ter-
changing prelim
programs may
KATIE XIAO
By
many a
to doctoral
Gateway
convicted of bomb-
was
ing the U.S. Capitol
pus
figures
as
consider
Faculty
UNIVERSITY BRIEFS
customer service
and be
Call Brian at 919 681-5884
very
or
skills, have reliable
dependable.
stop by for details.
in
The Chronicle
MONDAY, MARCH 3,
Improved detection cited
in rise of
plagiarism
2003 �
PAGE
5
cases
KAREN HAUPTMAN
By
The Chronicle
It’s 11 p.m., and you’re just getting started search paper due tomorrow. You sit and
puter
search prepare to
tion and data that
com-
NEVER/RARELY
wouldn’t it be easier to just cut and paste paragraphs from websites
or
to download
even
But, University officials ber of
Board last
cial
esty
90
Instead,
conclusive
no
actually cheating
are
believe that
some
plagiarism
of which
percent
Internet, there remains students
although the
is
of
awareness
using better
are
that is growing
and
faculty,
greater
and
often, [or that] It’s
rism].
more
Scanlon,
shows
their peers
cases
it, [plagiarism]
people
are
are
factor of peo-
happening of
aware
[the increase]
[plagia-
solely
to
Rochester
the
at that
far
Self
Others
Self
12.3
16.5
37.3
8.0
50.4
88.8
32.0
8.1
39.9
3.1
28.0
89.7
43.0
5.4
39.8
4.9
17.1
hand in paper to
a
91.7
37.8
6.0
41.1
2.3
21.1
professors with
pares
can
students’
papers
the site.
on
each submitted paper against its out
a
At Duke, paper
indicating
suspect
must
who
cannot may
10
be
any it
runs
Wallace said roughly
to
compare
The site
com-
database and
the paper’s
degree of
Institute
students
more
submit
automatically submit
plagiarized.
nitin.com]
suspicious
papers
a
through figure
year,
to
on
use
with the
par
when the license
was
are
know sor
sive
at
didn’t
want
to
submit every student’s
the best
automatically
purchase
are
of professors’
use
paper.”
convinced that detection methresources.
you’re using it,” said Donald McCabe, Rutgers
in
University who about
some
change words
a
seen
a
dramatic increase in requests,”
profes-
conducted exten-
plagiarism. “It discourages
cases,
more
has
while
stu-
others
encouraging
while still plagiarizing. For
students, we’re much better off promoting
“We haven’t
[Tur-
that every faculty member would
away
experts
research
dents
a
integrity
of
believe
m
ing themselves. For
example, students copied
peers
often
or
very
said
from the
text
percent
of their
Internet without citation
but
frequently,
50.4
8
only
admitted
percent
that behavior themselves. “I
hope
doesn’t sors
belief
[the
cause
convinced
that’s the
that the Internet is
to
cheat, but clearly
Scanlon added that instances of cheating without
“The
it
of
ness
might
a
students
more
Internet
making
isn’t
r
t
lot easier for
1
r
might in-
cheaters,
but
i
it’s
people already in the busisaid.
“This
there
means
instances of plagiarism without
more
"S
f
cheating.
creating
doing it,” Scanlon
be
and
it easier.”
making
crease
profes-
cheaters,
are
I’m not convinced
case.
luring people
cheating]
are
said. “Some
convinced that all students
are
I’m not
it’s
students
more
hysteria,” Scanlon
a
more
doing it.”
people
Undergraduate plagiarism gained prominence national issue in 2001 when
the University of Virginia
148
were
as
physics students
n
a
at
suspected of cheating
i
their term papers.
on
Louis
the
Bloomfield,
taught the class and has giarism-detection plagiarism do
simply wrong
program,
the
was
“Students
developed in his
that what
his
they
are
aren’t
what
taught
is
doing
A
L?
J
2
__
_
_
_
is
plagiarism,”
plagiarism they really disapprove, but it is. It’s
tem—students can’t
a
ONCE YOU GET IT RIGHT, IT JUST SEEMS SO OBVIOUS.
something not all
can
failure of the academic sys-
distinguish between the
of academic research and
In
outright
cases.
recognize what
use
pla-
own
students
class,
Bloomfield said. “When students recognize as
who
professor
noted that while
problem
not realize
in most
Virginia
since
proper
plagiarism.”
order to better educate students about proper
methods of citation and
requires Writing
learning
use
of others’ research,
20 —which includes class
Duke
time spent
various research methods and methods of ci-
tation—of all first-year students. Freshman Lauren Deysher said her writing professor
incorporated the library’s
resources
and showed students where to
find
into the class
guidelines about
the proper methods of citation.
“Writing was
20 did
help us,” she said. “The professor
you didn’t there would be
consequences. It
careful about what you
In addition to
were
brain surgeon to
shouldn't
figure
out that
an
apartment should offer you convenience,
management. And that's good. Because brain surgeons
really think about apartments when they're cutting into people's brains.
improving efforts
made you NOW PRE-LEASING FOR
copying.” to educate the
munity about plagiarism, technology
com-
to catch cheaters
has similarly improved. If
a
professor finds
does not student’s
seem
phrase
on
a
an
see
or
Internet
if the
she
can
a
t2)
DURHAM P 919-419-0440 WWW.EXCHANGEAPTS.COM
search
phrase
or
the
simply type engine
appears
like
anywhere
the web.
Duke also has
18 AND OLDER CAN LEASE MANAGED BY UHG/ABBEY
to fit with the rest of the paper
into
5110 OLD CHAPEL HILL ROAD,
/-^THEr
SUMMER & FALL 2003
suspicious phrase—one that
writing style—he
google.com and else
a
privacy, and responsive
clear that you had to cite information, and if very
more
the
It doesn't take
license with Tumitin.com, to which
BRAND NEW APARTMENTS
to
lot of
than policing dishonesty.”
cheating than actually report cheat-
are
Others
“Tumitin.com helps to deter plagiarism if students
Instead,
Turnitin.com.
in
automatically
ods
We
papers.
Not all
professors requested the
year,
requests last
she said. “We don’t have professors just
the site.
submit
then
of Turnitin.com this number of
on
professors
they
professors Wallace,
report
to others in
similarity
a
submit
database of papers
a
purchased.
David Neumann and Patrick
by
professors
Technology,
a
among
more.”
[plagiarism] happening study
more
could be
unfair to attribute
A recent
cheat-
are
awareness
obviously
to refer
ple knowing where
students
more
being referred. [The increase]
more
Purchase
associate dean of students for a
without citation
paper to hand in
a
evidence that
prints
affairs. “There’s
students
Request
the
nationally.
ing,” said Kacie Wallace,
Others
Judi-
involved
professors’
awareness
“It’s very hard to say that
Self
75.5
more.
improving and that they
methods of detection—an
judicial
Copy paper
num-
involving academic dishon-
semester
26,
to
rose
that
say
text without citation
Copy
entire paper?
an
brought before the Undergraduate
cases
OFTEN/FREQUENTLY
SOMETIMES
the Internet for informa-
work into your paper. But
can
you
on a re-
down at the
J
PAGE 6 �
MONDAY,
MARCH
3,
The Chronicle
2003
Information Session Tuesday, March 4»
■■
las..
Sell
it.
Buy
it.
7:oopm Rent it.
MELLON UNDERGRADUATE AWARDS FOR SUMMER RESEARCH IN LATIN
Say
if..
AMERICA OR THE CARIBBEAN
Students will report back research
on
their
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Hire it. Find
summer
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opportunities and YOU will find out
more
PLACE:
about the 2003
2114
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Latin American and Caribbean
“DINNER
Place it!
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tor
Eds Classified
Studies
Advertising
PROVIDED**
Call 684-3811 for DEADLINE for 2003
Competition: March 24th
rates and information.
them For
an
application,
visit www.duke.edu/web/las/Fundina/underarad.html or
come
by
our
center.
frogs sent you.
Chronicle Community’s Daily
Newspaper
The Chronicle
MONDAY,
MARCH
3,
2003 �
PAGE 7
CRIME BRIEFS From
Projector taken An
vestigation of the parking
employee reported that between
and 6 p.m. Feb. 26, model
jector,
stole
someone
from
room
6 p.m. Feb. 24
$3,750 video
a
Infocus/LP755,
3WW03400142,
09 of New
pro-
number
serial
vehicle owned by
in
was
and 8
at Duke Forest
Road, Gate #26, and when he returned,
A student reported
$3,000
caused
damage
in
to
Whitfield had
someone
left
window,
a
Feb.
door
rear
air bag, the back of the driver’s seat and the top of the console. Further, well
as
papers,
a
as
$2OO computer bag key,
a
with cables and
Feb.
25,
someone
$2OO
a
attempted
bypass the lock, causing $2OO
door and
p.m.
damaged door.
in
damage
to the
lock set. The time of damage is
to the
entered
An
116 in the Old Chem-
room
at 314
window val-
a
Feb.
stolen
employee reported that between
25,
stole
someone
his
$2OO
3 and 8:29 p.m.
Motorola Star-tac
phone from the Children’s Health Center.
unknown.
Crime briefs
that between 4 and 4:45 p.m.
reported
Phone
to kick the door
fraudulently used
used her DukeCard number to fraudulently
someone
purchase
$3BB
worth
of
food
are
compiled from Duke University
lice Department reports. Anyone with
A student reported that between Jan. 13 and Feb. 28,
someone
parked
was
broke out
someone
ued at $250.
stolen.
were
Laptop swiped A student
that at 5:37
that between 11:30 p.m. Feb. 23
Feb. 24, his vehicle
a.m.
Anderson St. when
floor men’s restroom in reference to It appeared that in to
9:01
called to Randolph Dormitory’s third-
was
Duke Card
Feb.
damaged
shop employee reported
he
22,
door
and Armadillo Grill
Window broken
and
a.m.
on
Parizade, George’s Garage
stolen.
A lock
reported that between 7:30
23, he parked his vehicle
revealed that another
student had been broken into. A
a
Divinity.
damage caused to vehicle
A visitor
reports
lot
window valued at $250 had been broken out. Nothing
Bathroom
$3,000
staff
versity
Cafe
Cattleman’s,
at
those responsible for these can
Durham
or
contact Lt. Davis
CrimeStoppers
knowledge
Po-
about
other crimes at the UniTrimmer at 684-4713
or
at 683-1200.
istry Building and stole her $2,300 unprotected Macintosh
laptop
and
computer
$5O
a
two
tone
gray
notebook carrier.
Computer stolen An
fice in 3400 Duke
1,
someone
Hospital
charged related
North and stole his
to
black
and
breaking
vehicle break-in in the H
parking lot
>1 Devil of a Deal...
$2,000
nylon briefcase.
entering
At 4:35 p.m. Feb. 18, officers responded to a
Feb. 27
p.m.
entered his secured of-
Gateway laptop computer and $5O
Two
5
employee reported that between
and 4:50 p.m. March
a
at the
report
of
comer
of
lue Sweatshirt:
LaSalle Street and Erwin Road. When they arrived, officers found Jason Crews, 20, and Jonas West, 22,
ting
in
a
truck in the lot. Crews and West
officers for
by
questioning. Other officers searching
Crews
questioning
proached by a window
and
West, officers
witness who said he
on one
saw
searched Crews
$9
95
Long Sleeve T-shirt: 100% Combed Cotton
ue
ap-
eguiar $21
Crews break the
Crews
vehicle,
motor
sonal property and
paraphernalia.
a
95
On Sale for
$6
95
small
count of
one
West
aiding and abetting
injury
possession
charged
was
a
counts of
two
to
Short Sleeve T-shirt: 100% Combed
ue
arrest-
was
with two counts of breaking and
charged a
On Sale for
the
were
they found
pipe used for smoking marijuana.
tering
95
vehicle and reach inside.
When officers
ed and
tegular $34
detained
found two vehicles with broken windows.
parking lot While
were
80/20 Blend
sit-
en-
leguiar $15
95
On Sale for
Cotton
$4
95
per-
of drug
with two counts of
felony.
Crews and West could not be reached for comment,
Gold
Long Sleeve T-shirt: 100% Combed Cotton
Radio stolen An
Feb.
a.m.,
95
employee reported 21,
someone
cated in the East and stole
a
that between 7:30 and
entered
8:30
95 Regular $21
On Sale for
..
$6
unsecured office lo-
an
Campus Service/East Physical Plant,
Gold Short Sleeve T-shirt: 100% Combed Cotton
$BOO Motorola two-way portable radio with
key pad, model MTXB2SO.
95
Regular $15
95
On Sale for
$4
Vehicle entered Sometime between 4 and 7:39 a.m., into
student’s
a
$250 window his CD
vehicle parked
someone
301 Swift
at
broke
Ave. A
broken, and the $lOO face plate
was
player and
$lOO road side
a
taining miscellaneous
items
assistance kit
stolen. Further
were
to
con-
in-
Yellow Sweatshirt:
SPECULATION
80/20 Blend 95
Regular $34 paign—that Keohane was planning Building
comer
to leave her Allen
more
a
many
saw
in
political
science class next
community
Academic
status
95
it
All sizes in stock with limited
stepped down.
Council
last
quantities per size.
Offer good while supplies last
spring.
of
women
attempt
an
In
a
to
speech before the
Keohane herself
month,
at
before Duke’s first
and enact change
female president
pressed hope that the initiative’s findings
ex-
The
University WHEKE
SEAL
DUKE FANS
UNIVERSITY „
SHOE
EAST
would be-
CAMPUS
STORE
part of her legacy.
“I think the fact that I open that
free in
am
and made
topic
about
talking
been helpful
it,”
a woman
people
she said
Upper Level, Bryan
made it easier to
feel enthusiastic and
Sunday.
“I know it’s
Shop
with
us
Monday
-
24/7 via
Friday:
our
a
number of
women
undergraduates,
online
B;3oam
VISA, MasterCard,
to
-
Center
catalog
at:
•
684-2344
7;oflpm • Saturday:
American
East
or
do
a
faculty members
dean
it, maybe
or
I
department
can
do it
who look at the
chair and
too,’ and
I’m
B;3oam
-
Express, Discover, FLEX,
say,
Union
Building
s:oopm
Monday-Thursday;
IRIs,
B:3oam
Saturday VISA,
&
-
ll;(M)pm
Sunday:
MasterCard, American
684-3473
Wow, she ofDuke
Stores"
Intimity
•
Friday:
12noon
Express,
Cash, Personal
Departments
*
www.dukestores.duke.edu
presi-
pleased by that.”
