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Friday, April 4, 2003
Sunny
and
High 83,
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Low 55
www.chronicle.duke.edu No.
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The No. 10 men’s lacrosse
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vliiVV/i THE INDEPENDENT
Blue Jay Way
__
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lili
Saturday
VUJJ
afternoon.
See page 11
DAILY AT DUKE UNIVERSITY
Schools
gain little ground
in most recent
rankings
KIRA ROSOFF
By
U.S. News and world Report
The Chronicle
a^an^incii
U.S. News and World Report released its 2004 uate
of America’s best grad-
rankings
and for the second
schools,
in
year
a
How Duke fared
Duke received mixed results.
row
The School of Law, after
falling
out of
the top 10 last year, stayed put at No. 12, while
the
slipped
of
School
Fuqua
No.
to
spot
a
School of Law
Business
tied with
7,
the
Haas School of Business at the Universiat
ty of California good
Medicine,
falling
Berkeley. There
however,
news,
which
for
rose
a
the
spot
two
spots
last year.
are
very
surprised
“We school’s
Dean
year,”
did
ranking of
not
the
The Chronicle.
in the In
that
a
School
.
m
°r
News
departure
complete
coverage,
-
Enqincerinq
scor-
.
previous
al business programs. Duke sat at No. 8
years, 8 schools, 4
are
in
points this
their individual ranking is
both manageln ent and
business, No.
in
realize that and
influence
continue to
feel
is
do
appropriate
that
improve
the
Along Fuqua,
with
the
the
magazine also ranked
Dean
Breeden could
Douglas
The School of Medicine tied with the
we
ued
quail-
ranking
.
of
University
rad
Johns ton
overall
M.B.A.
marketing
not be reached for comment,
U.S.
that
international
sin the executive
and No 4 for
Fuqua
per-
perceptions.
everything
to
she
meaningless, I
important
are
rankings
We
section.
special
Pratt School of law school
tyofthe law school.
Coach Gail Goestenkors and the women’s basketball team receive well wishes from fans before
Slursinq
not reflected
sent to the
any yeai Nonetheless,
ceptions
see
School of
gotten
Bartlett addressed the
that
wrote.
for the Final Four in Atlanta. For
has
program
this
their
is
closely bunched (within
year),
Off to Hot-lanta
Law
e-mail to
oil
As
CHRONICLE
School of Med icine
this
of
an
school
quality
our
message
Pro cess
JANE HETHERINGTON/THE
the law
improve
rankings.”
community
so
Business
and it is frusmany ways,
so
that
trating
“The
of
to No. 4 after
Katharine Bartlett wrote in
better in
Euqua School of
was
School
Pennsylvania, but continHarvard
University,
the
Hopkins Universi ty and Washing-
University in St. Louis
lor
sever-
See U.S. NEWS
on
page 6
Black students Book: grade inflation exists at Duke discuss incident
Thursday night
recent
in
Joshua Jean-Baptiste,
with which
negative light
they
a
dozen
Bryan Center,
people
well
as
as
attended the
the
topics that they hoped students will address campus race
discussion
we
can
a
campus
thing
in
light
we
having
have
a
a
of
Psi
Kappa Alpha
es
and
During
the
recently published
articles
did not offer
the DSG a
less
most
which
ence,
tends
to
give
When son
description of the
a
a
IllSidC
The
Nicholas
Sciences
hopes
to
saw
on
jre
he
School
of
the
Environment
applicant
and
Earth
numbers this year, but
increase class sizes in years
to
come.
See page 3
A fire
in
the
See page 3
they
exists
believes,
which
manipulate
take in order to maxi-
grade point
students
overall
The
also
a
averages.
enrolling
in
By
courses
grading professors, proportion
of
high
he
continues,
from the
professors,
problem,
comes
of whom give out high grades to
grades
nrollments and
conducted
0 0.
approach, rather
suggesting
teacher ratings
by their students. Johnson provides data
a
strong correlation
between the average
yield clearer results. was
underground
tunnel
caused the evacuation of residents
ing.
Eng-
grades awarded increases.
page 9
consistent
and
middle range of the
with leniently
he writes.
mathematical
holistic one, would
grading
Psychology,
science
Johnson
their
pra*
“When evaluating grade inflation, it See REACTION
jes ;e
synthesizing the data for his book,
believed that
than
process.
students
■e
soc;
economics,
and biol-
severe
•ontinuum.
from
and
the
crisis,
leniently
stringent grading
to this rule is
with the natural sciences,
president. They said
complete
mpied
as
that humanities
grade
severe
•olicy political
teaches at the \
highest grades
courses
ploy the
students addressed three of
Chronicle articles written about
the altercation involving the
gathered
exception
discussion, the
least
conducts
concludes
into
hile drama, music and literature
classes in the sciences and mathem,'
meeting organizer.
the
now
impor-
difficult to compile
Chemistry, mathematics, physics
1998-1999 academic year
award the
some-
fraternity
well
Undergraduate!
ences
to say
as
more
study from which I could draw conclusions.”
at Duke
survey
Johnson, who
of his present situation,” said junior Nate
Jenkins president
a
in
data from the Duke
versity of Michigan,
black student gov-
responsibility
grading trends
historical research
statistics
ernment president...
professor
is also very
to have the most
Evaluating Teaching
in further
regarding the incident and
take pride in
statistics
Johnson
quantitatively,”
qualitatively
tant but would have been
se-
Johnson’s book systemat
details
during the
list of
relations.
“If
Duke
data I had
any
at data
book to be released April 18.
using
in the
meeting
a
cally
said the situation has
which they formulated
during
Former
colleges?
Education,
been portrayed. About
crisis at Duke and at other
Titled Grade Inflation: A Crisis
the implications of the
controversy surrounding Duke Student Govern-
ment President
a
analyze
said. “Looking
Valen Johnson thinks so—and will reveal his evidence
The leaders of several black student organizations to discuss
grade inflation
lective
FOSTER
The Chronicle
met
tant to
The Chronicle
Is
By JACQUELINE
CHARLIE MEHL
By
very
of
See GRADE INFLATION
impor-
Jarvis
dormitory
early Thursday
morn-
The Center for
Systems neering
seeks
on
Biological Inspired to
explore
page 7
Materials and Material
integration
of traditional
engi-
methods with those of natural sciences. See page 5
PAGE
2 �
FRIDAY,
APRIL
World & Nation
4, 2003
NEWS BRIEFS
*
Supreme
Court overturned a stay
allowed Oklahoma of
a
to move
who killed two
man
Thursday
Iraqi government officials
and
passed by
a
when he
PATRICK TYLER
By
17. The
was
Defense
Service
WHO
A
team
experts begin research
on
China—a
and set to work flu-like illness
hunting
as
west of
city just
clues to the
Hong Kong
origins
of
a
desert
in
Thursday
the
to
Baghdad
—
Thursday
The thud of
The Bush administration wants to trol of federal vouchers that families pay the rent, the
a
give
states
for
major shake-up
government’s largest housing
rival
one
near
in
Iraq
Harvard a
miles
the
of
skirts
appoints first female dean Kagan,
forces
the
Gen.
His the
at
the
school's
•
the first female dean in the
it
may
that
plans to
resume
to resume
plans
13 years after its
last fired their
was
whether
Pentagon
cept
for
army
intended to isolate Sad-
their
fighting,
they
This
night.
be
whether it. the
ex-
said
they be-
responsible
Baghdad Thursday
raised
was
left
said.
not
were
are
anything
defense,” he
own
for the blackout of
of the to
of
charge
U.S. military officials
Saddam—re-
to
the
of
question
deliberate tactic of
a
city’s defenders.
The blackout occurred shortly after
clear
not
allied
into the
press
Thursday
forces
would
to
Saddam’s
night
seek
city immediately
the government
crews
Havana courts
or
wait
but it
meeting,
under
implode
image
appeared
television in what
to
it
was
taped
was
on
state
described
as
a
also possible that
was
in advance.
despite
the present moratorium
ANITA SNOW
By
It
Cuesta Morua said outside
The Associated Press
HAVANA
The first
on commer-
wave
nationwide crackdown went tro’s
News briefs
compiled
government
About
moved
of dissidents rounded up in
on
to
trial Thursday
wipe
out
media and
cluded from the trials,
MARKETS
NASDAQ
Down 44.68 at 8240.38
I 1
“This is
a
Down 0.14 at 1396.58
tary
assault
Tiananmen
diplomats
were
on
referring
pro-democracy
student
most
beautiful
experience
we
can -
aimed
have is the
at
warning
Albert Einstein
“This is not
mili-
protesters
“putting
the
brakes
States
on
about
the
in
going
to
cused of
were
and
opposition
Cuban
undis-
an
ranging
from
Santiago
in
are
announced in writing with-
proceedings.
trial,” Maria de los Angeles
a
put
on a
working
with U.S.
land to subvert Castro’s
Menendez,
the defendants. “They
show. The sentences
The dissidents, rounded up
United
and
days.
who also showed up to support
Square.
the
Havana
elsewhere in Cuba,
Sentences here usually
mem-
1989 Chinese
in
under way but indicated all 80 trials would to
were
in two weeks after the
The recommended sentences of 15 years to life
mysterious.”
cases
be concluded within
ex-
in years.
to the
hearing Thursday.
one
began
the far east. The government refused to say how many
of Cuba’s harshest
the final phase
dozen trials
the westernmost province of Pinar del Rio to
opposition.
judicial Tiananmen,” said opposition
ber Manuel Morua,
< >
growing
foreign
campaign against internal dissent 00W
Fidel Cas-
as
a
closed number started
a
Prosecutors sought life sentences for 12 of the 80 defendants.
from wire reports.
International
FINANCIAL
dissidents
begin trying
whaling,
harpoons.
whaling.
“The
fate
proceed
ifpossible. ‘Whateverremnants
more
forces—thought
says the whaling will be for research, which is al-
O
it
to reflect
appeared
the exact
would
dam and avoid street-to-street
lieved that
committed
It
of
prestigious
whaling
Iceland has revealed its
cial
the allied
mains unknown.
Richard
forces
186-year history.
Iceland
lowed
be
to
prove
Myers suggested
pressure.
with deliberation. He made it clear that
350
across
growing
would not be in
comments
fact
most out-
Thursday afternoon. as
is ‘an illusion’
capital
that American
scattered during
or
desert—was “weakened,”
best-trained
10
Chiefs
the
that
ends,” he said.
entered
on
Joint
of the
announced
Staff,
are
Baghdad,”
Myers, chair
scholar and former aide in the Clinton White
House,
the
lethal in the final moments before it
ar-
occupied
Airport,
of
“And
foreign
forces
Rums-
“still lethal.”
was
miles from the center of the city.
programs.
Law School Thursday named Elena
forces
Allied
International
Saddam
of
artillery hailed
British
1941.
“Coalition
Harvard Law School
on
Iraqi army—parts of which
15-day armored thrust
a
“an illusion.”
was
Donald
Secretary
have been routed
of
that the
the city of the first
since
army
con-
two million
help nearly
while the
government
as
city insisted
American approach
changes in housing for poor
outskirts
western
in the
officials
fatal
the worldwide death toll rises.
Bush proposes
United
States armed forces rolled out of the
mystery illness
of international scientists landed
Guangzou,
approach
feld cautioned from Washington
five to four vote.
KUWAIT CITY, Kuwait •
insist American
ahead with the execution
people
New York Times News was
judgement
•
Baghdad
near
Supreme Court allows controversial execution
The
*
airport
enter
Troops
The Chronicle '
are
March
beginning
diplomats
on
are
already decided.” 18,
are ac-
the Caribbean is-
government and of being
merce-
naries in the pay of Washington.
sovereignty,”
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1
The Chronicle
»
t
FRIDAY,
APRIL
4; 2003
�
PAGE 3- ’•
Nicholas
applications stay By
even
MARGAUX KANIS The Chronicle
the
Although
to the Nicholas
number of
ment and Earth Sciences in
same
to
ue
those
2003 after in
percent
16
further increases
for
like
last year in order to raise the
seen
quality
remained the
jumping nearly
administrators contin-
2002,
hope
applicants
School of the Environ-
of graduate students
accepted
to
their program.
Approximately plicant
.
80
p001—275
of the
percent
apstu-
prospective
dents—were admitted this year. Administrators
aim
acceptance
rate
what ate
at
its
in
in the field
Indiana
in
2001
was
acceptance
2
rate.
a
was
74
1
and per-
ANDY YUN/THE CHRONICLE
JARVIS DORMITORY RESIDENTS stand outside in the cold early underneath the
dormitory
when
a
Thursday morning
fluorescent light overheated and ignited
a
as
fire trucks and fire fighters put out
a
fire that started in the tunnel
blaze.
ranked
in 2001.
dean
Schlesinger,
Nicholas School,
no.
News
has
Duke
by the magazine
William
University
ranked
by US.
World Report, currently
no.
this some-
environmental policy
management.
Bloomington, which
cent
being
higher than other leading gradu-
programs
and
maintain
to
despite
to
hopes
of
the
expand the
Small fire in Jarvis forces evacuation
ranks of the Master of Environmental
Management of
Forestry
120
program and the Master
program to
students.
students
Around fill
now
class.
ranks
of
the
what
I’m
really
with
to
students
President
ronmental
George
policies.
who
as
selves
envisaid
Schlesinger
students view the master’s gram
disagree
W. Bush’s
degree
academically
so
they
can
coun-
teract Bush’s actions.
The
admissions
responded
led by
use
on
page 6
Dormitory
a.m.
waited
in
Thursday morning
alarm from the
utility
12:45
a.m.
a
received
Thursday. By the
to the scene, the tunnel’s
the call
time fire
at
ap-
A
fluorescent
the fire, fire
fighters only had
The
larger than
a
all
chimney,
smoke
traveled
it
actually
was.
and then it looked like
along the back of the building,” a
because
resident of Jarvis. tunnels
the
also triggered the fire alarm in Carr “The rest of the smoke
he said. “It
was
No students
to
carried
fined to
light
reported
enough
up
through [Jarvis],”
to irritate the throat.”
injuries, and damages
the tunnel, fire fighters
it
Building.
just traveled
smoke but
it
cleared
the
were
con-
building
of
smoke before students could re-enter.
light
in
the
utility
tunnel
under Jarvis
the fire, said Lt. Tom Gustafson of the Duke Uni-
versity Police Department. which caused
melt and
had
said freshman Joanna Hundley,
fighters
sprinklers had almost
fire extinguisher, but the tunnel remained filled with
caused
much
we
had five chimneys
we
tun-
dense smoke.
on
See NICHOLAS
Jarvis
an
seem
“It looked like
through ventilation systems, Gustafson said, noting that
completely extinguished
heated,
committee,
building
of
until after 2
The Durham Fire Department
pro-
away to better prepare them-
residents
fire fighters responded to
proximately
He attributed the recent influx in ap-
made the fire
nel below the building.
after,”
Schlesinger said.
plications
Pajama-clad front of their as
looking for the largest and best That’s
KAREN HAUPTMAN The Chronicle
graduate
100
the
Nicholas School. “I’m
By
approximately
the
The
light burned
plastic
drip down, igniting
a
cover
in
out and
over-
the fixture
to
box of combustible material
the tunnel floor. As students evacuated the building, the smoke
Although that
they
fire
was
responded
small, fire officials to
the
fire
alarm
appreciated and left
the
building immediately. “The
students
Towner said.
seriously. saw
the
students
big
stuff.”
performed
“They
If we
can
excellently,”
Capt.
evacuated without hassle
do the little stuff,
we
hope
William
and took it
we
can
do the
‘
'
The Chronicle »AGE 4
� FRIDAY, APRIL
4,
2003
From staff and wire
Bush comforts families of
leaving the
and
plus
dead,
war
reports
state with
cheered President
by
Marines tears
George W. Bush shed
with relatives of Marines killed in
“It
Iraq
Thursday
and told
base
Bush’s
first
since the
hard
hit
Bush and his wife Laura
Northgate
family
in
troops
in
Among
the
old twin wore
ing
girls
private, but
loved his
V/,
The
several small 6-week-
including
Marine. The meet-
Marine,” Bush
Bush
teary-eyed
expectations about ital
and
a
a
quick takeover of Saddam
collapse
ment. Bush said he foresaw
families,
“The
a
Vo Ko\ve
jusF
-Puk!
of the
Iraqi
Hussein’s
hundreds of miles,
yards,” he said. ‘The
course
It's
we
cap-
of
were
approval,
his speech with Marine
Corps’
Crotts’
$323
for
plan
join
you
will
Economists
Little
Shoppers Club,
the
war
in
10
age
and
under
birthday
meals,
balloons,
a
ree
‘ousel
ride,
gifts Members
next
and
bers
To
only"
discounts
apply
for
your FREE
visit
the
Northgate Service
$4OO million from
a
be
state
raise taxes.
or
speaks
at
Elon
U.S.-led
in
invasion
University is
Iraq
“war
a
that
Tutu, who
the 1984 Nobel Peace Prize,
won
brief
University’s
news
spoke
ed States
held
convocation. He
conference with reporters before the
in
hasty
was
a
cer-
many countries believe the Unit-
saying that
emony,
spring
initiating
the
to
war
remove
and final
“If you have waited 12 years, it to be able
not we
wait
to
will
victory.”
said Tutu, who became
ligious figures ful
in the
nonviolent
yet
seems
one
of the world’s
leading
campaign
to
end
re-
forcein
apartheid
South Africa.
