August 22, 2003

Page 1

Weath

The Chronicle

DUKE UNIVERSITY Ninety-Ninth Year, issue 1

FRIDAY, AUGUST 22,2003

Parental leave policy extended to staff

Ludacris to make Cameron crazy by

DURHAM, N.C. WWW.CHRONICLE.DUKE.EDU

by Cindy Yee 'HE CHRONICLE

Andrew Collins

THE CHRONICLE

Ludacris will get plenty of Duke’s “southern hospitality” Sept. 24, as the good-times rapper has agreed to grace the stage of Cameron Indoor Stadium for the first major concert there in almost a decade.

In an effort to help staff members in both work and family life, the University announced in early August a new parental leave benefit for staff members, which will take effect Sept. 1. Under the new policy, eligible staff members who are considered the primary caregivers in their families will be provided three weeks of base pay when they take time off of work for the birth or adoption of a child. Paul Grantham, director XSjy. of communications for Duke Human Resources, said the paid parental leave kicks in only after the new parent has used three weeks of vacation or sick time, but that the next three weeks are fully paid according to the employee’s regularly scheduled hours of work. Previously, University employees had to use vacation or sick time to receive pay for their time off. Ifthey wanted more time off than was provided through vacation and sick time, they had to forego their paychecks for the additional days. “We are delighted to be able to provide this support for Duke families,” President Nan Keohane wrote in an e-mail. “We hope to demonstrate in this way that we understand the importance of parenting, and make it a bit easier to combine career and family.” The new benefit stems from Keohane’s Women’s Initiative, which she launched last year to study and respond to issues -7

Duke University Union President Jonathan Bigelow said the University has secured an “airtight” oral agreement with the Atlanta-based rapper, known for such hits as “What’s Your Fantasy,” “Area Codes” and “Act a Fool.” His next album, Chicken and Beer, will hit stores next month, roughly coinciding with the concert. Despite the rapper’s profane lyrics and occasional bouts with controversy, Bigelow said Ludacris’s immense popularity among college students and boisterous persona make him an ideal choice. “Ludacris offers a major attraction, with a fresh option from traditional college rock availability,” Bigelow said. “Ludacris plays the type of music that Duke doesn’t see a lot of.” Tickets are not yet on sale, but Bigelow said prices will be $2O in advance for Duke students, who will have the first right of refusal on prime seating. Total capacity will be about 4,500 for the concert, and Bigelow expects a mixture of stuSEE LUDACRIS ON PAGE 14

LUCY NICHOLSON

for AFP PHOTO

Rapper Ludacris, 2002 Best Rap Album Grammy nominee, will come to Duke next month.

SEE PARENTAL LEAVE ON PAGE 16

Duke drops to No. 5 in U.S. News rankings Princeton Review ranks Duke 3rd in overall academic experience by

Andrew Collins

THE CHRONICLE

Duke slipped one notch in this year’s U.S. News and World Report college rankings, placing fifth but remaining tied with the California Institute of Technology, Stanford University and the University of Pennsylvania. The Massachusetts Institute of Technology, which had been lumped in with that group last year, stayed at fourth and pushed

the others down. Harvard University joined Princeton University at number one after finishing tied with Yale University last year as runner-up. Provost Peter Lange welcomed Duke’s high ranking but urged prospective students to use caution in interpreting the U.S. News survey. ‘This is wonderful recognition for our faculty, programs and students, who are arriving back on campus to begin a new semester,” he said. “As much as we welcome such news, we recognize the limitations of these kinds of surveys and urge high school students and their families to use them as only one factor in deciding where to apply

to college. So much about a university experience is difficult to quantify, and every student needs to decide which university is right for him or her.” U.S. News worked to refine its ranking methodology this year. The rankings no longer factor in yield—the ratio of admits to applicants—which previously accounted for 1.5 percent of a school’s ultimate rank. Getting rid of yield could have helped Duke, which has fewer students accept its offer of admission than other top-10 schools. Duke was noted for five “programs to

SEE RANKINGS ON PAGE 14

Princeton Yale MIT Cal. Tech

Duke

Stanford

U. Penn Dartmouth College Washington

U. St. Louis


FRIDAY. AUGUST 22.

THE CHRONICLE

20():

Investigation into U.N. bombing in Baghdad continues by

Dexter Filkins

NEW YORKTIMES NEWS SERVICE

U.S. investigators BAGHDAD, Iraq looking into the deadly bombing of the United Nations compound Tuesday are focusing on the possibility that the attackers were assisted by Iraqi security guards who worked there, a senior U.S. official here said yesterday. The U.S. official, speaking on the condition of anonymity, said all of the security

guards at the compound were agents of the Iraqi secret services, to whom they regularly reported on U.N. activities before the war. The United Nations continued to employ the guards after the war was over, the official said. The official said when investigators began questioning the guards, two of them asserted that they were entitled to “diplomatic immunity” and refused to cooperate. Diplomats working in foreign countries are

often entitled to immunity from prosecution by local authorities, but the official said the two guards could make no such claim. The investigators are continuing to interrogate the guards, the official said. “We believe the U.N.’s security was seriously compromised,” the official said, adding that “we have serious concerns about the placement of the vehicle” and the timing of the attack. The bomb exploded directly under the third-floor office of the U.N. coordinator for Iraq, Sergio Vieira de Mello, while he was meeting with a prominent American human rights advocate, Arthur Helton. Both men were killed, along with several top aides to Vieira de Mello. In New York, a U.N. official reacted skeptically to the assertions. “All of us are trying to get to the bottom of this,” said Fred Eckhard, spokesperson for the secretary-general, Kofi Annan. “In fact, the sec-

retary-general is sending his security coordinator to Baghdad this evening to investigate the bombing. But the task is not made easier by the conspiracy theories circulating. We’ll have to separate as best we can fact from speculation.” No one connected to the U.N. office in Baghdad, which was demolished in the bombing, could be reached for comment. The United Nations had a large presence in Iraq before the war, running the oil-forfood program and housing teams of weapons inspectors. The U.S. official said investigators were trying to determine which, if any, of the guards failed to report to work the day of the attack. Even before the war, the government of Saddam Hussein was widely known to assign its intelligence agents to guard and guide foreigners who were visiting or living in the country.

Suspicions have focused on the guards rather than other local U.N. personnel because their links to Saddam’s security service were close. Under the former regime, they had to report to the security service once a week on the activities of U.N. personnel, Western officials said. Even so, U.N. administrators retained the guards after Saddam’s government was removed. U.S. officials said earlier this week that the administrators had also turned down a U.S. offer to provide greater security around the building. The U.S. official also questioned the wisdom ofU.N. officials who ordered the construction of a cement wall around the compound. In some places, he pointed out, the wall was just 12 feet from the building. Tensions have repeatedly flared between the United States and the United Nations over Iraq.

Capitol Hill reacts to Davis'California television address by

ERICA WERNER

THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

LOS ANGELES Gov. Gray Davis called the recall effort part of a wider attempt to “steal elections Republicans cannot win,” evoking the impeachment offormer President Bill Clinton and Florida’s 2000 presidential election fiasco. In a speech televised statewide Tuesday, the first major address of his political fight for survival, Davis defiandy told Californians that he makes no apologies for his actions as governor. He said he inherited the state’s energy crisis and that its budget woes were part of an American economy that has “tanked.”

“For the next seven weeks, my highest priority is to do the Job you elected me to do, but make no mistake... I will fight this recall and the right-wing forces behind it,”

Davis said. In Washington, Democratic party leaders were closely watching the polls Wednesday to see if Davis’ address succeeded in reversing the governor’s declining support. Democrats are united against the recall but split on whether to back an alternative candidate. The top choice would likely be Lt. Gov. Cruz Bustamante, who recent polls show neck-and-neck with Republican actor Arnold Schwarzenegger as the leading replacement candidates.

A senior party official, speaking on condition of anonymity, said Wednesday that Davis has until shortly after Labor Day to shore up his support; otherwise, Democratic leaders will begin signaling their support for Bustamante. Another party official said Davis is having trouble raising money. Democratic Party chair Terry McAuliffe is sending former Clinton White House spokesperson Ann Lewis to California this week to head up the party’s communications strategy for the recall. Hours before Davis’ speech, Bustamante, who has billed himself as the safety vote to keep a Democrat in office should

Davis be ousted, offered a one-page “tough love” budget blueprint. The plan borrows many of the embatded governor’s rejected budget ideas, calling for raising taxes on cigarettes and higher taxes on high-income residents. Two top Republican contenders planned to discuss their ideas for reviving the state’s economy Wednesday. Schwarzenegger, who has avoided publicly discussing his stand on the issues, planned to speak at an economic summit attended by high-profde advisers, including billionaire investor Warren Buffett. He also planned to begin airing campaign ads.

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THE CHRONICLE

FRIDAY.

AUGUST 22. 2003

I3

Duke family killed in July plane crash From staff reports Twelve members of the Brumley family, which has had close ties to the University for many years, died when their plane crashed into a mountain in Kenya July 19. Two South African pilots were also killed. “The Duke community is deeply saddened by this terrible news from Kenya,” President Nan Keohane said in a statement. “Five of the 14 persons on board the plane were graduates of the University; they had all maintained close ties and contributed to Duke in many ways. Their lives were filled with professional achievement, commitment to family, service to society and a spirit of generosity. Our hearts go out to the family and friends ofall those who were lost in this unspeakable tragedy.” Sixty-eight-year-old Dr. George Brumley Jr., Trinity ’56, was a former co-director of the Division of Perinatal Medicine at the Duke University Medical Center. He began a long affiliation with the University as an undergraduate before proceeding onto the School ofMedicine and then Joining the Duke faculty in 1966. Dr. Brumley founded the medical school’s Division of Neonatology in 1972 and served at Duke until 1981, when he became chair of the Department of Pediatrics at Emory University. He was the winner of a Distinguished Alumnus Award from the Duke medical school. His wife, 67-year-old Jean Stanback Brumley, Women’s College ’5B, was a fellow Duke alumna and originally from Salisbury, N.C. She worked as an elementary school teacher in Durham before she and her husband moved to Atlanta, and was active in a number of charitable and civic organizations. Three of the Brumleys’ children died on board: George, 42, Elizabeth, 41, and Lois, 39. George 111, MBA ’B6, lived in Chapel Hill. He was chairman and CEO of Oak Value Capital Management, a Durham investment management firm he SEEBRUMLEYS ON PAGE 12

EDITOR'S NOTE With this edition, The Chronicle begins daily publication.We hope your summer's been good. Here's to a great new year!

ANTHONY

CROSS

for THE CHRONICLE

Members of the Class of 2007 sign the new Community Standard, which renews the University's committmentto honor and integrity..

Community standard debuts by Cindy Yee THE CHRONICLE

As students funneled

out

of the Chapel Thursday af-

ternoon, they were asked, per tradition, to pledge to up-

hold honor at the University. This year, however, marks the first year the incoming class put their names to the new Duke Community Standard, which replaces the former undergraduate honor code this fall. During Thursday’s convocation, the Class of 2007 was reminded repeatedly of the University’s expectations. President Nan Keohane cautioned students to remember their personal dignity and Duke Honor Council Chair Robert McDonald reminded them that “the foundation of this University does not lie on the gothic stones before us, but within its students and faculty.” The Community Standard has three main differences from the old honor code, which was established in 1993. First, it strengthens the honor code’s “non-toleration clause,” which required students to report incidents of academic dishonesty but did not require students to name the offenders. Now, students are expected to cite specifically the student they are accusing, if known. Judith Ruderman, vice provost of academic and administrative services, said this policy will be essential to the judicial process in cases ofacademic dishonesty, as the

accuser can be more readily called upon as a witness during the judicial process. Although the accuser will not be forced to testify, the entire process will be more open because the accuseid will know exacdy who accused him, Ruderman said. The Community Standard also provides the possibility for one-time mediation for minor, first-time offenses. Under the old honor code, academic dishonesty cases always went directly to the judicial system. Now, however, a faculty member who learns of a student’s dishonesty but judges the infraction to be minor may settle the matter with the student outside the judicial system. The Dean of Students Office will still monitor the system and will keep a record of the mediation process, but the offense will not go on the student’s permanent record. Ruderman said this aspect of the Community Standard encourages more student-faculty interaction—an element she said was essential for the University to truly work under a self-governing honor code system. The third major change from the old honor code involves the punishments doled out after an incident of academic dishonesty. Previously, students were punished

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chronicle

Cluster printer changes to reduce confusion then swipe his DukeCard at the print release station. He then se-

by Cindy Yee THE CHRONICLE

ANTHONY CROSS

for

THE CHRONICLE

Kirsten Clemens, a first year graduate student in English, tries out the new printing stations in the Perkins Library computer lab.

Chapel By

summer interns

Jeff Finch

THE CHRONICLE

When Duke students think of summer

internships, they usually think of working in D.C. with policy, in New York City with media and advertising or at a technology or pharmaceutical company. There are even numerous grants and fellowships students can apply to to help fund these summer adventures. This past summer, however, the Chapel sponsored the Pathways Program, a different sort of intern-

ship altogether. This was the inaugural summer for the eight-week long program, an internship that placed nine Duke Students at positions in local churches and faith-based non-profit organizations. The program is funded by a five year grant the Chapel received from the Lily Foundation and is designed to help undergraduates discern their vocation as it relates to their faith. "People in their campus fellowships

The Office of Information Technology recently unleashed ePrint, which University officials say should make printing in OIT computer labs quicker, easier and more eco-friendly. In the weeks between the end of Summer Session Term II and the arrival of students for the fall semester, OIT installed print release stations next to the printers in all of the PC and Mac labs. Jen Vizas, manager of Academic Technology Services, which oversees OlT’s computer labs, said the Unix labs will soon have release stations as well. Each release station consists of a monitor, card swipe and mouse. When a student wishes to print a document, he must enter his NetlD when sending the document from his computer and

lects the document he wants to print from a list of print jobs, which are available in the ePrint system for 12 hours. “This solution should reduce the amount of time a student spends at the printer sifting through paper to find their document and cuts down on paper waste,” Vizas said. She added that ePrint allows students to print to any OIT lab or quad printer from their residence halls or wireless laptops once they have downloaded the appropriate client software. OlT’s ePrint system uses Pharos Systems’ Uniprint software, which can track, monitor, measure, route and optionally charge for network printing. SEE PRINTERS ON PAGE 9

help Durham keep the faith

get their spiritual formation there, but Pathways is a program that will take them out into the community to carry out social justice ministries and the sharing of the Gospel," said Reverend Regina Henderson, the program’s director. The program is away for students to explore different types of Christian ministry from being a full-time pastor to running a community service center she explained. About two dozen churches and community organizations were invited to apply to receive interns from the program. Reverend Henderson then worked with the student interns to find an organization that fit the students’ interests in ministry. Ultimately, five churches and four faithbased non-profits were assigned interns from the program, which satisfied the nine interns who wanted to participate. The churches and non-profits applied to receive interns mostly because they wanted to provide Duke students with the opportunity to work in the type of min-

istry they provide. “I’m a Duke Divinity alumnus and I remember it was hard to find field placements in a Pentecostal church when I was a student,” said Reverend Herbert Davis of the Nehemiah Christian Center. “I wanted to create that type of opportunity for current Duke students.” Some students applied because they felt they had been called to ministry but did not know what kind specifically. Others applied out of a desire to learn how their faith can be an active part of their careers. Tve always thought of ministry as being a pastor at a church,” said Kori Jones, a Trinity Junior who interned at Durham Urban Ministries. “I learned you can do ministry in other ways than being a pastor, in taking time to talk with someone, to smile and wave here and there. It’s the little stuff that’s very important.” The interns lived in graduate student apartments on central campus. They ate meals together regularly and participated

in group activities such as a Durham Bulls game, bowling and a climb to the top of the Chapel. During the week, they were expected to work 30 to 35 hours at their internship sites. The work they did ranged from answering phones and folding church bulletins to planning fund raising events and giving sermons on Sunday mornings. On Wednesday nights, the interns would gather to reflect on what they were learning in their internships and in their spiritual lives. “It surprised me how these students of different denominations could live together and have theological discussions where they agreed to disagree while still building a close community,” said Reverend Henderson. “We had people working in Episcopalian, Methodist, Pentecostal and Presbyterian churches as well as non-profits. This made our discussions interesting with the SEE INTERNS ON PAGE 10

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THE CHRONICLE

6 I FRIDAY. AUGUST 22. 2003

Parking garage opens, restrictions begin Monday garage after hours but will not be allowed to leave their cars overnight. “We will be monitoring so there’s no overnight parkAfter 18 months of construction behind the Bryan Cening,” Reeve said. “You will be able to stay until midnight if ter, Parking Garage IV has opened to the public. you’re at the library, but if you’re there when we open up While permits are restricted to employees and graduat seven in the morning, we’ll be looking for that.” ate students, PGIV will also serve as the primary parking To address potential safety concerns, PGIV is outfitted for special events and will add flexibility for undergraduwith extensive security measures, from better lighting to ates parking on West Campus after hours. Regular operations will begin Monday, although this active patrols. “In addition to staffing the lot during the pay times, week, anyone could park in the garage. The lower three levels are reserved for employee permit holders, visitors we’re going to have enforcement going through the can park on the third and fourth levels and the fifth level deck,” Reeve said. “We have security cameras, we have is for graduate students, said Melissa Harden, assistant lighting that gives off a brighter light [and the whole director of parking and traffic. garage] is designed better Visitors will pay a fee of $2 per for keeping it light and hour, with a maximum charge of keeping it bright. We’ve “We will be monitoring so hired a cleaning company to $l2 per day. the garage clean, and “We’ve been having a lot of keep there’s no overnight parking. we’ll have foot patrols as acpeople coming in, with kids You will be able to stay until midtive security. It will be active coming back to school,” parking with people parking, and lot attendant Tanya Melton said. night if you’re at the library, but they are deterrents to crime “We’ve had a lot of traffic, and as well.” everything’s been running if you’re there when we open up The addition of PGIV smoothly.” at seven in the morning, we’ll be comes at an important time In addition to providing more for parking and transportaparking on West Campus and allooking for that.”tion services, as the Univerleviating the current parking Cathy Reeve crunch, the deck fits into the Unisity and Medical Center parking systems complete versity’s long-range parking goals, their merger. After the said Cathy Reeve, director of merger is complete, the new parking department will parking and transportation services define its long-term goals and come up with a detailed “We’re trying to provide parking for now and in the future,” she said. “With [the Center for Interdisciplinary strategic plan. “We’re going to be able to state our needs for the next Engineering, Medicine and Applied Sciences] and other like the Perkins addition and comfive or so years,” Reeve said. “It’s more than Just the numimprovements Divinity ing, all these are going to impact and require parking. ber of parking spaces, it’s where they’re located and how We’ve built for the future, so that when the need arises, they’re used. The University does have a physical master there will be a place for [displaced employees] to park.” plan that looks out based on what the University’s needs The garage will operate 7 a.m. to 11 p.m. Monday are for buildings and programs. What we need to do is ANTHONY CROSS for through Friday, 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. Saturday and 1 p.m. to take parking and transportation and develop our plan that The new PGIV on Science Drive is now open for business. 6 p.m. Sunday. Students will be able to park in the supports the University’s master plan.” by

Karen Hauptman THE CHRONICLE

THE CHRONICLE

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THE CHRONICLE

FRIDAY. AUGUST 22. 2003 I 7

Short and Sweet, Meet and Greet Photos by Anthony Cross

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8

THE CHRONICLE

1 FRIDAY. AUGUST 22.2003

Crime Briefs

Gluttons for Learning

Fight at Hospital requires police assistance

Duke Police officers responded to a fight in progress in the Emergency Department driveway at 10:10 p.m. Aug. 18. Upon arrival, the fight had ended and the parties involved were separated. According to witnesses, who wished to remain anonymous, a visitor approached an employee and was very abusive. The employee was offended by this, and a heated verbal exchange occurred. After the verbal exchange ended, the visitor attempted to leave the Hospital byway of Emergency Department drive. The employee followed the visitor and more words were exchanged, resulting in the visitor being struck by the employee. The visitor did not need medical attention. The employee and the visitor were trespassed from Duke.

