March
Monday,
I
»
31,2003
1
M
1
West is won
The Chronicle _
Mostly sunny High 50, Low 32 www.chronicle.duke.edu No.
V 01.98,
The women’s lacrosse team beat No. 17 Stanford 12-7 in
Saturday night West Coast
Sportswrap
See
125
a rare
victory. page 4
THE INDEPENDENT DAILY AT DUKE UNIVERSITY
A&S dean to return to
Longtime
By
KEVIN LEES
return to the Duke
The Chronicle
William
and
arts
Chafe, dean of the faculty of and vice
sciences
undergraduate down from his to
As dean of the
will
June
positions
Chronicle learned
step
30, 2004, The
and research,
teaching
resume
for
provost
education,
sciences,
faculty
step
post
of arts and
in June 2004.
lining the of the
exciting,
time—and
movement for-
period of significant
summer
in
a
Peter
his
to Maine next
getaway
Chafe will return to the history de-
are
came
to 32 years ago.
“[ln to
division’s $4OO million
the next 13
to
try
of the Uni-
one
Sciences,”
statement released
“He has
accomplished
University, and
we
a
are
step down]. I felt
an
Keohane said
decided
actually
last
think because
had accomplished
we
Chafe’s tenure has
great deal for
terdisciplinary research
the
most of what
seen
of the John
he will
I
added in
we’re
months,]
improve Curriculum
to do whatever
we
to make
can
ties,
the
Center
an
a re-
initiatives in
genomics and
in
effort to balance growth in the sci-
our
with sustaining the humanities and
ences
sciences,” Chafe said.
As vice provost, Chafe has also had firm
reshaping
hand in
a
of the
many
in the humani-
Child and
for
in-
more
the art project with the warehouses, and
the creation
Hope Franklin Center for
going
2000—we’re
forward aggressively with
move
faculty
our
social
interview Sunday night.
Sunday evening.
delighted
basically
accomplish,” he
wanted to
[to
August
portion
capital campaign.
trying
letter.
“I
we
indebted to Bill for his leader-
in Arts and
a
cus-
new
prolific fundraisers, head-
most
ality and
earlier last week. After
“We
dean of the
a
an
and rewarding
versity’s
in
ship
down from his
and Sciences.
“For me, this has been
Trinity College Board of
the
implements
uates. He has also been
ident Nan Keohane and Provost
year,
will
and
departments,
Arts
space for
budget, allocates
strategic direction of Arts
challenging
the
maintaining
oversees
of the
implementation
Curriculum 2000 for Trinity undergrad-
depart-
inclusive campus environment
partment he
CHAFE,
ment,
each
and
Policy,
ward for Arts and Sciences,” Chafe said
tomary
WILLIAM
faculty
for
in the Sanford Institute of Public
Policy
Chafe author-
Visitors this weekend and notified Pres-
Lange
THAD PARSONS/THE CHRONICLE
searches
and Sciences
Sunday.
Chafe notified department chairs and members of the
izes
faculty.”
faculty,
teaching
See CHAFE
Family
on
page 9
U.S. pauses,
DSG pres,
weighs plan
arrested
for
Iraq York Times News
KUWAIT
be
may
for assault
MICHAEL GORDON
By New
American
war
the
on
offensive,
an
Student Government Executive
there
Committee released
distasteful term than
more
no
> Incoming members of the Duke For
Kuwait
CITY,
military
Service
“operational pause.” The military prides itself
it
Central that
not
was
chief of
U.S.
the
insisted
Command,
the
military
With three weeks until the end of his
Sunday
term,
pressing
was
the
Saddam Hussein’s regime. Reports from
with assault
campaign
they have been ordered to pause for few
Franks
days,
insisted,
are
3A.
“simply
not the case.”
The
situation,
in
fact, does
be that simple. pear to ed
resistance
the
limited
the
not
size
Faced
with
need to guard tive
to
the
logistics
confronting American
a
are
multitude of
military
Most
no
tasks.
longer on
the
military experts
would be
the allies
tion to have made
the
port
one
Hall
Eight Monday night.
in a
a
shoving
that
stronger posi-
rapid advance
The Chronicle
ALBUQUERQUE,
each
to the
area was
troop
being accelerated,
a
season.
from
vincing
trans-
first
teams’
2002
Farm that
N.M.
game
The
victory
at
Inc IHP IllolUC
on
Putnam Mathematics
Duke officer had
the
loser
watch the rest of the
will
The
(29-5)
second-seeded
Regional
off
a
71-48
the
are
returning
to
rout
Mexico
the Elite
senior
Competition,
first American woman to complete such
a
prestigious
See TEXAS TECH
on
Sportswrap
making
her the
feat. See page 3
sophomores
senior
booklet that will include
organizing personal
the
publication
accounts and
taries about sexual assault. See page 3
of
a
commen-
arrested
were
DSG President
John were
Joshua Mitchell
junior Michael
Jean-Baptiste
Njoku.
released
Jean-Baptiste,
who
inflicting
on
$l,OOO
a
$2,500.
was
charged
serious
injury,
page 9 See JEAN-BAPTISTE
are
student—-
Their court date is set for May 6.
for
at 9:30 p.m. ET in
Four
and
with assault
will be
the NCCU
bond and Njoku’s bond was set at
of
and
with assault outside Edens
and Mitchell
and
Eight
3A;
and
enter the finals of the Midwest
fresh
charged
Jean-Baptiste,
Raiders
Lady
was
Duke students
and to
home
and think about what could have been.
hometown favorite New
in Durham.
have at
season
pushing
escorted out of The Great Hall.
page 9
Senior Melanie Wood was named a Fellow of the Lowe||
con-
State
the
Albuquerque, N.M., the- stakes See WAR
a
while
lanta,
came
the two teams meet for
second time tonight
was
of the 2001-
that contest with
85-69
it
Blue Devils
Tipoff Classic
When
The last
met,
Panhellenic
—
Three
to the Final Four next weekend in At-
time Duke and Texas Tech
on
troops. sign Sunday
a
The Great
in
party
con-
that
earlier
each other. Both individuals
of whom
were
much higher. The winner will advance
CATHERINE SULLIVAN
By
the
Baghdad
agree
a
They
the
was
National
the
after
Council’s step show,
one
The
has
had the Bush administration
more
In
in the Blue Devils’ win
Women seek Texas-size win
away
sent
will face Texas Tech in their tournament’s Elite
women
finding themselves
luxury of concentrating
Baghdad
Georgia defender Saturday night
witnessed two individuals
impera-
and
The
over a
of urban warfare in Baghdad,
the allied forces
fight.
the rear, the
in
supply lines,
consolidate
prospect
FORWARD ICISSTILLIS goes up
plan.
war
threats
student.
incident
an
During
evening.
American force in the region has slowed the tempo of the
of
tinuation
the
Duke
North Caroli-
a
also learned that the fight
of the
Edens
that several
University
offi-
police
dispersed
officers
learned
Central
na
in
forces
Duke
fight outside
a
students had beaten up
ap-
unanticipat-
guerrilla
from
south and
The
a.m.,
to
Upon arrival,
crowd and
Student
early Sunday morning.
responded
cers
a
Duke
arrested and charged
was
Around 2:34
American commanders in the field that
of
president
Government
its
Chronicle
The
U.S.
to overthrow
ahead with
action.
no
MOLLY NICHOLSON
By
that Gen.
surprising the
Franks,
Tommy
but took
pressure to defeat its foe.
ing relentless So
Sunday
ment
seizing the initiative and apply-
on
short state-
a
A student cle
was
reported
stolen
that his
from
week. See page 4
a
$3,000
Central
on
page 10
dark green motorcy-
Campus parking
lot last
PAGE 2 �MONDAY, MARCH
World & Nation
31, 2003
NEWS BRIEFS
•
illness infects Canadians
Mysterious
Palestinian bomber wounds 30 in Israel
Palestinian suicide bomber wounded 30 side
a
packed
cafe in northern Israel
out-
people
Sunday,
attack the Islamic Jihad called “Palestine’s
100
of Asian flu
new cases
reported
the heroic
of
people
gift
TOM COHEN
By
to
tious
Airways
no
longer bankrupt
with
A
U.S. Airways will emerge from bankruptcy Monday
Sunday, killing three
eight months,
tion takes
much
infecting
from Chapter 11 protec-
in the midst of
place
than experts pre-
sooner
sprint
that threatens
a war
more
others
many
it
warned than
to devastate the entire industry.
be
may
•
about Columbia crash
New data recovered spaceshuttle
Columbia’s recorder
usual temperature the shuttle
experienced
the
dicating descent,
spikes
an
ship
in the left
the
wing just
un-
after
heat of re-entry,
peak
damaged
was
registered
before it
began
in-
its
more
ly
originally thought.
start
officials
news
pushing
Gunman kills
man
A gunman stood up in
Michigan
were
ing
•
in
Michigan church
during
and killed
church service
a
a man.
More than 10
injured trying to flee the building,
Conflict in
some
Coast’s lawless west killed
ian and wounded 19, nation said
an
by leap-
one
civil-
official in the rebellion-torn
Sunday.
MARKETS
O
NASDAQ
Down 55.68 31 8,145.77
j
1
Down 14.63
<>
like
3
psuper.”
3
31 1,369.62
king,
lunch like
3
prince -
disease
than
people
By
respiratory
include
Sunday,
The International Ice eration canceled
may
first
be-
infec-
more
Thursday
in
the
Toronto.
probable
hospitals
to
dreds
people
of
Another
more
each in
women’s
new
In
have
addition,
have
cases
and
patients,
been
have
been
closed
two hun-
quaran-
in New
possible
turned
case
Brunswick, officials the illness
day, meaning nated in Asia
may
now
that origi-
reach
Canada. The New Brunswick
begin
volves
Beijing.
a
school
up
said Sun-
world
to
in the
cases
tined in their homes.
Hockey Fed-
scheduled
championships
50
people have died from
in
Officials
reported.
syn-
three one
four
far,
illness
about 100
majority of
across
case
principal who
in-
recent-
traveled to China.
ly
3nd dinner
Adelle Dsvis
THOM SHANKER
WASHINGTON
feld, fending
off
sharp
the
criticism of his
number
of
nor
hampered the offensive. up
to
That assessment
of the
the progress
military’s drive
the
secure
was
in the skies
country’s
south, had placed
un-
people would
war,
Rumsfeld
Baghdad
the
over
Guard units
Iraq, the
anticipate
had
rise
up
said allied forces had
controlled40
percent
fighting ability
deployment of
The
suc-
southern oil fields.
su-
of the
of front-line
by half.
Sunday morning talk shows,
beset by a
questions suggesting
guerrilla campaign
incorrectly
and
help
on
war
assumed
the allied
that the
war
heavy
going
ABC’s “This Week.” “It’s The number of
vance
of the
among Gen.
war
a
on
war
plan
nine
little
days,” Rumsfeld
near
Iraq
Tommy Franks,
commander of the
war,
the
president, Rumsfeld
said.
OF WAR Department
“Civilian and
of
in ad-
decided over months of consultations
WEIGHT
series
said
early for post-mortems.”
and
the Joint Chiefs of Staff before he took it to the National
Security Council and
A lecture
was
delayed
combat units.
ground troops deployed
was
Iraqi
effort.
and he denied that he had
some
has “been
in the
quick collapse ofthe
Rumsfeld rebuffed all assertions that the
an
cited
and
the
too much faith in the
and
government
needed to
shared by Gen. Richard Myers, chair
Staff, who
to
on
were
fundamentally flawed,
to within 50 miles of
territory and had slashed Republican
troops
Myers
they had failed
wartime manage-
had they slowed deployment of forces to
defeat Iraq,
cessful efforts
Donald Rums-
commanders had not
ground
extent that
the
Rumsfeld and
schedule
on
In their appearances
Service
Defense Secretary
Sunday he and his
derestimated
premacy like
Lim
minister,
the
of the Joint Chiefs of
“E3t breskfssl
So
a
Organization officials
not
health
United States.
Hong Kong, Toronto and Singapore.
health
New York Times News
Summing DOW
Lim said in
with the
does
a
located
Toronto,
have reported 62
officials
new
which could
Pentagon: Troop deployment
ment, said
News briefs compiled from wire reports.
FINANCIAL
huge
a
Hong Kong and China. That
deaths reported
ivory Coast kills 1, wounds 19
Ivory
in
cases
figure
some
of
people,
the
people worldwide,
in
emergency
at least 54
infections
with
many
SAKS, has killed
complex—-
between government troops and armed
looters in
or
apartment
easily
risk
acute
number of
more
as
miles from the U.S. border. U.S. health
reaction,”
one
said
Authorities have declared
“super
people
out windows, authorities and witnesses said.
Fighting
lieved,
chain
severe
drome,
dead-
as
as
conference.
the
Kiang,
spread
Sunday
a
60
worldwide past 1,600.
Hng •
in
them
a
said
•
ill with
people had fallen
the
run
World Health
flu-like disease—more than half of
Singapore’s
official said Sunday.
“We
contagious
more
infect
others, he said.
people and
as
Hong Kong health officials said
The
worldwide infections to 1,600
bring
Labeled
can
cluster of infected
Asia and Canada
through
after
dicted. The airline’s
40
illness
mystery
known treatment continued
no
spread
to
than others.
infectors,” they
Iraq.” TORONTO
U.S.
in Toronto
an
The Associated Press
•
The Chronicle
sponsored by the Duke University History
Control
and the Duke Alumni Association.
of the
Military
in Historical
Contemporary Perspective”
The Chronicle
MARCH
MONDAY,
31,2003
�
PAGE 3
Booklet seeks discussion
on
sexual assault Students’ efforts to share assault victims’
coincides
experiences
with Sexual Assault Prevention
Week, which begins today.
By
YEJI LEE
The Chronicle
Sexual
assault
in
is,
general,
a
silent crime.
Fewer than 50 percent of sexual sault victims will
perience
to
someone
member
family
member of zation
a
else—not
friend,
or
ex-
even
a
let alone
a
law enforcement
professional
or
as-
speak of the
ever
organisaid
counselor,
Coordinator of Sexual Assault Support Services that
Jean Leonard. She suggested
tion—a
student
upcoming
an
collection
of
publica-
narratives
con-
cerning sexual assault—Allison Brim, Monica Lemmond and
Ryan Kennedy, Lauren
Williams—will
provide
which
through
venue
victims
a can
break this silence. works
Leonard, who Center,
has
role
ing
acted in
for
the
at the Women’s
limited consult-
a
four
Duke
mores—who hope to publish version of their booklet
near
a
sopho“rough”
the end of
the semester. The
publication’s
format follows mous
tion
submissions
or
accounts
incident
array
on
of
to
stories
increase
common
with
com-
the topic. The project’s
spark discourse as
anony-
victimiza-
with another’s
dealing
wanted
ganizers
detailing
intermingled
are
mentaries
dialogue-oriented
pattern where
a
to
present
and
a
or-
diverse
perspectives
among
readers,
awareness
and
as
to
well
dispel
of assault.
misconceptions
“One of the goals of this project is to address the
opinions
of sexual assault,
See SEXUAL ASSAULT
JjpLKINS
Graduate &
on
page 10
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MARCH
MONDAY,
�
2003
31,
CRIME BRIEFS From
vehicle
Motorcycle taken A
that between
reported
student
stole
someone
$3,000
his
dark
from the
JKAZX4EIBWBSI,
and
count of
one
obstructing under
place
resist,
officer.
an
delay
They
were
$5,000 bond and given
a
a
March 27 court date.
green
Kawasaki Ninja motorcycle, serial
ing
7
March 27 and 4:15 p.m. March 28,
p.m.
ber
and
staff reports
The
num-
suspects
were:
tolome De La Puerta, 20, of 1325 Juniper
in
$2,499
equipment
Two students
entered
their
stole
and
room
digital
player;
someone
a
of forced
Two
9:10
and
CD;
into the
entry
heard
$2O
a
lot
at
1809
tion
were no
$l5O
on
car.
Duke scene,
student
police.
as
they
reported
saw
parking
a
victim called to
stopped
to the
person
parked
Her
directly
Colonial
friend, led crimes.
to
their
They
arrests
missing and
and 3 p.m. March
men were
arrested
$5,000
a
vehicle. Both
secured
Department
A student
her
while
at
broke
$5OO
and
vehicle
lower Allen one
reported 28
March
a.m.
8
March
a.m.
