March 3, 2003

Page 1

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

&

are

required

forms for Duke-in

petitioned programs:

Application (for Duke

starting

March 2

nd ,

programs Blue

March 19

th

& May I*>

only)

form with official

transcript Authorization

& consent

form

Don’t wait! online

Call or visit

today

us

to enroll.

Questions?

Call 684-2174

Office of Study Abroad, 2016 Campus Dr.

abroad@asdean.duke.edu

1-800-KAP-TEST

www.aas.duke.edu/study_abroad

kaptest.com registered

trademark of the Law

School

Admission

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

Enrolling

on

page 11

In A Summer Course

At Johns Hopkins Is A Great Way To Get Ahead. ■d

for Duke

No Deposit

2 Br. Townhomes

1 Br.

ir

course

ir

reason,

8 Minutes to Duke

$705

Apartments $6OO

Beautiful Setting •

W/D Connections

65 lbs.

or

ahead

get

load for the fall

enrolling get

want. And if

Large Pool Pets to

up

imart way to

•me •

to catch

in

a

or

on

spring

summer

credits? Want to

at Johns Hopkins is

course

the credits you need and the

you're

enrolled at another

for the summer, you

can

lighten

semesters? Whatever

select from

courses

university

and

80

over

isferable courses.*

in 2 Bedrooms

Log Onto

www.jhu.edu/summer Request

Your Summer Schedule

Of Course

Offerings.

PATIO

For

! m |

|o-2.0

|:

£'S«°

3

more

log

information, including

onto

and have

Term I:

KITCHEN

s

course

www.jhu.edu/summer a summer

May 27

listings

call

(Applications

Due

\ Term li: June 30

-

and times

1-800-548-0548,

much better than others.

June 27

-

or

August

1 (Applications

May 16)

Due

June

20)

|Sdi *\% Old Chapel Hill Rd. |

LIVING ROOM UTXII’I"

TWO BEDROOM

r;:;«z.T 1-800-548-0548

Johns hopkins UNIVERSITY

TOWNHOME S<].

Ft. 1175

t=r

489-1910

Online

courses

'Check with

available.

your

college

or

university

to

ensure

all credits

are

transferable


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

it.

Hire it. Find

summer

it.

opportunities and YOU will find out

more

PLACE:

about the 2003

2114

Campus Drive, Center

Latin American and Caribbean

“DINNER

Place it!

competition!

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

The Chronicle

In this week’s issue

Sportswrap Editor:

•Paul

Managing

Top

25 scoreboard

Graphics Editor:

Arizona

1

No.

72,

2

No.

3 Oklahoma

No.

4 Florida

No.

5 Texas

St. John's

69,

No.

7 Kansas

No.

8

No.

9 Louisville

No.

11

No.

12 Wake

No.

13 Xavier

Marquette 98,

14

Forest

Dame

Syracuse 93, Georgetown

16

Illinois

No.

21

New No.

No.

53,

California

Mexico 25

70,

No.

No.

76,

84

23 Utah

Fordham

Mann,

Shane

Ryan,

Silverstein,

Catherine

Sullivan,

Matt

Jeff Vernon

thanks to

Dave

Ingram

Kevin

Lees.

Founded 62

weekly

St. 51

St.

Josh

Ted

and

Chronicle

editor

managing

editor

(OT)

Creighton

Arizona

Smith,

Special

70

79

Mississippi

20

80,

Dayton 69,

18

Poses,

Crowley,

Michael

68

N.C. State 65

82, Michigan

Lehman,

Jake

Nasr,

Sullivan,

15

Illinois

Davis

Christie,

Robert

Paul

Githens,

Schmelzer,

Brian

82

87

No.

Arkansas

Adam

76

No.

Southern

Assaad

67

71, George Washington

Maryland 68,

Nick

Jeste,

Colvin,

Gabe Paula

Jacobson,

St. 61

Clemson

80,

Neelum

Jesse

Abby Gold,

71

Carolina

UAB

Corey,

Writers:

71

24 UConn

10 Notre

No.