Laptop nabbed from unlocked dorm room

A student reported that between 11:15 p.m. and 11:30 p.m. Aug. 20, she left her Edens Dormitory 2A room unsecured and someone stole her $2,000 blue and gray Hewlett Packard laptop computer.

Purse, electronic devices taken from LSRC

Two employees reported that between 11:30 a.m. and 2:23 p.m. Aug. 18, someone entered their unsecured office in the Levine Science Research Center and stole a $lOO purse that contained a $2O wallet, credit cards, $7 in cash and a driver’s license. Additional items stolen were a $75 Sony portable compact disc player and an $895 Olympus digital camera in a blue case.

Attempted break-in at Sanford causes damage ANTHONY CROSS for THE CHRONICLE

New graduate and professional school students listen to Convocationceremonies in the Chapel Thursday.

An employee reported that between 8 a.m. and 8:45 a.m. Aug. 18, someone attempted to break into his office on the second floor of the Sanford Institute of Public Policy. There were pry marks on the door and the lock does not function properly. Total

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An employee reported that on Aug. 20, she received harassing phone calls to her work phone in Human Genetics Building.

Wallet stolen An employee reported that between 10:30 a.m.

and 4:50 a.m. Aug. 20, someone entered her office located in the CARL Building and stole her $2O wallet, which contained a checkbook, checkbook cover, Social Security card, her children’s Social Security cards and her driver’s license.

Laptop taken from locked trunk

A student reported that between 2 p.m. and 8 p.m. Aug. 19, someone entered the trunk of his secured vehicle and stole his $1,899 Compaq laptop computer, serial number IVO6FL47HDSM, model number 12XL125, from 202 Alexander Ave.

Spraypainting damages vehicle

An employee reported Aug. 19 that during the time her vehicle was parked in the GH parking lot on Yearby and Flowers Drive, someone spraypainted the passenger’s side door with red paint, causing $7OO in damage.

Purses pilfered

Two Diet and Fitness employees reported that between noon and 1:30 p.m. Aug. 19, someone stole their purses from under their desks. One employee’s $2O purse contained her $l5 wallet, $3O in cash, credit cards, her $l5O Nextel cellular phone, her keys, her Social Security card and her driver’s license. The other employee’s purse was also valued at $2O and contained her $l5 wallet, $3 in cash, credit cards and a Trek cell phone valued at $lOO.


THE CHRONICLE

FRIDAY. AUGUST 22. 2003 I 9

will probably save paper.” Vizas said OIT should know within the first couple weeks of ePrint’s operation how much paper the system

PRINTERS from page 4 Vizas said the software is used widely throughout colleges and universities. Although some students said they were worried that the University could start tracking and charging for students’ print jobs, Vizas said OIT is not planning on monitoring student printing at this time. “We have the capacity to do that, but we’re just trying to increase services right now,” she said. “People will be able to move quicker, and they won’t be waiting on people who monopolize all the printers at one time.” Vizas said students have generally reacted in favor of the new ePrint system. Junior Vivian Wang said the new system is not only convenient but also “environmentally conscious.” “Before, when people printed, lots of papers would get left in the tray because students couldn’t find what they printed,” Wang said. “Now it keeps track of what you print. So it increases individual awareness, which

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It increases individual awareness, which will probably save paper. —-Junior Vivian Wang

will save. She noted that some universities have saved anywhere from 20 to 40 percent after switching to Uniprint. However, Vizas emphasized that ePrint’s primary aim is not environmental preservation. ‘The main reason we did this is increased services and selectability in print loca-

tions,” she said. “Before, you could only send jobs to one printer. If there was no paper in that printer, you would have to go back and reprint, which could be a hassle if you had already closed the window you were working with. Now, you can just go to another release station and swipe your card.” Still, some students were wary of the new system. Junior Michael Mahdi said ePrint was “more tedious than anything else” and that it could be a hassle for students in a rush. Vizas said ATS is now looking to work more with Duke Office Products to allow students access to high-end printing. Eventually, she said, students may be able to send print jobs to Devil’s Duplicates, where they can have their documents printed and even bound. ePrint could also turn up elsewhere on campus, such as in the main part of Perkins Library, where students often print papers off e-reserves. This transition would not go through ATS, however, as Vizas’ office deals only with OIT computer labs. Will Rosenthal contributed to this story.

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THE CHRONICLE

FRIDAY. AUGUST 22.2003

STANDARD from page 3

INTERNS from page 4

under a two-semester suspension policy. Now, punishments will be tailored more to the severity of a student’s infraction. Although the new Community Standard may be most prevalent in the classroom, advocates of the new policy insist that it can and must be applied to all aspects of a student’s life at the University. Avery Reaves, Duke Student Government vice president of academic affairs, said the honor code that students have been signing since 1993 fell short of those codes from schools with historically strong systems of academic integrity'. ‘The code was given due lip service but was in practicality seen as clumsy and peripheral, as President Keohane has described it, to students’ day-to-day lives here at Duke,” Reaves said. “At Duke we seek not to build simply a community of great to violate “the very principle on which our scholars but also a community of great citizens, in their years here and in their lives community is dependent,” and the new to follow.” freshmen have already promised to uphold Ruderman said the exact wording of that principle by signing their names to the the Community Standard was a topic of Community Standard. But that is certainly much discussion over the last year, as adnot the last they will hear ofit. ministrators wanted students to uphold The Duke Honor Council will present the standard in their non-academic the Community Standard again during spheres as well. first-year orientation. Throughout the “Last year, we hounded the faculty to school year as well, Ruderman and talk to their classes about the honor Reaves said they plan to expose students code,” Ruderman said. “We worded the to the new standard by encouraging facCommunity Standard to make sure that ulty to go over it in their syllabi and even students knew exactly what was expected giving smaller group presentations in resof them. It’s a two-way street if we want to idence halls. create a community that is truly honor“This is a gradual process, but if we get able, so we have to have high expectations out there and keep the word out about the for students as well as faculty.” Community Standard, it will be something Administrators say their next challenge that will be planted here and left to grow,” will be in educating students about the new Reaves said. Community Standard. McDonald has al. Many members of the Class of 2007 ready told the Class of 2007 that to cheat is said they were optimistic about Duke as a

different perspectives in the group,” said senior Adam Hollowed, who interned at Reconciliation United Methodist Church, a multi-cultural and multi-racial church. The program seems to have been uplifting for both the internship supervisors and student-interns. “It was wonderful that we received a student willing to work with our program and not only that, but one who Was willing to contribute uniquely,” said Reverend Larry Johnson of Reconciliation. “Every summer we do a multi-racial camp and in addition to the kids having fun, Adam thought it would be good if the kids contributed to the community through service as well. So we took the kids to a nursing home and volunteered for a few hours.” Jones said the internship was a good fit for her because it was away of combining several aspects of her life. “I worked mostly with the kids and I can see myself in teaching as a,ministry now. I’m interested in education and ministry so this was the best of both worlds.” Though the grant from the Lily Foundation is only for five years, the long term continuation of the Chapel Pathways Program has become a goal of the Chapel congregation. “The program reaches students’ spiritual needs and is filling a void in the Chapel life at Duke,” said Reverend Henderson.

ANTHONY CROSS for THE CHRONICLE

university with a strong self-governing honor system. “I think most students will take [the Community Standard] seriously,” said Josh Posen, an incoming freshman from Toronto. “Especially after signing it, people who are tempted to cheat might think, T already committed not to.”’ Others, however, said they thought the Community Standard would have little practical effect. “If you were going to cheat in the first place, you still would, regardless of the Community Standard,” said Caitlin Vandevander ofSilver Springs, Md. “There’s a lot of pressure to sign the code when you come out of the Chapel because everyone’s signing it anyways, so it might not mean a lot.” Los Angeles native Peter Moon struck the middle ground; “It might not be feasible, but it’s still good to have it, at least formally,” he said.

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THE CHRONICLE

FRIDAY. AUGUST 22. 2003 111

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THE CHRONICLE

12 FRIDAY. AUGUST 22. 2003

BRUMLEYS from page 3 began with a partner in 1990. He was involved as a board member in several North Carolina environmental organizations and at Durham Academy, Elizabeth Brumley Love, 41, Trinity ’B4, earned a Ph.D. in clinical psychology from Emory University and was a resident ofLondon. Her interests included mental health issues and organizations serving children. • Love’s husband William was also a member of the class of 1984 and went on to receive his MBA from Duke in 1992. He had been director of sales and marketing for the European branch of his family’s company, Printpack, which produces packaging for the consumer products industry. Other members of the Brumley family who perished in the crash were the Loves’ 11-year-old daughter Sarah; George Ill’s wife Julia Preston Brumley, 42; their children George IV, 14, and Jordan, 12, both of whom attended Durham Academy; Lois’s husband Richard Morrell, 43, and their 11-year-old child Alexander Morrell. Services for the families were held in Atlanta and Chapel Hill.

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THE CHRONICLE

FRIDAY. AUGUST 22. 2003 113

The Duke University Union presents

Broadway 7

at Duke

2003-04 Four musicals and a great

Shakespeare classic.

October 27, 2003 8:00pm, Page Auditorium The Chicago Shakespeare Theater’soroduction of

ROMEO AND

JULIET

“./one of the best Shakespeare companies on a continent dotted with them.” —London Independent November 17, 2003 8:00pm, Page Auditorium

FAME

“A boisterous, charged show that’s full of energy and spirit.”

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December 3, 2003 8:00pm, Page Auditorium

SATURDAY FEVER NIGHT “You will be dancing in the aisles.” —New York Times

February 16. 2004 8:00pm, Page Auditorium

KATE KISS ME, “KISS ME, KATE is irresistible.” —New York Times

Feb. 24 or 25. 2004 8:00pm, Reynolds Theater, Bryan Center

Season Tickets on sale until September 24 Duke payroll deduction deadline August 29 Gen. Public $ 100, $ 145, $

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$95, $BO, $6O University Box Office, Bryan Center Call 919-684-4444 To receive an order

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www.union.duke.edu

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SHAKtSPEARE

ROMEO AND JULIET is presented in cooperation with the Shakespeare in American Communities initiative: The National Endowment for the Arts is proud to sponsor Shakespeare in American Communities, a national theater touring initiative, in partnership with Arts Midwest.


THE CHRONICLE

11l FRI D AY. AUGUST 22. 2003

RANKINGS

“It’s one of those things where no doubt every administrator says what I say [about the rankings lacking credibility], then peeks through their fin-

from page 1

watch” by the magazine: first-year experiences, undergraduate research and creative projects, learning communities, study-abroad programs and writing in the disciplines. Elsewhere in the state, the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill dropped a notch to 29th, and North Carolina State University was 84th, as U.S. News expanded its ranking beyond the top 50 for the first time. In addition to the perennially popular U.S. News survey, another major player in the college prep business released its rankings this week. The Princeton Review’s list of the top 20 colleges in 63 categories, ranging from academics to extracurricular to quality of life, gave Duke more cause for celebration. Duke made it onto seven lists, netting third place in “best overall academic experience for undergraduates.” According to The Princeton Review, Duke is a ‘jock school” where “students pack the stadiums.” Despite a “beautiful campus,” “town-gown relations are strained,” and there is “little race/class interaction.” It is also among the “toughest [schools] to get into.” Duke placed in the top 20 in all those categories. Although Vice President for Student Affairs Larry Moneta said he did not give the Princeton Review rankings too much credibility because he did not believe them to be scientifically valid, he acknowledged he was “flattered” that Duke scored third in overall academics. Moneta said the rankings should be seen as amusement only, not used as a guide for administrators

gers at what their ranking is,” he said. ‘There’s no doubt that we talk about it, but I don’t talk about it in the sense that ‘That’s the way we’re going to measure our approach.’ I don’t use the rankings and I don’t use the indices that they measure on in any way.” A significant change from recent years is that Duke is absent from the list of schools where “alternative lifestyles [are] not an alternative.” Last year, Duke was eleventh in this category, which is set up as the converse of the “gay community accepted” category. The University topped the list

in 1999. “Duke has made strides in a number of areas since the 1999 number-one review and those strides have been made on every level,” said Karen Krahulik, director of the Center for Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and Transgender Life. “Nearly every aspect of the University—from the president to administrators and faculty to straight students, gay students and all students in between—a number of people at Duke have been trying to make the campus more comfortable for people who practice an alternate way of living.” Although Krahulik, too, disparages the survey’s statistical invalidity, she said it is important for the University to do well because prospective students pay close attention to the rankings. “I know there are students who choose not to come to Duke because we’ve been on that list,” she said. “My hope is more students who would choose an alternative lifestyle will see Duke as a comfortable place in which to make that choice.”

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dents and other young people from the surrounding area. Other acts that were considered for the concert but abandoned because of scheduling issues were Bob Dylan and a combined set of Ben Harper and G-Love and Special Sauce, said senior Dylan Ashbrook, chair of major attractions for the Union. Early fall is typically inconvenient for rock acts because summer tours are just ending and winter tours are yet to get underway. Budgetary constraints and the needs of the athletic department also influenced the Union’s decision, Ashbrook said. Bigelow acknowledged that security would be a major consideration for the Ludacris concert, and that it would have been “virtually impossible” for the rapper to perform outdoors on a quadrangle—for instance, on the Last Day of Classes. Pardy owing to this worry, some administrators were querulous when they heard that Ludacris would be performing on campus. Who? Who? was Vice President for Student Affairs Larry Moneta’s reaction, he said. “Then I consulted my expert on all such matters, my 22-year-old daughter, who said, ‘They’re a cool hip-hop “We’re dealing with administrawho are by and large middleaged, who don’t listen to this type of music,” Bigelow said. “There

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were some people who had no idea who Ludacris was. Everyone had security concerns.... A lot of those concerns translated into specific security measures [which are still

being negotiated].” A successful and safe concert could portend a return to the musical glory days of Cameron, which last hosted a major concert in 1996. The athletic department’s decision to reopen the venerable arena to bands came in 2002, after a long-standing moratorium on concerts due to the availability of the stadium, protection for its new floor and overall expense. Now, Bigelow and others are trying to restore Cameron’s musical reputation. “When I hear that James Madison University brought Ludacris and is able to bring musical acts in their large venues, it’s a shame that Duke hasn’t been able to do this for the last few years,” he said. Icons of the 1960s and 1970s like the Grateful Dead, Dylan and Bruce Springsteen all packed the house to make Cameron one of the prime venues in North Carolina, but a combination of scheduling difficulties and the arrival of newer, larger stadiums in the Triangle had made Cameron an afterthought, at best, for most major bands. Ludacris may lack the classic rock pedigree of the Dead and Dylan, but his live show is described by Ashbrook in the timeless language of popular music. “He’s exciting, he’s loud—it’s going to be awesome.”


THE CHRONICLE

FRIDAY. AUGUST 22. 2003

CENTER FOR LESBIAN, GAY. BISEXUAL, AND TRANSGENDER LIFE

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16 I FRIDAY. AUGUST 22.

THE CHRONICLE

2(X)3

PARENTAL LEAVE among women at the University. Grantham said the policy is a direct result of the 15-member Women’s Initiative Steering Committee’s efforts to garner feedback from women across Duke. Still, he noted that Keohane herself was instrumental in the change. “Most organizations offer a parental benefit tied to a short-term disability, which means it’s only accessible to the birth mother,” Grantham said. “Ours is accessible to people giving birth and adopting, and it’s accessible to mothers as well as fathers. [Keohane] made it pretty clear that parenting is not a disability and that parental leave should be something that is broadly accessible to the Duke community.” Donna Lisker, director of the Women’s Center and a member of the Women’s Initiative Steering Committee, said the new benefit is a great improvement over the previous policy. “Unpaid leave is impractical for most people, and not everyone has a large balance of sick and vacation leave,” she wrote in an e-mail. “These three weeks, fully

paid, are a great way to stretch the time new parents have with their children.” Lisker added that the benefit is not exclusively for women. “It helps primary caregivers, regardless of gender, and it helps families in general,” she wrote. Keohane’s announcement of the new benefit Aug. 11 has met an overwhelmingly positive reaction from staff members who have or are expecting children, officials said. Deirdre Gordon, program director for the Divinity School and a member of the steering committee for Parents@Duke, a group that advocates for rights for Duke employees that are parents, lauded the new policy as one of the University’s first commitments to staff members that considers both work and home life. “It recognizes that Duke employees are more than somebody who sits in a chair and works all day,” she said. Among those who will benefit from the new staff benefit is Julie Pruitt, program coordinator for Duke University Health System’s ActivHealth. Pruitt, who is 12 weeks pregnant, said she was worried about her parental leave before the new policy was announced. “I felt guilty about using a lot of my sick time when my

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husband was hospitalized unexpectedly last year. I wouldn’t be able to spend that time with my baby,” she said. Pruitt said she could only have taken six weeks off with pay under the old policy, which she felt would have forced her to leave her baby at home when he was still too young. The alternative—taking an unpaid leave in order to get a full 12 weeks at home—was also a very difficult option. Under the new policy, however, she will be able to take nine weeks off with pay and hopes to work part time until she can resume as a full-time employee after 12 weeks. Gordon noted, however, that there are a few things Parents@Duke would like clarified about the new benefit. For example, she said the group would like to learn more about the rationale behind the requirement that the employee be the “primary caregiver” for the new child. “Right now, if both parents of the child work at Duke, one person has to be designated as the primary caregiver, but if one parent works at Duke and one parents works elsewhere, both can take a leave,” she said. ‘There may be a very logical reason behind this policy, but we’re just not aware of it right now, so it’s something we would like clarified in the future.” Gordon added that there are still many discrepancies between the faculty and the staff policy, and that the University should continue to look at making parental benefits more consistent for people who work at the University. Under the parental leave benefit for faculty, new parents can take a full semester off for the birth or adoption of a child. Grantham said it is difficult to compare the faculty and staff parental leave benefits because faculty do not receive vacation time, which staff members can use toward their time off as new parents.


Please check inside for the complete 2003-04 SCHEDULES FOR THE MEN'S AND WOMEN'S BASKETBALLTEAMS. See page 20

O Chronicle

bports ■

Oui captures Amateur championship

Time for

Humphries to tell all

Alex Garinger THE CHRONICLE

by

GLADWYNE, Pa.

Senior Virada to camthis week with few a souvenirs from pus her summer travels. Namely, a gold medal and the Robert F. Cox Women’s Amateur trophy. The rising Duke senior captured the 2003 U.S. Golf Amateur championship Aug. 10, with an impressive 2 and 1 victory over 16-year-old Jane Park in the 36-hole match play finals at the Philadelphia Country Club. It was the first-ever Amateur championship by a Duke player, and the Thailand-native’s second major title: She won the NCAA Individual Championship in 2001 as she guided the Blue Devils to their second team tide. “I knew I had the game all along to play with the pros,” Nirapathpongpom said. “But I had to show the mental toughness. I did that this week.” Nirapathpongpom used a stellar putting game and tight short iron play to outdistance a feisty Park, who showcased a prowess ofher own on the greens to keep the match close throughout. The two traded leads through the first 18-holes, with the Blue Devil taking a 2-up lead into the afternoon. She won the 19th hole, but then dropped three of the next

Nirapathpongporn is returning

I wantKris Humphries to come to Cameron so I can directly ask him—or someone very close to him—why he abandoned his National Letter of Intent to play basketball at Duke in order to enroll at Minnesota, and why the National Letter of Intent Steering Committee accepted his appeal to allow him to compete in the 2005D4 season. Asking him in person is the only journalistic method available, as Humphries and his supporters have been nothing but evasive throughout one ofthe strangest ordeals in recent Duke basketball history.

