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Sports Football coach Carl Franks anticipates Week One
It's 4:38 a.m., and this issue ain't getting done anytime soon
The Chomicle
YALE UNIVERSITY
Ninety-Ninth Year, issue
721
cks Vi Haft
out students by
Ace Man
THE CHOMICLE
In response to continuing concerns about lazy, destructive, drunken students, Executive Archdean of Residential Life Freddy Hall has abolished students from the University. The move follows Hall’s discontinuation of annual review and the removal of several fraternities from campus over the last few years. Hall said he realized that fraternities and annual review were not really the problem—it was the students he had to stop. “I had a meeting with some student leaders the other day,” Hall said. “Smitarelli was stinking drunk, Volvic was riding a unicycle and Deuce Bugaloo took a baseball bat to my ‘quad model’ ant farm. There’s no way I can deal with these people anymore!” Students had mixed reactions about being banned from campus. While some were unhappy that they would no longer be able to attend the University, others saw it as a positive move. “I think it’s brilliant,” said Duke Student Government President Matt Volvic. “But then again I don’t really care because I’m graduating, anyway.” It was unclear what would happen to the quad model in the absence of anyone to live in the quads. Hall suggested filling the residence halls with 1,600 cats, who could participate in activities like wiffleball, cooking competitions and an art appreciation fair. Hall even said he would personally act as a “master of ceremonies,” sporting a top hat and cane and leading the cats in their various quad activities.
DURHAM, ENGLAND
JUEVES, APRIL 1,2004
WWW. DUKEBASKETBALLREPORT. COM
Brodhead's true identity revealed by
Yemil Lamas
THE CHOMICLE
Scandal rocked the campuses of two of the nation’s most respected universities Thursday when it was revealed that Richard Brodhead, President-elect ofDuke University and outgoing Dean of Yale College, was in fact the Kool-Aid Man. “I’ve known Dick since 1776, and although I’d always known him for his sweet disposition and willingness to sit down for an afternoon cup of juice, I’d have never thought that it had come so far.” said Professor Tim Donaldson ofYale. Friends and acquaintances were rightly surprised; hidden sources at Kraft foods revealed that Brodhead had been leading an elaborate double life since 1965, when he was tapped to succeed the then-recently deceased Adlai Stevenson in the role of the giant pitcher. By day, Brodhead pursued the life of scholar and top administrator at Yale University. By night, Brodhead battled the thirsties and brought joy to millions of parched, sugar-deprived children. In the early ’9os, Kool-aid man rose to the height of popularity, starring in both short Marvel comic strips and a short-lived Mattell action-adventure game for the Atari 2600 game system. Brodhead personally starred in each of these projects, rising to a notoriety rivaled only by the Easy-Mac yellow dinosaur and Toucan Sam. “Utterly revolutionary; I’ve never seen such effective cross-market advertising” said Duke Professor of Economics Ned Cower, while sipping on a cool cup of Purplesaurus Rex Kool-Aid.
Reactions to the news at Duke University were mixed. “Kool-aid goes well with Vodka, so I guess Brodhead does too; this has the potential to completely reshape the party-scene at Duke!” exclaimed an excited student. Employees at Quenchers and the Alpine Atrium, on the other hand,
”
SEE KOOL-AID ON PAGE 55
New Haven bound?
Safety School?
