April 7, 2003

Page 1

Monday, April 7, 2003

The Chronicle

Rain 47

High 63, Low

www.chronicle.duke.edu Vol.

98,

No.

Feeling Blue Jays The men’s lacrosse team lost to Johns

Hopkins

Saturday dimming NCAA Tournament

130

Sportswrap

See

19-6

their

hopes. page 3

THE INDEPENDENT DAILY AT DUKE UNIVERSITY

Tennessee velunteers, Duke declines By

NICK CHRISTIE The Chronicle

Tennessee

ATLANTA

66

One year

removed Duke

56

Oklahoma, the Duke

the

nence. After

an

NCAA semifinal loss to

team worked all rung in

from

women’s basketball the next

climb year to

ladder of

national

to

struggling

promi-

get through the

first four rounds of the 2003 NCAA Tour-

nament, the Blue Devils hoped er

to discov-

their best basketball in Atlanta. The

same

as

ever,

feeling returned

sickening

Duke bench

to the

Tennessee

Sunday

pulled

how-

night,

late in a

away

contest to win the semifinal

hard-fought

the Blue Devils’

matchup 66-56, ending

national title aspirations. “It’s called survive and

Volunteer

head

“That’s what

against played

well

very

Power

bounds,

Summit.

team that

I

thought

together.”

forward

Tennessee

Pat

able to do tonight

we were

Duke

a

said

advance,”

coach

Gwen

with 25

Jackson

led

15

and

points

her

propelled

side

Duke’s

victory.

to

re-

that

dominating performance

a

Alana Beard countered with 29 points of her

ing

including

own,

10

dur-

straight

late in the

three-minute stretch

a

second half. The

First-Team

tion received little mates fort

and her

though, not

was

All-America

enough

selec-

from her team-

help

ef-

single-handed

to

the

help

Blue ROBERT TAI/THE CHI

See TENNESSEE in

Sportswrap

page 4

SHEANA MOSCH holds back tears at

a

press conference

following Sunday’s

loss to

The Chronicle

Capitalizing consent to

hosting

major

a

Union has

from the University

guarantee

an

Department’s

for

a

�. a

mid-September

Campus

president

said the

coming president Jonathan Bigelow ming body

has

been

working

bringing

on

is

for

early

as

as

under

to land

expect

big

to

the Union’s

is

no

band

that

everyone

like, but because of the

really great time, a

name once

venue,

matter who it

no

on

By

concert

a

budgeting

The

ing is

campus

it should be

for the concert and

begin

KEVIN LEES

on

University

may be

getting

even

closer to jump-

the monorail.

Executive Vice President Tallman Trask

development partner

days—a day

end in

September, the

Friday

or

for the

said the

architect and

an

planned,

bigger

Trask listed five finalists for

day

more

a

than-$2OO

available.

likely

not fall

As

largest

venue

and

indoor

ities •

we

can

venue on

get

a

er

inside

on

Administrators and created

greek

decide judicial

greek

judicial cases

students

board,

POSTER FROM

1978 advertises

Cameron Indoor Stadium,

page 9

are

which

praising allows

the

Dallas-based

com-

outsourced their real estate and facil-

management

in 1997

Jones, Lang and LaSalle,

that has

SPECIAL TO THE CHRONICLE

people A

See CAMERON

a

done work at

a

worldwide

the Georgia

develop-

Institute of

Technology

campus.

lot of

Trammell Crow Company,

of Pennsylvania

on a

triple the 1,200 capacity of Page

next

Central Campus de-

mercial real estate developer, to which the University

than 4,000 ticket-

more

a

velopment partner:

Panuccio said.

Cameron features space for

Auditorium, the

a

almost every week-

on

concert will

Saturday night,

holders—more than

load-in,

stadium will be

home football games

are

for

se-

day for load-out—during which

a

famed basketball

a

may

million overhaul of Central Campus.

ries of three consecutive

“It’s

firm

private

administration is close to choosing

a

is,” said Panuccio,

The Athletics Department has allotted several

there

a

this summer,

The Chronicle

senior.

the

place

program-

ends and negotiations with groups begin.

“There

going

a

overhaul of Central

2004, administration officials said.

back to Cameron since the last show there in 1996 and

process

an

to take

expected

and construction

Panuccio and in-

Jesse

Major planning

to be

yet

determined.

Outgoing

narrows

recent

secured

exact date and band have

Union

career,

concert in Cameron Indoor

Stadium, the Duke University

show, although

game

developer

ALEX GARINGER

the Athletics

on

of her Duke

Search for Central

Union to host concert in Cameron By

the last

Tennessee,

newly

greeks

involving their groups. See page 3

to

a

Grateful

a once-common

new

industry,

will

speak

book. See page 4

on

a

an

expose

in-

mostly retail development

in See CENTRAL

on

development and

Charlotte-based

occurrence.

The author of Fast Food Nation, food

Dead concert

Faison,

vestment firm that has done

the fast-

campus next week about his

Provost Peter

ing

Lange

on

will wait until the

of the Academic Council

ing faculty diversity.

page 6

to

release

See page 5

April a

or

report

May meeton

improv-


PAGE

2

�MONDAY,

World & Nation

7, 2003

APRIL

NEWS BRIEFS

Baghdad besieged by ground

than

people

dozen

a

week,

were

also said

killed in attacks

in northeastern

villages

preliminary

a

tigators

U.N.

investigation

found

they

more

on

more

New

U.S. to lead

Iraqi government for 6 months take

probably

months to cede power in postwar civilian

authority

more

Iraq

to

than six

an

Iraqi-led

that would pave the way for

sentative government, U. S. officials said

BAGHDAD,

The number of year

in

people

U.S.

a

repre-

to

two million for the first

topped

get-tough sentencing policies terms for Justice

drug

the

and

jails

last

time, driven by

that mandate

sein’s

the

government,

found itself

Iraqi

long

said.

From new

shift

the

heart of

the

from

a

from the air to will

depend

the

fought

war

SARS kept hidden by Chinese government

Severe Acute China’s

by

was

the Chinese government until

began reporting

present in

for months but

Guangdong province

revealed when it

Respiratory Syndrome

was

The

increasingly

with the U.S.

Baghdad,

an

Army’s

died

3rd

Sunday.

capital,

February,

Division outside an

the

name

has

U.S.

compiled

of

New

compass

in

city

this

of

In its

Iraq, North a

Iraqis,

numerous

at 1,383.51

relative

MARKETS NASDAQ

Up

j

|

strongest

Korea said

its

36.77

at 8,277.15

since

security guarantees

Friedrich

von

yet

The

reaction

yet

to the

war

in

Sunday that only by arming itself

to

up

even

now

since the

daily

repeated with

news

ago:

the information mincherubic air

a

conferences,

have fallen to the

Iraqi trap by advancing

But

for

those

listening

for

for the minor notes that rise the

people,

major

theme,

to

ones

pound

shifts,

even as

out the familiar

there have been hints of

a wa-

vering certainty.

demon-

See IRAQ

on

page 12

than two weeks of

more

the start of the

Iraq

war,

flatly de-

that it has

repeatedly

Schiller

demanded of

“The

Iraqi

war

help

avert

a war

not

help

avert

a

a

disarming through

but rather sparks it,”

suggests

that

nonaggression treaty with the U.S. war.”

itself

statement, issued by the Foreign Ministry,

even

comes

this weekend, saying that the country would not be affected by any UN. resolutions about its weapons

development

programs.

Security

Council meets

Wednesday

to discuss

North Korea’s recent unilateral withdrawal from the Nu-

clear Nonproliferation

gion said

that the

Korea could

mean

Treaty, and

some

analysts

flurry of proclamations

tee

against One

a

in the re-

from North

that the country had decided to press

ahead with development of atomic weapons

shows that to allow

does not

arms

the heels of another defiant North Korean declaration

The UN. after

the United States in recent months.

the signing of

thy youth.” -

anx-

gates of the city.

the

of loyalists

if not

security.

quiet

inspection

true to the dreams of

core

Service

the North Korean statement said. “This

“Keep

leader’s

million

HOWARD FRENCH York Times News

clared that North Korea had abandonedeven the kinds of

< >

ister has at

preemptively

“tremendous military deterrent” could the country

guarantee

from wire reports.

Down 13.07

its

of almost everybody 4.5

official line,

The Americans,

was

on

has

government

into the

magnetic point

a

wait

they

capture of the airport three days

Airport.

on

with

DOW

The

held to its

by the Americans, the airport

become

to

iously for the end.

to be

Friday,

that

hauntingly

per

of

to be

what, until

troops

majority, who have begun

a

Saddam or the increasingly venturous

mostly stilled

The statement, coming

FINANCIAL

scream

appeared

of

area

U.S.

by

personal

North Korea

TOKYO ap-

parent pulmonary embolism. News briefs

was

By

39 and died of

was

capital

shake off decades of fear and to whis-

machine-gun

Now stripped of the Iraqi

a

primarily

on

strably

rocket

fighting appeared

the city, in the

capture

to

devastation

earthshaking

bombs and missiles

correspondent traveling

Infantry

He

U.S. reaches

as

not

cases.

NBC News

what

whether the hard

NBC journalist dies naturally at 39

David Bloom,

flying

dis-

more

and

concentrated away to the southwest of

where the outcome

one

of

Saddam International

of battle signaled

cacophony

staccato

Most of the

capital

war

by the

the

by

artillery

low-level ground support missions.

to be the

of America’s

phase

of

sounds

U.S. jets

Hus-

into

deep

Sunday

fire,

ground troops. •

ground strategy

and rifle bursts, and by the

of

many

of Saddam

centers

power

being

of relentless

topple the Iraqi leader.

offenders and other criminals, the

Department

tant

After

Iraq

two weeks

overtaken

Sunday,

Service

ground battle that promises

Sunday.

jails

prisons

News

bombing that has destroyed

decisive

More than 2 million in U.S.

York Times

mass

subjected

The United States will

switches to

war

BURNS

By JOHN

found. Inves-

than 20

air-dominated

Formerly

last

Congo

graves. It is unclear who carried out the attacks.

war

Major casualties discovered in Kenya

At least 966

The Chronicle

as

a

guaran-

feared attack from the United States.

longtime American analyst

the statements reflected

a

of

North Korea said

fundamental shift in policy by

would See NORTH KOREA

on

page 7


The Chronicle

APRIL

MONDAY,

New

7,2003

PAGE 3

greek board

judicial wins

praise

� Students and administrators students

having greek

their

involving

cases

increases

has heard of

front

Chronicle

greek judicial board

plan, but

a

total of four

a

all

the

is

no

longer

functioning body that

a

newly-trained

senting

groups

with rules.

MEGAN CARROLL The

just

own

compliance

By

The

say

adjudicate

main

cases

greek

far in

so

justices

repre-

governing

bodies at the University. The board to

ary

chapters, under

graduate later,

concerning

cases

which

the

established in Janu-

was

hear

have

of

jurisdiction

the

been

Under-

Judicial Board. Four months

administrators, and

representatives leaders

greek

previously

are

observing

national

greek

campus

greek

the board’s pro-

cedures and offering nothing but positive remarks. “It’s ior

Leskosky, Council

ternity

said

smoothly,”

gone very

Lou

board

judicial

sen-

Interfra-

outgoing

chair,

who said the board benefited from fol-

Dean

UJB

the

lowing

model.

of Students

Kaciel

Wallace

mensely

for

has

helped

the

through

“[Associate

Judicial Affairs

Judicial Board. A lot of their

procedures process

came

already

in

set

it

has

of

deliberations

hearing

streamline

“They’re

on

every

learning

holding people

accountable,”

groups

a

up.”

heard.

intricacies

new

with

the board

Wallace praised case

im-

us

Undergraduate

she

have lasted

said.

and

“Their

than

longer

what I would consider normal because

they’re having such thought-provoking discussions.”

See GREEK BOARD

J&Plkins

Graduate &

on page

9

Drive For

/MITSUBISHI

FREE! No

H

M f

M

fn f

If

twit t

payments ‘til

payments.

Plus

2004. now

No paying interest.

get

$5OO cash tor

a

No

making

down

limited time.

7

/M,

<

See dealer for details.

EDUCATION EDGE PROGRAM New Mitsubishi for ANY

Pre-approval

Starting

$17,400

GALANT

$22,000

at:

$13,800

MONTERO

LANCER

$18,400

ECLIPSE

SPORT www.mitsubishioutletstore.com y.y

(919)

688

(800) 222

-

5511

Exit 12 off Durham

-

9742

across

M

Freeway at Mangum St,

from the Durham

Bulls Athletic Park

wake

Hl

motor|

up

ahddFhre


pAGE 4 � MONDAY,

The Chronicle

2003

APRIL 7,

CRIME BRIEFS

UNIVERSITY BRIEFS

From

From staff reports

Fast Food Nation

author to Duke

Eric

nalist Food

hosting

16

for

Nation,

in

the

investigative

discussion

a

Love

Auditorium

VFI

plate

and 2

stolen

was

the

the social and

from the

of the

rear

United States

fueling

sion is

sponsored by

that she

fied,

ucation class at

Glaspie,

the N.C. Correctional

Women’s Institute.

and

with

starter

million in separate

ceived $1 the

Center for

new

and

Sciences tumor

for

imaging

gifts for

from

in

that

communications.

focuses

on

Dean Kristina

Pratt

from

Hill,

the Duke football

on

a

June

At 10:58 p.m.

now

the

a serv-

parking lot Matthew

ing.

wireless

senior, for

Johnson said

the

of

tumor

imaging.

on

They

sustained $6OO in damage. The

$500,000. is

In

directing $166,667

its

man

will be

a

A

inaugural J.

Chandran

was

given April

Clarence Lecture

Beverley

ry.

a

alcohol

was

Provenzale, professor

of

by

He

stop

was

near

on

could not be

A

description man

a

St.,

was

Addoms

was

$2O

credit

given

cards,

Service An

Dormitory.

43,

A

someone

reached for comment.

it

Upon arrival

$3,500.

a

fire

a

7:12

at

was

discov-

discharged

had

a

fire

the second floor.

on

fire

March 30,

someone

charged

a

$55

extinguisher

to service

between

that

reported

floor hallway of House FFI. an

on

dis-

the third

extinguisher.

East

done

playing,

3 and

a

Duke

noon

found

An

a

$lOO

in

damage

door,

in

and

to the lock.

employee reported that between

and 1

p.m.

April 3,

someone

$2O cash from her

purse.

parked

Crime

the

at

and stole

briefs

University

at

compiled from Duke

are

Police

Department

Anyone with knowledge

a

sponsible for University

a se-

Window broken

these

can

or

reports. those

re-

other crimes at the

or

Lt.

contact

at 684-4713

mer

about

Davis

Trim-

Durham CrimeSto-

ppers at 683-1200.

employee reported that between

The Vagina

rolofoe ] SYMPHONY OR.CHESTR./V

Harry Davidson, Music Director

Monologues

presents

April 10,

All About Brahms: The Best of

Wagnerites

featuring Student Concerto

April 13, Duke

Competition

2003 at 8 PM

2003 at

1:30 PM Auditorium

University's Page

STANFORD

Winner Based

Psyche Loui, violin

Obie

on

interviews

with

hundreds

of women, Eve

Ensler’s

Award-winning play brazenly explores questions

pondered

but seldom asked.

Featuring

SUMMER

often

SESSION

2003

Duke students and

PROGRAM staff,

Wagner: Prelude to

Vieuxtemps: Brahms:

Act 111

of Die

Meistersinger

these benefit

performances

are

part

of

V-Day,

a

global EIGHT-WEEK

movement to

stop

violence

against

women

and

Symphony

No.

2

in

D

Major

*

Violence

against

Take General

a

women

stand

is

happeningeverywhere.

against

Admission:

$l2;

Enjoy

*Fullfill

Students

w/ID: $7

and

West Coast

a

earn

in

For

in the

ADMISSION FREE

at the

University

Box Office

Bryan Center, 919-684-4444,

http://tickets.duke.edu.

For

Engage in Stanford

intensive

faculty

more

�Three-week

more

Fiction

than

study with

and visiting scholars

24

SUMMER

590,

STANFORD,

CA

Six-week International Security with CISAC experts

THROUGH

AUGUST

contact

SESSION

ROOM

103

94305-3005

PHONE

650.723.3109

EMAIL;

summersession@stanford.edu

or

information visit

WEB:

http://wc.studentaffairs.duke.edu/vday.html

Summer Writers’

Workshop

in

and Poetry

*

200

information,

more

STANFORD BUILDING

Tickets available

*

40 departments

JUNE

wmi THE VKHEHCi STWS

spring!

the

Area

Gen. Ed. requirement

VDAY

Baldwin Auditorium

summer in

Stanford credit

Choose from courses

8:00 p.m.

INSTITUTES

such violence!

9

Last chance to hear the DSO this

a

San Francisco Bay

Wednesday, April

SHORT-TERM

QUARTER

girls.

Violin Concerto No. 5 in A Minor

7

entered

Hospital

nurses’ lounge at 5300 Duke

North and stole

$250 service vehicle parking permit.

An

unsecured

an

the

April 5,

someone

Management Department,

1/2 Buchanan Blvd.,

to

to

responded

Cash filched

brown

that between

April 4,

vehicle

officer

$3O wallet,

$lOO

and

reference

no-

bag,

soccer

Duke

West-Edens Link basement

Campus, and

red Nike

keys

A

soccer

he

damaged

Door

that between 8

employee reported

April

1114

could not be

He

student

March 29 and

stole

permit nabbed

Facilities

Mangum

placed under

of pharmacology and

biology.

a war-

breaking and

830

of

cured bond of

to

Dormitory

someone

smoke detector

between

a.m.

larceny. Jeffrey

and felonious

Ruffin,

5.

ered that

Birkenstock sandals had been stolen.

standing

Department had

arrested and

responded

in the Duke Clinic.

on

ticed that his

entered

and

field

that, when he

Durham Police

Marshall

and

missing.

was

Pegram

April

p.m.

someone

April 2, he was playing

soccer

rant for him for felonious

Dr. James

that

$l5O Sprint cellular phone,

a

the bench at the bus

Timothy Haystead, associate professor cancer

Duke Univer-

a

the

A.

entering

checkbook, cred-

a

visor from the der-

student reported

noon

and

cash,

police

in

It costs

Further investigation revealed that the

radiology,

alarm

stairwell of Aycock Dormito-

Gilbert

in

Nokia cellular phone

Belongings stolen

man

April 5,

lying

$5O a

Duke

had

the three units.

reported

$4OO Handspring

and 9 p.m.

a

returned,

extinguishers discharged

Fire

the roof

damaged

by

she

the

2003,

a

matology workroom

for

cited

Department officer located

rear

student

through

Distinguished 2

jumped

on

March 13 and March 14,

22-year-old

a

freshman,

matched

who

at the

the Annual Fund. The

or

When

Clinic.

black shoulder bag, containing

driver’s license

3 that be-

$4OO visor taken

vehicle in

the Bivins Build-

earlier in reference to

total to

to Pratt

her $4O

Building

to have been caused

appeared

Alcohol Law

an

Southard,

a.m.