No.

Morray Evan

Samuel

17 Okla.

No.

East

82,

Mike

70

No. 6 Duke

Brian

Associate Editors:

66

Georgia

Texas Tech

79,

69

Rosen

Robert Tai

Sr. Associate Editor:

Texas A&M 64

Pittsburgh 71,

Rutgers 95,

22

Auburn

73,

76,

72,

19 Stanford

No.

Kentucky 74,

No.

No.

Editor:

Photography

Men's: No.

Doran

Editor: Tyler

in

The Chronicle.

72

Sportswrap

1983,

sports

is

the

supplement published by It

be read

can

online

at

www.chronicle.duke.edu To

69

reach

Flowers

64

the

department

sports

Building,

call

684-2663

or

at

301

e-mail

sports@chronicle.duke.edu Women's; Connecticut

No.

1

No.

2 Duke

No.

3 Tennessee

No.

86,

70,

Providence

52

84, Kentucky

18 Vanderbilt

72,

No.

5 Kansas

67,

No.

6 La. Tech

St.

98,

No.

4 LSU

Colorado

Virginia 69, No.

10 Texas

70,

No.

11

No.

12 Purdue

No.

13 South Carolina

No.

OF THE

60

59

Baseball

Carolina

65,

lowa

78,

Kevin

8 Texas Tech

St.

Mississippi

perfect

After

76, Michigan

15 Penn

76,

No.

16

No.

19 Arkansas

losing

Michigan

68

hurling

a

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

begins

basketball

meeting Blue

with arch

Devils

chance

for

a

need regu-

title.

different

Duke!

Small classes.

Daily

Budget

15 East

800-844-7858 tie Fares

$313

London

$lO4

TERM

BudaetairFares@Aol.com

From the East Coa:

Accra

$399

Cairo

Sydney $677

Athens

$199

Buenos Aires

$255

Nairobi

Rome

$176

Hong Kong

$287

Auckland

Taxes

prices may

extra.

be

Prices based

available. on

Please

call

roundtrip purchase.

us for

Certain

departures restrictions

1:

TERM 2: Soa

$329

Johannesburg $369 Lower

Casual & relaxed.

37th Street, Ste. 501

sw Email:

Tokyo

interaction with

instructors.

flirfofe/lnc^ $464

apply.

June

15

30

-

-

June

26

August

9

$265

Lagos $375

$699

from

Paolo

May

Lima

other

$278

US

cities.

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

its

team


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.”

Spring Break

One-Color-on-White Printed 100%

I cotton, short sleeve

Publication:

Deadline:

T-Shirts

Starting

March 5

Mon, March 17

Wed,

lues, March 18

Thur, March 6 W

Wed, March 19

Fri, March

7

at

¥

Don't forget to *4Bpiece Minimum order required,

RESERVE YOUR SPACE!

please

call for details. NO SCREEN CHARGE!

Duke Stores Custom Orders

684-8109

or

684-8204

& Department of Duke University Stores®

02-0958


Sportswiai

H 3,

8 �MONDAY,

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.

<^'

'

\

i

>

fT

.lisJlfjE?!

*

#

i:

* -

i:

~'aii* mm

j^iap^ips

H

Find The Chronicle’s sier than

e

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

Annual

David

Memorial Lecture: and

S.

Jeffrey

Cutting-Edges" by author

Levin,

mer

medical

school

pioneering scientist in

the

and

ty,

health.

March 2002

5,

Duke

Lecture

is

Medical

Ready

contact

tion,

foris

a

campus.

and more!

Only

$425-500.

Chronicle

helped

to

and

Available now. One bedroom

Account

Burch Avenue,

apart-

close to

includes

is

-The

8-10

classified

academic

cam-

lent

utilities.

the

15-

to

learn

& business

and is

great

a

to

open

and

informa-

more

Harold

the

Koenig

koenig@geri.duke.edu

at

learn.