Clerk Head—of no relation to Richard Fore —said he plans on Citing a bad back and foot purchasing five to eight more injuries, incoming president Segways for his staff. Richard Fore Head has anTo fund the operation, Vice nounced that Duke will be relo- President for Student Affairs to New eating Harry O’Neta said Haven, Conn., in students will incur late August. a $23,395 “service Current presifee.” The Duke dent Nan Earl meanChapel, Kohan applauded sold while, be will W the move, citing the JmSSTSamr to Donald Trump com- dispatches FROM YALE for luxury condos, absolutely, and the Gardens pletely coincidental The a series of articles be drilled for will presence of .nearby examining life at Yale University, 13.1C University 3S 3 home to Dean Richard Brodhead, A135k.311 oil. XnC Duke’s future president potential influence Bryan Center will on Duke’s future. be pillaged by the “It’s a great solution —now local militia and untalented carinstead of kicking the fratemi- toonists. ties off campus, we just kick the “If that doesn’t cover things, campus out of Durham,” Kohan m probably just tack on anothsaid. “And we also feel that New er s2s—no, sso—no, uh, wait, Haven will provide a much safer don’t write this down,” O’Neta said. He then dove into a nearby community.” In response to security con- pile of Benjamins and swam cerns, police chief Barrance away. by
It’s Really Late
and we’retired
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TOM MENDEL/THE CHRONICLE
This is the best crowd shot we've taken all year. Had to run it
were concerned for the sustainability of their smoothie business. When reached for comment, Brodhead uttered a protracted statement of“OOOH YEEEAAAH! He then darted out of the room to battle the forces of cottonmouth in
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2 I
THE CHRONICLE
THURSDAY, APRIL 1,2003
Suit* Uniuerattg Durham North Carolina 27708-0027
Executive Vice President
TELEPHONE
203 ALLEN BUILDING
FACSIMILE
019)684-6600
019)
684-8766
BOX 90027
April 1,2004
We want to remind everyone about the bonfire policy we established several years ago, which again govern this year’s activities. The victory celebrations following big games in recent years have been what we have all hoped for, and ones in which the Duke community could take pride. The same rules remain in effect this year and, with your cooperation, we will continue to celebrate our victories safely and enthusiastically. In keeping with this goal, we remind you of some key concerns:
The University has obtained a City bonfire permit for April 5, the date of the NCAA Men’s Basketball National Championship game. Bonfires on any other days will not be permitted by the City and are, therefore, illegal. Anyone who participates in a bonfire on any other day will be subject to University discipline and potential criminal prosecution The City Fire Marshall asks that everyone stay at least 10 feet away from the fire
Please keep stacked benches to a reasonable height (not more than three) and do not climb on top. The tragedy at Texas A & M a few years ago provides ample evidence why.
If you carry a beverage, please use a plastic or metal container. There will be additional trash receptacles on the quad. Do not sit or stand on building roofs
Do not use dorm furniture as fuel for a bonfire. Do not add fuel to the fire more than two hours following the game. The use of gasoline or any other fire accelerant is prohibited The only permitted bonfire site is in front of House P. Any fires that are started outside of this area will be considered illegal and dealt with at the discretion of the City Fire Marshall and Duke University Police.
The City Fire Marshall has the right to revoke this and future bonfire permits if these rules are not followed or the crowd gets out of control. Let’s not abuse this privilege. Celebrating basketball victories with a bonfire is now a Duke tradition. Follow these basic safety rules so we can maintain this tradition for years to come.
Matt Slovik President Duke Student Government
Tallman Trask 111 Executive Vice President Duke University
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DUKE UNIVERSITY Ninety-Ninth Year, issue 127
THURSDAY, APRIL 1,2004
DURHAM, N.C.
WWW. CHRONICLE.DUKE. EDU
Neighborhood leaders question NPI by Cindy Yee THE CHRONICLE
For many of the University’s neighbors, planning for the makeover of Central
Campus has aroused much excitement, but also much frustration as the University tries to decide the type and extent ofretail operations that will be allowed on the redeveloped campus. In fact, ‘frustrating’ seems to be a catchword for some neighbors in describing recent encounters with the University—so much so that there are talks in a few neighborhoods of pulling out of the much-lauded Duke-Durham Neighborhood Partnership. The initiative is aimed at improving the quality of life in the 12 DSG President-elect Pasha Majdi addresses senators at the body's meetingWednesday night.