Campus
www.shopdukestores.duke.
Cash, Personal {'.hecks
staff members,
can
$6
members, while laud-
the Women’s Initiative
start discussion
dent
On Sale for
difficult for her to shift gears. She already
Keohane’s evaluation of the
come
95 Regular $21
Emeri-
Brodie, taught during his tenure, but that
Moreover,
Duke,
Long Sleeve T-shirt: 100% Combed Cotton
scholarship before she retired “for good.” She
has plans to teach
ing
produce sig-
Sunday that her predecessor, President
tus Keith was
Yellow
desire to return to the
a
classroom and the library to teach and to
noted
$9
On Sale for
office.
She often communicated
nificant
95
-
B;3oam
-
8:00pm
Bpm
Discover,
FLEX.
Mils,
Checks
03-098
PAGE 8 �
MONDAY,
MARCH
The Chronicle
3,2003
Local entrepreneurs, alumni share CHRISTINA NG
By
“[Our faith]
The Chronicle
better—even
A lemonade stand in the
lawn-mowing
job
most children
summer or a
the farthest
may be in
get
starting their
children of
business, but the four Calvo have set
Cary, N.C.
ger dreams—a
own
their hearts
on
big-
lyn,
in
ranging
Mia and Ashto
12
and
passion
L.E.A.P. African American
Discussion
ship,
their
eight
with the participants
success
of Saturday’s Panel
from
age
shared
old,
years
recipe for
about
Black
History
Month Committee. In the
and
Achievement
Calvo
Prosperity—the
scribed
their faith
siblings
of their
the basis
as
de-
business,
P&J Sweet Treats. Started in
response
to their
help their
pastor’s
church become
challenge debt-free,
enough profits
company now reaps nate
also learned from this experience should
you
always
persevere
Although
cer,
the
part of the earnings
to
the
charity.
and
stay
in
a
25
approximately
passion and “Turn
make it into
a
into
ideas
and
do,
to
you
their
siblings
awarded
Southpoint gift certificate
an
my
for
in
succeeding
Hillary
of
president
Fowler,
was
event
time, but
Various
[speakers]
come.
invited
we
re-
said
entrepreneurs in
advising
the audience.
they
so
Other
on
their
speakers
they’re doing be-
the im-
highlighted
some
and team-
drew on their experi-
to advise the audience.
ences
“Qualities
can
be cultivated, but you
should have enough
yourself
with
Taylor
and surround
people who [have those,]” the
Sparks,
of Sparks
En-
Principal
& Associates.
from page 4
will
Laursen
to learn what
sense
don’t have
you
BRIEFS
develop
school-wide
a
strategy for recruiting graduate and students
dergraduate other Pratt master’s
and
faculty members
expand
to
to
and
offerings
degree
emphasis
Global Flows
Conference continues kick-off
original
documentary for last Global
Flows
Panhellenic
by
discussion of the film with Michael Cunningham,
a
on
the set of The Hours. The film
author of the book
on
was
which the movie
shown in Griffith Film Theater this
was
weekend,
fol-
been
is
sponsoring
a
ge
0
to
f
Queen
Women
of
Entertainment,”
a
hip-hop documentary by David Lamb, a
professor
York. The
based.
has
Queens
i ma
Color in American
lowed
Hip-Hop
Miseducation of Lau-
(From The
and
speaker
week’s
tonight. The National
Council
of “The
Girls
ryn’s
tonight
Conference
rescheduled for
viewing
im-
special
the first-year experience.
on
Hip-Hop
The
un-
with
work
with prove the Pratt curriculum
ACTRESS MERYL STREEP AND PRODUCER SCOTT RUDIN talk
po-
for others
own.
of resourcefulness
building, and
said
encouraged
to work
know what
starting
courager
SPECIAL TO THE CHRONICLE
en-
they could be cultivated by
tential entrepreneurs
qualities
experiences
for
successful
a
The President and CEO of Piedmont
are
keeping this
professional
their
on
the need
taking risks.
was
and has
success
for future years to
precedence
A lot of the
stressed
most people aren’t bom with qualities, Duke alumnus Isaac
portance
wonderful
a
also
Green
first
early
you
Although
fore
smaller-than-anticipated
persist-
venture.
tributed
set
and
door until
every
Investment Advisors also
he said.
the
on
thusiasm in order to have
the Black History Month Committee, at-
drew
envi-
an
business
own
lationship up,” she said.
addressed the ideals
She
account-
an
‘yes.’”
a
all those
make half of what DDS
we
Senior
featured eight student and profession-
necessary
its
get
can
busi-
independent
and started
now
“It
at
panel discussion, which
al entrepreneurs,
and
motivation
ence—knocking
Deliv-
into
service
laundry
very enthusiastic about
second
Devil’s
Fulbright,
personal consultant, said, “You
have
must
does and we’ve only been around for two
judged
proposal. The
years ago—-
pleased overall.
the best
to
a cru-
shareholder
a
start
turnout to the
diown
Streets
a
as
founder of
to make
He chose the latter.
ness.
“I left
Paul said.
plan
businesses. The Calvo the
like
participants
to
groups
or
wonderful
a
business,” the
lunch,
into
a
structure
years,”
hobby
the
Gupta,
Inc., had
with the flourishing Service
and
their
identify
ant and
decision two
business
integrate
encouraged
for it.
go
your
During
of
participants
to
business. Whatever you
vided
offi-
difficulties
he also
business,
Calvo,
technology
the
from various colleges
to
to do-
cial
ery
Paul
12-year-old
acknowledged
being
Devil Laundry
that
strive for the best.”
opening panel discussion of the
Entrepreneurship,
ship,
Senior Arun
10 years old. “I’ve
success
Genevia Gee
ronment into which not many African Americans venture.
Executive Officer
can
first annual event for L.E.A.P.—Leader-
do
keep
we
who is
Joseph Calvo,
Entrepreneur-
the
by
sponsored
down,
the chief financial and
Siblings Joseph, Paul,
to
strive
us
doing it,” said Chief
thriving cookie- and pie-
baking business.
helps
if we’re
for
recipes
at John
in New
Jay College
event will be
at
the White
Lecture Hall at 7:30 p.m.
Author
ANDREW CARD
By
tertwine
The Chronicle
In 2002, A Beautiful Mind captured
and
emotionally troubled genius John
mathematician,
2003, there Hours,
a
mental
and
Nash.
In
is every indication that The
centered
story
around
emotional conflicts
of
the au-
thor Virginia Woolf, may follow suit.
Following Friday
a
in Griffith Film
Cunningham, from which dressed
cluding cal
the
Theater, Michael
author
the
the film
story’s
and
of the
book
adapted, ad-
was
major
the value of the
themes,
in-
moment, physi-
unconventional
beauty,
sexuality and writing itself. “I may be the is
happy
only living
with the
out of his
book,” Cunningham said.
The movie’s
plot mirrors
her
During
life, Woolf
several bouts of clinical
unstable. the
The Hours
midst of
one
such
her
that she
was
profound
ham
uses
one
novels, Mrs. Dalloway,
1970’s
book
film, Cunning-
of Woolfs as
more
a
such
much about
of my main points—the
one
miracle of the here and now.”
Cunningham attributed to the
success
star-studded
nine
loway
have both
much of the
film
has
academy
rocketed
been
awards,
popular
device to in-
man
to
physical
a
role
donned a fake “She
was
top of
emphasized Virginia
Woolf in
which
de-emphasize appeal.
to the
the work
as
To
nose
required
her
this
have
seen
as
a
ever
gay
a
of
or
lesbian film,” he said.
in which the film
sign that all the people
as
Kid-
traditional
end,
Kidman
during filming.
freed of her Nicole Kidman
try have been surprised
written
by
a man.
ning poet, essayist, journalist
Wednesday
Morgan, azine,
leader of the mod-
and
“Men know women
a
a
During
a
to kick offWomen’s
a
on
the
books make
think that’s sense
though they’re truth in them.”
not
will discuss her
new
Mag-
book, Sister-
hood is Forever: The Women's Anthology
for 5
a
in
New Millennium, at 7 p.m. March the White
Lecture
Hall.
A book
signing will follow the lecture.
A&S
meeting
canceled
The Arts and Sciences Council meet-
one
a
women
the
ing scheduled for March
ques-
women,
why
lives,
and
L au-
certain
we
even sense
6 has been can-
celed. The next meeting is April 10.
student
to us, because our
campus.
coun-
lot about men,” the book’s
thor said. “I
appear
History
former editor of Ms.
male perspective.
lot about
theorist,
will
activist,
questioned Cunningham about writing female characters from
award-win-
political
beings.”
to discover that
session,
answer
a
movement,
good job.
a
film examining the fives of three
and
who
what it was meant
Many audiences throughout
tion
wel-
was
rebelled against issues of com-
being received
Morgan,
feminist
ern
Catholic
one
plicated sexuality have done
was
to this
audiences did not character-
manner
comed is
It’s
Robin
Month celebrations
the exception
newspaper,
“The
stressed
of the film.
“With
ize it
Cunningham
to be—a movie about human
performances of its
The
cast.
nominated for
particular,
the
to
and the books The Hours and Mrs. Dal-
that of the
contemporary
so
aspect
depres-
happiness and the simple joys of life,” he said. “That’s
century author Virginia Woolf,
Throughout
the positive response he has
Yet I don’t know
depressions.
of Nicole Kidman
editor.
Woolf in
the
subject
anotherwriter who wrote
three female characters: the early 20th
a
was
specifically dealing
speak
Wednesday
whole
with issues of
homosexuality.
period. However,
a
The Hours also delves into the realm of sex,
mentally
sion should not be the audience’s focus.
bestseller lists. He
homemaker and
depicts
Cunningham,
to
according
among the lives of
a
depression,
released into
was
Feminist leader to
kind of beauty,” Cunningham said.
new
and
and
beauty,
experienced
considered by many to be
was
film’s novelist that
movie that got made
novel, transitioning
of these
lives
“One of the things that I love about
of The Hours
screening
in the
day
one
seemingly unconnected women.
the Oscar for Best Picture for its depiction of the
discusses The Hours
Cunningham
ch
Sportswra
2 �MONDAY, MARCH 3,
Weekend
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In this week’s issue
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be read
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at
www.chronicle.duke.edu To
69
reach
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OF THE
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Kevin
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Mississippi
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After
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16
No.
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Michigan
68
hurling
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Buffalo.
3-of-4 from
•
Men's lacrosse
Despite taking to No.
5
a 4-2
Maryland
Terrapin lead,
station
the No.
6
7 Blue
Devils
fell
Week
13-7.
•
Big
Illinois
to
and Purdue
Ten revenge
last
in
week,
Durham
Duke
6 crushed
this weekend.
Swimming Duke
•
finished
Broken record eighth
despite strong
in
individual
the
ACC
Dean E. Smith Center
6
championships
performances.
While
the
spring
Men's basketball Duke
57
a
lost to
free
St.
•
Spreading
John's 72-71
throw with
no
as
time left
on
the blues
6
Marcus Flatten hit the clock.
Women's lacrosse The second-ranked
squeaked by
Johns
•
6
Hopkins havoc
women's
Hopkins
lacrosse
rival
Discover
a
the
campus
men's for
Carolina.
here
lar-season
11-8.
of
the
the road
North
to win
team
rest
break,
rolls down
55
67
68, Alabama
took
one out of
63
Wisconsin
Florida
Duke game as
3
perfection
within
came
Women's tennis
68
14 Minnesota
Picture of
Sunday, 4 p.m.
56
91, Mississippi
No.
Georgia 76,
59
•
Thompson
67
Auburn
No.
State
North Carolina
69
Boise St. 60
No. 7 North
Men's basketball @
Game
N.C. State 60
a
The
to have the
ACC
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basketball
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Sportswr
The Chronicle
Thompson TED MANN
By
Duke
3
Buffalo
2
close to
perfection two
With
rarest
feat
ball:
The
Coombs
in
the
filled with
Twenty bat
zeros
game of
the
Jack
scoreboard
was
for the Bulls.
With
catcher
Brandon
from
away
record
count
plate—and
rightfield for
a
on
strike
one
name
in
the
delivered to
never
been
fore where there’s
bid for perfec-
in
so
a
who
situation be-
much emotion,
much excitement riding said Thompson,
ers,
on
struck
one
so
the
was
one
pitching performances this weekend. doublehead-
of weekend
pair
a
Duke (7-6)
avenged
a
tough loss
in
the series opener by allowing only five in
winning
coach
Bill
after
the
took that
to
a
bounced
we
game after
Sunday,
in the game.
entered
Devils
enth and final
inning clinging
Justin
Duke
allowing things
The
as
be-
[Saturday],
get interesting late
lead,
I’m
back
hard.”
win, 3-2,
Blue
head
four,” “[But]
tough loss. Everyone
second
to
[all]
said.
game
was
one
the on
how
first
that
won
Hillier
with
pleased
cause
the next three games.
should’ve
“We
hung
only Thompson’s
‘Tve
In
single, taking with
but also his no-hitter.
a
pay
day,
10-0 romp,
for the Blue Devils
In
ball
near-perfect
of several stellar
sail
watched the
into
tion,
his
Thompson
the
not
DiCesare,
etching
books,
full
a
Thompson’s
to
had
game
really upset with myself...
highlight of Duke’s
runs
come
was
me
perfect
3
but it turned out okay, I guess.”
dou-
a
at
Buffalo hitters had
retired.
as
and
against Thompson, and twenty
been
it
came
seventh
Buffalo
against
Field,
base-
and the hitter made
pitch,
for it. I
perfect
possible Sunday.
as
outs
in
Thompson
final inning of the first bleheader
bad
It is often called the
Duke’s Kevin
game.
within 1 out of
comes
the 22 Bulls hitters he faced. “I made
Chronicle
The
IQHDAY, MARCH 3,
the to
Jim
Dilucchio,
seva
3-1
Perry
pitch,”
out
10 of
See BASEBALL
on
KEVIN THOMPSON throws
page 7
Women’s tennis dominates
Big
a
rocket
Ten duo
of Buffalo
10-0 thrashing
Duke’s
during
weekend
over By
ADAM SCHMELZER
6
The women’s tennis team could
The Chronicle
Duke
ily Purdue
have
I
being
upset
by
No.