Police

sity

the foundation

addition,

Sciences

a

extinguisher, which had then activated

April 3,

near

Duke

the

date. He

on

on

purse

bench between the front entry doors to

underage. Stavros Pavlides,

18-year-old

At 5:23

matched by the Nicholas Faculty Lead-

ership Initiative, bringing

units located

Biological

es-

3:30

reported that around 3, she left her

April

p.m.

it cards,

They

Police arrest wanted

J. Chan-

gift

court

court date.

on

advances in brain

The latter

7

employee reported April

conditioning

Grace’s was

pilfered

A visitor

$6OO and

at

of the

underage possession. They

dran Distinguished Lecture Series and research focused

Purse

resulted

tween October 2002 and March air

reached for comment.

will endow

Beverley A. and Clarence

subject

conditioning damaged

An

door to

glass

rear

$lOO.

timated at

less than

Foundation will support CIEMAS and

$333,333

placed

May

a

that the Trent

not pay for his

calls.

cited for purchasing

was

someone

an

the Chandran Family

its programs and

given

was

Air

charged

was

phone

12

call at

a a

could not be reached for comment.

former

a

team, also

Blvd.,

to

charged

was

Enforcement officer stopped

died earlier this month of cancer.

$500,000

he

408

Hall

around 7

that

reported

April 3, she noticed

Cafe had been broken. Damage

Jr., 22, of 1109 Liberty

was

student

A

ALE cites 2 students

Chandran

Beverley

David

His bond

who stood

Chandran is former chief operating

company

larceny.

could not be reached for comment.

dran and his late wife Beverley.

ices

“8.J.”

Lowell

given

were

Chan-

officer of Nortel Networks and is

Grace’s door broken

a

St., being charged with trespassing and

brain

Clarence

chair of the board of InfoClarus,

e-

identi-

of

senior,

Blvd,,

with making harassing

Applied

and

research

were

Aaron

21-year-old

in Steven Wallace

concerned

was

5,

408 South Buchanan

re-

Interdisciplinary

Medicine

Engineering,

harassing

April 2,

responded

meal. Subsequent investigation

again

cyberstalking. Twenty-four-year-old

William

$1 million

April

on

a

Buchanan

South

The Pratt School of Engineering

received

for her safety. The suspects

medical students who teach health ed-

Pratt receives

3 and

reported April

mails and phone calls and

group of Duke

a

5

April

The discus-

population.

of the inmate

A student

p.m.

someone

broke out the $lBO driver’s side window.

en-

Drive

in reference to

Trinity Cafe who did

at

Broad St.,

the second

charged with larceny

A Duke officer

charged with harassment

Two

rapid growth

the

someone

on

p.m.

Man

Engi-

6:26

climate of the

political

room

at 705

parked

vehicle

April 3, while her

and 5 p.m.

was

$3,000 Apple/G4 laptop computer.

number-

neering Building.

book, Schlosser explores

new

April 4,

p.m.

unsecured

an

floor of the Murray Building and stole

Levine Science Research Center. In his

and 5:30

tered

license

N.C.

vin

#918614,

3

1,

1996 red

$B,OOO

his

April

p.m.

motorcycle,

2

that between

employee reported

JH2RC36IXTM6OOIB7. The motorcycle

April

of

stole

someone

the

on

at 7:30 p.m.

prisons

March 24

a.m.

Honda

jour-

of Fast

author

Schlosser,

state of U.S.

8

Social

for

Medical Students

is

Justice

speak

An

that between

employee reported

An

Laptop stolen

stolen

$B,OOO motorcycle

staff reports

summersession.stanford.edu

I 6,

2003

institute


The Chronicle

MONDAY,

to release

Lange

later this

diversity Provost to

for

at

looking

released

faculty

April

at

said

Lange

expected report

an

on

last week

the next step

May’s

November that

number of black

fields

goal

diverse, like

regarding diversi-

for

increasing

the

in schools

and

faculty

that traditionally have been less the Nicholas School of the

Fuqua

of

Hart,

hav-

doubled the

number

That

44 to

eral

olina at

creasing

ically

comprise

at in-

attempts

diversity.

currently

Although

Peter Lange

al-

less successful

though

Members

were

Black

3.7

report

of the

task

the

force

BFSFs

15.

Lange March

will focus

of the

ready

at

on

those

demic

the

three aims: recruit-

members

to

enter

less

popular

specifmem-

this

are women

Initiative, position women

a

at

was

for the

by

part

the

and

the

at

challenges

Duke, including students,

ulty and employees.

disciplines.

by of

a

JANE HETHERINGTON/THE CHRONICLE

Women’s

wide-sweeping look

of

pro-

report, presented

commissioned

a

re-

and that the

remained stagnant

decade. The

report

aca-

that

spring

President Nan Keohane,

al-

in the fudebated

only 30 percent of tenured

number has

past

women

Academic Council

fessors at Duke

They said the

faculty

will focus

report

minorities and

ported

charged

successor

Duke, and encouraging minori-

ty students

minori-

black faculty, task force

ture—the

ing superior minority faculty members,

retaining

on

other

faculty

percent

complete their recommenda-

set to

tions to

large part, he

of the climate for

statement earlier

developing

the Uni-

of North Car-

bers hoped the University would look at

overall faculty.

with

to leave

ties at Duke.

sev-

similar,

chose

Greensboro—in

said, because

years

followed

ago,

religion,

versity for the University

effort,

10

begun

2001, William

newly tenured associate profes-

a

in

sor

of black

faculty from 88.

the

It will also address the ongoing ques-

Strategic

tion of climate at Duke. In

ing

or

School of Business.

Initiative—ahead

schedule,

being

Environment and Earth Sciences

Black

Faculty

and is

former dean of

The next step will most likely include

the University had reached its previous

ty—the

on

the Fuqua School of Business.

Academic

recommendations

reported last

faculty

the for

A new CROP of volunteers Local students

fac-

Sunday’s

hundreds of other

join

CROP

members from around Duke and Durham for

community

which seeks to raise money to

Walk,

help fight hunger.

Theater 2003 New Works in Process

The Duke

Department

community written

evening

by

to

see

and

of Theater Studies invites the campus

participate

in the

Duke students. Five short

development

plays

of the New Works Festival. Titles,

will be

of

new

performed

plays

and directors

playwrights,

April 7. Bryan Center, Von Live interactive

Michael

by Jay

perspective

in

each

are:

directed

Canon

O’Berski of the Theater Studies

faculty

2003

Hall

webcast at:

Free and open to the

by Caroline Kessler *O3,

B and

4-6 p.m. EOT C,

Duke

Let Down

Introduction:

directed by

past

Carla Brackman ‘O3

violence?

Cathy

N. Davidson

redress)

Scholars

assess

legal, philosophical, and nomic issues

Dr. John Hope Franklin

James B. Duke Professor Emeritus, Duke University

eco-

Moderator;

William

Parity, Jr.

Director, institute of African-American Research

surrounding

University of North Carolina

Table Work

directed

reparations to

by Adam Sampler! 'O3,

descendants

at

African-American

by Maura Farver 'O5

slaves

in the

Chungmoo Choi,

East Asian

University of California

Roman

at

Languages &

People by

white

directed by

West of the Theater Studies

Jeffery

Egypt

and

India,

Bagley *O3, interactions with

Between

directed

by Faran Krentcil *O3,

and

attempts at

Grant Parker, Classical Studies, Duke Orin Stam, Cultural

South African

Concluding

"truth and reconcili-

ation." Discussion to follow.

Saturday, April 12

Sunday, April

13

at 8 p.m.;

John Hope

at 2 p.m.

Branson Theater, East

Tickets $8 general admission, $6

discuss reparations

University.

Campus

at 684-4444

or

tickets.duke.edu.

senior citizens.

Tickets available

Contact University at

University

Remarks: Richenel Ansano

Parking for

the

April

9th event will

cost ofparking in this deck will be

April

9,2003,12:00-2:00 p.m., Room 240,

Franklin Center, 2204 Erwin Rd, Durham, NC. with

Free and

Parkingfor the April 7th event willbeavailable

students and

University

Anthropology, Duke

University

FOLLOW-UP VIDEOCONFERENCE,

-

North

Associate Director, Franklin Humanities Institute, Duke

by Paige Schweitzer ‘O4

Thursday, April 10

University of

Chapel Hill

University

to Koreans,

Space

at

Wahneema Lubiano, Literature Program, Duke

Native

faculty Americans, Japanese reparations

The

Carolina

Literature,

Irvine

Adrienne Davis, School of Law, encounters with

Sarah

Chapel Hill

of Panelists:

context of Ancient

Last

Campus

Franklin Humanities Institute, Duke University

Opening Remarks:

by Chris Venit *O4,

West

public

Director, (or failed to

University's

http://www.duke.edu/web/institute/reparations

How have different societies

redressed

Box Office

beavailable

a

open

in the Bryan in

handed out at

FHI Seminar Fellows

panel of scholars from Spelman College and Harvard to

the public.

(enter

visitors lot

off Science Drive,

the Duke Medical Center parking deck at the

comer

of Erwin Hoad and Fulton Street. Vouchers

to offset the

the event.

the door one FOR MORE INFORMATION ON EITHER EVENT:

hour

before

PAGE 5

Faculty Diversity fall

chaired by Rex Adams,

will be

diversity

or

on

established last

was

Council meeting.

Lange

spring

The Task Force

Provost Peter

7,2003

present faculty with post-BFSI plan

From staff reports

that

report

APRIL

curtain.

Call 919-668-1901

The Franklin Humanities Institute

Theater 2003:

New Works in

and Catherine

D. Wood

Process is

Family

supported by

Endowment

Fund.

The Robert

R.

Wood, jr.,

or

visit www.duke.edu/web/institute.

gratefully acknowledges the ongoing support ofthe Andrew W. Melton Foundation and

the Offices of the Vice Provost of Interdisciplinary Studies and the Dean of Arts and Sciences,

Duke University.


PAGE

6

The Chronicle

MONDAY,^APRIL 7,2003

the

thought

CENTRAL

from page 1

with

said

Trask

Hines,

a

New York-based office de-

firm

velopment

Cousins

Properties,

based general purpose

Atlanta-

an

cussion

with

firm

one

in

is in dis-

particular.

The eventual partner will help

cially

the

support and

overhaul

will

Central

help

Campus its

supervise

construction.

Trask countless

offers

has

the

in

received from

years

a

said

the

“I

as

“We’re

we

that

over

The first of

the

the

on

Central.

planning

in

beds

to

al-

Central,

not know what form

that

would be

they

and

more

mix of

a

dorm-like

resi-

dences with private bathrooms but not

Participants

in Mezcla dance in

acts influenced

by

bly Page

Auditorium

Friday night.

The

performance

combined 10

different cultures from around the world.

just

should and

some

space.

proposed one

dozen

things

include

also

a

bookstore recreation

Trask

said

would like

the

nent to be

part

phase of some

con-

dining

gathering

or

place,

cafe, and possi-

facilities that

or

office

although

transportation of the

Trask,

executive vice

first

developers

ministrators all

complete

he

compo-

phase,

he

campus

transit

system

for

planning

are

Central

of which would involve

of almost

gutting

every

rent structure in the 275-acre

complete and $2OO

Trustees the

plan

with

a

at its

more

Board

of

approval

to

a new

“University Vil-

up in the area,

complete

“Main Street” that includes for

and

800

least

at

and staff housing, and

undergraduate 200

school

professional

ater

to cost

The

February meeting.

hope

apartments dents

expected

preliminary

gave

will rise

lage”

is

million.

an

a

graduate

students, hotel,

an

Duke Gardens.

Journalism

presents

Courses. Instructors.

Great Price!

TERM

1:

TERM 2:

"The Media and the War

on

May June

15

30

-

-

June 26

August 9

Terrorism"

Register now! Monday April 7, Terry

2003

Sanford Institute of Public

Policy

and

amphithe-

DeWitt Wallace Center for

Great

stu-

expansion of the Sarah

DUKE

Great

new

faculty

POLICY

Communications and

The

area.

overall project could take up to 20 years

SANFORD INSTITUTE PUBLIC

a

cur-

TERRY

OF

you

of the many innovations ad-

Officials

He added that the first

it up

The is

Campus,

kitchens.

Mixing

a

Campus

than

a

half

are

for sep-

to

possible

as

Drive

an

PRESIDENT, ON POTENTIAL CENTRAL

those beds would take. He said it could

such

route

for

Tallman

be

facilities

East-West

effective than Campus

expected

will include the ad-

phase

1,000

apartments

ROBERT TAI/THE CHRONICLE

for it,”

me

pre-qualify”

not

and get in the

summer

though Trask did

struction

well.

could look at.”

entire

an

he

developers

begin

can

has

ground by 2004,” Trask said.

dition

as

that

technologies

before with

parts of new elements

earnest

idea—but

other

or

making fun of

looking

more

there

and

to

reshaping

added

He

hope

a

viable an

as

“We

said.

University

subdeals with other arate

Trask

them,”

large

as

scope

campus.

a

through

Cen-

developing

development partner

a

the

proposed

light rail

“Everyone’s

pre-qualify.”

Trask had

building

to West

“We invited them. We tend

invited

tend to

of

by

he joked about considering the monorail.

firms first. “We

idea

get

longer.

that he went to top

but

Campus,

he

over

interested

groups tral

that

while

earlier this spring when

was

might be effective

that’s

said

it

as

first

buses,

finan-

a

Central Campus is still

option he

developer

Trask said the University

the

monorail from East new

could

University

buses for

using

www.learnmore.duke.edu/

Lecture Hall 04

SummerSession

8:00pm

684-2621

P.


Chronicli

SERVICE

competition. from page 3

France,

has

International,

helped

worked

paint

to

an

various

on

Echstenkamper

French

anti-drug mural,

community

community

with

ties

other

funds to

or

and

ganizations,

the

Humane

she

or-

in activi-

Society,

didn’t have

She

says

France,

high

was

teams of its

sports

also

was

small

whose

Echstenkamper, school

the French Con-

on

to France

French academics state

a

scholarship

“It’s

to go

blurts

Echstenkamper

injured

on

States

to

bilateral

accept

quake that registers

15

It

essay.” On

that

“I fell down was

a

alyst said. “There is

not

talks.

known in North Korea

a

“This

the United

is

an

scale,”

single policy that

over

10

the past

or

we

The other

began

a

North Korea ternational

when the United

be

The

war

The

in

stirred fears in the North Ko-

Iraq

has

action,

all

To

judge by the war

has

in North Korea.

recent

Thursday,

the party newspaper, that

statements,

strengthened an

even

more

in the

Korea

name

of

said, “the

gun

barrel

Roh’s

pool its energies “into strengthenfrom the principle

military

military

far less

over

the

of

placed

over

The

An

once

since

Korea in

editorial

the

North Korean

from

Rodong

beginning of

an

with

insistence

on

a

and

Washington

less

Roh’s

in

itself, over

to

an

came as

a

was

huge protest

the deaths of two

accident

last

military strength.

campaign, which

Sinmun,

involving

an

zone

movement was

American armored

the pages

on

of

on

of

the

seem

to have ir-

reported Saturday

14,000 American troops

dividing North and

the

decided, but

is

here

South Korea

U.S.

North Korea at

in

officials,

an

a

reacting

an

say that the

a

time of

meanwhile,

Policy

Section

11968

on

Korean

Saturday

risks

emboldening South Kore-

removing Americans

increase the likelihood of

Certificate

Program

Offerings System

Time TuTh 3:50-5:05

156/PPS 156: Health Economics Finkelstein

Tu 6:45-9:15 p.m.

of Health Care Conover

M 7:00-9:30 p.m.

PUBPOL 2635: Public Health Issues: 11205

Prevention &

357: Seminar in

LAW 347: Health 14118

Sloan

Care, Law,

and

M 6:00-9:00 p.m.

Policy TuWTh 1:30-2:30

Havighurst

01

261/ECON 261/ ENVIRON

Evaluation of Public 11130

TuTh 10:55-12:10

Health Economics

01

8568

Management

Whetten

01

272:

Expenditures Conrad

01

TuTh 9:10-10:25

PUBPOL 2645.30: Health Care 14383 •

2:30 PM

Tickets:

$l5 general

University

admission

tenor,

Box Office,

as

the

$lO Duke students

or

Developing

Countries

Martin-Staple

01

Tu 5:25-7:55

p.m.

For 9

For 6

tickets.duke.edu

$l2 each for group sales of

undergraduate electives,

visit

us

at

http://www.hpolicy.duke.edu/hpcp/ugrad_courses/fallo3.htnil

Evangelist

919-684-4444

in

DUKE CHAPEL

Rodney Wynkoop, Conductor with Karl Dent,

Policy

10 or

more

graduate electives, visit

a

North Korea in the future.

on

Taylor

01

in

daily.

growing distance between

fear that

Instructor

01

to the

political exploita-

editorial

increasing danger.

may

pull Amer-

launch of the Roh

111: Introduction to U.S. Health Care

Catalog#

11983

APRIL 12,2003

before

zone.

emotionally

and to the

major South

from forward positions

PUBPOL 253: Politics

will

defense secretary, need to

during the

sentiment,” said

JoongAng Ilbo,

11117

SATURDAY

that

along the demili-

troops back from the demilitarized

Fall 2003 Course

PUBPOL

in the

Department, howev-

South Korea and the United States

vehicle

Health

ECON

37,000

removing

have informed their Korean

officials

unilateral American attack

ECON

rhetoric

in the U.S. Defense

Moo-hyun administration,

summer.

ASSIGN

the

Awards

issue.

deployment

Rumsfeld, has spoken of the

tion of that

forming

schoolgirls

PUBPOL

was

capital, Seoul.

Many analysts

DUKE CHAPEL CHOIR & ORCHESTRA

for

course, her face and her

in South Korea centered

anti-Americanism

anti-American

South Korean

honoree

emblazoned

the

revising

man-

York. She

Community

People’s April

“The United States

came

deployment

never

of

are now

im-

taken

newspaper

patronizing relation-

revised

a

an

has

the end of the year. American diplomats said nothing

in December of a

upset victory

of

Spirit

that about

counterparts

American troops in the country.

it clear

preparing

was

many

had yet been party

the closest American ally in Asia. This crisis

was

cry

ship

published

of

troops

national

a

2002, and,

of Teen

New

be removed from front line positions

presidential candidate, Roh Moo-hyun, whose rallying

was

in

and

protests and campaign

tarized

well-

from Sarasota histori-

er, and the South Korean press

the hammer and sickle.”

as

passions

huge American Army garrison from Yongsan

ritated

re-

as

Prudential

center of the

the workers.”

foreseeable, has been in

the

the

named

idea

American

have started

may

France

cause

sickle,” and

with

general.”

to follow her

sion,

a

to read.

hammer and

with Echstenkam-

cal sites to the Florida Governor’s

for their

responsible

in

people

Echstenkamper

mind—especially when

to the surface with the

more

kind

Echstenkamper

be the next tar-

Rodong Sinmun, making

despite its poverty, North

sacrifice

the

of

What

end at

ican

the hand of hard-liners

editorial

to

and

pulse

seem

Donald

“axis of evil” with Iraq and Iran.

the Iraq

seem

work,

crises.