Building parking lot,
both exterior mirrors
from the
mounting
of
of the
as-
Construction vehicle window broken
some-
A Duke officer
namaker fire
locations.
as
Chapel Hill
Chapel
Apartments,
Hill
sub-
with
with
entering
a
Clinics
his
bench
level 2
$l4O
her
returned,
$45 wallet, $lOO Liz
$l2
silver
long
phone,
candle
lighter'
ning of
an
begin-
station.
He
with his
and charged
drawn back at
right fist
subject.
A Duke officer
him from
prevent
Hospital North between
7
and stole purse.
the
striking
in
officer
the
to flee the scene, but after
Eastman
employee
reported that between
sault
on
Dr.,
an
was
that
it
broken.
after
BP
a
at
visit-
was
Alex He
The
police
at
was
stu-
water
money.
Duke
morning
said was
his
gas
Wells’
was
tres-
passed from Duke.
anyone. He
chest
prehended
brief
water
an un-
attempted
attempted
a
a
his 206
Alex Wells
friend named
forward
free
some
by
He said he
friend, broke
ing
on
told the
upstairs,
located
was
5.
closed fist and forcefully pushed her. He
An
from
him this
being held back by
He
door.
1913 Erwin Rd.
with
was
Crime briefs
a
charged
Department
Duke
reports.
Anyone with knowledge about those
ap-
sponsible for these
struggle. with
compiled from
are
Police
University
Ex-student Adam Hill, 20, of 14-108
two
was
knocked
man
meeting
Chair filched
motor
a
his
was
5300 Duke
employee’s
man
altercation between a group of
struck
an
28,
ex-
to
in cash from
trespassed
broke and he needed
Duke officers
to be the
sever-
calls at her work
A student reported that at 9:19 p.m.
dent he
Someone entered the employee lounge
and 1:05 p.m. March 25
Man
had
charged in fight 29,
that at
in the Green Zone of Duke Clinics.
Alexander St.
At 8:03 p.m. March
reported
employee
March 27, she received
student, who
not be reached for comment.
$BOO
a.m.
students in Craven Quadrangle. One
Apartment
a.m.
Duke
March
noticed what appeared
bro-
Cat excavator machine.
a
threatening phone
area
been taken.
Ex-student
and
a.m.,
$l5O window had been
a
$2OO
glasses,
sun
al
a
containing make-up and
make-up bag a
Nokia cellular
Claiborne
A
10:30
she
containing
purse,
7:39
Threatening phone calls made
was
When
area.
at
3:20
bench in the Duke
a
to the Wan-
responded
lane
Rd.,
Cash stolen from purse
in front of
ken out of
reported that between
a
the Jarvis bike rack.
29,
valued
and 3:41 p.m. March 28, her purse
suspects.
identified
were
2920
A visitor
stole
someone
the
in
parked
was
27,
student’s $250 green Huffy bicycle from
that between 10
bond.
officers
be
not
Sometime between 2 p.m. March 22
$42
for the two
charged
were
counts of breaking and
stereo
could
in
a room
Vehicle mirrors broken
known
on
along
window broken,
apprehension
20,
They could
$l5O window had
stopped,
was
a
vehicle
Subsequent investigation of the who
vehicle
He
disruptive.
Bicycle stolen
left unattended on
investiga-
breaking and entering,
suspects
Centeno,
been broken out.
ject
a
in the N.C.
Rd., Colonial Apartments; and Eduardo
in
her vehicle
report that
in the lot
1901 Erwin Rd.
from
and
reached for comment.
Purse nabbed
student’s
Roberto Aguilar, 16, of 2920
another
been broken into. Her
had also
men
larceny from
as
given
The
to
him. Short-
victim,
with
Durham Police
a
approached the
suspicious
lot and
Ed
p.m. March
Duke Clinics’ third-floor Blue Zone.
Duke officer
a
stolen.
suspicious
sisted in the
crime
the
well
were
to
a
for the
face plate
The two
her
area
discovered that
She
As officers
ly after speaking
was
the
that
in the lot had
and charged
window had been broken out.
The
the
her
and
She
to
larceny
Subsequent
three blank CDs
student
a
lot.
revealed
parked
room.
25,
Rd.
Erwin
responded
roommate
check
car
with
charged
parking
751
alarm go off in the parking
a car
not be reached for comment.
observed two suspicious
CD
break-ins
March
p.m.
op-
PV55830.
number
At 2:15 p.m. March 27,
a
At
were
red 1992 Chevy Lumina, fourlicense
1
$7OO Herman Miller
a
found that
num-
silver
$2O
a
blank
Two arrested in
a
sedan,
They could
dormitory
black Jansport backpack. There
signs
door
Kodak CX4230 Easy
camera;
$0.50
a
Giles
laptop computer, serial
CGWVQII;
Share
erating
suspects
stole
Dell/CB4O Latitude
$2,499
a
Pentium 4
in
F. The
St., apartment
that between
reported
and 7:20 p.m. March 23,
6:15
ber
stolen
March 26 and
p.m.
someone
Aeron black office chair
ment L; Rubin De La Puerta, alias Bar-
lot of 1914 Lewis St.
Over
28,
Julian
Juniper St., apart-
1325
19, of
Jullian,
park-
arrested
2:30
University
as-
can
or
re-
other crimes at the
contact
at 684-4713
mer
or
Lt.
Davis
Trim-
Durham CrimeSto-
ppers at 683-1200.
officer and being intoxicat-
Be d Meter Reader POSITIONS BVfULBBLE
STARTING fST
$9.50 /
Infra Source Meter Services/VSI is
currently looking for support
our
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Flexible Must 2 a
several
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A cash
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are
research.
encouraged
to
April 4,
to
an
a
drug free workplace.
outstanding
Junior and senior
submit their work
Please
e-mail, fax
Dean
Martina
02 Allen For
more
Program
Duke
Project
500 W. Dutton’s
Mill Rd.
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inquire
in Education:
-
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PA
19014
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in the
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to:
to
The Chronicle
MONDAY, MARCH 31, 2003
�
PAGE 5
UNIVERSITY BRIEFS From staff reports
Search committee solicits The chair of the search
didates for Duke’s next
president
the faculty and others for advice the
needs at this
University
preparing
identify
can-
begun soliciting
the kind of leader
on
of its
history.
the responses, which
would
“criteria and
a
has
stage
Chair Robert Steel said needed by April 30,
input
committee to
assist
are
the committee in statement” to
qualifications
share with candidates. for the presidential search committee
Suggestions can
be sent to: Presidential N.C.
Durham,
90871,
Search
27708-0871
Box
Committee, by
or
e-mail to
pres-search@duke.edu.
Panel to address FCC rules The Federal Communications Commission will hold an
open
p.m.
at
hearing
today
the School of Law from
to discuss
protect localism, competition and diversity The discussion
12:30 to 5
FCC review of rules that seek to
an
in the media.
among other
will address,
things,
the rules that limit dominance in local television
mar-
kets and the merger of major television networks and
community media outlets. The event is held
a
dozen hearings
the country to elicit public comment
across
media topics, New
of about
one
including
in
panels
being on
key
Phoenix,
Chicago,
York, Seattle and Washington, D.C.
Today’s
will
hearing
School of Law. FCC JonathanAdelstein
be held in Room
3043
commissioners Michael are
of the
Copps
and
to attend.
expected
The hearing is open to the public and seating will be available
first-come, first-served basis.
on a
Duke, UNC collaborate
Brazil
on
series
The Consortium in Latin American Studies at the
University
of
North
Duke is hosting and
April
1
on
Carolina
Chapel
at
the
new
Brazilian
Inacio Lula da Silva. The events
Hill
and
series March
two-part speaker
a
government
31
of Luis
free and open to
are
the public. Alexandre Fortes will address “Lula’s Victory and the Challenges Gardner Hall Fortes
coordinates of
Program
the Workers’ Party” at UNC’s
Facing
105
room
the
the
7:30 to 9:30 p.m.
today from
Documentation and
Workers’
Memory
national
Party
Perseu
Abramo Foundation.
On
Tuesday, April 1,
Paulo
Fontes,
contemporary Sao Paulo, will address
an
historian of
“Labor and So-
cial Movement under Lula’s Administration: Rising to a
New
Challenge”
ture Hall
on
from 7 to 9 p.m. at the White Lec-
Duke’s East Campus.
Lent A time for repentance
And renewal
Communal Reconciliation Service (Confession)
Tuesday April
Ist
,
7:oopm Duke Memorial
Chapel
NEWMAN „
|
,
Explore
•
ww,
Stuaent
,
the
cathoHc@duke.edu
CENTER AT
DUKE
684-8959
UNIVERSITY
Duke
Opportunities
duke.edu/web/catholic
Chapel
Basement
’EVE ANDRAWESAHE CHRONICLE
Remembering the lost Students attend Gaza
during
an
a
vigil Sunday night
Israeli army
to
operation.
mourn
Corrie
the death of Rachel was
Corrie,
the first American
an
casualty
American peace activist who
was
killed March 16 in
in the recent Israeli-Palestinian conflict.
PAGE 6
�
MONDAY,
MARCH
31,
The Chronicle
2003
in 4 Women
1
and
in
i
10
the
Men will be
majority by
in their
raped
someone
lifetime;
know.
they
Oo
help they need.
Most don't seek the
Have You Been Affected?
is Available
Help
CT'
o°.
o°
Crisis
Support & Counseling
Duke Sexual Assault
Support
Services
(SASS)
684-3897 Duke
Counseling and Psychological Services
(CAPS)
660-1000
Durham Crisis
Response
Center
(24 hour hotline) 403-6562
Whati
—Ethical /Sexual /
\
Assault: Any
sex
act
without your consent,
I
y
Definitions
unable to
Rape: Any
sex
act
\ against your will,
or
freely give
when you
/
\
are
involving penetration of any that is
against
your will, without your consent, when you
are
unable to
freely give consent.
/
11
consent.
body opening by any object,
X,,.
Sexual Violence
>V
or
J S
Facing
Always believing
\
the Facts
supporting the
\
victim
I
Holding perpetrators accountable
yAlways \
&
ByS.
giving respect-Always getting
Fighting
sexism and
Confronting
consent#
homophobia
sexist
jokes
Trusting your instincts. Getting involved!
J y
The Chronicle
MONDAY, MARCH 31,2003
ďż˝
SCHEDULE
OF EVENTS At the Gazebo on Main
Quad All Wee
March vi-April
TIE A RIBBON Tie
a
ribbon
purple
violence
the chains
on
you know.
lining
Main
Stop by the Gazebo
WEAR A RIBBON Wear
a
purple
ribbon
to demonstrate to
specifically encouraged will
join
us
in
to tie
/WHITE
wearing or
a
ribbon
a
and write down
of sexual
why.
RIBBON CAMPAIGN
your commitment to
commit, condone,
never
Quad to honor the courage of survivors
white ribbon
remain silent
violence
ending
and signing
pledge
a
about violence
against
women.
Men
card stating that
against
are
they
women.
CLOTHESLINE PROJECT The Clothesline men
Project is
experience.
a
national
project that bears witness
Come view the shirts
making workshop
will
made
here in
survivors
by
to various forms of violence
be held at the Women's Center
our own
women
Duke community.
Tuesday April
on
that
2nd from
and
T-shirt
spm-spm.
PINWHEEL PROJECT The
pinwheel project
will
have
in the student
pinwheels
body
who will
on
be
the lawn to
survivors of sexual
TAKE BACK THE NIGHT.
at the East
begin
through Central,
Jackson
Katz on.
Wednesday April
work of
particularly
3
@ 7:OOPM
Chapel
with
a
speak
8:30.
out at
9 @ 7:3opm
Katz
has dedicated
violence
sports a
prevention
culture
and the
Master's
degree
himself to the
with
men
and
boys,
military.
from Harvard, where his research
in Education concentration
player,
holds
He
men
"More Than A Few Good Men"
gender in
and
Campus Marketplace, continue
at the
A former all-star football
women
Out
and end
Keynote Address:
groundbreaking
Speak
the number of
assault in their lifetimes.
Thursday April
March and The march will
symbolize
was
in the social
masculiniites culture
construction
through
the
of violent
sports
and the media.
Sponsors Duke
Counseling
&
Student Health Center,
Psychological Services,
Interfraternity Council, Women's Studies
Athletic
Department,
Department, Sociology Department,
Department of Cultural Anthropology, AquaDuke, Sophomore Class Council, Division
of Student
Affairs,
Lou Williams
Black
Student
Alliance, Interfraternity Greek Council, Chronicle,
Center, Psychology Department, Theta Nu Xi Multicultural
Panhellenic
Association, Alspaugh, Aycock, Private
Alpha
Delta
Pi
Sorority
Donor,
Sorority,^
PAGE 7
PAGE 8 � MONDAY, MARCH
31,
The Chronicle
2003
"The Moods of
Imagination:
Manic
Depression and
Depression
and Writers"
in Artists
Kay Redfield Jamison,
Ph.D.
Professor of Psychiatry at the Johns
School of Medicine
Hopkins University
Tuesday, April 8, 4:00
PM in Perkins
Rare Book Room
James
M.
Provenzale,
Professor of Duke
University
M.D.
(open
to
Medical
and
Redfield
Kay
texts
Timothy Haystead,
University
coauthored
on
months
the
own
and
with
Mind ,
The New York Times Bestseller List for
was
five
experiences
has
been
her
manic-depressive
translated
into
more
fifteen
She has received many awards for her work and
chosen
2001, she
& Cancer
or
Unquiet
An
illness,
was
Professor of
authored
her
languages.
Ph.D.
has
Jamison
and scientific articles.
memoir about
than
Duke
reception will follow)
Center
numerous
Pharmacology
and
Library
Radiology
Dr.
Associate
public
2003
by
was
Time
as
magazine
selected
as
a
a
"Hero of Medicine."
MacArthur Fellow, also known
In as
award."
"genius
Biology
Medical
Center
the Common Fund Seminar
Sponsored by: and Cultural For
more
on
Race,
Gender, Sexuality
Study of Medicine.
information, please
919 684 6869
or
contact Priscilla
Wald at
vwald@duke.edu
DUKE CHAPEL CHOIR & ORCHESTRA
ASSIGN
Wednesday, April 2, 4:00 2002
North, Duke
2003
p.m.
Duke
Hospital
University
Reception immediately following the
for
presentation
(919)
660-5389
more
information
DUKE SATURDAY
•
APRIL 12.2003
•
2:30 PM
DUKE
•
CHAPEL
Rodney Wynkoop. Conductor with Karl Dent,
tenor,
as
the
Evangelist
EDMUND I. PRATT, JR.
Tickets: SCHOOL OF ENGINEERING
$l5 general
University
admission
•
Box Office.
919-684-4444
$lO Duke students
•
or
tickets.duke.edu
$l2 each for group sales of 10
or more
Sportswrai
2 �MONDAY, MARCH 31,
Weekend
The Chronicle
ortswrap
In this week’s issue Editor:
Paul
Doran
Managing Editor:
NCAA Tournament
Graphics Editor:
Midwest
Associate
Regional
Final; No.
Mike
3
No.
Marquette 83,
1
Kentucky
69
Kansas
78,
Arizona
1
No.
Editors: Neelum
Morray
75
Gabe
Jacobson,
Paula
No.
12
Butler
Oklahoma 65,
No.
3
Syracuse 79,
No.
10 Auburn
Syracuse 63,
No.
1
54
Smith,
78
Sullivan,
Mann,
Adam
Poses,
Silverstein,
Catherine
Crowley,
Michael
Ted
Lehman,
Josh
Schmelzer,
Semifinals: 1
Davis
Christie,
Robert
Paul
Githens,
Jake
Assaad Nasr,
Regional
No.
Evan
Nick
Jeste,
Colvin,
Jesse
Abby Gold,
2
East
Corey,
Writers:
Final: No.
Brian
Samuel
Regional
West
Robert Tai
Sr. Associate Editor:
Men's
Rosen
Tyler
Photography Editor:
Brian
Matt
Sullivan,
Jeff Vernon
Final: No.
3
South
Oklahoma
47
Dave
Semifinals;
Ingram
Kevin
No.
1 Texas
No.
7
No.
82,
5
Conn.
thanks to Chronicle
Special
Regional
No.
60,
6
The No.
85,
7
Michigan
St.
f§B3,
in
Sportswrap
58
weekly
1 Texas
editor
78
Maryland
Final: No.
editor
managing
Lees.