“Semper Fi”—an abbreviation of the
consumer
told
Tax collections
little odd
1980s and 1990s for his
He added that US. leaders conceded that the
“ever faithful” motto.
stantially eroded
a
maybe another six months,”
unjust when they sought support
confidence hurt
state
lawmakers
tax
consumer
collections in a
budget
predictions, eliminating
Come watch the annual
confidence sub-
March,
the
basketball
in Wilßec
“It’s
Thursday that
came
or
that
Council. Their failure
war
“is
not
un-
justifiable and
is
immoral,” he said.
in
$ll9 mil-
budget
sur-
sad
a
is
try great
pattern,”
tion,
coun-
your
the alliance of power with morality.”
Tutu received letters
Tutu said. “This is not what
country great. What makes
makes your
putting
hole for the year.
for the month
derlines the fact
war
for it from the
an
in front of
a
which honored
doctorate of humane
honorary crowd of
2,800
the class
at the
of 2003
convoca-
as
well
as
Dean’s List and President’s List students.
game
the IM Bu
also
special "mem-
from
some
membership Mall
put together
to
years—would
two
more!
will
and
mailers,
free
the next
for
shortfall, legislative
surprise
receive newsletter
enjoy
can
Med-
as
Desmond Tutu said Wednesday.
op
louder than when he ended
Iraq and waning
lion below
scenario
beginning
are
the
on
greeted by repeated, deafening
none
North Carolina back in
kids
such
should not have happened,” South African Archbish-
go
now
N.C. tax collections
Mall's
Northgate
money to state
some
programs,
million
United Nations Security
War, soft
easily addressed be-
projected.
forced to either cut another
agencies
was
When
be
worst-case a
budget writers—who spending
some
less than
three months of
govern-
is set. We’re
the advance. Our destination is Baghdad. And
His remarks
FREE
icaid, spending
at Elon
clear finish, whatever
accept nothing less than complete
roars
next fis-
at the end of
Saddam Hussein.
“Having traveled
kli<As
surplus
prices.”
to lower
the timetable.
the last 200
in addition to
agencies,
The
the
assured
million
to the
still
told. “He
was
peaceful” and “I’m proud of you.”
more
are
proposed budget for the
$ll4
a
now
the governor has held back
Tutu a
next
of the families
names
Some military commanders have sought
<*•
cause
Under
country.”
world will be
projects
potential shortfall should
any
missing.
senior White House official
a
right
It’s
negative.
go
and higher energy
war
Gov. Mike Easley’s cal year
withheld.
“He loved being
A
base has lost
are
were
lapel pictures of their lost
was
Leje-
2-week-old baby. Some relatives
described it afterward. were
more
their fathers, a
annex
13 killed—than any
grieving families
and
troops
chapel
a
Iraq. The
Iraq—at least
children who lost
a
could
short-
said.
negative,” Crotts said of the
downside due to the
was
$BO million
the fiscal year. His budget adviser Dan Gerlach said
met in
other military installation. Six
Mall
of slain
members of five Camp
une-based Marines killed more
It
deaths.
it
positive,
go
to go
three months. “The risks
two weeks ago.
began
with about 20
combat
with relatives
meeting
war
by
could
likely
one
man’s family, “He’s in heaven,” at Camp Lejeune,
military
more
a
Dave Crotts
fall, legislative economist
card,
Customer
Center
Northgate Mall CS'/ctfraditio
//
oj
r
'f/y/c y
WEST VILLAGE DETAILS Mall Hours: Monday-Saturday
10a.m.-9p.m
Sunday
timber columns and
•
Heavy
•
Impressive floor-to-ceiling
•
Over 50 different floor plans
•
Fitness Center
•
Extensive businesscenter
•
High speed
•
Within
exposed
West
red brick walls
Village
windows
featuringranging
in size Duke
l-6p.m Over
160
stores
from 600 to
including Hecht's,
Belk,
Old
Navy,
Sears,
1,860
square
feet
East
Campus
internet access
walking distance to shopping
Main
Brightleat Square
The
Food
Court
and
The
Carousel email
us
at:
westvillage@druckerandfalk.com
www. bluedevilventures. com
_
St.
The Chronicle
FRIDAY,
UNIVERSITY BRIEFS
Materials center aims at
From staff reports
Great Hall,
Marketplace game
The
semi-final
game
between
televisions
large-screen
on
Hall and in the East Union The game is scheduled to
in The
Great
they might look
7 p.m.
begin shortly after
same
School of
game will be shown at the
Duke’s ACM programming
teams
the
from
emerged where
in
3,850
preliminary
were
of
all
championships,
106
one
whom
worldwide
contests
The grant,
of
five �
years,
graduate
those
Conference set
intellectual property
on
The Center for the Study of the Public Domain at Duke will present ence
a
major law and
“International Public
on
Technology under Regime” April
a
Globalized Intellectual Property
4 to 6 at the School of
The conference will focus
the
on
Law,
3043.
room
bigger picture that is
upward harmonization of
from the recent
emerging
economics confer-
Goods and Transfer of
international intellectual property rights.
forum to be held
Reparations
Monday
The Franklin Humanities Institute is in
“Reparations
from 4 to 6 p.m.
John Hope emeritus of
sor
of
sponsoring
conversation
public
a
7 in Von Canon B & C.
April
James
Franklin,
history,
panelists will
Orin
Perspective,”
will make
B.
Duke
professor
opening remarks,
include: Wahneema Lubiano,
and
profes-
literature; Grant Parker, professor of classics; Starn,
of
professor
cultural
anthropology;
Chungmoo Choi, professor of East Asian languages and
of California
literature, University
and Adrienne Davis,
School
of Law,
Irvine;
at
University
of
North Carolina at Chapel Hill.
See BRIEFS
The
on
page 9
Vagina
Monologues April 10, 2003
April 13, Duke
Based Obie
at 8 PM
2003 at 1:30 PM
University’s Page
on
interviews with
hundreds
Auditorium
of women, Eve Ensler's
Award-winning play brazenly explores questions
pondered staff,
but seldom
these benefit
movement to
Violence
stop
a
Featuring Duke
performances
against
Take
asked.
violence
women
stand
is
part
of
V-Day,
women and
a
global
girls.
happeningeverywhere.
against
General Admission:
are
against
often
students and
$l2;
such violence! Students w/ID; $7
VDAY UNTIL IHi BOUNCE STOPS Tickets available in the
at the
University
Box Office
Bryan Center, 919-684-4444,
http://tickets.duke.edu.
For
more
or
information visit
http://wc.studentaffairs.duke.edu/vday.html
science
and
is
an
and
award of
expected
students.
gram
expect 50
it
engineering
as
well,”
together,”
We
want
have
a
different
to
infuse
into students.”
$2.9 million
even
a
co-
over
50
Biology
Joe
Bonaventura of
beginning
“the
of
a
several
departments
engineering class
you
both
a
civil
“However,
and
we
can
and look at it from
cell
the
way
same
example
“In
course.
might look
an
said the center
engi-
together.”
mechanical
do the
co-
of Cell
the Nicholas School of
revolution in
in the
who will
with Professor
the red blood
introductory subject
a
course
series,
course
various
Sciences,
work
neering and biologists
for
at
a
a
engineering
an
bicycle and use
approach,”
with
as
traditional
a
he said.
red blood
cell,
perspective and
impact
One of the broad goals of materials science use
impact
directly, but the certificate graduate students
on
pro-
engineering methods
structure of to
hope
taught through
the Environmentand Earth
the next
grants
feels the
Clark said. “The
introductory
an
as
a
biology perspective.”
farther.
significant
well
as
engineering.
Needham gave
of
for
opportunities
Center Co-director David Needham,
is
� PAGE 5
lot of research opportunities
a
teach the introductory class
chemistry.
to translate to
will allow unfunded
efit from it
Graduate
traditional among
Clark, however,
will
students
a
and seeks
of materials science and
engineering.
of the center will reach “I
competed.
which will be
receiving
Training award,
multidisciplinary knowledge
had
selected from 1,329 universities
teams
in 68 countries
graduate Tom Finley
way
medicine and natural sciences
professor
than
perspective
in materials science
program in the Pratt
created after
was
director of the center. “Science brings in
The team of junior Ethan Eade, junior Albert Mao
68
graduate
2003
well.”
that
students to understand the process
said Rob Clark,
Contest World Finals spon-
same
and
The program will include
not limited to
Foundation Integrated
bringing natural
team finished in 43rd
sored by IBM in Beverly Hills, Calif.
and December 2002
new
biology, biology
“We want
week’s 27th Annual ACM International
red blood cell the
interdisciplinary research
like cellular
Collegiate Programming
a
as
en-
bicycle.
engineering methods,
computer programming
different level—one
a
Education and Research
Students finish 43rd in
in last
a
Engineering
National Science
locations at 8:30 p.m.
to foster
place
at
The center and
Should Duke win Sunday and advance to Tuesday
night’s NCAA finals, that
to
Materials
to take traditional
hopes
makes students look at
Marketplace.
Building’s
methods
gineering
undergraduates
4,
growth
program will evolve. It will include
Center for Biological Inspired
new
and Material Systems
the women’s basketball team and Tennessee will be
broadcast
TRACY REINKER
By
The Chronicle
women’s Sunday evening’s NCAA
show
to
APRIL
biology
and to
to better use
knowledge
of
biology
a
concept
improve materials manufacturing. “[Materials science]
and
a
is
bringing together
process,” Clark said. “Right
now
to ben-
is that the
is to
understand the
See MATERIALS
on
page 7
what’s miss-
T
6 �
PAGE
FRIDAY.
APRIL
U.S. NEWS the
Among ranked,
health fell
individual
spot each
No.
5, respectively.
fell
to
No.
No. 4 and
to
7. Duke
No. 8 in
rose
it
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place, the
one
remained below
tied at 33rd with Rensselaer
top 30,
1. Yale
university
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school’s biomedical
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4. Columbia
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5. New York
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university of California-Berkeley
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University of Michigan
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Experience
Call
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us
University
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Boston Summer!
at 617-353-5124 or
the Summer Term website
visit
at:
Difference
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Dale D. Stewart, O.D. 2200 W. Main St., Durham
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SUMMER TERM
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SA 00/1
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the
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About
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university of Califorina-San Francisco
more
4.
to
budget
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tuition,
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Washington University
which
Duke does not have.
includ-
Problems arise, however, when the in-
4. DUKE university
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7. DUKE UNIVERSITY
Pennsylvania
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University of Pennsylvania
specific
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tions and Graduate Record Examina-
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university of California—Berekely
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demic experts. The
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University
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"'Cigan
University of Pennsylvania
university
be reached for comment.
measures
Un'»ersit» *
of
1 Harvard
Pratt Dean Kristina Johnson could not
News
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program
ranked 2nd, only below Johns Hopkins.
tion-only
University of Chicago
7
Institute in New York. The
Polytechnic
U.S.
6.
No.
University of Michigan.
Although School
however, tied for
program,
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gerontological and
Services
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vironmental science.
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NICHOLAS
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U.S. News and world
from page 1
physicians’
mained at No.
The Chronicle
2003
4,
equal opportunity/affirmative action
institution and employer.
The Chronicle
FRIDAY, APRIL 4,2003
MATERIALS
in
distributions
GRADE INFLATION
from page 5
a
similar
that
way
�
PAGE 7
law and
many
business schools do.
Additionally, Johnson believes that giving students in
ing
texts
engineering is
which
is
the
because
important
vastly
is integrated into every
process
Clark
explained
science is better
said. “Nature is
the master of
a
the molecular level
does and then neer new
From
that
use
knowledge for
delivery
encapsulated drugs
to deliver
posed just
it
of biodefense alerts for
on
the
said.
classes has
curve
“The
mim-
the
to vascular tis-
infuse
but rather
quality
which has does not
for grade
of
on
an
absolute
pushed concur
students
is
actually
to tumors. Anoth-
tions for
use
“We
standards that
many
We want to
possible among
are
judging today’s
30
years
chapter of
old,”
that if then
to
book,
reform
suggestions
is
poses 20
expecta-
students
award. Johnson
indexing” was
of the
excluding
student evaluations of
from instructor that arise
summaries
from
high
the lowest and
ignoring
the
likely
class
to be
since
highest these
10
two
Biological Inspired Materials
for
and
Material
is
“What
from today’s
missing
materials,”
Needham said. “And
and
grade inflation.
writes. “More
must
course
more
be
now
or
public
and
adopted,
closely linked
faculty
assessment
to student achievement.”
pol icy
of
we’ve done that
DU
K
E
for the red blood cell, and we’re starting to do it for other individual molecules.”
Ultimately,
the
of
development
bridge the
ies program aims to
a
gaps
between Pratt, a new
per-
spective, Clark said. “The benefits will be
eries,
Needham said. “If
this,
it
process.
is
going
of
create
And you tell
how
products
new
to
knowledge,
new
explanations
new
me
a
works,”
invented from
are
we
Internship Fund
discov-
new
biology
to
process
where
4th Annual
materials stud-
natural sciences and medicine to create
create
a
go from there.”
(inner & Auction Friday. April 4.2003
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Dungeness
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m
F
or
are
principled student grading practices
Tinny
all
properties
percent groups
“To right the boat, two things must happen,” Johnson
systems
biology,
measure
low
grade-biased when evaluating
SAWFORD INSTITUTE
other ‘-ologies’ is the ability to
would or
their instructors.
professor of materials and co-director
Center
at
rejected by
students” Rob Clark,
pro-
system
into
multidisciplinary knowledge
run
he writes. To achieve this, Johnson pro-
percent of
the most
using
he proposes
constraining
they
“academic
biases
grading
evaluations,
Johnson said.
Johnson’s
solutions
these
as
cease
students increase.
higher-achieving
shouldn’t be
Also, carefully their professors
with this popu-
improving,
an
long
more care-
the Arts and Sciences Council in 1997.
my
grades.”
inflation. He believes
such
Duke in the mid-19905, but the plan
scale,”
taking
up the
grading standards should naturally rise,
different perspec-
engineering.
not decreased. I don’t
quality of the students
Johnson, however,
forward-engi-
Chief
tive than
problem.
improved,
In the last
a
a
“My grading standards have
grade
potential biological attacks.
“Science brings in
as
in the
since students would pressure faculty to be ful with the average grades
see
GPA’s with normal-
grading would push down grades
does not
Kelley
of materials science is the
major application
ized
has observed that his grades have steadily risen, but
per-
nature
example, involves
process of oxygen
the option of reporting adjusted
the end of the semester.
at
lar reasoning
Needham’s research,
sue
to
give them
from
engineering
products.”
icking the
er
self-assembly
an
reverse-engineer what
want to
is
manufacturer of products,” he
up.
professors give and the ratings their students
grades
James B. Duke Professor of Economics Allan Kelley
for materials
major stimulus
a
material
manufacturing. “The philosophy as
we
the
design.”
to look at nature
spective,
material process,
proceeds Internship
must
be
The Chronicle pAGE 8 �
APRIL
FRIDAY,
2003
4,
APRIL 6TH
SUNDAY,
Religious
Academic
at
Lil
Sibs
Weekend:
in
Yoga
10am-12pm,
Brunch
at
Social,
Upper
Duke Gardens:
arched
the
the
We’ll walk from there to
APRIL 4
FRIDAY,
APRIL 4
FRIDAY,
East Brown
Developmental The
12pm.
often to
Bag
Musical
Shabbat:
6pm.
Sing,
Series
Bag Speaker
researchers
give departmental in the area a
held
drums
with
other
leader
Mark
guests
from
is
and
to discuss their
chance
the
energetic,
Malachi! Israel
guitar-playing
There will
joining
be
and
us
three
Room
Sociology/Psychology Building,
237.
the in
University Program
Mac
Ecology: 12:45pm.
stories
personal
of
recent
Intifada. in
jewishlife@duke.edu
triumph during RSVP
Please
scientist
Research
Service. “Earthworms and in
and
process,
inter-
APRIL 6
Episcopal
Student
teer brunch
of
Senior
of a
Seminar:
series
Resolution
out.
night
in
the
Moore
seminar
Church”.
in
spm,
followed
at the
Episcopal
Ave.
Contact
Alexander
for on
annehc@duke.edu
at
Copple
is
Please
Memorial
attend. Alumni
if
advance
Sundays.
by fellowship
Student Anne
for
Center,
Hodgesinforma-
more
Romulus
Linney.
Divinest
Sense:
performance about
Room.
Lecture
Series:
Prof.
Distinguished
Andrew
on the
ogist
Walder.
Stanford
Sociology,
transformation
socioeconomic work
China
request
Production:
Sheafer
had
Scenes
4pm.
Asian/Pacific
economies.
Studies
and
Sociology/Psychology Bldg.,
and
China.
research
on
young
people.
Center,
Science
Dept
of
329.
Meetings
Discussion:
Medical
University fossils: tion
Faculty
2pm.
Coffee
Sociology.
Center.
conservation
phylogenetic
flanking
signals
for
“Hunting
Duke
Rag-2."
144
Eastern
Switten
Margaret
the
“Singing around
Series:
Versus
Song:
Free
Biddle
and
and Troubadours
to
open
Music
Featuring
a Bedouin
live
free
Tent with Israeli
music,
West,
Quad
Middle-
hookahs,
rock
products,
and
the
101
public.
East
Building,
Bryan
spring
music,
and
at the
dance
concert
Campus.
at
held in late
Student
The
Publications
door.
Page
Dance
celebrates
the
Baby.
Bpm.
Devil
the
www.welcomebaby.org.
April.
A
History
of the
Board.