Feb. 23. Instead, led by sophomore used the loss
Blue Devils
feating Michigan Sunday “It
came
as
49
eas-
after
Illinois
4-3
Kelly McCain,
the de-
motivation, soundly
Friday evening
and
Purdue 6-1
afternoon.
was
teams
7-0
frustrated
gotten
big confidence
a
booster for
us
solidly,” said McCain, who earlier only
the seventh
player
in
to
finally
beat
in the week be-
Duke
history
to
be
ranked No. 1 in the Intercollegiate Tennis Association’s national rankings. “We tried to take something from, the Illinois
match and put it
hopefully
it
helped
In singles
us
toward these
came
at the second
Johnson put away first set before
AMANDA JOHNSON crushes
a
forehand
during singles play
as
Duke defeats
Michigan
To
this weekend at the Sheffield Indoor Tennis Center.
request
visit
us
your storage
unit,
call now,
or
at http://www.the-storeroom.com
jj.
k
If Store Room 'ELF
STORAGE
CENTER
and
play against Michigan, McCain defeated
Michelle DaCosta 6-3, 6-1. the match
matches,
win these easier.”
a
only closely challenged
spot, where junior
feisty Kavitha Tipimeni
taking the second
See TENNIS
on
set 6-2.
page 7
Amanda
7-5 in the
Sportswrai
iH 3,
4 �MONDAY,
The Chronicle
Duke falls to St. John’s
on
free throw
TYLER ROSEN
By
The Chronicle
St.
72
John's
John’s
St.
NEW YORK
Marcus
Hatten stood at the free throw line Duke
71
with the clock reading 0:00.0, ready
to shoot free throws with the game tied at 71.
guard carried the 28 points he had already
The senior scored and
image of practicing free throws inside
an
grandmother’s “I
had
throws in my
try
not to break
do that and not break
if I
can
ing
out here to shoot
Overall
window
a
window
a
hit
free throw in front of
a
21-4
Maryland
11-4
19-7
Duke
10-4
20-5
N.C. State
8-6
15-10
Clemson
5-9
15-10
North
5-9
15-13
Virginia
5-9
14-13
Georgia Tech
5-9
12-13
Florida
4-11
13-13
Forest
hit her. So
or
or
113
Wake
there,
“In
her,
com-
19,000
peo-
thought that was easy.”
I
ple,
Conf.
free
shooting
younger,
was
grandmother’s house,” he said.
shoot it and
you
that I
vision
a
his
house with him to the line.
Hatten bounced the first free throw off the rim and
in, immediately bringing
a
rush of
and fans onto
players
the court to celebrate St. John’s (13-12) 72-71 of No.
upset
Just four minutes
and seemed
60
on
But after
Storm.
before
Duke (20-5)
5
Madison Square Garden
stunning
sellout crowd in
a
Sunday. Blue Devils had led 71-
earlier, the
the verge of finishing off the Red
St.
layup inside, Duke’s
Glover scored
John’s Anthony
Duhon overthrew
Chris
a
press-
breaking
sailed out of bounds, Hatten drove for pass that
another
layup and Duke
clock violation,
the ball
drive
Hatten started to
better of
Jones, thought buried
four
points, St. John’s
a
the crowd,
it,
from
been
down by just
trailed by only
1:49
With
made
one
a
three-pointSt.
remaining,
John’s
one.
the
Jones,
with 23
until
Storm forced
J.J. Redick missed
Devils’
Blue
leading
on a
scorer
up his fifth foul.
points, picked
trifecthe
on
Kyle Cuffe
of his two free throws to tie the game at 71-71.
The Blue Devils then held the ball until there were less than
10 seconds
left
the shot
on
drove to the basket and fired up
clock, before Duhon out of control
an
that whiffed the rim. The Red Storm missed
a
layup
pair of
shots and the Blue Devils took the ball back and held for the final shot. Duhon and freshman Sean Dockery
and
passed back
forth at the top of the key, before Duhon handed off to Daniel
the ball
leading
loose
with 5.1
grabbed
scorer
broke for center court to take
was
the
half,”
anticipated and tried I
was
right there,
came
as
to the
he went
potentially game-winning basket.
screen.
was
John’s
sprinted
fouled by Ewing
minutes of the second
time I
St.
seconds remaining.
the loose ball and
“They had been running that 10
a
smack into Hatten, who jarred
ran
Duke basket, where he for the
took it while cut-
Ewing. The sophomore guard
ting around Duhon and final shot. But Ewing
out with
Ewing,
a
able to
last
play the
same
Hatten said.
not to not let him
move
and I stuck
“This
get
to
and... the ball my feet hand in there—and
my
pot of gold,”
however, believed
pot of gold
the
was
tarnished. “He reached
across
fouled,” Ewing said. Duke lost
body,
my
and
to 38.7
53.3
felt see
that I
it that
got
way,”
from the
percent
percent for St.
Devils stormed out behind Jones, who an
I
“But the refs didn’t
despite shooting
field, compared
John’s. The Blue was
playing only
hour from his Trenton, N.J., home. The senior scored
12 of Duke’s first 15 points, and
John’s
actually led St.
by
two at the time.
But the Red Storm the first
half
game seven
kept the
by forcing
bounds, and trailed
grabbing
re-
By the end of the
fewer rebounds (34 to 41) than St. John’s. Hatten
game. Duke
Duhon,
11
in the first half
Dockery,
improve tried
on
his average of 21.5 points
nearly
Jones and
them could consistently stop
every
as
Krzyzewski
guard
the
agile
came
to
in which
of
game,” Duke head
said. “We didn’t
intensity
the boards. They
him—
none
scorer.
we’ve been playing, and certainly
to do with the
on
J.J. Redick—but
“We should have been better all coach Mike
despite
18 in the
three fouls, but then exploded for up
second stanza to
well
close throughout
and
38-35 at the break.
paced the Red Storm with
per
game
turnovers
Duke had double the turnovers (16 to 8) of and
picking
-AY JONES cheers his team near
On Duke’s possession,
night
cheering
silent
largely
the Red
by this support,
Glover.
Dahntay
basked in the sudden
which had
Buoyed
ta, and
shot
a
completely around
spun
another turnover and followed it with er
on
Duke’s
against
three-pointer. Suddenly
and
then.
again
hands of the out-
in the
senior.
standing
of
lost the ball
was
play nearly
a
as
lot of that has
[St. John’s] attacked
play today.”
Carolina
a
the end of the
Sunday’s
on
from the bench after
72-71
loss to St. John’s.
fouling
State
Sportswta
The Chronicle
iCH 3, 20
5
Blue Devils beat NCSU, finish 16-0 in ACC
SHEANA MOSCH flies past
a
Wolfpack defender and
towards the
hoop during Sunday’s game,
her final at Cameron Indoor Stadium
Duke looks to ACC tournament the middle of the paint and
PAULA LEHMAN
By
The Chronicle
Duke
14
With
86
minutes left
State
60
court. With fenders
the
Alana Beard,
N.C. State
into
directly between
to
at half
the ACC)
6-10 in
Amy
and
Simpson
de-
to
crashed
the
floor—seconds before the ball slid through the net, onds before her third
three-point-play
sec-
of the game.
1,
shut down
by Duke, 86-60,
16-0) slammed the door
as
regular
the Blue Devils (28-
game,
with the league
season
title and
head
we
score
in
team
our
it
thought Gail
coach
players hard
I
was
game with
an
early
7-0
four of the
seven
had taken.
pack head coach Kay Yow said.
half,
based
primarily
a
on
its
to the
tremendously
or
on
in
the first
dominance
fastbreaks
starting line-up, in
con-
down
in which she would leave
one
of the strongest combined per-
formances they have put forth this year. Both finished in
double
digits—Mosch
with 13—and worked
are
with
14
powerfully
left in the second half,
going
back to boot camp
it,” Goestenkors said with
as
and a
No
can’t
really
it is time
the upcoming
are
an
with
our
going
as
the
Matyasovsky
duet. With 7:40
Matyasovsky held the ball
in
players call
evil grin. “We have other
wanting
to win the ACC
to go back to the basics.”
Duke 86, N.C. State 60
Duke
(11-16, 6-10)
(28-1,16-0)
N.C. Slate
Mendeng Simpson Chones
1
2
24
36
44
42
FG
FT
R
A
TO
BLK
S
2-9
0-0
5
1
4
2
3
0
0
1-6
0-0
4
2
2
4
2
0
4-11
6-8
11
2
14
0
3
11
PF
3
PTS
13
0
1
James
5-12
2-4
4
0
4
Rivers
1-6
2-2
2
1
4
2
2
0
0
0-1
0-0
0
0
0
0
1
0
0
0
McDowell
1-4
1-2
2
1
3
2
1
0
1
Bell
3-4
0-0
1
0
71
1
0
0
0
2
1
5
5-11
1-1
11
13
0
60
11
1
Team
Technical fouls:
12-17
36
11
18
McDowell (0-2), Bell (1-1), Labador (2-6).
none
S
Duke
FG
FT
R
PF
PTS
A
TO
BLK
Trills
7-13
0-0
7
2
15
5
1
3
2
Matyasovsky
6-8
0-0
4
3
13
2
0
1
0
Harding
3-7
6
0
77
3
0
1
Krapohl
1-40-012931
Beard
Matyasovsky
ACC and fellow senior Sheana Mosch ended their final in
of the
I
It is
postseason has arrived and
Three-pointers: James (1-4), Bailey (0-1),
contin-
hard drives
On the other end of the age spectrum,
seasons
country.
radar and look towards
speed.
in
both teams behind.
regular
the
22-64
ually bolted past her defender the lane
“We
Labador
rhythm
solid
has Harding, whose great quickness and agility tributed
adjust
Bailey
“We didn’t win any battles in the first half,” Wolf-
developed
an-
to do whatever it takes
players willing
am re-
the combined defense efforts of Beard, Iciss Tillis and had blocked
dri-
always
always remained positive.
FINAL
opened the
a
in
team to be successful.”
For Duke the to
have
them, they
and looking forward to the
side-defense.Within the first five minutes of the game,
Duke also
to have
help their
N.C. State
Matyasovsky
have
goals and that begins
something
beyond. I
ease
always had great attitudes.
asked of
Tournament. We
game
it and
intercept
that about all the teams in the
special to
They
was
that
is
to
them,” Goestenkors said
have
how
“We
said.
inlead thanks to series of fastbreaks and aggressive
Wolfpack
say
of
proud
“They
matter what
effort,”
ACC tournament.”
shots the
very
figures, which shows
will need for next weekend and
The Blue Devils
am
four
working. That
was
ally happy with the
Michele
“I
two seniors.
had
Goestenkors double
team
the ball
Wolfpack defenders where
two
ACC tournament this weekend in Greensboro.
season.
great
a
an
unde-
scoring the
later, Matyasovsky lobbed
waiting
was
passed the ball behind her
to the baseline and
other layup.
Duke finished
feated record for the second consecutive
“Overall
10
the ACC. With all
on
players scoring by the end of the its
ving Mosch
done it.
Out-run, out-scored, and out-matched, the Wolfpack was
Two minutes
layup.
driving hard
(11-16,
Mosch, cutting
ahead
to recover, Beard cut hard toward
struggling
center
in
to
the game,
looks
Harding
Lindsey N.C.
back
9-14
1-2
4-5
02
6
2
22
2
5
2
2
1-1
0-0
0
5
2
0
2
0
0
Mosch
7-11
0-1
5
0
14
5
11
2
Smith
2-2
0-0
Foley
2-5
Bass
Whitley
1
0
4
0
0
0
0-0
3
2
4
5
0
0
1
1-5
0-0
4
2
2
1
0
1
3
39-70
5-8
40
18
86
30
13
8
13
3
Team Totals
Three-pointers: Tillis (1-2), Technical fouls:
0
200
Beard (0-1), Foley (0-2), Whitley (0-1) Matyasovsky (1-2), Krapohl (1-4),
none
Arena: Cameron Indoor Stadium
Attendance—B,B74
Sportswra
6 �MONDAY,
After
Blue Devils
leading 4-2, POSES
By JAKE
The
13
Maryland
men’s
7
lacrosse team Duke
7
its
5
The
Maryland.
13-7 loss to No.
a
the Blue Devils throughout which
game
dominated
Terrapins
played
was
Maryland’s
ed
3-1
a
out
came
before
edge
the game in their favor to
score
“I
11 unanswered
think
Maryland our
We
it
for that,
down
got
we
of
out
got
Of the
span
half-time advantage
badly needed
a
Duke fensive
of eight minutes in
of
the
Terps
to
adjustments Maryland’s
7-4
to
de-
six
Maryland’s goalie Danny McCormick shut out the Blue Devils for
a
38 minute
stretch spanning from the beginning of
high
17
“I
saves
thought
37
on
had
a
defense
our
really
was
connect
while on
one
it
really gives
was
a
us
said.
hat
a
Brian
of
Ter-
a
pair
more
mistakes
goals.
The
shots, connecting
on
opportunities. blunders
our
Pressler
“We
said. and
gave
de-
on
made
too
them better
shots then they deserved.” Once the outcome ofthe game was al-
of
Kevin Brennan added
record
for
goals
hat trick
a
the on
Blue
Devils
a
to
the afternoon. The
Duke midfielder also led the team with six shots
on
“There is
goal. a
lot of lacrosse left in the
this
get
said. “We
Pressler
team here and
the afternoon.
to
Maryland squad and
of their
percent
season,”
career-
scored
Terps
man-up,” Cottle
team took 35
“It
to the final minutes
of the game. The keeper
that resulted
The
they did,
the
Moran added
rapin
pair
quarter
way
on
ready decided,
sec-
was
LaMonica and Hunt each had
the
but
ond-half goals.
the second
the
many
the pace
tally
with
capitalize
to
opportunities
only able
was
fense,”
some
slow
attack,
still able
were
make
to
said.