Founded Mich. St.
and
sports
Chronicle.
is
the
by
supplement published It can
be
read
online
at
76
www.chronicle.duke.edu reach
To
Flowers
the
department
sports call
Building,
684-2663
or
301
at
sports@chronicle.duke.edu Women's: Mideast
Regional
Semifinals: No. No.
1 Tennessee 2
Villanova
Midwest
No.
86,
53,
No.
4 Penn
St.
Colorado
6
No.
1
Men's tennis • Skin of their teeth
Duke
No.
66,
5
71,
Georgia
No. 6 N.
63
M. 48
Blue
alive
their
Devils
Clemson
edged
53-game winning
3
Women's
4-3, just keeping
Despite
streak.
5
golf •Tiger-esque? the
rain,
straight Bryan
Devils
Blue
National
won
Collegiate
their
third-
tournament.
Monday, 9:30 p.m. Women's lacrosse
Semifinals; No.
1
Conn.
No.
2
Purdue
No.
70, 66,
5 B.
No.
11
C.
In
49
Notre
Dame
47
No.
1
a
short
Stanford
California dreamin'
•
out to Palo
trip
Alto, Calif.,
Duke
4
Women's basketball
smeared
The
12-7.
set
women's up
a
•
Dog of
team
basketball
a
time
and
nipped Georgia
contest with Texas Tech
in the Elite
LSD
Eight.
2 Texas
No.
73,
After a one-loss season, it all comes down to this: Win ketball
Men's lacrosse 69,
The Pit, Albuquerque, N.M.
6
Regional
Semifinals;
No.
The
Regional
West
Tech
OF THE
Regional
2 Texas Tech
East
Texas
vs.
51
Semifinals: No.
Women's basketball
Game
58
5 La. Tech
No. 6
63
The
men's
Harvard
Minn. 60
•
Duke of the North?
lacrosse
this weekend
team
in
4
more-than-doubled
Durham.
Baseball *Wake ,
The baseball Forest
sw
over
up
and
call
team lost
two
straight
the weekend.
2ATSHIRTS
•
in
DECALS
•
PLAQUES
•
a
and
to Wake
possible
•
and the
goes
arguably
history
TROPHIES
here
team
No.
1
women's
to the Final
Four
shot at the national
the best Duke
falls short of its
ROCKERS
•
bas-
in Atlanta
title; lose,
women's
team
goal.
lAMPS
•
KEY RI
;GS > -o
c/j
> -c
Duke
.y/jnyp $Sf Wt's/ytasy I
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02-0958
Sportswiai
The Chronicle
!H 31, 2003
MONDAY,
�
PAGE 3
Women’s tennis crushes Florida State, 6-1 Blue Devils ride strong ADAM SCHMELZER
By
singles play, with FSU’s Amberly
The Chronicle
Duke
After
6
road Florida St. the
1
women’s
with
tough
a
Florida
tennis
to
4-3
No.
March
team
easy 6-1 win
an
tee
loss
1,
The
rebounded
said
noles, coming off
Duke’s record
a
6-1 loss
any
were
not
was
pleased with the quality of the
win.
“Everyone With
Duke
really
were
was
a
singles
still
score
to wins
match,
none
in
of
singles
several
played
1
15 of the
season.
having
lineup, but
some
tough
the No.
Duke in
to find the
trying
Junior
Amanda
feated Christina the
73-14,
almost
our
Tan-
right
the
combi-
right
we’re also
peo-
trying
to
get people rested,” Ashworth said.
loose, and that was good.”
combined
cruised
in
ple
said.
he
relaxed,”
after
for
position
nation in terms of
real threat from FSU, head
opponent
Seminoles, which Ashworth
team’s 19 matches this
ex-
conference
over
ranked
play
not
intended to give McCain
“We’re
coach Jamie Ashworth said he
“We
was
singles
to UNC Sat-
Though the Blue Devils pecting
the
victory
Smith 6-
McCain,
did
matches. McCain has
fell to 13-7.
urday,
Kelly
nationally,
against
the season, while the Semi-
on
2
No.
26,
to
singles.
much-needed rest
victory improved
17-2
at third
Sophomore
Sunday afternoon.
to
defeating freshman Julia
7-5
5
Florida State
over
singles performances
Johnson,
Denny
top singles spot, trouble at
some
who
in two
de-
sets
in
said her team had
the
beginning
of the
match in doubles.
every
of which went to
three sets. The team’s only loss
came
Men sneak
ANTHONY CROSS/THE CHRONICLE
in
See FSU
by
on
SARAS ARASU hits
page 10
a
forehand
Clemson for 53rd
en
route to
a
win at No. 2
singles
ACC win
straight By
versus
Florida State
NEELUM JESTE The Chronicle
Duke
The
4
tennis
a
5-2
barely
of
downing
its
won
contest
yesterday
sneaked by Clemson 4-3. The win of
team
season
3
Clemson
men’s
53rd straight ACC regular
14th-ranked
it
as
came
on
the heels
Georgia Tech (11-5,
3-3) Saturday. No. 11 Duke
who
olina,
(12-5,4-0)
handed Clemson
coming off Saturday’s victory
was
its first home loss of the
over
season.
(19-8, 3-1), North Car-
The Blue Dev-
ils started off the day by taking the doubles point with wins at
the No.
Michael Yani Jonathan
1
and
No. 3
spots. Phillip King
8-2, along
won
with
Peter
and
win in
were
King,
singles.
within
two crucial
one
The
Tigers
off
as
came
he rolled to
an
ankle
injury,
1
singles
was
straight sets, 6-4, 6-4, by Sander Koning. spot, Clemson
MICHAEL YANI
won
both his
singles
matches for the Blue Devils this weekend
How much does it cost for STD
I’m
waiting
Are diets
to have sex...what else can I do with my
healthy?
partner?
COT QUESTIONS ABOUT— SEX, EATING, BODY IMAGE, SEXUAL ASSAULT, ALCOHOL OR OTHER DRUGS)
What do
pe-e-r
do?
odvcjfort
Where is the Student Health Center?
Call the
Healthy
Devil Information Line
<6BI>WELL, OPTION #4) .
Or
drop by the Student Health
And talk to Hours:
a
Monday
Healthy Devil -
Thursday,
Center
Peer Educator
12-2pm & 5-Bpm
* *
HUkudent ftd’tds-iifri
A
Joint
took
a
point
See CLEMSON
testing?
health Center
Program of Communily &
Family
Medicine
and
Student Affair*-
and
when Ash
on
page 10
a
back, however,
match of victory before Duke
three-setters. In the No.
coming
and
8-4.
Stokke,
Stokke gave Duke its second point
6-3,6-1
Shults
won
match,
defeated
in
In the sixth
Misquith
beat
lortswrai
PACE 4 �MONDAY, MARCH 31. 2003
The Chronicle
Blue Devils dominate Harvard in men’s lacrosse Cassese, Rewkowski help Duke bounce back after losses
3
to No.
GABE GITHENS
By
beat Harvard consecutive
After
15
losses
Harvard 7
7
North
lacrosse
vard’s
two
defense
regular
against the a
“Our to
was
people
key
were
in need of
the
of the of his four
goals against
the Crimson this weekend
Women’s lacrosse 3 Blue Devils win 6
No.
scores
chops
straight,
move
Devils,
Kevin on
ball
Cassese
Skandalaris
goal
sisted
for
and netted
the
“It’s
Blue
of his
one
came
offense our
we
shots.
game
racing
plan the
past
as
against Harvard.
Lee
in
the
white North hot
score
never
that
an
unas-
early
an
3-0
relinquish. and Harvard
people,”
many
“Coming from the great, got them
we
I think
day.
to
hole
a
Duke took
play
upfield
the ball
hot, humid day
a
for the Blue
saves
exploited
Pressler said.
when he
Attacker
day.
14
defense
goal
doesn’t
Harvard defender in front
on
on
making
passed
lead that it would
apart.
the
got
the scoreboard first a
quickly
to counterattack
15 peo-
seconds
going
while
perfection
Kincel, who had
minutes of the
16
we
tired Crimson squad all afternoon. A. J.
jumped ahead with
goals
it
Duke executed Pressler’s to
Crimson’s
possessed
minutes
We played good, fundamental offense.”
win
respond-
played
got
we
to
flat,” Cassese said. “As
soon
as
on
the
put
with 8:36 left
couple
little bit
started clicking and
head coach
people,”
a
to
quarter.
15-7
defense.”
back
faked out
one
a
2-0
up
only
this week
during practice more
before Duke to
Senior
scores
a
out
possession'
Duke
“The first
Har-
dominating performance.
Harvard
MATT REWKOWSKI
men’s
to
Crimson (3-4) and
play
on
Devils
9
had four goals,
goalie Jake McKenna
in the first
play
matches remaining,
season
much of the first five game
No.
through
next
Blue Devils
3
offense and at least that many
on
back
the
and No.
afternoon. With
Mike Pressler said. “We
ple
No.
their way
on
the Blue Devils
ed with
the tore
(7-3)
victory Saturday
to
Georgetown
Carolina, team
who also
Rewkowski,
The Chronicle
Duke
No. 7 UNC
Georgetown,
our
their first
on
numbers and the
four See HARVARD
Matt
on
page 10
down Stanford in Palo Alto
to 9-1
after 12-7 win
17th-ranked Cardinal
over
MIKE COREY
By
The Chronicle
do
Rarely
12
Duke
opponents
in
sport
any
travel to Palo Alto, Calif., and 7
Stanford
with
away
women’s lacrosse team did
just
win,
a
that
but
the
Saturday
come
No.
with
a
3 12-
7 defeat of Stanford (6-2). But
after six
even
consecutive wins for the Blue
Devils (9-1), including 17
No.
Katie Chrest not
the
Stanford,
the most recent Blue
insisted
victory
emerging
she and her teammates with
satisfied
completely
Devils’
their
over
star were
performance
against the Cardinal. “I
thought
utes. We had end
we won
Duke as
be six
for
are
aged
lot of
one
of
has a
“But I think in the
lapses,” she said.
because of
certainly
Chrest is up
didn’t have it all together for 60 min-
we
a
our
overall better talent.”
more
talent than the Cardinal,
multitude of Duke laxers that will
postseason accolades. Among her teammates,
potential
All-Americans. But Chrest has
to stand up with her peers,
as
man-
she currently leads
the Blue Devils with 27 goals, 11 assists and 38 points on
the
season.
Saturday,
Chrest recorded three
goals
and three assists. “She’s very, very gifted,” head coach Kerstin Kimel said. “She’s got tremendous stick skills, and she just has a
knack for scoring.”
See STANFORD
on
page 10
KRISTY DIRKS and the women’s lacrosse
won
their sixth
straight contest, beating Stanford
Difference
Make A DUKE
DEANS' SUMMER
UN
12-7
1V rRs S T Y
FRO CJ RAM
In
H
Trachinjf
Die ATJO
N
in
m
me
in
mole
than
re
m
than um
telling;
bexiag.
IcatD.n#
Join
fur
u■»
RESEARCH FELLOWSHIP
The Academic Deans of Trinity
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Sportswra
The Chronicle
MONDAY, MARCH 31,
5
Blue Devils win
Bryan National The
and
top-ranked
champion Blue field and used take the
Devils
Bryan
pulled
rained
a
national
defending
from the
away
shortened weekend to
National
Collegiate.
PAUL CROWLEY
By
The Chronicle
Milli Vanilli on
famously lip-synched, “Blame
once
it
the rain.” Last
title from
The
golf
teams
fairway
LEIGH ANNE HARDIN finished fifth at the
beat
squad
sinking
or
the
field without
putt Sunday,
a
two
hitting
earned the
days
the two-time defending finished the
champions
National,
with
total of 580, putting it four strokes
a
its nearest
tournament
Sunday.
Blue
win in
of the
two-day competition
of which
During Duke’s
nament’s final round
earlier tourna-
the front
1999 national seven
cloudburst
and
Perhaps
nine,
State
hearing footsteps, but lead
eight-stroke
an
Arizona
surging
a
after
more
vivid in the
players’
second
after
place
to
say
that everyone
after
was
While Brooks’ squad
Gamecock was
unmistakably
were
got
we
going
relegated final
two
up
themselves
Classic
excited to
[Sunday
play and had
See GOLF
got
to 54,” head
Doctors Without
7:OOpm:
Dr. Ahmen Zouiten will
play,
the
on
a
con-
golf.
morning], it had been “We
Wednesday,
April
his
Von Canon
experience
the
(in
with Doctors
BC) Without Borders
as
a
physician
in
Come for info and free
pretended
we
coaches’ meeting, but
page 11
Meet in the
lobby
improve the
Blood Center
Center to
manage your stress
through
laughter! Thursday,
for
begins
at
Night: 7:oopm
B:3opm.
at
more
a
Join
March and at the
Speak
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Sponsored by
more
at
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the Women's Center.
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charity walk on
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Registration beings
Sclerosis
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Soceity.
10:00am.
Meet at
Contact
jcpl9@duke.edu
information.
6:
Durham
CROPWALK,
meet at Duke
in this annual event to raise money for
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on
5:
Multiple in
Sunday, April 2:3opm:
3:
April
GlaxoSmithKline
call now,
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and learn how to volunteer to
Learn from the Carolina Health and Humor Association how
Participate
storage unit,
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7:30-8:00pm:
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at
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Tour of the Red Cross
2:3opm:
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request
2: Health Awareness
ll:00am-3:00pm:
March
us
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Take Back the
visit
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health of others!
loss]
too adverse for any
crazy,” Brooks said.
to
the team plays
one
kind of
“They
[the Lady
on
from hole
intensity
same
Dan Brooks.
raining like
were
tournament’s
2003
called off.
were
“I’d like
the
April 6,
-
March 31:
Monday,
memories
ing this tournament, the Blue Devils
March 31
a
three
the Lady Gamecock Classic earlier this month. Dur-
“When
Health Awareness Week
the entire
rounds gave Duke its first national title.
ditions
UNIVERSITY
championship
holes of the tour-
canceled and
were
the Blue Devils
team had
tougher,
DUKE
annulled.
was
During
with the
x
featured weather-shortened
Tulsa, Okla., the last
rounds
community
ahead of
service center
reminiscent of two
was
both
rounds.
To
Collegiate golf
a
rivals, Vanderbilt.
The win
ments,
were
National
the win.
Duke,
coach
Bryan
its lead from
as
Bryan
to
THAD PARSONS/THE CHRONICLE
National Col-
tournament.
tournament’s first
Devils
round
were
the Blue Devils took home the
as
top-ranked and defending national champi-
Duke
the
real,
weather-truncated Bryan
a
legiate golf
on
17 different women’s
night, it for
saying
Contact Mel Baars
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Chapel
hungry people throughout the world. Registration
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ALL WEEK: Volunteer with
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All events
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3822 S. Alston Ave. m »Ji i
or
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UNIVERSITY
'
are
free.
For
questions
or more
Heidi Schumacher (hks@duke.edu).
The Chronicle
Sportswr
6 �MONDAY,
Hook, line and sinker: Bass’ 10-poi CATHERINE SULLIVAN
By
The Chronicle
Duke
ALBUQUERQUE
66
Coming
N.M. 63
Georgia 11:54 ed
of
trailed
(34-1)
upset-minded
44-41.