Charming

hardwood

rooms,

ceilings. For

information call

showing

price

and

to

large

and

floors,

All sizes and

919-681-

or

with

properties

101

high

ft

Gorgeous

W.

Union the

Open 3

ceiling, Skylights

Columns.

Front &

5

or

Bldg.,

Duke Card

day)

4 consecutive insertions -10 % off consecutive insertions

more

$l.OO $1.50

day

for

a

(maximum

15

spaces)

extra per

Office.

Or call 919-684-3811.

ATTENTION

SOPHOMORES!

Interested in sure

children?

your licen-

earning

to teach

Currently for

applications Contact

school

elementary

Jan

accepting

Oaks

311

housing.

Swift Ave.

furnished,

W/D,

0.8.0.

accept

Will

$2.00

2br/2ba,

660-

3077/jrigg@duke.edu

or

Houses For Rent

Campus,

Partner’s

Now!

Spring

to

1109

bedroom,

3

Place.

3

Available

Discount.

336-248-

Ave.

Virginia

mile low

from

Duke,

utilities,

2BR

house,

less

great

pets

than

Duke

Cash, Check, (We

backyard, great

floors,

deck.

cannot make 24

-

drop

ACC Tournament Tickets.

WEST VILLAGE APTS

4.

Open

and seniors. A cash

prize

deadline is

Application juniors

to of

will

$250

be

April

awarded

standing

innovative

research

dealing with

for

2

Lofts,

East.

blocks

from

Room

(3 all

front porch,

off

www.duke.edu/web/education/schol

Opportunities

I-85/I-40.

Call

area.

or

2

storage,

to

lished

appointments with

clients

Advisors.

to

VALIC

Supervisor, 1601,

tions

and Grant

available

Applications Friday,

2003

Spring

Assistantship

URS

car

on

until 8

$8.50/ hr.

in

can

fenced

Large

yard,

age. 5 min. from min.

to

$9OO

NC

Durham,

27707.

be

Page, willing

Will

Hillsborough!

Florida!

Jamaica, Best

Best Prices!

historic district, 12 up

Available

$9OO/mo.,

Vacations!

Bahamas, Best

Parties,

&

is limited!

Space

Book

Now!

Hurry

trip! Europe

Other

world

Book

on

wide

line

$250

only $lB9

one

way!

destinations.

www.airtech.com

(212)-219-7000.

site. N. MYRTLE BEACH, SC. SPRING location

for

Duke

employees.

given.

2BA condo. $86,900.

2

stu-

BREAK/GRAD

BR/

PER

PERSON,

beach.com.

Call Laleh

WEEK $75

&

UP

www.retreatmyrtle-

1-800-645-3618.

402-1281

SPRING

$lO

sold?

Call

Sales.

with

Avon,

919-614-1480.

NORTHGATE AWESOME JOB.

BARBER

House acres,

for

Sale.

2Bedroom,

country

woody

miles

west

Road,

fireplace,

central A/C &

SERIOUS CAREER.

BREAK

MYRTLE BEACH

$5 for every

Linda

Rep.,

of

1.5

setting,

Durham,

6

Resort

dents

Spring

Spanish

floors,

now!

heating,

stove,

for

Graduation

Linden

hardwood

Ocean Drive

Week!

welcomes stuBreak

Galleon! Book

1-800-438-9590

refrig-

Mall

Ruby Tuesday. Northgate Opening. Person! Club

Full

Service

Blvd.

your

a

accepting

1058 NC

27701.

Management

10am-Bpm.

Day-one

Health

discount

weekly

We

Men’s NCAA Basketball

on

and

certification

Tournament Guide

posi40%

meals,

employee

paycheck

offer

Dental

&

Full- and Part-time

Pathways

w/Duke ID

Get Ready for March Madness!

Immediate interview

tions, flexible hours for school,

$2 off

in

West

Manager. Accepting applicadaily,

Insurance,

Sat. 8-5:00

Re-

Apply

Career program.