“When Dan LaMonica and Brian Hunt
play
the Blue Devils
as
able
was
four of six such
big lift
chance to regroup.
a
middies
success
ability
penalties.
trick for the
a
in-
the pro-
anybody
offensive
advantages
man
from Duke
very
the second quarter. The Terps held
in
and
to beat
to its
man-up chance.
five of those tallies
goals,
11
within the
factor
attack
going
was
selfish with the ball.”
came
not
are
Duke
by
ex-
opportu-
shooting,” Pressler
give
offen-
plan
our
of sink. We
out
got
to
line
5-for-40
the
on
Duke head coach Mike
got
we
on
on
I want
as
said. “When
few goals
went
first
“Our
partially due
goals.
credit
some
doing,”
own
Pressler
sively.
much
as
they
as
coach
was
offense’s
scoring
on
central
a
Maryland’s
4-2 the Ter-
turned the momentum of
rapins quickly
are
going
got
good
a
ROBERT TAI/THE CHRONICLE
to rebound and KEVIN BRENNAN had
going again.”
hat trick
a
Duke’s loss to ACC rival
during
places Bth
Duke
wins
Virginia
The
The Chronicle
Duke
Blue
ACC
Men’s
helped
lead the women’s lacrosse team
Johns
past
Hopkins Sunday.
the three 780
edge Hopkins
11-8 in women’s lax contest From staff
who
reports II
Duke
After
No.
Hopkins Hopkins
8
Blue Jays
a
sixth
6-2 lead
18
Johns
scored
its
goal, giving the 10 minutes into
just
recorded
gave Duke
8-7
an
Kate
can
two
coach Kerstin Kimel signaled
Meghan
out to
rally
Duke
her No. 2 Blue Devils
by reeling
responded
unanswered halftime
a
time-
(3-0).
off
five
goals, three coming before
and two
in the
more
opening
minutes of the second half. Kimel’s team would go
Johns
on
to win
11-8.
Hopkins
(0-1)
comeback, tying the 20:18
remaining,
prevailed
as
attempted seven
Duke’s
the Blue Devils
to
with
defense
outscored
the Blue Jays 6-2 in the second half. Freshman
sensation
lead it would not relinquish
a
advantage. Kaiser
Katie
Chrest,
three-goal lead
a
with 11:21 left.
Hopkins
score
but
again,
Chrest put the game out of reach with free
position strike
with
just four
points respectively.
main close
was
Jays
ground
were
able to
testament to their as
Johns
outshot 32-13. Duke,
edge
a
points.
not
Despite
a
in
well
placing in the
the
swam
end-
season
individual medley,
when he recorded
preliminary a
to
the Blue
accu-
Hopkins
was
who is 5-0 all-time
Jays,
balls category,
in the game.
re-
also
holding
won
a
the
34-22
his
push
on
the
was
on
After
a
own
time of 1:50.57 in
heat. The
sophomore
half-second slower finish
in
John
school record
12th
the fi-
in
and
position
a
that
use
stroke
illegal dolphin
used
off,
a
disap-
strong
per-
200-yard breaststroke
discouraging but
little
as
I
fuel for my 200 breast
Saturday,” Storm said. off to
getting
a
slow start in his
finals heat, the freshman
ed
the
a
following day.
“That to
heat of the 100an
to power him to
completed the
length of his heat and post-
fastest final
In the 200
swam
on
formance in the
to
event.
the
kick
got
number of Blue Devils
individual records
ing
and
11th
Andy Storm, after being disqualified
The Blue Dev-
time of 2:02.98, good for 10th place.
In
the
Justin Ward
Rowland,
Kevin Ko all
breaststroke
200-yard
same
Ben
event,
finished 18th, 19th and 22nd, In the
and
qualified for the finals but
diving portion
competi-
tion
first
Devils top finisher in both the one meter
day of competition.
Humphrey’s
contribution
the
to
individual medley
as
he set
best time of 1:51.25 in the ies of the on
a
career-
preliminar-
200-yard butterfly. He
to record
a
15th-place finish his
in that
event
with
Heifers
taking 22nd, also setting
sonal best time.
went
teammate
Teddy a
per-
sophomore
Tim
respectively.
of the
headline the Blue Devil’s effort in the
Blue Devils effort did not end after the
shooting,
against
140.5
ils scored
host school
in
and Patrick
Winters also qualified for the finals.
yard breaststroke for
score
on
the
again
once
Justin Ward
place. Heifers,
of
a
with 567
position
was
the
event
finisher for the Blue Devils
top
in
success
medley
from the preliminary
consecutive
out
for
min-
utes to go.
rate
second
Humphrey
pointment
555.5
nals
would
fifth
edged
Humphrey broke his
extended the lead to
Miller built
its
UNC
shot into net
a
Senior All-Ameri-
few minutes later, moments before
That the Blue
game at
but
game-high four goals,
the 16:04 mark with
at
for
Sunday’s contest, women’s lacrosse head for
a
a
to
had
individual
dominated
posting
meet
of
Friday.
Natatorium.
Koury
of Virginia
Florida State
meet,
the
Diving
in this event.
victory
Blue Devils
day
route
on
and
and the University
Carolina’s
The University BOBBY RUSSELL/THE CHRONICLE
in
eight place
Swimming
Championships North
competed
championship
Blue Devils
400-yard
Devils
well but finished in
at ACCs
ACC
sth-straight
POSES
By JAKE
The
Maryland
breaks record,
Humphrey
KATE KAISER
Md.
College Park,
that type of shooting percentage.”
and mount-
leading
his
blamed
connect
as
went
coming unraveled of-
With Duke
fensively.
in
Maryland
longed drought.
“You
aggressive
to
nities
fall to
goals,
goal.”
Pressler
ability
much of the
at
Artificial Turf Facility. Duke
cellent in
opened
schedule
ACC
with
Sunday afternoon
Cottle said. “McCormick
Dave
No.
head
Maryland
impressive,”
The Chronicle
11 unanswered
give up
lacrosse, 13-7
No. 7 men’s
Terrapins burn
No. 5
and three meter In
the
from
on
think
Storm said. their
own
the
the
Hyer finished “I
platform
one
races.
meter.
day,
I
goals.”
Hyer
Saturday, platform,
position.
team
“Everyone
reached their
events.
three-meter
in 15th
the
the Blue
was
first
competitions
dove to 11th
diving
Hyer
was
was
think
content,”
able to swim most
people
Sportswia
The Chronicle
!H 3. 2003 �PAGE 7
MONDAY,
BASEBALL
from page 3
and Zach Schreiber
had combined to
allow only three Buffalo hits. The
led off the inning
Bulls
consecutive
Duke’s on
closer,
After
feat
by a
With
route to
a
6-4,
6-1, victory
over
Purdue’s Lara
long,
Burgarello
run
the
staving
game
off de-
within
the
on
one
line,
desig-
Vanhorne sent
Phil
towering
3-2
a
second.
on
hitter
Buf-
strikeout,
a
the Bulls
putting runner
nated
en
tying
Joe Mihalics lined
centerfield,
into
with
backhand
flyout and
a
shortstop
pitch
a
the
putting
with
Schreiber,
base.
falo
KATIE GRANSON hits
off
singles
to
flyball
a
but
center,
Duke centerfielder Senterrio Landrum
kind of
TENNIS
from page 3
emotionally get
For Purdue in
dation, combined The Blue Devils
against
the
kept
lineup
same
who handed Duke its
Purdue,
of the weekend. Freshman
only blemish
Julia Smith, who did not
play
nois match due to
lost to the Boil-
injury,
The victories
dropped The
while
improved Duke
to 5-3 and Blue
and
Michigan
to
a
psychological
“I felt overall
11-1
Purdue
ple
away
“The thing
we
out
and
every
court, and
those teams all —nothing look at
a
did
really
we
well
good
was
we
starts
on
positive,”
to feed off
of at
he said. “We could
and say,
Alright,
we’re
winning there, we’re winning there,’ and
Missing something? Due
to
pretty strong match,”
players
to
place,
out
with
against
come
up
on
chances
a cou-
one
space
you’re
are
Jeff
to
emphasize
“We talked
a little
bit about what I like
factor, where
we
win, but they could,” he said. “You
always have for your
to have that kind of
respect
opponent.”
constraints The Chronicle
See
Tuesday’s
was
issue
unable
for
more
to
8-3
an
game, senior
Bulls
a
triple, and
victory.
isfying retribution for discouraging
loss
Duke
Saturday’s
in
top
lead and
7-6.
won
3-of-4
saw
focused
close
to
details
I
on
perfect
every on
memories
mously ball
on
of
some
time
as
nervous
in
great
[just]
to
I’ve
never
been
in
oh-so-
guy
to
block
the
play.
most
infa-
in base-
bids
got
so
as
I’ve been in
close to
be
a
said.
part of that. where
dugout
a
a
a
Hillier
perfect
game.
a
It’s
unbelievable.”
evoked
Blue Devil sporting
the
coaching,”
“It’s
which
on
history.
understand-
Thompson’s game,
of
tantalizing lost
“That’s
starting pitchers,
their
tries
an
long
the series
HERNANDEZ
BRIAN
Buffalo’s Phil Vanhorne, who scored
several encourag-
the
ably
CATCHER
push their record back
.500, and
talk after
CHRIS BORGES/THE CHRONICLE
a
first
win,
ing outings by
fit
sat-
Buffalo scored
of the ninth to
While the Blue Devils
to
were
following
when the Blue Devils gave up
early five-run
above
two
the Blue Devils cruised
as
The three consecutive wins
in the
scoreless
and rightfielder
paced the offense with
Patrick
scored
runs
event
from the weekend
in
today’s
issue.
weekend action
DECALS
•
•
PLAQUES
•
TROPHIES
•
ROCKERS
•
LAMPS
•
KEY
Duke University Stores®
Custom Orders
Deadlines for issues after
the
three hits, including
SHIRTS
Early Advertising
second
innings,
the weekend to
to call the ‘should-could’ should
six
the
wall, giving the
chance to exhale.
held
Alieva
Brian
with his team that every match could be another Illinois.
a
Saturday’s
game,
the Blue Devils’ concentration
trying
In
of
the short end.”
of talent, Ashworth is
didn’t give either of
anything
court
to
home
Despite
success
Duke’s opponents.
got off
came
early
a
the most talented teams in the country in
going
put
played
of your best
matches from the onset, and head coach
to
the
the circumstances,
like, given
we
catch,
Blue Devils
make
and
retreat
not far from the
through
just that when you’re playing
their
Jamie Ashworth said this
for
double-whammy
to
able
was
as
overwhelmed Boilermakers.
dominated many
helped
with the absence of two
Purdue head coach Mat landolo said. “It’s
4-5, respectively.
Devils
particular, this intimi-
key players because of injuries, served
in the Illi-
ermakers’ Amy Walgenbach 4-6, 3-6.
overall,
into the match.”
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THE FRANKLIN# HUMANITIES INSTITUTE
The Chronicle
HifnacLooking for
a
March 2003
Wednesday Conversations
Anne
March 5:
Mitchell Whisnant
Summer Activities Historian and
“The
of the Blue
(Hidden) Politics
March Duke
“The
The
Ridge Parkway”
summer
Popular Music Study Group”
session students.
be
Michael Byers,
energetic
University School of Law
Duke
Coalition?
program
in International Affairs”
The New Unilateralism
initiates and
and recreational programs for resident
University Department of Music
summer
“What
programmer
implements cultural, educational, athletic,
19: Tom Brothers,
March 26:
Programmer:
Manager, Franklin Humanities Institute
Mellon Grant Project
and
Applicants
enjoy people,
planning experience,
have
must some
possess
excellent written and oral communication
All Conversations John
are
held from 12:00 Franklin
Hope
Light
PARKING:
DUKE
BUS:
parking
East-Central-West
and have
off
on
more
to
parking
the
Central
in the
information
Morgan
new
The
Women’s
Anthology
Wednesday,
about her
IS FOREVER: for
a
New
Millennium
March 5 at 7:00 p.m.
White Lecture A book
speaking
book
SISTERHOOD
signing
Hall, East Campus
will follow the lecture.
"Feminism is creating freedom. Robin Morgan goes
beyond describing
what's
wrong
and
beings
to
envision what could be."Gloria Steinem
This the
event is
Rare
sponsored by the Duke University Libraries,
Book, Manuscript, and Special Collections Library,and
the Sallie Bingham
Center
for Women's History and Culture
with additional support from the following Duke departments and programs: Duke Alumni Association, the Franklin Humanities Institute's Mellon Project "Making the Humanities
Women's
Central,"Kenan Center,
Department
of
Center
History,
Institute
for Ethics, the Women's Studies Program,
for Lesbian, Gay,
preferred. stipend and
Campus apartment.
May
5
For
an
-
August 9.
Flowers Dr. behind Trent Hall
www.duke.edu/web/institute.
and activist, will be
are
Rising
Franklin Center.
Award-winning poet, essayist political theorist, journalist,
to an automobile.
40-hr.work week. $3650.00
for
provided
bus, get
Robin
access
and seniors
juniors
public
deck adjacent
Call 919-668-1902 for see
Room 240
Rd. and Trent Drive
Vouchers will be
or
skills, be familiar with Duke and Durham,
1:00 p.m
refreshments served
Free and open to the
Duke medical center
till
Erwin Rd.