Georgia (21-10)
Bass—who had scored the last
four
secutive
points
a
give the Blue
lead.
run
Bass’
victory
dogs and
in
earn
con-
Devils
four
51-46
a
to
a
the fifth-seeded Bullin the Elite
spot
a
“Mistie gave
the
us
Eight
Monday night.
spark
sK
need-
we
Duke head coach Gail Goestenkors
ed,”
said. “When she hit she
was
buckets,
of
couple
a
emotional and I think she
so
ally got
else going
everyone
The Blue
Devils
had
defense which limited cent
in
shooting
percent for the A
EC
all
struggled
**
2-3
zone
•M
Duke to 32 per-
the first half and
41
game.
series of set
for Bass
re-
well.”
as
night against Georgia’s stifling
plays that Duke the
against
around hook shot,
a
mid-paint off
putback
turnLind-
a
two free throws and
Harding miss,
pair of layups
a
ran
allowed the
zone
freshman to convert
sey
10
helped propel Duke
over
No. 2 Texas Tech
against
in
points
of nearly
span
minutes to
66-63
nine
just
games—poured in
Mistie
center
freshman
However,
out
with
top-seed-
in the game,
remaining
Duke
timeout
a
off
feeds
from
a
Sheana
Mosch and Alana Beard. “As far
the
as
Christi
outside,” Georgia said
Thomas
“I didn’t
run.
get
went, the back
zone
stuck to the
got
of
Bass’
around to
get
man
center
10-point finger
a
on
the ball and deny. She just played good in that little
stretch and she
did what her
team needed her to do to win.” Duke extended its lead to
tive
shots
three-point
Vicki
who finished with The
seven-point
and
seconds,
21
Tillis, points. Blue
margin—the
night—lasted only
eight points by Georgia
within three with
to
minute left Down
less
than
1
the clock.
on
Blue
66-63, Georgia forced the
into
Devils had
guard
Ebony Felder brought the Bull-
reserve
dogs
point
game-high
a
Devils’ largest of the 20
by
consecu-
forward Iciss
and
Kraphol
with
seven
5:36 left in the second half after
shot-clock
a
violation
and
chance to send the game into over-
a
time
if
shot
on
it
could
the
convert
game’s
Mosch
However,
a
possession.
guard Alexis
stripped
Kendrick to prevent
three-point
a
final
game-tying
shot.
“The last thing I said to Sheana defensive
‘great
said. “That
was
huge for
was,
Goestenkors
play,”’
She
us.
played
really good defense down the stretch.”
game close
when its
points
offense hardly that
80.7
averaged
throughout
the
one
season.
field goal
14:40 mark of the first
half
and found themselves down 19-8 with 10 minutesremaining in the “I
think
wanted
[Georgia] do
patient and
gaps. We shot
jumpers wanted The very
a
opening
did
stanza.
what
defense
in
said.
“We
they
the
weren’t
didn’t penetrate
lot of threes and
the
lot of
a
they
to do.”
on
game,
was
a
points
held to just 12 points
Player
attempt
down
year—shutting
who averages 21.9
shooting.
ESPN
ac-
offense for most of the night.
Beard,
The
on
All-American
of the Year did not
score
Georgia 63
[Beard]
their
thought her
Beth
Mary did
we
us
Beard’s
to
stay
lone
Bulldogs
a
was
a a
a
goal—a
26-25 ad-
six
of their a
half, stretching
points,
own
32-28
maintained its
Georgia second
with
responded arc
so
4-ofand even
field goal until the
for the way said.
“I
a
they played,”
as
on
FG
FT
R
PF
A
TO
S
MR
0-0
4
2
21
0
1
0
0
36
0-1
0-0
1
3
0
0
0
0
0
14
3-6
0-0
5
0
6
5
1
0
1
27
3-8
Harding Krapohl
Foley Whitley
sure
and
never
and
en-
much
her
as
run.
Georgia
very hard
our
give
my
compo-
just playing through the tough
times to find
a
w£y to win.”
0-0
2
0
9
1
0
0
0
25
3-4
5
1
12
5
2
1
2
40
4-7
2-2
4
2
10
3
0
1
0
19
0-0
1
0
2
2
0
0
0
14
2-10
0-0
1
2
6
0,
1
0
0
15
0-0
0-0
1
4
0
0
0
0
0
10
9-14
34
13
15
6
2
3
200
Team 25-55
66
Technical fouls: None
Georgia Lycett
FG
FT
II
PF
PIS
A
TO
BLK
S
MR
4-10
2-2
3
2
11
4
1
0
0
33
2
0
0
23
2-2
5
1
16
1
6-11
1-1
12
2
13
0
0
2
1
34
0-4
0-0
2
3
0
4
3
0
0
36
4-11
1-2
4
1
11
5
7
0
2
39
1-4
0-0
4
0
2
0
0
0
0
14
Frye
0-1
0-0
0
1
0
0
0
0
0
4
Felder
4-5
2-3
3
0
10
11
0
0
17
20-48
8-10
38
15
63
2
7200
Oriskell
6-7
Thomas
Taylor Kendrick
Team
I also
losing
BLK
4-11
1-4
Mosch
RTS
Three-pointers: Krapohl (3-8), Tillis (3-6), Foley (2-7), Beard (1-4).
Goestenkors
thought they played
team credit for
63
shot
lead in the
much credit to
and with great intensity.
31
edge.
it to
until Bass went
“I just give
32
9-16
Bass
first lead of the game.
from behind the
F 66
Duke
Totals
The
2 38
Tillis
Beard
field
Duke
Georgia (21-10)
Matyasovsky
game.”
first-half
for its
vantage
point. That
one
in the
three-pointer—gave
of slow-
got her
we
(34-1)
“I
said.
Lycett
I think
down, and
little frustrated at
key for
Duke
really good job
a
1 28
could because
as we
through her,” Georgia
game goes
forward
ing
few shots
as
Pierce
per
shot until 7:12 into the game
and did not
to take
that
few teams have been able to
Beard
Duke 66,
to force
was
tered halftime with
Bulldogs also did something
this
“Our game plan
first
and kind of fell into what us
complish
-11
on
Goestenkors
half,” very
to
2:33 mark of the first half.
resembled the
The Blue Devils scored
through the
half
the first
FINAL
machine
per game
Duke
helped
in
Totals
Three-pointers: Thomas
Drlskell (2-2), Kendrick (2-5),
(0-1), Pierce (0-1), Frye (0-1),
Arena: The Pit/Bob King Court
15
Lycett (1-4), Taylor (0-2),
Felder (0-1).
Attendance—l6lB2
Officials: Cunningham, Bomengen, Dahlem
14
dlp
(clockwise from top left) MISTIE BASS
V,
screams
in exhila
sealed Duke’s win. JOLEE AYERS drives to the hole in Ts will square off
gia Bulldog
in
Duke tonight for a berth in the Final Sunday’s three-point victory. Tillis had anotl
against
f
the
scoring
also
defense
Stingy keep
four rebounds. MICHELE MATYASOVSKY AND ALANA E
Sportswrai
The Chronicle
sparks Duke win
run
ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. midity
is
While hu-
nearly absent from the New Mexico
arid Al-
buquerque
area,
just
Mistie for
the Georgia women’s basket-
was
too
ball team.
secutive Duke
points
route to
en
con-
much needed
in
five-point cushion 66-63 win
extremely sluggish
an
fifth-
over
Georgia.
The
utes
dictable. Bass
was
far
had been in
from
pre-
of the
one
roller-coaster
freshman
connecting of
two
GSHbwflMk
season, on
the
just last
thirteen shots had
Robert Samuel
eluding
——
Came Commentary
j
J
in-
two much.
j
needed,
,
point-
blank attempts in the first half. didn’t
let
the easy
attempted just
Devils
shots
she
in
the
second
half”
Duke
as
a
the Bull-
to halftime.
defense.
zone
“Their
zone
was
I
quick. game
just
on
goals
five of their
17
really
was
played
and
a
great
Duke’s first half struggles, the
mood of the Blue Devil
were
of the
start
give the Blue Devils
crowd,
Nan Keohane
only temporary
second
half would
two
Devils
results.
four
Sheana
Tillis,
Vicki
Matyasovsky
with
“As
paid
off,
Bass’
as
began
break
to
Bass
zone.
the
as
connected
Duke
giving
lead
a
the back
outside,” Georgia
Thomas said about how
able to get open
was
of the
plays
game,
on
the
assertively
But both of her very
hoop.
get ie]
a
finger
just
stretch
on
on
the low-
21
career-high
in
good
she
did
that
what
her
two from
little better from
a
after Bass’
Georgia
the
into the lane and
spun
able to obtain
only
a
but
this
by
timid.
playing
the ball from
possession
66-63 deficit with
remaining,
was
“We’re very
sec-
on
short jumper.
a
was
11 seconds
score
With 53
and 2.9 left game
Beard
knocked down
sub-par
she did
run,
biggest points.
onds left- in the
Alexis
wide-eyed
a
time
Mosch
Duke had won 66-63.
happy
Goestenkors
win,”
head
Georgia
Beard continued her
the game’s
stripped
Tillis,
Landers said.
Andy
Georgia
the
points.
three in the second half,”
shotclock,
from
NCAA tournament
an
“They shot the ball
Kendrick, and
the ball and deny. [Mist-
played and
including
of the ball with
went,
zone
to the
center Christi
the arc,
Blue
streak, the
5-for-21
but finished 3-for-4 from
who finished with
Although
minutes,
far
beyond
performance
finally
got stuck
shot just
line-up
they would never relinquish.
man
had
Georgia three-pointer,
new
to Bass’
catalyst. Up
coach
and two free throws in the
layups
four
next
a
three-point line,
life
some
Whitley,
gamble
post-positioning
on
seemingly
block. “One time I didn’t get around to
to the
driving
as
of its
in the second half.
a
Goestenkors’
Mistie
fresh start.
a
It did not.
first
produced
Duke,
determined and
While the first 1:36 of this
only
her husband Robert, seemed to be-
the
remaining
points
the scoreboard for
on
put
the 6-foot-3 Wisconsin native also acted
for starters
and Michele
Krapohl
run
set in. The Blue
producing
Wynter
tonight.”
In addition to the much needed Bass’
breathe up to
Mosch and Bass
needed her to do to win
for
Duke, head coach Gail Goestenkors
down the Georgia
which included President and
had
a
none
were
Mixing things
Beard
tight,”
sort of Y zone, but it
a
trailing
were
infinite options
12:52
Beard looked like her old self
,
Blue
plan.”
Despite
junior
Bass’ poor first half play easily blend-
the
in
and the
give them credit, they
general
Devils
anxiety
athletic team, and
Consider,
active and cuts would close up
really
This is when
substituted
field
and
rim,
passive
the remainder of the game.
three
minutes,
off the
clanged
All-American remained
into
connected
said. “They
the
of the Year Alana Beard
20
Georgia
over
makeble shots
26-25
three-point attempts.
Iciss Tillis said.
ed with rest of the Blue Devils. Duke shot
even-
obviously been affected by
Player
first
again
advantage
lieve the problems
missed in the first halfaffect her finish-
ing
32-28
famed
Georgia’s National
10 min-
18-6 run to take
on an
Duke had
she
attempted,
a
half, scoring
opening
The Blue Devils
then faltered
took
dogs
deepest troughs of her
“Bass
went
game’s
outburst
in the
along the way.
tually
10-4
a
second-half run that gave the Blue Devils
seeded
32.3 percent in the first
just eight points
lead, but
Freshman Mistie Bass scored 10
a
just
7
IONDAY,
to
come
said. I
little
credit to
team
great heart and intensity.”
Georgia.
away with
“Give
a
much
so
thought they played
ft*;
1
front of home crowd
Tech embarrasses Lobos in ROBERT SAMUEL
By
for New
The Chronicle
ALBUQUERQUE,
after
N.M.
ments later.
The
New
Mexico-Texas .1
fought, evenly
was
game
played
game
Tech hard
a
for
all
the last 7:44 in the game. During
stretch, the Lady Raiders
Pierson down to
i
MATT KLEIN/THE CHRONICLE
after scoring another layup
ech’s 71-48
shellacking
CISSTILLIS
during
a
10-point
AND LINDSEY HARDING sandwich
shot from
run
that
of New Mexico. The Red Raiders
sll-rounded performance, scoring D contest
her
Georgia’s
21
a
Geor-
points and grabbing
MARY BETH LYCETT.
a
Senior
18-0.
Lobos
scored
16
victory
Although game, Tech’s Letz
they
advantage
nailed
a
the
University of
16,000 fans. never
able to to
pulled
to lead Texas Tech
over
the Lobos were
that
Plenette
and
points
New Mexico and its
but
out-scored the
forward
eight rebounds
71-48
Mexico,
Jordan Adams,
tighten Texas
18-16
after
turnaround jumper
9:32 left in the first half.
Abbie
with
Unfortunately
foul
went
out
and
fense,”
University of
coach
Don
such
mo-
had
we
no
New Mexico
said.
Flanagan
of-
head
“Looking
ifI had to do it
have
played her. But it’s been our policy
to sit
players when they
came
The
back
over
again,
have two fouls.
to bite us.”
Lady Raiders
quickly took
ad-
ing
on
Moore,
a
and
Casey
baseline
Jackson
drive.
desperately trying
Lobo to
team in the game, connected
pointer of her to make the
own
score
points
during the
Mandi
keep
on a
her
three-
18-0
“It
was
Marsha
is
The New
a
Six
run,
in the
led
no
players Jia
by
paint
give
to
Texas Tech head coach
huge,”
Sharp
said
on
down,
you
in the
of
the
18-0
run.
the road and you the
most
get
important
can’t let them get back.”
Lady Raiders’ defense
Mexico
during
the
smothered
run,
as
the
Lobos missed 11 straight shots—includ-
ing
several
air
balls—and
four turnovers.
with 7:44 in the half
23-19,
again
41-19 lead at intermission.
you’re
“When
thing
scored
were
Texas Tech
a
scor-
score
Lady Raiders had
finding points.
trouble
someone
vantage, with Natalie Ritchie downing
though
the
Perkins’ six. Twelve of the 18 unanswered
I would
back,
It
first half)
scored
three-pointer
led in the
the bench
sent to
her second
committing
“She
The Lobos would not
its star 6-foot-4 center, was
See LOBOS
on
page 11
committed
Sportswrai
8 �MONDAY, MARCH 31,
Blue Devils
drop pair
The baseball team lost 11-1 By JAKE POSES
Wake Forest
After
7
day Duke
4
of the best
one
unable to hit
collegiate
back Saturday with
formance but
11-1
an
fell
again
against
Friday,
tying
per-
No.
at
19
Sleeth
struck
in
pitchers
lege
Wake
Forest,
“He
Murray said.
one
the was
Blue
13
Devils
hits.
seven
facing
were
col-
Adam
country,”
he
everything
was
just didn’t hit.” Duke’s
the
only
first
home
came
in the
the
the blast,
only managed
to
two
get
solo
of
bounced off the top
run
wall. After
top of
Patrick
Brian
a
the
Blue Devils into
runners
The Demon Deacons got in the
third
and
single
Rusiecki to
against
with
Jamie
a
trio
Johnson over
an
and
Jeff RBI Jeff
3-1
was
shutting down the extended its
of homers.
slammed
shot
hit
a
In
lead
the fourth,
three-run
the seventh
blast
consecu-
whose
Johnson,
average
climbed to .474 following the game. The
Demon
Deacon
scoring
continued in the sixth with two
run
came
homer
shot. The final
on
an
runs
a
by Steve
frenzy
D’Antona
of the game
eighth-inning,
In the series’
Patrick
right field line
Layden RBI
an
having
Despite
without
ners
walk,
single
run.
Troy
bring
to
starter,
without
three-run
Lefaivre.
second game
the
on
of
out
got
the
ble
play
followed
“We
one
the base
advantage of
by
said.
really
hard,”
[Durfee] for
game
was
Every-
us.
excited about the prospect of
Cooling off the
Duke
in the second
bats, play by
a
was
25-minute
delay. Devils
retained
their 3-0
until the bottom of the third
advantage
when Wake
pulled
utive doubles and
within
game
for
one on
consec-
sacrifice fly.
a
recorded
Patrick the
dou-
them.”
suspended rain
a
pop up.
“Russell
great
a
a
playing
were
was
beating
the
scratch.
a
Murray
cor-
inning
runners, the Blue Devils hit into
his
Duke on a
second
by
RBI
of in
knocking
sacrifice fly.
Wake fought back in the fifth when the Blue Devils made
takes, including Durfee
the
was
a
number of mis-
a
fielding
error.
then pulled with
ROBERT TAI/THE CHI
one
out BRIAN PATRICK and the baseball team lost
giving
up
number of hits
same
four runs
Zach
of his
Schreiber entered the game
cross
lacked control
pitches.
He later .bases
walked
Want
Rusiecki
then
with
threw
allow another Wake
to
made
a
the wild
player
are
going
to
for
an
sports
next
a
errors,”
give
a
team
extra out. Teams like that
combined
score
Deacons
took the lead as
a
D’Antona
the left-center gap
drove
in Rusiecki.
year? Email Mike Corey
to
move
Tim
of 18-5 this weekend
to 4-1
on
pitching just
one
at
mlc2o@duke.edu
inning
didn’t take
opportunities that have made
of relief.
advantage
we
the game
of
some
had which would a
completely
dif-
ferent story,” Murray said.