—g'

s

y

a

Humphries’ history with the Blue Devils. Humphries, a ballyhooed 6-foot-8,240 pound recruit from Minnesota, verbally committed play for Duke in the summer of 2002. Verbal commitments are not binding, and a player can change his mind about which school to attend without any punishment from the NCAA. But in November Humphries was temporarily true to his word, and signed with Duke. Humphries seemed happy with his decision, and made no qualms when his Hopkins High School basketball team played at Cameron in a 63-46 loss to St. Anthony’s (New Jersey) during a winter tournament held in the Triangle area last January. But in mid-May, Duke, on Humphries’ request, released the Minnesota native from his NationalLetter ofIntent. The decision shocked nearly everyone, and no one involved had any explanation or analysis on what went wrong. NCAA rules prohibit Duke from commenting on the former Hopkins star, but the Humphrieses, along with their friends and family, deliberately chose not to explain themselves. Byjune Humphries had decided to play at his father’s alma mater, the University of Minnesota. Although the storm appeared to be setding, Humphries continued to reveal nothing, telling the Associated Press his release from Duke would “remain private.” Golden Gopher head coach Dan Monson made the unlikely claim that he too had not been enlightened on the extenuating circumstances that led to his departure from Duke. Monson was probably just relieved to replace sophomore Rick Rickert, who declared for the NBA draft although he was not ultimately selected. to

SEE HUMPHRIES ON PAGE <NONE>

Wooden candidates Men's basketball stars JJ. Redick and Chris Duhon have been tabbed as preseason Wooden Award candidates. Duhon, a four-year starter, was a finalist for the award during the 2002-03 season.

Senior Virada"Oui" Nirapathpongporn pulled away with the 103rd U.S.Women's Amateur Championship

X-country champ to skip fall semester by

Paul

Crowley

THE CHRONICLE

To a collegiate long-distance runner, the summer provides the only significant respite in a season that can extend from September through July. To a collegiate long-distance team, it is likewise a time ofrenewal, when a squad tries to use new recruits to fill the vacancies left by recent graduates. In the upcoming cross country season, the women’s team will have to fill a sizable hole, as it will be competing without one of last season’s mainstays, 2003 USATF Junior Cross Country individual champion Clara Horowitz. Horowitz’s absence, likely the most troublesome cavity for coach Norm Ogilvie’s team this year, has less to do with graduation and more to do with two seemingly unrelated other factors: health problems and the 2004 Summer Olympics. “She’s going to delay and redshirt for the fall,” Ogilvie said at a press conference earlier this week. “She’s got some health issues that she needs to resolve, if you get my drift.” Later in the same press conference, Ogilvie mentioned Horowitz’s other reason for redshirting in the autumn. “[North Carolina star Shalane] Flanagan’s back for her last year of cross-country

Clarett to hear today

I

I

I

SEE AMATEUR ON PAGE <NONE>

Ohio State's

star

tailback,

Maurice Clarett, expects

to learn today from the NCAA whether or not he will be allowed to return to practice Friday, according to friend and confi-

dant Jim Brown.

and she’s not going to run track, to get ready for the Olympics,” Ogilvie noted. “Clara’s just doing the opposite thing, because the Olympic trials are next summer. Clara decided not to return to school in August, but it was a mutual decision on all involved.” Ogilvie stressed that Horowitz, a native of Berkeley, Ca., intends to return to Duke in January and would again compete for the Blue Devils. “We think it’s a good decision for her,” Ogilvie said. “Clara has every intention of running indoor and outdoor track, and trying to make the Olympic trials next July.” The loss ofHorowitz for the upcoming season is only the most recent roster modification for the team. Ogilvie’s squad has lost Caroline Bierbaum (who transferred to Columbia) and Horowitz for the fall season, while gaining the services of former high school All-American Natasha Roetter, who will participate this fall after opting not to run competitively once arriving on campus last fall. “We had five freshmen score in the ACC last year,” Ogilvie said, referring to Horowitz, Sally Meyerhoff, Bierbaum, Shannon Rowbury and Laura Stanley. “And now three of those are back, and how do we get better?”

Neuheisel sues NCAA Former Washington foot-

ball coach Rick Neuheisel sued the Huskies and the NCAA Thursday, alleging that he was wrongfully terminatedfor his involvement in college basketball pools.

Sophomore Clara Horowitz plans to return to Duke in January to resume her running career.

U.S. dominates again

AP football rankings

The latest Dream Team trounced the Dominican Republic 111-73 Thursday

No. 1 Oklahoma No. 2 Ohio State No. 3 Miami No. 4 Michigan No. 5 Texas No. 6 Auburn No. 7 Kansas State No. 8 Southern California

night on the strength of Tracy McGrady's 17 points, Vince Carter's 15 points, and Jermaine O'Neal's 14points.


THE CHRONICLE

18 I FRIDAY, AUGUST 22, 2003

The long, slow, deep, soft, wet joy of Bulls baseball by Mike Corey THE CHRONICLE

It is perhaps the most celebrated movie line among baseball aficionados; a soliloquoy of sorts that encapsulates everything from love to sex to drinking to passion and, of course, America’s national pastime. “Well, I believe in the soul...the small of a woman's back, the hanging curveball, high fiber, good scotch...that the novels of Susan Sontag are self-indulgent overrated crap. I believe Lee Harvey Oswald acted alone, I believe there ought to be a Constitutional amendment outlawing astroturf and the designated hitter. I believe in the sweet spot, soft core pornography, opening your presents on Christmas morning rather than on Christmas Eve, and I believe in long, slow, deep, soft, wet kisses that last three nights It was delivered by one Crash Davis (played by Kevin Costner), in the film that Sports Illustrated recendy tabbed as the best sports movie of all time, Bull Durham. It was this movie that propelled the Bulls to national fame, making the ballclub the most recognizable minor league franchise in all ofAmerican sport. The farm team for the Tampa Bay Devil Rays, the Bulls have deep roots with Duke University, and their games have become a community event as they bring people together from all walks, balks and runs of life. The Bulls, which won their first-ever International League (triple A) championship last season, are in the midst of ”

their 101st season of playing ball. Founded in 1902 and originally called the Durham Tobacconists, the squad actually played its first game against Trinity College, which later evolved into Duke. The Tobacconists won the exhibition game, 8-5. The ba;;c;ib disbanded until 1912 when it joined the North Carolina State League, and played its first game as the “Durham Bulls” on the Trinity College Campus, which is now the site of Duke’s East Campus. In the years that would follow, the team’s popularity grew slowly—that is until the Bulls began cashing in after the success of Bull Durham in 1988. The Bulls moved into their new ballpark in 1995 in front of 10,000 fans, a number which instigated an expansion of the stadium which was completed in 1998. The edifice is a diamond in the rough of sorts in Durham, made all the more enamored because of the recent success of the Bulls, and because of the mid-inning contests that involve and entertain fans ofall ages. Currently, the Bulls are well on their way to defending their AAA Championship, as they are three games up in the South Division with a 68-60 ledger. And even if the Bulls weren’t competitive, games would still be enjoyable, because of the welcoming and entertaining atmosphere that has become the norm in minor league baseball. And if anything else, a fan can always pass the time at the ballpark reciting lines from the movie.

Durham Bulls Athletic Park attracts a wide variety of people from all across the Triangle region

Remaining Home Games

Average Attendance Levels City Attendance Population

August 25-27 vs. Charlotte 28-29 vs. Richmond 30-31 vs. Charlotte

-

-

Louisville 9,288 256,231 Buffalo-8,366-292,648 Pawtucket-7,971-72,958 Indianapolis 7,893 791,926 Toledo-7,400-313,619 Norfolk-7,171 -234,403 Durham 6,938 -187,035 Columbus 6,365 711,470 -

-

-

September 1 vs. Charlotte

-

-

Playoffs begin September 3

-

Game times Monday thru Saturday 7 p.m. Sunday 5 p.m.

-

South Division Standings

-

-

Durham 68-60 Charlotte 67-65 Norfolk 62-70 Richmond 58-74 -

Ticket information

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www.durhambulls.com

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THE CHRONICLE

HIDAY. Al GIST 22.2003 Ilf9

Sports Briefs Compiled by Mike Corey Football The Blue Devils are extremely optimistic heading into the final week of preseason practice, with the many fifthyear seniors raising expectations higher on a daily basis. However, the season ended early for freshmen cornerback, Cedric Mason, who suffered a serious injury to his left patella during the football team’s first hitting drills of the season last weekend. “He's probably better off that this happened now," Duke coach Carl Franks said last Tuesday. “He's had a history of some problems with his kneecaps.”

Men’s Soccer In an exhibition game this past Monday, the Blue Devils survived a second-half surge to down East Carolina 5-2. Junior Nigi Adogwa scored a hat-trick on the day, scoring the game’s first two goals to give Duke a 2-0 lead. Justin Trowbridge, in his second year starting in goal, made one save and allowed no goals in the first half of play. In the second stanza, however, East Carolina put two quick scores past junior netminder Mark Valdez to knot the match at two. But Duke retaliated with two scores from freshman Josh Swank, and a final goal from Adogwa, to sink the Pirates. “It's great to score goals,” Duke head coach John Rennie said Monday. “Scoring three goals after we were tied is a result of pure effort, fitness and heart. This team has a lot of those qualities. A lot of teams would have lost or settled for a tie after the game was tied. ECU came out in the second half with a lot ofenthusiasm and intensity. We didn't match that tonight. That's something we can work on.” Duke travels to Connecticut Saturday for its final preseason game before beginning regular season competition at home against Liberty August 30.

Women’s Soccer

ANTHONY CROSS for THE CHRONICLE

Wide receiver Lance Johnson runs a passing route in a recent practice,

A 6-0 shutout of UNC-Asheville marked the beginning of the 2003 season for the women’s soccer team in an exhibition match last Sunday. The young Blue Devils were led by its seven upperclassmen, as juniorLauren Simel scored the game’s first goal, and recorded an assist to senior Gwendolyn Oxenham, while junior Casey McCluskey added two goals ofher own en route to the victory. Freshmen Lauren Tippets and Sarah McCabe closed

out the scoring for Duke, which will take on Old Dominion this Saturday in its last exhibition contest for the year,

Women’s Basketball Tillis and Pam Am team pick up silver medal Cuba defeated the United States 75-64 in the gold medal game of the Pan American tournament August 9, marking the Cubans’ fifth victory over America in 18 days. Previously, the Cubans had downed the U.S. in three exhibition contests played in Havana, Cuba, and once in the Pan American tournament in Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic. Duke senior Iciss Tillis scored three points and collected four rebounds in the loss. Beard and USA Young Women grab gold Alana Beard poured in 12 points and grabbed six rebounds in leading the United States Young Women team to a 71-55 victory in the 2001 FIBA World Championships held in Sibenik, Croatia August 3. The win served as compensation for the Americans’ only loss in the competition, when Brazil upended the U.S. 73-60. Beard, along with teammates Seimone Augustus (Louisiana State) and Christi Thomas (Georgia), were named to the five-member All-Tournament team. Following the gold medal presentation, U.S. coach Jim Foster—who heads up OhioState’s basketball program—was very complimentary of the trio. ‘They had great character and Augustus and Thomas stepped up today, Beard was consistent defensively,” Foster said. Both Beard and Tillis are on the Wooden Award’s preseason watch list which honors the nation’s top player.

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THE CHRONICLE

2i •01 FRIDAY, AUGUST 22,'2003

Men's basketball schedule

Women's basketball schedule

2003-04

2003-04

Head Coach: Mike Krzyzewski (637-227 overall, 564-168 at Duke)

Head Coach: Gail Goestenkors (237-82 overall, 110-50 in ACC)

TV

Opponent

BLUE-WHITE SCRIMMAGE EA SPORTS ALL-STARS NIKE ELITE DETROIT vs. Pacific (Great Alaska Shootout) vs. Houston/Liberty (AS) Championship (AS) @ Michigan State

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(@

Madison Square Garden) ESPN

DAVIDSON @ Clemson FAIRFIELD

Virginia N.C. STATE WAKE FOREST @ Maryland @

@

FSS espn2 espn2 espn2 ESPN ESPN FSN espn2

Georgetown

FLORIDA STATE @ Georgia Tech @ North Carolina CLEMSON

ESPN FSN

RJ FSN RJ ABC

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ESPN espn2 ESN

VIRGINIA @ N.C. State @ Wake Forest MARYLAND VALPARAISO

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ESN ESPN ESPN

@

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ESN ESPN

CBS espn2

TV

Opponent

TIME

7 p.m. 7 p.m. 7 p.m. 5 p.m. 11:30 p.m. 12:30 a.m. 12:30 a.m. 9 p.m. 2 p.m. 8 p.m. 7:30 p.m, 12 p.m. 4 p.m. 5:30 p.m. 8 p.m. 5:30 p.m. 8 p.m. 5:30 p.m. 9 p.m. 1 p.m. 9 p.m. 9 p.m. 9 p.m. 5 p.m. 9 p.m.

7:30 p.m. 7 p.m. 4 p.m. 9 p.m. 7:45 p.m. 7 p.m. 9 p.m.

PREMIER PLAYERS 110% CLUB vs. Texas (West Lafayette, Indiana) ELON vs. Purdue (Raleigh, N.C.) STEPHEN F. AUSTIN (Duke Classic) CREIGHTON/AUBURN (Duke Classic) @ Wake Forest

TULSA @ Northwestern State vs. Hampton (Los Angeles, Cal.) vs. Loyola Marymount/Northwestern @ Connecticut FLORIDA STATE @ Georgia Tech @ North Carolina @ Virginia MARYLAND TENNESSEE N.C. STATE @ Clemson @ Florida State GEORGIA TECH WAKE FOREST NORTH CAROLINA VIRGINIA @ Maryland CLEMSON @ N.C. State

ESPN ESPN

CBS RSN

RSN ESN espn2 RSN

RSN

espn2 espn2

RSN RSN

Our central location is conveniently on your way from most anywhere on campus. We carry newspapers and magazines, health & beauty aides, postage stamps, breakfast foods,

produce, frozen foods, canned goods, dairy products, bakery goods, bulk candies, soft drinks

and juices, cookies and crackers, chips and dips and energy bars. Work study positions will be available in the Fall. Call Alvin Puett at 684-2179 for more information. Department of Duke University Stores®


THE CHRONICLE

FRIDAY. AUGUST 22. 2003 121

ACC Football Preview The Chronicle's annual ACC football preview comes out Friday, August 29, with in-depth coverage on the Blue Devils, and stories on each team in the conference, along with profiles of the ACC's top players and coaches.

Duke Fall Sports Preview The annual fall sports preview will be released Friday, September 5, and will include coverage of men's and women's soccer, men's and women's cross country, field hockey and volleyball.

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THE CHRONICLE

22 | FRI DAY, AUGUST 22, 2003

H&R Block Tax Course Begins September 4 Thousands of people are learning the skill of income tax preparation from the H&R Block Income Tax Course. H& R Block, the nation's largest tax firm, is offering instruction starting September 4, with flexible morning, afternoon, and evening classes available. the 11-week course, you will learn the, nuts and

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WACO, Texas Scott Drew is leaving Valparaiso to take over the challenge of repairing a Baylor basketball program torn apart by the death of a player, the shamefilled resignation of coach Dave Bliss, a string of transfers and potentially strong NCAA violations. Mike Oppland, a sophomore-to-be at Valparaiso, told The Associated Press Thursday night that Homer Drew called his family to tell them Scott Drew was going to Baylor and he was coming out of retirement to take his place. “I was surprised (about Scott), but I guess I understand why he did it,” Oppland said. “When Homer retired or whatever, he said he was done with basketball. I guess, he figures he’s the best man to take over the program.” Scott Drew is expected to be announced at a Baylor news conference Friday. Baylor president Robert Sloan would not comment on Drew. “We do not have a deal yet, but we’re working closely” with the search committee to hire someone soon, he said at an afternoon news conference. Baylor spokesman Larry Brumley repeatedly said that a new coach had not been selected, even after being told by the AP of Oppland’s comments. Houston television station KRTV, the Waco Tribune-Herald and the Fort Worth Star-Telegram, all citing sources, reported Thursday that Drew was expected to be announced as the new coach on Friday. Repeated calls to regents and search committee members were not returned. Drew has only one year of head coaching experience, going 20-11 and reaching the NIT last season. He spent the nine previous seasons as an assistant to his father at Valparaiso. Their most memorable season was 1998, when they reached the round of 16 in the NCAA tournament with a team led by his brother, Bryce, who hit a miracle shot to beat Mississippi in the opening round that year. At 32, Scott Drew is one of the youngest coaches in Division I. As an assistant to his father, he was known as a resourceful recruiter, having brought in many players from Europe, Africa and South America. Bliss and athletic director Tom Stanton resigned Aug. 8, the same day that Sloan said the school had placed itself on. a two-

year probation. Baylor launched an internal inquiry in July into possible NCAA violations, after allegations surfaced of improper payments to players following Patrick Dennehy’s disappearance. Dennehy was found shot to death July 25, and former Baylor player Carlton Dotson remains in a Maryland jail awaiting extradition to Texas to face charges in the death. The inquiry found that Bliss was directly involved in paying tuition costs and other expenses for Dennehy and another player. It also found that failed drug tests by players weren’t properly reported. Since then, secretly recorded taped conversations of Bliss have shown he asked players to lie to investigators to try to portray Dennehy as a drug dealer. Patrick Dennehy Sr. plans to sue the university, its former coach, regents and others, saying officials conspired to cover up information about his son’s death and concealed illegal activities within the athletic department, according to his attorneys. The lawsuit, which is expected to be filed Friday in Harris County District Court, seeks at least $50,000 in damages. It also accuses officials of creating an “unsafe atmosphere” in the department, The Dallas Morning News reported in its online edition Thursday night, citing a draft of the lawsuit. As part of its self-imposed penalty, Baylor won’t play in any postseason tournaments next season, including the Big 12 tournament. The school also offered every player to be released from their scholarships, allowing them to transfer to other schools. The NCAA on Wednesday said it would waive the one-year transfer period and let the players be eligible at their new schools immediately. Junior center Lawrence Roberts, the team’s leading scorer and rebounder last season, transferred to Mississippi State. Junior guard Kenny Taylor said he is transferring to Texas, and incoming freshman center Tyrone Nelson instead enrolled at Prairie View A&M. Junior guard John Lucas 111 has also asked for his release, and the second-leading scorer has said he won’t return. Senior forward R.T. Guinn, sophomore forward Tommy Swanson and junior college transfer Harvey Thomas also asked for their releases.

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THE CHRONICLE

FRIDAY. AUGUST 22. 2003 2: :3

DUKE CHORALE

DUKE WIND SYMPHONY

COME SING!

PLAY WITH US!