2204 Corner Erwin
Center,
noon
Bisexual
and the Masters of Arts in
and
TransgenderLife,
Liberal Studies Program
j
application,
call 684-5375
The Chronicle
MONDAY, MARCH 3,2003
REFERENDA
to go toward student activities.
from page 1
cent] increase,”
Currently, each student for the year,
$64
or
in stu-
semester,
per
tuition cost increase
fees. If students approve
dent activities
SOFC
both measures, each student would pay another
$167
$83.50
or
per year
DSG
—a total of per semester
$19.50
per semester
—
fees
in student activities
ly
$72
pays,
Finance
DSG-affiliated body
and
on
or
$2B
$432,000 this
in DSG’s
crease
tivities fee,
in-
portion of the student
ac-
$120,000
additional
an
“We
“We
chair
dents would the 5
Pushpa
stu-
part
we
of
for this
on
of the
a
lot of the program-
events
big-name “If
you
on
and
increase, falls
cent er
increases at
larger
in line with
a
year’s
3.9
top-ranked, private
per-
the increase in tu-
feel it falls toward the middle of the range of
honor its dent’s
Provost Peter
2003,
an
in
a
peer
statement.
commitment to meet 100 percent of
nearly $37
spent
Lange said
our
we
that the University would still
demonstrated
need
in
million for
increase of 8.3
Duke
in 2002-
financial aid
from the prior year,
percent
$4O
The Graduate School
by
three-year push
stipend just
2.8
$25
rooms,
and A
rates
Board
million
its
to
percent
$26,610,
part of
as
however,
graduate will
possibly
we
can’t
a
larger
growth the
over
as
well.
the Washington
which
will
conferences,
provide
meetings,
a
and
a new
a
space
crunch since it
to
The
addition.
began
Duke
Inn’s
100
more
restaurant
fitness center
approved planning renovations. Ex-
the
that would cost almost
transform
the space between
campus—a million
$2OO
East
and
In
Trustees
gic plan funding pact,
two
adopted in
a
on
spent
West
much of their time
years
ago,
examining
intellectual progress and future
[Saturday], from
update
presentation nomic
on
on
give
were
and
Trask],
funding the plan
in the
a
and
changed
their reactions to the it
options
was
action,
we
mainly
a
a
specific
Nam Keohane wrote in
not asked to take any
funding moving forward;
and
ecoan e-
but
tested
just
described for Treads up’
on
one
genre
five of six subfields.
successful
is
a
exam
into
of
completion
the
nonconditional requirement
of
a
doctorate
degree,
will continue to hold a central
scholars,
sider
to
maybe, just
in
‘early warning system’
even
departments
as
of making the
ways
relevant
conmore
and
education
graduate a
exam
little less fearsome.
case
the
continues
economy
stagnate.” to the Board
Lange also presented inflation
states
The report
changes
in
views,
that
grade inflation
grade
on
meeting. be at-
can
students
better-quality
to
part
report
a
for December’s
originally planned
and
in the curriculum.
one
on
considered two administrative
Lange
himself, and another
Vice President for
or
Student Affairs Larry
provided graduate and professional
students
to talk with Trustees about student
dential life and housing on
the
on
services
Moneta a
chance resi-
issues, and
officials
implementation of the
presented
new
W)
r
In addition to Keohane’s
considered
several
this
will
serve
of Harold
announcement,
leadership
other as
Trustees
questions,
“Spike” Yoh’s three-year
term
summer.
Trustees also authorized tween
the Fuqua
tional University’s
School
a
strategic partnership be-
of Business and Seoul Na-
College of
Business Administration
and allowed the school to file for
government
disaster
relief following December’s ice storm, during which the Sarah P. Duke Gardens sustained Dave
Ingram contributed
to
significant damage.
this story.
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Find The Chronicle’s sier than
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supplements online.
digging through the kitchen drawer.)
Chronic
plements
now
in-
chair of the Board follow-
*°oj
l
a
residential
.duke.edu
WWW.
re-
Pratt
life plan that began last semester.
ing the end
challenges.
part of Friday,
author,
role in the process of turning students
any
cluding who
its im-
the strategic plan; they heard
[Lange
climate,” President
mail. “They
both its
uncertainty and
“The Trustees spent the first most of
strate-
Excellence,” the school’s
time of economic
the
past years.”
report
addition, the
graduate
said French
School of Engineering Dean Kristina Johnson.
stores and restaurants to
studies,
for much of the dissertation research
that
plan
areas
weeks
two
director of
on one
and conferring
The Board also
apartments, and work-
bring
expand
in
exams
period, while Spanish students
one
Since
$5
tributed
campuses.
to
business center,
school
expansion and
to
are
growth,
that the
to
preliminary approval
gave
nursing
monorail system
a
20-year project
full
grand ballroom.
permanent
[and]
preliminarily
ing with developers
and
of
followed
romance
students focus
students
take two
oral examination.
an
Margaret Pier,
weekend
also
four-hour classroom
or
studies in
without better space, better fund-
more
the campus’
reconstructing
small
enough. “We’ve really
not
ecutive Vice President Tallman Trask has called for
see
well.
approved
for
students,
a
increase. Other schools raised tuition
addition,
space
a new
tuition and registra-
to increase tuition to pay for
percent
varying The
saw
awards. Master’s
■
at
a
Board also
reviewing “Building
10.9
was
indoor swimming pool will be added
for Central Campus
mil-
lion next year.
fees rise
The
and
stu-
a
aid.
financial
and administrators expect that to rise above
tion
years
students
concentration,
exam
said, adding
we’ve been pursuing
school has suffered from
schools.
as
each sub-
on
open-book.
in the form of take-home
exams
later by
organizes
1998,
its accelerated bachelor’s degree program last year.
ition and fees for students and their families, and
Lange emphasized
five
had
hit the point where
ing,
56,000-square-foot
a
national trend oflarg-
“We have worked hard to limit
institutions,”
in
recently
Panuccio
increase
Panuccio
Meanwhile, the Board than last
new
is
student’s major and two minor
of
per group
the
The project will take 14 to 16 months to complete.
The tuition increase,
a
exam
in
concentrated
the exam, the stu-
to work
day
a
English,
papers
increasing
that
such
casual events,
tion,”
campus.
an
prices,
student
given
written
committees.
committee
“We’ve
look at the level of program-
from page 1
In
increasing
growth of costs, growth of the organiza-
give
said the Union has not been able to fund
of
by
Major Attractions
the fee by $5 per year.
Panuccio said.
dramatically,
dent is
voted to raise the Union’s component of
with technical and contract-
rising
costs
again its
for
the
field, and the
bands at the Armadillo Grill. Most,
and we’d like to
school,
from page 4
coursework. During
of
portion
to combat those
and funding
campus
more
of income be-
revenue.
campus,”
on
speakers
programs
largest programming body
asked to do
and
which
the number of performances
fee is virtually his
source
PRELIMS
big-name perform-
ering student ticket
only fund
can
Panuccio, president
the
However, ing
tuition increase next year
TUITION
$1 million worth
and
The money would also go toward low-
now we
this campus what it really deserves.”
would
said
Raja
only be allocating
percent
are
are
ming
SOFC to fund student groups. go to SOFC
Jesse
sides ticket sales
about
managed
With the
over
[per year], and
and the oldest
proposed
year.
for
only ad-
“Right
1980s
their
plans
more
Major Speakers
from each per semester,
SOFC
total,
the Union
and
while SOFC has
organization’s only
$56
fee,
costs and host
funding
For
student’s activities fee. In
the
the
19905.
increase in
an
the
Union, the activities
the other
campus—receives
per year,
With
costs have increased
its fee for inflation.
the
senior said.
[to campus],” the
about 40 percent of that,” she said.
The Union—the major programming
body
in
in
ers
recognized
through annual budgets.
groups
money
[in] that
hike
a
had
we
used to bring Bruce Spring-
we
steen and the Grateful Dead and REM
matter what.”
no
requested
and honoraria
get requests
that funds the 200-
DSG-chartered
plus
19905...
cal
funds
Committee—a
[per-
Over the past 10 years, Raja said, techni-
justed
managed by the Student
is
last
for
portion of the fee in the early
exponentially
per year.
Of the $l2B that each student current-
Organizational
the junior said. “It’s
that students will be paying
$l2B
pays
that
ming
“The money will be part of that 5
PAGE 9
�
available online!
PAGE 10 � MONDAY, MARCH
Classifieds
3,2003
Peace!
Small
East
DURHAM
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David
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showing
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Jan
accepting
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accept
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cannot make 24
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WEST VILLAGE APTS
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and seniors. A cash
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standing
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storage,
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to
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if
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any questions about classifieds,
or cancellations
after first
insertion
deadline.
The Chronicle
versify priorities for
KEOHANE
from page 1
something that has
nobody
ing,
is that
thinking
is where we will be. Because this
Puke] is
current
our
somebody
may
just
we are
with
along
and
some
tions that we’d have to consider. So I
making
not
She
she
rights—end
own
and
in
Keohane,
up,
at age
said she hopes to live the life of demic for
long
as
retirement.
cently,
she spent
days
of
versity
and
full
ing the Duke label
As
possible is
she
ly,
still
there” and she
hopes
“I
chose
this
and
because
profession
ests
I’ve
helping people get their
22 years
and
solve conflicts
toward
looked
final
her
16
the end of the
status
the
campaign,
plans
she
projects that
of
As
the
push,
Valedictorian
to
often cited
was
women
on
known
a
role
campus, but it
was
began
the
expressed
the
to
Keohane
people’s lives,” that I’ll be
a
better
University residential and alcohol poli-
and
1993,
characterized
nearly
one
marked
by
inherited will
presidency
her tenure has
been
criticism
recognizable
be
whose mantle she will pass
overall ranking has hurdled
on.
its
over
have become
petitors, admissions
to Its
com-
more
diverse
and
schools
ments have increased their
And of course, it is
wealthy. The known
effort
as
The Campaign for Duke has met most of its
in
goals,
own
large part due
to Keohane’s
efforts. Following the term of Keith
Brodie,
Association
of
fondness
raising
spearheaded
money,
effort that has
an
on
that I
Adam
two-year
identified
other
proving student services, portant
Junior
a
junior has
Taylor
major one
reason
year
as
the
inefficiency
for
leaving
restructuring
vors
imstu-
his
as
DSG
after
legislator—fa-
but
has
said
he
would wait until being elected to spec-
ify
a
a
different
perspective, junior
Mike Sacks is running les
on a
campaign
from Los Ange-
to shake up DSG. Al-
though he has characterized cussion
regarding
recent dis-
restructuring
wants to
petty, Sacks
move
away
as
from
the legislative inaction he believes has
plagued
the
“DSG is club
pre-political bureaucracy
which
biggest
does
event
structuring,”
of the year is he
told
The
last week. “I have little for
a
and
nothing
or
the
some
re-
Chronicle
regard
no
constitution that supports
such
bureaucracy.” dressed
the
since its
president
but has not offered
as
that
a
for facilities
sophomore,
has ad-
internal workings
of the
and athlet-
Slovik said he has
struction
there
are
of
aspects
some
to remember that
amount
no
restructuring will guarantee strong and
leadership the
president,”
from
skills
managerial
the
junior said.
on
improving
campus
such external issue has
safety, but
emerged
theme of the election this year vice
executive
candidates
have
no
the
as
Duke’s campus
on a
student
govern-
in their ap-
on
vice
but
present Russ
will
allow
legislature
implementing
the
and creating
a
DSG
a
has
ticket sys-
Freshman his
proposed
own
including reducing
to 40 members from a
to
president
proposals.
specific
Ferguson
as
for facilities and athlet-
restructuring plan, the
currently
who
the executive committee
president
tem
With
ticket
speaker
vice
a
and
three
Hall
Fame
of
in
deans
academic
system vice
pro
sition to be elected by the
50,
for the
president
tempore
po-
legislature.
faculty
of Arts and
ed he will
profound
a
has indicat-
seek another five-
year-term
when
Likewise,
Chancellor of Health Affairs
CEO
his
ad-
dean of the
Chafe,
Sciences,
likely
not
current term ends.
Duke
of
his third
five-year
Health
University
will conclude
System Ralph Snyderman
term in 2004.
“I told the board that if there
being
not
was
longer,”
stay
able to
was one
from both
plained
convince
Yoh said. “But
her to she
as
personal and
a
the
for her and she has of the entire
A
with
complete
ex-
pro-
sup-
of Sunday’s online at
be found
can
www.chronicle.duke.edu.
the next 12 months about possible
over
from page 1
complete
community.”
transcript
conference
press
Yoh
of
that
have
year—could
ministration. William
port
the job, the de-
on
later this
effect in changing the face of Duke’s
fessional viewpoint, the timing is ideal
founding.
Keohane—and
of
transform
for student af-
president
COMMITTEE
and
internal
external
candidates
for
the top spot. As Duke will be the most those
“The
be.
might
qualifications
Duke community is broad and rich and
perspectives, and
In
a
press
own
looking for
who combines
someone
by the faculty
capacity for
a
because it is
a
president brings
students,
groups
in
talking
faculty
to
com-
ran-
members
or
doesn’t
who
of curiosity
or
have
empathy
that
for
all
parts of the institution, I think is going to have
a
moments
hard time when the complex
come,”
she added. “I also
they choose somebody humor and
a
with
a
hope
sense
lot of stamina and
a
of
high
Speculation
will likely
run
rampant
to
helped
it’s
here,
got
to be
of the ideal jobs in all of the academ-
of the Board
at
of Trustees,
Sundays
conference. “Because of the envi-
press
ronment, the faculty, the North Carolina
locale, there
are so
many
Duke that I can’t
things going for
think of any
why somebody would not
reason
want this
job.”
Searches at Columbia, Harvard and
been
or
have
universities
will
soon
be
recently
completed.
Keohane cautioned against looking to obvious places for her are
a
lot of
tentially
all
now
cies
very
job, a
strong
presidency,
in
successor.
out there who
people
“There are
po-
candidates for and
they’re
sitting university presiden-
in other
are
some
areas
like
of them might be
a
are
a
lot of
who could do this many
perbly”
who
of
provost’s
presidents of
liberal arts college the way I “There
a
not
elsewhere,” Keohane said. “Some
them
not
tolerance for stress.”
spec-
beyond
world,” said Harold “Spike” Yoh, chair
university
of construction workers.
“Somebody
one
of empa-
members of the Duke
munity, noting her joy
the
hopes
sense
a
well
reach
in her term
accomplish
Michigan
enterprise.”
for all
sense
man-
country
University walls.
the
compli-
very
Keohane added that she
dom
that
qualifications
genuine respect
and students with
the
presidential opening, that
ulation will likely
ic
that the Trustees
hope
the kind of academic
thy
qualifi-
ideas for
interesting and complicated
an
agement,
Keo-
successor.
job, and I would
a
“Because of what Nan has
conference Sunday,
cations for her
cated
really
with
in
university
prestigious
people think.”
hane offered her
are
I’m
about the committee hearing
excited
what those
new
proaches.
sits
Science
failure that I have done in my term, it
con-
unprecedent-
scale
ed since the University’s
.
supported
differ ment, although they
Junior Cliff Davison,
will
decades,
several
lead to
presidential
strongly
the
restructuring
have
renovations
and
projects
over
“It’s
Last year, campaigns focused prima-
rily
significant
the last few years and for the
diverse in
DSG that need to be addressed, but it’s
important
981
Political
visible—the
most
Hav-
DSG function well. think
1
in
990.
and
operation.”
most
are
can
legislator and
freshman
a
that I
so
hundreds of millions of dollars in
next
goals.
said.