Sunday’s final up the win for Wake
the year and Duke’s
(0-2) suffered the loss after
Layden
“We
pay.”
in the seventh
double into
costly
can never
to make you
Demon
good
couple
a
“You
Hanson picked
plate.
to write
like Wake
The
loaded and
the
“We
Murray said.
for the Blue Devils and
by
on
and striking
out three.
pitch
Saturday
runners
out, Tim Morley,
an
in the fifth after
was
for
Caradonna hit
Michael Golom
advantage.
the fence.
The
tive
Duke starter
D’Antona
Wake
Devils, a
the board
hit back-to-back sacrifice flies
With Sleeth Blue
on
Johnson smacked
Wake
give
Tim
The Blue
scoring position.
Alieva. Ryan
single
Murray for the game’s first a
throwing
run
when
a
Next,
down the
Unable to take
of the best
built up to be. You need to hit to win and we
the
on
base, putting him-
position.
single
a
After
Wake
out
and held Duke to “We
26th
his
won
NCAA record.
an
7-4 to the Deacons in Game 2
around Patrick.
for
game
scoring
to drive in
the ACC)
strong
7-4
Sleeth
Kyle
in
self
in a
off the game with
and then stole second
smacked
Wake Forest (19-7, 5-2).
consecutive
Murray led
Fri-
defeat,
pitchers, the
baseball team (13-15, 0-5 came
again got
falling
board first.
struggling
to
Devils
19 Wake Forest
to No.
in Game 1 before
Friday
night, the Blue
The Chronicle
The Chronicle
and has
yet
game
was
rained out
to be rescheduled.
The Chronicle
Sportswr
MONDAY, MARCH 3».
Track teams compete in 3 meets By JEFF VERNON
“I
The Chronicle
It
was
field,
busy weekend for track and
a
team
as
members
events in three cities and
continents.
ent
Laura and
Stanley
Sally
led
competed
in
two differ-
on
women’s distance
in Palo
runners
with every
said.
ran,” he
great
For
single
the
all
come
against
run
a
way
some
guys.”
the
men’s
5,000
sopho-
meter,
Hatch and senior Jared
Michael
Moore finished 12th and
19th,
respec-
Alto, Calif, at the Stanford Invitational,
tively, qualifying for the NCAA Region-
while the remainder of the teams
al and the IC4A
peted
in the
Clara
freshman
com-
Raleigh Relays. Meanwhile, Horowitz
the United States World Cross
represented
in
Lausanne, Switzerland. Horowitz helped overall
overall to
the third American
was
the finish line. She quali-
cross
fied for the U.S. team
by winning the
km USATF Junior Cross in
pionship
was
15.
not
chance to experience again,” said
sistant coach Kevin
Jermyn. “And to
as-
rep-
resent the U.S.”
Back tional
from Duke and
the
several
the
ran
fastest times in Duke
third
and
fourth
in the
history
5,000
meter run,
despite the fact that they
previously
never
In
competed
addition, Phebe Ko,
Elizabeth all
had
Meaghan Leon,
qualified for the
letic Conference
Eastern
The
in
May
for their efforts.
Jermyn expressed
4:32.27 and
“It
for
big
was
ly expect
to have
the crowd
(34-1),
on
at The
16,000
over
neutral.
like
the
difficult be-
very, very
experienced head
Mexico
anything
coach
Gail
said. “But I also know that
Goestenkors
playing
Texas
tremely
difficult.”
Tech is
to
going
be
ex-
who
Pierson,
led
are
by
by head
season
only four
The teams look forward to the NCCU
from the field and 58.4 points
game this
campaign,
coach Marsh
Another
when
a
she
Sharp after
Award
finalist
and first-team All-Big 12 selection, element of
an
toughness
brings
to Texas Tech
that Duke will have to contend with. “It
was
much
pretty
Pierson said after the we
you
a
street
fight,”
her team dismantled
warriors. No
pound
us, we’re
matter how
much
to
right
going
come
back and pound you.”
guard
the on
Lady Raiders’
of
points
season, 34
a
is
first-team All-
has been
most consistent
scoring
games
junior
one
of
players
in double figures in
while
averaging
16.4
and 5.2 rebounds.
Perkins Raiders’
has
also
Perkins,
12 selection. Perkins
the
33
Jia
is
tight
its
beating
be
opponents
5-4 when
with
of
one
to
hit
zone.
its
shots
The
Blue
better to the
they’ll
against Devils
on
the
na-
American
Texas
to
2-3
respond
Tech,
Alana Beard
opportunities
more
two
of
post
ESPN
No. 2 Duke
(34-1)
perime-
against the Bulldogs.
Raiders
Vicki Krapohl, Jr. 5.5 ppg, 1.8 rpg
Guard
Natalie Ritchie,
Guard
Lindsey Harding, Fr. 6.4 ppg, 4.0 rpg
Guard
Erin
Guard
Alana Beard, Jr. 21.6 ppg, 6.9 rpg
Guard
Jia Perkins,
Forward
Michele Matyasovsky, Sr. 5.2
Forward
Iciss Tillis, Jr. 14.8 ppg,
also
a
held opponents
sure
other number teams out,
can’t
to be the best team The
leader of the
to
shooting
Lady that
35 per-
looking
are
blowing
are
really
at
focus
on our
on
defense
during the last game.”
Lady Raiders
intimidated
by
No.
They have competed all
ference—beating
2
ner-up
Oklahoma
twice—and
they
and
appear
8.9 ppg, 2.3 rpg
Jr. 16.3 ppg, 5.2 rpg
Jolee Ayers, Jr. 4.1
Sr. 17.9 ppg, ppg,
4.5
7.9
rpg
rpg
ided last
In her senior year, she has
season.
leadership and
that
inside presence
an
could
Mistie Bass and the other frontcourt 1
an
up
improved offensive and defen-
Devils
are to
advance.
steals with 77, and Grant is ninth contest, giving the Lady Raiders
■
jent, and if Duke
/ugh pressure and scoring
probably the teams
Kansas
be
con-
have its guards
parallel
most
to
keep Duke alive.
to
Duke in
terms
of its
jely because of their deep benches. Cisti
Lady had
Raider's backup center, is averaging 7.3 ppg, a
big
run
in the second half Saturday with 10
Bench equity should keep it interesting.
.nament
12
can
have succeeded in advancing this far in the
While bf
Big
a
Texas Tech has struggled
game, the Blue Devil guards should
-
against
NCAA
to
THE NOD
has been proving how much she’s been missed
ranking.
season
both 2002
to be
likely
not
are
Duke’s
Jr.
6.6 ppg, 3.5 rpg
Plenette Pierson
ANALYSIS
[for
a reason
seeds who
we
Center
/ever,
you guys
one
but
Forward
rpg
when
and try to get better each game. We want
is
a
whole
new
im to
igths,
more
world compared
match up
too
depth and experience
Antonio. Also, Beard will
run-
ies against Texas'
State
the
from
most
man-to-man
struggle with Georgia’s 2-3
hitting
to
perfectly in
zone.
their stride at the right time. “I think
we
have the
want to win and we’re ever
man-to-man defense
7.5
3.6 rpg
ppg,
Fr.
Grant,
Although
23-2
are
“I don’t know if there is
am
(29-5)
Coach Marsha Sharp
Guard
leading at the break.
said. “I
No. 7 Texas Tech
Coach Gail Goestenkors
have
inside
up
their last three games.
the Lady
The pit
P.M.
Duke is 6-1 when trailing at halftime this year,
TEXAS TECH
vs
31st
All-
as
should
rather than be forced out to the was
at the Stanford Invitational this weekend.
coverage that
one-on-one
from
see
Georgia’s might
March
9:30
the
of the boards. counters
history
re-
losing the battle
the nation’s best teams in the Pierson
Complementing Big
will
the basketball. Texas Tech is
glass, but only
Duke
DUKE Mon.,
Duke
that. We just have to focus
Lady Lobos. “I think what this says is are
for
the third fastest 5,000 in Duke
per
lead the
is fourth all-time at Texas
key
ran
the slow starts],” Duke forward Iciss Tillis
Naismith
a
Her 82 steals
season.
ROBERT TAI/THE CHRONICLE
SALLY MEYERHOFF
the slow starts that have plagued them in
games.
Pierson,
a
17.9
averages
for the remainder of the
suspended
re-
The Blue Devils will also have to avoid
foot-2 forward has bounced back from shortened junior was
runners
Raleigh Relay.
senior
and 7.8 rebounds per game. The 6-
points
Duke
“The rain didn’t really bother us,” said
ter like she
The Lady Raiders Plenette
incredible
New
playing
Duke
that,”
season.”
good
tion’s top offenses, although it struggled is
crowd
been]
haven’t
we
a
to endure intermittent
freshman Allison Nesbitt. “The meet set
the other
against Georgia.
of
think
have
[would
should defi-
you
finals,” she said.
mained positive about the
Pit—the Lobos’ infamous arena—will be
cause
*
competing that I
Tech with 260 steals.
New Mexico out of the tourna-
I
in
spurts of rain Saturday,
23-1 when
so
a
Despite having
bounding
66-63 nailbiter
here,
me
“Sometimes you grow a little impatient,
in
more
the
little excited, but it’s early and I definite-
cent from The Chronicle page 1
Duke
“Obviously
after
in
record
well, but
run
faster in the
run
hand, barely survived its Sweet 16 game
decidedly
McKie
100 meter
day earlier.
a
nitely
the ECAC
Janay
school
own
able to
was
for
Senior
Junior
the 1500
best time of
personal
a
qualifying
team, and she
ment,
fifth in
finished sixth in the her
finished
Invitationals in Durham, May 4-5.
the first time since 2000
With
Craig,
placed
Championships.
tying
men’s 4xBoo
time of 7:33.37.
a
Lauren Matic
several
saw
The
Steve
by
fourth with
of satisfac-
a sense
TEXAS TECH
a
little
a
nice tone for the rest of the season.”
tion about the weekend.
Top-seeded
“But at
run
Raleigh Relays also led
relay,
College Ath-
Championships
he said.
strong performances.
in the event.
Stanley, and Meyerhoff
Wort,
person-
bit faster.”
Invita-
performances
Freshmen Meyerhoff
runners.
Stanley
Stanford
strong
in the
to walk away from
satisfied,”
time I wanted to
same
event
stateside,
saw
always have
meter, notching
to go out there and
experience something that she might a
6
Cham-
Country
Houston, Tx., Feb.
“Her main goal
get
“You
that pretty
she finished 39th in'the 6 kilo-
as
meter run, and
equaled his
al best time.
the
the U.S. place fourth
Championships
process. Hatch also
in the LAAF
Saturday
Country Championships
weekend
over
person
definitely
was
the country and
across
more
“It
to
opportunity
of the best
and
Meyerhoff
contingent of men’s
a
happy
was
that
9
it
“We’re
takes to not
mentality that we going
to do what-
do that,” Perkins
satisfied
until
we
get
said.
to the
Final Four. We’re going to be disappointed if we lose any
more
games this
year.”
ictory since the
tournament
started. As such, Duke has relied
Duke firmly believes that their defense jt
creates
their offense,
down Plenette inside and have their guards and forwards hit-
able
to
pull through
to
Atlanta. The Blue Devils
squeeze
by
Paula
by the
Lehman
The Chronicle PAGE IB �MONDAY, MARCH 31, 2003
from page 4
goals and
assists
two
day
Harvard
the Blue Devils
was
ever
3-1
a
to
came
playing
a
man
down.
“We
to
goals
the quarter and put
second
the
6-1
a
Harvard during the second half
Jepsen and Taylor
the
during
highly contested
were
ed
of them many
match, but
collect-
easily
or
ran
don’t
usually
we
down,” Rewkowski said.
“I
a
said.
“We
to cut the lead to
ly
JULIE DeROO
won
both her
and doubles matches
singles
we
together
from page 3
goal
ly,” we
been
I wasn’t
she said. “I think, for the most part,
so
did that in singles, but not
she said.
in doubles.... We weren’t fired up
that around
turning
did
we
much
so
the
over
course
their
won
this
of Duke’s
one
is its
pects
strongest
as-
doubles teams—which have in
point
year—they
match but every still
are
vulnerable,
is
with
out
come
playing
good
a
With McCain out of the
“We
Adams
senior Hillary some
going
in
needed experience
ing
in
have
for
said
she
not
was
in
heading
keep
from page 3
won
Jar-
10 of his
last 12 matches, earned the third victofor his team when he beat Jason Zim-
Ludovic Walter
sets,
in
entangled
court
Both players
won
three
scores
“It
was
battles.
set
won
first
lost their
sec-
their
final set
by
really close,” head coach Jay
said. “We
were
down 3-2 and
win
came
the
and
final two
through
for
It
us.
they
was
d. Gheorghe 6-0), 2. Arasu
Host: Duke
Duke
again
won
and Shults-Stokke. The Yellow
Jackets,
coming off
doubles
had
a
three-game
won
points.
19th-ranked duo of
Scott Schnugg
Harvard 10 (McKenna).
14 (Kincel),
Stadium: Koskinen Stadium
an
gles
victory
giving ter
up
a
really big
at
won
his game to
Rajevac,
while Shults battled out
King
6-7
was
7-6
(3),
6-1,
(5), 6-1,
tough three-
a
upset by Anderson, 6-1,
6-4.
Michael Yani secured the contest for the Blue Devils when he set
breaker
opening
7-6
“They did
ly
the
a
really good job,” Lapidus
get
goes
everyone
top five team
a
playing
to where
only able
those shots
Duke next N. C. State
on
our
sees
action when it takes
Wednesday
at home.
their
win-
was
girl
cover
to outshoot
41 to 12
to convert
Georgia
Tech’s
in
as
Inside
team knew that to
put
we
made
Roger Anderson
game,
seconds
Lacrosse
d. Thompson/Jenkins (8-5), 2
Robinson/Boetsch d,
Zimmerman/Waller (8-5), Shults/Stokke d, Koning/Twente
ren
magazine
rine Records: Duke (12-5,4-0); Clemson (19-8,3-1)
we were
knew
and the
had to make
which
a
we
her
to
a
deci-
and out of did. At that
Gallagher
Lane
second
return
goal
as
she
of the
Chrest just 21 the
Stanford
then assisted
junior Cor-
on
Broesler, who also scored
the day.
a
hat-trick
a
force to
Duke’s
gel,
a
more
which makes
Duke.
armor
their
McHenry,
season.
ton.
The
Kimel
play
the that
stated
Prince-
against
of
and
Anderson
But up in the air.
Kimel,
finds the silver lin-
the optimist,
having
are
out for the year
knee
statuses are
to
ability
to
Injuries
Cauline
undoubtedly
is
to
us
and defen-
Fogarty and Laura Anderson,
McHenry
for
room
‘Many
offensive
for
blowing her
ing
always
said.
few kinks in the
after
ever
working towards
is
up
defenders,
of the
rest
their
on
dangerous.”
threatening
potentially
lost
three
from her lineup.
players
With these defenders out, Kimel is able to
game.”
is
well
are
are
Kaiser
developed
three
decision to take control
then assisted
later
as
units
Fogarty
I
we
stepping
are
more
push
Kaiser into
allowing this
to her
would
Duke’s
lagher
a more
roam
have
offense,
defensive role,
the field. In the past,
left
a
gaping
but because
and Bennet have
sively, Kimel
hole
Chrest,
stepped
is confident with the
in
Gal-
up offen-
strategy.
Duke will test its mettle next against
(8-4)
Host: Clemson University (Hoke Sloan Tennis Center)
to
su-
deficit to three. Senior All-American Lau-
and
extended their record
and
much
have
right
the All-American said.
we
Stanford’s reach,
point,
improvement,”
to 5-4
the game away
quickly knotted
Doubles
not
Duke is
being rectified.
people
sive
like game, I felt
control,”
making
are
“Each game
lead, Duke’s
Duke’s resident
‘When it became 5-4,
2), 5 Stokke d. Boetsch (6-3,
1. King/Yani
12 of
Kate Kaiser attested, the Blue
“During the
Jenkins d Zimmerman, (6-3,6-4), 4 Walter d. Robinson (6-3,5-7,6-
previous
on
mar-
under the pressure.
always
way to
But 5-1
a
slowly diminished
and
perstar
4-6, 6-2), 3.