50 singers (undergrad and grad students) New England tour (during Spring Break) repertoire various short pieces & major works by Handel, Mozart, and Vaughan Williams 6 concerts in all Tue/Thur rehearsals (7-9 pm)

Concerts in Baldwin Auditorium, Duke Chapel, and Duke Gardens PLUS the Duke Wind Symphony Viennese Ball

-

Tuesday/thursday Rehearsals 6:45 to 8:30 PM (Open Rehearsal Thurs., Aug. 28 in Baldwin)

AUDITIONS (friendly) Aug. 22-29,10 am -5 pm 03 Union West

Questions? 684-3898 Open Rehearsal

Tue, Aug. 26

6:45-7:45 pm

Baldwin Auditorium

ATTN: SINGERS

Questions? Contact Randy Guptill, Director 919-660-3306, guptiljr@duke.edu

AUDITIONS!

Duke Opera Workshop

Baldwin Auditorium This fall, we’ll work with guest lecturers in a master class setting on such topics as researching and learning roles, stage movement, makeup, Feldenkreis, stage fighting, improvisation and working with stage directors, coaches and conductors.

Friday, August 22 Information Meeting •■■

Trombone, Tuba

.

Wednesday, Aug. 27 4:30-6:30 pm

DUKE SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA

Information Meeting

7-B:3opm

Monday, August 25

019 Biddle

6:30-7:3opm

019 Biddle

7:30-li:00pm

084 Biddle

Tuesday, August 26

Flute, Oboe, Bassoon, Trumpet Horn, Clarinet

7-ii:oopm

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019 Biddle

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Thursday, August 28 Percussion Violin

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or visit www.duke.edu/music/performance

For more information, please contact Harry Davidson: 919-660-3324

hdavid@duke.edu


24 I I RID

W, U LIUS

I

THE CHRONICLE

22, 2»n

AMATEUR from page <None>

HUMPHRIES from page <None>

four to bring the match back to allsquare. “I’m thinking this can go anywhere," Park said. Tm feeling pretty good after I made the putt on [23].” Nirapathpongporn then birdied the par-5 24th and 30th holes to secure a 2-up lead that she would not relinquish. “I knew, ifI stayed focused on my game, I’m the best player,” Nirapathpongporn said. “And the best player wins.” Although Duke head coach Dan Brooks was on hand to watch, Nirapathpongporn's father, Dr. Apichart Nirapathpongporn, who is suffering from leukemia, did not make the trip at her daughter’s urging. After securing the victory, an emotional Nirapathpongporn dedicated the win to her father. Nirapathpongporn and Park each earned an exemption into the 2004 U.S. Women’s Open, providing they retain their amateur status—questionable for the Duke star, who could turn pro after next year’s NCAA championships, when Duke will once again be a favorite. Earlier this summer, Nirapathpongporn lost 1 up in the 36-hole final to 13-year-old Michelle Wie at the U.S. Women’s Amateur Public Links tournament, and missed the cut by one stroke at the U.S. Open, making the Amateur win even more satisfying. She also finished third this week at the York Newspaper Company Futures Classic in Pennsylvania, behind winner and recent Blue Devil graduate Candy Hannemman. Current teammates Lizjanangelo and Leigh Anne Hardin also competed in the Amateur. Hardin, a senior, did not make the match play cut of 64 players, while Janangelo was knocked out in the first round of match play. The Associated Press contributed to this

There were only three speculative reasons tossed around about Humphries' departure: That he wanted a guarantee of significant playing time in order to quicken his route to the NBA, that Humphries wanted to play on the perimeter more dian the Duke coaching staff envisioned and that Humphries wanted to play closer to home. The first two reasons, if true, are founded on poor logic. Any player that is ready to compete in the NBA would receive plenty' of floor time on a Duke squad, and Mike Krzyzewski has a solid history' of using his post players on the perimeter with the most glaring example being 1992 national player-of-the-year Christian Laettner. And even if these were the reasons for his departure, they certainly are not the “extenuating circumstances” that the National Letter of Intent Steering Committee requires for instant eligibility. Normally when a player is released from a National Letter of Intent, he must sit out one season. Creating a horrible precedent, The National Letter of Intent Steering Committee granted Humphries’ appeal, and he is all set to play for Minnesota this season. The Star Tribune in Minneapolis, Minn., reported that despite a lack of publicly known “extenuating circumstances,” Humphries said that he knew all along he would be able to play in the coming season. “We knew awhile ago that it should be a for-sure [decision], but I didn’t want to publicly state it,” Humphries told the Associated Press in a story published July 22. What I want to know—and what the Duke community deserves to know —is what else Humphries “knew awhile ago.”

Kris Humphries struggled while playing in Cameron Indoor this past January as a high school senior. But despite his son’s silence, Humphries’ father, William, told the Indianapolis Star that he would eventually provide an explanation about Kris’ surprise decision. “I told somebody yesterday, ‘Don’t you think it’s kind of strange that we haven’t made a comment concerning it?,”’ William Humphries said in May. ‘That’s because there’s more to the story. There’s a legiti-

Kris Humphries Timeline July 2002 Verbally commits to play basketball for Duke -

November 2002 Signs National Letter of Intent (NLI) with Blue Devils -

mate reason.”

January 2003 Humphries' Hopkins Royals play in Cameron Indoor

Well, many a moon has passed since that statement, so I decided to give him a call. Mr. Humphries was busy, and politely gave me his wife’s phone number. But the elusiveness continued. “I have no desire to comment on that,” Mrs. Humphries said. Calls to the office of the National Letter ofIntent also went unretumed as of late yes-

-

May 2003 Humphries requests and is granted his release from his NLI. -

June 2003 Chooses to attend Minnesota after weeks of searching for new college -

terday. If Kris and his supporters have trouble communicating via phone and e-mail, that’s fine. They can all stop by Cameron one day. We’ll be waiting.

July 2003 NLI Steering Committee clears Humphries for 2003 season -

Attention All Student Grou Student Group Registration

NEWS FLASH: The Event Advising Center (EAC) has been consolidated into the newly created Office of Student Activities and Facilities!

All undergraduate and graduate student organizations will need to officially "Register" with the Office of Student Activities and Facilities (OSAF).

It's easy...

All staff in OSAF are ready and willing to help your student group register and plan your events!

Stop by our office, complete a one-page information form, and submit a copy of your organization’s Charter or Constitution

Once registered...

Important Dates

Groups may plan events, reserve space on campus, activate an on-campus agency account, and use the Duke name for programming purposes.

Student Activities Saturday, August 23rd

,

Fair 4-6PM

Hurry in....

OSAF

Open House ,h Friday, August 29 3-SPM

...so your group can start planning great programs and events!

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-

,

.

DUU Freewater Films presents: Cruel Intentions DUU Freewater Films presents: Shot in the Dork Leading at Duke (New Leadership Training Opportunity) DUU Freewater Films presents: City of God DUU Freewater Films presents: Raising Arizona DUU QuadFlix presents: Anger Management DUU QuadFlix presents: The Pianist

Bth.8 th 9th or 10th .

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11 th & 12th TPM & 9:3OPM 12th at Midnight 6 th &T h TPM & 10PM Sept. 13 th & 14th TPM $ 10PM ■

the- highlight's...

DUU Presents a Scavenger Hunt for First-Year Students RLHS & CC Presents Great Bands In the Great Hall More Details to Camel RLHS & CC BBQ at the WEL featuring the “Jump Little Children" Bond RLHS & CC Pre-Gome Concert featuring the “Dave Matthews Cover" Band DUU Freewater Films presents: Laurel Canyon

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Sept. Sept. Sept. Sept.

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The Chronicle

FRIDAY, AUGUST 22, 2003 � PAGE 25

Department of Theater Studies Annual Open House All Duke undergraduates are invited to this open house on the first day of class, Monday, August 25, from 5:80—7:00 p.m. in Sheafer Theater in the Bryan Center. Gome and meet the Theater Studies faculty and the Duke Players Council and reconnect with friends. Information about courses, auditions, backstage opportunities and other news will be available. Food will be served!

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Auditions for Love's Labor's Lost and Why Things Bum are invited to audition for foil semester productions the first week of class, on Thursday,

FREE

Sheafer Theater, Biyan Center April 1-4 Theater 2004: New Works in Process Branson Theater, East Campus April 8-11

All Duke

August 28 from 6:30-10:30 p.m., Friday, August 29, 4:00-8:00 p.m. with callbacks on Satuday, August 30 from 12:00-4:00 p.m. Auditions will be held in the Bryan

Center. Sign up in advance for your audition time in the Duke Players notebook at the Info Desk in the Bryan Center. For more information about auditions, email Danny Smith at dbs@duke.edu or Amit V. Mahtaney at avm2@duke.edu.

To audition for Love’s Labor’s Lost, please prepare a 1-2 minute monologue. Classical monologues are encouraged and all those auditioning are required to prepare some material for audition, if not a monologue, a story. To audition for Why Things Bum, please prepare a 1-2 minute contemporary monologue. You will also have the option to read sides if you haven’t prepared material.

OffjStage

Duke Players is the student organization in the Department ofTheater Studies. Its members support the Department’s productions by running auditions and working on production crews, promoting participation

Backstage Opportunities Ifyou are interested in getting involved in opportunities to work backstage on any of the productions listed, get in touch with Jan Chambers, Resident Faculty Designer, at janci@duke.edu, or Doug Martelon, TheaterOperations, at douglas.martelon@duke.edu, or Naomi Reagan, Duke Players, at nmrB@duke.edu.

in theater by all Duke students,

and by representing the interests of studentswho are involved in Theater Studies. Duke Players also produces one lab production each semester. All undergraduates are eligible for membership.

Duke University Department of Theater Studies 306 Bivins Building Box 90680 Durham, NC 27708 Info: (919) 660-8848 •

www.duke.edu/web/theaterstudies


pAGE

Classifieds

26 � FRIDAY, AUGUST 22,2003

Announcements Child care needed for 10 and 12 year old. East Chapel Hill area. Approx. 36-40hrs/month; ■ M-F 2:3opm~6;oopm alternating weeks. Child care experience, references and transportation required. Nonsmoker. Salary negotiable. Please respond to Christi at: 919-918-7742 or ckaugustine@earthlink.net.

PE 152 Women’s Health Issues

(Health and Physical Education Department) An integrative experience designed to introduce students to a variety of women’s

health issues, as well as mental, physical, emotional, social, and environmental factors affecting college-aged women. A practical, hands-on approach will emphasize information, resources, and skills to help students achieve and maintain a healthy lifestyle, as well as an understanding of the broader issues facing women today. This class will meet on Tuesday (3:556:25pm) in 020 Wilson Recreation Center. Dr. Susan Stewart, HPER Dept., is course coordinator: other contributors to the class are Dr. Greg Dale and Assoc. Prof. Jan Olgivie (HPER) and Franca Alphin, Student Health Dietitian. Fraternities, sororities or student groups: Looking for the right match willing to help a non-profit, non-sectarian, K-8 Durham school with two special events. Fall and spring. Casino night and fund-raising auction. Great for resume or service hours. Call Trudy 403-7773.

Multi-family garage sale. 8-23. BAM-12PM. Kids toys, clothing, household items, and more. On Copper Creek Drive, off Woodcraft Pkwy. Between Barbee and 55.

RDU AIRPORT DIRECT TAXI $25.00 flat rale to RDU. Call

(919) 306-5380 or 677-0351, www.citizenairport.taxi.com.

WANTED PARTICIPANTS IN LISTENING EXPERIMENTS. These studies are designed to determine the role of various brainstem neural subgroups in the psychological process of hearing and their influence in selective auditory Principal attention. Investigator: David W. Smith, Ph.D. Room 204/205, Sands Building, Hearing Research Division of Laboratories, Otolaryngology-Head and Neck Duke Surgery, University Medical Center. Eligibility Criteria: From 8-40 years of age with normal hearing. Subjects be will compensated $B.OO/hour for sessions ranging 1-2 hours each. For more information, please contact Gilda Mills at 919-681-8270.

NORTHCATE

The Biggest "Back to School poster Sale.” The biggest and best selection. Choose from over 2000 different images. FINE ART, MOVIE MODELS, MUSIC. POSTERS, HUMOR, ANIMALS, BLACK LIGHT, SCIENCE FICPERSONALITIES, TION, Landscapes, Kids, Photography, Motivationals. Most images only $6, $7, & $8 each! See us at Von Lower Level Cannon Hall C Bryan Center on Monday August 25th through Friday August 29th, 2003. The hours are 9 AM 5 PM. the sale is sponsored by Prolific Art Galleries, Ltd. -

-

-

Apts. For Rent 2BR, Duke area, central heating and air, W/D, stove, refrigerator, dishwasher, microwave. $5OO. no yard work, no pets. Free water. References required. Nice. 6831705. Leave message.

All new. Walk to West/East/Ninth Street. 1, 2, and 3 bedrooms. Hardwood floors. Washer and Dryer. Starting at $650. Duke bus stop on site. Call 919-730-7071. American Village Duplex. #lO Tarawa Terrace. 2 bedroom, 1.5 bath, living room with fireplace. Fully equipped kitchen with washer/dryer. Wooded lot. 5 minutes to Duke. Call 919-603-1952. Available August 1.

Apartment near Southpoint to sublease available as soon as needed. Lease ends January 17, 2004. 10-15 minutes to Duke. Lovely 3rd floor apt. w/easy access to all Triangle locations. 2BR/2BA 1200 square feet. Includes W/D to sell if needed. Gated access, fireplace, garden tubs, 9 foot ceilings, walk-in closets in both bedrooms. Fitness center/pool premises. on $855/month (willing to negotiate). Call Amy 451-1508 or Sara 9498390. Lovely apartment in restored 1915 vintage house suitable for one or two bedrooms. Antique heart pine floors, thermopane furnace, washer/dryer, good closet space. ADT security system and water paid for by owner. Access to large, fence yard maintained by owner. Pets allowed 1102A North Elizabeth Street in Durham-close to Duke with good neighbors. Grads and professionals only. $640.00/ month, references and security deposit. Available now. Lease through June 30 or July 31, 2004. Call 361-2639 or lamar-

ATTENTION: WORK STUDY STUDENTS!

After-schoolchild care needed for 3 children in Chapel Hill ages 13, 11 and 8. Monday. Wednesday. Friday, 2:30-6:30 pm. Must be reliable, responsible, non-smoker with a good driving record. Call 812-7375. Babysitter needed for infant, 6-10 hrs/wk. One block from East. References required, $lO/hr. 4163842 or ijm@duke.edu.

Childcare for 13 year old needed. Some overnights. Females, only please. Call 620-3648 for more info. Looking for reliable, professional childcare for 1 year-old girl and 3 year-old boy in my Hope Valley home. Flexible hours. English as first language. Mostly afternoons and weekends. Call Trudy;9l9-4037773.

Nanny wanted for infant. 1 day/week, flexible. Add’l hours possible. Own transportation. Nonsmoker. Clean driving record. Referrals must. $B/hour. a Charlene: 401-8686. Part time babysitter for my 3 y.o. daughter on T,W,Th afternoons from 2:30-5:30. Call Laura at 6430256 for more info.

Responsible and fun babysitter needed to care for three year old child ten hours a week. Great pay and nice work environment. 225-6299.

SEEKING PART-TIME NANNY Durham family seeks nanny for 15-20 afternoon hours a week including one weekend day. School pick up for 12 y.o. girl and 8 y.o. boy. Care for older children and 2 y.o. twin boys. Excellent pay, loving famMust have ily, great kids. car and excellent childcare Email: references. hegger@psych.mc.duke.edu or call 949-1154.

Sitting for 1 year-old girl. Wednesdays and Fridays, 10-12, occasionally extra hours. Home convenient to Duke. Non-smoker, experienced, references and own transportation. $lO/hr. Call 4906702.

glenn@aol.com. CRITICS NEEDED! No experience necessary. Up to $5O/assignment. Open schedule. Call 1-800-3746966.

Fabulous Chrysler 1986 Leßarron Convertible for $5OO, mileage 140000, for sale runs fine, contact Oliver, von919-403-7562 or

schweinitz@yahoo.de

HOURS,

NO

Heavenly NIGHTS/SUNDAYS. Ham seeks energetic/friendly individuals for its upscale deli, catering and specialty meat store. Great pay/work environment. 489-3710 after 2pm.

BARBER SHOP Full Service Style Shop

Bull

city

Run VJT

•wautjirowi

Mon.-Fri. 8-5:30 Sat. 8-5:00 $2 off w/Duke ID

286-4030 Northgate Shopping Center, down from Sears Auto, next to Harris Teeter

REMNANT SALE! Remnants Starting at .

340

Are you a good student who enjoys helping others? Are you looking for a flexible part-time job? Why not be a tutor? Tutors needed for introductory Biology, Chemistry, Computer Science, Economics, Engineering, Math, and Statistics. Physics

Undergraduates (sophomoresenior) earn $lO/hr and graduate students earn $l3/hr. Print an application off our website: www.duke.edu/web/skills or pick one up in the Peer Tutoring Program Office, 217 Academic Advising Center, East Campus, 684-8832.

Help your fellow classmates by tutoring them in ECE 61L, 62L, EGR 53L or EGR 75L. The Peer Tutoring Program needs you! Undergraduates earn $lO/hr and graduate tutors earn $l3/hr. Print an application off the website: www.duke.edu/web/skills.

CHEMISTRYTUTORS NEEDED Tutors

needed

for

General

(21L, 23L) and Organic Chemistry (151L). Undergraduates earn $lO/hr and graduate tutors earn $l3/hr. Pick up an application in the Peer Tutoring Office, 217 Academic Advising Center, East Campus, 684-8832 or the website: www.duke.edu/web/skills. Chemistry

Be a tutor for Computer Science 1 or 6. Apply in the Peer Tutoring Office, 217 Academic Advising Center, East Campus, 6848832. Undergraduates (sophomore-senior) earn $lO/hr and graduate tutors earn $l3/hr. Home and Business Manager needed for self-employed couple with small children, house farm, and busy lifestyle. Located in Rougemont. For more information call 919-620-7622 or 730-1856.

Lifeguard(s) needed for up to 10-15 hours/ wd®k at the Lenox Baker Children’s Hospital therapeutic pool to guard for children and adults with special needs. Person must be at least 18 years old and hold current lifeguard certification. Hours available immediately. Pay rate is $9.00/hr- If interested contact catie Shafer at 684-4315.

MATH TUTORS

Unique work-study opportunities with the internationally known

If you took Math 25L, 31L, 32L, 32, 41 or 103 at Duke and want to share your knowledge, we need you to be a tutor! Be a math tutor and earn $lO/hr (sophomore-senior) or graduate students earn $l3/hr. Apply in the Peer Tutoring Office, 217 Academic Advising Center, East Campus, 684-8832.

AMERICAN DANCE FESTIVAL. ADF is seeking reliable and selfmotivated individuals for office support, good hands-on experience for those interested in Arts Management. Exciting, informal, busy environment. Hours flexible between 10-6, Mon-Fri. Starts at $9/hr. Call 684-6402.

Student-preferrably workstudy funded to perform light secretarial responsibilities. Filing, copying, mail run, etc. Contact Michelle

Needed;

Smith @ 684-9041. Flexible hours, rate $7.50/hour.

NEEDED: Student (preferably work-study funded) to perform

basic clerical work which may include, but is not limited to, followup phone calls and correspondence to research study patients. mostly afternoons and Hours: some evenings. Rate: $7.50/hr. Contact Tanya Kagarise at 6688222.

Part-time computer whiz needed for local business. Fax resume to 688-8860. Peacock Alley Chapel Hill Gifts/Linens. Part time sales associate, 10-5. 967-2152 ask for -

-

Betsy.