Senators reject fee increase by
Aaron Levine
THE CHRONICLE
Duke Student Government legislators had money on their minds at their weekly meeting Wednesday night, discussing the $7O student activities fee increase and the recent discovery of $140,000 in DSG funds. Legislators passed a resolution rejecting the increase to the fee implemented by Vice President for Student Affairs Larry Moneta. Officials said the fee increase was in direct violation of DSG bylaws, which require a DSG vote and student body referendum for any changes to the activities fee. “The money is given to the students by the students,” said Student Affairs Committee representative Dave Rausen, SEE DSG ON PAGE 12
COMING FRIDAY
neighborhoods near campus and boosting student achievement in the neighborhoods’ seven public schools. “Several neighborhood association boards, including Old West Durham, have started talking about the possibility of pulling out of the partnership because many do not view it as a partnership,” said John Schelp, president of the Old West Durham Neighborhood Association. ‘To be clear, Duke is doing good things, especially in the seven elementary schools, and they deserve credit for those efforts. Some neighborhoods are seeing some benefit from Duke, but others are frustrated because we feel like we’re just a window dressing.”
Schelp explained that a lack of open communication between the neighborhoods and the University regarding Central Campus retail plans are a reflection, not the cause, of a more long-standing problem with the Neighborhood Partnership—namely, that the University seeks but ultimately discounts neighbors’ input on developments that will affect town and gown alike. Although such sentiments are not universal or even prevalent amongst the 12 partnership neighborhoods, Schelp is certainly not alone in his assertions. Elizabeth Dondero, president of the Burch Avenue SEE NPI ON PAGE 11
At Yale, diverse students, not faculty by
Emily
Almas and Kelly Rohrs THE CHRONICLE
Diversity may be the biggest buzzword Duke right now, but at Yale University, where Richard Brodhead, Duke’s future president, has spent the last 40 years, students report that at times it is difficult to grab the administration’s attention about minority issues. Most students report that Yalies come from a variety of backgrounds: geographic di- dispatches FROM YALE versity is extensive; Republicans and Democrats live to- The fourth in a series of articles examining life at Yale University, are home to Dean Richard Brodhead, gether; admissions need-blind; the University Duke’s future president guarantees 100 percent of President-elect Richard Brodhead speaks with Yale students last April to address concerns demonstrated need; and roughly 30 perabout the administration's response to alleged violent acts against fellow students. cent of undergraduates are people of color. But unlike at Duke, students report a racially integrated campus. There is a table in Commons, the main residential college and many keep their Undergraduates do very little to self- dining hall, known as the “black table,” freshman year suitemates, who are selected by the university in part to encourage but it is generallyregarded as no more exsegregate, students said. Some of this is atdiversity. tributable to the residential college sysclusionary than the table where the foot“Sometimes there’s a little more tem, in which incoming students are ball players sit. All housing on campus is priced the racial splitting when people choose their randomly assigned to a college where they live for their four years. Students have same so there is no financial motivation to roommates sophomore year, but it’s still only about 100 students in their class with live in any particular area. Almost all students continue to live with people in their whom to live so racial mixing is common. SEE DIVERSITY ON PAGE 10 at
Pratt improves undergrad advising Sophia Peters THE CHRONICLE
by
It’s that time of year —when students spend hours logged into ACES searching for that class that fits in the perfect time slot or that fills the elusive ethical inquiry requirement. But for the first time, this semester students in the Pratt School of Engineering are unable to access the wonderful world of ACES and class registration without meeting in person with their advisors. Tod Laursen, senior associate dean of education for Pratt, and Linda
Franzoni, associate dean for student affairs for Pratt, have implemented changes that they claim will make the academic advising system more substantial and useful for engineering students. Pratt now requires its students to meet with their advisors to obtain their ACES PIN, bringing engineering advising more in line with the practices already in place for Trinity College students. Moreover, a separate advising website has been established that contains general information about the Pratt curriculum and an online appointment service that officials .