6-1), 6. Misquith d. Shults (6-1, 6-2)
were
Kaiser believes the mistakes she and her teammates
perfection, and there
Jessica Bennet started the rally,
Singles 6-4), 2. Yani d. Thompson (6-4,
be-
performance,
clearly demonstrating that it
goal.
after halftime. But
Duke 4, Clemson 3
1. Koning d. King (6-4,
goals
two
be reckoned with in the NCAAs. In fact,
scoring would
whopping
a
After jumping out to lead
a
come
for 60 game
managed
gin, but
were
were
significant.”
by
sion
they can.”
on
[if we] played
get
was
probably could have
Consider: Duke
through stretches
out of it.... We’re
can
to
Devils buckled down rather than folding
they struggle, but they eventual-
come we
the second
taking
set 6-4.
said. “Everyone
if
won
after
(6)
for Stanford. It
the Cardinal
24th-ranked
11-9.
we
have been pretty
only
opponent. Wal-
the third spot,
and
out
game
minutes... the difference in
another easy sin-
on
though the Blue Devils
satisfied with their
win, and we’re happy
a
And
difficult
out of there to win,” Kimel said. “We
8-5.
Marko
over
one
a
dispensing of the Cardinal.
“A win’s
(8-4)
upset of No. 8 King and Yani
top doubles spot, cruised to
Duke’s lead would balloon to 12-5 before the Cardinal tacked
Still, the Blue Devils had
University (Sheffield Indoor Tennis Center)
the
merman
streak,
Harvard-Johnson, Macieod, Logigian,
Haunss.
Primm.
Duke beat Stanford
help
from page 4
and not let them back into the
Saturday,
ning
15
fore the game’s conclusion.
time
Records: Duke (17-2,3-0); Florida State (13-7,3-3)
doubles point with wins by Walter-Zim-
nine
up her offense to
d,
match today.” On
SAVES: Duke
6-2), 3.
(6-2,
1. Johnson/Deßoo d. Tantee/Gheorghe (8-6), 2. McCain/Adams d.
both tense
a
stepped
STANFORD
Doubles
where
the last two split. Walter and Yani had to
5
controlling the point,”
Lawrence (6-0, 6-0), 6. Granson d. Tirapelli (6-0,6-0)
on
of 6-2.
Lapidus
4
on
KATIE CHREST
1. Johnson d. Denny (6-3,
dominated in the
players
third and both
remained
their respective
but then narrowly
ond. The two
3
did well in
Tanlee d. Smith, (6-1,6-4), 4. Deßoo d. Cordell (6-0,6-1), 5. Adams
setter,
6-4.
With Clemson up 3-2, Duke’s Michael Yani and
7
3
the
Singles
at the
Clemson’s
6-2.
6-1,
maine Jenkins, who has
6-3,
F
GOALS: Duke-Cassese 4. Rewkowski 4, Brennan 2, Monfett 2, Skandalaris, Flannery,
Duke 6, Florida State 1
Stokke
merman,
3
into
Johnson said.
8-0 with
CLEMSON
ry
4
3
an
working
we
Cordell/Denny (8-4), Smilh/Granson d. Lawrence/Tirapelli
against FSU.
season
Adams
Shults
(3-4)
Boylan, Gotschall,
quick-
successive
three
3
0
in
that game
Peter
Duke
2
1
Ashworth
overall,
that
shape
to
com-
May. Adams played singles
the third time this
to
prepa-
for the NCAA tournament
However,
goals
quarter
(7-3)
match,”
Longhorns
after shots—which
line-
able
was
ration up
Harvard
competition.
all
doubles,”
singles
the
match.
good
in
their next
he said.
gain
few
a
1
and
practice,
well in
during
Johnson agreed
team
this match—and
have to
mindset when we’re
up,
nervous
out-of-conference
one
Ashworth said. “We
did.”
we
victory.
playing
to face the Texas
day
and
of the match.”
Though
well. This
should win and
Duke will take to the road Wednes-
coming
good job
a
set
straight
a
“I’ve
to go out and win solid-
was
out there. But I think of
with
responded
can
back. We
come
match play, and showed her confidence with
“Our
10-5, but
there
we
or
Florida State
against
worried about her lack of experience
FSU
the weather
of the fourth
beginning
games,”
could sit
back today and played
game
team.
tough
Duke 15, Harvard 7
Duke
Harvard strung at the
weekend
don’t think
it.”
exploited
we
for
ready
were
another
in
next
two
FINAL
they
be
heads up and
them
tire
do—to
is
as
Saturday.
Hopkins will
situation
lost
our
came
three midfield lines —which
the
been
victory
and be bummed out about it
pick
by Kincel. “We
crucial
a
Devils
Rewkowski
shot-attempts
31
haven’t
we
fin-
in
the two-game skid before
Johns
to
Blue
“We
managed
“We
early
against another highly-touted
of the field. Harvard
what
earned
Duke
they stopped
must-win
end
harder and
doing recently.”
The
Wray
the way in controlling Duke’s
led
de-
as
bit
opportunities
That’s
heading
constantly outplayed
into halftime and
fenders
lead
little
a
today,” Pressler said.
our
game.
of reach. game out
The Blue Devils carried
Paul
ished
defense for
start
played
smarter
Rewkowski
then burned the Crimson consecutive
the back of the net.
deficit after
Colin Macleod beat Kincel when Duke was
day, put shot that
on a
flew through the Harvard defense into
them down.”
wore
closest
The
the
on
11-5
the Blue Devils up heat of the
who had two
Brennan,
Kevin
scores.
HARVARD
No. 20
Vanderbilt in
this Wednesday.
Nashville, Term.,
Spoitswiai
The Chronicle
GOLF
we
knew
From
LOBOS
from page 5
it would be rained out.”
“Some girls wanted to go out and said.
when
“But
we
Although
umbrella
an
able tool in any of the
days
were
the
“For
first
was
71 and
The
a
team,
the
knew
we
tried to play
as
a
72
saw
a
The
second
and
an even
par,
though this
Blue
Devils
of
pair
a
points
in the disas-
down. We had to
was
didn’t do
we
were
it,”
come
together
New Mexico’s Chelsea
missing that spark
in
our
eyes
in
with the loss, the Lobos, who
to
get
ing
to their first Sweet
in the
16,
were
happy just
to be
play-
game.
We didn’t play
best game, but
our
we
got great
expe-
Moore
picked
14
the
only
other
in
bright spot for
New
Mexi-
points.
Texas Tech will take
in up
was
scoring
Albuquerque
on
Duke at 9:30 p.m. in the Pit
Monday night with the
winner
making
the Final Four.
PLENETTE PIERSON takes it to the over
hoop during
Texas Tech’s win
New Mexico in the Sweet 16.
consis-
said. “As a
a
factor. We
one-day tournament.” Kristy and
McPherson of
May Wood, a
both two-
for
Wednesday
compete hosted are
Georgia, but intend
in the Liz
by
the
spend
• • •
University of
hoping for
to
Athens,
Murphey
similar
a
more
time
on
course.
I
“Personally,
“But
looking
was
definitely got
we
victory
is
a
team’s
forward
playing,”
to
anticlimactic
the better end of the
deal,
you
on
University (286-294=580),
2. Vanderbilt (298-286=584),
4. Wake Forest (297-300=596),
5. Tennessee (298-302=600),
South Carolina (294-307=601),
8. Purdue (306-297=603),
10. North Carolina (303-303=606),
16. Mississippi
6t.
Duke
get your senior photo taken.
15, Louisiana State
17. UNG-Greensboro (329-310=639),
18. Memphis (324-326=650)
12-Bpm Sharp
Individuals
6. Janangelo (72-72=144),
to
12. Louisville (307-302=609),
13t. Furman (313-307=620),
St. (315-313=628),
(300-296=569)
6t. Auburn (298-303=601)
9. Florida State (304-301=605),
11. Tulsa (297-311=608),
13t. North Carolina State (311-309=620),
3. Georgia
7t. Engstrom (69-76=145),
15t. Aazam
Zanganeh (74-74=148), 85t. Garcia-Estrada (90-79=169)
and NOT
just
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5. Hardin (71-72=143),
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victory.”
March 29,2002
(314-311=625),
Due to
victory.
Bryan National Collegiate
1. Duke
play
I would have liked to
was a
leave
they will
Janangelo said of the
Saturday,
of
and finished
day,” Engstrom
Georgia. The Blue Devils
a
style
unable to shrink the
sixth-place
a
that the weather would be
Collegiate tournament,
the
effective
was
142.
where
result in
team and
Although disappointed
two-
drop-off
of Vanderbilt, shared the individual title with
Ga.,
more
place.
Carolina, and Courtney
under-par
much
defeated the University of Miami and Mississippi State
turned
seventh, but Janangelo’s
Nuria Clau of Wake Forest, South
atop
76 and finished the
played well individually, but on
a
Grear said. ‘We
co,
other Blue Devils
logged
Engstrom
better
was
Janangelo
second day of competition
finish. Hardin also stroked
“I
sat
Duke
as
as
featured
Blue Devils
Hardin and
the tournament in fifth
play
a
New Mexico
rience,” Flanagan said.
play netted her another
tent
holes
72, respectively.
tournament tied for
little hos-
the beginning of the game.”
286.
Engstrom’s play, but the the slack.
and it
sunny,
share of the individual
a
and the
Ann
Leigh
Junior
half,
“Our confidence
beautiful,”
Engstrom, whose
the leaderboard after the first day, a
a
trous first half.
golfers.
not used to up here.”
eighteen
first-round 69 earned her
under par with,
just
was
senior Kristina
lead. Both Engstrom
Though utilizing in the second
final half compared to only
Sunday, the first
to all the
Janangelo said. “It
tournament’s
The
for
it
days,
out, which we’re
warm
a
were
environment that is
an
said. you have to [win] with your defense,” Marsha
lead to less than 16. Adams led the way, scoring 18 in the
golf bags
two
blistering play by
in
we
to be the most valu-
proved
hospitable
more
first
freshman Liz was
senior
play,” the
conditions
tile,
to not be out there.”
happy
two
the
saw
from page 7
“When you’re in
players perspective, Engstrom agreed.
a
lONDAY,
the /treet
Retakes
or
Questions?
Online
Viewing of Photos $lO
E-mail chanticleer@duke.edu
The Chronicle
PAGE 12 �MONDAY, MARCH 31, 2003
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The Chronicle
MONDAY, MARCH 31,
positions
WAR
from page 1
The
was
told to fly directly to the
It is not the
case,
Calvary
gulf region.
to
a
their attacks
These
are
campaign
on
the
a new
a
goal
is to
their holes
so
force Iraqi
the
come.
out of
they will be easier targets
for the Air Force and
soften up
generally Republican Guard units that
are
In
sion,
the
for
attacked
have
example, Army
the Medina divi-
from the
Apache helicopters
the
Baghdad that is
tack
division,
Iraqis have responded
by rushing As
tlefields.
been pounded
more
the
division
has
forces have been moving south to fill in the gaps in the Medina’s position. Adnan
to
division,
Republican
a
Tikrit, Saddam’s hometown north
division
has
fense of the
armor
now
Baghdad
taken
to
undergraduate experience
Larry Moneta,
Chafe
was
the
ar-
residential life plan that created
chitect of the
new
independent
corridor West
and mandated that all
Campus. The plan
ed with making the campus
more
a
the de-
small ele-
sopho-
diverse.
Duke’s in-
have
professors
dean of the
as
faculty
of
in the
thropology and Anatomy
criticized
Chafe for his
faculty, however, including the Department of Biological and his
a
glaring hole
at
a
time when several other key
successor
will
likely focus
faculty hires, finding
a
on
when several capital
projects—including the French Science
“Part of his
tion of
tentag,
a
legacy
diverse
director of
mitment to
is
England, private school going
student
body” said
undergraduate
diversity
his commitment to
a
is
circuit.
to be the institutionaliza-
Christoph Gut-
admissions. “His
decades-10ng....
I’ve always
com-
felt
student body that’s really vibrant
solution to
the Arts and Sciences budget deficit and shuffling dethat need
new
space
Center and the
we
should focus
now
on
Dean Chafe’s
complishments and his intentions,” Lange said
in
ac-
an
vorite when he
ican
Chafe
graduated
of
distinguished professor
civil
rights
1980s,
Chafe
the changing social and economic
following suffrage, the sit-in
Carolina, post-World
history and liberal intellectual foray in administration
history department from
out of the
to
campus.
in the 1970s and
women
movement in North
War II Amer-
Allard Lowenstein. came as
1990 to 1995. Since
chair of the
1995, he has
dean of the faculty. From 1997 to 1999, he also
the Williams
the 61-year-old
taught
one
gender equality. A student fa-
roles of American
and what
native,
and
on
as
A Boston
race
After
came
of the leading scholars of 20th
one
has written books
as
in his successor.”
on
century American history, particularly the
served
might be looking for
University.
College, he
immediately became
Alice Mary Baldwin
of history, Chafe is
served
an e-
Columbia
Vassar year at
the most visible faculty members
mail. “There’ll be plenty of time to discuss the search we
one
1971 and almost
His initial
Nasher Museum of Art—are completed. “I think
Duke in
from
history
for
teaching
movement and
accomplishing
long-term
partments
side the traditional New
leaders
have also announced their intentions to step down.
science
American
Also
The announcementwill leave the administration with
He has also
out-
An-
handling of complaints
tellectual life in selling the school to potential students.
championed the recruitment of students
per-
of sexual harassment in the physics department.
Chafe’s
Chafe has also been involved in efforts to project and
effectively communicate the strength of
cutting
an
has been credit-
from Harvard College before earning his doctorate in
engaged and thoughtful has been very strong.”
Some
the
positions
up
strengthen
capital, while
of
Most of the
ment is still in Tikrit.
Before the arrival of Vice President
for Student Affairs
more
to the at-
forces to the bat-
Medina
and
on
in-
an
from the air, Iraqi ground
from page 1
policies that will affect
live
Republican
stationed southeast
formance
mores
or
of the city, and the A1 Nidal division.
close to
101st Air-
borne Division struck at Medina
come.
the
on
Baghdad, has moved again.
Republican Guard force guard-
for years to
its
The Marines have
the attack
unit
The
ing the southern approach to Baghdad.
CHAFE
for
Division,
Guard unit that was moved from Mosul
days,
recent
bombed
de-
fending Baghdad.
forces
joined
The
prelude
troops
also
a con-
for the decisive Baghdad battle to
Infantry
toward Baghdad.
fantry
Guard.
Republican
limited attacks but still
3rd
Guards. The Marines’ 3rd Air Wing has
resuming
by
tinuation of the offensive and
The
so
halt. In fact,
American land forces have begun of their
9
on
part, has advanced another 10 miles
though, that combat
operations have ground
phase
PAGE
Friday night.
2nd Armored
contingent of the
of Karbala
the city
near
2003 �
deanof Trinity College. Chafe was
College presidency
race
in
at the last moment.
1999,
a
finalist for
but he
pulled
PAGE
10
MARCH
MONDAY,
�
31,
The Chronicle
2003
JEAN-BAPTISTE
side of his
right from page 1
and
left
nose,
left side of his face
eye,
and back
arm
his
down to his waist.
could not be reached for comment.
Mitchell, wrestler,
He
injury.
in-
declined to
although
tion
vague.
Njoku,
former DSG treasurer,
a
with assault
charged
assault
injury,
back
holding
on
inflicting
with
the
he
and—for
female
a
student
student
assault the victim.
victim
ran
his
which
injuries,
WOOD
he
are
cops
the
to
recollec-
were
still into
one
utive vice
while other
guy
up
The
three
the fourth
The
incoming
new
on
who
DSG released
“We, the newly-elected
DSG
of violence
acts
sort
«
way
competitive math students
It
the practice
seems
article
Who Loved
Girl
of her
one
Discover
search focuses
ic
already
the
Main,
nity
minor who
Wood has
already
study
to
acceptances
achievements,
takes
writing
in
see
becoming
ied,
a
one-year
impact
scholar-
next to
a
professor
at
a
a
already hanging
de-
others, be
great deal of comfort
in
Lemmond. She
experiences,” said
on
incorporat-
they have already
responses
number two’ refers
to,”
she
is
specific
Duke,
co-planners think reader
happened
to
a
“I
jer-
anonymous
so
in the
in
a
call for
can
much
simplest
respond.
to
interpretation of what
many
tensive
a
it
a
paper
this story.
mandatory and
talk
the introduction of to
Writing
had
no
could
they
freedom,”
instead envision the book’s
in relevant
right
real and
in
triggered the project. The
others with simoutcome
over-
were
scope
affected
by
of this
sexual
responses,
the students brain-
publication that would provide
“One of my goals at
who
courses. on
work with
violence
professors,” Kennedy like
topics
sexual
be interested,
may
the
integrate
of is-
Brim added.
on
their
how they
Some professors in
to
even
as
a
teaching
ex-
tool in
professor
course,
was
to incor-
courses.
as
how
Bob Korstad,
policy, who teaches
public
Policy Choice
Value Conflict,
as
on
questions
assault crimes. “I think
quires said,
a
the
of sexual assault
problem
that there
noting on
whole
campus that
limited
were
avenues
encouraged students
Students plan tion based
on
continually
to
update
the
from the student
publica-
they body and other members of
the Duke community. “This is have
a
constant process. I don’t think we’ll
enough,”
publication
can
submissions
for
to ConcernedAtDuke@hotmail.com.
in Latin American Studies
6(ir*fers
Burning
Issues Series
presents
Labor of Love:
Opportunities in Lula’s
Bryan Center
two-part
Brazil
discussion
Zouiten,
just returned from Kenya with Doctors Without Borders,
March 31, 7:30
-
9:30 PM
Gardener 105, UNC-CH
speak
on
and his and
Doctors Without Borders
Dr. Alexandre
Fundagao
experience abroad
answer
questions.