PHYSICS TUTORS Be a physics tutor for the Peer Tutoring Program today! Tutors needed for physics 52L and 53L. Earn $lO/hr as an undergraduate tutor or $l3/hr as a graduate student tutor. Peer Tutoring Academic 217 Program, Advising Center, East Campus, 684-8832. RAINBOW SOCCER COACHES WANTED! Volunteer coaches needed for Youth, ages 3-13, and Adults, 9th grade and older. Practices M&W or T&TH, 4:00S:ISPM for Youth, 5:15-Dark for Adults. All big, small, happy, tall, large-hearted, fun-loving people qualify. Call 967-3340 or 967-8797 for information. Start your own fraternity! Zeta Beta Tau is looking for men to start a new chapter. If you are interested in academic success, a chance to network, and an opportunity to make friends in a non-pledging brotherhood, email: zbt@zbtnational.org or call 800-431 -9674. Student Lab Assistant: Medical research lab needs help with transgenic mouse care, lab maintenance, and immunology protocols. $7.00/hr, flexible hours. Contact email Clark, PhD, Amy agc2@duke.edu, Dept of Med DUMC, phone 286-0411, lab ext. 7301.

TEACHERS/Child Care Assistants. Durham church hiring EXPERIENCED childcare workers for Sun. am, Wed. pm. $B.OO per hour. Call Venetha, 682-3865 ext.3s.

Work Study Assistants Administrative

the in help Philosophy Dept. 4-5 positions, work-study only. (Front office, Journal, and Faculty Asst.) $B/hr. Send note of interest to cici@duke.edu.

Work study student 8 to 10 hours/week. Hours negotiable. research data. Entering Department of Psychiatry. Send resume to:

mccoyo29@mc.duke.edu

ADF ARCHIVES seeks students to assist with inventory, arrangement and preservation of historic records and photographs. Also work with electronic reference tools in Excel and Access and on website. Great job for individuals with good organizational skill and attention to detail. Hours flexible between 10-6, Mon-Fri. Starts at $9/hr. Call 684-6402. Tutor Wanted for Computer Windows 98 and Digital Camera. Must have Patience with beginner. Day and time will work with your schedule. Home near Duke. Call 489-5154 Between 8:00 AM and 8:00 PM

UNDERGRAD WORK STUDY OPENINGS 1-2 workstudy undergraduate students needed to assist the master Policy Program of Public Admissions office. Extremely flexible schedule and all training is proEmail vided. chuck.pringle@duke.edu with your

name, phone number, and resume.

WANTED: ECON TUTORS The Peer Tutoring Program is looking for Economics ID, 51D, and 55D tutors. Pick up an application in 217 Academic Advising Center, East Campus, 684-8832 or print one from the website:

www.duke.edu/web/skills. Earn $lO/hr as an undergraduate tutor (sophomore-senior) or $l3/hr as a graduate student

tutor.

WANTED: STATS TUTORS Statistics tutors needed for 101 and 103. Undergraduates earn $lO/hr and graduate tutors earn $l3/hr. Print an application off website: our www.duke.edu/web/skills or call the PIP office at 684-8832. Work study student needed 6-10 hours a week ($6.50 per hour)in Oncology Recreation Therapy. Assist adult oncology patients and family members with recreational activities. Call 681-2928 for more information.

Houses For Rent 1 BR Apts, and 3-6 BR houses with security systems available immediately. 416-0393. 113 St. Paul Street. Remodeled,

great neighborhood. Big yard,

garage, and storage shed. 2 bedroom, office, dining room, W/D, stove, fridge. $975/mo. deposit. 493-3983 or 730-2609. +

1405 N. Duke Street. Trinity Park Northgate area. 3 bedroom, living room, dining room. Completely remolded. $lOOO/mo. deposit. 493-3983 or 730-2609. -

+

2120 Copeland Way, Chapel Hill. 4 BR, 2.5 Bath. Single Family Home in Downing Creek. 2-car garage, deck, fenced yard. $1495.00. Call John at Real Estate Associates 489-1777. 3 Bedroom, 2.5 Bath, all appliances included, W/D Connections. Convenient to DUKE, UNC, RTP. House at 7 East Bayberry Court. $l2OO/neg. Available now. Apple Realty, 919-688-2001.

per square foot!

Durham 809 Rose Hill. 3 bedroom, 2 bath, bus to Duke. $895 Call 215-0729, 961-1868

5337 Roxboro Road Durham, NC 919-477-9849 Monday-Friday 9-6 Saturday 10-3

Hillsborough Two bedroom brick, large yard. $695 Call 215-0729, 961-1868

-

Durham

BE A TUTOR!

CPSTUTORS NEEDED!

Help Wanted

FLEXIBLE

Four student assistants needed immediately in the Talent Identification Program (TIP). Duties include general office and clerical support, light computer work with attention to business detail. One student assistant needed for Research Division. Prefer major in Psychology or related Social Science, and experience conducting literature searches. One student assistant needed to work on website initiatives. Prefer upper classman with good writing and organizational skills, who is familiar with website software (Dream Weaver). Please call Tanette Headen at 668-5140 for interview and more information.

CALLING ENGIN. STUDENTS

gas

windows,

The Chronicle

-


The Chronicle

FRIDAY, AUGUST

3 BR/2.5 bath 2 story 1600 sq. foot house in Chapel Hill on very private 1 acre wooded lot, 15 min. from Duke. W/D, dishwasher, hardwood floors, fireplace, deck, front porch, HVAC, huge kitchen with island and bay window. Available 10/1/03, furnished or unfurnished, $l5OO/mo. Please call 360-8612.

Restored log cabin on historic farm. 15 minutes to Duke. Loft bedroom, large LR, wood stove, central heat/AC, W/D hookup. No pets. $625/month. 620-0137

813 W. Knox Street. Trinity Park Northgate area. Available 10/1/03. Beautiful 2 bedroom cottage. $9OO/mo. deposit. 493-3983 or 730-2609. -

22,2003 � PAGE 27

SOFA & LOVE SEAT: SOFA & CHAIR: 12x12 BOUND CARPET: 30” SELF-CLEANING ELECTRIC STOVE: BABY CRIB: 5’ GRANDFATHER CLOCK (BATTERY): 26 CHAIRS; 9’ ROUND TABLE: BAR W/4 STOOLS. CALL 471-0792.

FLEA FOR ALL Shop our warehouse of fun, affordable furniture. Beds, dressers, tables, lamps, rugs, bookcases, desks and more. ThursdaySaturday. Roxboro and Pettigrew in downtown Durham. 818-6455

+

House suitable for 3 students, 10 Durbin Place. 3 bedroom, 2.5 bath, W/D, dishwasher, disposal, refrigerator, range. New carpet, freshly painted. Private drive. 919-4033525.

FURNITURE AND STUFF! Flea For All Antiques and Collectibles. Th-Sat. Roxboro and Pettigrew in downtown Durham. 818-6455 UNIQUE

307 Dacian Avenue 1 mile from Duke’s Campus. Great neighborhood. 2BR, 1 bath, large kitchen and living room. Separate dining room, fenced in BY. W/D, refrigerator, central heat/AC. Hardwood floors, lawn maintenance included. $675/mo. 919-682-1450. 7 Room (3 bedrooms), central heat/air, all appliances, screened front porch, hardwood floors, 2 car garage with enclosed storage, on 2 acres. Hillsborough area. 2 Minutes off 1-85/1-40. Professional quality. Call 919-732-8552 or 880-5680.

Condo in the woods. Colony Hill. 2 BR/1.5 BA. Close to Duke. $93,900. Call Laleh 919-4021281. FSBO 2101 Farthing Street Durham Northgate Park. Reduced to $85,900. 2BR with Bonusroom, 1BA, private corner lot fenced yard for entertaining. Fliers available at property.

Secluded yet near. 2 bedroom. Stove, refrigerator, central AC and heat, washer/dryer hook-up; hardwood floors, carport, wood deck,

fireplace. Very nice, 1.8 wooded acres 5 miles west. Highway 70. Option to buy. 382-8012.

1500 Duke Rd. University Rear courtyard. 3 blocks from clinking red light on Campus Drive. Rain date: Sunday, www.geoci-

ties.com/lizardpots

C 1771 IM*

•/ILLIEL

activation on rate plan $29.95 or higher

REQUIRES

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*s3s value car adapter and case with 1 year agreement. Nokia 51851.

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*After $5O rebate. Requires activation on rate plan $29.95 or higher.

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LOCAL FREEDOM PLAN UNLIMITED NIGHT & WEEKEND MINUTES

©2003 ALLTEL. Limited

time offer at participating locations. Service agreement, approval & approved handset required. Most rate plan changes require a r month contract. Activation fee may apply. Offer may not be available in ail coverage area may vary. Offers are subject to the ALLTEL Terms & Condit. Communications Services available at any ALLTEL store or at www.alltei.com. month add a line plan available with the activation of two lines of service on qualifying ALLTEL rate plans with service agreement. One line must be a primary line of service. No more than 4 secondary tines of service can be added to primary tine. Upgrade fee may apply. Night minutes are Mon.-Thurs. 9;oopm-5;59am. Weekend minutes are Fn. 9:OOpm-Mon. 5;59am. Nationwide long-distance applies to calls placed from customer's local calling area & terminating in the U.S. An additional 41-cent Regulatory Cost Recovery fee will be added to the ALLTEL rate plan per month, .

V I

AT THE

Durham Office

C II

I

Hill Obstetrics

-

&

Gynecology

105 Newsom Street, near Durham Regional Hospital Richard E. Lassiter, M.D Michael D. Fried, M.D. John W. Lane, M.D. Vivian E. Clark, M.D.

tvi/efa'ci

NOKIA

AUTHORIZED AGENT

\

personal,very private Obstetrics & Gynecology

Chapel

|4*

|

For more information or to apply, please contact Barbara at 684-0388 or e-mail starbuck@duke.edu

£

Very

Chapel

CRAFT SALE

Value Cellular

toe Art* value dOiUU

Break 2004. Travel with STS, America’s #1 Student Tour Operator to Jamaica, Cancun, Acapulco, Bahamas and Florida. Now hiring campus reps. Call for group discounts. Information/Reservations 1-800648-4849 or www.ststravel.com.

Spring

of

Pottery sale near campus Sat. 10-7.

kmerritt@nc.rr.com

i

Rooms of furniture for sale. $lOO per room. Will sell individual pieces. Call or drop by for details. Best Value Carolina Duke Inn, 2517 Guess Road, 286-0771

Travel/Vacation

Misc. For Sale

House priced to rent 3 bedroom, 2 bath ranch style on cul-de-sac. Fenced yard, lawn maintenance included. 2 miles from Duke in quiet neighborhood. $lOOO/month. Call 684-7366 days, 967-1261 c email evenings

;

STUDENT SALE!!!

Must sell everything: Twin sized bed $l3O, 19 inch TV $BO, Microwave $2O, Toaster oven $l5, Bar stools (2) $l5 each, Couch $2O, Blender $l5, and other great deals. Contact 919401-3710 or ramirgoo7@yahoo.com.

Hill

nnd&t/nixHt/cyif

Pat R. Chappell, M.D. Karen H. Clark, M.D. Amy B. Stanfield, M.D. Pat P. Pressley, F.N.P. Melinda Everett, W.H.C.N.P. www.chapelhillobgyn.com


21 !8 I

FRIDAY, AUGUST 22,

THE CHRONICLE

2003

What could be better tkasv

/*/

w

Kick offtheyear with three weeks offiuv!

August 23

through September 14 Wl

w

Saturday, August 23

Friday, August 29

1:00pm

TBA

Ice Cream Social, (Mi Gente), South Balcony, Upper East Side,

9;oopm

10:00pm

Duke Chapel Choir Open Rehearsal, Chapel "Comedy Central" presents

4:00-5:00pm

Lowell Sanders, Baldwin Auditorium

5:00-7:00pm

Hoof 'n' Horn Musical Theater

7:oopm

7:Bopm

Inc.)/ Clocktower Quad

Sunday, August 24 8:00pm

8:00pm

Acapella Jam, Page Auditorium

9:00-10:00pm

Saad Ibrahim: Building Democracy in the Arab World, Richard White Lecture Hall

Duke Chape! Choir Open

Center for LGBT Life Open House, 2nd Floor Flowers

Building Grad and Professional Student Council Welcome Back Party, (GPSC), LSRC Patio

5:00-8:00pm

Cambell University, Koskinen Stadium Women's Volleyball vs. Pittsburgh, Cameron

Pool Party, (NPHC BSA), Central Campus Pool &

Indoor Stadium Incoming Students Pizza Party, (Duke Chinese

Students and Scholars

5:00-8:00pm

Assoc.), Von Canon C, Bryan Center Jump Little Children BBQ, (RLHS Campus Council),

Concert &

7:oopm

&

WEL Quad Men's Soccer vs. Liberty,

Koskinen Stadium

Outdoor Movie "Bull Durham", (Freewater

Women's Volleyball vs. Texas A&M, Cameron

7:3opm

Campus Quad "Victoria Station" and

8:00pm

"Mountain Language":

Branson Theater, East Campus Swing and Salsa Welcome

Southgate Gym 10:00pm-2:00am Dance Party, (WXDU 88.7 & 103.5FM), Hideaway

Indoor Stadium "Victoria Station" and "Mountain Language": Two Plays by Harold Pinter, Reception to

Two Plays by Harold Pinter, (Duke Players),

9:oopm-l :00am

Women's Volleyball vs. Marquette, Cameron

Indoor Stadium

Ballroom Dance Club),

Thursday, August 28

5:00-7:00pm

Women's Soccer vs.

Dance, (Graduate Student Dance Club, Duke

Rehearsal, Chapel

4:00-6:00pm

8:00pm

Ice Cream Social, (AQUA Duke), Upper East Side, East Union

Wednesday, August 27 6:00-8:00pm

TBA

Presentations), East

Monday, August 25 4:3opm

Step-Off at the Chapel, (NPHC), Chapel Quad Crowell/Wannamaker

Quad BBQ, Crowell Quad

Cabaret, Branson Theater 10:00pm-2:00am Lambda Jam, (Lambda

Upsilon Lambda Fraternity,

12:30pm

of 2005 Council, West Campus Quad

East Union

2:30-s:oopm

Class of 2005 BBQ, Class

Saturday, August 30

8:00pm

Follow, (Duke Players), Branson Theater, East Campus, Pizza Party Allies Social, (Duke Allies), LGBT

Center, Flowers Building 10:00pm-2:00am Greek Fest, (NPHC),

Brodie Gym, East Campus

Anti more-to


Comics

The Chronicle

FRIDAY, AUGUST 22, 2003 � PAGE

Boondocks/ Aaron McG uder

THE Daily Crossword WHAT |l WOOLI

THE O.P.P. RAN? WHAT HIS PLATFORM PE?

29

Edited by Wayne Robert Williams

ACROSS

1 American in April to the IRS

6 Guitar gadget 10 Spigots 14 Got up 15 Scandinavian saint 16 Saintly glow

17 Traffic diverters 18 Ms. McClurg

19 Rocker Billy 20 Lang, course 21 lowa city

24 Smudges 26 Payable on

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Doonesbury/ Garry Trudeau

Tantalus

63 Rigging support 64 Boozers 65 alive! DOWN

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2 Press 3 New Jersey city

12 Goad 13 Maglie and Mineo 22 Do wrong 23 Graph lead-in 25 Covers 27 Legal

documents of column 29 Idle and Lindros 30 Messy substance 31 New York city 32 Rome's river 33 Burpee order 35 Grin and it 38 Drastic 28 Type

reorganizations

39 Memorization by repetition

41 Close tightly 42 Albania, Bulgaria, etc.

44 John Lennon song 45 Behold Pennies 47

49 On the apex of 50 Bye-byel 51 Muse of history 52 Harangue 54 Rubik's toy

55 Militant deity 59 Actress Farrow

48 Bakery

purchase

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Academic MONDAY, AUGUST 25 4;3opm. Saad

Ibrahim: Building Democracy in the Arab World. Ibrahim is professor of sociology at the American University in Cairo and director of the Ibn Khaldun Center in Cairo. Richard White Lecture Hall, East Campus. Contact Geoffrey Mock, 681-4514, geoffrey.mock@duke.edu. A reception will follow the talk in the East Duke Parlors, East Duke Building, next to the White Lecture Hall. Lecture:

FRIDAY, AUGUST 29 Psychology SHS Colloquium Speaker Series:

4pm. Jeff Epstein, Ph.D.DUMC “An Empirical Investigation of Ethnic Differences in Teacher Ratings of Children with ADHD”. Refreshments will be provided. Psychology/Sociology Building Room 319. Contact Ginger Moore, gmoore@duke.edu.

Religious SATURDAY, AUGUST 23 Wesley

Jonathan Chiu, Monica Franklin, Dawn Hall Jennifer Koontz, Stephanie Risbon,

Fellowship:

12noon.

Pizza

Lunch

Blackwell Commons.

SUNDAY, AUGUST 24 Wesley Fellowship: 7pm. Worship. Upper East Side.

MONDAY, AUGUST 25 Westminster Fellowship: 9-1 Opm. “HapHour,” an informal time of refreshments and fellowship begins at B;3opm. Chapel Basement Lounge.

Duke Events Calendar Social Programming and Meetings FRIDAY, AUGUST 22 New Exhibition Opening Reception: 6-Bpm. Through Rebel Eyes: Youth Document Durham. An exhibition of photographs, audio pieces, art installations, and writing exploring and expressing ideas about how race, media, and sex affect youths’ everyday lives in Durham. Free event open to the public. Refreshments provided. Center for Documentary Studies, Porch Gallery. Through September 27, 2003.

SATURDAY, AUGUST 23 Preview Screenings: 11 pm. Family Fundamentals by Arthur Dong. A P.O.V. special presented by UNC-TV and the Center for Documentary Studies. A brief discussion will follow the screening. Center for Documentary Studies.

SUNDAY, AUGUST 24 Meeting: 4pm. The Durham branch of the NAACP will hold its monthly membership at Mt. Vernon Baptist Church (Roxboro Road and Enterprise Street). Dr. Regina George-Bowden will give a report on the Flolloway Achievement School to the membership. More info: call John Schelp at 286-6045. MONDAY, AUGUST 25 Sing Along Concert: Bpm. Duke Chorale and Duke Chapel Choir. Duke Chapel. Free Admission. Call 6603300 for more information.