EOE.

286-4030

next

from

Sears

to Harris

wanted,

and

Call:

$4/hr

+

ask

7688,

Northgate

tips. for

$9/hr

315-345-

Aaron.

Email:

apblo@duke.edu.

Shopping Center, down

EARN $9/HR Managers/Drivers

REPRESENTING DUKE STUDENTS

Auto, Inclusion

Teeter

Specialist

Durham

Campus. Weekdays Call Tom

or

Betsy,

,

needed to work

with child with disabilities near East 3:15

to

7:30.

FACULTY, STAFF AND ALUMNI

403-3482.

for all your legal Since

1988

HOWARD •

Close to Streets at

ATTORNEY AT LAW

t ,2, and 3 bedroom apartment homes available

Undergraduates welcome

move-m

s sf

TOWER

si

3100 TOWER BOULEVARD

DURHAM,

NORTH

TELEPHONE:

Ridge

FLOOR

our

necial

1

FIFTH

UNIVERSITY .

Call

Rent starts at $520

j Pine

K. ROSS

Southpoint

15 minutes from Duke

needs

CAROLINA

27707

(919) 493-7850

the

room

www.myrtle-

beachstudentrentals.com.

POSITIONS!

ALL

applications).

tions

Mon.-Fri. 8-5:30

Durham,

for

Looking

with

Hiring!

Ruby Tuesday,

(Always

Style Shop

Now

and

at

Party

erator. Call 382-8012.

SHOP

place your

ad.

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

1-800-234-7007

Mexico/Caribbean round

and

orders:

684-3811 to

&

www.endlesssummertours.com

969-6972.

dents

(919)

684-3811

Hotels,

919-

April

Fax

Great

e-mail orders

classifieds @ chronicle.duke.edu

No refunds

stor-

fireplace,

Break

Spring

Cancun,

or

Indep.

0858

Visit the Classifieds Online!

Houses For Sale

earn

-

buy single

kms23.

quality.

919/493/5756. EOE.

Would you like to

27708

880-5680.

DUMC/VAMC.

deposit.

or

phone

3100 Tower Blvd. Suite

March 7. Awards for up to

$3OO for semester

90858, Durham, NC

call

until

accepted

Box

2

applica-

web

on

Financial

Scheduling

PRO-

GRAM. www.aas.duke.edu/trini-

ty/urs/.

VALIC

weekends.

Resumes SUPPORT

for

estab-

Primarily evenings

No

p.m.

Chronicle Classifieds

Buy

800-846-2407.

negotiate price.

tix. 613-2080

#1

3BR/IBA

jrigg@duke.edu; or bcj3@duke.edu.

RESEARCH

Sell.

Building

mail to:

Masters.

sports events.

2 Minutes

Professional

919-732-8552

Great

UNDERGRADUATE

All

Need 2 tix to PFunk at

screened

mbryant@asdean.duke.edu; Schedule

accepted

payments.)

WebTickets.com.

hardwood floors,

Hillsborough

acres.

email

and

central

bedrooms), appliances,

with enclosed

garage

Business

Flex

fax to: 684-8295

heat/air,

information:

or

neighborhood,

All concerts.

con-

venient to Duke. 490-4635.

7

out-

education. For

arships/holtonprize.html

Southwest

(919)-682-3690.

www.bluedevilventures.com.

investigative

or

sq.ft.,,

or

cash

off location

•101 W. Union

Broker 489-1777.

Durham. Great

required

change for

hour

ACC TOURNAMENT BUY/SELL. 800-698-8499.

3BR/2.58A, 1600

is

IR, MC/VISA

or

Downtown

noon

1

welcome,

hdw

neighbors, $895.00

6223.

Educational Research

12:00

publication by

Prepayment

910-

www.duke.edu/web/education.

Holton Prize in

heading

day for Boxed Ad

$BOO/month, singles.

new

bath.