say will expedite the advising sign-up process, again mirroring the Trinity system. Laursen hopes the new system will move students and advisors away from solely communicating via e-mail. “The main point of this new system is to emphasize student and advisor interaction and make sure that they are meeting face-toface every semester,” he said. As Pratt faculty and students adjust to the new online appointment system, some users have reported glitches in coSEE PRATT ON PAGE 8
THE CHRONICLE
4 I THURSDAY, APRIL 1,2003
World&Nation
New York Financial Markets Down 24.00
Civilians from N.C. murdered in Iraq by
Jeffrey Gettleman
NEW YORK TIMES NEWS SERVICE
Four Americans working for a security company were ambushed and killed Wednesday and an enraged mob then jubilantly dragged their burned bodies through the streets of downtown Fallujah, hanging the corpses from a bridge over the Euphrates River. Less than 15 miles away, in the same area of the increasingly violent Sunni Triangle, five American soldiers were killed when a roadside bomb ripped through their armored personnel carrier. The day’s violence was one of the most brutal outbursts of anti-American
FALLUJAH, Iraq
rage since the war in Iraq began more than a year ago. The steadily deteriorating situation in the Fallujah area, a center of anti-American hostility west of Baghdad, has become so precarious that no American soldiers or Iraqi forces responded to the attack against the civilians, who worked for a North Carolina firm. American officials said the civilians were traveling in two sport utility vehicles although some witnesses in Fallujah said there were four. ‘Two got away; two got trapped,” said Muhammad Furhan, a taxi driver. It is not clear what the four Americans were doing in Fallujah or where
they were going. But just as they were
passing a strip of stationery stores and
kebab shops around 10:30 a.m., masked gunmen jumped into the street and blasted their vehicles with assault rifles. Witnesses said the civilians did not shoot back. There are a number of police stations in Fallujah and a base of more than 4,000 Marines nearby, but even as the security guards were being swarmed and their vehicles set on fire, sending plumes of inky smoke over the closed shops of the city, there were no ambulances, no fire engines and no assistance. SEE CIVILIANS ON PAGE 9
Georgia voters to consider gay marriage by
Andrew
Jacobs
NEW YORK TIMES NEWS SERVICE
ATLANTA In an extremely close vote, Georgia’s House of Representatives approved a measure Wednesday night that will allow voters to decide in November whether a ban on same-sex marriage should be added to the state Constitution. The Republican-led Senate approved the bill in February, and Gov. Sonny Perdue, a Republican, has said he will sign the measure, a move guaranteeing its placement on the ballot. Georgia is one ofabout two dozen states that already have laws banning same-sex marriage on their books, but this year decided to consider strengthening those prohibitions. Lawmakers here and elsewhere—alarmed by events in
Nasdaq
£|n Dow
California and Massachusetts—are pursuing constitutional amendments, arguing that while laws can be overturned on appeal, amendments provide a more resistant foil to judges who might find the law unconstitutional. “We cannot let judges in Boston, or officials in San Francisco, define marriage for the people of Georgia,”* Rep. Bill Hembree, a Republican and the amendment’s sponsor, said in a speech to the chambers. Georgia will be one of the first states to get an initiative on November’s ballot, adding a polarizing social issue to the battle for votes in a presidential election year in which voters are already deeply divided. Utah’s Legislature also approved put-
@
10,357.70
Down 6 41 -
@1,994.22
NEWS IN BRIEF Billions to go to embattled Afghani state
Nations from around the world have pledged $4.4 billion in aid and low-cost loans to help stabilize and rebuild Afghanistan next year, with the United States accounting for about halfof the contributions.
OPEC to scale back crude oil production
highs, OPEC took a step that could push prices even higher by announcing that it would cut its crude oil output target by As fuel costs reach record
4 percent.
Congresswomen unite to criticize military A coalition of congresswomen blasted the U.S. military Wednesday for not taking assaults against women seriously, characterizing the problems as human rights abuses.