Time:
Publications Location:
exhibit
Board
tering
and
has
the
since
played
student
managing
Perkins
chronicles
Library
role
the
1927 in fos-
publishing
on
cam-
pus.
life, “North
Architecture”.
capella
a
Iranian
Contemporary
East
Carolina
School:
The
Art
Museum
University
Duke main
Campus at the
North
quad.
of
of
of
Art,
Carolina
displays
and current
of
has
architecture
modern
The exhibition
past
East
Auditorium,
forefront
many years. works
Richard White
from
history.
throughout
of
Speak
-
Welcome
Creativity:
Hours.
During Library
Exhibit:
styles
dance
about
downloaded
website
Undergraduate
Gallery.
Campus.
for
a collection
of
architects in
practicing
Contact hokazak@duke.edu
Duke
Upcoming Events
staff,
faculty,
for
(SQ);
APRIL 7
Bisexual
West
Westminster
and
Mondays.
the Center
refreshments
Transgender Bldg.
Sibs
Unitarian Social
5-7pm,
Karaoke
11:30pm,
&
Center.
8:30-
East
Side
Upper
for
at
of
Shipman
at
presentations,
contact
property
Lieutenant
schedule
to
668-2627
pre-
Workforce
Personal
programs,
Please
Crime
awareness
Tony
these
pro-
grams/services.
B:3opm.
who
people
Mondays.
Opm,
It’s a
religious
particular
life’s with
begin
Basement
religion.
of
hanneOOl
Hannenman,
Patty
com-
for
look
question,
and believe that truth doesn’t
Chapel.
Marketplace.
9-1
time, dinner, worship.
meaning, one
pizza,
fellowship, begins
Universalist:
7-
Registration. Craft
B:3opm, Tye-Dye Workshop,
and
time
for
Campus)
Weekend:
informal
“Haphour,”
Rape
Life.
(Center
munity Lil
Presbyterian/UCC Fellowship:
engraving.
services:
following
Law
educational
9-
lite
10pm,
Flowers
-202
violence
for
students,
provided. Sponsored by
201 -
and
employees
Lesbian, Gay,
social
4-6pm. Weekly
offers
Alcohol
sentations,
MONDAY, Queer
Socially
Police
prevention presentations,
P.
4pm.
(ML Holyoke College) presents
New
1100.”
Duke
Mary
Lecture
Black’s
Screen/Society:
12-4pm.
food,
Location:
Department
among
Campus
advance/$6
to
more
North Carolina.
Day:
LGBT Life Music
to be
learn
with
be
may
Baby
Presenting Duke
RETROSPECT.”
“IN
6pm. in
$4
Beth
awareness
Theater,
Film
Duke
Drive,
Cinema, “Apple.”
Israel
snacks/drinks
of recombina-
and
Rag-1
genomic
Sciences.
Biological
Griffith
volun-
Baby call
may
A
prevention
Fridays
12noon-Ipm,
basement.
Chapel
climbing wall,
Cowell,
raising
Welcome
and
volunteer
a
Applications
been
Connection:
balancing. You
Free.
group.
Candidate/Biology
Lindsay
Black:
Special guests APRIL 4
FRIDAY,
much more! Main Bioinformatics
of
the
application
an
Center.
on
Sponsored by
Room
by
Depression.
on
and suicide
of
sociol-
leading
contemporary
great impact
transitional
Prof,
Walder,
is a
“Ginf
2pm.
Theater, Bryan
the interest
depression
Auditorium.
Ipm.
of state socialism
in
changes
has
and
Andrew
University,
in
to
Social Programming
Commons
own.
Flowers
becoming Studies
sign
plan
you
and
persons
tion.
and Nichols
201
Bldg.
Dance with Heather
His
long
to
is 505
of seminars
students. This
graduating Divinity “Conflict
This lecture
1-spm.
afternoon
Friday
Eucharist
Holy
Located
dinner.
up
after a
Join
Interested
team.
Training
Center:
Arboretum.
grassy area for 40
quiet
a
stretching
or do your
Baby:
to
yourself
advance.
SUNDAY,
a flow
Welcome Treat
11am-2pm.
Welcome
Service
Divinity
can follow
Asiatic
Building.
A247-LSRC.
play.”
part
IM
minutes of informal
tree-
Forest
other soil invertebrates
pattern,
tallgrass prairie;
USDA
1-4pm, 3-point
Kickball,
Brunch:
Sunday
Theater
Callaham,
&
the
song-
presenting their
and
hardship
contest OR
Cream
special free
work.
Ice
Marketplace.
play
&
dance,
Side
throw
Brown
researchers
Series:
Speaker
12-1 pm,
Marketplace.
Meet
12noon, Tuesdays.
in
bridge
Duke
@earth-
Carillon
Recital:
carillonneur. after the
Chapel,
He
Samuel
also
Service of West
5
Weekdays,
J.
performance by
gives
a
For
recital
each
Worship
Campus.
pm. A
15-minute
Hammond, University before
Sunday.
information, call
and
Duke 684-
2572.
link.net.
Volunteer EOS
Seminar:
Research:
G.K.
“A
4pm. Gilbert
Great
201
Geologist”.
as
of
Engine
Old
Chemistry Bldg.
SHS
Psychology James
Blumenthal,
Medical
Center
Cardiac
Series:
Colloquium
Duke
Ph.D.,
4pm.
University
Interventions
“Psychsocial
Rehabilitation.”
Room
in
319,
by
Institute
Internship
“The
Higgins,
Multiple Intelligences
108
Symposium.
History
East
of
Fluxus”.
Graduate Student
Duke
other organizations that do not
offer a the
salary
Robert
Eisenstein.
Duke
Mary
living
or
expenses. Free
at
Baker
Terry
internships
and open
Dinner tickets are available
public.
Dale
and
More
baker@pps.duke.edu.
Institute of Public
info
Biddle
Series:
at
Opportunity China
in
10am.
(Mt.
Holyoke and
Music
led
Project,
Free
open
the
to
East
by and
College)
Building,
open
to
and
contact Yan
will
public.
Campus.
Hannah Fluxus”. Student East
for the
floor,
Morris
Study
Rauch
Development.
Bldg.
Binstock,
University.
White
Freewater
People”.
Films:
Griffith
7
Film
&
Policy.
9:3opm.
“24
Theater, Bryan
Hour
Prayer:
Production:
Sheafer
Linney.
Bible
“Ginf
by
Center.
Theater, Bryan
of
Lil
Sibs Weekend:
Bagels. Chapel Street
10am-12pm, Brunch
Fair.
12;30-5:30pm,
8-10pm,
at
Look-a-like
12:30-1:30pm, Steps.
286-9305.
and
Room
Human
15103,
Duke
For
Student
Higgins,
Department
of
Sociology.
more
Rural
Room
Shannon
Coordinator,
Tuesdays. Duke
032,
open to all students. Call
Movie
on
the
Alpine
from
Creek, NIEHS, forces
joining Campus
Quad,
year’s
Earth
Studies
Romulus
Linney.
Production:
Sheafer
Bpm.
invited to
“Gint”
Theater, Bryan
or
Free
and
please
Spring
Corrections:
Fashion
Show.
Door
the
Sarah
Love will
by
with
help
vided. Info:
684-3897
P.
Duke or
Student
Sexual Box
Union
Assault
90920.
the Women’s
12;30-4pm.
History
East
Duke
of
Graduate
Building,
Brownies and
perform
alcohol
can
at
be
Come
of
Sigma
Chi
•
South and
the
the
us
pick
up
End and
bags
the Dillo.
purchased
Admission with the
Karen’s is
free,
proper
ID.
SASS
126
Durham
Center,
684-3897
litter Park
Duke
The
along (1204
for
Medical
Center:
are
Best
Buddy:
this
public
Goose
refreshments will
Schroeder,
Ave).
be
or call
668-1128
is •
Cancer
Patient
Susan
Moonan,
•
Caring
House:
Creek
Alston
www.owdna.org/fosec.htm
Services:
Univeristy
Jane
clean-up.
pro-
Meg Harvey,
John •
Children’s
Support Program 684-4497
490-5449
Health
Center:
at 286-6045. Edith
Ongoing Events Classes:
your
stress
hour
of
5:30-6:30, Wednesdays.
while
yoga.
treating yourself
Brodie
Campus.
Joe
Furman
students
and
Duke
Recreational
a
Club
for more info.
Rosenblatt,
Children’s
Reduce
relaxing
to
members. Visit
667-2567
Ambassadors:
Kay Satterwhite, •
East Duke
Duke
684-3835
Hospital Auxiliary: Diana
•
668-4107
Classic:
Lucy Castle,
Center,
instructing. Open
Fitness
www.joefurman.com
to
Few,
Coordinator
http://volunteer.mc.duke.edu •
of
City
stream
East
Services:
Support
Contact
Ellerbe
others
•
see
Hemric,
26.
April
Saturday,
held.
11pm-I:3oam.
Chuck
and
•
Yoga band:
Gardens:
chemric@duke.edu.
basement
AQUADuke
Auditorium in the LSRC. be
90920.
Program
and
Worship
Chapel
Friends
Duke’s
Day
trash
Center.
liyan@duke.edu.
Multiple Intelligences
108
Gay
prizes/drawing
8:30-10pm.
Box
Few,
Johnson,
Memorial
West
at Durham’s
Theater
126
684-5994.
9-11 am.
Day:
Schelp
Studies
information
of Art & Art
Symposium.
Center:
Contact
Clinics.
Tuesdays.
Sponsored by Baptist
area.
Gloves,
Economy:
Symposium:
“The
Women’s Ist
contest,
Central
Alexander
506
Case
Ph.D.,
Aging
Zone,
s:lspm,
7-Bpm,
Study:
Earth
APRIL STH
SATURDAY,
House:
Party
Center.
Bpm.
McDonald
http://ronaldhousedurham.org. Chris Hill,
668-1705
friendship. Studies
Ave,
Sponsored by
Conf.
of
Elite
on
Asian/Pacific
by
Li at 684-2604
Campus.
Center
H.
‘Anti-Aging
on
Chapel.
Dillo Graduate
Robert
by
War
Sociology/Psychology
329
Department public.
Professor
speak
Transitional
a
Sponsored
the
Walder,
Stanford
Perspective.
Building. Institute
in
Duke
‘The
pm,
Reserve
Volunteers
Lyric
Andrew
Ipm.
Sociology
12-1
Medicine’” Western
TAIZE
Campus. Speaker:
Ronald Lecture:
613-
www.pubpol.duke.eduor
Sanford
to
by emailing
8,
Duke Volunteer
Lecture
Medieval
Switten
Margaret
sup-
APRIL
TUESDAY,
APRIL 5
Department of
which
Fund,
who seek
Sanford
students
nonprofit
Theater
Discussion
go to
Endowment
auction
the
with
Romulus
Music
silent
East
Building,
Campus.
SATURDAY,
6pm,
Proceeds
Hannah
Symposium: 5-6pm.
of Art & Art
Department
dinner.
ports public policy
7394. Student
Auction:
followed
about the Institute:
Sociology/Psychology Building.
Graduate
Fund
Internship
Getzelmann,
684-3646
Teer House: Monica
Taylor,
477-2644
at
I
i
• f..
-
l
l
The’Chronicle
REACTION
place;
BRIEFS
from page 1
from page 5
leading
the up to
Jean-Baptiste and two For
example,
Kirtane
they the
was
early Sunday morning
other students
on
arrest of
questioned why sophomore
only
witness whose account
Tushar
pub-
was
“There
two
are
one
that is
conflicting stories:
playing
out
on
one
in The Chroni-
the streets,” said senior of the Na-
Brandilyn Dumas, president of Duke’s chapter
tionalAssociation for the Advancement of Colored People.
Many
roundtable discussion attendees voiced their
that, for those students who
concern
knowledgeable
of the details of the
were
not
previously
arrests, the portrayal
of the event in The Chronicle may be the sole influence how students think about the incident and sway
can
on
strongly
a
result
[of the one-sided portrayal of the incident]
misunderstood portion of the community
said senior Abena Antwi, co-president
defamed,”
was
of the Black
Stu-
later
Dave Ingram
recognized
Thursday
evening,
Chronicle
defended the newspaper’s
from
the
and
the
potential
racial
have striven to report the most
possible,” said Ingram, ther
as
more
vative
causes
bombing the US. Capitol
1983,
Prominent
a
The
founded
institute,
70 conservative student
Columbia tied with Network said
of its
one
in
elists
named Colle-
1953
a
gen,
finished fifth in the included
third; and Cornell
Boston Red
ac-
Law
Other
Hill
Chapel
“win-
university
of Mississippi,
in
mer
century.
Century” include
and Policy
at
Relations
&
Pan-
for ProfesPaul Haa-
sponsoring
the Duke Law
and
owner
of
Human Resources
Baseball
Tellem, president
Players Associ-
of SFX Baseball and the for-
president
general counsel of the
Los
Angeles Clippers.
re-
stature of those
sensitivities,
and
complete, balanced
we
stories
Graduate Student
Appreciation
Week
details emerge.”
Many students argued that all the facts surrounding
April 7-11,2003
Sunday night have not yet been gathered and revealed to the University public. However, everyone at the meeting declined to comment curred early
Sunday
on
how the actual events that
morning
differed from how
Sponsored by
oc-
The Duke
they
Graduate School
University
have been portrayed in several local newspapers, as well as
on
the Tom Joyner morning radio show. Many meeting
attendees attributed their not commenting for the fact that the Jessie
Pinkrah,
case
a
Sunday’s
a
to
a
half
and
colleges
universities, and
professional, social,
Jean-Baptiste’s DSG work has
“Regardless of who’s
the invaluable contributions that
recognize
senior who attended the meeting,
students
graduate
blame [for
events], everything that has taken place
last semester and
As part of the National Association of Graduate-Professional Students’
respect
is still before the courts.
said it is unfortunate that been overshadowed.
to
to
Duke
sponsoring
graduate
celebration to
(NAGPS)
students make
professional
activities for its
for this week of
us
and
Graduate School is
University’s
self-improvement
join
graduate
a
students.
to
the
country’s
week of academic, We encourage all
events.
this 7th
Monday, April
[during Jean-Baptiste’s presi-
dency] has been disregarded,” she said. Conversations with the Dean*
12:00
Tai
5:00
Chi Demonstration Class*
Latin
and
Ballroom
6:30
Dance
p.m.
p.m.
Relaxation
&
9:00
Getting Started: Choosing &
Graduate School
Workshop
on
a.m.
12:00
Red Cross Blood Drive a
Thesis
Research
for
5:30 9:00
Buy:
a.m.
p.m.
1:30
-
7:30
-
p.m.
Trinity Room, West Von
Canon
Union
A, Bryan
The Coffee
House,
Center
East
Campus
Wrestling Room, Wilson Gym
p.m
Red Zone, South Hospital
p.m
Multi-CulturalCenter, Bryan Center
p.m.
Midnight
-
p.m
Social AMF
Psych Building,
Rm.130
Bowling Lanes
9th
April
12:00
Housing Workshop
A
10:00
-
p.m.
Wednesday,
or
7:30 p.m.
-
p.m.-4:00
12:00
Graduate Students
Bowling Night
To Rent
p.m
p.m.
Dissertation Topic
or
Funding
Teaching Portfolios
6:00
Bth
Tuesday, April
Meditation
1:30
-
-
p.m.
1:30
-
p.m
Multi-Cultural Center, Bryan Center
Classroom Teaching: Paradigms, Pitfalls and Possibilities
2:00
Workshop
p.m.
Debt Management Workshop
2:30
p.m
Picnic
6:00
p.m
-
3:00
-
3:30
Red Cross Blood
Drive
9:00
Nutrition Workshop “Food
a.m
10:00
Locating Funding Workshop and
12:30
Mood”
Multi-Cultural Center, Bryan
p.m
Breedlove Room, Perkins Library
-
p.m
11:30
-
p.m.
LSRC
Patio
10th
2:00
-
a.m.
1:30
a.m
p.m.
Red
Zone, South Hospital
Von
Canon A, Bryan
Center
Multi-Cultural Center Lounge,
Bryan Center
Friday, April
Discount Free
Day
at
10 Minute
Store
Gothic Book
Chair Massages
*
& University
Store
8:30
7:00
a.m
5:00
Friday, April
Pizza Party (Also Celebrating Contributionsof Graduate Professional
Patrick
p.m, p.m
Bryan Von
Center
Canon
C, Bryan
Center
18th
&
Students to the
President’s Initiative
E.
11th
1:00 p.m
Appointment Only
Johnson,
on
Women)
Professor
5:00
p.m.
7:00
p.m
-
7:00
p.m
9:00
p.m
Gross
Chem Portico
of Performance Studies
Northwestern University,
“Strange Fruit”
*
A One Man
Must RSVP to Erin
For
more
Performance
Dean-Plizga
informationplease visit
our
at
nn
duk(
-
or
Shafer Theater
call 684-2056.
webpage: http://www.gradschool.duke.edu Graduate
Student
Center
p.m.
-9:00 p.m
Thursday, April
Affairs
for
of SFX Basketball,
coverage. “We it
the
vice pres-
Baseball; Gene Orza, associate general
Arn
executive vice
second
21st
the
Opportunities
Sox; Robert Manfred, executive
Labor
ation; and
finance
the School of Law
at
chairman
Werner,
Major League
an
in
and
counsel of the Major League
rankings.
University
Tom
ident of
at
at Berke-
management,
law and co-director of the
professor of
School;
Collegiate
at
sports
sports
“Challenges
speech
of North Carolina
a
>
conference examining the major issues
Center for Sports
ademic conference June 22. The University
for
Gayatri Spivak,
keynote
in
sional Sports in the 21st
by
newspapers.
professors, in
a
facing professional
were
Duke because the
14 for
April
William Buckley, established the Collegiate Network to some
figures
and representation will gather
conser-
Tuesday, by the Intercollegiate Studies Institute’s
senior. “We hope to report fur-
a
in
dedicated to
The sixth annual “Polly” award winners
support
.