George W. Bush has included North

the

“Lauren has been winning awards in

in-

two other

major

of

era, the gun barrel should

unfolded

backdrop of

get of American military President

multiple

has

standoff

hierarchy that the country could

rean

an

in violation of

developing

agreements.

the

against

today’s

secret uranium enrichment program that was

incredibly ded-

concerned

senior Pentagon

States confronted the country last fall with information about

school. “She’s

high

icated

they

she said. While it has been

kids tell her she is

ability

per in

can’t

ever

Peer

a

those

Project]

will

can

Morgan

in

participated

I

as

program

being

lations between the United States and South Korea,

have

“In

North Korean crisis

like it

long

as

freshman

PAGE 7

Mentoring

said.

Bookworm

seem

deal

doesn’t

All

who

Gieseke,

7,2003

indif-

realize what

Echstenkamper

“[The

point,”

great

the editorial

to the

crisis,

even

15 years

that is left standing.” The

must

giving priority

an-

this

re-

over

the revolutionary

ing

earththe

“I

college

today’s era,”

no.

of doesn’t

one

trip, Echstenkamper

interested

for

said

remember,”

of activities grows longer

the list

to

my French

good

should be placed

the Richter

on

As

and longer,

D-Day beach.” Laugh-

a

made for

experience.

out,

as

service

community

translating

mind-blowing.

was

missing,” she

were

to say

from page 2

months of urging

after

ference

scary

talking about a different trip

North Korea

the government

of

in

pleasure

kids just didn’t

girl

said.

“In

NORTH KOREA

into the

“the Frenchness of it

in the culture around them. “The

Iceland

like

kind

of the craters..,. So that

won

a

ran

ing, she explains herself.

gres team and in

shocked.

was

is,” she

among

sport,”

my

places

she took

as

for classmates who weren’t

in

also able to

was

when you realize how small the world

When was

from

interest

all,”

from Iceland back in the United States,

things.

“Volunteering

own.

non-profit

participated

she

members enjoying

Rochelle,

international

her

deepened

and Turkey. When she

boards that give grants to youth in the

La

other

20

music, and

make friends

service

visit to

Her

with

students Zonta

APRIL

MONDAY,

us

at

http://www.hpolicy.duke.edu/hpcp/grad_courses/fallo3.html


20AT

v

i

f t ffi '

i.

ff (*4i

il.

9

.

f

*

� ��

.

f

f

fl l f*»ff —,

fI

*

*,*■*

t f nwa

-

*jr

■'

IONL [C IE

«

-

#*4i

*.

£

4f

rM

M

e *

t

#

NJ

H

4*4

t*4444*

I

4 4 i //f ,£ij

j

j

J

7

r i

y '

;

jr’i

i

j y

j

*

i

|

i

� ���� � ��� ��������� � �� ������� � �� � � � ��� ���������

� �

� � � �

� � � � � � � �

� � � � � � �

CONGRATULATIONS

� � � �

}

DUKE WOMEN’S

� �

� �

BASKETBALL

t � �

Congratulations season.

Please

to Duke on a

join

great

Duke fans

in

I I

a

t �

welcome-home celebration for the

� � �

Women’s Basketball Team:

� �

� �

� * *

Wednesday, April

9

� � � �

6 PM

� �

Cameron Indoor Stadium

t * � � �

� ��

� ���� � ��� ��������� � �� ������� � �� � � � ��� ���������



The

Weekend

OTnaUMBOLis

In this week’s issue

Sportswrap Editor:

Paul

Doran

Managing Editor:

Inside Duke •

Luol

who ball

Deng

and

comprise

Humphries,

entire

class

recruiting

named

Kris

the

of

2007,

first team Parade 24

Deng averaged

Graphics Editor:

men's basketwere

10

Robert iai

Brian

Morray

Sr. Associate Editor:

Evan Davis

each

Associate Editors:

All-Americans.

points,

Rosen

Tyler

Photography Editor:

Mike

rebounds

Corey,

Neelum

Nick

Jeste,

Christie,

Robert

Samuel and

five

while 14

assists

assists

earlier

this

25

up

four steals

a game. The

named

this

game

Humphries picked

rebounds,

also

per

and

season,

Jesse

Jacobson,

Paula

Paul

Colvin,

Gabe

Abby Gold,

two forwards

McDonald's

Writers:

points,

five

Lehman,

Ted

were

Assaad

All-Americans

Jake

Nasr,

Schmelzer,

Josh

Poses,

Silverstein,

winning

Blue

Matt

Devils

team continued

in ACC

ways

dates

which

No.

1

seed

17-20

Special

the in

thanks to

Dave

Ingram

Kevin

Lees.

and

Chronicle

editor

managing

editor

in

North

plays

in

Founded

its 56th-

won

contest —a

back to

weekend,

May

Wednesday,

straight ACC

the

the

the ACC tournament

its

play. By beating

over

clinched

Raleigh. Duke,

Jeff Vernon

Sullivan,

tennis

State 4-3

Carolina

Brian

year.

men's

Florida

Mann,

Adam

Smith, Catherine Sullivan, •The

Crowley,

Michael

Githens,

weekly

streak that

The

1983,

Chronicle.

1996.

Sportswrap

is

the

supplement published

sports

It

be read

can

online

by

at

www.chronicle.duke.edu Women's lacrosse "The Cavs

NCAA Tournament

The in

women's

lacrosse

Charlottesville,

come

team crushed

Va. this

home

Virginia

3

12-7

weekend.

Track

Just like home?

track

The

and

Invitational

at

field

nearby

6

teams

NCCU

hosted

the

Duke

To

reach

the

sports

Flowers Building,

due to renovations.

call

department 684-2663

or

at

301

e-mail

sports@chronicle.duke.edu

Men's National

semifinals:

No.

2

Kansas

No.

3

Syracuse 95,

94,

No.

Women's golf 3

No.

Marquette 1

Texas

61

84

Devils

Hat trick

The

Blue

won the

this

weekend —their third

3

Liz

Murphey

win

of the

Invitational

spring.

Men's lacrosse *The Blue No.

1

Johns

lacrosse

Hopkins

crushed

Jays Duke

4

way 19-6 in

men's

@ North Carolina „„

OF National Kansas

championship;

vs.

Syracuse,

9:18

Women's basketball "The end p.m

Duke

fell to Tennessee,

finals

for the

second

losing

time in

4

in the national

as

semi-

many years.

Rowing The the

Men's tennis

Game

this weekend.

Coronado's silver

varsity eight rowing Jessop-Whittier

T

THE

4

finished

team

_

second

in

cup.

Wednesday, Women's; National No.

1

No.

1

NCAA Basketball "Twice semifinals:

Tennessee 66, Conn.

71,

No.

The No.

1

Duke

56

it

Connecticut

back to the

women's

as

nice

basketball

team

5 made

championship, beating Texas.

Coming The

men's tennis

State.

Details

team

snuck

past

No.

37 Florida

The

Blue

Tuesday. season

2 Texas 69

Baseball

championship;

Tennessee

vs.

Connecticut,

The 8:37 p.m

Blue

remain

Pack-ing big

Devils

winless

were

in

bats

swept by

the ACC.

6 the

Wolfpack

to

Coming The

tomorrow

men's

golf

team

finished

Invitational.

Cleveland Golf/ASU

iTSHIRTS

son, it

DECALS

Duke

14th

Details

at

the

Tuesday.

PLAQUES

Devils

took some

TROPHIES

streak

North

56-match

on

the

Shults

when

Last

heroics to

Hill

regular

line

Carolina.

last-second

Peter

Chapel

keep

sea-

from the

going.

ROCKERS

University

their

streak

archrival

then-freshman Duke

put

winning

face

they National

5 p.m.

Cone-Kenfield Tennis Center,

tomorrow

LAMPS

KEY RI sTGS

Stores®

Custom Orders C/D

I

One-Color-on-White Printed 100%

OQ

cotton, short sleeve VD

£

T-Shirts

Starting

at

eS h—j I—s

CU

w h-t

$28%

50

e

*4Bpiece Minimum

order required,

please callfor details.

NO SCREEN CHARGE!

Duke Stores Custom Orders

684-8109

or

s:

684-8204

Department of Duke University Stores®

02-0958


*

Ba

Sportswi

No Kates, By

ADAM SCHMELZER The

Duke

1.2

7

Charlottesville, team

seemed

liers

had

minute of to be

a

rivals

the

against

team

and

going

Cava-

the

first

supposed

But

7-1 Duke lead.

a secure

then,

things

Freshman star Katie Chrest found herself

ejected

from the

foul, and senior

Kate

their

suit

soon

highest

after.

scoring

the Blue Devils

bench, able to

a

With

players

hard

scored

seven

goals,

two on

of

the

Virginia’s bids for

and pulled

out

a

12-7

take

Every single really

i

<

�PAGE 3

goals

in

comeback

a

victory

over

the

team

was

effort.

contributed

a

trouble

though her career

half.

first

pair

the

handling

The

Lauren of

second set

goals

a

Virginia

scored.

second half

defensive

and

Gallagher’s five goals Virginia

to

impres-

an

15

saves.

attempted

an

but

by the Cavaliers, pressure

record

Goalkeeper

had

saw

was

the game—-

showing for Duke, with

The

two

Cavaliers’

Aumiller, for

goals

Huether also

Meghan

to

[Virginia’s] offense.”

had

the

comeback

fought

and

up

scorer,

held to

sive

complete

pesky defense, scoring only

leading

for

a

the defensive end

on

person

down

Virginia

complete

of

capable

such

was

knew this game

we

a

stepped

shutting

appeared vulner-

Cavalier attack.

However, third-ranked Duke off No. 4

a

Kaiser, who

four of the Blue Devils’ first followed

for

game

to

Devils’

interesting.

got

effort,

totally

were

in

heated battle between conference

was

we

lacrosse

The

was

knew

said. “It

Virginia

since

and what

play,

“I

this,” Kimel

game

women’s

scored

i/i

problem for women’s lacrosse

no

minutes

unstoppable.

not

n

in the win.

Eighteen

the

«

>toWDfIY,M»Bn. t,feD63

been more pleased with her team’s effort

Chronicle

into

| Virginia

■Hir

».r.

»»»

,

*

Duke’s

senior Lauren

were

too much for

overcome.

Cavaliers Sunday afternoon. Head coach Kersten Kimel

said she could not have

No. 1 women’s

See VIRGINIA

on

page 7

KATIE CHREST

helped

the Blue Devils beat

golf, Janangelo win By

Liz

PAUL CROWLEY

At

a

time of the

year when most duffers

are

dusting

and starting to think about tee times,

the women’s golf team had pulled

down two victories

already going into this past weekend. The reigning tional champions

weekend,

with

brought that number win

convincing

a

Collegiate Classic

in

a

Murphey

Athens, Ga.

title.

Liz

lines up

a

putt

at

a

who

won

the Liz

Murphey Collegiate

recent tournament.

Classic,

69,

to finish

total

up

it

there,

the

but it

with

as

par in the tournament’s

a

fresh-

opening

with two consecutive rounds of

a

said.

“I

was

round

started off

native

shooting

in

[to

looking

to

breakneck

at

210 for the tournament. This career

in

in

39 for the

a

is due to my staying patient and

success

and

“The

said.

myself,” Janangelo

was

conditions for his teams’

fairways

were

reasonable and the greens

have been

playing

on some

nally the putter started post

some

to

pretty rough

work, and she

The rest of the Blue Devils posted totals

as

well. Virada

eighth place finish with Hardin nailed down

some

Nirapathpongporn

a

a

222 for 12

impressive

pulled

total of 220, and

TRULY IS FOR

no matter ’who

what

the

enjox

can

energy

at

your

storage unit,

you

Increase

& flexibility,

boost

stress,

levels

and

mind

your body,

many

your

connect

&

spirit.

or

http://www.the-storeroom.com

>

the

at

choose

s

Yoga Spot front

19

best teachers

event

classes in

you

cf the

and 24

various

Room SELF

STORAGE

ofyoga, pilates

CENTER

ht meditation.

’d

if

you

store it

anywhere else, you're paying

daily

workshops too much.

SHORT + TALL

I

THICK + THIN

I

[_ YOUNG

MALE

+

OLD,

+ FEMALE,

and

Clones

and weekend

held

frequently

throughout theyCUT.

Duke 3822 S. Alston Ave.

Durham,

NC 27713

Students &

Bring

544-6220

your Duke

this

Staff: ad for

generous Discount!

CiPKnnt

501-K 9l 9

Washington St (near

6 67.9642,

an

are

shape you’re in,

your strength

tVtnY

out

Leigh Anne

place.

reduce

us

able to

was

benefits of yoga.

request

as

greens. Fi-

good numbers this weekend.”

you

visit

were

good,” said Brooks. “[Liz’s] putts haven’t been falling

or

call now,

suc-

thankful that winter rules had been lifted.

>

To

31

phenomenal

a

down with

slowing

Brooks cited improved

we

the best of her young college

equaled

“I think my

believing

East; was

Dan Brooks said.

up

playing well going

r

JANANGELO,

were

final

Conn.,

the front nine before

of Ohio

Janangelo took home the individual

Janangelo shot

day, but followed LIZ

[were] the best of

distinguished itself individually,

superstar

pace, with the on

was

Janangelo

if not to win.”

Janangelo’s

cess,

of the west coast teams

Duke also man

Sunday.

11 strokes.

top field,” head coach

place highly,

of

three-day total

toumament-best round of 288

“[These teams] really none

I knew I

“Individually,

tournament’s last nine holes. a

Duke beat its nearest competitor, the Buckeyes

State, by

than a third of her rounds ended up at par

the tournament],”

na-

three this

in the Liz

The top-ranked Blue Devils shot

876, including

to

more

below.

or

off their clubs

from the game

Murphey classic

which

The Chronicle

Virginia, despite being ejected

East

Campus)

www.yogaspot.com


Sportswra

4 �MONDAY,

Vols leave Duke in tea

3

ROBERT TAI/THE CHRONICLE

from

(clockwise the

top left)

ALANA BEARD

her team’s win

over

TENNESSEE

yells

BARBARA TURNER drives

hoop. CONNECTICUT’S

during

at her teammates

41-30

overcome

from The Chronicle page 1

the

distance.

and 15

sec-

let both teams

and Tennessee

the game’s physical

play

picked

nature

agon

up

Jack-

early,

She

spinning

Volunteers’

Lady

ond-chance points, nine more than Duke. The officials

the ball up the court. BLUE DEVIL SENIOR SHEANA MOSCH flies

brings

Heather Schreiber in the Huskies’ two

win

point

past

a

Volunteer defender

connected

layups,

multiple

on

off

fending

Volunteer defenders at

Beard’s

heroics

three

time.

a

remaining,

nearly pulled

ils

when—with her

one.

foul line for

Her

first

effort

one-andoff

clanged

momentum dramata

timeout

thing

to

calling of

lot

told

didn’t have “If

lose,” she said. the

over

back,

and offensive

the other person outwork

rebounding played

team’s win

her

Duke’s kiss

but

American, just

nine

who

you.” a

key role

heavily a

in

upon

to

in

scored:

post

dejected-

ly from inside her locker. “Those that

we

feel

trol.... We feel like

Earlier,

Beard

like

from

we

are

can

all

con-

the

had

done

all

she

than four

the contest tight,

as

each side

struggled

to

establish

the

eked

an

out

“I don’t know

jumped

out to

ESPN

away

late

in

the

game,

the

has

as

been its

an

15-8 ad-

early

pulling

down several offensive rebounds. Her

team

Duke

sorts,

sive

somewhat out of

looking

head

coach

implemented

a

ed

wrinkles following the second offi-

between

matchup

a

zone,

unteers to

full-court

alternatand

trap

a

Vol-

confusing the Lady

great effect.

“We went to 2

Gail

few defen-

cial timeout. The Blue Devils

floor, a

we’re

and

the

41

after Beard swished

halftime

finished

“I

a

buzzer

the

so

we

edge only

half

Duke

13

that the shot at

the

us

momentum,” she said. began

scoring just

opening

10

9:14

play,

to

deficit Duke

the second half

six

in the

points

minutes. Down 41-35 with

since

and

its

facing in

early

the

largest

first

half,

responded.

Sheana from the

Mosch

corner

Tillis

a

a

2-2-1

[press]

zone,” she said. “Tennessee

into

is

so

a

3-

good

over

a

trey

and Beard would follow suit

pulled ahead,

27

(33-4)

a

your

good job of pick-

ing it apart.”

never

44-43.

a

half,

and

They would

lead again.

Butts

FT

room,

Mosch

Duke’s

sub-

struggled

to

R

PF

1

1-6

0-0

Jackson

7-13

10-12

15

Lawson

I

F 66

PTS

A

27

3

2

0

2

28

0

TO

56

BLK

S

MP

1

0

1

27

3

2

1

36

3-12

2-2

11

0

8

5

2

0

0

35

Moore

5-9

1-2

2

2

11

1

2

0

3

37

Ely

3-7

0-0

7

4

6

0

2

0

2

26

Davis

0-0

0-0

1

0

0

0

0

0

0

Zolman

0-1

2-2

0

0

2

0

1

0

0

5

Jackson

3-4

1-2

11

0

0

1

13

Robinson

2-5

1-13

11

3

0

18

8

5

8

200

71

1

5

13

66

3

Team Totals

24-57

17-21

41

12

Three-pointers: Butts (0-2), Jackson (1-3), Lawson (0-2), Moore (0-1), Zolman (0-1). Technical fouls: None

Matyasovsky Harding Krapohl Beard Bass

Foley Whitley

Totals

Afterward, from inside dued locker

the

wish

39

29

FG

FG

FT

R

PF

PTS

A

TO

BLK

S

MP

4-11

0-0

5

2

9

3

1

2

2-

36

0-1

0-0

2

3

0

11

2

2

3-8

0-0

5

5

6

4

3

0

1

0

1

0

0

11

0

0

10

0-1

0-0

0

1

0

4-5

6

2

29

1-3

0-0

2

2

2

0

4

0

0

1-1

4

3

10

0

0

0

2

30

0-0

1

0

0

0

0

0

0

8

0-0

2

2

0

0

1

0

0

9

20

56

9

12

4

7200

4-9 0-2 0-2

40 14

3 24-61

5-6

Three-pointers; Tillis (1-2), Mosch (1-2),

19 34

12-24

Team

they get comfortable with

I

changed.”

(35-2)

Trills on

mid-range jumper.

the next minute and

Duke

could have

why.

12

Duke

connected

and then followed a Ten-

basket with

nessee

idea

no

excited,

before

as

players.

ice cold,

have

up

FINAL

Tennessee

with

the end [of the half] would give

Duke

pumped

sounded. Beard

definitely thought

Instead,

haven’t played

Tennessee 66, Duke 56

Devils

three-pointer

opening

to lead all

points

we

game,” the captain

percent

Blue

29-27 halftime

always

games.... I

Mosch

defense, and they do

pull

relaxed

turnovers and

vantage, forcing

tional semifinals. As to

and

why

well these past five

did

rhythm.

Neither team shot above

from

the

during the tournament. Ten-

when

began

never

points.

calm

could to prevent another exit in the naTennessee

would

pregame warmups, Duke start-

tendency

beat ourselves.”

we

Duke

looking

Goestenkors

transi-

rebounds and

the free throw line,” she said

things

ed

Kodak All-

struggled

how they

off offensive

Despite during

nessee

points and five rebounds.