New U.S. nuclear powerpiant in the works
Seven companies have agreed to jointly apply for a license to build a new commercial nuclear power plant, the first new reactor application to be filed in three decades.
170 Ectasy traffickers arrested and charged A U.S.-Canadian drug trafficking ring believed responsible for 15 percent of all the Ecstasy smuggled into America has been wiped out by
American and Canadian authorities.
News briefs compiled from wire reports. “Fool me once, shame on you; fool me twice, shame on me." —Chinese Proverb
SEE GAY MARRIAGE ON PAGE 9
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THURSDAY, APRIL 1,2003
the chronicle
I 5
Nowicki hopes to invigorate Newsßriefs natural sciences departments the faculty is unlikely to grow significantly in size. “We will have... some tremendous opportunities for geBefore incoming Dean of Natural Sciences Stephen nomics,” he added. ‘These are wonderful opportunities Nowicki can set an agenda for his new division, he said he and need to be combined with strong faculty recruitment not necessarily a large number, but an outstanding faculty, will need to figure out where Duke stands now. “I’m not being cagey, I’m justbeing honest—l have a lot to achieve the goals we had in the original strategic plan.” to learn,” said Nowicki, biology professor and director of Nowicki, who attended Tufts University as an undergraduate studies. “I really need to get out and learn what graduate and earned his doctorate from Cornell University in 1985, came to Duke as an assistant professor the needs and aspirations of the other departments are.” The administration’s attention to natural sciences in in 1989. Winner of the Distinguished Teaching Award recent years—most visible in the construction of new in 1992 and a fellow of the Guggenheim Memorial Foundation, Nowicki has focused on the buildings like the French Science Center—ecology and evolution of animal behavior in has put his future realm in good shape, he said, despite the fact that incoming Dean of his laboratory. While serving as DGS, Nowicki has retooled the Faculty of Arts and Sciences George McLendon has described natural sciences as the biology doctorate program to focus more on fellowship support and less on teaching, a among the comparatively weaker areas of more competitive strategy he said allows Duke the University. to compete with top biology programs. “I’m very impressed with the administration Nowicki has already taken a leadership we have in place, including incoming Presirole in several areas, chairing both the recent dent [Richard Brodhead] and incoming Dean committee charged with suggesting changes [McLendon], but also [Provost Peter] Lange and [Dean of Trinity College] to Curriculum 2000 and the education Bob Thompson,” Nowicki said. undergraduate re-achave of the group think we’re to a University’s “I going becreditation committee great team. We need to focus “We need to focus attention on some attention on some of the detween 1996 and 1998. He has of the departments that are poised to also served on the executive partments that are poised to committee of the Academic move in the national rankings, move in the national rankings, but I Council from 1998 to 2000. but I couldn’t tell you how to Nowicki has won internaok) that yet.” couldn’t tell you how to do that yet.” tional acclaim for his research One major goal, he said, Steve Nowicki on bird songs and has received will be to work with the other wide respect for his prowess as incoming deans on broad academic concerns, such as divera teaching professor, said Biolosity and women’s issues. “Each department has its own gy Chair Philip Benfey. He has also shown “remarkable orparticular dean, but there are certain issues... that aren’t ganizational and leadership skills” while serving as DGS, the purview of any particular division, and I’m looking Benfey added, melding the evolutionary, ecological and forward to working across divisions toward a general cell and molecular aspects of the department to yield a signature program. goal,” he said. Berndt Mueller, current dean of natural sciences, said “Steve is a very broad thinker, with broad knowledge of the sciences, but he’s also a very humane person, one well Nowicki’s excellence as a scientist and broad understanding of the interplay between instruction and research tuned with the human side of academics,” Benfey said. “It’s always a challenging job to try to foster the progress make him extremely well qualified for the job. ‘There’s no amount of experience that can prepare in the sciences in an academic setting. There are all sorts of constraints and limitations on what one could and can you for jobs like these,” Mueller said. The biggest challenge for natural sciences, Mueller do, but... it’s a great time for someone of Steve’s capabiliadded, will be to continue development at a time when ty to be stepping in.” by