Heading

payment

Watts-Hillandale area,

West

day prior

fully

sophomores.

Riggsbee;

line

-

extra per

Bold

deadline 1 business

Campus

919-382-3043.

724-4257,

2

$2.50 for

a

all Bold Words

day for

extra per

Roommate Wanted

the

1200, Southeast Real Estate.

student

20 % off

(Combinations accepted.)

to

6633.

Private

-

special features

Chronicle , across

for first 15 words

additional per word

$259,900.

419-

or

or

for first 15 words

$4.50

-

100 (per

com-

desire

a

The

at

bath.

separate

$6.00

-

private party/N.R

professional

and

Apply

hall from

ranges.

arrange

593-1538

skills,

appearance

business rate

Island.

resume

excellent

Requires

munication

HOMES

AND APARTMENTS?

North.

University

For

LIKE OLDER

Room

Center

and

builder.

Story

Gourmet

Central

all ads 9

advertising

SW

2

room.

with

plan,

Advertising

BR/3.58A.

family

with

room

about

floor

and

in

Master Suite. Guest bed-

Luxury

excel-

an

&

foyer

home

4

kitchen

the

during

year. This is

opportunity

Durham.

summer.and

week

Newspaper

Transitional

an

work

to

this

per

for

looking

Assistant week

per

then

604-5787.

Place:

The Chronicle

/Advertising

Department

20

$450/mo

Assistant

Advertising

GRAD STUDENTS

ment,

C-21.

Agent,

a

416-0393.

www.bobschmitzproperties.com.

pus,

$B5O/month.

Trudi,

now.

on

minutes

minutes West of

okay.

Rear Staircases.

Medical

Public.

left!

near

religion, spirituali-

Center,

General

and

5:00-6:30P,

free

few

Dr.

professor,

Time

2003,

Apartments.

Security systems

Pets

home 15

919-403-7773.

All

the

whose research

1980s

create the field of

1 BR

God,

Connection.

epidemiologist

an

beginning

of

Exploring

Health:

Spirituality-Healing Levin is

Health,

Controversies,

and

and

Faith,

Larson

“Religion,

Healing:

Crossroads,

B.

15

Duke,

Raleigh.

THIS SUMMER? Ist

of

rental

For Lease.

acreage.

IN

The Chronicle

if

you

have

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

(insert

Nannerl O. Keohane

Roily’s

priceless possession;

Account

Representatives:

Account

Assistants:

CAR.

THE

AT

V

>5

Sales

.......roily

Deck:

Monica Jonathan Melissa

Representatives:

Johannah

Ben

David Chen Brooke

Creative Services:

Rachel

Lauren

Charlotte

Claremon,

Gregory, Megan Harris,

Assistants:

Thushara

Chris

Holt

Reilly,

Melanie

Shaw

Sallyann Bergh

Classifieds Coordinator: Classifieds

Fazekas,

Deborah

Corea,

Ashley Rudisill,

m

Dauphin,

Andrew

Durity,

...Laura

Business

Dohmen

Chris Graber

Coordinator:

VS'

Farrell,

Sim Stafford

Silver,

Administrative Coordinator: National

Hall,

Kristin Jackson

Katherine

Eckerman,

Rogers,

Dawn

Franklin,

Chiu,

Sales Coordinator:

I

/

v/T'i

anne

photogs

here) Village:

campus

NORDSTROM...

precious and

jane, jeff

WARM UP

BRACELET

IT

FOR

UP

I’LL

ALTHOUGH

HOTHIMC COULD

BEGIN

“VEN

OF

CONFETTI BECAUSE

TO YOU?

THERE'S

PHOTO

AUTOGRAPHED

MY

CAN

Paul

100th Volume of The Chronicle:...

Money bin:

Keohane’s

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

business

or

J —'

to the

days prior

attention of “Calendar Coordinator”

to the

90858

2

Dawoud

Bey.

Practice

of

Whetstone

Exploring Crisis.