“That’s

tion,

weighed

Tillis, herself

let

rim, though.

again be closer

they weren’t

about heart. You can’t

are

That

any-

go pursue it. A

defensive

times,

boards

I

me

from the sidelines

screams

said, tearfully. “We’re always

Defense dominated in the first half,

offensive

Blue Dev-

crucial

a

game’s

ically altered, Summit called to regroup.

down just 58-54—the junior strode

to the

sition. The

Duke

back in the basketball game with 1:04

back

“Coach

she makes her way towards

HEAD COACH PAT SUMMITT

Sunday night. TENNESSEE

Tennessee

said.

son

as

Duke in the national semifinals.

rebounding advantage

gressively

she

past Longhorn

Lady Devils

as

30

Harding (0-1), Krapohl (0-1), Beard (1-2),

Foley (0-1).

Technical fouls: None

Player of the Year fought

perately

to

keep

Duke within

des-

striking

Duke ignited for

a

with all three baskets

quick

6-0

coming

spurt,

in tran-

explain why her Blue Devils ended their Arena: Georgia Dome season

playing

beneath themselves.

Officials: Yarbrough, Bell, Cunningham

Attendance—2B,2lo


Sportswrai

The Chronicle

7. 2003 �PACE 5

MONDAY,

after Final Four loss observers For the last game of the year,

ATLANTA could

the

sing

since

night

sung, it

was

Atlanta,

in

dirge.

nessee’s

to the basket

missed three

better

Duke’s entire

seven consec-

for

foul during

a

or

the front end of

a

was

she had been

as

number of games this offense

Ten-

But she also

drive.

a

Beard

worse,

offense,

fouled by

was

three-point play.

a

ac-

possessions,

seven

drive and contorting her

she

as

made some

loss,

the

layups, and she bricked

one-and-one after

a

Sunday

Duke’s NCAA Tourna-

on

on a

graceful layup

a

Shyra Ely

Duke’s

song—but

in the

points

phenomenal plays

spinning for

singing

team. Most

season.

who scored 29

robatic and

in

joyous

a

finale to

fitting

a

and

run

Beard,

For

a

Beard took the ball to the basket

utive times in

body

was

it became

been

they’ve

a one-woman

after Duke fell behind 56-49 with 2:34 re-

Beginning maining,

ment

refrain

Beard is

January: Alana

times it

once

old

same

As

season.

stagnated throughout

.

the Tournament and game, the other Blue Devils

found themselves

much of their time

ing

spend-

_

lyler Rosen

standing and

watching Beard perform. “You can’t with

one

win

in

and Alana has

step

the

and

up

tried to take

never

out the

spread

on

in the first

run

on

fast breaks,

second

senior

half, or

people

scoring.”

in which all the

during

points

were

8-0

a

scored

the foul shots that ensued. In the

on

with

half,

that role for

needed other

definitely

we

Duke had its best offensive production

<0

said

points,”

off the bench to finish second

came

this team. I know that to

Commentary

game

for Duke with 10. “We’ve known that all year

scoring

long,

all

scoring

person

Sheana Mosch, who

Ik

Game

basketball

a

the Lady

Duke

Volunteers denying

baskets in transition, the Blue Devils began looking into Beard.

creasingly

During the final few minutes, tried to

perately switched

to

Beard had

a

‘When

a

got

some

someone

open

wings.

shots. of

the caliber

in time when

point

denied the

effectively

lanes and

you’ve

think there’s

that

zone

open

the Blue Devils des-

as

claw back into the game, Tennessee

we

I

Alana,

need her to take

Duke head coach Gail Goestenkors said. “I wanted

over,”

her to take every shot at that point in time.”

.11 j % fJJr

point guard

Junior a

Vicki

Krapohl added that, late

close game, ‘We all know what

our

best chance is to

did, and she almost

our

By

The Chronicle

Conn.

71

Texas

69

With

the

mighty

underdog

had the Huskies faced year 10

took

pulled itself as

minutes

into

the Huskies

to

Geno

Texas. At

19

squad

“I

survive

found himself

have not played

Texas,

done against

as

as

physical

head coach

uncharacteristically the most

phys-

add to that game,”

can

on

his

anybody

and

500th

career

defensively

as

hard to get things

as

11 in the UConn’s stretch

run.

points,

in-

The Naismith

National Player of the Year, Taurasi drew praise from her

biggest thing

With 2:56

with her star

and

jumper

ance

drew

you

can

say

about her

is

that

with 16 points and was

unable to do

“It

was

a

very

Although

non

Texas could only shake its head at the lost opportu-

nity to take out the defending national champions.

disappointing,” Longhorn

radt said. “It’s

hurtful, it’s all

imagine when

a

down to

plays

After

plays

and

the

on

championship

pelling themselves Jaime

Carey and

the

in the last three minutes.

are

she said. “It

things that

hard

as

they

you

can

team and then it

can

play

comes

reached its

portunity

going

right.

to let

us

a

UConn

next

play

peak advantage,

teams clawed and battled in

an

impressive

two

a

reacted

like

a

eight points,

display

of

28.2

seconds

re-

back to within

a

giving Texas

one

into overtime

pulled

finally

or

op-

win out-

the up at

top on

eager

to

perennial

when

Tournament,

because in

a

Beard

win

over

at

the final buzzer,

rival Tennessee

night’s National Championship Game.

in

Tuesday

was

scoring dropped

Beard’s scoring

then 50s,

re-

her teammates’ pro-

were

the loss

feelings surrounding we were

Wynter Whitley

eliminated by

we

were

just surprised

a se-

But this year,

different.

and satisfied to

get

only eight players,” sophomore

said. “Last

year

accomplished,’ and

was

more

of, Wow, look

T can’t wait for next year,

because next year we’re going all the way’ And this year, it’s like, We got here, and lot

more

didn’t do it.’ It’s

definitely say any-

to make this feel better.”

The Blue Devils

move

we

disappointing. Coach G said she can’t

things they failed

were

to do:

left

to

rebound,

off the ball. “Everyone

on

all

the little

defend in transition,

in this

done something,”

have

focus

room

Krapohl

feels like

said

after

we

the

the team’s locker. game in Duke

was

outrebounded

outscored the Blue Devils

15-6

41-30,

and

Tennessee

in second-chance

points.

Beard said thatDuke’s failure on the boards, accounted for the loss. But own

jumped with joy

can

long.

season

the ACC Tournaper game, to

60s,

to the Final Four with

a

pro-

her way up. Huskies

then

70s,

“Last year

of the key with two seconds left, but lost the handle

face

the

thing

were

Late substitute Alisha Sare

The

the

all

nior-led team in the national semifinals.

could

game

shaky.

Duke’s loss in the Final Four marks the second time

play.”

see us

trey with

Longhorns

to send the

the

at what

game’s

final seconds,

points

in two the Blue Devils years

was

UConn missed free throws and also turned the ball in the

90

or

plummeted.

and

junior,

team that

our

Final Four

duction

at the call that earned her

a

80

ment and the NCAA

highs, but

team

in front 71-66.

swished

scoring

we

to be able to do it in pressure situations.”

advanced to the

to UConn. Stevens finished

on

that smelled blood in the water.

The Huskies scored the

on

the past,

essentially constant, while

foul

the officials.

shifted,

Duke

in

scored

mained

physical game,”

team

They’ve got

into

crucial fourth personal foul, Stevens declined to place any blame

over

head coach Jody Con-

the

as

really good

at the end

Texas

off-bal-

an

throw,

rebounds, both

pleased

have

Stacey

because everyone here wants to

maining,

against

10

anything

single possession.

situations.”

team

free

huge offensive

Stevens, giving the ball back

in the crucial

another

converted

Taurasi

a

and

score

in

and

step forward,”

scored 28 of the Blue Devils’ 57 points

Huskies finally pulled within three. Connecticut’s AshBattle than

other players

some

were

Texas Tech. From late in the season, when Duke

ensuing

an

never

seven.

past

because the team’s other hands

‘We need to have

points. Likewise,

began.

remaining

she’s not afraid,” Auriemma said. “She wants the ball

“It’s

its lead

pushed

never

clear

Down five and reeling, Texas refused to go quietly.

grateful coach.

“The

Texas

Momentum

Huskies with 26

a

is,

That’s what

give Alana the ball.

she said. ‘We have other players

two teams traded bas-

deficit to fewer than four

Final Four game. The referees

Texas.”

Diana Taurasi led the

cluding

nights’

Sunday

as

minutes, the

that lasted the

in momentum. Despite several tries UConn

closed its

ley

charismatic Connecticut

don’t know what I

“We

as

physical

71-69.

he said, also taking time to reflect

good

edge

UConn

his team faced all year.

really

victory.

but

stretch

a

kets with neither team being able to establish

Then the excitement

victorious out of its

team

his

see

Auriemma

time this

no

seconds,

lost for words, before praising Texas ical

Connecticut

lead that it would never relinquish,

a

slugfest with the Longhorns Ecstatic

to

larger deficit.

a

and

emerged

tough challenge,

left

12:25

women’s basketball team found it-

self trailing 50-41 to

It

better part of eight

ATLANTA

play,

For

hard-nosed basketball.

NICK CHRISTIE

largely

chance

did it herself.”

Goestenkors wanted the ball but

best

no

matter the

expectations left

“[After last year’s loss but it didn’t hurt deep,

“Tonight,

we

hurt.”

blame, the failure to

meet then-

with red eyes. many Blue Devils to

Oklahoma]

we

were

upset,

deep inside,” Goestenkors

said.


Spoitswr

MONDAY, APRIL 7, �

1*

*

«»�’>»

y

'M

vu

trounces Blue Devils in

Wolfpack

After losses to No,

lowing

The Chronicle

N.C.

State

Duke

4

least the

for

majors

time

when

kicked

for

playing

the well of hope has For

hope

off

the

weekend,

for

the

team

months, and

an

third

and

again

unable to take

this

weekend’s red-hot

against

single

a

North

2

ACC)

Devils 11-4

defeated

in

Sunday

0-8) to

its

“N.C.

Duke

State is

and

the best team we’ve. said.

play

We

need to

just

good

play better

fundamental baseball.”

on

closer

match. However,

the

fourth

Wolfpack Vern

shaped

a

a

in

the

propelled

starting

ace

shut down the Blue Devils fol-

pitcher,

jumped

after

Morton,

out to

Tim

3-2 lead in the

a

hit

Layden

N.C.

State’s

RBI

an

crossed

the

Colt

catcher,

threw the ball into centerfleld

to nab

Layden stealing.

The Blue Devil lead was short-lived, however. The first batter in the top the

Justin

fourth, 1-2

hanging in

three

Riley,

The

days.

fastball about

where Riley’s home

In

sent

to

feet

the

a

low

left

of

landed for back-to-back

took

the Wolflead

a

they

relinquish.

never

Saturday’s

the Wolfpack

game,

battered Duke’s and

run

batter,

next

very

emphatically

would

fourth home

And with that,

runs.

a

the

far

Morton,

ten

of

deposited beyond

curveball

hitter Colt

cleanup

19

for

pitching

hits,

Nate Cretarolo al-

starting pitcher

lowed only three

in

runs

eight innings

N.C. State routed the Blue Devils.

Justin

led the

Riley

with

way

in with five

chipped doubles,

and four

and

Wolfpack,

Michael

starting

survived

Rogers

third inning to

pitcher

Duke’s

five

a

in the sixth

pitch

earn

the 9-6

Bill

one

of two

Hillier

things

victory.

said.

“We

do,”

coach

either

quit,

we can can

make excuses, and whine about things, we

can

out

come

and work

Duke’s loss to N.C. State,

inning during

“We’re in the cellar [of the ACC], and there’s

paced

runs

run

two

batted in.

two home

Friday, Riley’s the

hits, including

runs

KEVIN THOMPSON throws

home

a

and two doubles, and David Hicks

run

comfortable 11-4 victory.

N.C. State’s

Sterry,

as

up

far

big innings

and eighth

to

the

drubbing,

was

balk.

trying

as

Following Saturday’s finale

Sunday

a

plate

the

“[At

very

baseball. [But] we’re not going to make excuses.

and

pack

games.

didn’t

we

(13-19,

consecutive loss 11

past

time],

and

Saturday,

16-3

played,” coach Bill Hillier same

Blue

slumping

sending

sixth

10th in the

only three hits, but

leftfield fence for his 7-

Wolfpack (27-7,

the

Friday,

9-6

had

■ N.C. State

helped by three walks, three wild pitches,

was

Carolina State

on some

Duke defense.

and Brian Patrick

series

cut the

put

game out of reach with four runs

sloppy

single

game in

Patrick

single

Wolfpack

ACC

at Jack Coombs Field.

The 15th-ranked

the

7-4,

when

winless.

three-game

RBI

third,

Duke

Wake Forest,

to

outdueling

Brian

a

Layden

the

straight

emerged

Tim

in

for Ist ACC win

looking

Thompson.

after

eighth,

lead

Duke

After suffering sweeps at the hands of

Virginia

the

dry.

run

faced off against

and

opponent,

In the

double and

the

baseball

the third straight weekend,

Blue Devils

a

dream. While

Duke’s

week,

team has been

the

is

all teams can, at

have

may

last

season

leagues

short while,

a

in

day

major

and

springs eternal,

start

shaky

a

Duke starter Kevin

Opening

11

C. State, the baseball team is still

1 5 N.

TED MANN

By

3-game series

or

harder and

start

executing

a

little better.”

The Blue Devils host No. 8 Tech next

executing

start

and

weekend,

better,

if

Georgia don’t

they

they

will

to avoid their fourth

hard-pressed

be

con-

secutive series sweep.

Women’s tennis smashes Track and field show-off

Cavs, Terps COLVIN

By JESSE The

Duke

6

Virginia

1

routing

two

reaching

several

all

Day

No.

the

said,

site

Duke

had

doubles point

weekend,

opponents,

milestones and

even

time to celebrate Senior

while being

with

Virginia Duke

its

able to be

6-1

win

seated

its record

to

visiting

5-0

afternoon,

the

kind,

by

players

won

the

capturing

Pole

Amanda Johnson 2-0

up

nifer

with

a

the

6-1

defeat of Jen-

and

Tuchband, and

the Blue Devils

put

6-1,

sophomore

teammates

Kelly McCain

followed suit with easy wins, the latter one

in the ACC

clinching the

In the last

By

PAUL CROWLEY

During

was

country,

as

skills off

an

on

opportunity

teams

Durham this

to the track at

compelled Duke

Deroo

tional

weeks

and

it

away,

match

the

on

four

its

the

was

seniors

quartet—Hillary Katie

Granson

leave

Ambler

last

for

schedule

this

Adams,

have

They

to

a

three

NCAA

regular

Siripipat—-

indelible

an

helped

tournament

the

missing

is

and

a

national on

a

All

the way. a

great

lost

never

we

can

they

at

home

outside.

ride them for can

end their

a

while

career

good note.”

With

shots

gone

The match lasted 30 minutes longer

dium’s

entire

players

and

followed

by

one

focus their

was

the

on

rally-filled,

two

back-

“I

would

have

loved

them

though,

all.

in the

It’s

head coach

team’s

win

“But

just

of

all

the can’t

you

match,

one

big picture.”

Ashworth said his

to

said.

matches,” McCain win

he

was

effort, but

pleased with

was

not

doubles also

were

said. “But the

we

middle

where

we are

Saturday, less,

not set

en

good and

pretty

our

sin-

good,” Ashworth

need to do

[flights],

a

better job in

especially

with

in the season.”

the Duke team

dropping route

Maryland (8-9, 0-5.)

the

a

single

to

a

7-0

was

North

Carolina

gave

same

us,” women’s

Ogilvie an

the

said. “It’s

a

big

event like that.”

showing,

caliber meter

was

team, made Tom

place, jumping

a

third

landed

15’6.25”. Laura

place mark with

12’6”.

the

“Outdoor

season

has just started get-

my

finish

from

last

to

improve

[weekend’s

Donny

second later, at 7:27.13,

we

can

field two relay

of that quality goes to show

coach Norm Senior

team

Ogilvie said.

1,500-meter

ran

or

runner

4:29.60 for

a

in Duke

Lauren

the fifth-best

history, earning herself

to

write sports next

a

third-pace finish. Freshman Sally Meyerhoff the

right behind her, traversing

was

course

in a

The next will

be

Raleigh,

scanty 4:30.25, and

earn-

fifth-place finish. meet

the on

a

ACC

April

for

the Blue

Devils

Championships

18th and 19th.

a

Want

the

has,” men’s head

flaw-

blowout of

in

far this year.

race so

ing herself

ting underway, and I’d hoped

specialists

Paul,

the second- and fourth-best finishes

race

a

a

depth that this

Warner

ran

to take second. The two times constitute

in

Brent

of

Fowler and Jon Amt, crossed the finish

able to succeed

begin-

Schneider,

Aaron

“The fact that

the

a

4xBoo

men’s

of 800-meter

up

teams

have been

in

Casey Reardon, Bill

Nick

Gianturco,

dle distances.

Chen pulled out

and

of

that

the

in

put

national-

relay. The “B” team, comprised

Spierdowis

Matic

vaulter

finishes

two

7:26.43 to take home first place. The “A”

ning of indoor track: pole vault and mid-

Pole

including

location

off-campus

events

team

I

“Unfortunately,

Both middle distance teams

good

line less than thanks to

team’s bread and butter since the

upon

flight

at

invita-

own

great weekend,

the meet, Duke

second

was

to hold its

Jan

Despite

happy

with its consistency. “Our

a

support NCCU

Julie,

in

meet

a

renovations

University.

was

sacrifice to host

that we, especially

am sure

“It

host

Wallace Wade Stadium

town

across

Central

and the sta-

and-forth game.

single awry

7-6, 3-6,1-0.

than the next-to-last

gles

coach Jamie Ashworth said.

longer and on

two

champi-

“The four of them have done

Hopefully

two

championships.

onship, which might be job,” head

Blue

berths,

titles

season

ACC tournament

“They

The

four-year record of 95-15,

ACC

that is

year.

the program and its all-time

on

records. Devils

home

the team

and Sheffield

Indoor Tennis Center with mark

six

Julie Deroo,

Prim

and

Stadium

is

close

to

got

said.

wasn’t able to do that.”

milers lan Cronin,

weekend, but

triumph of the day when she took down

the season’s

to show their

campus.

able to steal the Cavaliers’ only singles

Although

the

across

gle annual home meet, the Duke Invitational,

and 20-2 overall—the ninth straight 20 for the Blue Devils.

lays]Warner

typically takes

the track teams relish their sin-

win

season

that

a season

it far afield to various meets

The James

IC4A qualifying vault at the Raleigh Re-

The Chronicle

match.

flight, Kristen

vault, distance perform strong for Duke

first

and third doubles flights. Then junior

Adams

over

1-4) Sunday

(11-8,

ran

re-

women’s tennis team nice

at home contest

depth

of

rants

plays

and rants of the oppo-

comfortably by Sunday night. And

successful

ceiving grunts

a

4

and

exasperation

frustration—and

conference

finding enough

of

grunts

Chronicle All

weekend

over

year? Email Mike

at

mlc2o@duke.edu.

in


f

r*

i«j T

vjV

CM

The Chronicle

Sportsman

Men’s lax dominated No.

1 Blue By JAKE The

Hopkins

POSES

After each

The

No.