«,
4,2003 � PAGE 9
Law to hold sports conference
ranked Duke in first place, tied with Co-
Network.
vh
award
correctness
lumbia University, for “political correctness.”
giate
\
Editor
beginning of this story that
quires special attention, because of the involved
political
convicted of
ners”
dent Alliance. Reached
horn,
in
t
tied for fourth.
Citing last month’s guest lecture by Laura White-
praised suicide bombers
general opinion about Duke’s black community.
“As a
‘wins’
student newspaper organization
lished in The Chronicle.
cle and
Duke
assault charges.
Georgetown University,
\
APRIL
University and the University of California ley,
events
},t>
FRIDAY,
or
at 684-2056.
contact the
Office of
The Chronicle PAGE
10
�
FRIDAY,
APRIL
4.
2003
free concert. WEEKEND EXCURSION THE BASICS:
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2
BAA 40-NEXT OF KIN: UNDERSTANDING THE GREAT APES Dr. Leslie
Are humans the
species?
What
only animals that
can our
what
we
bodies tell
say
Fri 10:30-11:20
Digby, Mon, Wed,
we
do,
go to war? Are us
about how
but what
we
we
we
the most intelligent of all
choose
our
really do!)? The
apes
orangutans, chimpanzees, bonobos, and gorillas) fascinating comparisons
h
(not just
mates
(gibbons, offer
to the behavior and
ecology of
human species. We will investigate the many aspects of ape
biology including: Evolutionary history, morpho-
social interactions, mating systems, parental care,
logy,
medicinal
use
of
plants, communication, cooperative
hunting, alliances, warfare, conflict resolution, and cross-species
measures
of
intelligence. Throughout
class, students will be challenged to critically evaluate the ideas assess
Students
can
check out his film
“Tough
Guise” at C-flix
by logging in
to
their potential
Intended for
non-
for understanding human behavior and
presented and
history.
majors.
http://duke.cflix.com Others
may
BAA 47
information@cflix.com
BODIES OF EVIDENCE:
-
INTRODUCTION TO FORENSIC A former all-star football field of gender violence the
He holds
military.
concentration
was
and the media.
player,
Katz has dedicated himself to
prevention
a
Master's
degree
men
and
boys, particularly
in Education from
Katz
has lectured
on
work in the
Dr. Steven
Churchill, Mon, Wed, Frl 11:50-12:40 f
through
his research
sports culture
hundreds of college and high school campuses and
trainings, seminars, and workshops in the U.S., Canada,
This
course
of death,
provides
focusing
on
an
introduction to the
Case studies and lectures will ved in
body recovery
Pa*)
medicolegal investigation
explore the methods and issues invol-
and crime
scene
investigation, identifying
time since death, and serving
Student Health
you
to the
following
rt. The role of the forensic
sponsors
Center, Women’s Center, SHARP Healthy Devil
Peer
Educators.
Interfratemity
Coun-
cil. Athletic Department, Counseling & Psychological Services. Women's Studies Department. Sociology
Department, Department of Cultural Anthropology. AQUADuke. Sophomore Class Council.
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chology Department, Theta Private
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forensic examinationof the human skeleton.
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j
in sports culture and
Harvard, where
in the social construction of violent masculinities
conducted hundreds ofprofessional and
with
groundbreaking
;rs,
cause
as an
t
indivi-
and
manner
of
expert witness
anthropologist
in
mass
military service, and Investigation of civil rights
ibuses and
war
Intended for
crimes will also be covered
non-majors.
in
Marcus
Hatten
helped St. John’s beat
Sports
and win the Red Storm’s
Georgetown
sixth NIT title. See
12
page
The Chronicle
FRIDAY,
APRIL
Men’s lax to face No. 1 Blue Devils need win
No.
vs.
1
Jays
to
help
Women’s
Hopkins secure
golf
NCAA bid
The Chronicle
A week removed
visiting
to
from its
Harvard,
men’s lacrosse
team
1)
for
15-7 win No.
the
(7-3, 0-2)
travels
After
top-ranked Hopkins Blue Jays (5-
Saturday afternoon, after
week
of
the
somewhat
struggling
compete
for
season
chances for
making the NCAA
become
ment
much
should it lose this to
loss
has
behind the playoff
lacrosse’s
most
Homewood Field,
Hopkins
which
14-straight
won
where extra
of
large crowds
Devils
said
playing
the
leads
Blue
champion
they
and
in
Blue
the
Liz
Collegiate Classic, hosted by of
Georgia.
has
team
been
mostly schoolwork—we got and we’ve had the team
expected
the
against
are
the
balls
Blue
Devil
and
(54)
third in points (21 “In the
for better
doing schoolwork
this
working back
on]
Sunday,
touching
up and
week,” head coach
Dan Brooks said. “But each of them prob-
backs
ground
hoping
competing
University
“[The
venue,
wall,”
senior midfielder Kevin Cassese,
who
team is
national
are
Murphey
for the game. “Our
golf
Collegiate
top-ranked
travel to Athens, Ga., this weekend. The
squad,
games,
are
the
weather and similar results when
Duke
the
National
the Bryan
tournament,
defending
storied
on
at
women’s
com-
eight-ball.
the talented
Jays have
golf
put
but also the disadvantages at
tory
in the Blue Devils’ way is
Standing only
murky overtime
week,
to
PAUL CROWLEY
After last weekend’s rain-soaked vic-
defeats to ACC rivals,
managed
already
not
last
Georgetown
bined with two
An
classic.
Murphey
The Chronicle
tourna-
more
game.
By
Duke’s
desperation,
1 Blue Devils
in the Liz
And while it is probably too early in
straight
last
Collegiate
weekend, the No.
needed
Blue Devils.
the
their third
winning
National
Bryan
straight
a
much
practice—a
for
’pause
preps
Murphey
10
weekend to face
Baltimore, Md., this
the
See HOPKINS
on
also.”
course,
or
three hours
The hard work will
8 assists.) out
two
the
for Brooks’ squad,
currently
come
ably spent
in
team
is
goals,
we’ve
past
calls
swing-
a
schools,
page 14
KEVIN BRENNAN and the Blue Devils will
No. 2 women’s lacrosse
try
to take out Johns
Hopkins
in
Maryland
squares off
The Blue Devils travel to Charlottesville for
preview
of
this weekend
“strong
as
See GOLF
against
upcoming
hopefully
they
field,”
including
day
pay off
of
Southern
title
con-
page 13
No. 4 UVa
ACC
Championships
The Chronicle
off
Coming lacrosse
team will
Virginia (9-2, The
a
matchup
1-1) is
loss
disappointing
the No. 2 women’s look
to
also
a
in
20
No.
to
1-1 in the
rebound
Sunday
ACC Championships
(9-2,
against
ACC)
of the first
preview
which will
also
be
4
No.
Va.
Charlottesville,
round
played
in
Charlottesville.
With
Maryland
locking
up
the No.
tournament and North Carolina ence
for
second
a
matchup regardless
the
Blue
Devils
Vanderbilt, the Cavaliers victory
with
a
confer-
poised
of the outcome of
at
James
12
struggled,
Madison.
Attack
8-6
losing
coming off
are
game-winning goal
only
12-11
its are
game.
While
fired
seed in the
schedule at 0-3, Duke and Virginia
Sunday’s
al
1
finishing
an
at
emotion-
Amy Appeit
into the bottom of the net
seconds remaining
to
give Virginia
a
victory.
After
being embarrassed
at home last
season
by the
Cavaliers 18-6, the retooled Duke team looks for revenge.
See VIRGINIA
on
MEGHAN MILLER will try to help lead the women’s lacrosse team against conference rival Virginia this weekend
page 13
Alana All-American
Jordan defends
Doherty
Women’s basketball star
Washington
Alana Beard
and North Carolina alum-
mous
was
a
unani-
first-team All-
America selection. She
nus
the
Wizards star
Michael Jordan said was
“very disappoint-
West
tops list
was
the top vote getter in
The Atlanta Braves lost
Red Sox 14, Devil
their third
Cardinals 6, Brewers 4
Expos, 4-0.
falling
American list. He
The 0-3 start is the worst
T. J.
was
joined by
Connecticut’s Diana
forced former head coach
Collison, Josh Howard
that has
Taurasi and others.
Matt Doherty to resign.
and Dwayne
11
joined by
straight game,
to the
the Associated Press All-
ed” with the way UNC
was
Major League Baseball
Braves start bad
Xavier senior David West
Ford, Nick
Wade.
in 15 years from won
season
a
team
the NL East
running.
on
face what he
national
on
a
POSES
By JAKE
Vanderbilt,
11
COLVIN
By JESSE
over
� page
4, 2003
Rays 5
Mariners 7, Athletics 6 Twins 3,
Tigers 0
Pirates 7, Reds 5
Royals 12, White Sox 6 Cubs 6, Mets 3
(
PAGE
12
�FRIDAY.
St. John’s
ANDREA SZULSZTEYN
St.
NEW
70
John’s
for most of the second
Hatten
Marcus 67
G’town
helped St. John’s win And
championship.
a
at 67 with 1:27
YORK
Red
the
Hatten ended his
22
points
record
sixth
ing
victory in
over
John’s
National
Big
front of
St.
as
with
Tournament
collegiate
career
Thursday
night
at
Boisterous St. John’s fans rushed the
York”
played.
Fans then crowded around
Hatten and lifted him up
ders. the
When Hatten
on
their shoul-
announced
was
fans
MVP,
tournament
Afterward, nets and
wore
“There’s
John’s
no
on
as
chanted,
said. “Even if it’s
pionship, I’m
down the
cut
it’s
not
just glad
be
to
Hatten
feeling,”
championship. part of history
a
right now.” Freshman
Elijah Ingram made
remaining
have tied it
a
man
Michael
with 25
points,
nine rebounds and six blocks. Bethel had
points while Gerald Riley had 10. “No
said
pressure,”
added 19 points. “I to
getting the ball The game
games for
came
was
and
has
us
won
tied
or
a
lot
of
this year. I’ll definitely live head coach
with that shot,” Georgetown
to have shoot the ball
going
St. John’s 1989 and
has the
even
posting
that
said,
Ingram,
(45).
win
to
getting fouled.”
down to the final two
The
“Know
Red
another title,
note in the locker
a
the
most victories in
history
room
size.
ring
your
St.
John’s goes for No. 6.” win
The
completes for
the
entered its
John’s
remarkable
a
Storm.
Red
game
against
the Red
the Blue Devils 72-71
upset
free throw with
on
St.
Duke Storm
Hatten’s
time left, starting
no
that time
we
after
pronounced
were
MARCUS RATTEN helped take St. John’s to its sixth NIT championship,
a
of nine wins in 10 games.
“At
also
Georgetown and led
early
Storm. The Hoyas as
eight
the
had
a
turnaround
against
were
up
special.”
by
the Red as
The
break.
But
second half in It took
a
nearly
the
started
Hoyas
the
first
Hatten seven
points,
by
to
Hoyas briefly took the
St.
John’s
the
and
Red
Storm’s
they led
43-38
held the
lead back
easy
baskets,”
wanted to do
was
The
Red
Georgetown
lead until
the 13
offensive
gave up
Hatten said.
Sweetney,
ed
a
“All
lot we
in the second half.”
Storm
including
boards.
Reynolds
added
early
Hatten
has
deci-
a
will
for
stay the
in
school
until
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leave
“Our first-half defense
of
half, they killed
the offensive boards,” Sweetney said.
but St. John’s led 60-54 with 7:40
play.
“In the second
five
Grady Reynolds
Bethel tied it.
six minutes for them to
scored
dunk
everything difficult
funk.
and St. John’s (21-13) took advanscore,
tage.
44-43,
many
in the first halfand led 38-34 at
a
minutes into the half.
dead,” St. John’s head coach Mike Jarvis said. “This team did something
who
looking forward
again.”
its first NIT title since
won
expected
Storm
season
big
Sweetney led the Hoyas
12
“Gerald
as
the buzzer sounded.
Georgetown
his final free throws.
Ingram made
two
the game. Tony Bethel missed
three-pointer that would
a
shot with 4.1 seconds to go. That’s when
string
free throws with 4.1 seconds to seal
forced to
were
Riley missed
March 2 at 12-12. But
NCAA cham-
an
NIT
an
to
get the ball
the ball outside, and pass
turnaround
the back.
better
failed to
lead, but
inside to Sweetney. They
T-shirts that had “6-time
NIT champions”
Hatten made
give St. John’s
another chance
had
Hoyas
tournament’s
“Marcus Hatten!”
St.
The
“New York, New
as
Hatten
Craig Esherick said. “He’s somebody I’m
Madison Square Garden.
court after the game
player
68-67 lead with 1:13 to go.
comeback
Georgetown
East rival
12,406
its
won
Invitation
70-67
a
scor-
from most valuable
half, Bethel tied it
remaining.
of two free throws to
take the
championship,
first-ever
a
Storm
fans helped him celebrate.
with his
one
points
Hoyas (19-15) trailed
minutes. After the
The Associated Press
70-67, wins NIT
G eorgetown
edges
Red Storm creeps to 6th NIT title behind 22 By
The Chronicle
Sports
APRIL 4. 200:
of inclement weather, matches will be in Sheffield Indoor Tennis
Center)
he
Sports
The Chronicle
VIRGINIA
from from page 11
to
“There is
“The
we
senior Kate
is
game
know
between
big rivalry
a
schools,”
two
fueled by
have to be
Kasier
emotion.
Devils
Lane
Fogarty
lost
the
Cheryl Lynn Horton
“Any
time
defender, Kaiser
create
said. “We
few people
the
team
defensive will
presence
on
“It
focus more
hurts
on
we
to
have
look
miss
on
we
do
Megan Huether
have,”
attack
in
and
have
game
her
seen
and
advantage victory
to
a
With
con-
Notre
play-
has
ments
nearly
every
only
led
Virginia Sunday
been
facing
go at
the
up
for the Blue
shot
specific technical
at in
team hasn’t
since
ways
said. “Just
time. These
a
golf.”
taken to the it
Saturday, when
second
tourna-
weekend.
important
are
The
at
round
the
Bryan
the
the last for the Blue Devils,
as
rain
control the
tempo of
the field and play
The weather
our
home matchup
in the ACC
“This “We’re
win
on
lead
at
a
four-stroke
a
win
a
their quest
toward ACC and NCAA titles.
one
going
team this ful if
would be instrumental for the confidence in
well-timed for Brooks’
is
no
different,”
talented,
we
HEAD COACH KERSTIN KIMEL talks to her team
during
a
break at
of Duke’s recent games.
one
and
today, until
Brooks said.
won’t feel
the
take to the
tournament
course
will
Sunday.
Co.
Grilled
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Florentine
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and
BBQ Chicken
generous
spinach,
in flour tortillas with Lime
Mixed Grille-
of
and sauteed
flavors.
infused
breast,
Served
rice
boneless
with
a mild
chile
pork
and
•
hearts.
pasta
sauce,
in a
hearty
lettuce,
&
meat sauce
tomato,
Cilantro &
posole.
beef medallions
garlic mashed potatoes
Jk
or.r
and
and sauteed
Featuring New Wine Selections
E
artichoke
cheese
and
of
generous
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on the
cob.
Thursday is Crepe night
.
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the
don’t win.”
we
The Blue Devils
Catering
1stW&Wwm
the
to shoot for the win. With
Specials foe Friday and Saturday
US
can-
close of play Saturday.
against
tournament,
of
strength
between
remaining
was
which took home
squad,
Diner
WALK WITH
fair-
finished
National. The second round proved to be
game and the rematch with
Blue Devils’ attack
a
usual—one
things
Huether said. ‘We want to
Dame
Sunday’s
coming
good
which
celed the remainder of the tournament.
just
over
to loosen up the
mainly
was
team,
the
moves.
probably be controlling
plan,”
in 2001.
goals for this week,” Brooks
of the game.
“We want to
which
Appeit
points
really
never
the key
the game all
action. a
undoubtedly been
control the game and not let them.”
play. Virginia
goals
into this week’s
“They
the
said.
Lauren Aumiller and
the ACC
of the Blue
point
year,
time it
competition the last
“We don’t really have
this
use
Devils will
sopho-
especially against Virginia
has strong
to
But
have to look past her and
what
and
she has done all season, will
as
the
won
The work
the Virginia defense with force.
absence
her
focal
a
have
Chrest,
pace not
leading
tournament cham-
Collegiate Classic last
Murphey but
Oklahoma
Georgia,
Florida. Duke did not enter the Liz
pion
said.
by UVa coaches, the Cavalier
players
a
depth.”
The weakened defense will be cern,
ers
scouted
distraction.
field but
become
Auburn,
entered, is
Chrest
from page 11
State, and defending
season.
■
a
on
attack.
patient,” she
While Chrest has
the field,
it is determined not to let her
be
has
con-
surely
be
just
tenders
focused
the team in both goals and points
gaps,”
to
strong.”
is also
Devil offense.
need
to
the sidelines our
Fogarty’s strong
going
of
to have to be
Freshman Katie
starting
lot
a
are
from
tribute. It hurts While
ble this
a
midfield-
a
GOLF
13
we
Duke’s offense is also very formida-
to defense.
lose
you
you
move
hearing,”
goals. Defensively
goal Huether
“I need to
injury has forced head
coach Kerstin Kimel to er
with
been
stopping the strong Virginia
game.”
defender
season
have
“They have the potential
lot of
a
going
In
We
said.
score
are
contest, the
starting
for
torn ACL. The
this
ready for
Prior to the Vanderbilt
Blue
our
said.