Andrew Gerst
THE CHRONICLE
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Final Four to be shown in Cameron A large-screen television will be set up inside Cameron Indoor Stadium Saturday night for students to watch the Final Four. Doors will open at 5:30 p.m. for the first semi-final game, between Oklahoma State and Georgia Tech, which is scheduled to start at 6:07 p.m.; the Duke-Connecticut game follows, with the tip-off time scheduled for 8:47 p.m. Only Duke undergraduate, graduate and professional students with DukeCards will be admitted, and they should enter Cameron at the north end. There are no provisions for public viewing of the game on campus. Editor’s Note: Go. You won’t regret or forget it. Panel to discuss campus security An April 2 panel discussion with neighborhood representatives and Duke faculty members will explore the issue of campus security. The event, called “Security: The Comforts and the Costs,” will be held from noon to 2 p.m. in the Mary Lou Williams Center, 201 West Union Building, on Duke’s West Campus. The event is free and open to the public. Panelists will talk about the security measures instituted by the University after a robbery in the Bryan Center in November 2003, and whether the University is isolating itself from the community in the name of security. Speakers also will explore the connections between campus security measures and strategies adopted on a national and international level since Sept. 11. The discussion will be moderated by Srinivas Aravamudan, director of the Franklin Humanities Institute at Duke. Participants include Martina Dunford of the New Horizons School; John Schelp, president, Old West Durham Neighborhood Association; Melvin Whitley, president, co-facilitator, Durham Northeast Central Neighborhoods PAG 1; Rania Masri, Institute for Southern Studies; and Wahneema Lubiano, professor of African and African-American Studies. DUPD investigations of alleged assaults continue Duke University Police Department Chief Clarence Birkhead said in a statement that his department has developed new information that he hopes will resolve two sexual assaults reported earlier this month. Birkhead, however, said he did not want to release specific details of what investigators have uncovered about the reported rape of a student near Edens Quadrangle and fondling of another student on Central Campus. The two crimes are believed to be unrelated. Birkhead said his department has consulted with a private investigative expert who is helping the department review both cases.
6 I
THURSDAY,
THE CHRONICLE
APRIL 1,2003
Men’s role in stopping rape takes center stage Liana Wyler THE CHRONICLE
by
As thunder rumbled in the distance and sheets of rain pelted the Von Canon room windows, a small group endured the storm by attending ‘Jalapenos, chest hair and the power of Greyskull: Duke men and the violence that affects our lives,” the second keynote address for Sexual Assault Prevendon Week. David Rider, Duke graduate and current director of consulting and training for the Washington, D.C. based non-profit organization Men Can Stop Rape, returned to campus with colleague Kedrick Griffin to talk about the role men can play in encouraging a community without rape or sexual assault. Rider chose to take a more dialogueoriented rather than lecture-style approach to his presentation, as the intimate size of the audience lent itself to fostering discussion. “What I want to do tonight is create a space where we can talk,” Rider said. To begin the discussion, Rider asked the group why they thought he had made the choice to participate in Men Can Stop Rape. Various members of the audience volunteered the possibility that Rider was gay, a victim of sexual assault or rape himself, a S.N.A.G. —short for “sensitive new age guy”—financially privileged, or a “bleeding heart” liberal. “Did anyone of you think I was a rapist?” he asked rhetorically. “Young men are trained to fit into this very narrow box where men who speak about this issue are not real men.” Rider shared stories of his experiences as an undergraduate at Duke. He talked about his best girl friend during sophomore year; they were neighbors in Hanes House and shared everything with each other. One weekend, she went to visit her family and called Rider at 2 a.m. after having gotten home from a party. She told Rider that the best friend of the guy she was dating had driven her home and on the way, pulled over and had raped her. “If you could list every wrong thing you could say, I said them all—‘What