Ongoing

Events

Exhibition: Through Rebel Eyes; Youth Document Durham. An exhibition of photographs, audio pieces, art installations, and writing exploring and expressing ideas about how race, media, and sex affect youths’ everyday lives in Durham. Free event open to the public. Refreshments provided. Center for Documentary Studies, Porch Gallery. Through September 27, 2003. Duke University Museum of Art Summer Exhibitions: “Brodsky and Utkin Prints” through September 7. Alexander Brodsky and Ilya Utkin were born in Moscow in 1955, where they studied architecture together. Turning to pure ideas rather than the physical world, they became known as the “Paper Architects.” Their etchings of fantastic projects draw freely from the past, and were responses to the dehumanizing Soviet architecture that surrounded them. They were leaders of the Moscow conceptualist movement of the 1980s. Duke University Museum of Art Summer Exhibitions: “Dyshlenko Change of Situation” through October 26. Yuri Dyshlenko was born in 1936, spent 30 years in Leningrad before emigrating to New York in 1990; he died in 1995. His style was collage-like, an information age bombardment of visual data. He felt that all art is self referential for the viewer, a stimuli of the modern world seeking noise, the masses; like television and photographic advertising. The goal was the opposite of pop art to capture visual cliches, a monument of the Soviet myth of the American lifestyle. -

Tim Hyer, Heather Murray Rachel Claremon Ashley Rudisill

CDS Photo Exhibition: What Helps Dodge Helps You: A project by Brian C. Moss. The Center for Documentary Studies presents an exhibitionof oversized pinhole camera photographs of a former steel castings factory in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. On display July 21-September 27, 2003. Duke Donation Center: Tuesdays 12 pm 4:30 pm, Thursdays 9 am 1:30 pm. Duke South Hospital Clinic Trent Drive Ground Floor Red Zone. -

-

Call

for submissions; The Eighth Annual Documentary Film and Video Happening invites submissions of documentary work from students and emerging community filmmakers, videographers, and pixelslingers. Submission Deadline: October 10, 2003, Happening Dates: November 1416, 2003. For more information, go to http://cds.aas.duke.edu and click on the Happening logo, or contact Dawn K. Dreyer at 919-660-3680 or dkdreyer@duke.edu. Volunteer: Welcome Baby is happy to announce a September volunteer training for volunteers in two programs. Parent Supporters and Hospital Visitors are greatly needed in the fall. If you have questions or need additional information, please feel free to call Anne Drennan at 560-7318 or Aviva Starr at 560-7341.

+

-

Submissions to the Duke Events Calendar may be may to calendar@chronicle.duke.edu. Deadline is 2 business day.


THE CHRONICLE

301 FF\IDAY, AUGUST 22, 2003

The Chronicle

The Independent Daily at Duke University

Housing changes New housing policy will hold offenders accountable for living agreement violations As the most recent alteration to Duke’s ever-morphing housing policy, beginning this fall, students who are kicked off campus for housing.violations will be required to pay the full amount of their contracts through the end of the academic year. Essentially, delinquent students will not only lose their housing privilages, but could owe the

university up to several thousand dollars in payments. In the past, students asked to leave campus were charged only for the time they actually spent living in university accomodations. The remaining balance of their housing contracts were paid for indirectly by their classmates. The administration’s rationale in adopting the new system is that only the offending individuals should be made to bear the cost of their infractions. Housing officials are also depending on the new punishment plan to act as a powerful deterrent. They hope that it will prevent students from dilberately violating housing guidelines to escape the university’s mandatory three-year on-campus policy, and dissuade people from engaging in unruly behavior in general. Several students have stated that this policy is too severe. They point out that a student kicked off campus will be responsible for paying the balance of his or her housing contract as well as rent at an apartment or house. In many cases the possibility exists that a student dismissed in the fall semester will be paying for their room even after it is filled by another student, such as someone coming back from abroad in the spring. Whether or not this new system is too harsh depends largely on the logic behind it. If the adminstration’s primary purpose is to deter offenders and those looking for a free-pass to off-campus living, then the new policy should go a long way toward achieving its goals. Offending students have signed a legal contract, and in violating it, have not only disrupted the university community, but also passed the burden on to those who have no responsibility in the matter. When they accpeted admission to Duke, they simultaneously agreed to abide by its living requirements, including three full years of on-campus residence.

However, if the true purpose behind the plan is simply to recoup monetary losses, a better policy could be implemented. Offending students should be liable to pay for their rooms until another tenant can be found. For instance, an indvidual asked to leave campus in the fall semester should be responsible for paying their housing contract only until another person moves into their room in the spring. The new housing violation policy takes some much needed steps toward addressing the loopholes in the current on-campus residential system. Students who break the rules should not be allowed to shirk their responsibilities, however, housing officials should take care to be reasonable in the amount and duration of monetary punishments they assess.

Doctors find alcohol program lacking As the scientists who

participated in the “So

You Wanna Get Buzzed” drug and alcohol orientation, we would like to respond to the recent editorial expressing great relief that freshmen would not have to listen to this talk. We find it regrettable that the most important thought you could express to incoming freshmen and their parents was your relief that you could do less alcohol orientation, but you might be surprised that we agree with you about some things. We have always maintained that the best drug and alcohol education occurs in small groups facilitated by an informed person, preferably including a peer. We have been advocating to the Duke administration since 1998, before Raheem Bath died of an alcoholrelated illness, that fresh-

man orientation include such a program. We felt so strongly about it that we voluntarily conducted presentations in freshman dorms that requested such a program, and conducted training for dorm RAs (which might have something to do with their greater ability to handle alcohol-related infractions as reported in the same Chronicle). The administration responded with the proposal that we conduct an orientation for the entire freshman class that was

mandatory (a requirement winked at by the administration last year, as is evidenced by the fact that at best half the students attended). We also agree with you about the timing before -

things really get rolling on campus. We actually advocate sending information out to incoming freshmen before they arrive on cam-

The unsigned editorials of The Chronicle are the majority opinion of the newspaper’s editorial hoard, which is composed of all staff members with “editor” in their titles.

FALL 2003 COLUMNIS

The Chronicle

columnist application during the summ. Page Editor Andrew Card immediately

Est. 1905

inc. 1993

ALEX GARINGER, Editor JANE HETHERINGTON, Managing Editor ANDREW COLLINS, University Editor CINDY YEE, University Editor ANDREW CARD,Editorial Page Editor MIKE COREY, Sports Editor JONATHAN ANGIER, General Manager ANTHONY CROSS, Photography Editor WHITNEY ROBINSON, Design Editor JENNIFER HASVOLD, City & State Editor JOSH NIMOCKS, City & State Editor MALAVIKA PRABHU, Health & ScienceEditor LIANA WYLER, Health& Science Editor KIYA BAJPAI, Features Editor CHRISTINA NG, Features Editor ROBERT SAMUEL, Sports Managing Editor BESTY MCDONDALD, Sports PhotographyEditor DEAN CHAPMAN, Recess Editor DAVID WALTERS, Recess Editor RUTH CARLITZ, TowerView Managing Editor TYLER ROSEN, TowerViewEditor WHITNEY BECKETT, Cable 13Editor MATT BRADLEY, Cable 13 Editor ANDREW GERST, Wire Editor KAREN HAUPTMAN, Wire Editor BOBBY RUSSEL, TowerView PhotograhpyEditor JENNY MAO, Recess Photography Editor JACKIE FOSTER, Features Sr.. Assoc.Editor YEJI LEE, Features Sr..Assoc. Editor DEVIN FINN, StaffDevelopment Editor ANA MATE, SupplementsEditor SUE NEWSOME, Advertising Director NADINE OOSMANALLY, SeniorEditor YU-HSIEN HUANG, Supplements Coordinator BARBARA STARBUCK, Production Manager MARY WEAVER, Operations Manager NALINI MILNE, Advertising Office Manager The Chronicle is published by the Duke Student Publishing Company, Inc., a non-profit corporation independent of Duke University. The opinions expressed in this newspaper are not necessarily those of Duke University, its students, faculty, staff, administration or trustees. Unsigned editorials represent the majority view of the editorial board. Columns, letters and cartoons represent the views of the authors. To reach the Editorial Office at 301 Flowers Building, call 684-2663 or fax 684-4696.T0reach the Business Office at 103 West Union Building, call 684-3811.T0 reach the Advertising Office at 101 West Union Building call 684-3811 or fax 684-8295. Visit The ChronicleOnline at http://www.chronide.duke.edu. ® 2003 The Chronicle, Box 90858, Durham, N.C. 27708. All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced in any form without the prior, written permission of the Business Office. Each individual is entitled to one free copy.

pus. However, we part company with your enthusiasm for voluntary, webbased education. Conveying this information to incoming freshmen is just too important to leave to chance. During the first semester, college freshmen are going through the period of their lives when they are most likely to severely injure themselves or die from alcohol-related injuries. We have found that the vast majority of adults don’t even know how one dies from alcohol. Therefore, we urge you to consider an effective, small group based program involving educated peers or other trainers. We also renew our offer to help in any way possible.

Cythina Kuhn and Wilke Wilson The writers are professors of Pharmacology at Duke Medical Center

If you failed to receive a response concerning

or call 919 270 8866.

On the record “I learned you can do ministry in other ways than being a pastor, in taking time to talk to someone, to smile and wave here and there. It’s the little stuff that’s very important.” Kori Jones, a junior who interned at Durham Urban Ministries as part of the Chapel Pathways Summer Internship Program.

Letters Policy The Chronicle welcomes submissions in the form of letters to the editor or guest columns. Submissions must include the author’s name, signature, department or class, and for purposes of identification, phone number and local address. Letters should not exceed 325 words; contact the

Direct submissions to: Editorial Page Department

letters and guest columns for length,clarity and style and the right to withhold letters based on the discretion of the editorial page editor.

Fax: (919) 684-4696 E-mail: letters@chronicle.duke.edu

editorial department for information regarding guest columns. The Chronicle will not publish anonymous or form letters or letters that are promotional in nature. The Chronicle reserves the right to edit

The Chronicle Box 90858, Durham, NC

27708

Phone: (919) 684-2663


THE CHRONICLE

FRIDAY. AUGUST 22. 2003 31

Going the Distance

Despite

the exhausted FACs whose sweaty size-large T-shirts testify otherwise, many freshman have come to Duke minus something important—something heavier than even boxes packed with five dozen pairs of shoes. And unfortunately, even its absence creates heavy baggage. Yes, high school “loves.”

ball’s chance in a bowl game. And many course, started out as a long-distance reier to make the actual race a marathon indeep factors enter into a relationship’s lationship, but rather had become one stead of a sprint because you are prepared longevity prediction, like the quality of when her beau of a year and a half for the hurdles. But, then again, there are your cell phone service and the ratio of (somewhat off and on, though) had the some people who Just can’t run long distance, aren’t there? nerve to graduate and leave her. A.B. Dukes to athletes in your dorm. But Maureen wanted to hear nothing His freshman year, Blakely did not even Amazingly, they still had not had the of it her freshman year. She and her high terms-of-engagement discussion, like two os- walk the ambiguous line ofDon’t-Ask-Don’tschool boyfriend had been together about triches hiding their heads in a pile of dirty Tell-Just-Drink. The boy had a beautiful girltwo years and she loved him very much, laundry. But Sidney knew instinctively (she friend that he didn’t seem to like but whom thank you. Her room was adorned with knows these things) that as much as she he also couldn’t seem to break up with. And framed pictures, wall pictures, collage picloathed all such discussions, it simply must she lived close enough to drive in regularly, tures and even refrigerator pictures of be had. All they had agreed on, though, was at which time Blakely had ingeniously maFrank, who somewhat resembled a fetus. by ear.” The question was, what neuvered a plan to dislodge Si worries his And she spoke with him everyday, somedid that mean? girlfriend might have had that her big coltimes even two or three times a day. And “I think it might justbe guy-speak for ‘exlege boyfriend was less than faithful. she was very loyal. clusive until we find a reason not to be, so I include the Blakely example as closlet’s save the conversation for then,” Sidney ing words ofadvice for freshman who will “What do you mean, you haven’t cheated?” Sidney asked. Maybe Maureen really said to Daisy, as they walked through a undoubtedly follow the same path, but crowded fraterwho should at least do it did blackout from two drinks; she had alwell. Blakely would pull ways thought she was speaking figuratively. nity party, de“What about the guy down the hall? Or the bating whether “Freshman are plopped out the framed picture of Cindy, from a drawer they were scopguy upstairs? Or that Lacrosse player?” that also included a page “Oh I pretty much just kissed all of ing out guys for llltO the ITIGSt eXCItIPQ them—that’s not cheating,” Maureen said. jmtDaisy or for time of their lives, conwith scribbles like “I love Cindy” and “I miss Pretty much, Sidney thought. “But don’t the both of “And stantly meeting new peo- Cindy,” and he would bring it up of course when Frank visits. You them. s never know how people define cheating.” |e many of whom aren’t quickly prominently disIndeed. Perhaps therein lies the probplay both on his desk, as lem. At the ripe age of 18, most of us have reaiiy, unless of even bad looking.” though they lived there not had a serious long distance relationship course I am in his personal ode to the girl. And then he before, and there is no ideal example to misinterpretmodel it after. And then freshmen are ing the meaning of ‘play it by ear’ and then would isolate her from all his friends who plopped into the most exciting (or at least that’s not fine with me because I don’t want might blab by saying, “They are all so sick of hearing me talk about you—they probunchaperoned) time of their lives, constant- to be a bitch Daisy, needless to say, took the side of a ably won’t even treat you with respect.” ly meeting new people, many of whom And he kept this harrowing act up, aren’t even bad looking. The ambiguity of friend who would much rather have a partthe whole thing creates a slippery slope. ner to prowl with than someone who talks being miserable on her every visit, well And it doesn’t get better with age. about such ridiculous relationship minutia. into his sophomore year. That is, until he Sidney had never understood the people “I’m sure it does,” she said. “Besides it’s your finally provided the final lesson: he freshman year who would dedicate a persenior year and there are still so many cute dumped her and, minus that picture business, proceeded with life entirely as fectly good going-out night, like Monday, guys.... Well, sort of.” he had before. to talking on the phone with someone But maybe having experienced the relashe had to assume was boring. But now, tionship in a Duke setting means a senior years later, when she was supposed to be in a long distance relationship is not runWhitney Beckett is a Trinity senior. Sex and older and wiser, here she was in a long ning the same course as a freshman. Maybe the Chapel appears every otherFriday. distance relationship. It hadn’t, of if you have practiced on the course, it’s eas-

mit

Whitne' Beckett It seems almost every Duke student who actually dated in high school brings their boyfriend or girlfriend with them in fear that everyone at Duke will be dorky and bad looking (not entirely true) and that they will never find such real feelings again as the ones they conjured in the backseat of their first car. In practically every 200-square-foot dorm room (150 if you pretended to have allergies to get airconditioning), there are pictures taped to the wall of one side of the room that will be stared at longingly during long distance and oft-poindess phone conversations. But the chance of these pictures lasting longer than a two-beer tolerance is slim. They will be pulled down when these freshman bring someone new back to their room Sheryl-Crow-Kid-Rock-style, and frantically replaced in their proper shrines when the significant other comes to visit. What follows is a list of anomalies more likely than still being with the same homegrown love by the beginning of sophomore year: earning a 4.0 freshman year; staying in Pratt, even if you are a girl; spending less than $5OO at Uniquities by graduation; going to the gym everyday; still loving the Marketplace by the end of the year. In other words, you have Duke foot-

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Welcome to Duke: a good great school Note: The follovAng column has been censored and revised by the Administration.

Freshmen,

first off, congratulations! You are now attending one of the best schools in the country. After an intense application process in which there

were a record number of applicants, you have been selected as the best of the best. These next four years will determine the future you map out for yourselves. Hopefully it will be a fun four years (five if you’re pro mod because Curriculum 2000 is so restricting) that not only enriches your mind, but makes you realize your place in the world. So as you begin life at your new school, here’s a brief overview of the different aspects of Duke University that you should be concerned with throughout

the

next four years. The one thing you will notice at first is the confusing graduation matrix that is known as Curriculum 2000. So

life

There is no problem with the fraternities. They will be here forever. Please ignore the fact that four fraternities have been kicked off in the last four years. It’s just a coincidence and there is no mass conspiracy to eliminate the party scene from Duke. Because of the

nates college life in determining who gets their pick of what room. But at Duke, the sophomores dominate all the rest for some reason. The logic behind this is continuing the beloved East CamPus experience so that all of the friends you made within great “nhuiniicKf in© tha aHminctra. aOlTlinSira UDVIOUSiy, a predetermined your dorm tIOH IS VGTy Sneaky by set of other dorms can continue VC _\/illo to be a community. Of course, this cl aiailii Stripping 3W3y oia/siii K.-VIII6 SlOWly pulllshes you for rakjrlg friends outside of your dorm. So fresh before they lay down the men, in order not to get screwed Koom and kill It \ over come housing picks time, .

bGIHQ

where fraternities have homos. Don’t go off east. There are no fraternity houses there. They don’t exist. Ignore the rumors, they are just lies. The next potential student problem deals with the embodiment of Duke itself, Krzyzewskiville. The all pow

,

This is all not to say this university isn’t a great institution. Enjoy your time here. Definitely tent when basketball season starts (lets hope Moncta doesn’t have-his way). Check out Greek life for sure (because it may not

Other than that though, the plusses at this school definitely out-weigh the minuses. Get involved in vari-

ous student activities; don’t be a shut-in who studies all the time and doesn’t invest anything in the

Basically everybody loves it. If you

Duke/Durham

community. cheer on your Blue Devils in sports besides basketball, because our athletic department is one of the very best in the nation (ranks around 20th in the Sears Cup competition). Even try to make it out to a few football games, because the team is surely going to be a lot better this year. Most importantly, have a fun-filled and adventurous freshman year; it will breeze on by before you know it. Go to hell Carolina go to hell and go Blue Devils. Try

You can graduate in four years with no problem while being a double major or even a triple major. You won’t have to go to summer school or attend an extra year. This is just one of many ill conceived attempts by many things, but very few real skills. Trinity Dean Robert Thompson is God and should be President of Harvard because of this great program. Another issue is the controversy surrounding Greek

K-Ville is in no trouble In fact, there is consideration to expand K-Ville into G-Ville in honor of the women’s team and Franksville in honor of our esteemed football coach, because he hasn’t gambled on March Madness tournaments, partied with opposing school’s students, gotten caught with strippers on the school’s ticket or won any games. Then of course there is the always controversial housing policy. All across the nation, seniority domi-

to

Jonathan Patillo is a Trinity sophomore. His column appears every third week.


32

THE CHRONICLE

FRIDAY. AUGUST 22. 2003

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THE CHRONICLE

FRIDAY. AUGUST 22. 2003

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Class statistics From the Editor In your suitcases Expectations and apprehensions They'll miss you Scenes from move-in FACs speak out Parents' predictions Eavesdropping on East Meet your senior administrators And your DSG leaders Not to mention academic gurus And more student leaders Plus student affair and biz leaders •••

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We apologize in advance to any students, parents or FACs whose names spelled wrong or mislabeled. Good luck to the Class of 2007!

we


FRIDAY. AUGUST 22. 2003 3

THE CHRONICLE

The 007s By The Numbers Applicants

Trinity

Yield 41.6% Total

13,990

Pratt

2,729

Total

16,719

Matriculants

1,367

Trinity Pratt

263

Total

1,630

Top 5 States

772

Pratt

N.Y.

175 149

N.J.

15 94

N.C.

Admits

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163

Black Native Amer.

