March 31, 2003

Page 1

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

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on

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The Chronicle p AGE 4

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

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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°.

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)

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more

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DUKE SATURDAY

APRIL 12.2003

2:30 PM

DUKE

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Rodney Wynkoop. Conductor with Karl Dent,

tenor,

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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

e-mail

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

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PLAQUES

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to Wake

possible

and the

goes

arguably

history

TROPHIES

here

team

No.

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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.

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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

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In

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Die ATJO

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telling;

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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

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Doctors Without

7:OOpm:

Dr. Ahmen Zouiten will

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morning], it had been “We

Wednesday,

April

his

Von Canon

experience

the

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with Doctors

BC) Without Borders

as

a

physician

in

Come for info and free

pretended

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coaches’ meeting, but

page 11

Meet in the

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loss]

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were

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called off.

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“I’d like

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April 6,

-

March 31:

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memories

ing this tournament, the Blue Devils

March 31

a

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the Lady Gamecock Classic earlier this month. Dur-

“When

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the entire

rounds gave Duke its first national title.

ditions

UNIVERSITY

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its lead from

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THAD PARSONS/THE CHRONICLE

National Col-

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tournament’s first

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as

top-ranked and defending national champi-

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the

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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

Fare is

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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

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or

Questions?

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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

e-mail

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

on

contact the Consortium

las@duke.edu, or

681-3980.

labor

the


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The Chronicle The

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at Duke

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103 W Union

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DUKE UNIVERSITY DEPARTMENT OF MUSIC A World of Music: Fall

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2003

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Comics

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.

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OF

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ON

40

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43 In a ir

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short time

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breath

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10

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Broadway Gaze

wantonly

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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

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firm

yet

Spare

70

City

Louis

sign 67

Tru

Plenty

wonder?

Poet Teasdale

Blast letters

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3/31/03

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topper

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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

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The Chronicle Potential

Nan Keohane Mike Ken

Krzyzewski (he already Reinker

Hans

Blix

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need

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successor

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P

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Deb

Loßiondo

(668-


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

KENNETH REINKER, EditorialPage Editor PAUL DORAN,

Sports

Editor

On

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Photography Editor

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MIKE MILLER, Health & Science Editor

BECKY YOUNG, Features Editor

MATT ATWOOD, TowerView Editor

JODI SAROWITZ, TowerView Managing

ROBERT TAI,

Editor

JOHN BUSH,

Editor

Graphics

MATT KLEIN, Sr. Assoc.

University

ALISE EDWARDS,

University

MOLLY Editor

& State Editor

Sports

off,

was

Sophomore Baptiste

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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

haircut


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