Ellen

scriptural

Location:

Divinity

Brown-Bag

Davis,

at Duke

Memorial

by

International

Amnesty

Foundation.

professor

School, cri-

ecological

Common

of

Room,

Bryan

12;30pm. Discussion

and

and

Center

with

advocate Elena Schitova.

Duke

UNC

the

chapters

Common

meeting

at

taught by Duke

1317 W.

Studies,

Vegetarian

Multicultural

Feast:

Lounge, Bryan

room

of

Sense

A.

Comparative Brian

will

Crisp

Programmatic

University Scenes

Making

Professor of

of in

Subjection:

5-7pm,

Mondays.

part

of

Disciplines -

East

spm. Saidiya

English

at

the

Berkeley

Terror,

lecture

Campus

and and

Slavery, America.

Hartman, Rhetoric,

series.

for

the

School

Divinity B:4sam.

Writing

sermon? Get tion

session!

Desk.

some

exegesis paper? help

Location:

at

library

a

sheets

Sign-up

Session:

Bibleworks

Library

an

Preparing

resources

for

8a

Location:

223

and

in

Six

C Perkins

Theater,

school,

land

West

Center,

Bryan

from

two

between

hood. Filmmaker

Bollywood:

Beyond

Cinema "Saree".

On

Campus

children

school

Griffith

stranded

and

home

in

in

"Women at Work:

Corporate Life".

only

Women

All

are

Betty Spence

way

about the 2003

more

instruc-

Center

Computer

for

and

YOU

or

their

on

will find

competition! 2114 Campus

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:

Caribbean.

Drive, the

at

are

School

Divinity

provides

networking

for

Duke

East

research,

senior level

Parlor

East

-

Spring Writing Workshops: 7-Bpm. sensible,

skills?

writing

your

and

practical

effective

Sign

for

up

Want to learn

ways one

to or

improve

all of the

no

their

to child-

person!

Campus

Spring WritingWorkshops. the

Blackburn Adcock

Literary

Festival

discussion with

Event:

students.

Presbyterian/UCC

Studies

204 D East

ments and

"Haphour,"

fellowship, begins

at

9-

Fellowship:

informal

time of refresh-

B:3opm.

All

are

wel-

comed.

Undergraduate Lounge. please

contact

Benjamin Cellular

Morris

and

Sara

For

4pm.

Betty

Multicultural Center,

Sessions will be held

0010

Center.

Bryan

in

Call

684-6756 for information.

English Department

questions

Hudson

and

Self-

Professor

Across Duke

the

Building

Unitarian

time,

Universalist:

dinner,

people

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,

guest

the form of letters to the ediwelcomes submissions in

author columns. Submissions must include the

department or class,

ber and local editorial

for information

The Chronicle will not are

and

promotional guest

letters based

not exceed

on the

325

regarding guest

publish anonymous

in nature. The Chronicle

columns for

name,

length, clarity

and

or

style

words;

num-

contact

Direct submissions to: Editorial Page Department The

Chronicle

Box

90858, Durham, NC 27708

the

The

John Hope

Franklin Center, Room 240

2204 Erwin Road, Durham, N.C. 27708 Duke

University

columns.

form letters

reserves

signa-

phone

and for purposes of identification,

address. Letters should

department

s

the

right

and the

or

Phone: to edit letters

right

discretion of the editorial page editor.

letters that

to withhold

(919) 684-2663

Lunch will be provided.

Please RSVP to

p.gutlon@duke.edu

Fax: (919) 684-4696

E-mail; letters@chronicle.duke.edu

Sponsored

by

on

Eberstadt’s research includes, among other topics

Duke

University

Center

for

International

Studies


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.

in any form without the prior,

free

Company, Inc.,

or trustees.

cartoons

at 301

direct

that

attractions

Student

the

by

Advertising Office Manager

103 West Union Building, call 684-3811. To reach the Advertising Office

© 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 �

~


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.