Keohane’s arrival
since
changes
that,
The
need to
we
clarified
a
the
perhaps
been those
even
matters.
the
change
Keohane
is chosen
successor
hand that person
retains
among its
president and executive
Candidate Matthew Slovik
the evolu-
corporation,
ics, has said he advocates
organization. a
a
teaching
government
Both
proposal.
From
“I
im-
as
Collison—who cited
freshman
a
seen
of
organization’s
I
governance struc-
academic
on
president
as
1
to
Board and with the Health System before my
But
specific restructuring proposal.
vice
American
988
that out with the
parture
dent government.
the
as
insulated the Universiarrangement has
ics
Stanford
and
National Women’s
the
fine-tuning,”
some
ic research and
more
as
time
praised
the University
student
than restructuring
much
do
fairs
such
issues,
other
many
System, which
separate
a
authority
1
think
“And I’d like to work
fewer than two years
surpassed
Katz,
my
structure, but I
basic
Medical Center, which still fists academ-
legislator,
DSG
I
administrator
an
as
and
spend
to
so
as
ture similar to that of
while
Swarthmdre
at
faculties
Wellesley
of
the
don’t intend to
we
blurred the decision-making fines at the
personal tiffs,” Wang said.
contrast,
were
my desk
tion of the Health
under
Yale
from
Pennsylvania
of
structure has worked
general the
well and
I had to make
much,
so
about how
didn’t have
ing served
By
started
campaign
there
“In
spend-
undergraduate life.
Keohane and Yoh
a
and
into
Keohane
RESTRUCTURING dissent from
on
would have liked,” Keohane said.
ed
Anne’s
199 5.
own
and that will fund Uni-
all expectations
and
things
of
from
Keohane said, it has ty from liability, but,
president not known for his
a
time
St.
attend
they
establishment five years ago has operat-
funding.
more
$2 billion fundraising
depart-
and
the
choices
more
valid,
her from
prevented
the road
on
.
each year and that the cap-
time
more
“Once
is
competitive, the University community more
ing
Science
Political Science
while such
that,
sometimes
are
reoccur
ital campaign
was
alone, the University she hardly
criticisms
often
in
changes
of Duke.
aspect
every
In numbers
the
the
assumed
Keohane
July 1,
I feel
to
Political
in
95 1
967.
Presidency
October
said, “and
Scholarship
Political
in
1
President
Vice
for
ex-
political philosopher.”
1
in
University.
Keo-
alongside four-letter words,
hane
She said Sunday
Honors
with
College
University.
University
Assumed
name
cies.
Oxford
in
on
College,
stu-
by
re-
difference in
a
Kappa
Marshall
Ph.D.
Inducted
ercising authority makes
School
experi-
in her tenure
drawn regular
of
Served
inter-
has
High
activities.
undergraduate
Dogged early
ence.
a
College
University
desire to contin-
a
Awarded
Beta
Wellesley
from
Received
of
and implementation of
planning
changes
Springs
major
a
gender dynamics
University hiring and other
ue
as
the Women’s Initia-
as
examine the
She also
Hot
of
Phi
Graduated Science
first female presi-
University’s
now
Ark
Blytheville,
in
at
undergraduate life and
to
dent, Keohane model for
Born
cap-
women
dent protests that often mentioned her
out how
figuring
nu-
spent
the table and helping them
on
I
about issues like justice
equality and freedom, and
filling of
University president, Keohane
as
prioritize, including
to
make further contributions to the field.
loved thinking
she
described several
tive,
and Mill and
“Rousseau
said,
are
and the
not until last year that she
genetics
as
and other natural sciences evolve rapid-
Plato
bear-
clothing
the governance of the Health System.
philosophy,
such
disciplines
of
regulation
Stanford
relatively unchanging. While
Ini-
administrative positions.
merous
ital
Keohane
the Duke-
Duke, changes
her return to research is made
field, political
Equity,
that produce
companies
to
Nanneri 0.
programs,
the creation of the Office of In-
stitutional
University, Keohane acknowledged that
because her
academic
new
the Uni-
College,
Pennsylvania
many
months
the fac-
on
of
greater internationalization,
62,
aca-
reminis-
fondly,
at Swarthmore
ulties
an
possible before
as
Speaking
of the
their
BIOGRAPHY
overhauls of residential life, the found-
tiative,
be
2003 � PAGE 11
University Health System, major
am
husband—-
her
scholars
well-respected
nearly
the creation of
oversaw
3,
come.
are
Durham Neighborhood Partnership
expectation.”
our
years to
actions
op-
I’ll
that
promise
certainly
Wherever both
firm
a
it is
here, but
Duke
ing
announc-
ideas
other
any
come
her
Tangibly, countless.
world, and
MARCH
MONDAY,
people
was.
out there
job well, but there are can
she added.
do
it
really
su-
p AGE 12 �
MONDAY,
Comics
3,2003
MARCH
The Chronicle
Overholser/ Roger Yamada
Daily Crossword
THE
Edited by
Williams
Robert
Wayne
ACROSS 1
Dole (out) and
“Harold
5
Maude” star
Shillong's
9
state
14 “Rhyme Pays" rapper Fibber
15
de
16 Brandon
Wilde's cinematic
cry
17
Bank offering
20
Long, long
21
Signs
22
Lots
time
on the
line
dotted
and
lots
-fi
23 24
Heavy
25
Carte blanche
30
Canadian
imbiber
golfer Dave cash
Indian
34
35 Cheers
for
Manolete
Gilbert/ Scott Adams
36
Tony's cousin
37 Outer
opposite of
Delta
"The
38
Venus" writer
WHEN
REPLY
I
WORE
YOU
LEAVE
IT
E-WAIL,
WELL. ..I LL
TO
ATTRACTS
E-WAIL.
.
THE
VICIOUS
OUT
t
T~T/
4
& the rest
5
Outpatient facility
Hillbillies"
THAT WORKS
CYCLE.
of “The
Beverly
41
BREAK
TO
40 Max
_
M
KNOUJ HOUJ
rAAILS TRYING
__
*-ET
VOICE-
I'W
FOR
6
Play opening
42 Roast host
7
43 Historic times
8
44 Charlie of
9
you.
Berlin 10
48 Have
high
hopes
54
V
12
Green
Gables
team
61A
18 Jan or
Stenerud Elam
Jason
workers
60
Mongrels
19
61
New York
23
Haughty
24
Picturesque
25
Sop
stadium
63
values
Cultural
64 Actor 65
26 Part
Sean
LEM
of
33
Kind
41
Lots
28 Head cheese
45
Seoul
Type type
46
Fourth
48
Zenith
49
"Eyes
of
Stoppage breathing
discipline
29
DOWN and
30 Witticism
Men"
31
Sound rebound &
Twixt 12
Adders in
the
of tank
32 Age
54
Verne's captain Floating
55
man
estate
hoosegow "The
56
Dog
58
Kreskin's
59
"
Wide
in
Thin Man"
Fascinated by
51
Belly problem
53 Subsequently
of land
50 Heart
Far East?
20
52
Timer button
39
27
Exercise
"Of
Diner
expressions
off
62 Give
au
Bellow
girl 13
Hoops grp.
game
Tru
Fitted with
Writer
57 Marble-moving
Doonesbury/ Garry
riches?
-la-la British
11
town
52 Italian bell
O
Past of
boots
Giant Mel
47
Sty cry
racecourse
member
46 PGA E
CA
Escondido,
39 Loses one's
forte
Largo"
The Chronicle for Nan
Things the University should name Quadrangle:
Keohane
The Keohane
chair of
The Keohane
Chapel:
The Keohane Nan’s
PAIGE,
IS
THERE
ANYTHING I Do?
AWAY.
is
WAY
\
MAKE
TO
UP
ANY
THERE
backsync
of the IS
IT
boys
you,
mother;
most
it
THAT
was
KE
my
»S
THERE THIS
To
CUTE
ONE
60
brian
.kelly,
Hideaway
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Nannerl O. Keohane
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Sales Coordinator:
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photogs
here) Village:
campus
NORDSTROM...
precious and
jane, jeff
WARM UP
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I’LL
ALTHOUGH
HOTHIMC COULD
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“VEN
OF
CONFETTI BECAUSE
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THERE'S
PHOTO
AUTOGRAPHED
MY
CAN
Paul
100th Volume of The Chronicle:...
Money bin:
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The Keohane
60
..ken
03/03/03:
Keohane
FoxTrot/ Bill Amen
jen .karen
science:
political
Weiss
Emily
Representative:
ov.o
Duke Events Calendar Submit notices at least event Box
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or
J —'
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days prior
attention of “Calendar Coordinator”
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Dawoud
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scriptural
Location:
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12;30pm. Discussion
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Latin
American
24th.
and
Caribbean
Deadline
provided.
March
America
back
report
opportunities
Dinner
Competition;
will
For
for
2003
application,
an
visit
150:
Gendered
9:loam-
Experience
invited to attend
a
of
series of lec-
guest speaker.
Dr.
Betty
come
by
our
Center.
French Table:
7pm, Tuesdays.
Join
French Table
us.
us
for the
Great Hall
to the
(close
La
and
table francaise.
speak
French with
Loop).
the President of the National Association of
Spence
is
Female
Executives.
female
Studies
will be the
In her
training opportunities,
the
recount
space available
appearing
Series
-10:25am.
executives.
and
120
she
role,
Film
their
Undergraduate
in Latin
www.duke.edu/web/las/Funding/undergrad.html or
Lecture
tures.
research
out
Studies.
Library
Students
summer
Reference
7-B;3opm
Incentives
Representation
Bpm.
Indian
Independent
back
Series:
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Drive, the
at
are
School
Divinity
provides
networking
for
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East
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senior level
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East
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Spring Writing Workshops: 7-Bpm. sensible,
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writing
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Festival
discussion with
Event:
students.
Presbyterian/UCC
Studies
204 D East
ments and
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fellowship, begins
at
9-
Fellowship:
informal
time of refresh-
B:3opm.
All
are
wel-
comed.
Undergraduate Lounge. please
contact
Benjamin Cellular
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and
Sara
For
4pm.
Betty
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English Department
questions
Hudson
and
Self-
Professor
Across Duke
the
Building
Unitarian
time,
Universalist:
dinner,
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who
worship. question,
look
believe that truth
gion.
9-10pm,
It’s
doesn’t
Basement of
a
Duke
Social
Biosurface
life’s
with
Chapel.
meaning,
one
particular
Patty
Session and Annual sion and annual
religious community for
begin
hanneool @ earthlink.net.
Mondays.
for
or
comments,
(skh3@duke.edu)
or
(bam9@duke.edu).
author of
will be March 3, 2003. The lecture Feminist
Center
TUESDAY,
Mellon
7pm.
Summer Research
4
Center. Hindu Student
Nineteenth-Century
Hartman's lecture is
of
California
Jeff
Pettigrew.
"Electoral
Parochial
Screen/Society:
10pm, Mondays. Associate
and
(Carpenter Boardroom).
Westminster
Hartman Lecture:
in
Portrait
Ewald
Location:
Workshop
present
vs.
Democracies."
Presidential
man's
Council.
Saidiya
"The
MARCH
Classroom. Politics
dreams in this subliminal Free
7pm.
course
The
Wendy UNC.
and
the
Theolgocial
Library,
Rights
the
conjunction
Watch:
School.
Discussion:
with
Representation:
Documentary
Divinity
responses to the
Alumni
Russian Women's Presented
as
associate
practical theology
to discuss
Duke
Crisis
Ecological
Join Dr.
bible and
sis.
9:30-2pm.
the
To
and
Series:
Photography Speaker
In
Photography, Work
±
Awards for
3 To
i
Information Session:
The Portrait in
calendar@chronicle.duke.edu
MARCH
Discussion:
J.
at
”
MONDAY,
x
r
Engineering
Meeting: 4pm.
meeting. Love
Science, Levine Science
CBE
poster
ses-
Auditorium and Hall
Research
from
explains
garden. Doris
Duke Center.
Prayer; s:lspm, Tuesdays.
of
DUU
7-Bpm,
Duke
Memorial
Tuesdays. Worship
Chapel
Garden: A Duke
LeDuc,
how to create
Films: 7
Freewater
Griffith Film Theater,
Chapel
Adcock
Bryan
Literary
reading
Lilly Library. Study:
Room 032,
Night
a
tranquil night
&
9pm.
Presents
"Iris"
Center.
Center.
Hannenman, Bible
the
Alice
Stress.
Gardens staff,
Blackburn TAIZE
7pm. Exploring Daily
Poster
and reli-
Gardens class:
Respite
basement
and
area.
friendship. Sponsored
contact Sara Morris
and
For
Festival book
questions
Hudson
Event:
or
comments,
(skh3@duke.edu)
(bam9@duke.edu).