Fortes,
Perseu Abramo
April 1,7:00-9:00
PM
Richard White Lecture Hall,
For
more
info about Doctors Without Borders,
East
go to
Campus,
Duke
University
Dr. Paulo Fontes,
www.doctorswithoutborders.ora.
Solidarity
Center AFL-CIO, Brazil Reception to follow.
Music Video
Sponsored by the Community Service Center
cornmun/fy service DUKE
*
center
UNIVERSITY
as a
part of Health Awareness Week.
Lively
cOnTTIUn/fy service DUKE
center^
UNIVERSITY
ever
Williams said.
on
and politics in Brazil.
will
se-
the feedback and overall reaction
A
who
and
to hold
rious discussion.
Monday, March 31
Dr. Ahmed
re-
tremendous amount of education,” Korstad
Challenges and
in the
an
plans
is reflected in sexual
gender inequality
Those interested the beginning
of
in their
the text to stimulate discussion
use
interest
have already expressed
integrating the book
The Carolina-Duke Consortium
7 pm, Von Canon
as-
and
into
publication
We want to leave it up to them
courses.
ethics
more
idea of the
people
outreach, possibly
(ifidtifS Witter!
a
20
initially
possible because
not
was
academic
crime and
sault,
associate
Duke classrooms.
explained.
This girl clearly knows her math.
“Those
receive
stormed ideas for
‘the
said.
places
Encouraged by the
num-
structure to be stud-
to
a
possibilities they
project’s organizers
think, Wow,
shocked,” Lemmond admitted. “I changed
how
of the
a resource
sitting
guest column, published
dialogue, urging
lot of ways—l had
issue, of
though,
just
read
component
awareness
one
in
would
Brim, listing
quickly learned
as
such
last November,
experiences
was
as
it’s
out.”
on
awareness
student
every
concerning
The use
feature that
will further the
someone
in class’ It becomes
a
assault
said
so
to say
in and it’s
do this.”
to
Lemmond said.
She issued
ilar
“I sues
in
recog-
assault.”
plenty of
generous
me
Lemmond’s
number.
contains a
may
some
whelmed her.
sit back and wait until her
can
have
The Chronicle
major university
number is two because it is the
at least in
a
the audience. “A
on
effective,”
teach after school. may
Building. Like other retired jerseys,
ber that still
accounts
own
project leaders plan
publication
could
that
it,”
fraterni-
Sigma
Garinger contributed
Alex
“We don’t want to force it
publication
and
this
been awarded
retired next to the others sey is
“My
directed
Kraines said.
Wood’s will need
about their
Lemmond and her
Cambridge, England, and has received
For now, Wood
stories with
sharing their
of their
eco-
from the top universities to which she ap-
years,”
Physics
and has
in
The
a
her doing top research in mathematics in five
and
years, in 10
Wood is
member of the NCCU
process from here
sexual assault
other victims.
into the
ing
at Duke.
plied. Her advisers think she “I
burdens, release anxiety and offer
also mentioned the
group,”
graduate classes
psycho-linguistics,
produced plays while
ship
by
a
the Phi Beta
all in the courts now,
sexual
courses
of for
considered.
received criticizing their work. math
In addition to her
nomics and
everybody
their eyes, have misconcep-
open
“Some victims may find
Hain explained.
philosophy
to lift
nized
re-
and
complicated
vast,
a
look,
hopes that parts
algebra-
called the absolute Galois
mysterious object
true
a
Brim said. “We want
facts,”
gree of comfort in
and
Her
of the set of
symmetries
which form
numbers,
take
abstract pure mathematics. “[Her]
on
concerns
to
offer
as
The collection offers assault survivors the opportu-
published
for publication.
one
well
tions addressed.”
a
under the
completed
as
“The
titled
Magazine
Professor of Math Richard
has submitted another
work
featured in
was
Math.” She has
research papers,
of
guidance
in
do it.”
high school
has paid off.
freshman year, Wood
By her six-page
in
reached
Duke, declined comment except
Duke’s
so
not be
could
that “the police have stepped
a re-
about most
at
own:
porate
SEXUAL ASSAULT
at
Amachi, president
ty. Jason Dukes, president of the Sigmas
Executive
on
Alpha fraternity
Phi
The victim is
do not condone
of any
are
Omicron order
comment.
chapter of
statement of its
arrested
students
the Alpha
the Alphas,
Wednesday.”
grettable incident and
on
strive to lead
always
Duke. Senior Obi
the up at
feel that this has been
Committee,
of
exec-
executive offi-
come
three
All
executive committee of
a
exercise
an
other student repre-
president and
members of the Kappa
it. We’re talk-
on
it will
soon
seemed badly injured, but he got up
from page 3
working
sure
was
judgment and recognize that the
sentatives should
to
“In terms of DSG’s
it with the
members of the Duke Com-
believe this
we
by example.”
senior and DSG
Legislature meeting
‘The
left
a
president.
ing about
was
guys
guy
DSG
mem-
regrettable instance, and
a
response, we’re
someone
phone screaming,
coming.’
beating
munity, of poor
Sunday afternoon
As
campus.
certainly don’t condone those actions,”
and I’m cers,
cell
added
the sidewalk,
current executive
DSG met
said Justin Ford,
other
three
them off—it
pull
I
party
a
dressed up,”
continued “until
a
of
“I think it’s
up
witness
on
discuss the situation.
At the time, Kirtane said, the victim
the
to
bers
after that,” Kirtane said.
to be treated for
sustained
with
up
were
transported
was
Emergency Department
his
after
happened
to
The fight
was
not be reached for comment. The
said
Future and
wit-
fifth-floor
pretty ruthless.”
could
Njoku
tried
he
his
turned
beating
people
by Njoku while his friends contin-
ued to
“It
said.
guys
victim —false
imprisonment. The female held
think it
because people
was
serious
female Duke
a
friends
who is
was
“I
comment.
Kirtane
from
assault
window,
blood stains
were
washed away Sunday morning.
Tushar
Sophomore nessed the
varsity
with assault
charged
was
serious
flicting
accomplished
an
the
However,
own.
there
extending
This event is For
more
Burning
free and
information
Issues Series,
at
Clips
Discussion
the public. open to this event, or on the
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2003
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Music
Music 65:
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M
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Collegium Musicum, Chorale, Afro-Cuban Percussion,
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The Chronicle
MONDAY,
Overholser/ Roger Yamada
THE
Daily Crossword
MARCH
Edited by
2003 � PAGE 13
31,
Williams
Robert
Wayne
ACROSS Gluttons
Priestly vestment 10
Makes a choice
14
Distinctive flair
“Uncle Vanya"
15
character
Stagehand Boxer Benvenuti emblem
Clan
British Open winner
Tony
So-so to a soda
Is
jerk?
Plus feature Native
of:
sutf
limit
Upper
at
So-so
the
lumberyard? 33
Tummy muscles
Bert/ Scott Adams
State
Hawkeye
Michelangelo piece Theater
38
DOGBERT THE
HEADHUNTER
ASTON
FIFTY LET
ME
HOW
GOOD
BUDGET,!
PEI
YOU
TELL
ONE
J[
MY
HAVE
BEEN.
,
OF
C'
ON
40
Apollo
RE
43 In a ir
6
short time
44 Brand of
7
breath
CE I
8
9
So-so in
\ME
Fish catchers Kind of
10
Joe
Broadway Gaze
wantonly
statistics class? 11
Sty 54 'O
second
Jackie's
55 59
12
Foreseeing Curry
Actor
Nautical call
13
Mineral springs Pin box
So-so to a
21
botanist?
22 Don't throw out
64
Actress Moore
26
66
Broadcasting
Field yield smoke!
68 Holy 69 Not
Factory
29
Doze
briefly
30 Have
debts
31
Untrue
part?
32
Actress Farrow
one
33
Songwriters'
-34
Bathysphere
DOWN
35
Atlas, e.g.
52 Ousts
Salon coloring
39
R-V
56
Nary
72 73
St.
near
27
Spots
71
au
firm
yet
Spare
70
City
Louis
sign 67
Tru
Plenty
wonder?
Poet Teasdale
Blast letters
Doonesbury/ Garry
3/31/03
Anderson
OR
Portland,
Birthplace of
mints
CEO
PLACEMENTS
YOU'RE
J.
By Philip
backdrops
AN
IF
a
Dilapidated
grp51
HI,
MY NAMSSZIPP&R
HARRIS, ANP
I'UL
HJAUPBN
YOUR
TOUR GUIP3!
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Spanish
Sound sleeper?
45 Bill
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47
requirement
50 Love in
Editorial cartoonistof old
abode
Lofty
62
57
Cong _
Main Street
Mrs.
63
Culturally showy
structure 58
topper
Culture
61
Danube
41
COU&S3
YO, VOU'VB
the
on
Capital
explorer
Uses
base
64
a
Thieves' hangout
keyboard
London
60
65
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of self
Sense
The Chronicle Potential
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31
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the Sponsored by at the
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Ewald and Jeff Whetstone at Duke
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Chapel
basement
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information, call 684-5994.
open
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Deb
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p AGE
14
�
MARCH
MONDAY,
The Chronicle
2003
31,
Letters
The Chronicle
In the
Tuesday
improve
might
the
day
limits
many
classes
are
ond because the
strains, such
as
to take the
ability
undergraduate academduring the middle of
clustered
that
courses
high volume of classes
creates
is about how to alter the schedule to alleviate
The
provost’s Task Force of different of
variety
to the
present
Course
on
only debate
is
this
at
looking
a
can
semester. All of these
during the Tuesday/Thursday afternoon slots is simply that each
department
cal tic
would
current schedule without
This a
provide for
set of 75-minute classes
one
space
necessitating dras-
met vocal
benefit of the
Tuesday/Friday plan
that
for
the
over
provides students and teachers
between the two classes.
presented
was
proposal of increasing scheduling system is
extra
an
day
to
prepare
example, while taking Tuesday/Friday
For
may
those
independent issues
for
of
Bureau
decline
be obvious
this
in
fewer
last
a
matter media
This extra
only Wednesday with the Tuesday/Thursday
day has potential benefits if students
do their work and prepare for the second class more
it
use
system. to
wisely
meeting of the week
thoroughly than they currently do. However the sad truth is
that many students will wait until the last minute to do their work
regardless of how much time they have between classes. Thus, the impact of this change will probably be minimal. The crucial
having
thing students and faculty need
additional
an
an
still if
adjust their schedules
they
so
classes
so
that
desire and should not be
for purposes of social
should be done
only
on
inconvenience to many students and fac-
ulty. The administration should work
to
that students
ensure
they do
not have
pushing Friday
not to
flexibility,
can
Friday classes early morning
or
the schedule
engineering. Altering
to increase
“The
umn,
accomplish other
the
in terms
it’s
face. to
things
in life
porations
in
or
I
Bikini
Kill,
Tupelo, the Slits and less,
count-
countless others If
heard.
too, then
bothers
this
Perhaps
is
best
rather,
(or the
screamed)
want the air-
“We
We
air-time,
want
my
encapsu-
post-punkers
back!
waves
be
you
to voice
today
come
rights.
your
can
don’t
just
want all
we
the time all of the time!”
public
writof
Ann Lee
a
Trinity
policy
writing
am
I
for
Dead Prez, Big Black, Uncle
lated
progressive,
a
played.
fighting
Fugazi,
68
access.
necessarily
a
cor-
where seminal bands
spaces
conviction
exactly
what is
deciding
and
that
given primacy
are
believe
like
music
loves
disturbing
ad
delibera-
as
writer is music
The
’O3
director
for WXDU.
a
I’m
propose
small number I’d
like
not
but
to
and who is
about this for
wrong?”
incomplete is
the
Hitler If
wrong.
genocide
against
neighbor million
in which well
Hussein is
over
of
member
a
front
of
Europeans
as
to
choose
truth about Adolf 19305.
generation
cannot
under where
circumstances,
does that leave us? Whatever
a
your
a
war,
died. Saddam
people
KEVIN LEES, Managing Editor
with
in
make moral judgments any
in
ignore
to
throughout the
our
Iraqi
conversation.
Americans the
the the
point
no
truth
just
is
the
to
the
eyes,
ignore
answer:
war
threat
blunt
and
How
Saddam
8-year
an
Saddam
there is
a
she will
or
have chosen
their
people and perpetrat-
own
that
They
a
anticlimactic
an
immediately concede
continuing
Johnson’s questions, “Who is
right
not
greatest
of
one
can
anti-
an
activist and he
people,
most
with
war
point
Therefore
are.
reply
to
conversation
simple black
are
we
“genoci-
dal dictator.” If I’m having
com-
them
that
of people
group
honor with the title of
white,
and white propositions,
his
Editor
and
staring
Clearly
going
ed
DAVE INGRAM. Editor
University
it
dangerous and risky worldview
elite
Life,”
anything
see
of black
when
even
committed
ALEX GARINGER,
by
to
the standpoint
specialist.
danger posed
to
plete inability
Saddam
The Chronicle
of
by moral relativists: the
and
goals surreptitiously..
Pursuit
represents
in the
to decide is whether
day of preparation is worth having classes
Friday, which could be
public
not
am
Marxist
Jillian Johnson’s latest col-
instead of
to
consolidation
excessive
from
Moral relativism is
FCC
cover
illuminating
activist,
an
the
the
competition,
who
Refused,
ing
of
more
Media
owners
girl
failed to
I
years,
and,
own
increased
music
to pre-
classes, students would have both Tuesday and Wednesday pare
on
percent. Due
25
the
to
Eric Hanson
by
threatens
have owned and
consolidated
by
have
how
few;
the past 25
people
1996
allowed
report,
mascot
our
Freedom Devils!
percent. Major media has also
tions,
control affects everyone.
During
of
FCC
a
reduced
rates
these
reiterate what
is not
to
number of station
Law,
out
could
entity
the
“Freedom Devils” instead. Go
in
men-
limits
eliminated all
according
what
involved
exclusive
an
Bloom
one
out
pointed
alarming
an
Comm-
public
changing
finds
exam-
the number of radio stations
personal weight. to
Bloom
Greg
also
com-
use
Blue Devil mascot. I propose
homogenizes
numbered
has, for
As
360.
to continue to
munity
Trinity ’O2
Federal
music,
carry
to
propriate for the Duke
socie-
a
communications Act
being
a
School
may
tioned in his article, the Tele-
from 12:30 to 5
think. It
you
undergraduate study. The only
classes within the current
Monday/Wednesday
the
to find
3043,
Friday—this
Tuesday and Friday.
opposition when it
of directors of
January meeting
Monday and
set of 75-minute classes
proposal, however,
from
this,
the
at
p.m.
during
evenly
to
possible schedule change that the task force is considering
that it
do
to
But I’d like
Thursday and another
at
to limit
changes. One
ized
hearing today
throughout the day and the week, solving the logisti-
problems with the
bought
out. The group author-
in
once
I
us.”
against
you’re
or
position,
airwaves
ple, decreased at rate
run
but
one
“you’re either with
where
us
and friend-
place
no
media. What
college
stations,
how
500 TV stations
independ-
our
namely
radio
room
schedule
can
popular time periods. This would force departments their classes
keep
media,
ission, is conducting
The most effective way to reduce the number of classes sched-
the number of classes
to
fighting
of
unity, cooperation ship have
are
about
Iraq
ty
ties
therefore feel that it is inap-
sym-
sides,
feel about France’s
they
music lovers
plain old
Communications
congestion during the prime
Tuesday/Thursday times.
uled
and
in
war
both
on
regardless
a
students
DJs,
a
know passions
deep
organizers,
radio
artists,
as
Franco-American
the current
fans
when
country
I
ship.