116

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THE CHRONICLE

FRIDAY. AUGUST 22. 2003

FROM THE EDITOR

Words of wisdom, the more the merrier By Alex Garinger Three years ago this week, my oldest brother Geoff, a 1997 Dartmouth graduate, called me as I was frantically packing up 18 years of junk that I just could not live without in college, to wish me luck before I set off for my freshman year at Duke. Before we hung up, I asked if he had any words of advice. “Alex, there’s going to be a time over the next four years when a friend’s going to bust into your room at 11:30 at night on a weekday and ask you if want to go bowling,” he responded. “Say yes.” We then said our goodbyes and hung up. Of course, he was right (I bowled a 114 the first time that happened, thank you very much). And of course, the recommendation that incoming freshmen should not let new opportunities pass them by and that they should experiment and try new things at college, is perhaps the piece of advice most often given to members of the Class of 2007 this week. But there is another lesson, I think, to be learned from that phone call: seeking advice, especially from those older or more experienced, is a good thing. A very good thing. Indeed, if I hadn’t asked, and if my brother hadn’t answered, I would have more than likely brushed aside with a laugh the request to come out of my bowling retirement (when bumpers no longer were considered cool in the third grade, my days with the sport came to an end). Members of the Class of 2007: Ask for advice from people older than you as often as you can. This maxim applies to every part of your Duke experience, and I assure you will work wonders, mostly because old people simply love to help young

a kick out of it, as reserved just for those with Ph.D.s. just not on an empty stomach. And Marketwho three Ask the at the by employee guys, Smirnoff Ice may be a “girly” evidenced my brother, years ago made small talk for 10 place what dinner she recommends drink, but it sure as hell tastes betminutes before I asked the question today. Ask your RA to give you the ter than Busch Light. The number of friends you tent he wanted me to ask. lowdown on the greek scene. Ask Want to get good grades? Talk to your new sorority sister if parties with freshman year will be about a your professors or TAs after class, are more fun in section, the Belmont third of the number of friends you go and ask them questions about that or at an off-campus house. Ask the to spring break with senior year. Oh, yeah, you’re tenting freshsecretary in the department your day’s lecture or the best way to apman year. Your call after that. proach an upcoming paper or exam. going to major in if they would recWaking up really early the day These days, many professors are ommend a really nice adviser. Ask the experienced Cameron Crazy if a paper is due and writing 12 pages only holding office hours by appointment because students so rarely acyou should stand TV side or bench in three hours is possible, but you tually take up the opportunity when side (actually, I’ll answer that: TV would actually have the opportunity side). are hours to proorfead and rewrite that paper set. Go in The point if you wrote four pages an hour the ask. day before the paper was due. and talk to is, Talk to your professors about last They’ll love Frequent Bullocks at least once them about last night’s that you’re a month with 12 of your closest night's reading, the subject they asking; friends, tell the waitress “family reading, the you ll love style,” and give her a good tip. Every subject they teach (it’s what they other day of the month, eat a teach and if you should pursue that healthy, balanced diet. (Eating disorsay. their pasafter And since ders, by the way, are never in style.) sion biology major or just say screw it, Read The Chronicle every day all!), what you’ve made other coursit this far, (sorry, shameless plug). you must be es or profesWhen you go home for Thanksand choose literature instead. sors somewhat giving and find yourself calling your they heeding my family, “y’all,” don’t worry. That’s a recommend, good thing. if words of adyou Go abroad or to New York or Los should pursue that biology major or vice and looking for a bit more. So here’s a few things I’ve learned in Angeles. If not junior year, then defjust say screw it and choose literainitely during one of your summers. my three years at Duke: ture instead. Ask if you should do reFor average to difficult classes, Studying in Paris, France, is a lot search this summer in Kenya or go for an internship in New York—- the more of the assigned reading more interesting than selling ice material you actually read, the betcream in Paris, Idaho. you’ll be surprised how willing a proThere are more good restaufessor can be to send off an e-mail to ter you will do. a colleague in the area you’re interFind a friend with a car. Now. rants in the area than just those at Southpoint or in Chapel Hill. Find More than likely, the admisested in. Your goal should not be to exploit sions people picked you because you 'em. Student theater is great, Freeyour professors to pad your GPA or were passionate about something in water films are free or cheap and a resume. It should be to learn as high school. Don’t let go of that pasmuch as you can from them (after sion. But if you do, find another one capella is not, I repeat, not evil. Finally, don’t leave the bowling all, you’re paying for $40,000 a year before you graduate, and let that, worth of advice—more if you play not your parents or your major or alley without getting back your your cards right). your friends, guide your career path. shoes. The guy behind the counter And seeking advice should not be Everclear punch is really good, doesn’t like that.

people. They get

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THE CHRONICLE

FRIDAY. AUGUST 22. 2003

Welcome New and Returning Students WE’RE YOUR BACK-TO-SCHOOL HEADQUARTERS FOR

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THE CHRONICLE

6 I FRIDAY. AUGUST 22.2003

Pom-poms, Texas flags and a French accent What do you think you brought that

else brought?

no one

r, Giles

could possibly bring. I got to the airport and

said college, and he said, ■ I was going andtoI read Catcher in the Rye. iy favorite

books

-

isale,

vial pursuit, rote in way grade, so I to read.

Tyler Brock, Long Island, NY, Wilson I have a three-foot high plastic beer bottle my friend gave to me as a joke. It says Bud Light on it. I don’t think anyone else has one of those.

'

Brent Berneli, Houston, TX, Gilbert-Adams I brought a Texas flag, but I know everyone else brought one of those. At least they should have, if they’re real Texans. I also brought my crushed red velvet pimp Jacket. I don’t think anyone else brought that, at least I hope not, cause I don’t want people imitating me, trying to be cool like that. Well, it’s fake crushed velvet. You can’t drop a lotof money on something you wear , once or twice or three times.

Brooklyn, NY, Wilson I don’t think anyone else brought their pom-poms and their old uniform. I used to be a cheerleader, so I might put that up just to remind myself. Oh, and a subway map, I’m going to hang that up to remind of home.

Denise: But it fits! I like rice a lot, it’s very easy to make, so I’m going to live off rice and chicken. She brought the Forman grill! Juliana: We have everything in our room different shades of blue, except for the red sheets I have, that I had to put on my bed, because I got them as a gift.So now we’ve got a little bit of red, and everything blue. Except for our Forman grill, which is red too. Denise; O ye oflittle faith! Alex Gruner, France, Alspaugh My French accent.

Blair Moller “There are a few things I brought but I can’t tell you because my mom’s in the room.”

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THE CHRONICLE

FRIDAY. AUGUST 22. 2003 I 7

Your Source For Duke Course Books

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8

THE CHRONICLE

FRIDAY. AUGUST 22. 2003

So long home, hello Duke What are you looking forward to and what are you worried about?

LOOK

Amanda Wei College is so much different from high school. It’s not just give out a worksheet, stuff like that. I’m really excited to meet the professors. The longest I’ve ever been from my home is probably about three days, so we’ll see how long I last here.

INTO THE ARTS AT DUKE Denise Lopez-Domowicz, Brookfield, IL, Randolph Being able to stay out, not having [my parents tell me ‘you can’t go out tonight,’ or ‘you have to be home by a certain time,’ or whatever. Being able to do what I want and not have restrictions on that.

Come to an INFO SESSION

about Visual and Performing Arts Opportunities on Campus

Friday, August 22,3:30 pm to 4:30 pm In the Duke University Museum of Art (DUMA) Upstairs Lecture hall/gallery

Faculty & staff from Art Dance Film/Video/Digital Institute of the Arts Museum of Art Music Theater Studies Duke Union •

Craft Center Documentary Studies & others will be there to speak and answer your questions. •

Find out about

Performance Opportunities Extracurricular Opportunities Management and Crew Opportunities Money for Arts Projects

Off-Campus and Service Projects Your questions answered!

Mitha Rao I’m just excited to be somewhere where there are new people. A lot of people from my high school went to Big Ten schools and they know a lot of people already, and I don’t know anyone.


THE CHRONICLE

FRIDAY.

AUGUST 22. 2003

His old bedroom's becoming our new sauna, but we'll still miss him Whatare you going to miss

most

about you child... and what

are you going to miss

least?

Prema Rao

Knowing everything she’s doing, what she

ate

who’s she with right now... The messy room at home I won’t miss at all.

Karen Doran What will I miss? Everything! He’s fun and he’s wonderful and (choking up) he’s fun to be around, and..; I’m going to get teary if you do this.

for lunch,

Sandy Casale He’s my oldest, so this i ence with having some even though we’re just 1 the road, just walking 1 been making me weep ; just going to miss his en bright and interesting ai His clothes all over thi over the laundry room, ready reclaimed my lau it’s actually a lot bigger l it was, so other than every thing about him

Robbie itami The dynamic he’s the last one out -1 think that tells you a lot. I’ve already signed up to do more work. -

Carolyn Bernell They’re going to we’re

not

sad to

going to be exha

•ebby I’m going to miss the music in the house. The piano, the guitar, late nights coming in from band practice an energy about him and a sensitivity to everything that is going

have run us all over this huge campus so much that I’ll be exhausted, I’ll say, ‘Brent, goodbye, I’ll see you soon.’ He is just a fun guy to have around, he’s very even tempered. We have a hormonal teenage daughter, and he’s been a real good influence on her. We’re going to miss him a lot, but it’s time for him to move to the next stage.

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10

THE CHRONICLE

FRIDAY. AUGUST 22. 2003

THE

DUKE TECHNOLOGY ADVANTAGE Applet

EK4.L

Dell Laptop Computers

Apple laptop Computers

Dell Latitude 0800,15.4" WUXGA screen

S Powerßook G4,17" screen

g £

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il> Order Number

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Intel Pentium M, 1.5 GHz processor 512 megabytes RAM 40 gigabyte hard drive 32 megabytes video RAM DVD/CDRW combo drive Intel 802.118 wireless Ethernet modem 1.0" thin 4.9 pounds Windows XP Pro 4 year PC Protection warranty •

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Intel Pentium M, 1.3 GHz 256 megabyes of RAM 20 gigabyte hard drive CORW/DVD combo drive 32 megabytes video RAM Intel 802.118 wireless Ethernet modem Windows XP Pro 1.2" thin 4.7 pounds 4 year Complete Care warranty •

Intel Pentium M, 1.5 GHz processor 512 megabytes RAM 60 gigabyte hard drive 32 megabytes video RAM DVD/CDRW combo drive Intel 802.118 wireless Ethernet modem 1.59" thin 6.8 pounds Windows XP Pro 4 year PC Protection warranty

ThinkPad T40,14.1" screen

Intel Pentium M, 1.4 GHz 512 megabyes ofRAM 40 gigabyte hard drive CDRW/DVD combo drive 32 megabytes video RAM Intel 802.118 wireless Ethernet modem Windows XP Pro 1.2" thin 4.7 pounds 4 year Complete Care warranty •

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All the computers on this page are supplied with a PC Guardian security cable, surge protector, and a 25' ethernet cable.

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03-1012

Duke Univer/ity Computer Store


FRIDAY. AUGUST 22.2003 111

THE CHRONICLE

Computer Technology for The Duke Environment www.oitduke.edu/oit/incomingstudents Applet.

deu

PowerMacintosh 64, US GHz processor •

NetYista A3op, Minitower

Dell OptiPlex GX26O Minitower

512 megabytes RAM 80 gigabyte hard drive CDRW/DVD combo drive Apple Studio Display, 17" flat panel ATI Radeon 9000 Pro, 64 megabyte video card Ethernet Modem Macintosh OS X 10.2 operating system 3 year parts and labor warranty •

IBM Desktop Computers

Dell Desktop Computers

Apple Desktop Computers

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Order number PowerMac -

Intel Pentium 4,3.06 GHz, 512k cache 512 megabytes RAM •80 gigabyte hard drive 4X DVD+RW/+R and 16X DVD (2 drives) Dell 1702,17"flat panel •32 megabytes video RAM Gigabit Ethernet Dell V.92 modem Soundblaster Live! Audio card harman/kardon 206 speakers Windows XP Pro 4 year parts and labor warranty •

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iMacG4,IGHz processor 512 megabytes RAM 80 gigabyte hard drive Apple SuperDrive (DVD-R/CD-RW) NVIDIA GeForce MX with 64 meg video Ethernet modem 17" display ApplePro speakers Macintosh OS X 10.2 3 year parts and labor warranty •

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Pentium 4,3.06 GHz, 512 meg cache 512 megabytes RAM 120 gigabyte hard drive 128 meg video RAM IBM L 1701,17"flat panel DVD Multiburn and DVD/CDRW (2 drives) Ethernet and modem Infinity speakers Windows XP Pro 3 year parts/1 year labor warranty •

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All the desktop computers on this page are supplied with a surge protector and a 25’ ethernet cable. HP iPaq H5450 Pocket PC 3.8" TFT screen Intel X-Scale, 400a MHz processor 64 megabytes RAM 802.118 wireless Ethernet Thumb Keyboard Microsoft Pocket PC OS 1 year exchange

Dell Axim X 5 Pocket PC 3.5" QVGA screen Intel X-Scale, 400 MHz processor 64 megabytes RAM 802.118 wireless Ethernet Snapon Keyboard Microsoft Pocket PC 2003 OS 1 year exchange

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Order online at: www.Dukecomputerstore.com 03-1012


THE CHRONICLE

12 I FRIDAY. AUGUST 22. 2003

Snapshots

Rom

Move-

Can a child count on you this fall?

ODVcmunity service center /

DUKE

UNIVERSITY

Join the national effort to improve math education this fall by becoming a tutor in the America Counts program. Modeled after the very successful America Reads Challenge, America Counts lets volunteers and university students in the federal work-study program tutor elementary-school students in basic math.

America Counts FAGts Who can tutor? America Counts welcomes undergraduate and graduate student tutors. Volunteers tutor two hours each week. Students eligible for federal work-study tutor up to six hours each week. The rate of pay for undergraduate work-study tutors is $12.50 per hour. For graduate students, the rate is $15.50.

Where do tutors work? At one offive conveniently located elementary schools or a neighborhood community center.

When do I tutor? America Counts tutors work with children during or after school, Monday through

Friday.

How do I apply? Call the Community Service Center, 684-4377, or download an application, http://csc.studentaffairs.duke.edu/. Return it to the CSC no later than September 19 if you are applying through the federal work-study program, and September 22 if you are applying to be a volunteer

Why be a math tutor? Students need solid math skills in the informationage. Low income students who take

THE KENAN INSTITUTE

FOR ETHICS

Grants Available for Programs and Events The Campus Grants program provides support for speakers, workshops, meetings, curriculum organizational development, publications, collaborations, and other activities. Grants of up to $5OO are available to all members of the Duke campus and medical staff, and center community —students, faculty—to support initiatives at Duke that promote ethical reflection, deliberation, and dialogue.

Fall Semester Application th Deadline: September 15 For more information and application form, see the Grants & Awards section of our website http://kenan.ethics.duke.edu call 660-3033, or come by our office at 102 West Duke Building. ,


THE CHRONICLE

FRIDAY. AUGUST 22. 2003 113

Thompson Graves The first thing that makes life easier as a freshman is to get to know people and you have some grounding and have some good friends. I wish people had encouraged me to meet as many people as I possibly could my first week or two.

Friendly advice from your FAC What words

of wisdom would you give to the incoming freshmen? g and Lauren Sultsber Don’t save all your work for the weekends, try and get stuff done, because you’ll end up not doing it until Sunday night and you’ll not be happy. Definitely time management, if you don’t manage your time, you’ll never be able to go out and have fun, you’ll have so much work to do. Meet a lot of people and meet as many people as you can, especially freshman year. That’s when you’re allowed to go up to people and say, hey, what’s your name, where are you from and that will definitely help. Try and go out a little into the city. Whole Foods is right across the street, it’s easy to start there. Because we have Durham, which is actually a pretty big town right at our fingertips and no one seems to use it. Enjoy your time. It goes by really fast. I can’t believe I’m already a sophomore. Make sure you take things slow.

Carver Moore This is the one time where a conversation over whether it’s called soda or pop can evolve into a 30year friendship. Some people are going to come here and immediately start complaining about how much it costs or about all the stuff that’s gone wrong and about 10 percent of people are going to play it right and realize that if they play their cards right and take advantage of the untold resources that are offered here that even if they’re paying full sticker price, $40,000 a year, it’s still an amaz-

ing bargain.

Ruby Lekwauwa, RA Get to know your RA, get to know your professors and get to know people on your hall, because they’ll be your support for the year.

w Schmidt piece of advice I have is to stick with yo jes because initially they may seem too h, intimidating, but you may find they beco. lier or more reasonable as the semester ga I would also say under no circumstano uld you throw a party in your dorm room I would isosugg* you lay down the rules with your lommate in terms ofhow you will be handling space in the room and what’s reasonable and cleanliness. In terms of social scene, don’t be afraid to attend any event even if you don’t know the group because you will find most groups will be very willing to welcome freshmen or any people to their event. In terms of Durham, I would suggest going wherever you go in groups and making sure you have someone who knows where you are going, but don’t be too afraid becuase there is a lot of worthwhile stuff around East Campus and further -1 would highly suggest a Durham Bulls baseball game.

Chris Ellis Professor Miregrad told me one time if you do what you’ve always done, you’ll get what you’ve always gotten. You need to take classes that interest you. Don’t listen to everything that your parents said about what you need to major in, what you need to be doing ten, fifteen years from now. Take the classes that interest you and think about your major toward the end of the year going into your sophomore year.

tadenfcl doln

(is

Me at Chapel for...

ORIENTATION SUNDAY Join Dean Will Willimon & Asst. Dean Craig Kocherfor a talk, "Being Religious At Duke" August 24, 9:45 am Alumni Commons Room

University Worship Service August 24, 11:00 am Preacher: Rev. Dr. William H. Willimon Sermon: "The Wisdom of Freshmen"

OPENING SUNDAY University Worship Service August 31, 11:00 am Preacher; Rev. Dr. William H. Willimon Sermon: "Confused, Yet Curious, About Jesus"

Following the Orientation Sunday worship service, students are invited to have lunch in the Chapel Basement. All singers are invited to an open rehearsal with the Chapel Choir from 2:30-4 p.m. on Sat, Aug. 23, and to the pre-service rehearsal at 9:15 on Aug. 24. Call 684-3898 for more information the Chapel to pick up your free copy of Goodbye High School, Hello College, a devotionalbook for new students by Dean Willimon. Duke Chapel 684-2572 www.chapel.duke.edu

Come by


THE CHRONICLE

14 I FRIDAY. AUGUST 22. 2003

Rinse and repeat How

often will your child do his

or

her laundry?

Robbie Itami He’ll hold off as long as he can, although he’s already found out that he goes through multiple shirts in a day with the humidity, so I think he is going to be forced to do it more than he plans.

Marissa Brock He’s pretty organized, he’ll probably start off once a week, and then he’ll probably sign up for the laundry service. I give him three weeks. When he sees how hard his classes are, he’ll quickly sign up for the laundry service. Carolyn Bernell (Brent's mom) Carolyn: He’s got enough clothes to go 17 days, so I would think, every 17 days. Brent: Well, you can re-wear clothes a lot more than that, I mean, you’d be surprised how versatile a pair of pants can be. Carolyn: We bought a ton of Febreze, so he’s in

Oebby He’s not good at separating laundry, so I expect to get a lot of pink clothes that really are white getting shipped home to me at the end of the fall. I think it’ll take him a few tries to get the hang of laundry, but anyone who gets into Duke should be able to figure that out.

good shape. Brent: We were at the store and she wanted to buy me detergent, but I was like, I’m not going to use that. Laundry is determined by the smell test, and if it fails, it gets washed. If it passes, it’s good to go again. Carolyn: And the nice thing is that we live far away so that he has to fly home and they don’t let him bring his laundry home, it’s not going to be like, here mom, here’s my dirty clothes. Brent: And you don’t buy white shirts, because they show the dirt. And there’s always overnight delivery, charged to the credit card.

Poor lost lambs... Karen Doran He will have no idea how to keep track ofhis checkbook, Lawrence Zimmerman He’ll live by himselfwithout his mother’s intervention Irish Vento She’s actually pretty self-sufficient can’t wake up -

Rose Moss Given previous experience there is no chance that laundry will be done any sooner than once a month. My prediction is once every 3 weeks- I’m an optomist.

m

We provide a variely of conveniences

including a gourmet food a

section

with

selection of breads, muffins, cook-

ies, coffees and teas, candies and

juices. An expanded frozen foods section, breakfast foods,

dairy items,

fresh fruits and vegetables, condiments, soft drinks, cookies, magazines

and candy also fill the shelves at the East Campus Store. Don't forget to

browse through

our University

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which provides you with a large selection

of quality Duke clothing TM

of Duke University Stores

*


THE CHRONICLE

FRIDAY. AUGUST 22. 2003 115

Do You Play an

InstrumontP Want to be part of the

largest musical group at Duke? Ever wanted to be in a flag

squad? Want to travel to the ACC and NCAA tournaments?