7pm.
signing. Thomas
or
Betty
Room,
please
Benjamin
MONDAY,
The Chronicle
Letters to
MARCH
3,
2003
� PAGE
13
editor
the
Mi Gente endorses candidates in elections Following candidate cultural
in
session
a
to
able
was
on
groups
which each
address
many
Feb. 26
on
campus
and further discussions with the candifor
dates
Duke
president
Student
Feb.
on
Latino student to endorse the
Duke
the
Gente, is
association,
a success-
ful
the immi-
Government:
future, especially given
dent
Taylor
sent
Reaves
vote
president, Avery
for
for vice
community
We
all very well. 4
March
on
and
repre-
urge you to these
support
Alex
Richard Rivera
president for facilities
Trinity The
is
writer
’O3
co-president
for student affairs.
president
on
the stuto
body and will be able us
and athletics and Elizabeth Dixon for vice
firm grasp
a
relevant to
most
the
whole.
a
president
interaction,
for vice
Niejelow
as
qualified and enthusiastic candidates.
for vice president for academic affairs, Andrew Wisnewski
ahead for
are
These leaders have
the issues
for
Collison for president, Cliff Davison for executive vice
that
changes
University and the DSG
pleased
following candidates
Student
most able to lead DSG into
nent
Government
Mi
28,
Mi Gente
After much deliberation,
believes that these candidates will be
of Mi Gente
Duke Conservative Union endorses for DSG dent for facilities and athletics. None of
On behalf of the Executive Board of Duke
the
pleased
to
clear
am
is
We
are
considerable
Ultimately
standing
and his
modicum of
professionalism. This
decision,
tough
understands that it is not DSG’s job to
effort
needed to make DSG function with was
micromanage
or
the programs of others. All
a
a
from
candidates
these
DCU’s
his
because
however,
exceedingly qualified. Ultimately, experi-.
to DSG office. As the DCU
ence
was
but
factor,
deciding
expect and hope that Ferguson, man, will have We
leadership. Reaves
DSVU endorses It’s
Duke
Student
elections.
As
making
you
stress-free
have
voting
really;
spa
don’t
voting
a
right
come
forget
in
spa
should
candidates best support ideals
long
as
as
we
please.
And, of
sharing
our
identical
read
easy—just
the blanks
on
course,
factor that
a
in you
agenda
having
an
today with
the rest of DSVU.
Also, DSVU formally
will. you load off,
port
Alex
for
Niejelow
does
not sup-
anything.
Zachary Dunn
at the door.
your
are
list
thank you for
background,
political
our
ballot your
decide which
to
try
a
be
your-
This is sup-
thinking for
to check
you
if
please, don’t bother
mechanically results
the most
experience
and take
yourself and independence Why
to
to
fill in
and
DSVU likes to think of itself
possible.
but
posed
the
the Duke
think
to
self with such questions.
student
committed
But
you?
of
Chronicle columnist
a
don’t have
for
to
undoubtedly already firmly
that
sure
relaxing,
a
is
for
is president
Conservative Union and
you
like
candidates
Government
you
DSVU
know,
as
Trinity ’O3 The writer
Dunn’s
Union would
endorse
officially
so
and
again,
time
that
Student Voting
Just
Bill English
for academic
president
I
these candidates.
fresh-
and Alex Niejelow for vice presi-
affairs
president,
also endorsing Avery
are
for vice
a
elected
are
their votes for urge the faithful to cast
we
in campus
bright future
a
nation-
international,
al and state politics if they
the
refrain
to
pledge—promising
addressing
the
signed
also
is
Ferguson,
Russ
challenger,
endorsed
membership
program campus events
under-
organizational
the
our
to have
platforms.
Elizabeth Dixon, with the hope that she
president because of his
experience
of
mediocre
extremely
endorsing Clifford Davison for
executive vice
is
race
about it.
didn’t worry
president of student affairs
vice
all
competitors.
his
we
position
the
since
but
for,
We also foundboth of the candidates for
His
him above
actually
uncontested,
and lead-
goals
ership background place
interaction
dent for community
for Duke
president.
thinking, realistic
members know what the vice presi-
our
enthusiasti-
DCU
Government
I
following
Taylor Collison
endorses
cally
the
announce
endorsements: The
Student
Union
Conservative
Trinity
’O4
Nicholas Eberstadt
The writer is the chair of
personal
Dunn’s Student Voting
here to do it
Union
Henry
Wendt
Chair in Political
Economy.
American
Enterprise
Institute
Students for Matt Gillum endorse Matt Gillum the
We, Matt
of
members
Gillum for Duke Student Government
president. rorism
his
use
to
perfect candidate 21st
We
century.
make
lead
us
guarantee
Zane Curtis-Olsen
and his
funds
embezzle
personal
own
Dr.
Eberstadt is
a
Trinity
for
him
the
into
the
in
Russia, China, and India
political economist
Senate Committee
against), his advo-
hemp-based clothing
determination to
of Aids
really just
that?” Vote Gillum, and you will be
lavishly rewarded.
ter-
on
“Did he
the he is
(which
of
cacy
Matt’s strong stance
say
“The Future
term, Matt will have all
of Duke exclaiming,
Matt
endorse
formally
Gillum,
the end of his
for
Students
’O5
international affairs.
on
Foreign
who has
frequently testified
Relations and The
before
House Committee
health and mortality in developing
countries,
including HIV/AIDS.
Tom Roller Trinity
that, by
’O5
March 3, 2003 12:00
-
2:00 pm
Letters Policy The Chronicle tor
or
ture,
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14 �
PAGE
The Chronicle
MONDAY, MARCH 3,2003
The Chronicle Collison for
running for Duke Student Government president
candidates
Two
president
stand out above the rest, Matthew Slovik and either would make
Although
Taylor Collison
excellent DSG
an
president,
Collison stands out above Slovik both because of his broad undernext year and because of his
standing of the issues DSG will face overarching Collison
vision for the to the
comes
served
outsider, having
on
serving
Craven
as
something of
as
DSG
as
Quadrangle presi-
dent and social chair of Alpha Tao this year. Collison is also
nity
founding EZDevil.com, ed students
a
the institutionalized SAGES
a
responsible for
before
courses
came
into
being.
experience, both inside and outside of DSG, gives
This breadth of Collison
Omega frater-
portal site that provid-
a
to evaluate
place
an
legislator
a
leaving the organiza-
his freshman year before tion and
organization.
race
unique perspective
what DSG
on
and should
can
plish. Collison understands how DSG should function body,
a
as
liaison between the administration and students.
a
Letters
to
lobbying
Additionally,
ming. Additionally, he
wants to revamp the Student
Finance Committee process, which is
effectively
what each committee should work
a
ing previously served
Organization
most DSG as
for facilities and athletics last year. One of the most
parts of Slovik’s campaign is his plan and-abput talking
portion
unity
the executive board in order to have among
president. The accomplishments of DSG
as
develop
a
vendors should be such
system is
a
a
group.
students system of discounts for Duke
not the
something sorely
for
so
a
at local
job of
DSG
a
president, and Katz lacks the
organization.
not do since he is
effective DSG
an
only
care
can-
semester.
should be commended for his
problems that he points
president will
next year, which Sacks
problems facing DSG, but his platform lacks
solutions to the
fees
tract
ability
recognize
any substantive
costs to
ability
five
to
and
DAVE INGRAM, Editor
Page
Editor
MATT ATWOOD, TowerView Editor
Editor
JODI SAROWITZ, TowerView Managing Editor
JOHN BUSH, Online Editor TYLER ROSEN, Sports Managing Editor
Editor
AMI PATEL, Wire Editor MELISSA SOUCY, Sr. Assoc. Editor
Photography Editor
THAD PARSONS, Sr. Assoc.
Editor City & Slate
EVAN DAVIS, Sr. Assoc.
ANDREA OLAND, Sr. Assoc.
PhotographyEditor
Although fee
Sports
Editor
BARBARA STARBUCK, Production
MARY WEAVER, Operations Manager
University,
of Duke
NALINI MILNE,
faculty,
view of the editorial board.
(he Duke Student Publishing The
University.
its students,
opinions expressed
staff, administration
Columns, letters
To reach the Editorial Office (newsroom) the Business Office Union Building
call
at
is entitled
to one
684-3811 or
copy.
your we
value
we
input
our
of
But
events.
and
we
long
student
Committee
the
that
have before
based ask
that much—-
continually works
price
of
Domino’s
a
Union, the will
increase
dramatic. How do
and
would
like
plan
we
foremost,
we
increase
to
to
funding?
greater
First
be
the
situation.
campus
We
sary.
throat.
students,
committees that
woeful-
are
under-funded and
We
push
are
a
artists
not
are
bureaupro-
down
leaders
pus
ham-
neces-
student
a
we
to
trying
gramming
budgets of Major Attractions Speakers—two
not
are
enrich
only ask
we
administrative
cracy
Union
to
when
government and an
and
Major
The
life and
increases
for
examine
closely
to
you
your
group
and
trying
to create
something fun, stimulating,
pered by high technical fees
recreational,
and interesting while we
would like to lower
ticket that
not free.
to
reduce
like
student
We would
Quadflix
the
from
prices
we
those events
at
prices
are
$4
current
here.
intellectual
We have been
for 50 years and do
it
for
50
need your
what
if
Maceo
programming,
and
Jim
Bruer
George Clinton cheaper
for students.
Third, greater
will
funding
allow
us
bring popular shows such “Rent”
for
more
than
work,
and
you
deserve
to
ming
as
and
one
if
you
this
our
think
campus program-
please
for
we
support
attend
quality
than
vote
want to But
you
if you
our
are
doing it
If you like
help.
do,
we
we
more.
and make shows like “Rent,”
Parker,
in this newspaper
Manager
Unsigned
a
get
out
the Union fee
the 1980s and the Union to
eight
early
once
major
(George Will,
1990s—-
brought six
Jesse
night
and
expand
will
our
allow
efforts
programming
increase.
Saturday night
Jackson,
Armadillo Grill.
to
in small
such
speakers
us
as
Jesse Panuccio
the
Trinity ’O3
bands in the
The writer is
president of
Duke University
Announcement Please
see
page 13 for letters from various
organizations
endorsing candidates
for tomorrow’s Duke Student Government elections.
On
the
Building, call
record
first step is
to
really invite the opinion of lots of people
are not
necessarily
those of Duke
editorials represent the
majority
684-2663
or
fax 684-4696. To reach at
the characteristics and qualities of the position and rich and diverse in
are.
The Duke
as
to what
we
community
90858, Durham, N.C. 27708. All rights reserved. written permission
think
is broad
perspectives, and Tm really excited about the committee
hearing what those people think.
101 West
No part of this publication
of the Business Office. Each
individual
Board of Trustees Vice Chair Robert President Nan Keohane’s
Steel, who will chair the search committee for
replacement,
on
beginning the
process
the
Union
non-profit corporation
represent the views of the authors.
Flowers
of
cam-
and talent costs.
Second,
I
sheer principle.
on
for
But for the
may
to any increase in fees
asking
collective
ly
students
Some
object
our
the
consider
voting for that referendum.
the Union is
pizza.
I also
Thus,
will
you
student,
Per not
we
also in need of
are
same reasons.
hope
and
again.
can
Finance
fax 684-8295. Visit The Chronicle Online at http://www.chroniclc.duke.edu.
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Company, Inc.,
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© 2003 The Chronicle, Box may be reproduced
and
Duke
at
administratively, for
The independent
increases
that the student groups fund-
ed
Duke just does not offer the same
Student
recognize
we
PhotographyEditor
SUE NEWSOME, Advertising Director
Supplements Coordinator
The Chronicle is published by
tuition
most
Government,
SETH LANKFORD, Online Manager
ALISE EDWARDS, Lead Graphic Artist YU-HSIEN HUANG,
Editor
MEG LAWSON, Recess Editor
BECKY YOUNG, Features Editor
MATT KLEIN, Sr. Assoc.
Projects
MIKE MILLER, Health & Science Editor
University
ask
Look back to the Duke of
REBECCA SUN,
KIRA ROSOFF, Wire Editor
every
we
years
approval.
JENNIFER SONG, Senior Editor
Photography Editor
NADINE OOSMANALLY, Sr. Assoc.
surely
caliber
Thus, about
tradition
JONATHAN ANGIER, General Manager
Photography
school
a
the
nation—you will notice
unaffiliat-
are
Duke
increased funding for many of
Look
across
we
with
Editor
MATT BRUMM, Senior Editor
ROBERT TAI, Sports
programming—-
seven
because
ALEX GARINGER, University Editor
Sports
our
the student body to increase
out.
KENNETH REINKER, Editorial
skyrock-
bring the best and
Duke’s
deserves.
KEVIN LEES, Managing Editor
BRIAN MORRAY, Graphics Editor
technical
programming that
occur
GREG VEIS, Recess
con-
have limited
schools
utilize
continually
and
most varied
ask
RYAN WILLIAMS, City & State Editor
life
campus
experience.
have found that
eting
of to
The Chronicle
JANE HETHERINGTON,
of
quality
fees.
PAUL DORAN,
we
exhibits,
art
confronted with rising
we
studying in Los Angeles this
Shaomeng Wang
year
shows and many
and the Duke
is his enthusiasm, which is
begin planning immediately for
and
costs. Over the last 10 years,
needed in DSG. However, enthusiasm will
presidency. Moreover,
13,
Oktoberfest,
The Union is
far, and Sacks’s campaign lacks the substantive issues needed
successful
need to
the
the
improve student services and his
greatest qualification
Mike Sacks’s
legislative experience,
Major
other programs that add to
has
encouraged. However, the implementation of
broader vision to lead the
one
to
Devilhunt,
not
and thriving
popular programming.
Although ed
Organization
cam-
student-sponsored,
at
Duke,
radio,
quality
body,
Cable
Each
alive
was
with
inal television and film programs,
and
Springstein)
Bruce
films,
bring concerts, movies, orig-
Broadway
Adam Katz, who has two years of
powerful ideas about how
are
an
Buffet,
pus
Freewater
more.
Jimmy
the
Speakers,
much
R.E.M.,
Dead,
per
largest and old-
at
(Grateful
smaller programs. The
by
programming
Major
notoriety
$ll
The Union is
est
bands of great
Neil Simon),
dozens and dozens of
semester.
University’s
greatly benefit students
Student
Fee
Broadway
facilities and
the
Activities
platform.
individual ones, but rather those of
desire to
out-
perhaps focusing too heavily on Additionally, Slovik understands the importance of building
effective year
of
the
Union’s
University
portion
we
undergraduincrease
to
including
clearly understands the issues, but his platform is less
teamwork and
vote
Attractions,
broad than Collison’s, athletics.
president
encouraging
get the DSG president
to
ates
Duke
more
experience, hav-
vice
that Duke
ask
to students. Whoever is elected should copy this
of Slovik’s
Slovik also
to
comprehensive vision for
the executive committee
on
not program-
next year.
on
clearly the candidate with the
Slovik is
groups
sorely in need of review
student groups, and has
serve
March 4,
On Tuesday,
University Union and Campus Council—each of these three policy and lobbying,
editor
Fee increase for Union will
Collison best understands DSG’s role in relations to the Duke
has their role and DSG’s should be
the
accom-
(see story, page one)
Commentary
The Chronicle
Watching this Iraq story unfold, all can
I’d
planet,
own
my
kids and
own
some
pop
Bomb”—attempting
not about
were
most
my
pull
popcorn,
help
the
onto
a
that
something
Muslim world. how
see
drama unfolds. Because
this
about to
are
is the
see
voluntarily engaged
dent has
Harry
Truman
dropped
Japan.