I
what
Kaiser
>AY. APRIL 4.2003 � PAGE
Shop
last
Sports
PAGE 14 �FRIDAY. APRIL 4. 2003
from page 11
Princeton,
there’s
this, and that
their
15,000
can’t do
we
the
would be
There
in
the
great if a
will
ior
be
lost
to be the most hos-
we
play...
to
country could
exception
North
over
Duke
Barrie
in
of
a
in
14-9
ago.
Bobby
have
18 assists
sopho-
Benson,
Barrie and
Kyle
sen-
sen-
three
past on
a
combined
15-14 loss
national
champion
York, the
Blue
who has
in
New
Jays have been perfect.
Sports staffers: be
In
(34).
matchup problems its well “We
need to
some
very difficult to
defense has
only
8.5
goals
today
per
at
many
weapons—their top three
the field at the
of it.
capable
[Duke]
on
step up,” Cassese said. “They
are
in his last
presents
especially
guys,
senior
Duke’s
Rewkowski,
same
time.
defend, but
It’s time
team to show
we
for the real
attackmen Matt
year
as
candidate
2:15 in the
a
national player of the
since
the
plan,
to escape with
denly buoy “We
beginning
of
to
score
Jays and
most of the game.
postseason hopes. control
“The
the
last
down at
pressure to
tempo,”
couple
quick-
score
in the second half... We’d like to
goal
a
up
down and
or
“We
two
enter a
to
have
and
the
slow
third
the
or
fourth
win
this
game.
why the image of the Shroud
can not
be
win
game in the ACC
a
make
the
really need this game.”
lounge. Chronicle-DSG basketball
presentation given by
Alan
explained by modern
science in
Whangler,
Professor Emeritus, Duke
game to follow.
a
M.D.
University Medical
Center
Chairman, Council for Study of the Shroud of Turin
Mary Whangler Chairman, Council for Study of the Shroud of Turin
2003
Tuesday, April 8, Alumni Commons
Guest
Facilitator For
more
Rhonda Maurer or
visit the
csst
7:00
-
Room in Duke
website
at
-
-
9:00
p.m.
Divinity
School
Dr. Brian Miller
information contact
at
rtm.duke.edu
or
684.2909
http://www.duke.edu/~adw2/shroud/
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684-4309
or
668-2603
SummerSession 684-2621
we
and
tournament,
playoffs....
Study of the Shroud of Turin (CSST)
members of the Council for
If
them off and beat Hofstra
should
get
ball
lead.
knock
we
of
halftime
THE SHROUD OF TURIN Learn
hope
victory that would sud-
to
said.
and have felt
able
the Blue Devils
we’ve been
games
ly
a
their
want
Monfett
Matt
Monfett
and senior midfielder Cassese, who has been tabbed
possession for
control
be
with the Blue
stay
quarter with
up.”
sophomore
to
to
hope
season,
If all goes to
because of
for Duke
the
enough
balanced, multi-talented attack.
They
the meeting
to
Hopkins
on
addition, Hopkins’
to come
sure
though,
are
percent of his draws to
been stingy, allowing
game, will have to
so
date and leads his team in ground balls
defending
to
Syracuse
a
guys
Hopkins’ Kyle Harrison,
65
goals
have
goals
for
by goalie
really disrupt Hopkins’ offense.
are
won
seven
headed
has limited opponents
33
has tallied 14
full with
gloves
games,
to about
who
in six games, and
The Duke face-off men will have their
tear. With the
Kincel,
defense,
Doneger.
defense,
game. Duke’s A.J.
Overall,
four games.
of its
comes
three
goals and
out of
come
over
overtime
,
attackman
The
It
win.”
two
Hopkins
beat
ior midfielder Adam
While Duke enters the contest hav-
ing
week
attackman
more
fans out
screaming
supposed
there with
last
which
an
Hill several weeks
Chapel
would be huge.
game]
20,000
place
and
The Blue Jays offense is led by
homecoming.
to
there. It’s
tile
reason
Carolina
again.
“[Winning It’s
no
Virginia
win
road when we’ve been in situations like
ing
includes victories
That hot streak
HOPKINS
The Chronicle
We
Classifieds
The Chronicle
CLASSICALLY MALE ON
SEE flat
rate
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eral office and
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APRIL
FRIDAY,
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PAGE
The Chronicle
2003
4,
For
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gent whlo
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RESEARCH FELLOWSHIP
announcing Program
in
Trinity College take pleasure in
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support of undergraduate research and inquiry
the arts and sciences.
reasonable
fellowships of up
expenses
on
to
$2,500 toward
associated with research
planned for the
See link
in
Approximately 30 Trinity College
students will be awarded
projects
summer.
http://www.aas.duke.edu/trinity/research/
Application
Be A
deadline: April
4,
2003
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on
the transformation of
contemporary China.
transitional economies,
that he
proposed
relationships in China’s workplaces and,
local
drug free workplace.
on research
leading sociologist changes
of “new traditionalism”
governments
is
a
and socioeconomic
great impact the
a
Opportunity
Economy: Rural China in Perspective
driving record,
Infrasource Meter Services
Stanford University
to
area.
hours available. a
Professor of Sociology,
Group
more
to
His work as
recently, in the model of “local
the corporate headquarters” that highlights the critical role of
governments
in
China’s economic transformation.
He is the author and/or
of Reform in Rural North China (1998),
and
many
other books
Friday, April 4, 2003
e-mail, fax
or
1:00-2:30 p.m.
mail resume to:
Sociology/Psychology Building, Room 329 Duke Infra Source Meter Services Duke
Project
500 W. Dutton’s
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Sponsored by Asian/Pacific Studies Institute
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Aston, PA 19014 Fax
of
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# 610-494-5638 FREE AND
OPEN TO
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c_caprio@vsigroup.com For
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at 684-2604
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in
explain authority
editor of China’s Transitional Economy (1996), Zouping in Transition: The Process
had
exemplified
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Please
state
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The Chronicle
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Roger
FRIDAY,
APRIL
4, 2003
�
PAGE 17
Yamada THE
TIAW.
X
HATE
F*tf>AVS.
Daily Crossword
Edited by Wayne
Robert Williams
ACROSS source
Sugar 5
Brenner Pass
range 9
India
Tea from Western
14
15 Spike 16
brad with
“My Dinner Andre"
17
state
or
director
of student
Type
19
German sub
20
Chemical compound “
21
Place"
23 If 26
all
fails...
"...they shall the whirlwind"
27
“Lost Horizon" director
31
Cover the tab
33
Spree
36 March follower 37
Gilbert/ Scott Adams
seat
Bridge
38 Verbal subtlety 39
Highlanders
40
Superlative
41
Lake
ending
CANT
REPAIR THE
A
DEFECTIVE
COIS
WORKER.
BEST
TRADE
YOU CAN FOR
A CO-
43
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DEFECTS
I
44
YOU
HAVEN'T
mater
52
British noble
4
Language
5 Cherub
"A Delicate
6
Balance"
7
Racetrack
playwright
8
Shut with force
9
College pad
Native-born
woman
Beach
Clicks
12 Woeful lament
Israeli
the
13
Dole
French
18
Models of
spa of
to
22 Part of
the
25
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PARfiwe OP SOME-
THING.
“In Praise
of
writer
Folly”
Something
27 Parakeet cells
shared
28
Two-toed sloth
29
Chilean range
IMPRESSIVE.'
QED
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Oscar de la
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perfection and
Fonz
/ / WHATms
Boys hit
default button
Marion,
USUAL.
stop
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Howard
THE
-de-dah
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Visionary
note
Trudeau
of
Bangkok
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;GO
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hookup
46 Alaskan tongue
DISCOVERED.
48
Doonesbury/ Garry
PA
Scottdale,
Skins
45 R-V
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YET
the
42 Perry's penner
WORKER WHOSE
M
in
Sierra Nevada
DO
1
YOU
Separated Popular piano
46
Pesky bug
30 Provoke
Pathogen
32 All 34
DOWN
one's
56
43 Charity
piece
Sports
assets
51
Battery
ruler in
Evening
52
59
35
Jazz
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41
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James
Roma
Gander group
Swapped
European
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Lubitsch
electrode
Self-satisfied
eagle
Director
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venues
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Impure layer
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a retreat
Coach Parseghian
The Chronicle Why
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offer for
It could Or
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18 4
APRIL
FRIDAY,
The Chronicle
2003
4,
The Chronicle
MER. RES PETER (\RNETTS
Later labs for future
Planning
shortages, science
space
departments may give students the option to take
which would add
evening labs,
welcome
to the schedule
flexibility
the addition of a host of cutting-edge
Despite
budget constraints will permit the
feet of square
lab space. As
teaching
weekend and may institute
a
facilities,
$lOO million, 162,000-
new
square-foot French Science Center
research
v
//
to contain
only 20,000
result, science departments
evening lab sections
to accommodate any
future increases in demand for lab space. These additional sections, if
properly, will provide significant benefits
instituted
An increase in the number of available labs and ent times at which these labs
scheduled will
are
to students. a
variety of differ-
improve student
scheduling flexibility. Labs, the duration of which often exceeds four
Women’s issues around the world
hours, often interfere with students’ other academic and extracurricular activities. If,
the science
as
daytime labs slots
departments promise,
eliminated when
are
the combination of existing
labs and
evening
students to choose the best time based
However, the administration concerns
in order for these
consider
rightly
their free time. be
four-hour lab
a
many
rest, meet with friends
Sunday
or
safety
First, week-
of students would
majority
Saturday
students
a
violation of
labs. With
these
nights
as
a
safety
time to
Students should not have
area.
to sacrifice
their
University
should not make hordes of freshmen
safety for the sake of convenience, and the
in the
to include sufficient
teaching lab
building is regrettable, the addition of evening lab
new
tions in
funding
coming
allow for the
years
is
a
i.e.,men they know. Globally, of
reasonable
to this
remedy
Shaza Fadel and
Jackie Lipchak
Guest
Commentary
Yet the chief did not provide options for sup-
port
with
safety
or
Phelista
that
attempted
Phelista faced cultural, economic,
and
The cultural
understanding
her property
can
subordination
and
state
passive condone
against
and
without
improve it is
frustrating that our quality is
not
so
not
well
as
and
many ways,
reflected in the rankings.
World
on
the
new
The Chronicle
sphere
PAUL DORAN,
Sports
Editor
make
RYAN WILLIAMS,
City
REBECCA SUN,
BRIAN MORRAY, ROBERT TAI,
MEG LAWSON, Recess
Editor
Graphics
TYLER ROSEN, Sports
MELISSA SOUCY, Sr. Assoc.
MATT BRADLEY,Sr. Assoc.
University
NADINE OOSMANALLY, Sr. Assoc.
YU-HSIEN HUANG,
Editor
University
MARY WEAVER, Operations
Features Editor
Sports
ANDREA OLAND, Sr. Assoc. Photography SETH LANKFORD, Online
Graphic Artist
SUE NEWSOME,
Coordinator
independent of University,
published
Duke
faculty,
NALINI MILNE,
Manager
The
opinions
view of the editorial board. Columns, letters To reach the Editorial Office (newsroom) the Business Office Union Building
call
at
103 West Union
684-3811 or
© 2003 The Chronicle. Box may
be
reproduced
is entitled
to one
in
free
any
and at
Company,
Inc.,
expressed in this newspaper
staff, administration
or tmstees.
“these
cartoons
a
Editor
Director
Manager
non-profit corporation
are not
necessarily
a
leads to
control
seriously. in the United States to leave
attempts is
she
violent
a
able
actually
similar to Phelista’s
attempted
to.
represent
majority
the views of the authors. call 684-2663
684-3811. To reach the
or
fax 684-4696. To reach
Advertising
fax 684-8295. Visit The Chronicle Online at
that
also
of
they
former hus-
or
N.
Thoennes,
the
1993
General
indicate
date”
or
2000).
July that
one
in
by sexual violence
United
National
Nations
Assembly adopted the Declaration of
Elimination of Violence Against Women.
the
Almost mate
decade later sexual abuse
a
partner
it
And,
making
it
for Victims of Crime).
the
criminalizing
include efforts to
husband to
a
(The National Center
Unfortunately, respondviolence
gender-based
to
not
is
to the
respond
simply
need
Approaches
act.
economic
myths
and
societal
abuse,
lack
and
of education about
to
of gen-
totality
der-based violence, which encompasses
tion,
inti-
adopted the mari-
crime for
a
his wife
an
crime in
a
in 1993 that
only
was
the state of North Carolina
ing
by
is still not considered
most countries.
isola-
cultural domestic
and sexual violence. Such factors affect
from
to leave her
their
her to
partner she the chil-
father.
Her
family
“forgive and forget” because
things happen.” Mary
went back to her He
ever
considered
time she left, her
place
to
band no
family
during their
continued.
Mary had
no
entire
She
she
left her
income and
again and
finally viable
no
a
her hus-
relationship
went back
When
next
refused to offer her
stay. The isolation imposed by
other ally.
cycle
leaving again. The
renting
Office
at
part
she
apartment
the
escaped, means
for
search
for
a
job.
of this
publication
Mary’s
to cultural and societal
intimate
partner
violence,
emotional
exhaustion
tions. This
woman
cal bruises
childcare
finding
or
expanded
101 West
http://www.chronicle.duke.edu.
90858, Durham. N.C. 27708. All rights reserved. No
an
and
abuse
acceptance
psychological economic
of
and
limita-
stated that after the physi-
healed,
the aftermath of
they
live
in
women
can
Durham, North Carolina.
or
be shattered. With such
that
Nairobi,
occurs
Mary faced
pervasive
a
crime
within different social contexts, the
to eliminate violence
against
women
would have to be “culture-and region-specific”
(UNICEF,
2000).
principles
should
“five
However, all
guide
underlying
interventions attempting to address violence:
vention,
prevention, rebuilding
protection, the
and
strategies
loves
domestic inter-
early
of
victim-sur-
vivors, and accountability” (WHO 2002).
con-
tinued to threaten her and the children’s lives if she
whether
The barriers that Phelista and
strategy
experience.
family for taking
those of Duke
represent the
form without the prior, written permission of the Business
copy.
and
family being
partner’s physical and sexual assaults.
Editor
Manager
Advertising
Advertising Office
Unsigned editorials
301 Flowers Building,
Building,call
constitution
BARBARA STARBUCK, Production Manager
by the Duke Student Publishing
University.
its students,
on
Durham, North Carolina faced bar-
were
encouraged
while The Chronicle is
based
Kenya
state
Editor
City & Slate Editor
EVAN DAVIS, Sr. Assoc.
Photography Editor
Supplements
Managing
MOLLY JACOBS, Sr. Assoc. Editor
Photography Editor
Assoc.
ALISE EDWARDS, Lead
Editor
AMI PATEL, Wire Editor
KIRA ROSOFF, Wire- Editor
THAD PARSONS, Sr.
Editor
JOHN BUSH, Online Editor
Sports Photography Editor
MATT KLEIN, Sr. Assoc.
Projects
MATT ATWOOD, TowerVlew Editor
JODI SAROWITZ, TowerView Managing Editor
Violence
by police and judiciary,
woman
before
away
MIKE MILLER, Health & Science Editor
GREG VEIS, Recess Editor
in
a
berated by her
dren
JENNIFER SONG, Senior Editor
& Stale Editor
machinery
Kenya has ratified,
own
beyond
seven
When she was
BECKY YOUNG, Features Editor
indicated
current
a
Against
percent
in her lifetime.
Kenya
average,
Editor
Editor
Photography Editor
Violence
will be affected
women
lence cannot be taken
“Mary”
JONATHAN ANGIER, General Manager
JANE HETHERINGTON,
statistics
four
worldwide,
riers that
Editor
MATT BRUMM, Senior Editor
&
National
and reinforces the concept that domestic vio-
will
DAVE INGRAM. Editor
Page
rights
Furthermore,
women.
in
illegal
Kenya’s
as
relationship
ALEX GARINGER, University
sex-
the United
U.S. News and
On
KENNETH REINKER, Editorial
by
R,
tal rape law,
national law. Yet, notions of the
private
Report rankings (see story, page one).
KEVIN LEES, Managing
National
(Tjaden,
sexually assault
insensitive treatment Dean of the School of Law Katharine Bartlett,
one-
involved
Indeed,
interviewed
completely economically
international treaties that
year. The School has gotten better in
Survey
relatives.
against
is
A
women.
property
law-enforcing
violence
women
wife and
a
of
ownership
male
on
that
legal
her abuse.
be inherited has led to the
divorcee
or
dependent
surprised that the Law Schools ranking did
and
partner, cases
indicates. Over 64
“victimized
In
that perpetuated
would have to become
very
he
with him
not force students to enroll in lab sections that will
this
When
husband, sex
changes, and do
are
decision.
to leave her
widow
We
2002),
percent
physically
band, cohabitating partner, boyfriend
sec-
record
the
women
were
political barriers
their other commitments.
intimate
an
10 to 69
being
one-half of the
(WHO
as
Women
the
space
problem and will
by
over
ual abuse
(Amnesty International 2002).
expansion of science labs. It is essential, however, that
the
assaulted third to
reported
States is not exempt from these staggering sta-
undergraduate students before implementing these
On
to
was
tistics,
officials consult
significantly hamper
reported the abuse
have
women
women
their intimate partners,
After
beat her and forced her to have
trudge halfway
to be
seven
chiefs office. The chiefs advice
village
aggressors of
tyrannical
likely
most
are
repeatedly.
raped
that she should leave him.
evening.