NEW MEMBER SCHEDULE Friday, August 22 nd

-

12:30>1:30 PM

-

Orientation Meeting

Bone Hall in the Biddle Music Building on East Campus- Meet the officers and director. No obligation just info. All students and their families welcome. FREE FOOD AND DRINK! -

Saturday, August 23 rd

-

1:00-3:30 PM

-

Marching Rehearsal

First Rehearsal with the Band. Meet in Bone Hall.


THE CHRONICLE

I f> I FRIDAY. AUGUST 22. 2(XD

“Building Democracy in the Arab World”

Saad Eddin Ibrahim Saad Eddin Ibrahim is professor of sociology at American University in Cairo and director of the Ibn Khaldun Center in Egypt, a non-governmental organization that works to promote democracy and development in the Arab world. In 2000, Ibrahim and 27 other center employees were put on trial on charges related to their voter education program. Twice convicted and sentenced to seven years in jail by special state security courts, Ibrahim appealed both convictions and was acquitted this year. He has reopened the Ibn Khaldun Center and has continued his important work.

4:30 p.m. Monday, Aug. 25 Richard White Auditorium, East Campus Reception to follow in the East Duke Parlors For more information, call 681-4514 Sponsored by the Department of Asian and African Languages and Literature, Department of Political Science, the Center for the Study of Muslim Networks, the Office of the Vice Provost for International Affairs and Amnesty International

Sms®® Come Join the Fun! SPORT CLUBS Ist YEAR STUDENTS

SPORT CLUBS DAY

Friday, August 29 th 10am 4pm, Bryan Center Walkway -

IM FLAG FOOTBALL

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Wednesday, September 3rd 4pm 6pm, East Campus Union -

INTRAMURALS SOCCER OFFICIALS’ MEETING

Thursday, September 4th 6pm, 020 Wilson Center NO EXPERIENCE NECESSARY -

Entries open for pre-season flag football, soccer and volleyball Register online at www.duke.edu/web/hper

Captains’ Meetings: September 2 nd 020 Wilson Center -

Flag Football Soccer Volleyball

6:oopm 6;3opm 7:oopm

Ist Year Captains' Meetings: September 2 nd 208 Brodie 6:oopm Flag Football -

Soccer Volleyball

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For more information http://www.duke.edu/web/hper

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THE CHRONICLE

FRIDAY, AUGUST 22, 2003

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Millicent Okereke, Brooklyn, NY, Wilson Yeah... he’s still my boyfriend, he goes to NYU, we’re trying the long distance thing, but if it doesn’t work we’re still going to be buddy-pals.

Don't tell Christoph... Okay, so you’re here. Honestly, did you fudge anything on your application?

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-Actually, they review our applications before they go out, so we can’t fudge anything. Our teachers will not sign off on our recommendations until they’re re-

viewed.

-I told them I wanted to major in women’s studies

What advice do you have for your child? IrishVento Enjoy these next four years. There are never any other four years that are going to be anything like it. Just enjoy it and take advantage of everything.

Sandy I want him to not be afraid, and to be daring. And I want him to try some things that are outside of his comfort zone.

Debby Follow the road less taken experiment a lot engage himself with the surrounding community and also with the people that he’ll meet here. I think coming form the northeast to the south is one way that he was ready to take the road less traveled. -

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THE CHRONICLE

18 | FRIDAY. AUGUST 22. 2003

Senior Administrators Nan Keohane President

Keohane, the University’s eighth

president, is the highest-ranking Uni-

versity official. She reports to the Board of Trustees and is responsible for executing its decisions and making recommendations to the Board. Keohane, who is entering her eighth year as University president, has become known for her exceptional fund-raising skills—namely, spearheading The Campaign for Duke, the University’s $2 billion fund-raising effort, which is scheduled to last through 2003. Some of Keohane’s other initiatives include the 1994 creation of an all-freshman East Campus, the 1995 revisions to the alcohol policy and facilitated dialogue on race relations in 1997-98. Last year, she called for an initiative on the state of affairs for women at Duke. Keohane, a political scientist, served as president of Wellesley College from 1981 until 1993, and before that taught at Stanford University. She is married to Robert Keohane, James B. Duke professor of political science.

Peter Nicholas of Trustees

Chair Board

Ben Rees

Interim Vice President for Institutional Equity

Dr. Ralph Snyderman Chancellor for Health Affairs, CEO ofDUHS The chancellor is the top administrator in the Medical Center, overseeing the Hospital, the Duke Clinic and the School of Medicine. Snyderman is also president and CEO of the Duke University Health System, which has rapidly expanded in recent years to include health care facilities around North Carolina. He still makes rounds with patients as a James B Duke professor of immunology.

As supervisor of the Office of Institutional Equity, Dickson examines University-wide diversity issues, such as minority affairs, gender equity, sexual harassment and University compliance with the Americans with Disabilities Act. Dickson came to Duke two years ago from Stanford University, when OlE’s first director, Myma Adams, retired. President Keohane created OIE in 1995.

John Burness

Senior Vice President for Public Affairs and Government Relations Bumess is the University’s top public relations official and represents the University to the Durham community and to the state and federal governments. He oversees the Duke News Service as well as Duke Dialogue, a weekly publication geared toward faculty and staff. Bumess serves as one of Keohane’s top advisers and often speaks on her behalf to media and the public.

;

The 36-member Board is the gov-

erning body of the University and is

ganizing various University ceremonies, such as opening convocation, Founders’ Day celebrations, baccalaureate services and graduation.

John Piva

responsible for major financial and policy decisions. Yoh works with KeoSenior Vice President for Alumhane to shape long-term policy for ni Affairs and Development the University. Yoh, Engineering ’5B, recently retired from his posiThe Office of Alumni Affairs and tions as chair of the board and CEO of Day & Zimmerman the Office of University Development Inc., a billion-dollar professional services company in report to Piva. He oversees fund-raising efforts, inPhiladelphia. The recendy-completed Yoh Football Center, a new $2O cluding The Campaign for Duke, and million facility designed to spur the football program, was in fall 2000 he advised the University to raise the caminitiated from a $l5 million gift from Yoh. paign’s goal from $1.5 billion to $2 billion.

nua [get falls under Trask’s jurisdiction. He also serves as University treasurer. His top projects this year will include the new parking deck near the Bryan Center.

Trask came to Duke to assume his current position in fall 1995. Before that, he served as executive vice president of the University of Washington at Seatde.

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THE CHRONICLE

FRIDAY. AUGUST 22. 2003 119

DSG Leaders Matt Slavik

Andrew Wisnewski VP for Community Interaction

Avery Reaves

VP for Academic Affairs

President

Elizabeth Dixon VP for Student Affairs

Clifford Davison Executive Vice President

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THE CHRONICLE

21 !0 I FRIDAY. AUGUST 22. 2003

—Academic Administrators— Robert Thompson Dean, Trinity College

fostering cross-school initiatives and improving the library system. As provost, Lange also has the ultimate authority on appointments, promotions and tenure cases. Lange will spend much time this year ensuring the implementation of Duke’s strategic plan, approved in February 2000. Lange, former chair of the political science department and former vice provost for international affairs, was the visionary behind the development of Curriculum 2000, Trinity College’s new curriculum that requires Arts and Sciences students to take more courses in an increased number of disciplines.

Thompson’s main project this year will be to address academic integrity concerns and continue the implementation of Curriculum 2000. He oversees the Trinity College deans, and advises, merit scholarships and firstyear programs. He is also responsible for long-range planning and faculty recruitment A professor of psychology, Thompson came to Duke in 1975 and joined the administration five years ago.

Dean of Natural Sciences

merits of department chairs.

History, Chafe came to Duke in 1971 and is one of the history field’s top authorities on 20th century American history and the fight for civil rights.

Johnson, an optics expert from Colorado University, begins her third year as dean of the Pratt School this fall. Having reached the school’s ambitious $l7O million capital campaign goal, her projects this year will include implementing the new Center for Interdisciplinary Engineering, Medicine and Applied Sciences, the $lOO million engineering plaza that will more than double the school’s space. Her goals for the school also include increasing faculty size, revising the undergraduate curriculum and strengthening an initiative for photonics research.

Lewis Siegel

Berndt Mueller Chafe also holds the title of vice provost for under-

Dean, Pratt School of Engineering

Dean, Graduate School

Her top priorities include a humanities initiative in Americas studies and how best to use a warehouse near East Campus purchased for the arts at Duke.

graduate education, placing control over admissions and financial aid in both Trinity College and the School of Engineering in his hands. An Alice Mary Baldwin Distinguished Professor of

Kristina Johnson

Mueller, an expert in physics, holds a similar position to Holloway for the natural sciences departments. He was also appointed at the beginning of the 1999-2000 school year. Improving the natural sciences at Duke is among the top goals of the University’s longterm

plan.

Although many undergraduate freshmen may never run into him, Siegel, along with Chafe and Thompson, rounds out the deans for Axts and Sciences. Siegel, a biochemist, came to Duke in 1966 and has served as dean of the Graduate School since 1991.

Judith Ruderman

Vice Provost for Academics and Administration

Ruderman, one of a handful of administrators reporting to Provost Peter Lange, is in charge of a task force looking at academic integrity at Duke, a top undergraduate issue.

Trinity College Deans Gerald Wilson, pre-law advising Martina Bryant, pre-business advising Mary Nijhout, pre-graduate and research advising Kay Singer, pre-medical counseling

Welcome

Catholic Students Masses this Sunday,August 24 th 11 am in RichardWhite Lecture Hall on East Campus

9 pm in Duke Chapel Masses next Sunday, August 31 11 am Outdoor Mass on front lawn of East Campus followed st

by a cookout sponsored by local alums & faculty (in case of rain, this Mass will be celebrated in Richard White Lecture Hall on East Campus) 9 pm in Duke Chapel

Mty Worship

Also, come by our table at the Student Activities Fair on East Campus this Saturday, August 23rd to learn more about the Catholic Student Center here at Duke!

August 24 7:00 pm

All are Welcome Father Joe Vetter Director

NEWMAN A

\

a

|"l "1

"t

joev@duke.edu

j

.

CENTER AT DUKE UNIVERSITY

m

4

Gretchen Crowe Peer Ministry Coordinator grcrowe@duke.edu

Student Interns: Dawn Harrop Teresa Tetlow Liturgy Community Building dmh9@duke.edu tkt@duke.edu

Matt Toups Outreach

Mike Scott Special Projects

mht@duke.edu

mtslo@duke.edu

Duke Chapel Basement www.catholic.duke.edu 684-8959 catholic@duke.edu •

Upper East Side

(above the Marketplace)

The Reverend Jennifer E. Copeland United Methodist Campus Minister

919.684.6735 iTHE WESLEY jenny.copelandCdiduke.edu FELLOWSHIP AT DUKE UNIVERSITY


THE CHRONICLE

FRIDAY. AUGUST 22. 2003

Student Leaders Jonathan Bigelow Union President

Tori Hogan, Heidi Schumacher

Devon MacWilliam Panhellenic Council President

Panhel, an umbrella organization The Union is responsible for a for Duke’s nationally recognized sororlarge portion of the social programities, oversees most of the University’s ming at the University. Such organizations as Cable 13, WXDU, Major sororities and administers the rush Attractions, Broadway at Duke and process each January. Freewater Films all fall under its ausLed this year by senior Devon pices. Bigelow works with the Union’s 17 officers and MacWilliam, the group strives to deoversees the Union’s budget of approximately $400,000. velop excellence in scholarship, leadership, service and Bigelow’s primary responsibility is to manage the personal growth of sorority members. Panhel recently got its own advisor, and will get addicouncil of chairs, or the Union board, which oversees the tional storage space this year in Trent Drive Hall. Bryan Center, among other things.

Anthony Vitarelli

Community Service Center Co-chairs Hogan and Schumacher, both seniors, will coordinate all of the University’s community service programs, highlighted by Community Service Week in the fall. The two seniors hope to raise the center’s visibility this year. Among the projects that the center coordinates include Habitat for Humanity, America Reads and the North Carolina Rural Health Coalition and the Duke-Durham Hunger Alliance.

Recycle this newspaper!

111mj

|

Campus Council President Campus Council serves as a social

programming entity for the entire undergraduate student body. It strives to put on large, campus-wide events and help fund smaller social events. Each year, it is responsible

for programming Devil’s Eve and Last Day of Classes

Rob Saunders Graduate and Professional Student Council President Saunders represents graduate students from the University’s six professional schools and the Graduate School. A third-year student in physics, he will focus on graduate student funding, parking, increasing GPSC’s visibility and creating better links between graduate and professional students. He will meet regularly with senior-level administrators.

Brett Green

Interfratemity Council President The In terfraternity Council oversees and sets policies for most of the University’s fraternities. Nine members sit on the organization’s executive committee, which meets weekly with all fraternity presidents. Green, a senior, hopes to improve campus race relations, help diversify social options on campus and improve communication between the administration and fratemiJy

0 T YOUR PA RENTS' GREAT

HALL.

presidents.

Gerald Oliver National Pan-Hellenic Council President The Duke National Pan-Hellenic Council serves as the official coordinating agent of historically black and latino fraternities and sororities. The NPHC seeks to ensure groups are able to meet their commitments to alcohol-free social programming and to community service. The organization also hopes to celebrate the history and legacy of minority greek organizations.

THE NEW GREAT HALL

Maya Washington

Black Student Alliance President The Black Student Alliance organizes programs and represents black student interests to Duke administrators. Although in recent years it has received only a quarter of the funding it asked for, the organization continues strive toward its goal of improving the Duke and Durham communities. BSA also seeks to assure that the University continues its commitment to developing fair policies.

FALL 2003 DUKE WEST CAMPUS


2!2 I FRIDAY. AUGUST 22.

THE CHRONICLE

2(M)3

Student/Business administrators Larry Moneta Vice President for Student Affairs Moneta oversees a wide variety of student services and offices. In this capacity, he has primary responsibility for residential life, student organizations, career develop-

ment and counseling services, among other areas. Moneta arrived at Duke in August 2001 with a pledge to make Student Affairs run more seamlessly. He replaced former vice president Janet Dickerson, who left Duke in July 2000 to take a position at Princeton University. His top projects last year included implementing the quad system, further linking academic and student life and building the new “student village” on West Campus. The village has become his top priority, and he will be working on fundraising and planning for this ambitious multi-year project.

Sue Wasiolek Dean

Judith White

Director, Residential Program

of Students

Review

In her primary position as assistant vice president for student affairs, Wasiolek oversees parent and alumni relations for Student Affairs. A long-time member of the Duke community, she is affectionately known as “Dean Sue.” Her role as dean of students will also give her oversight in regard to judicial affairs and the Office of Greek Life.

In 1998, White was placed in charge of the overhaul of the West

Campus dormitories. She has been working with architects, students, administrators and the Board of Trustees to develop plans for renovating the current West Campus residence halls and planning for the West-Edens Link.

Catherine Reeve

Todd Adams

Director, Parking and Trans-

Director, Office of Fraternity

portation

and Sorority Life Among other responsibilities, Adams serves as the adviser to the Interfraternity Council. In that capacity, he consults with students on the Annual Review process and

Services

Reeve, who arrived in fall 2002 from North Carolina State University, oversees parking allotment, parking enforcement, road maintenance and the bus system. This year, she will attempt to implement an ambitious parking plan amidst a backdrop of continual complaint.

judicial issues.

Jim Belvin Director, Financial Aid The University has a needblind admissions policy and the financial aid office pledges to meet 100 percent of a student’s demonstrated need. Belvin reports to William Chafe, vice provost for undergraduate education and dean of the faculty of arts and sciences. Among the changes that went into effect last year will be the continued offering offinancial aid for international students and the abolishment of the car policy. The equalization of all housing rates across Duke’s campuses was put on hold for a year.

Jim Wulforst

Director, Dining Services

Wulforst is responsible for campus dining facilities, which have all been outsourced since his arrival. Dining Services also supervises ARAMARK Corp., which runs six campus eateries, including the Great Hall.

AAAAaX. I lU||/| J

SGrVICS center

Accept the America Reads Challenge! Become a Duke Learning Partner X/

/

America Reads Challenge asks college students to join a national effort to ensure that children can read well and independently by the end of the third grade. Duke Learning Partners a volunteer and work-study program joins this effort by placing tutors in public schools to improve the reading skills of Durham’s youngest children. ,

DUKE

UNIVERSITY

,

Two ways to make a difference: Volunteer Learning Partners Serve as a reading tutor at least one semester for two hours each week. Attend one training session led by reading specialists. Tutor at a conveniently located elementary school or a neighborhood community center. Apply to the Community Service Center by September 22. Federal Work-Study Learning Partners Serve as a reading tutor two semesters for six to twelve hours each week. Attend one training session led by reading specialists. Receive $12.50 per hour if you’re an undergraduate or $15.50 per hour if you’re a graduate or professional student. Tutor at a conveniently located elementary school or community center. Apply to the Community Service Center by September 19.

WHY ACCEPT THE AMERICA READS CHALLENGE? •

Studies find that sustained, individualized attention and tutoring can raise reading levels Share the joy of reading, Make a difference in a child’s life Be a role model Support local schools It’s fun! .

.

For more information and an application, contact the Community Service Center at 684-4377 or http://csc.studentaffairs.duke.edu/

Nationally, 40% offourth graders cannot read as well as they should Students who cannot read independently by the fourth grade are less likely to complete high school

.

.


THE CHRONICLE

FRIDAY. AUGUST 22. 2003

Don’t just read it be a part of it!

The Chronicle THE INDEPENDENT DAILY AT DUKE UNIVERSITY

Editorial Staff OPEN HOUSE Photography, Design, Graphics, Online, Technical and Creative Friday, August 29 3:00-4:00 pm •

3rd Floor Flowers Building

Reporters Friday, August 29 4:00-5:30 pm 3rd Floor Flowers Building •

If you cannot attend or have questions about The Chronicle

Come meet Chronicle editors and explore your options with Duke’s independent daily newspaper at our kickoff event, the open house. We have volunteer opportunities available for writers, photographers, cartoonists and layout artists in all departments: University, Sports, Health & Science, City & State, Features, Photography, Recess (Arts & Entertainment), or Tower View (news magazine), Graphics, Online, Special Supplements and more!

,

e-mail Managing Editor Jane Hetherington at jshlO@duke.edu. Refreshments will be served.

Business & Advertising Staff Paid Positions Available! Gain Valuable Experience in The Chronicle's

...

Advertising Sales Department

Business Department

Creative Services Department

Opportunities include: Working with campus and national clients

Opportunities include: Billing advertising clients Maintaining sales records

Opportunities include: Design and layout of display advertisements, special supplements Using design software on Macintosh

Soliciting new accounts Designing marketing materials Classified Advertising

Maintaining accounts receivable

(including Multi-Ad Creator, QuarkXpress, and Photoshop)

Call (919) 684-3811 to request an application or send resume to: The Chronicle, 101 West Union Building, Box 90858, Duke University, Durham, NC 27708-0858 Paid positions require a minimum commitment of 10 hours/week. Freshmen and sophomores are encouraged to apply.


THE

2‘

CHRONICLE

FRIDAY. AUGUST 22. 2003

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