10

lacrosse Duke

6

crushed

(6-1)

Baltimore, out

in

Saturday

Hopkins

and

men’s

team

the

Blue

goals

push

1 Johns

Jays

face

off

with

defense

the

pressured

their

face off circle. The Blue Jays

offs, failing

to

half

my tenure

dominated at the ‘X’ like dominated in

this

Mike Pressler and

said. “It

said.

have been

we

game,” head

we

coach

Johns face offs

the

won

and scored

on

opening four

each

goal

was

and

patient Pressler

second to

score

to

goal

the

ball

The

very

well,”

with

Doneger the

tacked

game

5-0, the Blue Devils

on

push

to

goals

only

the Blue

stretch to

apart

to

when

cut

one-by-oneßewkowski

Duke,

dwelling of

on

missing

national cham-

begins

run

plays

a

play down the

critical

a

Saturday

ACC

some

weekends

games

if

Graduate Student

team

in this 14-team invita-

Cup

the

2002

Kim

of

Mae

Jessi

Batzell,

Joyce Gay, Abby

Bailey, and Missy Buck-

miller remained in

edged

the first

gained

heated battle with

a

out

Duke by

a

mere

place early of 1:43.09

split time

2000 m race.

of the

leg

when it raced to

time of

a

team in third and

nessee

a

momentum in the second

1:40.02, which

place, behind

then gained the lead in the third when

they

recorded

of Tennessee. tain the

It

leg

Ten-

Minnesota. The Blue Devils

1:43.04, which

Tennessee until the final 500 m, when the Volunteers

Duke found itself in fourth

then

San

6:46.89. The Blue Devils

was

in the contest with

put the

consisting

gle, Natalie Zervas,

race

beat Clemson by about five seconds.

after

year’s commit-

at

seconds. Duke’s final time for Sun-

day’s

San

Varsity

Amelia Booth, Katie Lakin, Joanna Hin-

VIRGINIA

was

just

They

500 m leg

split-time

a

of

0.2 seconds ahead

unable to main-

were

lead, however, and theVolunteers

sneaked away with the very close victory.

game

the

over

have

we

“Our leaders

from page 3

the team

any

national

didn’t step and up preto

play Vanderbilt,”

she

said. “The team really turned around and to

came

out

fender.

“We’ve

playing

a

been

desire

we

call

team’s

working

did that

finally

against

focusing

“[The call] definitely

team

the

by taking the initiative

well. I’m

really proud

The win gives Duke

which included Vanderbilt

a

an

last

of them.”

some

8-6

loss

to

No. 20

tributed the team’s rebound from defeat to better

that

leadership.

they

as

today.”

the

com-

on

Fri-

of their

have

ever

they

can

still

this

work

season, on

including

game,

some

transi-

But

Chrest

their

as

a

that

emphasized

would like the team to

performance

remaining

the

see

she

Virginia

to model in all of

games this

season.

“This game has kind of set the standard for us,

showing

“I

think

us

how

need to

we

together,

we

we

need to

do,” she said. accomplish

can

amazing things.”

Struggling Need

smart over

Though the Devils played

play and what

at-

rest

tion between offense and defense.

game

important

Kimel

well

as

Miller said

four-game road trip,

Wednesday.

at home.

aspects

wasn’t under my

some

ing week, then play Notre Dame day

on

they played really

Duke will get

she said. “But I think the whole

responded

play

today.”

for her absence.

compensation

control,”

toward

being defensive about her,

did a good job getting ready to play today. I feel like

full 60 minutes all season, and

Chrest avoided the

to

with the

win,” said junior Meghan Miller, a de-

Week

Appreciation

in

Duke

Crew Classic.

momentum after

hopes for competing for a championship,” Pressler said.

some

said.

A

disappointed

danger

compete for

three

the Cal

won

I think

were

in

‘We have to win next

“We just tried to regroup and put in

that the inability

against Virginia.

the first period.

goals

with its

and ground balls made

The

it

tee

Diego

“Everyone

unhappy

the NCAA tournament understand that

lead to 5-2 at the end of

Jays’

well

it will have to elevate its

attempted

event

team

at the Jes-

Final

The

after last

tion-only

crew

pare

his

scored back-to-back

seconds

shoot

the outcome but isn’t

pionship.

seven

play

the

charge back. Matt Rewkowski

ground ball

when you

they

Blue Devils

Petite

this weekend.

Eight participated

happens”

the outcome.

of

and

defense was

to win face offs

said.

After Adam

and

place finish

Cup

APRIL 7, 2003 �PAGE 7

quicker that

step

a

their task very difficult.

deliberate,

very

shot

sop-Whittier Diego

O.iM .*MM I

Jessop-Whittier 0.22

second

a

really well,” Pressler

Hopkins

defense

no

the superior team.

were

it

pair

a

Hopkins left

as

efforts but recognized

44 seconds into the contest.

“Hopkins

to

Duke’s

possession.

Conor Ford scored the game’s first

unan-

raced to

m

.

rowing places boat

The 24th-ranked women’s

Hawkins,

were

that’s what

Hopkins

five

only managed

Every fifty-fifty

were.

more

surprising.”

quickly

was

scored

goals

they

“They

went

shocking

was

goal

goals.

doubt that

been

never

it

note,

Hopkins

as

“They shot

we

his third

on

Hopkins’ advantage

positive

a

of second half

give their defense

have

next

10-3. Three of

off the stick of Peter LeSueur.

The Blue Devils

the

much chance to rest. “In

on

swered

20 of

won

four

While the Blue Devils went into the

Duke

domination in

the lead to

game to cut

erased

Hopkins

the

the

to 10-4 at the half.

came

gled defensively. Johns

came

of the

in

Blue Devils strug-

as

to

scored

Rewkowski tacked

controlled the game from the

opening

29 face

Hopkins

4:42,

was

Homewood Field

The

second,

No. 24

From staff reports

in

early

the four Blue Jays tallies, spanning just

(7-4,

ACC)

by No.

19-6

at

Md.

team scored

MONDAY,

in 2nd at

Jays, 19-6

Chronicle

19

by

,f *I

»

find

to

a

child

provider?

care

help understanding the

star

ratings?

April 7-11,2003

Want to hear about other

Sponsored by The Duke

University Graduate

School

Join As part of the National Association of Graduate-Professional Students’ contributions that graduate and professional Graduate School is students.

We

sponsoring

encourage

all

a

students make

to

the

week of academic, professional,

graduate students

to join

us

social, and

12:00 5:00

Latin and Ballroom Dance

p.m.

Tuesday, April Meditation & Relaxation

9:00

Red Cross Blood Drive

& Graduate School Research

Workshop

on

a.m.

12:00 or

Dissertation

6:00

-

Classroom

Buy:

for Graduate Students

Workshop

Teaching; Paradigms,

and Possibilities Debt Management

2:00

Workshop

-

7:30

p.m.

p.m.

Midnight

p.m.

Child Care

Room, West Union

Von Canon A, The Coffee

Wrestling

Bryan

Campus

Room, Wilson

if4

Forum

Gym

Red Zone, South Hospital

Social AMF

Center, Bryan Center

at Psych Building,

Rm.130

the Women’s Center

Bowling Lanes i

-

p.m.

3:00

p.m.

9:00

3:30

-

p.m.

a.m.

Workshop

10:00

“Food

12:30

and Mood”

p.m.

-

9:00 p.m.

-

a.m.

-

Multi-Cultural Center, Breedlove

Bryan

Room, Perkins

Center

Library

Monday, April

14 at

noon

Ci

LSRC Patio

and

p.m.

Red Zone, South

11:30 a.m. Von Canon

-1:30 p.m.

p.m.

V

Multi-Cultural Center, Bryan Center

10th 2:00

-

p.m.

'TX"O

Center

House, East

Multi-Cultural

0

O'-

9th 1:30

p.m.

Thursday, April

Workshop

a.m.

4:00 p.m.

1:30

-

2:30 p.m.

Red Cross Blood Drive

Funding

Trinity

Pitfalls

Workshop

6:00

Nutrition

p.m.

10:00

-

p.m.

12:00

Picnic

Locating

a

University’s

Bth

5:30 p.m. 9:00

A Housing

p.m.

7:30

-

Wednesday, April or

1:30 p.m.

-

12:00 p.m.

Bowling Night

To Rent

for

for its graduate

Topic

Funding

Teaching Portfolios

self-improvement activities

7th

p.m.

6:30 p.m.

Thesis

Parents@Duke

recognize the invaluable

country’s colleges and universities, Duke

Monday, April Tai Chi Demonstration Class*

a

to

for this week of events.

Conversations with the Dean*

Getting Started; Choosing

(NAGPS) celebration

parents' solutions?

A,

Hospital

Bryan

Wednesday, April

CJp

Center

Multi-Cultural Center

Lounge,

16 at

7pm

will

explain

Bryan Center

Friday, April Discount Free

Day

at

Gothic Book Store &

10 Minute Chair Massages

*

University

Appointment

Store

Only

8:30

a.m.

1:00 p.m.

Friday, April Pizza

Party (Also Celebrating Contributions

Professional Students President’s Initiative

to

on

11th

-

-

7:00 5:00

p.m. p.m.

Bryan

Center

Von Canon C, Bryan Center

the ins and outs of

18th

of Graduate &

the

as

Women)

5:00 p.m.

-

7:00

p.m.

Gross Chem Portico

“Strange

*

\

more

finding

answers

to

all Duke open to

and

representatives

evaluating childcare,

your most

as

pressing questions.

employees, faculty

well Free

and students.

University,

Fruit” A One Man Performance

Must RSVP to Erin

For

provide

and

E. Patrick Johnson, Professor of Performance Studies Northwestern

Child Care Services Association

Dean-Plizga at

information please visit

our

7:00 p.m.

rind

webpage:

or

9:00

p.m.

Shafer Theater

Questions? E-mail keysoool@mc.duke.edu

call 684-2056. or

contact the

or

call 684-3990

Office of

Grai

Co-sponsored by

the President’s

Women’s Initiative.


-

PAGE 8

MO ,

I

'•

h

. t

APRIL 7, 2003

<

The G

duke honor week "The truth

of the

matter is

that you

The hard part is

right thing

to

do.

it.”

doing

General H. Norman

-

the

always know

Schwarzkopf

1

Monday 4/7: The Community Standard: Open Forum and Q&A Soc Sci to

discuss

139 @ 7 pm.

the

new

Free T-Shirts!!

Community

“I 'will not

Standard

lie, cheat,

will I

nor

Meet with

going into

or

students, faculty, and administrators

effect next Fall for all Duke students:

steal in

my academic

endeavors,

accept the actions of those who do.”

“I will conduct

myself responsibly

in all my activities

What does it www.inte

as a

honorably

Duke

mean

rit

and

for

.duke.edu

Tuesday 4/8: Mary Jane’s Freedom; Legalization Von Canon C @ 7 pm.

Science and Ethics meet head

on

of

Marijuana?

to discuss the

legalization of

marijuana.

Wednesday 4/9:

What Would Buddha Do?

Von Canon C @ 7 pm. interfaith

perspectives

on

Thursday 4/10:

Meet interfaith students and

issues of academic and social

The Green Wars:

Von Canon A @ 7 pm.

Monday 4/14: Soc our

Sci

Examining

our

Religion faculty

in

a

and Honor

discussion of

integrity.

Technology responsibility

to

or

Bust...

the environment.

The Honor of Sex: The Unwritten Duke Code

139 @ 7 pnn.

Chronicle

columnists, students,

and student health take

a

look

at

sexual moral codes.

Wednesday 4/16: Keynote: President Sanford Commons @ 3 pm. Ambassadoi

Staehelin, President

ot

of

UNICEF,

Jend Staehelin

In these tense times of international

crisis,

come

hear

UNICEF, the United Nations Children’s Fund.

sponsored by the duke honor council 1

quoted

from htto://www.v

jP J|

|| £Jj

1


The Chronicle

MONDAY, APRIL 7,2003

GREEK BOARD

taking responsibility

from page 3

Leskosky said the board added that

accused

is

party

not

currently

it is

made, during which the

assesses

vide

board’s

constructive

termine if

of

notified

board’s final verdict until

the the

week after

a

time Wallace

decision

to

pro-

feedback and to

the board

is

give

free range [of action],” is too

complete

us

Leskosky said. “If

severe

[Wallace] will probably

say

appropriate, but she will

too

or

lenient,

necessarily

overturn it.”

have

grammatical the

changes

board’s

tions, Wallace said. “Thus far,

sanc-

and to

intent

behind the

help them word

and

sanction

phrase

it to

close loopholes.” Greek

the

ished with...

Council and

the

National

decidedly positive addition as

to the

be

more

makeup

as

to

steps our

improve

Evans, executive hel,

on

the system

only

we

countability

see

said

Whitney

president

is

often

campus.

I’m

system.

cial board

vice

there

adding

sentiment

our

credibility within

our

community,”

own

of Pan-

anti-greek

certain

aspects

of

glad that with this judiare

for

publicly

things

CAMERON

that

taking we

ac-

do and

Jeremy

comply with the

due

the

to

said the

senior,

a

greek judi-

system.

“The board

the

understands

administration

ease

University to

quick

life

the board will between

administrators of lim-

punishments

them.

“It takes

of

tration]

a

JANE HETHERINGTON/THE CHRONICLE

burden off

problems

enough

for

[the adminis-

dealing

[greeks],” Maye said. “We

said Bigelow,

chair of the

or

below

a

itself

dents

Bigelow

said

commodating

in

Student Affairs

excitement.”

athletics officials

have been very

stadium. However,

also instrumental in securing the he

largely

credited students

voted in March to increase the Union’s fees by meant to

help bring

skyrocketing

ac-

negotiations and that the Division of

was

in

larger

acts

our

Students in The Great Hall watch the women’s basketball team’s loss to Tennessee

own

night.

A

large

screen was

set up in the main

eating

area

Sunday

for the game.

issues.”

overwhelming

more

Shock and awe

with

responsi-

are

dealing with

Union’s Major Attractions Committee. “The building

generates

the are

by enforcing harsh and

unfair

seemingly against

that

and greek groups that

accuse

iting greek

said

underus

everybody.”

tension

the

not

reminds

It affects

greek.

things that

does

“It

Maye said.

Greek leaders

ble

a

the administration could not under

way

from page 1

there,” said junior Dylan Ashbrook,

board’s

greek members themselves.

passage

who

$22

and make up for the

costs of talent and technical fees—as the

driving force. “This is the first benefit that we’re reaping from the

$2O,

everyone This

will

act

ment,

is not

which

a

the first

little

prices

tickets

more, as

to

attempt

at

for Duke

for

to

take advantage

for the Athletics

of

its

Student Council

The Duke

range,

their

bring

Offers

When the plans

nounced,

could be

Director

of

were

an

for the

made

“experiment”

profitable

classical works

George

to

Giselle and

of Isadora Duncan,

Balanchine

and

Martha

Graham, the Trockaderos offer irresistible fun and complete

for

dance afficionados

novices

alike.

Admission: $3O, $25, $2O Duke Students $24, $l9, $l5

Group discounts available

Tickets: Call the Duke

Box

Office

919-684-4444

or

order online

at

tickets.duke.edu

For

more

a

to the

$50,000 Counting

were

information: www.union.duke

com-

first

called

to determine if such

September

Union On

concert will have

events

no

Stage Committee presents

Tuesday April 15

Page

an-

the

protected.

nection to “K-ville Kares

pm

Auditorium

Duke

Lake

sell-out and

and if Cameron could be

Carlo

(Company

choreography

artist in the

Joe Alieva

8

from Swan

a

reaching

failed show

of Athletics

Tk*ockadero

eomic

Parodying

an

Ballets

£(gfie °Wor((fs

foremost

to

likely ensuring

chances

goal.

Panuccio said the

convinced the

University

hoped

Crows and to Dave Matthews, but neither could

concert

Government, the Union and the Gradu-

and Professional

had

organizers

improving

usage of Cameron

fall, student leaders from Campus Council,

Duke Student

The

mit to the set date.

Depart-

stadium, protection for

Kares,”

Duke Cancer

Patient Support Program.

$50,000-per-show

stu-

will tickets

to open Cameron Feb. 7 for “K-ville

concert that would have benefited the

fundraising

previously prohibited of the

University

bring

said.

policy change

availability

ticket

opportunity

floor and overall expense.

In the

ate

keep student

Cameron,

to

else,” Ashbrook

because of new

to

try

have to cost

the significant

fee,”

a

but if they “have the

really huge may

of the student activities

sophomore.

a

Organizers in

Mor-

that the accused

cial board relates to greek members in

outside

“People

plus educational

Sheldon Maye, outgoing NPHC president and

help

“Our community really needs to take

of the

aware

need to be pun-

to

willing

verdicts

greek

whole.

a

[punishments!,”

still

punitive

board’s

we’re all

a

rather

ourselves

move

accused]

senior, added

a

lishment of the

community

to

IFC President

Outgoing gan,

stand,”

is

use

consequences,

consequences.”

Panhellenic Council—said the reestab-

greek judicial board

the

of the problem.

reactionary

fact that [the

the

IFC,

commit-

correct the roots

trying

from

the previous

leaders—from

Panhellenic

help

can

“We’re away

it’s main-

ly been minor wording tweaks [to help the]

different

than the symptoms

may

small

been made to

form

and

new

which

that it is not

not

is

called “creative

concept

a

Leskosky said. “We’re

“[Administrators]

Only

using

sanctioning,” which emphasizes

dethe

operating

way it should.

[the verdict]

ted to

of

within

for things

system.”

our

Leskosky

PAGE 9

University

con-


11 'IV,

PAGE

10 ďż˝

MONDAY,

PRIL 7i

r.

The Chronicle

\

2003

1J

'

'

solutely fabu

ous

Family o

e

Week

Monday, 4/7: Queer Movie Ri?ht: Get Real 8-iopm, to Piycholo?y

130

Tuesday, 4/Q: film: Southern Wort, with remarks by Prof, man kWiter, p, Center for Documentary

Studies, Lyndhurst house,

1317 UJest

Petti?reil) ft. (Prerented

by the (enter for LGBT Life)

Wednesday, 4/9: TV: Rachel & Shane from (TlTV's Road Ru ej/Battle of the Sexes, lime/venue to he confirmed

Thursday, 4/10: Spring flin?; L6TBQ coffee/jazz social, 8-upm, Blue Coffee Company, 202 fl. Corcoran ft., downtown Durham. Anyone interested in interacting with the LGBT graduate f> ptofenional Undent community

at

Duke t UHC if uuelcome.

frida if,

4/11:

SQ: Socially Queer, r,-spm, IIC For

Open to all under?radf, staff, and faculty. Presented by DukeOUT.

m

flowers

Buildin?, West Campus.

Unity Conference 6 UIK-fH. more

information,

eo

to:

uituui.un(.edu/-tho

e/nainitu/

AQUADuke Alliance of Queer Undergraduates

at Duke


Classifieds

The Chronicle

ETHOS Ethos

is

Publication

authorized

University A child a

needs

Program in

uate

in

Check

our

Education

in

students

Education

often

in 213 West Duke

see us

enroll

Come

courses.

Formalwear

Millstone

Dr.,

Don’t miss mit

in

to sub-

GET FREE Don’t miss

Chronicle’s

Exam

Issue

28th.