While the lack of
her
the
Ironically,
it to the authorities for
must schedule fre-
majority of students enrolled in these labs will be freshmen—and dramatically improve lighting in the
was
not
accompanying
concerns
evening labs, the University
campus every
report
she courageously
years, the
quent buses between East Campus and Science Drive—since the
across
to
fearing
in non-academic activities.
participate
or
use
must also address
University
evening
on a
A vast
beat and
abused,
Similarly, Thursday and Friday evening labs should
implemented, since
The
lab times to be successful.
new
widow from Nairobi, Kenya
a
“inherited” by her brother-in-law. He verbally
schedule.
own
Phelista,
instituted,
sections would allow
their
on
current
no
are
must address several social and
implemented.
end labs should not be
evening labs
domestic
such
Agencies,
the
as
Response Center: Domestic Services, work with
Durham
Crisis
and Sexual Violence
communities to
respond
to
and prevent domestic and sexual violence. The first step to eradicate this type of violence is to be aware
and
Increased
then
awareness
on a
education and improved
ultimately flow
this
spread
awareness.
local level will provide resources,
which will
to the national and internation-
al levels. Get involved and take action. You contact the Durham Crisis more
pate
can
Response Center
for
information at 919-403-9425 and particiin
the
Safe and
Durham Crisis
Sound
Response
Race
Center
on
to
benefit
April
5
at
the Duke Cross Country trial.
violence continued.
Office. Each individual
Violence against sive
of
women
human rights
is
the most perva-
violations
worldwide.
Shaza
Fadel
and
graduate students.
Jackie
Lipchak
are
Duke
Commentary
The Chronicle
World domination With news
full-scale
a
it’s
captivating millions of Americans,
coverage
for the ins and outs of the fighting to monopolize sciousness and blur the watch
bum
Baghdad
wrenching photos But what
easy
five TV
on
to
to look at the heart-
or
scares
me
even
falling
Operation “Iraqi Freedom”
bigger—namely,
happen
beginning of something of mili-
tary operations against other “threats”
I
introduce
to
Government
a
Bush in the White House backed by of
power-hungry
arrogant,
the lines of Dick
along
mongers
believe
me,
Jlßr
war
Cheney,
fears
my
Andrew
rhetoric emanating
ent
Korea
and
Syria,
trine of
pre-emtive
Above
all, the
American
others.
is
foreign policy
ing ideology behind
Bush administration envisions
ly shaped
a
utter
The
is
policy
current
a
or
US. interests
war on
potential threat
even
The administration’s
for the
union of
ostensibly
nation that
any
to
(most definitely including
broadly defined to
access
opinions of other countries, rejecting the and the
International Criminal Court. he
recently,
motions for
Iraq, attempting
to
hoping
through the diplomatic
a
buy legitimacy from
an
ad
bloated treasury and afraid of being this war’s Yemen.
(In
Gulf War
I, Yemen and Cuba
the
were
Council members to vote against
the
of
the
a
student
of
government
call for any
for the student
respect
them to the punch
beat
foreign affairs,
established
organization
PNAC
leadership. Cheney,
for
package
to
Century,
for
what
picayune
the
see
it
of
and
a
non-profit
Wolfowitz. A
by,
global
among others,
issued
report
argued that in order for America
would be both
challenge
a
is
perfect place Then in
members,
winning the
U.S.-dominated
in
world
Iraq would provide
to base
our
Persian Gulf
1998, PNAC
sent
the
including
our
and involved “blatant
unholy
Playing ombudsman for
a
we
by
power,
This semester has been a time of
readjustment there on
analysis.
campus
life
First,
the transition back to life
was
Then
and
after
there
and
A
new,
the
military with
a
If
,
of
by
18
Cheney,
allow Hussein to
“a significant portion of the world’s supply of
a
ironic result
safer world
interests. On
more
the contrary,
war
to Americans.
of this villainous
susceptible
to
a
asserting American hege-
of terrorists, groups
to
military
national security
are
religious
small
funda-
generated by the encroachment
may
but it cannot
lone militant from may
large nation;
onto their turf.
superpower
we
our
from another
driven by both
mentalism and anger
nature of
longer is the United States
challenge
rather, the real risks
plot
amenable to American
militarily totally ignores the changing
international conflict. No
fight
Syria, the prospect
use
be
for
its
to
annihilate
military might
bringing the fight wars
in
Iraq
or
to
any
prevent
to its cities. So
North Korea
of terrorism within
will increase.
Now
the
our
or
borders
Trinity junior.
I’m not gery
Duke’s
Chapel
role
a
Duke students
or
Flag
anti-war resolution had 30
was
minutes;
did
like
the
for the anti-
nothing good
but
Duke,
at
it
did
make
everyone
clueless
stereotypical
to
try
liberal
conserva-
stunt
argue—they prefer
poli-
presi-
the board
only there because of affirmative
was
like the
seen
sideshow that campus conservatives have become? For the sake of the
pro-
to be cut short. You will be
University, the stooges’
embarrassing
are
acts need and
alumni,
us
you
embarrassing yourselves.
Martin
is
Barna, Trinity ’O2,
a
former editorial
page
editor of The Chronicle.
change
sex
to innovative
referring
~nmt Jennifer
Where
I
once
women
who
“why can’t
girls
No
fun.
kids
back
came
to
“available.” the
old
same
about
whining and
relationships
I
guys
The
from
promise and
biggest
expect
are
guys
of what be
a
corner.
to return to
we
a
are”
non-
a
It
hook-ups. has
come
I did
campus
“I need
saying
but
no
interaction.
surprise
male
to
not
where
definition
“I want there to
or
next year for us.” It’s not senior
avoiding commitment. Duke boys—-
syndrome
aside from the seniors who sudden-
who have gotten sick of the games.
ly realize they
Some guys
leaving the land
are
of smart and pretty girls—were
major bachelor mode; libido L-word,
not
and
“use
girls
love.
Guys
the
on
a
program, where
dispose”
were
was
were
in
looking
for
something
non-biodegradable. coming
January,
I
campus to
in
the sta-
see
music
development
through-
out the semester. Within the female
male
call
has
The
populations
of
transpired what
Great Duke Sex
underI like
to
Change.
alternative does
and
perks
come
One It’s
So, when the who is your
ex
finding
mutant of
gets
of
the are
and
someone.
a
and what
matter uni-
left
you’ve
out
is
disadvantage
on
norm.
While
reverting may set
we
altered
romantically
our
in
paths,
some
become
unhappy
this and
back. Case in point:
category
want
the
to
go
girl that
gets her non-exclusive hook-up and a
few weeks down the line decides
she
needs
other
definition.
there is
hand,
Or,
groom-like
and
anxiety
Apparently this
gets
bolts. is not
change
sex
the
on
the guy who
starts to settle down and then
meant for everyone. I
wonder
alteration Are
or
just
the
urinals to
Maybe it’s
bitching finding
the
spring; maybe entered sin-
for the first time since I
17,1 think
tually
go
rules
of
adults,
not
cuddle with? Chances
it’s Duke. But having
gledom
trend.
figalos—-
guys
about
of
permanent
have
female gigolos—and at
a
passing
a
to
going
we
sect
whether this
deviants is
romantic
are no.
advan-
unattached
unstressed about
One
back to the
romantic
with
is reaffirmation.
be
the
no
change
sex
behind.
someone
disadvantages.
to
than whom
girls.
moment when you realize you
happy
is
this
tend to guys
the noncommittal
This
the
while
of the steadfast
is that these
lifestyle
ation still
an
And ears
your
is, it’s unquestionably better
verse
against
relationship-seekers,
problem
tages
interesting
to the
female
swimming
toward—gasp—adult
relationships!
tus quo. And while the normal situ-
exists, there has been
are
current
pursue
to
expected
the
solely upperclassmen
or
host
derogato-
throw
can
you
yell “salvation!” Because
my
rings,
pets,
romantic
the
I
I find
want
just
phrases,
a
you
hands up, look toward the sky and
how alternate this
want to be
“just
boils down to random, DL
anticipating
no
longer “why can’t
no
some
exclusive
the
girls
having
to call
of slurs and other choice ry
I find frus-
with,
AGAIN just
you
heard girls crying
to settle down
naming
77ie Y Perspective
I
sur-
rather
the switch in romantic intentions.
have
Wlach Wlach
stamped
wanting
but
identity crises,
or
friends,
first
in
it’s
campus
and
a
in
mob
a
campus issues—-
on
Beach while the Confederate
even
something noncommittal?” Yes,
single
investigation.
grads Andrew Rothman is
touch
action. Does Al-Bulushi really want to be
“ridicu-
single.” It’s
time at college.
So,
able
with
meetings
like when former Duke Conservative Union
joining
find witness
you
:
my
to
situation:
tragically
con-
in the
Judicial Board because he felt that the black student
for reporting
trated
M
Lastly
been
entrance
life
liberating the Iraqi people, the Bush administration’s
while
look
tives do not tics
that the
was
one
most
off campus. has
of
will not be
into
barge
who would rather rant than argue. Duke’s
a
find someone?” but
returned
a
unions
movement
in the bathrooms about
was
with
oil will all be put at hazard.” The letter mentioned nothing
nation,
idiotic to
Myrtle
involved
that
Narvarte
semester abroad.
a
movement of social
order.
trinity
go-to phrase when pitching the
same
a
passionately believes
larger debates that
to
The Great Duke
must per-
police squad.
we
coverage, Al-Bulushi is
leader who
Wednesday’s display war
let’s look at those
story
my
A
insists
war,
moment,
facts. In The Chronicle’s March 31
lives of the unattached that I focus
if
the
doings with
it did not deserve two.
the
defending
disregard
him to invade
Iraq, arguing that
all DSG
that
the facts.”
dealing
letter—co-signed
a
be
should
complaint
cover
flying overhead. An
victim of the
incident
Rumsfeld and Wolfowitz—to President Bill Clinton, urging
our
of
who
that coverage of this
to remain
deterrent and response to any potential
the
to
friendly regime
of
down. This is
Sounding like
to the Persian Gulf to East Asia. Such forces
Europe
mony
or
public figure
a
it has covered the assault issue.
it’s
same-sex
Misinformation,
cause
loser.
is—a
Iraqi spokesperson
Republican Guard
lous”
real
only
as
some
going
dignity
any newspaper would
or
dent Martin Green resigned from the Undergraduate Minister
should
Narvarte,
a
manently deploy large military forces around the globe,
The
in
he may
to
Feb. 14 editorial.
a
when the group doesn’t affect the issue. DSG has
assault.
proud
look to
only
American
promote
the world’s only unchallenged superpower,
current
“I’m
university
any
black-eye for Jean-Baptiste, and the
alleged
racially
especially
he champions.
causes
black-eye for the organization when it should only be a
The
But
legislators
in
The Chronicle
this is simple: Jean-Baptiste is
on
veracity
body he fights for should
and step
coverage has been
only Security
need
one
founded in 1997
was
Rumsfeld
PNAC in 2000
in
elite and
with
resignation. Any leader
stereotypes.
on
and
felon at the head
an
cold-calculating
play
The
with any polit-
as
guilty. Yes,
should drive DSG’s vice presidents
is
bad.
resign.” Yes, Jean-
a
it
white,
and must be held accountable for his acts —good
defenses. But it’s irrelevant.
possibility of having
com-
as
Yemen subse-
war.
per year aid
the Project for the New American
stay
report
been assault-
crime, should be
“I
to
unsubstantiated,
restructuring DSG
reason
striking articulation of the Bush administration’s
vision of American
from
violent
immediately by,
decade, and Cuba continued to receive squat.) For
Answering Duke
get assaulted, too.
to
innocent until proven
mere
for
plan
vincing student
a
host of affirmative
The
to leech billions in aid from
our
quently lost its $3O million
have
claimed
coasted
hoc coalition of nations
is
Baptiste
with
charged
Jean-Baptiste’s
president has shown total
Kyoto accords, the Anti-Ballistic Missile Treaty
Most
Record
Chronicle does not
Jean-Baptiste,
meeting,
deplorable
Duke.” That’s
is
from Narvarte,
predominantly
a
attempt
an
Speaking of seeking
followed
sorry”
like
“as
facts.
get—all
can
come
the DSG
was
on
biased
personally
The
fine. We had heard you had
Thank goodness! We didn’t want
oil).
foreign policy decisions perfectly
illustrate this worldview. The
disregard
in that it
unnerving
provides justification for making is
distinct-
national interests.” Aside from its eth-
our
this
nocentricity,
Security
on a
ly American internationalism that reflects the values and
The
fall, states, “The
US. national security strategy will be based
our
Off The
Wednesday’s meeting,
at
card at
coverage
campus
story
has
given The Chronicle’s endorsement of Jean-Baptiste’s
as
us:
The first words from
ical leader
of the chill-
National
the White House last
by
contempt
global community whol-
the United States.
by
issued
Strategy,
The
understanding
an
and
Bama
alleged-
concerns
news
especially
Vice
Executive
write-up of the police report.
Narvarte’s assertion that
Martin
student.
visiting
as
race
the
misinformation and
“I’ve been in my room.”
with Bush’s flawed doc-
government’s foreign policy.
our
a
for
racialized
k
JSBb
ed. Oh, wait....
Iran, North
indicator of the direction of
clearest
of
everyone. I’m fine....”
Phew! He’s
increases future conflicts.
only
war,
Enjoy Myself
from the Bush
Nations, along
felony assault,
informed
Baptiste
“Hello, You
to future conflicts with
among
toward the United
form
Jean-Baptiste,
who may go down
students’ two greatest
t
p
unfounded. On the contrary, the belhger-
• administration points
the
the
plaining that irresponsible,
Polentzi Narvarte
ly jointly pummeling
u
I*
boring
as
a
only blatant disregard
who played
rpil|
at
DSG president, has been
with
charged
not
are
president
the toughest
a
Donald Rumsfeld and Paul Wolfowitz. And
Joshua
Jean-Baptiste,
Ip %
team
and
present
Student
in
meeting
The
Stooges:
DSG
by
statement
a
President Justin Ford and
That’s about
and student leader Yousuf Al-Bulushi
there is
as
were
Stooges’
comments,
Wolfe,
to
Three
Duke
DSG president
«
long
as
called, “My Three Stooges”,
Misinformation
Wednesday’s
m
likely,
essay
apologies
Duke’s
Hubris,
Spectrum
American interests. This is very
an
response to three American authors who had criticized
Inappropriateness—all
I’m scared that
Baghdad.
on
is the
series
a
is what will
more
Tom Wolfe wrote a
A Man in Full. With
our con-
big picture. It is frightening
of Iraqi children in the newspaper.
after the bombs stop
much
Duke’s ‘Three
and 24-hour
already underway
war
APRIL 4,2OOHMGEI9' *
FRIDAY,
it is
a
through love,
phase as we
only
we
all
was
even-
re-leam the
this
time
as
not adolescents.
person
drunk and IMs
Jennifer
Wlach is
a
Trinity junior.
‘
‘
PAGE 20 ďż˝
FRIDAY,
APRIL
4,
The Chronicle
2003
Fall 2003
-
Experience
WST 90
Gender and Everyday Life
WST 113
Gender Across Culture: 1:10 -2 PM
WST 1205.01
Gender Studies:
Gender Studies: Jean Leonard,
Contemporary
-
-
12:10 PM
Banu
Sick, Weak, Crazy
TTh 3:50
-
5:05 PM
WST
Special Topics: Women, Identity PM
Black Women Writers:
Charlotte Pierce-Baker,
Special Topics: Gender
2:20-3:35
10:55
Transnational Sex Work
WST 150.02
150.05
TTh
(SS, CCI)
Nilgun Uygun,
MWF
(SS,CCI)
From the Margins
WST 1205.02
Kathy Rudy,
-
Changing World
a
and War
-
or
TTh
12:40
-
Black Women
Writing
1:55 PM (AL, lAA, CCI, W)
Gendered?: Women and Mental Health
-
(SS, CCI, W)
lan
Lekus, MWF 10:30
& Power in U.S.
11:20 AM
-
History
Laura
-
(SS, CCI)
Edwards, MW
(CZ, lAA, CCI)
DUKE WST
160W
Feminism in Historical Contexts
-
Caroline
Light,
TTh 5:25
-
6:40 PM
(CZ, SS,
CCI, W)
WST
161S
Money, Sex
WST
162S
Gender, Culture
and Power
and
-
Kathi
Weeks, MW 2:20
Representation
-
-
3:35 PM (CZ, SS, CCI)
Tina Campt, TTh 2:15
-
3:30 PM (SS, CCI,
lAA)
WST 164S
Race, Gender and Sexuality
-
Karen
Krahulik, T 7
-
9:30 PM
(SS, CCI)
2003 Women’s Final Four
PAGE 2 �FRIDAY, APRIL 4. 2003
Table &]lcorns.
lititz
a
ntents
o
3
bxsuLsvj
<z/f- xe match with
tnoxE
The Chronicle
Staff
Box
ifiE Lins
on
What the Chronicle staff would do in Atlanta in
offsnciuz ,2V£
£
SEEKS
between Final Four games:
4 Paul
sblUQCjiinCj oj'JEnS.E
out its.
Doran
Mike
Jhichij
cut-outs.