Corporate control of
ent
this situation.
Scheduling
final report
aim to reduce the
possibilities
The
this
Grassroots
sec-
logistical
numerous
to the current schedule that it
changes
provost in its
want and
they
eating places and buses.
crowded
is
were
of
raising
effort. The
unity, cooperation and friend-
unit that became well known
Tuesday and Thursday, is inadequate, first because it
on
students’
bol
World War I-era French army
afternoons
Almost everyone agrees that the current
schedule, where
many
U.S. war
Blue Devil stands
pro-French Duke
the
for the money
as
truth
Blue Devils
know, the
in
ic
The
It’s
worse:
well. As
as
it
construe
satanic.
much
over-crowding
Thursday
and
in
some
changed because of French
toured
the
whether
light of the fact that
priate
being
Alterations to schedule should
there has been
past,
over
“Blue Devil” mascot is appro-
Scheduling changes eliminate current
editor
Blue Devil should be debate
flexibility,
to the
position I
mit
on
implore
the current
innocent?”
is
I’m
guilty.
Well
Saddam Hussein is to
open
this
anything about
discuss
war
with
anti-war activists at any
time,
providing that our
shall
fact.
political all
crimes
little
a
after
is
deny
Whatever
opinions,
sleep
peacefully Hussein
don’t
they
simple
Saddam
for
punished
I won’t
ple. Until then,
we
more
against the Iraqi
his peo-
cease
to wonder at “humanitarian” activists or
who protest (directly
indirectly)
dal
to
regime
maybe
keep
in
I’m
a
genoci-
power.
But
biased
just
because my relatives died in
ghettos, cattle centration
relativism.
Johnson asked, “Who is
an
who
Johnson,
cars
and
con-
camps.
subyou not to
moral
to
and
Matthew Ericksen
guilty
Trinity ’O6
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Commentary
The Chronicle
MONDAY, MARCH 31,
15
�PAGE
2003
Iraq: A just war? It
should
without
go
point, that the left
at
this
is wrong about the
war.
saying
vinced of the
Saddam Hussein is not morally equivalent W.
George
to
Bush,
on
par with the
in
the last
tortured and
American POWs
well
as
not about the tion of oil is
it
fired
as
good
executed
which
expropria-
to
the
and evil, became operative
contrary
crisis that
dangerous
Many
U.S.
seeks
them,
is
To
have
lost
able to
are
moral
my
point, that me
of the
reality
from above—the
us, be
they
compass,
fundamentally
are
moral
However,
wrong.
clarity does not necessarily follow from this
temic
caused
realization; rather, this provides the basis
Christie
It is
begin with,
get
being conducted
legal
as
to
response
a
12
tions, the
East
the
haps,
and,
U.S.
increasingly comes
to
English
the
The Critical
per-
as
information
more
light regarding Iraq’s role
Tony Blair
with
acting
are
not the
only stop
in shel-
of freedom in the world, who
understand
our
present conflict
the
blessing
of
as
at
our own
of
prevent much
the line. Coalition forces the
one
in
(Bob
such
in
a
dinary lengths will
Saddam is
future
brighter
a
though
deposed,
their
and not by
in and
however. These facts,
problem,
do not make
themselves,
the
particularly
right and salient.
I
will return to this troubling thought, but first
a
war
duty
it that
is
have
disagreements
engendered
worldwide? The
of
some
heated debates, not simply
the
“The
most-
is this: From
answer
it is
idiocy.
terrorism
and
to kill in war, what the
the
being
that the
con-
that
Milosz
of
avant-garde
true
question of
and
war
the
himself
this
war?
last
criterion
at the
of
appeasement
is
War? Divulging all the
and false, good
time guard
same
When
was
elected
we
to be the
person we’d
term.
”
We
thought we’d roll the dice Bush hasn’t
Unfortunately,
We had asked
damage alienate
stagnating
our
with dumb
and
mess
in front
repeatedly
compromise
reasons
ability
our
around
with
all
the
because of who their fathers be
why
we
power were.
revolted, is
Anyway, the search
An excellent
so
I
for
thought
giving
us
THEO
of
just
PROTEGE
for challengers
to
are
suck, though,
wouldn't be
make excellent
with
photos
see
joy
come
every
time
up
ers
cereal bins and
that blow up your shorts,
they
like
freezing cold air-condition-
we
we can
be better
do the
than
Dick
president
W.
to
an
as
trample
out
William Howard
in
our
Taft,
on
a
our
Band
a
connection to
taught
opportunity to
ram
a
ever
him how
for rebirth—-
career
is
a
to
himself a per-
president. Plus, he’d be way better than
days,
Nan
10-10-220 even
peace.
Trinity
a
senior.
need
with
war
someone
to the
bowing down
original country where, takes
president
as
his
fire up the
can
should res-
people
Walt Whitman has
hat off to
hair
Kennedy’s
fre-
unprecedented
who
the people,
no
one wears
thick, but
too
was
point.
(unless he
actor
was
I vowed that
Reagan spent eight
giving had
complete
us
utterly
no
years
factual inac-
what
idea
was
we
should never have another actor
on,
he’s f—ing Morgan Freeman, for
come
Finally,
284
million
to the six Americans
Keohane, president,
She has
wljp
a
president
like
him,
in as
liked A1 Gore.
Duke
announced that
played
Americans
University will
she
leave
because she has her
DuKe
sights
in set
the big prize. She wouldn’t be bad, actually. With her
unparalleled fundraising abilities, inite dent in the
she could
cal
put
deficit Bush has
huge budget
with his brilliant “cut taxes and increase
a
def-
given
us
spending” fis-
plan.
Chuck Berry, guitarist, singer, composer With Chuck duckwalking we
would
remind
around the White
the world
of
House,
they like
everything
about America, instead of just taking hate about
ever
the upsurge, and his wit will blow
just
candidates
to
going
we
because he just
Bush has
on
is
I know. After Ronald
us
movie.
opposed
hope
Guy, basketball fan, Duke University
president. But
hyperconserva-
collective throat, gain political power
swift and
a
f—’s sake. Furthermore, Freeman has
on
music with
Weinberg.
His
English
2004; this is, obviously,
lot of potential.
The Rising has
powerful
the
curacies
I
Washington,
disagreement by declaring
manent wartime Max
He would be
automatically gain
exploitative chance
agenda down
and
a
Bill
the
know,
lying
if at
settled,
leaders act to the best of their abil-
hats anymore, since John
as
it’s that proven,
stronger than Nixon and Clinton combined
11
our
be
only
In the meantime we
retrospect.
ities and pray for
His habit of
going on),
team
has
Tallent, bassist, The E Street
Sept.
that
these
described,
I
not distract
thought ought
instead of the other way around. Of course,
amazing
is
ends up unjust, and the
a war
war?”—will
just
a
in
all,
Towel
get
war.
patriotism
may
onate in the
you
strong choice, definitely, as, just by making
use
this
Morgan Freeman, film
Franks
since
troops.
current
that
everything
they
and hitting them in the face with it,
us
done. He’s also
live, and
one
of the
might get calls
we
saying “Chuck! It’s
your
cousin,
greatest poets
as
to
to the White House
Marvin! Marvin
Berry!”
Franklin Delano Roosevelt’s away, if not Gerald Ford’s. He’s not
She’s not really old
enough
yet, but with #2O, you make
22
points,
7
steals per contest, she’s got
thing Coach
one
had. Meanwhile, playing
could really turn this fed-
Alana Beard, basketball player, Duke University
exception. With
almost resurrect
First Gentleman. Oh wait... she isn’t
ALF, product spokesman,
eral government around.
an
he
close,
is named Dick.
Franks administration has
America
tive
Skip’s smiling face
greeting them? Plus, by implementing excellent ideas all-you-can-eat
was
even
which is pretty cool. With that billion-dollar “Yoh
instead of
of
he’d
but
if only because it would be
Bruce Springsteen, you
exec-
Sy-(Snootles)-
I have
a
Garry A
The Marketplace manager,
gushing
least
Government Center” being constructed
neces-
Candidates for the Presidency in 2004:
Who
as
Crazy
quency
to him in real life. Come to think of it...
mustached
think
real-
of THEODORE HUXTABLE’S PROTEGE’S
returned to the States to
time,
can
Franks, head coach, Duke football
though,
win the
people who aren’t
and-the-Ramblin-(Root-Beer)-Gnome, then,
“Skip” Herrod,
Cosby
If there’s
first
utives. With the help of political consultant
James
at the
he gets results. Wait, no, that’s not right.
I think
sarily politically affiliated, but might
with the list
Carl
HUXTABLE’S
Monday, Monday
some
choice,
actually married
candidates who don’t
I would provide
than what
she’s married to Ahmad Rashad. Never mind, bad idea.
White House in 2004. None of the political parties
ly famous
At
war
and
may call into ques-
from this. The ultimate question— “Is
us
utopian
is
thinking
simple pro/con posi-
of this
know
for war
thinking
Such
ever.
the
require both appraisal
of leftist
poverty
most
know
we
in
come
clear moral
than
aspects
worthless if
With the country
Bush-Gore tandem? Not
Dukakis.
to have Bill
too
on
for
for
will
presidential
Felicia Rashad, television actress
why
morons
than the
the
out this year.
Gephart. Who, admittedly,
us
fun
made
for letting spoiled-brat
worse
same
world.
I think this is
certainly better numbers
Everyone made fun of Dukakis any
is
to
engagements
some
seri-
aims in away that
not. Since
are
con-
to
define the parameters
Conservatives
deal effectively
to
Michael Dukakis, former governor, Massachusetts
moribund
a
are
putting
actually. Sure, he’s really old, but if we
and
policies
Bush has been
other ancient retired senators’ careers, surely
our
embarrass
fathers
founding
might
bang-up
enemies,
of the entire
Whoops. Tough break.
it
a
did. And those
ever
little with this
ourselves, “How much
allies, piss off
our
country’s history
run
at least he isn’t
could he really do?” Well, I guess,
bad tax cuts to turn it into
England
a
seen, but it
exactly done
wreck the most successful economy in
our
ever
like, “How bad could he be?” and “Well,
A1 Gore
job.
George W. Bush president, he didn’t
best-qualified
precisely
will
that
issues of last
grave
critique—critique that tion
it is
against
presently
tions, but
non-paci-
questions
and
conser-
qualified
proportionate
will not be reducible to
that fueled the Second World
THEO HUXTABLE’S PROTEGE proposes seem
does.
on
a
con-
“Waco”
suggest
uniquely
important
more
statements
that
war
words
I would
then,
against terrorism,
present times. How can we all options are exhausted and
that
the
inhumanity,
and
resort,
of just
part of Europe privilege
many
in
ambiguous presume
others
U.S.
survivor of a
the
contend with the
ously
toward the
Most
which most
dangerously idealistic. One
are
resort and
doesn’t sup-
a
gover-
and
don’t like liberals to be comfortable
that Iraq
Christie
Nick
global
peacekeeping
injustice,
recall
In brief
Regarding the first, why
Pope,
opposes
this
poet and Nobel
century,
this
concerning
con-
the possible
meant, writing,
asset that my
port
for
hope
a
end to
servatives
for conservative
Pope
on Bush, are byAccompanying their
war.
often
only
vatives
right.
qualification
two: The
larger
a
with the well-intended use of force.
is in
regarding
from the Vatican have focused
unusually in
Primarily
fist,
issues
wrestling with
from the
of
part
mainstream lib-
“Janet Reno” to be reminded of why
in war, and the
Nazism and Communism and
of
questions
to
are reasons
and
war?
is it that
week,
comes
morality
come
Neither is trivial.
interesting
an
understand,
to
come
greatest
reservations
campus. If there is any clear
received in the 20th
the
entirely
appear
wrong have become
We
What, then,
to
need
“paleo-
over
is
servatives find
these
thesis, the left
reservations
genuine
policy currently
obvious,
moral
simple
as
Laureate Czeslaw
campus, but
on
of anyone who is
perspective
this
over
on
fronting Iraq,
digression.
Why
claims
To reiterate my
most
acted
we
Novak)
for the
systematic
of the most instructive debates of
some
the grave issues of
host of
a
and
epis-
the fact that Nick is
war
international
nance,
duty toward world peace,
outer space when it
to
who blame
It should be
etc.
benefit of this war,
of
just.
war
course,
appearance in discussions of the last
choice. One
own
of
are,
the U.S.’s
as
today.
civi-
on
responsibility
our
Indeed, “morality” has made
and Americans will lose their lives in this cause
it is
why contrary
factions
most
after
Iraqis
many
such,
and win. There
however,
to avoid civilian causalities.
have
As
are
decisive battle that will deter-
through the UN.,
to extraor-
history and going
circles
conservatives”
material threat to
a
Saddam, but would rather that
of
conservative
tortuous regime is anathema to every ideal
intermediate positions—those
humanitarian-minded military
most
campaigns
Iraq
waging
are
within
war
of
degree
some
unique phenomenon:
support
to
ani-
most
are
of free civilization and
fight
down
greater catastrophes
discussions
is for the
the
against
or
modesty. Secondly,
and-large
the just
surprised
are
less serious. Thus also,
for
erals, while they still pick
can
The intellectual battles between “neo-
days.
the future of the free world. Our military is
intervention will
military
Many
(David Fmm)
Iraq.
lization.
that this
such
for
necessary
war.
conservatives”
people
mine the future of terrorism’s hold
hope
of
Saddam’s
engaged
integrity
protect. Both
to
mated
we
case,
and
we
tough questions regarding the
conditions
find that
expense,
and in the best interests of their countries, sworn
actual
of the
the‘“facts”
to ask
prosecution
spread
to
attempt
an
liberty,
worthwhile discussion. Once
a
on
agree
begin
of
missiles), proud
as
which they
have
hos-
a
American
are
begin
to
great beacon
to the brutalized
tering and aiding al Qaeda terrorists. Bush and
On the other hand
place.
to
problems
the
Theory
appears
genuine
world’s
the U.S.’s historical role
directly.
The latter threat
the
and if America would
patriots (people,
threatens
of both
populations Middle
tile
extent of which
gravely
now
of
meddling, the world wouldn’t be such
of weapons viola-
years
most
necessarily remain,
of the threats that surround
ought be checked by
tion at best and murder at worst. The U.S.
ploy
justifi-
such knowl-
Duke, grossly ignorant
more or
enthusiasm
our
I
support?
with most at
along
war’s
a
they verify
what role does this knowledge
in their
play
let
and
edge,
left’s characterizations of the Iraq conflict
of destruc-
agent
an
I
cation? How could
about these terms.
reassert my observations
over
third world.
few
evil, however,
Lest the reader think, at this
hegemony,
control
and
good
speak properly
involvement is
of the
military
our
of
ty
threat. What must and should dem-
a
ocratic citizens know about
like the taste of bread.” Met with this reali-
can
the left believe that
imperial
with
again. [These
have been discovered empirically,
values]
elected for another term,
a
Bush
on
military
oppressed peoples
nor
resources,
to
of a long march toward U.S.
part
is
war
and evil.
the present
their
on
citizens. This
fellow, noncompliant
of the
wrongness
afflict man, namely, the confusion between
Iraqi militants who have,
week,
or
claims
exhibit the most
American forces
nor are
rightness
widespread
war,
more
rebounds, game
3
assists and
3
than James Monroe
as
as
tall
many
as
Lincoln and Washington were,
fingers
but his show was say
as
a
about anything
John Adams,
big
or
even
which is success,
George W. Bush has
nor
does he have
Andrew
more ever
Jackson,
than you could
participated
in.
THEODOREHUXTABLE’SPROTEGE
was
reminded last
week in Page Auditorium that Arlo Guthrie is bossest tive.
people
to
ever
Woody wasn’t
live. Whoops,
too bad
that
himself, either.
was
a
one
of
the
split infini-
The Chronicle PAGE
16
�
MONDAY,
MARCH
31. 2003
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