April

on

684-3811

or

your

Break the

Building.

Call

cards.

flat

$25.00

RDU.

Call

Duke

DPC

183S

Religion. by

CZ,

O’Barr.

DANCING

and

C-L:

Professor

and

the

guide

Triangle.

submit be

to

renewal

a

101

W

dent

new

interior,

Forms

published.

Union

Bldg.

call

684-

information,

more

or

Saturn SC2 2

1996 rear

spoiler,

tion.

manual

Must

door coupe w/

LES

BALLETS DE

Tuesday,

condi-

good

8

15,

by

Auditorium. Tickets Office

684-4444,

tickets.duke.edu. the

by

Duke

at

150S,

ing

(Tiffany).

BC

Ford

Focus

SE.

5-speed,

Brought

Union

cruise,

tilt-steering,

records,

miles. mint

1

DRAG

maint.

condition.

‘Ol

Ford Escort

matic, air,

Fox

PAGE

SE

cruise,

own

GUYS

GET YOUR

north for 1

LES

ROOM

uate

Don't miss your oppor-

to

tunity

congratulate

in The

published

9.

May

information

has

homes

iors,

Chronicle’s

of

it.

BC

TO

Renowned Ballet

15, 8

Auditorium. Tickets

Box

Office

at

684-4444,

or

ting.

hiking

at

alums

in

in

per

mom

will

Reliable

our

exchange

dog/housesitting

(2x

neighborhood

with

shared kitchen.

non-smokers

and

3817

animal

see

BALLET?

LIKE

the

This is

your

only.

pool,

MEN

world’s

foremost

necessary. To

LES

ny,

BALLETS

year

old

2

terms,

Equivalent

to

Application

online

Tuesday,

Spanish at

sum-

ALL-

Two

rpalmerl

@

credits. 1

&

by

8

15,

April

Office

2.

684-4444,

tickets.duke.edu.

www.learn-

the

by

Duke

Page

pm, BC

at

Private

online

or

Union

Box

student

On

at

you

Stage

311

Duke

bath,

for

undergrads

work.

Start

next

T,W,Th

N-S,

and

2

respond, phone

daughter May

dryer.

no

cats) 419-

in

babysit

home for

my

and

Please

6-

throughout call

Susan

1/2

PAID

experience,

Weaver,

Mary

Looking

490-3032

friendly

singles.

W/D,

fully

0.8.0. Will accept

910-724-4257,

919-382-

advertising

donor.

egg

$6.00 for

-

private party/N.R

or

NORTHCATE

Bldg.

is

of

to

reply

of

descent

with

intelli-

complexion. Young, women

SHOP

seeks

couple

Wife

Full

similar features

who would like to donate,

Service

please

Style Shop

hannahbible@aol.com.

Handsome

compensation,

$2,500-$5,000. Thank you.

Mon.-Fri.

NOW

HIRING

agers,

service technicians for

for

energetic,

FREE

individuals

in

April,

rary

to

help

interviewing

neighborhoods.

call;

Christopoulos

Dr.

more

sum

Call

(919;

$2 off

information.

in

SUMMER AND FALL

If inter-

Interested

working

for

paid

what

for

com-

to

get

would

you

SWAT

doing anyway? ing

on

wanted

puters? Always

Christina

at 416-7524.

in

286-4030

2003

SWAT

tempo-

interviewing experience

preferred, training available. ested

TRAINING.

for

man

w/Duke ID

is

Northgate

be

Shopping Center,

look-

down

from

3

Sears

consultants. Visit

new

next to Harris

http://swat.oit.duke.edu/ today an

application.

Auto,

Teeter

Durham

Ridge Apartments

Pine

Close to Streets at

Southpoint

•15 minutes from Duke

1,2, and 3 bedroom apartment homes available welcome

Undergraduates

15 words

100 (per day) additional per word

8-5:30

with

Starting

variable schedule,

work,

lifeguards,

people-

all ads

1.

job

great

first 15 words

$4.50 for first

-

central

May

919-489-6603.

684-3811

English/German

business rate

heat,

summer

Call

Christian

Loving,

classified

room,

Gas

room.

1

bedroom,

dining

BARBER

878- 3661

included.

2br/2ba,

3

$B5O/month. Available

air.

position.

103 W Union

by

come

mer.

Pool and

Campus

Park.

Sat. 8-5:00

neighborhood

housing.

quality.

880-5680.

or

room,

calling 684-2621.

The Chronicle

Professional

Trinity living

breakfast

gen-

Wicke at 919-493-3932.

Rent. 1

2

Minutes

academic

Flexible hours,

and fill out

committee.

I-85/I-40.

details.

bedrooms,

Swift Ave.

furnished,

3043.

Brought to

off

Hillsborough area. 2

car

on

adjustment.

student to

summer.

nc.rr.com.

TROCK-

MONTECARLO,

Auditorium. Tickets

more.duke.edu/summersession/ and

DE

Institute

course

for

screened

hardwood floors, 2

porch,

acres.

Chapel.

through

gent

Looking

central

bedrooms), appliances,

garage with enclosed storage,

the

House

fair

the

IN

Oaks

ADERO

mer

far

SI 07.

Durham

SPANISH?

front

Jackie in

or

week with

a

for

first)

transportation,

Call 471email

Utilities

chance to

MALE COMIC BALLET compa-

in both

so

south-central

allergies (dog

month of

Condominium For

baths, washer and LIKE

Spanish

in

few hours

at

the

or

tennis,

12) offered

(a

there

Must like

emilypatootie@aol.comfor

Near Duke.

if

DEAD-

DO YOU NEED

contact

684-2032

(3 all

care

month) babysit-

$9OO/month

(Spanish

Desire

mom.

home

our

the

trails. Private room, bath and

entrance;

dogs;

for

board

home

month of

Great

Duke

and

Durham

occasional

BOARD

joke.

room

Furnished

TIGHTS?

Intensive

needed to

online at tickets.duke.edu.

sen-

15.

April

RETURNING

Comic

Page

pm,

Advertising

graduating

MONTE-

Company!! Tuesday, April

Issue,

call 919-684-3811

please

LINE:

annual

DE

World

All-Male

been mailed to

you haven’t received

ARE

DUKE!! The

grad-

your

Graduation

keepsake

the

CARLO

No

&

BALLETS

TROCKADERO

Graduate

at

Room

heat/air,

few hours

a

$7200

6 month-old, whole life

sition time FREE

AND GALS

7

in school this

Durham with about two weeks tran-

Tuesday,

pm.

TUTU’S.

the

Mon,,

4 door, auto-

-

warranty,

person

home with

at

summer!

Your

are

in

Sun.,

HELP WANTED

loving

our

BAL-

Duke’s

AUDITORIUM.

15, 8

April

at

activities are

If you

Houses For Rent

$5,400.

hiring

DE

Call

longer depend-

The Chronicle Business Office is

9-6

MONTECARLO

Stage

LES

see

or

pm

time,

your

668-1686.

WANT

TROCKADERO

by

factors

pathogenesis.

Call 919-732-8552

provide

Parents:

of

eral office

Come

LETS

to

virulence

the

Hours

summer.

and need to fill

Andrews

Women’s

QUEENS?

in

-

SS.

used

mechanism

three

or

96K-mostly

owner,

170S.

SOME?

at

committee.

Congratulate

Sat.).

two

evenings

the

Basement of the

for

to you

On

Fri., &

year.

Box

needs

scheduled

on

summer

organizations.

the

bacterial

contribute

Chapel (Evenings

Kind,

GOT

which

genomic

currently being

are

understand

to

Moriah Rd. or

to work

Chapel during

and

Page

online

or

students

graduation.

TROCK-

pm,

Chapel

Duke

are 4:45-8:00

sell

MONTECARLO

April

University

Comfort

7pm,

3508 Mt

charcoal

purple,

trans.,

080. 613-0206

$3,000

2004

to Duke stu-

dark

BALLERIStudies

SEE

13 @

May

infection

Cell biolo-

biology,

and animal models of

approaches,

Information

col-

host-

using geneti-

systems.

molecular

gy,

of

681-6765.

You

Higher

Jean

FREE

interactions

tractable

cally

candidates to

studies

on

pathogen

or

Devil's

NAS!!!... N0... WHEN?? COME

ADERO

FREE

globaltesol.com.

Blue

7:00-9:30 p.m.

Monday

Education

193S

R,

CCI,

on-line

or

seeking

are

laborate

Pay.

in-class

days

correspondence.

Inn

Taught

&

-Great

14-18)

680-2439.

Taught by TRAINED

LIKE

(Durham May by

Arnett. T-

DPC

p.m.

Politics

Gender,

DANCERS

(919)682-3690.

www.westvillageapts.com.

highway STS.

Edward

3:50-5:05

Education.

POINT

Guaranteed

TESOL Certified in 5

Summer Rentals

Available.

$$

chance to be in

3811. Available only

Science

-

CZ, CCI,

Professor

TH

ON

For

DPC COURSES

to

port.taxi.com.

MALE

Jobs

from

1-888-270-2941

Advocate, The Chronicle’s

available at

www.citizenair-

CLASSICALLY

Campus.

blocks

919-

FALL 2003

(919)-306-5380

677-0351.

or

rate

details.

East

2

Lofts,

PUBLICITY

2003-2004

listing

credit

accept

only

©chron-

advertising

efficient

cars,

10am-

Downtown

WORK STUDY We

in

advertisements

display

The

chance

your

AIRPORT TAXI DIRECT

also

415

Seminar:

must

We

Outlet,

Hillsborough. Open

Saturday

icle.duke.edu.

drivers.

ADVENTURE! TEACH ENGLISH OVERSEAS:

WEST VILLAGE APTS

STUDENT GROUPS

to

Air-conditioned

and

Infopack.

DEADLINE: APRIL 17

and

by

studs,

vest,

EXAM BREAK ISSUE

at

or

tie,

cufflinks.

and

Own

$BO. Includes coat,

-s:3opm. Call 644-8243 for

math.

ACES

student.

full-time

shirt,

pants,

Friday

fall semester Education on

for

your tuxedos for

Undergraduate

Publications Board.

www.duke.edu/web/education.

First-year

Duke

undergrad-

and

reading

courses

the

by

C

and learn how to tutor

course

kids

Enroll

mentor.

a

Special

Independent

an

7/2003 � PAGE 11

APRIL

MONDAY,

au^-

can

Rent starts at $520

move-in

sp*

4 consecutive insertions -10 % off

or

>

5

consecutive insertions

or more

-

48

20 % off

features

special

ICON

PROPERTIES

(Combinations accepted.) $l.OO $1.50

day for all

extra per

Bold Words

TEENS NEEDED TO TEST A QUESTIONNAIRE

day

for

a

(maximum

15

spaces)

extra per

$2.50 $2.00

for 2

line

-

extra per

Bold

Heading The Reasearch ages

heading

day for Boxed Ad ALL

day prior

to

12:00

publication by

noon

research

INFORMATION IS

The

confidentiality

Institute

questionnaire a

deadline 1 business

Triangle

15-17 to test a

of all

Section 501

KEPT

answers

(RTI)

is

looking

for teens

about alcohol and

drugs

for

study.

STRICTLY CONFIDENTIAL

is

protected

under Federal Law,

of the Public Health Service Act.

payment Prepayment Cash, Check,

(We

Duke

cannot make 24

-

is

change

Parental permission is required for Participation.

required

IR, MC/VISA

or

Flex

for cash

accepted

payments.)

hour drop off location

•101 W. Union or

and

the U.S. Public

mail to:

90858, Durham, NC

Interviews

27708

-

0858

(919)

your ad.

Visit the Classifieds Online!

No

refunds

or

have

any questions

cancellations

accept

a Certificate of

as

are conducted

485-2726 or

http://www.chronicle.duke.edu/classifieds/today.html Call 684-3811 if you

Visa

community

at RTI and

gift

card

reimbursement.

Participation and

from

programs

service.

satellite

offices in

Raleigh,

Greensboro.

CALL AMANDA at

(919)

orders:

place

$75 prepaid

FOR MORE INFORMATION

classifieds@chronicle.duke.edu

call

a

Service that some schools

Durham,

e-mail orders

684-3811 to

receive

Health may

fax to: 684-8295

phone

will

$lO for transportation

Volunteers can also receive

Building

Chronicle Classifieds Box

Volunteers

about

after first insertion

classifieds. deadline.

or

visit

toll free 1-866-800-9176 our

website:

https://nsduhweb.rti.org/clinval/website.htm


PAGE 12

furnished

Nicely

available to June.

APRIL

MONDAY,

2BR

7,

SUMMER STORAGE

house

tenants

responsible

The Chronicle

2003

in

Misc. For Sale

The lowest

1 yr. lease. $BOO/mo. Call 220-

ice.

Free

6459.

Woodcraft

3BR,

Townhouse

2.58A,

ment,

all

deck,

(work)

end Full

sqft.

unit.

Excellent

Digital

Piano,

$750

080.

Condition,

combined

Student’s

many

Storage.

832-

FURNITURE

(H). Moving

and

table,

tv,

must

sell.

and

washer/dryer

Call

for

why

College

Summer

888-266-8326

Saeed al Sahhaf,

ing,

as

floors, stove,

ity

rendering

70,

5

carports,

acres

miles west

of

off

util-

Why

large

highway

Durham. 382-

8012.

1

Pond

to Duke.

1/2 bath,

bedroom/bath,

pet-lover,

utilities

Community/5

with

deck

move

Comfy

master

washer/dryer,

All

smoker.

in

non-

included.

The

furniture

this

summer?

studio 5 minutes from West, Forest.

Dishwasher,

tennis, gym. $430

mo.

pool,

309-7234.

$72,000, SUBLETTER

WANTED

ROOMMATE WANTED female

male

Campus. Contact

need

undergrads

female

or

roommates

bedroom house, Must

2

be

blocks

1-2

for

furnished

available MAY-AUG. Porch,

5

2BR,

apartment

All interested

students

are

drop-in

pool,

dishwasher. Call 383-2070.

in the Office 9, 2-3:30 p.m

Madrid Nuria

session

is

being

posed

by

to storm the

try

not

city,

is

many

infantry

they did for

as

a

few hours early Saturday, but in earnest,

haul down the Iraqi

flag that still flut-

to

heart,

atop the Republican Palace?

ters

Offered

Moving van absolutely appointment.

an

Drive.

to

in

you.

including

Director,

at

We

20% off all a

or

free. Call for

bring

the

Mexico/Caribbean round

van

Other

moving supplies,

for

lock

919/469-2820

able,

the

Iraqi ruler’s days unthink-

or

at least inadmissible. But

Sun-

your

visit

unit.

our

Book

Call

or

website

trip! Europe world on

wide

line

only

$lB9

one

day

the information minister’s talk

the

“scoundrels”

way!

and

“villains”

destinations.

www.airtech.com

“criminals” who have invaded Iraq in

lesser

a

pressing,

subordinated to

key,

practical

more

Iraqis, he said, should be

of

report them

to the

the official made

star of the war, if

million new

cases

of skin

from melanoma, the deadliest form of skin

1

sightings

no

en-

way

merely

were

the work of the drivers’ imaginations.

and

warning.

words

other

Iraqi

of

advice, said,

he

fighters,

should refrain from firing their guns in “for

Baghdad

no

reason,”

many ap-

as

pear to have done through the

prolonged

heavy bombing, conducted from

alti-

an

tude that made the endless rattle of

tiaircraft guns and automatic rifle like

more

ty

than

an-

seem

reaffirmation of vulnerabili-

a

an

act of

defense.

meaningful

But if this sounded like

an

appeal for

there

ammunition,

With the

point. said,

it

in

enemy

the

was

duty

was

an

counter-

intriguing, slightly menacing,

who wants to do

he

Baghdad,

now

for

“anybody

so

to

use

his

weapon,”

develops skin

cancer

cancer.

cancer

hat. Seek shade. And

888-462 DERM

or

and anybody who failed to do considered

“cursed.”

so

would he

Violators,

more

not be treated

in

Later

the

Iraqi

day,

leniently.

Saddam

in the form of

weighed in,

read

fighters

a

himself

message to

television. The

on

or

fail

use

are

11

detected

you

spend

a

every year.

lot ol

lime

One

in the

during their lifetime. Don't be sunscreen.

For

more

one

information

visit www.aad.org.

personart

sun,

you

hour in the U.S. dies

should protect

of them. Stay

on

how

to

outof

youtself.

state

he likes to

was

in

were

that

a

In

of

muse on

media

Soviet-era

stage,

devel-

himself with

distinctly a

more

sober

statement read

Iraqis

on

should

“rumors,” especially of

suggested

gaining the

rumors,

shown in his

presiding

senior officials

In

a

showed

film

that

upper

U.S.

a

forces

hand.

some

top of his

of

or

on

Baghdad’s

message

game,

to

can

a

was

that

Friday

double, strolling

a

western of

was

full of

a

neigh-

leader on

beaming, hand-

slapping, climb-on-the-car-hood geniality. But the statement read

Sunday

suggested

the Iraqi done.

army

First,

an

was

the

not

armored

a

said

U.S.

personnel

or

job

that

British

carrier

or

dinars, about $5,000. Second,

during same

that

its

ar-

gun would be awarded 15 million

tillery Iraqi

his behalf

getting

statement

anybody who destroyed tank,

on

awareness

Iraqi fighter losing touch with his

“might attempt

believing that they

broadcast

Saddam,

at

that

said to have taken place Sunday.

standpoint,

anybody other than

The allies, he said, •ENMATOLOBY

with

uniform

Iraqi

himself the

he said

television,

release AMERICAN ACADEMY OF

marshal’s

meeting

flourishes

not be prey to

kind

fAADI

field

was

Iraqi military.

Iraqi Donald Rumsfeld with

rhetorical

mood Sunday.

the midday

protect yourself from

smiling Iraqi leader

about

But he

coil

saying

were

tighten the

to

so as

of knowing ifthese

said, would

his caustic wit at the Americans’ expense.

cancer,

Qatar,

in

roads that

access

circlement of Baghdad. There was

borhoods, the

Moscow,

skin

seizing

were

was

the lookout

on

oping his thrusts, amusing

a

they

Saddam would dare claim that distinc-

A sort of

up. Wear

U.S. commanders,

tion for himself.

the

Cover

the

sky alongside

be

concerns.

of U.S. units

ignore” sightings

From

sun.

the

and

for the enemy and “should

Sahhaf has

of five Americans

from

seeing U.S. paratroopers descending

(212)-219-7000.

to

out

west

telling of

www.ldselfstorage.com.

not

One

were

$250

everywhere

one

and northwest of the city

conserving

supporters,

numbered remains

might be

L&D SELF STORAGE

Garcia.

Surprisingly,

reporting

were

from points

arriving

drivers

if inter-

Wed.,

Duke

Administrative

of Baghdad,

fun.

mjmll@duke.edu

Services

Reference

Campus

guest

by and ready

citizens

the city’s

Travel/Vacation

April

2016

that

with intent to seize

responsible,

was

wel-

&

Featured

close

are

gas station

Baghdad

a

ques-

tion

Room,

really

question

at

that

Sahhaf had

subtle but im-

acknowledgment

an

that the very notion

abroad in Madrid?