Go to
tff
in
xaxe,
onz-dbn&nsLonai
game
Make fun Tour Atlanta's
of
Mike
delicious
Run
JlawSOYl
Paul
czdf[[~cz/frn Ex.ia.an 3\axa Jdawson leads 'Uehh
dJitans clash r
dJfiE
many
facts, oj
6
two
Crowley
AP
-m
A
atcnub
Way Blue
Leees
Paula
Lehman
Dave
Ingram
Sue
Run
long, long shower with gallons of soap to Savannah
Get
to
Augusta and back again
charged with underage possession
Look for
Garinger Newsome
T
Starbuck
xeolew
Roily Miller,
M
E
NTS
to
Go
Devils
Luck!
cQueen Street (Just North
Telephone: (919)
l&x*.
a
etc.
more reasons
Get in Work
a
to go
to
NYU
power groove
for Journal-Constitution
Fall
in love
and
get married
Buy TBS off Ted Turner
7
Good
ill)
Southerners away from
Arrive late
Kevin
Alex
R
cheerleaders
Jesse Colvin
Barbara
matchup -by
jersey
aoachinq hahtmoths
hxzahdoam csdf
Take
Catherine Sullivan
G XLi
UT's
Sox
Cough, hack,
Matt Sullivan
of two ±tytz± ofjitaij
Red
strip clubs while swervin'
Robert Tai
6
aoinjiaxii-on
out
a
pretending he has game
foxm Nick Christie
JdtratEqu
wearing
Take
Robert Samuel
(loan ft
Braves
Corey
Tyler Rosen
5
a
383-0
Mr. Peachtree
Buy TBS off Sue Newsome Eat all of
Georgia's peaches
2003 Women’s
The Chronicle
Hungry Blue Duke blew
Devils
away No. 4 Tennessee
Final Four
ready
by
21
points
dispatch Volunteers
to
in
FRIDAY, APRIL 4, 2003 �PAGE 3
early
meeting
season
in
V Classic
Jimmy
CATHERINE SULLIVAN
By
The Chronicle
Midwest
Regional
Duke
champion
(35-1) returns to the Final Four for the second consecutive time in program in
year and the
Atlanta, where it
Mideast Regional
will square off with
champion Tennessee its
(32-4), which will also be making ond straight
14th overall.
by winning their
seedings
tive regions, taken
Lady
Dome
their
on
tear.
points
entirely
over
va—the
team
Connecticut’s
ing
at
that
recently
Villano-
snapped
NCAA-record the
70-game
Elite
that the Lady Vols
were
73-49
Eight
are
peak-
the right time.
of
playing
Kara Lawson
guard
that
every
Duke, struggle
on
said. “We
honestly
time we
well and with
Volunteer
confidence,”
players win
their
second-seeded
“This team is lot
av-
Alabama
Penn State
streak—in
winning suggests
against
and
unexpected,
triumph
the
an
per game.
Though blowouts State, Virginia
their
during
season
in
Georgia
Tournament, winning by
erage of 33.5
not
floor
the
They have played
best basketball of the NCAA
reaching
home
Tenn.—enter
on a
in
biggest stage.
Vols—who hosted the first
rounds
Knoxville,
respec-
and Tennessee have
basketball’s
The four
Duke
different paths
very
college
sec-
the Final
both teams lived their up to
Although No. 1
in
appearance
Four and its
third
history Sunday night
step
believe on
a
senior
have 11 we
SHEANA MOSCH passes the ball to
The
Blue
the
gional
ly,
Devils
early against
and No.
2
to
early rounds
to
game
come
Georgia the
re-
finals, respective-
away with the victories.
averaging
during
has yet to
over
the regular
score
80
points
per
Duke season,
above 66 in the tourna-
ment. Its offensive a
teammate
Duke’s
during
stir with the
coach Gail Goestenkors is satisfied that
vorite,
her team is
ils
struggles have
creat-
media, but Duke head
doing enough
“There is
themselves
seed Texas Tech in
semifinals and
After
ed
found
No. 5 seed
and had to make strong second-half
runs
a
early
season
romp of the then-No. 2 Volunteers
the other hand, has had to
through
reach Atlanta.
down
MATT KLEIN/THE CHRONICLE
can
the floor.”
really nothing
us,” Goestenkors just
win
win
we
every
by
to win.
one
game, or
wrong
“Our
said.
goal
and I don’t
30
is to
care
I’d
points.
with
if
prefer
are
Lady
ranked
two
stranger
role, however. The two
teams
met
nessee
just our
lam not
want to
been able
caught
score
one
up
in
more
to do
scoring.
I
point than
two teams’
play recently,
Tennessee is widely considered the fa-
the
time
its
that
the
NCAA Tourna-
Eight
seeking
underdog
in
1999, Ten-
fourth straight
national title. The
with
a
“There
is
no
that
question
was
a
game that took Duke to another level in
the
69-63
of recruiting,” Tennessee head coach Pat
Summit said. “You been
they’ve
Blue
Devils
second-ranked Lady
upset
in what
was
tershed game for Duke’s program
a
Vols
just
can
since
doing
stand the impact of
a
Jimmy
winning
76-55 to
and
again
of the 2002-2003
V Classic in
look at what
the beat the
with Duke
the overall
waon
at
season
Raleigh,
even
See PREVIEW
under-
win like that.”
The two teams met
ginning
lOth-ranked
shocked
opponent.”
Given the
was
to the
last
in
and
so
ahead of the
terms of national exposure and in terms no
ment. In the Elite
advance. We have
spots
Vols.
Duke is
the latter, but the bottom line is survive
that,
the No. 2 Blue Dev-
though
even
page 8
se-
2003 Women’s Final Four
PAGE 4 �FRIDAY, APRIL 4, 2003
It’s all
63.5
The Chronicle
the No. 2
began the NCAA Tournament, the
onus
it
lugging
heavier than
was
carried. As
the program had every any
such, Duke’s offense has withered Blue
the
Devils
took
Duke’s
ing round. And though has
since
16
No.
on
seed
State in the tournament’s open-
Georgia
picked
its
up
As
women’s basketball
team
was
defense
since
energy
only
a
sive
shots,
a rare
What is
somewhat of an anomaly.
the
have been doing
we
with
defense,
our
confident
as
really
a
but
we
bit,
good job
have not been
head
offensively,”
coach
but
the way
a
So
did
we
averaging
in
pressure,
the
that
fact,
63.5
sputtered in
points
to
four
NCAA Tournament games. for
Luckily nents
bay with
at
the
Regardless, are
ing
has
defense.
Duke’s
shooters
have Tennessee lick-
Alana
made players
Beard
have
disrupted
many
admittedly
ing toward the end of the just
the
of her teamincluded.
Sheana Mosch, who stepped up her season,
thinks
we’re
an
they
“I think it is
[a
men-
are
team believes
having
on
good looks that Thus
“Really, nior
are
far,
the prob-
converted into
many
it has not been the
we’re
getting
open
sharpshooter Vicki
excuse
about said.
Perry
Street
Tue-Fri,
�
Durham
11-6 Sat &
I
offense
our
“Early
on
it had
thought
At
tle
the
time,
same
frustration with
In
a
lit-
media’s inces-
Duke’s
ability
to
fact, each hinted that because
the team is tions
no
both
however,
displayed
the
queries regarding
score.
so
there.”
Beard and Goestenkors
constantly answering
regarding
offensive
ques-
struggles,
con-
fidence is inevitably lost.
paper
or
time sees
[my
the
reads
team]
the
television, people
are
talking about where has Duke’s offense gone?
What
is
with
wrong
Duke?”
Goestenkors said. “There is really noth-
ing
wrong with us.”
Goestenkors N.C.
State
even
harkened back to
coaching
“The bottom
advance,”
up in
the
legend,
line is
Goestenkors
Krapohl
said.
said. I
am
“We not
concurred,
“When you hear people
919.416.0010
Sunday’s
have
caught
of
our
happened and it caused
get tight and they
start
what shots they’re but
added
that
Sunday’s
the
beginning of the
just shooting rhythm.
saying
you’re offense sucks, it’s going you,” she
VICKI KRAPOHL will be pivotal in
contest,
as
Duke will need
a
strong
inside-outside game.
and
showdown with the Volunteers.
NC 27706
By Appointment �
survive
she’s very optimistic going into
case.
looks,” ju-
so
to
JENNY MAO/THE CHRONICLE
late
scoring.”
Beard
refinemen
11-6
it’s
lay-off, but
subtle
1914
just
Goestenkors
think
there is
Jewelry
Fine
and
perplex
to
we’ve had four games now,
the offensive side
of the ball have to translate somehow into
points.
continued
But
and the
defenses of Texas Tech
been able to do that
Goestenkors’
Georgia State.
over
been because ofthe two week
offensive
tal issue].”
lems
foul
has
Jim Valvano.
awesome
team,” Mosch said.
pas-
is that Duke has been
against Georgia State,
scor-
mental issue.
a
“But
All-
as
attests,
and
tight
shooting rhythms of mates —herself
Duke,
win
have
“Every for
expectations
American
it’s
“I
chops.
The
it
aggressive man-to-man,
zone
now,”
sant
held oppo-
suffocating
woes
experiencing its
it
Duke,
so
attempted
Duke’s offense.
highest scoring of-
nation—has
just
been
pressure.”
Duke’s offense—the
fense in
of the
course
players...have
little bit of
much
put them down
the
over
I think the
season.
feeling
have not
we
has
statistical flaw for Duke.
scary
narrow
Georgia
Gail Goestenkors said. “We’ve had good
looks,
to
going
to reassert itself offensively since
Utah’s
busy
it
than
three-pointers
more
postsea-
little
aggressive
that
offensively
are
a
to be
was
of the tournament, Duke has been
trying
pressing
offense
the basket. Again, in the first four games
play began, Duke’s shooting troubles have been
on
the
agreed
get confidence back
assertive and
more
Devils
result, the Blue
way to
son
“We
in tournament, Blue Devils remain confident
points
have been.”
we
When
shooting
“We’re just not knocking them down like
MIKE COREY
By
Duke not worried about
good:
Despite averaging just
The Chronicle
that
to affect
said. “I think that’s what sort
to
I’m
team to
thinking about
taking,
whereas in
year everyone
and playing
with
a
was
good
just confident that it’s going
players
not
phy
to
on
pressure that has
Duke’s
shoulders,
the
confident
it’s
subside
a
since
and' the
the
pres-
shots
will
with the burden of
national championship
in Duke’s
over
that
finally arrived, the
fall—along
having
“Now
despite all the
accumulated
will
sure
begin
happen.” But
are
Final Four has
trophy
tro-
case.
that we’re in the Final Four with—there’s
all,” Beard said.
no
pressure
at
2003 Women’s Final Four
The Chronicle
Life-size cut-out
FRIDAY, APRIL 4, 2003 �PAGE 5
brings laughs, luck
to Blue Devils
ROBERT SAMUEL
By
The Chronicle
“This is horses-t.” Believe it
not, this
or
the advice
was
of the women’s team’s good luck charm: A life-sized cut-out of the women’s head Gail Goestenkors.
coach,
The picture of
was
Goestenkors
a
Vicki
day—or
as
“second
20th
gift
for
from
her
a
40th
friend birthher
said,
Krapohl
birthday”—which
she
celebrated Feb. 26. “It said.
just
was
Goestenkors
joke,”
a
friends
“My
took it around town
and had pictures made with it in various
and
places here
how
Realizing
Chapel Hill.”
humorous this
pre-
sent was, the Naismith Women’s Coach
of the Year decided
play
to
a
joke
on
her team. “I
it into
brought
scare
about my
ingly.
of the
some
“I
the locker
room
to
players because it’s
size,” Goestenkors
said jok-
it in the showers.”
put
it
Although
the
scared
obviously
players when they first encountered the cardboard cut-out,
they knew they had
found this season’s humorous motif. But such how sures
an
excellent has
example of the
kept
far out of
program’s history—as
the minds has
of her
been
players
possible.
as
particularly
important
team is
considering Goestenkors’
young, with five freshmen and seniors in the The
bringing Mall
people
vwtujwv/
two
\JKii
great
fun with
it to the Streets of
and finding out just are
Oi ii
JANE HETHERINGTON/THE CHRONICLE
CAITLIN HOWE AND LINDSEY HARDING hold up the famous Coach G cut-out. The likeness has followed Duke everywhere during the 2003
just exactly
tv
able to
nu
v
recognize
who she
was.
care
‘We took it to the mall to
knew
her,” Krapohl
thought
she
Carolina
was;
we
was
women’s Most
Hatched.
have had
Southpoint many
just
very
lineup.
players
the cut-out,
how
pres-
of this season—the most intense
in the
This
is
Goestenkors
were
said.
see
“One
[University head
people
if people
coach]
knew
impressed.
We
person
of North
she
had pic-
Wynter
takes
care
has
grown
particularly fond of the cut-out, taking
that
away
keeps
trips.
it and
of it,” junior forward Alana
Beard said. The game,
cut-out is
taken to every
with the life-sized credentials
hotels,
the
mostly
with
ward Michele
the
picture
for
the
players
good-luck
Whitley
road
rest
charm
and
even
team’s in
the
season.
Matyasovsky.
For home and away games, the cutout is
where
flights. When
Whitley
during
mainly Wynter
having
tures made of Coach G.” Junior
“It’s
Sylvia
who
of the cardboard
placed a
next to
a
dry-erase board,
word balloon is made to say
one
of Goestenkors’ favorite phrases. “Attention to detail’ was first
said.
things
“They
one
of the
that it said,” Goestenkors had
it
saying
things
I
stays
senior
for-
See LUCK
on
page 9
fc/uv/i
MCIUI®WOMEN f5 «fW VnKn 4®P
Jy IMP w
GOOD LUCK to
Coach G and the Women’s Basketball Team
In the ®
NCAA
Women’s Final Four*!
Women's Final Four® T-shirts are now
available at
The University
HY ...
•:
...........
yh
The East
,
Campus Store, and The
Medical Center Store Departments ofDuke University Stores
.
*
03-0993
2003 Women’s Final Four
PAGE 6 �FRIDAY. APRIL 4. 2003
Duke relies Tennessee
on
By JAKE POSES
very
in
tage
On
quickness.
anchored by leading son,
Tennessee will
the other hand, Gwen Jack-
scorer
to dominate the
try
Blue Devils in the low post.
little
a
said. “If
November, Alana Beard
pable. 22
She
used her
points, pull down
out
seven
As
quickness nine
assists and
she
has
unstop-
was
to
score
rebounds, dish
grab five steals.
been
most
for
teams,
Expect Tennessee to focus its defense
around shutting “We did
Tennessee
head
said. “We did I would
down Beard.
struggle
say
a
in the
Pat
coach
very poor
defense is
our
Summitt of
better,
all,
but I
would feel it would be necessary for to not
rely
on
just
player
one
her. We might have to rotate ers
to defend
some
Butts has
starting primary
won
a
lineup
spot
and
in
Butts
is
Tasha
the Volunteer
will be
now
one
of the
Duke
that,
in
the
head coach Gail
the Law for
chance for their first title
Mosch
since
her I
on
liant
year’s
a
are
committed
her
Duke
is
said. “[Alana Beard]
ent
Summitt
to
have
“They
teams
see
said.
on
to
to slow
play
down
a
makes
cle
3-2,”
a
to
expecting
am
us
bit and
also
with
to
try
players
her
that aren’t
great job of-
to
will
the
a
Gail
the
Lawson is
and
leadership
you
can
have m*
both
been
Gail
here
Goestenkors
before.
But
even
been
the
standing
last
as
Lawson
sidelines
getting somewhat comfortable
Final
she
Four,
Tennessee
comes
in
the
against
up
a
for whom cutting
head coach
down the nets feels routine. The of
acknowledged “big three” coaches
women’s
basketball
college
Connecticut’s
are
they
built
there
[had
are
the
still
are
Summitt
and
Goestenkors,
meeting Saturday in the Georgia
Dome for the
long
been
Final
into
going
Tournament’s
and two of those
final weekend;
three,
alive
NCAA
right
to
piay
been]
did
that,”
junior
n’t
in
a
They both
forward
Tournament
Tillis said.
where
nothing,
short amount of time.
ACC
* women
because
programs
and
MVP
Iciss
“Pat Summitt—it did-
take her
very
first national
to
long
win her
championship,
get
to
her first Final Four.”
there
as
Like
Summitt’s,
women’s
a
TALE OF
Summitt
Four,
in the finals
admirable
are
squad
%
“I think they’re both
and
outspoken
Vols
Lady
28
previously
a
prominence.
that
Geno Auriemma. All three
As
unremarkable
pacing the
Tenn.,
Knoxville, taking
ago,
to national
Summitt, Goestenkors
has
years
in
THE
TAPE
has
been
mar
has been there. When the
£
began
Summitt
Lady Vols nalists. gave
in
1982,
and
her
were
As
way
semifi-
Thriller Come
to
With
Chanots to
Me
and
14th Final
4
arrival in 1'
.§
appearance
appearance
s yj
•11th
§
at Duke
C
season
•
29th
season
J
as
7*
for
the
turning
Duke
C/)
atTenn e
5
‘cß
9MMnuor 282-83 over-
all record
•820-155 all
ofFire bowed
-entity,
reco
has
been
constant.