Vietnam
was
a
nuclear
the Cuban
missile
was
him,
on
And
crisis
shake of the dice by but it
it
oust
the
only
this
presidency
Anyone
this
on
20
nearly
found that 95 wants to
a
man
on
He has been convinced by of advisers
that
can
in
for it
seeing
to
a
I’ve
mission.
tiny
through.
ing and get
now
on
is
Chronicle
The
that until
is
and
get
energy
mean
and
ing,
“University
from
always
Kevin
unfortunately Briefs.”
some
THEODORE
So, with
more
Lees
help
news
stuck
reportwith
me
Ramblin-(Root-Beer)-Gnome,
family
serious with
are
in
of his
one
to discuss
wishing
wrong school” this weekend
THEO
mil-
yet another $25
family, all 14 East be
renamed
will be followed from 1 to 14 to from
were
by
a
numerical suffix
other
to
lated in
Monday Monday
President
Nan name
“The Nicholas Pool at Taischoff Aquatic Pavilion,” Coach K
“Nicholas
again
Court,” and
to the school of the
their
adding
name
it “The
environment, making
had
of
Durham has
Duke
sophomore
“ghetto” by
a
Apparently
it is not, despite evidence,
plex history, heritage,
a
asked what he
place
eclectic
an
and
declared
officially
party
two
city
a
days
with
amazing
an
rich
com-
musical
a
culture. When
of both the Piedmont Blues and the first-ever large in the United
States,
the
sopho-
sipped his beer and replied: “Ghetto.”
White studies department introduced A
European-American
Studies
in
future
the
the
alongside
African/African-American
Studies,
Studies, Latin American Studies and Studies.
“This
“Just
long
so
is as
department, lest were
excellent,” we
we
one
don’t have
has
department
been introduced to Arts and Sciences, time
to stand
some
departments
a
so
many
subdued reaction. “It
quoted
as
long
students,”
doesn’t
really
matter to
really
of
scares
encountering
me an
was
is
the
intruder
campus.”
of
to
edly attempting
being Board
her
get
brought
acts like
said.
American Studies
could be dismissed
on
though,
based
that she
evidence
actually
academic efforts
nities for intellectual and
that there
as
“work.” Far
worse,
spend-
courses
as
“Show
ways,” “George Washington
helluva guy, and white, too,” and “Why
we
was
insult poor
savors
as
to be
grounds of insanity, considers
her
interesting opportu-
personal growth, instead of
though,
every
possible
weekends.
Duke
is the
charge that this
day she spends here, instead
The
so
she
latter
can
wasted get really
offense
could
result
on
in
female
has
‘been
Trinity
for
Duke
the
us
won’t be able to
the
by
New
column is
syndi-
Times
York
News
for
“being
bad” after
she
eats
a
large
feeling guilty. in
drop
slight
number of
‘boring,
Duke
to
numbers for
in
decrease
the
who need to
depressing
is
applica-
this year, there
of dull but
number
get drunk to
existence, “The
applicants]
undergraduate
again
up
were
tolerate their
a
own
(boring, rich,
in BRA’s
drop
was
wealthy
unfortunate,” admitted head of
admissions Christoph Guttentag, “but with luck, Duke able to turn
some
by the
year.”
end of freshman
students
Two
already A
attend
ture
attending lecture
pair of Duke juniors actually
Robinson lecture last
even
to say before the lec-
going
was
went to the Randall
night without already
Tuesday
what he
didn’t
they
lecture
agree with before
agreeing with
stu-
of the other incoming
dents into, at the very least, boring alcoholics,
started. “I don’t know, I just wanted to hear
what he had to say, of them
maybe challenge
explained. The
my
own
ideas,”
other student could not be
reached for comment. This is the second such incident
In Other News
NPHC group holds yet another colloquium about
•
people of
color to
lack of interest in white
emphasize
people Member of
•
housing
T-shirt beneath “Duke
Fraternity pledge
•
brotherhood and
staff really
wearing
UNC
Housing” uniform trainers
friendship
attempt
to talk about
without sounding “f—ing
gay” Students engage in intimate
• ,
not
physical
encounter
involving alcohol
•
Duke Women’s basketball team discusses leaving
ACC to seek better competition in WNBA •
wants to show Great Hall
Sophomore
employees
she’s “not like other Duke students” •
Student
caught
attempting
to
out
break
of
lately
by THEODORE HUXTABLE’SPROTEGE would like to
senior has
good” lately, which, ity
terribly
racial box
good’
exercising A
am
told
service.
sees
applicants
and consis-
expulsion from the University.
race. on
quickly
the
then
slight
through half of them. The
charges
on
out of the
she pays thousands of dol-
to the classes
lars for instead of sleeping
just
tions
the
before
money’s worth
time in the Sarah P. Duke Gardens
tently going
do, but
to
I
so
has
rich, alcoholic’ applicants
charges of repeat-
on
University by committing subversive ing
And
Bush
this semesteris
junior
Undergraduate Judicial
related to Caucasian
include such
Duke
of just attempting to get through the miserable week
administrator
an
meal,
one
Duke has to offer
A
cated
tising herself
me
well-to-do,
are
female undergraduate
one
risk
students
some
this
that
University briefs
this has
Although
the assailants
as
“What
saying.
as
vio-
Duke student being sexually
one
Native American
We wouldn’t want that!” The department will focus
tunes: gay in
a
night
individual
give the impression
Americans, and will
entire Friday
an
Asian-American
transcend actually aspects of America that
the contributions of and issues
entire
But if you look
His bold vision
leg.
Thomas Friedman's
mil-
alcoholic
violated during
a
table—a
do it right.
settlement
will be
extremely minuscule
ago.
a
people thought about Durham being the birth-
black-owned business more
a
character,
vibrant
over-
Student accused of taking advantage of what
been at
student who had
alcohol-related assault.
an
white Duke
Durham officially ‘ghetto’
City
went to the
in the classroom.”
unprecedented event,
either way, just
from off
Nicholas School of the Environment Nicholas.”
The
a
not occurred before in recent memory,
for Nicholas’s
uses
an
passed without
the dorms
According
considered
i ECrE
by
[he]
Another student added the
sexually
students
nT'CP'R
name
s—
right thing
While overall
Friday night In
1
Each
No
HUXTABLE’S
dorms will
distinguish
another.
one
Keohane,
Campus
“Nicholas.”
con-
idea he had learned
an
told “maybe
was
courses
comment, “Leave that
result of
intellectual
that
if the
with
supported by boldness
not
areas.
worried
our
odds
as
us
discover
one
it
I
Duke
to be renamed “Nicholas.” a
in
stunning irony
to start
heard the failed attempt.
As
feel better about ourselves,
us
lion again; East Campus dorms all
lion donation to Duke by the Nicholas
in other
but
them $lOO
cost
vision.
am
helped
the
and
mahogany
you
only
is
Iraq
on
leadership,
this.”
A freshman
table has
out.
them,
expanded
they built would
to find the
seem
underneath,
gaso-
tapped
carved
I
that
to increase
Iraq
presenting
is
big, bold, gutsy
not
would
stop suicide bombing
or
in
could pull this off.
we
beautiful
the Palestinians
more
new
But
have
that
war—because
dealing
a
the Arabs —or wife.
power
conservation
rallied
versation told he’s at the wrong school
mil-
gives $25
to make
can’t
we
Student attempting
the day’s additional University Briefs: Nicholas
bigots
as
and why
as
Sy-(Snootles)-and-thehere
whites
everything
staying
would also have told the Israelis that
that if tak-
changed
support
more
generate
of
eve
president
I
so
of this
they
not
we’re
every
What do I mean? I
making
the
the
have
would have told
I
it
have
not
So here’s how I feel: I feel
THEO HUXTABLE’S PROTEGE does HUXTABLE’S PROTEGE do
radical
one
on
nation-building
who would
project, but they
done
things
would
would
proposed
eve
Bush
these
and
I
energies
the
on
democracy.”
all
were
your
imperil
convinced
Manhattan Project for
a
who
Had
see-
real
not sit
in
my
though,
for
will
extremists
dealing with them
not
costly
would,
are
crusade—-
a
tolerate
to
OPEC capacity is nearly
military preparations (which
we
your
with France, Russia
top of another
huge,
on
We
idle if you
our
a more
leadership,
serious
line
ever
but
and
He and his team
people
on
they stop suicide bomb-
find myself with $2.25-per-gallon
disarming).
Long
re
alternative
vital
not
midst
would just
and initiated
have at least gotten Saddam to begin
group
Palestinians that until
the
up
get used
nation
designs
imperial
no
'
(Yon
I
suc-
only place they’ve been bold
in their
a
to
a
could maximize
vision—support
conceived this
it. The
country
they
have
bold proj-
his boldness to
that
his
the only
we
treaty
tax cut
cre-
have
I would have told the
marathon abroad.
context
a
that
would not have
and
free
a
the
ing their revenge.)
and
security
telling
that
it.
be the worst people to implement may
“The
throwing
Iraq
ABM
we
of
an
Russian
ripping
were
and
a
a
his
by bringing hope
direction—to
context for
a
are
Iraq dealt with without
see
“A liberated
in
have
of the
percent
But Bush is
war.
polls.
well
up
by
the Arabs:
all
security
Russians
I’ve been
recently,
states
entire
elite
would have told
alienated
national
Bush’s
I fear that Bush has failed to
support
whole
of choice.
war
And don’t believe the to
his
betting
it
interest
same
ceed,
believed in it,
really
is
something
While I believe in such
is nuts. You could do
you
Bush
in
the
peaceful Iraq.”
decent
ate
because
my
have
I
dilemma.
I
“While we’ll deal with the Iraqi threat,
countries.
alternative. I would
power of freedom to trans-
America’s
thinks President Bush is doing this for reasons
to
angered
treaty
not
and progress into the lives of millions.
ect,
gambles.
but
summed
He
who
if
warming
this
see
And
Bush
global
Kyoto
without offering
really bold.
is
form that vital region
state would be the mother of all
presidential
don’t
the
trashing
dif-
America’s belief in liberty both lead in
Iraq, a
you
leads
war,
show the
imposed
was
No,
speech last week;
over
John F. Kennedy,
A U.S. invasion to disarm
political
a
for
was
I would not have
can
mixed marriage. My wife oppos-
a
me.
that he initiated.
one
that
this
es
huge
a
Saddam Hussein and rebuild
Iraqi
that
something
the
lion in U.S. aid.
Iraq
from the minute I
it
(as
Europe by
will not
and rebuilding
goal
my
office
team),
track,
audacious shake of the dice appeals to
on
threaten-
was
gamble that
a
not
the bomb
with the Soviets
war
have
since
huge risk, but
incrementally.
evolved
ing
a
And
presi-
in
day. This
every
great-
shake of the dice that any
est
took
ferent model in the heart of the Arab-
Commentary
what you
had been
Arab-Muslim
progressive
Saddam
out
ing
a
could
accomplished by building
be
only
It
coaxing simply
It’s
do anymore.
Thomas Friedman
whole
more
the
state—is
game-changer.
nudge
world
transform
to
Arab
dangerous
geopolitical
chair and pay good money just to
a
up
country,
own
my
is this; If this
say
2003 »PAGE 15
3,
long bomb
The I
MARCH
MONDAY,
as
women,
extensively. Another
reported
that she
being thin is means
that
a
has
“been
matter of moral-
she
has
exercised
secret to her virtue has been chas-
acknowledge composition the
an
of
obvious this
debt
column,
Jimi Hendrix
debt
to
ment
of transcendence.
to
as
The
well
Experience
Onion as
in
an
the
in
the
obvious attain-
MONDAY,
MARCH
3,
The Chronicle
2003
Suke
Uniuensitg Burfyam
Carolina
JJorflj
Office
of
the
BOX
27700-fIIIDI
President
TELEPHONE
FACSIMILE
90001
March
Dear Members of the Duke
eleven
-
bold
that have been
things together during
many
strategic plan firmly
in
for
rewarding
very
of its
I
am
those
and shared
years, the
place,
returning
field.
as an
me
a
to
the
I have had
the
library,
one
After
altogether. study
of the most
connect this with
my
training
I look forward to how much I have
hope
that
appreciated is
everyone
still much to be done
It has been and I
are
years to
very
and
a
as
good
your
together
privilege
Thank
you
and for
as
many
to the next
a
am
and
of
fascinating
stage
me
have given support you
a
in the weeks
we
us
have
University,
look forward to
giving
as
of
my
with
a
life.
and research
in 2004-2005,
on
our
into the next
move
administrative
want to reflect
Now, with
in December, and
teaching
year’s sabbatical
We’ve done
as a
I look forward
colleagues
jobs
in my
in all of higher
what I’ve learned, and
political
theorist.
know and months ahead, to let you your support
of
accomplished together.
my
work here.
And there is
16 months.
lead Duke
we
you
of what
in the next
to
in
involvement in Duke and
loyal I
moments.
time for Duke to
professional experience
with
proud
happy here,
come.
friendship
being
professionally.
and the classroom, and to interactions
challenging
and
and
exciting
move on
education, and I have learned much from it. Now I
I
many
have several of active involvement eager to years
to
intention to step down from the
scheduled to conclude
Campaign
institution, and for
theorist before I retire
political to
history
my
personally
me
strong administrative team in office, I believe it’s
stage
684-3050
At that time, it will have been eleven since I took office years
of Duke in June 2004.
years
(919)
University Community:
This weekend, I shared with the Board of Trustees
presidency
684-2424
(919)
1,2003
this
and I have treasured this
continuing
opportunity,
during
to be
and for all the
these memorable
Yours
colleagueship,
years.
sincerely,
——
VO
Nannerl
0. Keohane
experience.
Bob
part of the Duke family in the
1
PAGE 16 �
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