Abroad,

soldiers

off East

9

WED., APRIL

Study

shift,

a

To Saddam’s die-hard

Want to study

of

to be

fight. As for the

ested.

answer

U.S.

50

a

the

surrounding

this: When will U.S. tanks and

DUKE IN MADRID

a

destroyed

the

4

attend

area

told

Guards

overlook-

storage,

lies, asserting

who had filled up

being broadcast, Iraqis

six U.S. tanks.

This appeared

to

he

sur-

around the

noose

having killed

airport,” and

were

Instead,

masse.

“tightening the

U.S. forces

2BATH,

to

en

divided into

conference, the Republican

portant

Roommate Wanted

(919)599-3534.

come

contend-

that the Ameri-

where they

U.S. enemy in the

May-August.

min-

Townhouse-1 BR loft,

end unit,

ing pond Call

Park,

Northgate

$4OO/month. 220-7665.

Walden utes

FURNISHED SUBLET

hardwood

refrigerator, large

fireplace,

room,

deck. 1.8 wooded

Saturday,

isolated pockets

were

house,

longer

no

counterattack and

Iraqi

an

much

news

bedroom

was

had been routed from the airport by

teamlogistics@attbi.com.

bed,

Houses For Sale

Two

he did

Mohammed

minister,

or

Call Elizabeth at 383-2599

more.

tell

landing here and there.”

a

At about the time this statement the

Sunday,

cans

email

Desk,

Top

that there is

years

Find out

LLC is The

Choice

from page 2

and

confusion,

cause

IRAQ

Delivery. 50

over

experience.

Logistics,

Team

220-3229.

$1350/ mo.

528-4844

Technics

and

and

serv-

base-

appliances,

lease

upgrades, 9689

2000

Sale:

Unbeatable

Pick-Up

insured

Fully For

price.

battle “let him

join

a

any unit

unit of the

kind that he is able to join.”


Comics

The Chronicle

Overholser/

APRIL

MONDAY.

7/2003

PAGE 13

Yamada

Roger

THE

Crossword

Daily

Edited by

Wayne Robert Williams

ACROSS Part of

Witty

CD

remark

Brief summation oil

Vegetable spread

Zeno's home Make 17

amends

Sight-gag

comedy 19

Thin and

20

Feedbag

bony

morsel

21

Dry

23

run

Screwball

24 Show biz hanger-on Virtuous Liberals Persian poet Khayyam 1936

Gilbert/ Scott Adams

presidential candidate

Landon 34

Version

of the

Bible

Land

f ;

THIS THE

IS

DOG

HEADHUh

NOTICED

I

AS

CEO , YOU

TAKE

CAN

CREDIT

HA, HA!

FOR

LEGAL.

RANDOM UPTURNS

T

YOU

COKPA

JR

DCK

AND

WRITE

BY CHANGING

A BOOK,

VICTIMS WILL

JOBS. BUY

weather

Liquid

FACT,IF

tAILLIONS YOUR

UP

IS

KAKE

IT!

Lame

Foch

eg-

43

Flesh

44

Surpass

46

Siena

mark

Stir up

periods

Splinter

of

Letter-writers

61 63

Seventh Greek

10

Itsy-bitsy of

letter

mass

biter

Golf

Richard of

Cuban

NASCAR To one's

Strongboxes

69 Border

Trudeau

site

course

Render void

figs,

Cockamamie

commodity 68

Doctorow

novel

old

Tangled

group

Confiscates E.L.

58

of "The

Seven"

again

57

60 List

overboard

Magnificent

XIII

53 Loser 56

excuse,

Wallach

49 Notable 51

Cast

seven

times

main

Bounding

Simone and

48 IV

)/T

Doonesbury/ Garry

FL

Edgewater,

the

pharaohs

YES, IT'S IN

of

liking

Paulo, Brazil Withering look

on

70

Winglike parts

Unwind

71

Uses

Branch

38 Strives

53

personnel

40 Roman tyrant

54 Maui neighbor

Needle boxes

42 Disconnected

55 Schnoz-related

sieve

a

72 "Leading

with

My Chin" author 73

Pesters

Scruff

31

MS-

2

Dresser"

director Peter

DOWN 1

“The

37

Ailing

45 Gifts bestowed

62 Place

47

64 Firearm

Miscue

65

50 Japanese

Fractions of

honorific

rupees

quite right

59 London subway

musical sounds

More rational

35

Not

surf

66 Short sleep

Tin Man's

52

to

Miss, neighbor

need

Shoe

67

width

The Chronicle Bands we would

like to see in

Cameron

R.E.M.:

.Dave

R.E.M.:

.kelly

R.E.M.;

..mss

R.E.M.:

...paul,

R.E.M.:

.jane,

brian but Dave

Anyone

Matthews

anne,

UP

favorite band

Roily’s

B-'

mow

quick;

MOT

Dov

e

b-button;

Llf

R2*

Ll*

R2!

VIDEO

(R.E.M.)

roily

A Account

a-button;

GAME,

OH,

SOM.

Monica

Representatives:

Account Assistants:

YEAH,

Sales

Jonathan Melissa

Representatives:

Johannah

o

Sales

Chiu,

Eckerman, Ben

Rogers,

W°]

/

National

Coordinator

Creative

Services

10

Durity,

Thushara

Graber

Dauphin,

Andrew

Fazekas,

Deborah

Gregory, Megan Harris,

Assistants:

Chris

Corea,

Coordinator:

Shaw

Sallyann Bergh

Classifieds Representative:

Is**:

Holt

Reilly,

Ashley Rudisill, Melanie Classifieds

do

Charlotte

Claremon,

Chen

Dohmen

Chris Rachel

\

-

Farrell, Stafford

Brooke

Laura

"V

Jackson

Sim

Silver,

Hall,

David

Lauren

A

Kristin

Katherine

Coordinator:

Business

Dawn

Franklin,

Administrative Coordinator:

•r

kelly

robert, special, jane3

R.E.M

:>

Lbrian

R.E.M.:

FoxTrot/ Bill Amend

mike

dave

Emily

Weiss

'o-O

Submissions

for

lished

space

on

a

the

Duke

Events

available

Calendar

basis

Submit notices at least 2 business

for

events.

days prior to the

to the attention of “Calendar Coordinator" at Box or

pub-

are

Duke

Dttk'Th -J

*■

event

Speaker: 4-6pm.

Academic

study

APRIL 7

Justice:

A

National

on

F. Hirsch,

leave

on

124 Social Sciences

from

conserved

“Discovering machinery

global

on a

pathways

scale.” 111

Chair

&

Prof.

Dept,

Faculty

of

the

4pm.

Cell

embryonic

mouse

lung.”

practices.”

Mondays.

at

B;3opm.

All

Yoga

150.

are

MONDAY,

9-1

M.

Duke

Hogan,

University

morphogene111

Biological

Ewald. At

UNC.

In

us

welcomed.

or

Hope

who truth

It’s

worship.

look

question, doesn’t

Basement

of

a

with the

Portrait in

Franklin

Sponsored

Conversation

Bryan

Richenel Ansano, webcast live

Franklin

by

Center, VonCannon

(go

to

919-668-1904.

rooms

course

photog-

Center.

A

Public

Humanities

B&C. Contact:

The event

sponsored

is

by

begin Duke

with

meaning,

and

for

(close

TUESDAY, TAIZE

APRIL

Bible

will also be

www.duke.edu/web/institute).

own.

Film Theater,

religion.

quiet and

7-Bpm,

Duke

Student

info.

grassy

You

can

speak

French with

us.

Join Great

Publications

Undergraduate Library

follow

a

flow

or

do

Free.

Presenting Student Creativity: La table francaise.

Tuesdays.

Meet at the

for 40 minutes of informal

area

balancing.

Hours.

A

role

the

of the Duke

History

Board.

Perkins

Location:

7 & 9:3opm. ‘The

Bryan

Students;

Center,

Gold Rush.” Griffith

since

1927

publishing on

Time:

During

Library Gallery.

Publications

The

Board has

in

fostering

student

and managing

campus.

www.union.duke.edu. Free

Employees

$4; General Public $5.

Exhibit:

“North

Film: 7pm. Southern Comfort

(part

Center for

of Graduate Student

Documentary

lgbtcenter@duke.edu

Studies.

684-6607.

or

main

Campus

forefront of exhibition rent

Carolina

Duke

Architecture”.

School:

University

quad.

North

displays

a

The

Museum

of

Carolina has

modern architecture

for

been

many

collection of works of

Art

at the

years.

past

of East

Art,

and

The cur-

practicing architects in North Carolina.

8 Duke Police offers

Study;

12noon,

Loop).

people

Hannenman,

Patty

Memorial

Prayer: s:lspm, Tuesdays.

information,

a

stretching

played

for Duke

Chapel.

to the

Freewater Films:

believe that

particular

one

Fitness

more

in the Asiatic Arboretum. We’ll walk from

bridge

there to

the

http://lgbt.studentaffairs.duke.edu.

Room 032,

4-6pm.

Multicultural

8

7pm, Tuesdays.

hanneOOl @earthlink.net.

Baptist Perspective:

Event

Mondays.

Social time,

religious community

for life’s

Joe Furman

Campus.

www.joefurman.com for

exhibit chronicles the

7pm.

docstudies@duke.edu

in

Reparations

5-7pm,

for the French Table and

Chapel,

Upcoming

Ewald and Jeff Whetstone at

UNC.John

919.660.3663

conjunction

Representation; The

raphy,” taught by Wendy and

Series:

Photography Speaker

‘The Practice of

Institute.

APRIL

French Table:

Appreciation Week).

Portrait in

Duke

Center.

Bryan

Contact:

Wendy

arched Feast:

Opm,

Sciences.

The

APRIL 7

Vegetarian

your

Mondays.

Visit

your

hour of yoga.

students and Duke

Duke

in Duke Gardens:

ISKCON.

Hall Unitarian Universalist: 9-1 Opm,

relaxing

a

Levine

informal time of refreshments and

“Haphour,”

to

Brodie Recreational Center, East to

Reduce

Wednesdays.

5:30-6:30,

Meetings

and

events

treating yourself

Club members.

their

molecular Sciences.

L.

Brigid

Biology,

enforcing

Presbyterian/UCC Fellowship:

fellowship, begins

core

Classes:

instructing. Open

APRIL 7

Stanford.

Biological

Programming

Social

TUESDAY,

“Branch, bud and stem:

Medical Center. sis

of

Rural

Deeds: A

Lounge,

dinner, Seminar:

Biology/DCMB

conservation

for

Religious MONDAY,

Biology

and

in

by irrigators

to

Wesleyan

Stuart,

Joshua

2:lspm.

(Institute Words

the

Fellow,

Building.

Bioinformatics/Computational

Yoga

Free

Westminster

Candidate:

adopt

“From

Limited

Reflects

Trial.” Dr. Susan Center

and

Speech

Victim/Anthropologist

Humanities

University.

to

action

Marshall on

Science Research Center, Room A

“Constrained

Embassy Bombings

Graham

Australia)

of collective

commitments

2pm.

ongoing

Th mpi at?

X—X

V

stress while

Futures —NSW,

Speaker:

1J

90858

calendar@chronicle.duke.edu

MONDAY,

Fat

F

rj

J

Tuesdays. Worship

Chapel

basement

Union and

open

and

area.

to all

Events

tion

presentations,

Alcohol Law

friendship.

Sponsored by

students. More

Earth

Friends and

9-11am.

Day:

of South Ellerbe Creek,

others

call 684-5994. stream

joining

are

The

clean-up.

Durham’s

bags

Saturday, April

forces

public

East End Park

and

26. Volunteers from the

NIEHS, Duke’s for

this

is invited to

(1204

refreshments

www.owdna.org/fosec.htm or

Alston

will

be

year’s help pick Ave).

Sigma Chi Earth

Day

Rape

presentations,

tional programs, contact

following services:

schedule these

Workforce

Personal property

Lieutenant

Tony

Crime preven-

presentations,

awareness

violence educa-

engraving.

Shipman

at

Please

668-2627

to

programs/services.

up litter at

Gloves, trash

provided.

call John at 286-6045.

Info:

Carillon Recital: formance neur.

by

Weekdays,

J. Samuel

5

pm.

Hammond,

For information, call 684-2572.

A

15-minute

University

per-

carillon-


PAGE 14 �

APRIL

MONDAY,

The

r

>i

2003

7,

*

Letters

The Chronicle Wrongful protests

fact in his

Bama,

a

down not

resolution

a

devoting

sion

the

on

should be

condemning

a

topic. While the protesters’ right

respected, their methods

their criticisms Protesters

were

take-over

a

was

a

opposed unilateral action

introduced and to the

opposed

war

resolution is not

in

zation

Iraq, and

resolution

to

a

voted

was

drafted,

was

give

that formal stances

recognizes

the

on

spent discussing the topic argument by citing

recognize is that it is

to

to

issues

they

supported

not DSG’s

to

on

viewpoints

to

stage

If the

prevail.

to

educate members of the Duke

and the conditions in

spent

to the

opposed

a

take-over of

a

It is

legislative did not allow

community

on

wartime issues not the

Iraq, interrupting DSG meetings is

of

passage

serve

to inform the student

should consider

war

and

organized

body, and those

preventing

DSG from

con-

student

Jonathan

how the

on

helped

the Union

of the Duke

Bigelow, incoming president

secure

University

Cameron Indoor Stadium for

a

KEVIN

LEES, Managing Editor

MIKE MILLER,

Graphics

TYLER ROSEN, Editor

BUSH, Online Editor

MELISSA SOUCY, Sr. Assoc.

MATT BRADLEY, Sr. Assoc.

University

NADINE OOSMANALLY, Sr. Assoc.

Editor

Photography Editor

THAD PARSONS, Sr. Assoc.

EVAN DAVIS, Sr. Assoc.

ANDREA OLAND, Sr.

Photography Editor

Graphic

Assoc.

Sports

which

SETH LANKFORD, Online Manager

BARBARA STARBUCK, Production Manager NALINI MILNE, Advertising

Manager

University. faculty,

the Duke Student

The

opinions expressed

staff, administration

view of the editorial board. Columns,

letters

To reach the Editorial Office (newsroom)

call

103 West Union

684-3811

or

© 2003 The Chronicle. Box may

be reproduced

is entitled

to one

in

any

Publishing Company.

and at

or

in this newspaper

trustees.

Unsigned

cartoons represent

their

he should

end his desperate attempts to relive his

thoroughly undistin-

guished

college

write

and

years

about which

something

he knows.

characteristically

a

endeavor

of

read:

former co-chair of

1

a

past president of the Duke Conservative Union,

former associate editorial page

leftist

/ART /2003 / 04

v

a

the Undergraduate Judicial Board,

to

unusual criticism

anti-war

the

Trinity ’O2 The writer is

mind? Or did he

meretriciously

his

temper

Martin Green

and

a

editor

of The Chronicle.

[04!3eBdBlfoaos6s?in_archive-l

a

Office Manager

ed without due

with

arose

were

since

Chronicle

chose to take

relied

a

irresponsibly stance

Even

tion.

The

though

did

to

attempt

reach Jean-Baptiste and oth-

admitted

eyewitness his

“recollection

was

credibility

negligence,

members of the Duke

nity

who had

of

edge been

situation

opportunity to judgment based on all

and denied the make

a

As

and

Baptiste

a

result Jean-

have

involved

The event of

terms

black

greek affilia-

This

community.

implications

greeks

well

ethics. mores, and

daily

community,

forced

academic

deans

of

to

that

say

effect

of

any

do not wish to take in

support

or

the statements

thus far have not been

tive,

we

urge

objec-

members of the

to wait

yntjj, tjie

all of the facts of the

before

released

a

opposi-

involved.

tion of the students

are

story

making

fur-

judgments.

E. Abena Antwi

the

Trinity

our

Blacks

imposed

stereotypes

Black Student

Trinity

are

with

Duke NAACP.

In

some

And 5

cases, where deemed

others

for athletics

policy

excuse

’O3

The writer is president of the

them

on

Alliance.

Brandi Dumas

values,

deal

to

’O3

The writer is president of the

by the larger community and

explain dean’s

Deans The

story,

We stance

entire

the

as

been

objective

black

as

more

the

the

story that lacked objectivity.

Duke community views black

have an

only

be

has

the way

on

much

take

Chronicle

stood by members of the larg-

should

reporting

but

would

ther

is often misunder-

tion, which

situation

to

in

framed

was

same

black greek organiza-

or

community

public opinion.

of the

in

already

been convicted in the court of

objective

those

The

Realizing that

other stu-

the

regard given

have

an

We do not wish to

that

imply

giving due

not

intended to defame black stu-

tions,

influenced

negatively

In

light

by

present

reinforced

dents

commu-

prior knowl-

no

the

were

Because of

in jeopardy.

Chronicle’s

vague.”

of the gravity

to

stereotypes.

er

involved for comment, the

ers

the article

regard

character and

though

corrobora-

little

on

in

of the

story

dents

regard for pre-

manner

community is viewed, whose

of the facts.

por-

print-

was

senting the whole truth, The

in

the

representative

accommodations. The issue of

appropriate, individuals have

dean’s

School of Engineering would

been

under constant review by the

like to make

on

dean’s

clear the

the

of

in

discussed in

appearing

2.

April

on

When into

organiza-

the

as

a

The

enters

with

such

policy

for “official

excuses

University

tions

Pratt

and

College

NCAA

makes

nominations to

arship

programs,

or

schol-

granted

an

ad hoc basis, to repre-

sent the

ple, or

dean’s excuses,

University, for

academic

at

when

papers

assurances

be

to

Accordingly,

of

the

participate.

dean’s

“authorized

tion

University”

members of teams

officially

excuses

representa-

to students

granted

provides

that students will

able

for

it

or

recognized when

University

the

who

are

are

groups

by

the

officially

University.

academic deans for

at

the

to academic research. When

excuses

is

student rules

must

for

issued,

abide

issued.

the

engage

or

by

the

course.

The

set

as

instructor of the purpose

of

remove

missed

the

mit dean’s

excuses

to

about

with students, of

faculty and other

sectors

the

including

University

Student Health.

Gerald Wilson

excuses

for

that

In these

may

their

continue

dialogue

Senior Associate Dean,

speak

option-

result

missed assignments

dents

in

does not per-

activities

inations.

will

late work. The fac-

ulty regulation

al

to

of

medical

determined and

are

We

example

way

for

penalty

any or

is

excuse

dean’s

the

is

the

work

missed

examinations

by

a

an

process,

which

excuse

number

have led to modifications in

professional meetings related

dean’s

a

been

of years. These conversations

exam-

conferences

presenting

has

excuses

or

Phillip Jones

exam-

cases,

stu-

directly

instructors

Trinity College

in

Senior Associate

Dean

are not

necessarily

those of Duke

Http: /

Education, Pratt School of

about

Engineering

/ www.chronicle.duke.edu/ vnews / display.v /ART /2003

/ 04 / 02/3eBho64Bee363?in_archive=l

editorials represent the majority

call 684-2663

684-3811. To reach the

fax 684-8295. Visit The Chronicle Online

90858. Durham. N.C. 27708. All rights

or

fax 684-t6%. To reach

Advertising

at

Office

at

No part of this

Announcement

101 West

http://www.chronicle.duke.edu.

reserved.

publication

Fall 2003 columnist and Monday,

Monday applications

Chronicle office, 301 Flowers Building.