This
the 22 that have been held to date.
appearances
stranger
with
under
three her
to the final few
any
ball
that
quite
can
like
tell you Pat
belt,
Summitt.
that-be
Four is
of the
no
Big
college basket-
own.
here,
what,
11
asked about her many coaches
G, she’s
years?” own
can
Tillis
has
only been said when
coach’s results. “How
say
that
they’ve taken
three teams to the Final Four in 11
nobody dances Summitt
-
of its
“Same with Coach
Final
songs
Dance. Nevertheless, fan
a
of
powers
nearly
weekend will be her 14th Pinal Four out of
Goestenkors,
to
side
Chicago, Summitt’s
presence
pro-
formed ,
Away
3rd Final 4
•
tourna-
women’s
ment
•
See COACHES
on
page 8
years?
lead
streaky
“We
come
once
.
she
three-point line,” watched a
a
tape
game, and
type of night.
away with the cham-
well, and I know she’s going
is
Sm-
different NCAA
is
said.
undoubtedly
See LAWSON
one
at six
helped
said,
”
Tournaments since she started
scor-
aggressive-
everything she can.”
poses.
though Duke’s women’s basketball coach
very
from the
hitting
THE CHRONICLE and
have
in
assists
31-4 record and the
can’t let her have that
to do
player
SSL
Summitt
a
Her
sec-
'
BY PAUL CROWLEY
Pat
to
be
She wants to
great year,” Duke’s
31^
point
cast
(.869),
where she hit six threes in
in three-
Lawson
ppg).
is
the
award,
top
supporting
percentage
Goestenkors
pionship
threat
her
Lady Vols
starts
over-
Goestenkors
for
Step-Up
nation’s
sec-
and
squad
currently ranked
average (14.5
“She
the finals. Lawson
tremendous
a
the
with
year’s
Final Four.
Tillis which
need to
things
career
this
finalists
Lieberman
amongst
ness
having shot 71-for-154
having
of
ing
a com-
Krapohl,
good
(133), steals (41), points (493) and
forcing
Iciss
where
player
many
the
honors
free-throw
percent.
coach
aware
ond
postseason.”
average
such
and she’s
guard.
arguably the biggest obsta-
45
“She’s
page 9
on
a
so
She made
amongst
which
differ-
a
have
season.
her touches because
team All-America
Nancy
different
a
in and not
make it to
to
head See COMPARISON
doing
Vicki range to
breaking,
physical play.
“The [Tennessee players]
are ex-
to
get
currently leads the Lady Vols
counter
ond
leadership and de-
the Blue Devils
come
said. “She is their quickest defender.” The other Blue Devils
also
point shooting,
will
Tennessee
Goestenkors
“I
level with her
parable scoring
Alana.”
Duke’s quickness
to
trying
Ely
post
leadership throughout her
for
tremendously
of
type
make
Tennessee.
leadership,” head coach Pat Summit
and the
quarter
into
back
that just to slow
key
lineup,
they like
down
Goestenkors
three
2-2-1
a
does
Shyra
in the
Lawson has firmly established her
re-
accuracy
The 5-foot-8 senior guard has
to slow Duke down with the press.
try
Kara
like last year in the the Volunteers
expects
the
well:
happen for her team.”
Lady Vols
three-point
fensively of blending
defense.” any one-to-one
Goestenkors
credit
fense. She is
tough task for
a
stepped
still
said. “She is
just solely
man-to-man,”
to
ofthe
one
level this year. I think she is at
team that isn't
a
she
need to find away to shut
Lawson’s
“We
it up
sur-
as
players
and
Jackson
limit you want to
threats. Tennessee’s game is
on
player and she’s
other
by
Kara’s
But
key part.
is
tourna-
have slowed
both
and the transition game in which she is
defend
defenses.
zone
it will
biggest
likely
appealing
so
this
other teams
“We
is
zone
ready
Gwen
down
lay
1998.
down Kara Lawson,
a
scheme, Summitt
to
a
to
When Duke heads to Atlanta Satur-
day
attempt
an
throughout
ment,
to
who is perhaps their most athletic play-
er,”
in
zone
of the reasons the
play-
defenders of Beard.
“Tasha
to
court press that
matchup,
triple-
that the team will
expressed
turn
us
[on guarding Beard].”
Since the November
has
revenge-seeking, momentum-buildteam is
while Tennessee primarily utilizes
game,”
job. First
people
A
rounded
ing Tennessee
surprised.”
man-to-man defensive
with
first
and
“She’s their go-to
The Chronicle
Beard and other Duke penetrators. One
Beard is the target of opponents’ defenses.
four
see
you
wouldn’t be
PAULA LEHMAN
By
they did
Sheana
Alana,”
on
of the
she creates. if
key
to Volunteer success
to take ad-
surprised
double-teaming
teaming
point
hope
opportunities
“I wouldn’t be
When the two teams faced each other in
of the
vantage
Duke should have the advan-
well,
to be the focal
Volunteer defense and
While Duke and Tennessee match up
ball
power
pecting Beard
The Chronicle
UT’s Kara Lawson
speed,
on
The Chronicle
,
on
page 10
going
into
2003 Women’s Final Fom
The Chronicle
Duke
vs.
Georgia Dome
FRIDAY. APRIL 4.2003 �PAGE 7
Tennessee April 6, 7:07 p.m. (ESPN)
2003
PAGE 8 �FRIDAY, APRIL 4. 2003
Women’s Final Four
The Chronicle
dimensions to her game. When they need
PREVIEW
from page 3
her to take over, that she will
Now that Duke has reached the Final
ries between the schools at 2-2 In
November
that
the
matchup,
Lady Vols struggled with
their
new mo-
tion offense but have had the rest of the
become
to
season
“We didn’t
play
very
that
synch new
Our
as
a
we
shot
were
team. We
offense that
well offensively
Summit
November],”
thought
will feel
“The
we
selection
never
final,”
up
really
in
now we
can
in
our
are
much dif-
a
is
no
pressure
a
very
underdog playing
so
top seed.
said.
and go out
on us.
long
now
the
re-
“There
in that game and
that game. We
just
pressure
time in
a
game to win is
Goestenkors
to
leading
questionable
was
lot of
“I
had implemented.
and at times poor. We
a
toughest
said.
early
were
was
team
less pressure and return to the
level of play that earned it
gional
with the changes.
[in
Four, Goestenkors hopes that her
comfortable
more
demonstrated
she has
get the job done.”
feel like
play.
There
I think for the first
time
we
because
might be the
Tennessee
is
well.”
ferent offensive team now.” JANE HETHERINGTON/THE CHRONICLE
ANN STROTHERS is
just
a
freshman,
but her
production
this year has
her team to No. 1.
propelled
In order to it had
Vols the
No. 1 Huskies collide
in its
and
of
will
Duke
bounding
the
finals
to
with
Texas
streaking
COLVIN
By JESSE
Huskies
The Chronicle
While Duke Tennessee to
the national championship
No.
game,
night for the right
Sunday
in
play
goes
“Well,
head-to-head with
Connecticut and
1
seeded Texas will face off
game
tion’s current longest
holds
the
whose
70
the
women’s
winning streak
longest cut,
NCAA
the
team that
for
record
Connecti-
ever,
wins
consecutive
70 in in
a
a
told
you
Connecticut
you
would go,
Au-
chuckling
sarcastic,
a
you know.
lot of wins at the end of
when
especially
so
is
so
gone and
and Texas
they
are
you
have four
won
year’s
17
in
seniors
championship
team
on
page 10
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Ten-
on
sively and defensively. winning
that
rebounding
great
a
tenacious
game
is
Tillis
said.
the boards offenI think the
going
to be
key
to
getting
all the rebounds.”
Forwards
Gwen Jackson and Shyra
per the
game
during
for 32.5
points
the tournament, lead
Lady Vols’ rebounding charge.
Duke
the Jackson-Ely
counters
dem with its Americans
own
Alana
Beard
tan-
duo of All-
dynamic
and
Beard, who has accounted for
34
Tillis.
percent
of Duke’s offense—B6 of 254 points—in
nessee’s man-to-man defense.
“[Beard]
can
and break down See HUSKIEWOMEN
re-
few
the tournament, will be the focus ofTen-
Sunday.”
un-
St Tradition
a
huge favorite going
a
on
we
has
are
I think the
Connecticut, which lost four last
Seven-
against
forward kiss
Ely, who have combined
into the game
does not appear to faze
f
row
row
from
17-game
in
streaks
relative,
season,
row,
were
Tournament by Villanova. As such, the Longhorns’
someone
playing the best teams,
halted several weeks ago in the Big East
beaten stretch
yeah,’”
a
if
place
a
great
teen wins is na-
winning streak—
17—versus
with
Texas,
is
“It is all
the other
on
the team with the
pits
that has ‘Oh
think
I
there
riemma said.
second-
side of the bracket in Atlanta. The
that
Duke
“They’re
coach Geno Auriemma
the
that
this year.
“Tennessee
team,”
against
win
something
teams have been able to do nessee
Lady
Connecticut-Texas
have
battle,
that
success
game with the
advance to the
winner
game,
duplicate the first
“She is
a
beat you off the dribble a
defense,” Summit said.
hustle player. She has
so
many
ALANA
BEARD takes
Lawson in Duke’s first
a
jump
meeting
shot
over
Kara
with the Vols.
2003 Women’s Final Four
The Chronicle
LUCK
Goestenkors from page 5
good-luck
the
enjoys
charms,
FRIDAY, APRIL 4, 2003 �PAGE 9
humorous
admitting
that
she
likes to joke around with her team. would have been saying to them.” Alana Beard used
a
“I
different example.
‘“This is horses-t,’” she said. “It’s
The some
has
cut-out
luck,
as
the
life-sized picture win
over
The
was
instituted
game without the
the
Georgia State
cut-out
the
actually
only
sluggish
66-48
in the first round.
last
replaces
good luck charm: Homey,
a
season’s
freeze-dried
hampster who has been dead for to
eight
for
the
brought tell,
an
years.
Homey became
team in
when
Sheana
her dead pet
annual
a
occurrence
Mosch
“Homey’s “It
out
tradition this
Mosch
greets
come
our
past.”
after
greeting being
an-
the pre-game introductions.
player with
game off
into the air and a
chest bump to
the right foot.
on
the national
likelihood
But
and
for
used to
just something Coach G does. We bring something from
Mosch’s
The team will need all the luck it
nessee
It’s
cut-out,
can
find for the Final Four. If Duke is to be-
that the team
show and tell.
players,”
adopted another
always leaps high each
get the
all
[for this year],” Krapohl
have
season:
“It’s
mood,”
face
Connecticut,
the
just
two
it will in
both
Ten-
women’s
col-
greatest dynasties.
cut-out is
the
now, ease
champions,
have to
lege basketball’s
started at
with my
starting players
nounced in
for show and
does to bond.
said.
Blue Devils
of Duke’s
seven
fixture
laugh
to
In addition to Goestenkors’
one
of her favorite phrases.”
love
she said.
pressure
something
on
just
to
the
lighten
to
be
the team.
SCHOOL OF NURSING members show their
Mosch said.
COMPARISON
Expect from page 6
against
for the
support
Lady
Blue Devils last
the Volunteers to
Duke. To
to
try
try
night
to continue this trend
stop Jackson,
Duke
may turn
to the double team.
quite
quick
as
to
strength
are
push
you,” Goestenkors
and
strong
use
their
physical
with
they
around and get
said. its
from
Stemming matchup
very
you
strength
physical
comes
in
play,
the
post
the
on
on
the inside
victories.
In
those
to
propel
outrebounded their opponents
by
an
average of 16
re-
our jenny mao/the chronicle
ICISS TILLIS will need to
score
big
The Chronicle
in the
half court
game
mitt said. “Gwen
inside
out
and gotten
Jackson and
us
has
strengthened
great looks,”
Sum-
Shyra Ely have had
lot °f touches.”
post Sunday.
sports
from the
staff would like
to
will
attempt
with
a
to slow
variety
Matyasovsky,
of
VJaM
to
ft
Bass,
which
Wynter
team
see
include
Whitley
While Matyasovsky will start, Mistie Bass will
playing
Jackson.
However,
Duke’s team
strong
the
Blue
time in
speed
start
an
when is
attempt
Bass
and
enters
the best of luck in
inhibit
the
cause
471-8474 1321 New Castle Road 8-5
game,
headaches for
them from
exploiting
this year’s Final Four.
I Stravberr
Mon-Fri
see
shut down
greatly reduced. Consequently,
by Jackson could
Devils
to
their speed advantage.
wish the women’s basketball
seen
will
we
down Tennessee’s post
players
Mistie
OttVe'°
said. “We have
Gwen is prepared.”
extensive
a a
target,” Summitt
and Iciss Tillis.
the Volunteers have
bounds per game.
“Playing
attack Michele
her team to four easy
four games,
more.
Duke
Tennessee’s and
a
lot of double-team action this year and
even
boards. Summitt has used this size and skill advan-
tage
“She will be a
The Chronicle
2003 Women’s Final Four
10 �FRIDAY, APRIL 4, 2003
that
COACHES
from page 6
really
came
from
styles “I very
less
are
nothing.”
both
players,
So
playefs.
“I can’t
like
I think she’s
fun
just
cent of the time
Summitt’s
them
with
very
as
well,
more
Summitt
Goestenkors’ elder
the
expected
was
building
“I’m
Four this
through
a
re-
tional Coach of the Year awards for his
so
far
so
quickly.
tims in 2003
women’s
KARA LAWSON
was
Diana Taurasi.
named to the second team All-America squad yesterday,
the
LAWSON
Alana Beard from page 6
player
said.
that will
“She’s
step
up
the,type
of
and take that
last second shot. She wants the ball in
Saturday’s
contest
Tennessee’s loss but
more
to Duke in
importantly
chance to grasp the “I
to
hungry
avenge
November,
for
her
last
championship.
think she’s the heart and soul of
their team,” Blue Devil
starting guard
her hands. That’s er
just
the
type of play-
coach
Taurasi,
who
of
26
points
per
several
the
who
confident
group,” Lawson
said of her
momentum-gaining Vols.
believe in
each other. We want
couple of steps further
this
“We
to go
year.”
a
Turner have
and
combined
points
and
Moore.
Jessica
12
to
average
The
today, of the
Longhorn Tennessee
the
only
two
nearly
upset
points
in
came
on
muscular post game
a
backcourt. a
Texas
aver-
game.
MVP Heather Schreiber in LSU
points
matchup as
20
victory
40 rebounds
Region
32
and
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of
she
game
problems shoot
can
the
from the in-
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and will
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low
while
in
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Naismith
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most
Among the team’s vic-
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I
basketball
college
the Texas program
freshmen-laden team
was
The Huskies
two
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percent
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Auriemma has received several Na-
a
in
is.
she
sure
these
much
While UConn is the dominant force
fourth consecutive Final
efforts to bring
showcase
thing.”
same
,r om Pa9 e 8
this season, is instead
process in its
playing
to go
asked
was
to
definite, quick,
was
how
coaching giants have
but
game
reply
revealed
and
in
and
likely
was
to prepare her team for the semifinal.
56
HUSKIEWOMEN
decisions. Goestenkors
ing
are
to basic coach-
comes
Blue Devils early-season footage of the
basketball
to
the similarities
players,
when it
differ
relationships
100 per-
lighthearted
approach
fierce
some-
the
as
college
of
clashes with the
my
apparent
if
to “have fun
women
in terms of their
with their
can
the two
though
Even
greatly
as
Sheana
another every single day.”
one
her
the sidelines.”
on
2003
whereas
focused,
reputation
stateswoman
equally
lot of fun. You
a
the sidelines
on
with
laugh
to
have
we
with
relationship
I
having
me
times
her
but
adopted
the
senior
ability
Mosch cited Duke’s
focused,
very
of
charm, and
good-luck
a
with
intense,” Goestenkors said. to
their
results,
compatible.
we’re
think
speak
see
quick
similarly
trademark.
Naismith national coach of the year
Although the two coaches have produced
Duke’s
cutout
cardboard
a
And Duke
become
has
Goestenkors’ team has recently
2003 Women’s Final Four
The Chronicle
Duke
FRIDAY, APRIL 4,2003 �PAGE II
Ilnuiersitu Durham
North Carolina
27708-0027
Executive Vice 203
ALLEN
President
TELEPHONE 019)684-6600
BUILDING
FACSIMILE 019) 684-8766
BOX 90027
April 3, 2003
DUKE WOMEN HEADING TO THE FINAL FOUR
Congratulations plans
help
to
our
Duke Women’s Basketball Team
our
Duke fans cheer the Blue Devils
The Women’s Semi-Final
Sunday night: Campus)
to
and the
Marketplace (on
With
Tuesday night:
is 8:30 p.m., and
about bonfire
1)
at
Stay
Durham fire
permit
large pm,
screen
TVs in the Great Hall (on West
and admission is free.
in the
locations.
same
Game time
a
for
Tuesday:
post-game bonfire
on
Tuesday, April
8.
As
a
reminder
10 feet away from the fire.
3)
Beverages should be in
4)
Do not sit
5)
The
6)
Do not add fuel to the fire after 12:00
7)
The
or
of
stand
on
gasoline
only permitted
to
a
reasonable
paper,
building
or
any
plastic
basketball
this tradition
height (not or
more
top.
midnight.
prohibited.
Bonfire will be
bonfire site is in from of House P.
victories with
Josh Jean-Baptiste
on
metal containers.
other fire accelerant is
for years to
than three) and do not climb
roofs.
and dealt with at the discretion
maintain
on
will show the Women’s Final
to allow for
Keep stacked benches
Celebrating
big
victory.
Game time is 7
following special provisions
2)
illegal
We have
safety,
least
use
we
march to the Final Four.
admission is free.
again,
a
their successful
will be shown
Campus).
victory Sunday night,
a
Please make note of the
We have secured
East
game
on
to
on
of the
a
City
bonfire is
come.
at
1:00
Any fire started outside of this
Fire Marshal
a
extinguished
and Duke
Duke tradition.
University
Following
a.m.
area
will be considered
Police.
these basic
safety
rules will
LET’S GO DUKE!
Tallman Trask
111
President
Executive Vice President
Duke Student Government
Duke University
help
us
2003 Women’s
PACE 12 �FRIDAY, APRIL 4, 2003
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stay
Final Four
The Chronicle
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