April 4, 2003

Page 1

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Friday, April 4, 2003

Sunny

and

High 83,

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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

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already decided.” 18,

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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

the

rose

of Engineering

Pratt

place, the

one

remained below

tied at 33rd with Rensselaer

top 30,

1. Yale

university

2. Stanford

University

school’s biomedical

engineering

4. Columbia

university

5. New York

school

graduate

uate Schools

report

the

reputa-

a

ranking

as

well

ments, which educational zine’s

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Technology

9.

10. Dartmouth

university

from

university of Chicago College

and education,

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6.

As

more

school’s the

students

more

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their

on

revenue

remainder

resources

spend

classes

Schlesinger

Hopkins University

7. Columbia 8

University

students

Stanford University

University

education.

smaller,

are

hopes

6.

University

university of California-Berkeley

Although

School

University of Michigan

Georgia institute of Technology

reviving

this not

year’s

application

increase

optimistic

over

about the future

environmental

management

and forestry master’s programs. *•

g"***

10.

fj?™

3

“We

Lafayette

want

to

educate

as

skilled environmental managers

university of Texas-Austin

can—it’s

33. duke UNIVERSITY

good

for

the

Experience

Call

the

us

University

a

Boston Summer!

at 617-353-5124 or

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many

environment,”

Eyecare, Eyewear

You’ll See

last

of the Nicholas

SUMMER TERM

&. Contact Lenses

more

school’s

methods of recruitment.

did

are

the

7. California institute of Tech.

9. Puraue umv.-west

University off Illinois

the

and

advertising

year’s, administrators

Technology

creating

recruit

to

improving

personal

numbers

Boston

Fine

ma-

avail-

marketing, perhaps by deviating from

University of Michigan 10. Yale

by

web-based

SA 00/1

5.

the

cur-

About

funding shortages.

university of Califorina-San Francisco

more

4.

to

budget

100 students.

tuition,

grants.

coming

Washington University

which

Duke does not have.

includ-

Problems arise, however, when the in-

4. DUKE university

5.

of

from

triculate,

of-

1- Harvard

2. Stanford

master’s programs

and

performance

also reviewed,

scores.

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of

sciences. It did, however,

rankings

university of California-Berekely

rank-

for the sciences, humani-

are

commit-

e-mail.

an

rently supports

7. DUKE UNIVERSITY

Pennsylvania

1. Massachusetts institute of did not

statement a

environment,”

The Nicholas School’s

one-third

ex-

programs

for the

caring

achievement

tion 6. Columbia

University of Pennsylvania

specific

en-

tions and Graduate Record Examina-

maga-

of

in

career

personal

Undergraduate

be credited to their The

a

for evidence 0f...

wrote Peters in

university of California—Berekely

.

experience.

magazine

ings this

ment to

1990. It

demic experts. The

University

university

University

university

students

graduates’ achieve-

for

passion

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10. Cornell

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2. Johns

that

to the educational

as

can

rankings

in

began

qualities

faculty bring

perience

9

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Northwestern

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first published

1987. The annual America’s Best Grad-

and

12. DUKE UNIVERSITY

"'Cigan

University of Pennsylvania

university

be reached for comment.

measures

Un'»ersit» *

of

1 Harvard

Pratt Dean Kristina Johnson could not

News

with

that showed excite-

essays

a

Cyn-

ing transcripts, letters ofrecommenda-

SA ooi i

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,

8 with the

gerontological and

Services

applicants

vironmental science.

S i. Harvard University university

The School of Nursing dropped from

geriatric

ment and

J-CUM

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sought

Peters,

compelling

<Scti OO[±

also ranked

was

family medicine.

No. 27 to No. 29. Its

thia

medicine

drug and alcohol

from page 3

Director of Enrollment

JO re-

abuse debuted at No. 10 and AIDS three to No.

Report

and women’s

Internal

7, while

NICHOLAS

departments

assistants

1, geriatrics

one

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

Terry Sanford Institute of Public

Policy

Duke University

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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

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since

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Perkins

chronicles

Library

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life, “North

Architecture”.

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Contemporary

East

Carolina

School:

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Museum

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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

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styles

dance

about

downloaded

website

Undergraduate

Gallery.

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for

a collection

of

architects in

practicing

Contact hokazak@duke.edu

Duke

Upcoming Events

staff,

faculty,

for

(SQ);

APRIL 7

Bisexual

West

Westminster

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the Center

refreshments

Transgender Bldg.

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Unitarian Social

5-7pm,

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4pm.

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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.

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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:

WHD: come

see

WEEKEND EXCURSION THE DAVE MATTHEWS

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COVER BAND

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WHEN:

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2

BAA 40-NEXT OF KIN: UNDERSTANDING THE GREAT APES Dr. Leslie

Are humans the

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Fri 10:30-11:20

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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

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biology including: Evolutionary history, morpho-

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logy,

medicinal

use

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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

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Guise” at C-flix

by logging in

to

their potential

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non-

for understanding human behavior and

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BODIES OF EVIDENCE:

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INTRODUCTION TO FORENSIC A former all-star football field of gender violence the

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Dr. Steven

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hundreds of college and high school campuses and

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investigation, identifying

time since death, and serving

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you

to the

following

rt. The role of the forensic

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Center, Women’s Center, SHARP Healthy Devil

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cil. Athletic Department, Counseling & Psychological Services. Women's Studies Department. Sociology

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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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“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,

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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

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Brooks said.

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the

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tournament

course

will

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Served

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with

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and

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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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recently, in the model of “local

the corporate headquarters” that highlights the critical role of

governments

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China’s economic transformation.

He is the author and/or

of Reform in Rural North China (1998),

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Comics

The Chronicle

Overholser/

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

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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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THING.

“In Praise

of

writer

Folly”

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27 Parakeet cells

shared

28

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IMPRESSIVE.'

QED

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Oscar de la

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perfection and

Fonz

/ / WHATms

Boys hit

default button

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USUAL.

stop

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Visionary

note

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of

Bangkok

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hookup

46 Alaskan tongue

DISCOVERED.

48

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PA

Scottdale,

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42 Perry's penner

WORKER WHOSE

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in

Sierra Nevada

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30 Provoke

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32 All 34

DOWN

one's

56

43 Charity

piece

Sports

assets

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Battery

ruler in

Evening

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59

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Jazz

38 Peacock's pride

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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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Coach Parseghian

The Chronicle Why

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It could Or

get

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anthony

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PAGE

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

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Experience

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2003 Women’s Final Four

PAGE 2 �FRIDAY, APRIL 4. 2003

Table &]lcorns.

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between Final Four games:

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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

side

of

she

game

problems shoot

can

the

from the in-

down

bang

and will

with

low

while

in

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per

will game

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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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