April

21.

They

Please contact Andrew Card at

are

of

to

non-profit corporation

form without the prior, written permission of the Business Office. Each individual

free copy.

a

the views of the authors.

301 Flowers Building,

Building, call

Inc.,

others.

manner

The article

representing published by

Duke

Jean-

several

events

the

trayed.

of

coverage

the

to

Editor

Photography Editor

SUE NEWSOME, Advertising Director

Artist

Supplements Coordinator

MARY WEAVER, Operations

City & Stale Editor

MOLLY JACOBS, Sr. Assoc. Features Editor

Editor

University

those

statement

a

Sports Managing Editor

AMI PATEL, Wire Editor

KIRA ROSOFF, Wire Editor

ALISE EDWARDS, Lead

JOHN

Editor

Photography

MATT KLEIN, Sr. Assoc.

Editor

MATT ATWOOD, TowerView Editor

JODI SAROWITZ, TowerView Managing Editor

Building

of

undisciplined

Health & Science Editor

MEG LAWSON, Recess

GREG VEIS, Recess Editor

Union

mark

since it affects

Joshua

agreements

REBECCA SUN, Editor Projects

Photography Editor

RYAN WILLIAMS, City & State Editor

at

deserted

not

and the political

me

which

involving

and

Baptiste

the

BECKY YOUNG, Features Editor

the Business Office

jab at both

black

Government

Chronicle

JENNIFER SONG, Senior Editor

MATT RRUMM, Senior Editor JANE HETHERINGTON,

its students,

to

had

why Bama included his feeble

The

column

JONATHAN ANGIER, General Manager

University,

during

editor. I do, moreover, question

of the

Chronicle’s

University,”

PAUL DORAN, Sports Editor

independent

edi-

editorial page

as

he

flock? Irrespective,

to wonder

edited

was

tenure

his

one

own

The Chronicle’s

torial page

placed

on

ALEX GARINGER, University Editor

of Duke

how well

The

Trinity

KENNETH REINKER, Editorial Page Editor

The Chronicle is

tions. This leads

several

representation

YU-HSIEN HUANG,

motiva-

should be made in response to

next

concert

page one).

DAVE INGRAM, Editor

ROBERT TAI, Sports

able

are

organizations,

student activities fee increase has

The Chronicle

BRIAN MORRAY,

his

political

meeting

present felt that

angle

fee.

recently passed

September (see story,

a

of

presidents

single

first benefit that we’re reaping from the overwhelming

Union,

betrayed

pervasive

assure

brethren that

Chronicle coverage of Jean-Baptiste incident biased

Chronicle

using these methods, rather

student leaders and

the student activities

Sophomore

Bama has

ideological

to

as

so

his

his

left-

ill-informed,

customary

liberal drivel,

the UJB, year affiliation with

Http: / / www.chronicle.duke.edu / vnews / display,

it

the record

This is the

people

most

that

On

comprehending

not

party. By

respect

its stated business.

ducting

unacceptable

is

which I would not be

to

war

goal of the protestors is indeed

including legitimate teach-ins, flyering campaigns

alienating

which

tem, and

President

More interactive, informative forms of protest,

to the

as

with my three-

case

Duke with

movement at

non-

Ed in the first place. Was it the

of a racial quota sys-

use

Numerous issues

of those

meeting because democratic methods of expression

opposed

the

was

discharging

responsibilities,

UJB’s

the incidents

given sufficient, democratic consideration by DSG.

speeches would

This trend cul-

me.

Student

debating the University-related

concerns

irresponsible of protestors

way to start.

different

had become

race

political

student group that I co-found-

to devote

job

elected to address.

were

The resolution and the

their

by

non-University issues. The

to limit the amount of time

and moved

war

their

University of Texas. However, what the

the

at

correctly acted

debating the

ago

year

disturbing pattern

a

Following

30 minutes DSG

insufficient and

was

large blocks of their agenda Legislature

a

while

ors

minated in my witnessing the

spending enough time

four-hour discussion of wartime issues

a

legislators

protesters fail

editor

jurisdiction.

debating the resolution. They claimed that the

student

as

suspend their political endeav-

an

lie outside the

war

nothing

resigned

University’s

treatment of

that

students

majority decision not to pass the sign of inefficiency, but proof that the organi-

Protesters also berated DSG for not

than

the

evident to

to voice their views in

opportunity

an

a

boundaries of its

to

of

of

democratic forum. DSG’s

open,

were

many

because necessary

that DSG did

signals

debated

a

I

one.

Board

because

to express their views

junior, referred specifically

by the Legislature. The fact that

down

no

Judicial

to discus-

undemocratic, and

once

co-chair of the Undergraduate

behalf of students who oppose the

on

Protester Jessica Rutter,

resolution that

surprise

baseless and unwarranted.

were

claimed that

DSG failed to take action war.

concerns

previous meetings

of

knows

again that he

unilateral military effort and for

large enough portion

a

Three

about which he wrote should

Iraq. The protesters criticized DSG for voting

in

war

Martin

demonstrates

Duke

legislative meeting and accused the

organization of inefficiency and ignoring student

about the

that

pathetic palaver,

“Duke’s

entitled

Stooges,” stormed Tuesday, 30-plus student protesters

Student Government

to the

Columnist’s assault against DCU unwarranted The

Last

INICLE

*v»

are

available outside The

due before 5 p.m.

apc3@duke.edu

with

any

on

Monday,

questions.


Commentary

The Chronicle

A U.S. satellite surveillance is cated it

can now

level meetings before Prime

what

President

sophisti-

so

provide transcripts

they

Minister

Bush

Monday’s Belfast

Bush; Colin

high-

held. Here is

are

Blair

Tony

to

likely

are

of

fantas-

I

the

the

am

speak for all to turn

Commentary

of

to

That’s what your chaps

lating

in

be

wisely

are

Bush: And that

on

TV

risky looks pretty good “misunderestimated”

thought

Arabs

those

was

that

want to do after the

we

Bush:

Hold

Camp David

polls

were

When

on.

in the tank.

along

Sharon

Iraqi

I

in

Bush; You really think

opinion

The

be the all

well.

as

we

I’m

you

ought

unless

UN.

Blair:

does

for

post-Saddam Iraq. you

“pre-emi-

mean,

full

all

of

But a

’em.

the

Everyone who

learning

more

place for

them.

interested in the social

scene.

the

their

receiving

about it

Start

for

even

they

so

job

decide

might be

As these individuals will be in

the coming

the THEODORE

provide

social scene, with

I

days,

HUXTABLE’S a

events

some

BP:

probably

can

PROTEGE’S guide to partying at Duke. While Duke has

for

finds

Beer)-Gnome

remains dominated ties. The first

bit

are

a

plain,

them

two

types of

1

effect,

little bit

vanilla,

the white parties. some reason

there has black

it

hair,

||| I

The

seems,

so

of

“West

on

enter one, realize it

Then, when

you

get

on

detritus

democracy won’t

we

thinks

dorm, who normally

to you, will be

they will talk “So, where’d

so

drunk off his

to you, you go

asking

HUXTABLE’S

can

went to Pika for

a

little while,”

location like

a

gym

or

a

will be nowhere in sight,

their

they’re doing.

some

in the

but don’t

why,

sure

an

none

did

and freshmen.

fra-

look cool

coerce

some

or

to look

no

The

asses.

to do

are

these

the

f—?

of other

be the same, their

may

people?

Where the hell

Why

they

are

colleges

them? Are

on

invited to their school’s parties too? Or

wearing

are

we

conduct and gravity, attracting others of like hair color

a

voice

as

if

you

as

pos-

an

as

were

well

police?

as

music

the

from

junior high. They might

Hillside

grade-only dance. Hell, why

the

to

ever-hip

charge for entry, but you to go in

for-

early,

time,

so

it

play the tunes? Maybe do

they

vacuums

songs that aren’t

standbys,

not

just bring will

everyone

N*Sync and Britney

on

the songs

TRL

everyday

are

well record

recent

Intermediate’s

actual Duke

as

ogle

over

Spears.

7th

big

in Carson

Daly

him like The

only

the old social dance

the first you liked for

120 times you

heard them, then lost affection for through the next 90. And

amount of

lawbreaking

at

otherwise they might

actually

to look like

they know

what

one?

the

more

times. “Brown-Eyed

Girl,”

while

a

which is kind of

of

to

of it,

presumably

dancers

Bud

forgo it...

they

wouldn’t be

a

are.

worth

but

rhythm, that’s

at the

anywhere

none

underage drinking,

plenty

awful

buying

bargain!

parties themselves.

to do something about the

which would distract

them from their

real job—searching black people for concealed weapons. AFTERMATH WP: All the freshmen pile ious

jerks. There

is

some

on

the bus and act like obnox-

spewing, but

you

can’t blame the

from the bus drivers,

after they think how much they wish their kids could go to a

place like Duke and then

abusively BP: If

Bus,

see

a

bunch of

spoiled brats

piss away their opportunity. you

drive home instead of using the vomited Via go the whole

can

you

night without seeing

single

a

white person! Wow! So there you go, I hope it’s Duke social ball

scene

teams have

If it sounds like the at least

of fab

as

well

get quite

scenes

as

as

plenty

much

in the

ofother cool

basket-

to make social life at Duke

home more

after

all,

you

are

can

on

plen-

dig the

city. Or, better yet, work

thrilling and

grated by getting involved and starting thing. And after all,

gigs going

attention, plus there

city of Durham, if

tough vibes of our temporaiy

new

our

been to five Final Fours in the last five

huh? But really, it ain’t too bad, and there’s always

that don’t

ty

helpful.

really sucks... well,

your

more

where it’s at ain’t

where you are, it’s whom you’re with. So

come

inte-

whole

own

really

to Duke—-

we’ve got the Gross Chemistry Building.

THEODORE HUXTABLE’SPROTEGE would like to clar-

play anything—as long

as

eveiy

single

per-

heard in the song has ancestors from Africa. Oh, and

guitar

trash, but

in

once

any-

Anyone?

BP; DJs will son

150

ass,

effort of finding

mere

the coffeehouse,

WP: One word:

really

twelvers

Natty Light

BP: There’s

what

realize

Otherwise, the police might have

years,

MUSIC

Nu, Delta

about someone’s

buying

avoiding the

they just here

übiquitous question, “cool”

don’t

they

twelvers of

Raleigh?

because the Black Person Threshold affects both police

ass

song

all

are

And every

big.

freshmen for all of it. Some of it is

form? Are they from Durham?

names

too cool to talk

a

are

WP: Those in attendance drink

fraternity

it works out well.

everyone’s follicles

speakers

ALCOHOL

problem getting the said a

drums drown out the tasteless and

I guess.

cool,

by drinking

trying

free alcohol, all fresh-

they’re bored off their

meanwhile, have

basi-

Well,

agenda. Or else there’s just nothing else

come

they’ll play

waiting for

packed with members of the

early rush headway,

too familiar. Who

they

at least the

of those old-

one

They’re just

fraternity

meat to

piece of

have

clothes with

underage binge drinking, police

folded, attempting

will be

from

do something instead of just standing there with

arms

party

friends of the

then heard again

as

are

bass and

overly loud

Duke

at

outdated instrument. Sure, the melodies

Apparently,

What

big problem.

staggering

people

partying

to

so

Greensboro?

POLICE PRESENCE Due to the

exactly

dispensers.

to another.

someone

the famous factor of CP

these events in the form of

black

with metal

that

tunately, they will invariably bribe

really won’t be

are

people

so

over,

cafeteria, including

Brodie Gymnasium. They will

to combat

all

located in

are

scene

takes

residence certainly is not. Some of these individuals look

multiple parties.

parties

the

on

more

I’m not

Person

code

police

of these things with

metal Fez

BP: While

Monday

her respective

as

of the

freshman drunk or treating the other said freshman like

.

,

Monday

then answer, “Sigma

cool because you went to BP: The black

in

or

guide

reach the “Black

must be

cops

piece of meat. So

PROTEGE

back,

they

you the

tonight?”

sible. To which you

or

these parties

one

at Duke and

sucks, then head off

the bus to go

in

get

members,

Campus.” This is imporparties

a

men

InHU

located

are

tant because there will be frat

have to

by

a

obscure section

an

ton to make

like

j

so

it’s

to

school

a

J

A ,

genres...

two

parties

fraternity sections

WP:

syndicated

a

cally just freshmen.Whether trying to

\

I

perhaps

column is

Safire’s

the New York Time’s News Service.

super-

general vicinity.

same

try

WP: The

A

so

every-

markedly different,

are

WP: The white

Sig,

of

government

coalition of

a

whereby

ternity,

LOCATION

your

Condi briefed

one.

I’m

detectors whenever 30

wl

par-

little bit unimagina-

a

important to delineate the

can

that

William

PARTYGOERS

we’ll call those the black parties. The

in

me on

Bush: We’re not in the anointing busi-

hoods like you.

it

stimulating,

by

other kind, well, for

two sorts

as

good will.” [At

peace,

expression]

platform

a

Because

Threshold,”

Sy-(Snootles)-and-the-Ramblin-(Root-

one

laying

a

police the despicable

and free enterprise work. And

Particularly, they

letters

acceptance

I would

call

reso-

war,

parliamentary system—

a

into Duke is

just accepted

was

interestedin

let’s

Blair’s aghast

place quickly.

THEO HUXTABLE’S PROTEGE’S

a

“In

with

reconstruction

huge task,

Bush: That’s the

Blair: Foremost, central, predominant—

five,

say

coor-

happen,

the liberators who know how

diverse

Blair: Churchill did

peo-

credit

of Saddam’s regime, to build

nent”?

thought

a

hated

we’re out

lution.... In victory, magnanimity...

you

optimist,

and

roy-

projects.

programs,

that

making

getting

and

power. To

pre-emi-

a

to

you

nation is

firmly of the belief that

What do

Bush:

if this is

seen

sure

government

skimming. Then

Bush: And “In

put

we

transparent

those pontoons.

But I

George.

the United Nations must have nent role in

to turn

Schroeder and Putin?

Chirac,

bridge

for

Vladimir

Blair: You know I don’t,

very

coali-

a

No

And

more

of there.

run

around while

incurable

an

fear we’ll be

occupiers Iraqis

accounts.

get much

ground and make

into

go

grabs

that you and

responsibility

dinating charitable contributions from

Now about postwar Iraq—

will tell

You’re

dictator

no

justice system.

a

but also

secure,

Distributing food, health

Blair: Evenhandedness will redound to

to

a

are

still in office.

are

George.

alties

Iraqi

out their

lot of nations, all that. And if you want to

America’s benefit in world

over

more

better life for the

a

Bush;

ago, your

on

only

backrooms

Iraq

sure

set up

oil out of the

half of

business—hell,

at

financial

make

help

we’ll show them how to

edu-

with

Blair: But the United Nations confers

in Israel.

it

world

not

15

legitimacy—

to

came

I went

with that “road map” to lean

and I

the

show

�PAGE

provision-

a

start

let the factions work

leaders, power,

good constabulary,

tion that will turn

down

is to

liberation

of

to

no

We’ll

government.

advisers,

billion people, plen-

a

That’s why I said

ness.

al

eager to

suddenly

of India. We’ll put together

out

Blair;

against

2003

I assumed when the UN. wouldn’t.

war—

you

So

the

ple. That’s

couple of weeks

a

of

war

results in

Blair: Memorable locution. Now the first

thing

our

is

mission

My

smart

America’s

for the rest of both of

Islam.

South

mainly.

Muslims,

cated,

you

to the

over

of

ty

you

get

help.

threatened to

India, biggest democracy

Blair: Hindus,

in office. You need it.

or

makes

so

again.

us

Iraq

the notion that America

emu-

The media

now.

in

in. And

Bush: But with

can

is

troops,

our

to

Rummy

all, with all those Muslims—

bureau-

Bush: What I need is to knock

problem.

that

plan

war

If I

that

now

out

pitch

be able to mediate between the

days

our

patient.”

Water is the

Baghdad.

retired brass hats

Great turn of

pull

that presume to

Europe.

U.S. and Europe

power

Korea,

things?

run

peacekeeping

U.N., I'll

phrase—“ The

be alone. Japan is ready

and

bridge between

and the three nations

William Safire

British

foot-dragging

in and

come

Blair:

on.

and

Security

lost and treasure spent,

those

want

crats to

tic at Basra.

Blair: I’ll pass that

You

the

to

with all

around. Now,

you were

watch.

my me

American lives

at

summit:

Bush: Your brave troops

on

7,

the wall

on

Council and six months of getting jerked

and

say

Not

dragged

fly

APRIL

MONDAY,

has been banished for the

night along with every

Caucasian in the world. But who needs

a

guitar

when

you

have that offensive synthesizer filling in? Fortunately, the

ify that, be

a

yes,

gnome

the photo is David the Gnome... He wanted it

from the

The Adventures of

plays

a

nobody’s

studly ever

a

1994

Anthony Michael

Hall

to

vehicle

Gnome Named Gnorm, in which Hall

cop, but

his editors couldn't find

heard of that

stupid movie.

one

since


The Chronicle

PAGE 16 � MONDAY, APRIi

7 lb. A

Sierra

Mist, Mountain Dew,

Diet Pepsi v

Pepsi Cola 2 Liters

69 1 Limit

Kroger

»

/

or

(7-9 lb. Avg.)

Country Club

*■"

vak

f|Jts

lib.Butter

■'

$f

v\t

y

umberland Cap

/.

W

>

tg.g

\

Color

Yellow,

or

kory Hills

White

a Boneles

Sweet

fV,

Hams

Vi

Pound

,

050

\

K

%3fotm 1 *

r\

Kroger

%

ft

Cation

/

m**,

I

Apple or

Kroger

"

**

/uplpy(

1%

or

Skim

Orange Juice

120 *'

ct.

60 oz.

Bounce,

Downy,

2Jf® Kroger

All Varieties

1

'*'■'

31-40 Load Tide Powder

or

100 oz.

Frozen Entrees, Bowls

TideLiquid

or

/

Gallon

Ithy Choice

ndry Detergent

Meals

Milk

1

'9%

<4»

oZtor^4

3<»

2 J and 1.25% Chocolate or Buttemii Kroger Gallon Mi 2/S5 with Card

‘pared BBQ, Savory, rb

or Lemon

m

Assorted Varieties

Pepper

Potter and the

'2 Gallon Frozen Yogurt or

m

A MFA

iber of Secrets™

ntry club

Icken

DVD

lee Cream

99 W

,95 with Card Rights © J.K.R. Harry Potter,

st

i

..

/■*& L

with card & additionalpurchase

v

X'Z

I

4

Items & Prices

Through

$6.99

,

with Card

Trademarks of and © Warner Bros.

Ckhhl in Our ham

April

■■■■■■■

12, 2003.

lr

-I

IN-STORE PHARMACY

VISA

i

tT

JOB

Copyright 2003- Kroger Mid-Atlantic.

Visit

our

Website

at

A We

C*v

a

'wH

reserve

I

I

I ATM i the

right

to

www.Kroger.com

~1

!

I'AfftgßicaM

m >,,

lEBBRESS -

n

AA

limit quantities.

None

For Additional

sold

to

dealers.

Savings.

Characters,


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

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