PETER GEBHARD/THE CHRONICLE
David Rider discusses the different perceptions of acquaintance rape and stranger rape during his presentation Wednesday night. were you thinking?’ ‘Why did you get in and a sleeper sofa at the Red Roof Inn. audience wrestled with topics such as the car?’” Rider remembered. “[A while The lawyer suggested that Rider sleep on blaming a woman for being raped belater] she called from the hospital. She the bed and he would sleep on the couch. cause she wore revealing clothes, telling had taken every pill in her parents’ medRider accepted the proposition and a man that he throws like a girl, opening icine cabinet.” promptly fell asleep. Later that night he doors only for women and not for men, During his junior year when he lived in woke up to find the lawyer in the bed, and looking at Playboy magazine. After Old House CC, he broadened his circle of naked and with one arm hugging him debating each situation, the group voted friends and became close with 10 women, from behind and a hand in his underwear. on where along a continuum ranging nine of which shared with Rider that they “I haven’t even told this to my parents, from “most harmful to women” to “least had been sexually assaulted while at Duke. but I wanted to tell you that story because harmful to women” each of these topics ‘The statistics say 1 in 4 women are sexthat’s how it was.” Rider said. “But I refuse belonged. After the exercise, Rider noted that ually assaulted, but statistics didn’t mean a to let you leave here saying, ‘David does whole lot to me,” he said. “What mattered this work because he is a survivor.’ There while the mock situations are individually to me were my nine friends.” are 40,000 reasons why I’m doing this work ofminor importance, they combine to create the complicated, larger picture of sexRider then asked the audience how and this is one of them.” Rider of them knew someone who has called “atrocious” ual assault and rape. many stranger rapes acts, but said these incidents unjustly rebeen sexually assaulted. All of the audi“We live in something called a rape culceive substantially more attention than acture,” he said. “We swim in it, it’s all ence members raised their hands. He then told another story about when quaintance rapes, which make up approxaround us, it filters into the way we are.” he was a high school student and was imately 85 percent ofall rapes. Rider ended his speech by challenging friends with a 50 year-old lawyer. One members of his audience to each talk to “If the large majority of rapes are beweekend, the lawyer invited him to go with tween people who know each other, I’m two more people about what was discussed him to the University of Virginia to do not sure how much more blue lights across during the lecture. “The most radical step you can take is legal research. During that time, Rider as- campus will help,” he said. The rest of Rider’s speech was devotthe next one,” he said, quoting James pired to be a lawyer and eagerly took up the invitation. After a day of research, the ed to a discussion of what constitutes sitBaldwin. “By taking that first step we are two of them shared a room with one bed uations that are harmful to women. The changing this culture.”
What Happy Faces Are Hiding: Talking About Depression Can you or someone you know relate? Then join us 0n...
Wednesday April 7th 7:3opm Von Canon Presented by: Ross Szabo, Director of Youth Outreach for the National Mental Health Awareness Campaign
Co-Sponsored by: 'MINDS (Mental Issues and Needs of Duke Students) !,,!Panhellenlc, Residence Life and Housing Services, IFC .
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THE CHRONICLE
THURSDAY, APRIL 1,2003
I 7
U.N. court rules in favor of Mexico, rebukes U.S. by
Marlise Simons
and Tim Weiner NEW YORK TIMES NEWS SERVICE
The International THE HAGUE, Netherlands Court of Justice Wednesday ordered American courts to review death sentences imposed on 51 Mexicans in the United States, saying the prisoners’ rights under international law had been violated. The decision by the United Nations’ highest court was seen as a moral victory in Mexico, and as a stinging rebuke to the United States. The international court ruled that the prisoners’ rights to speak with Mexican consular officials after their arrests had been violated. It ordered the United States to undertake “an effective review” of the convictions and the sentences. The next Mexican to be executed in the United States is scheduled to die in Oklahoma on May 18. President Vicente Fox of Mexico said the decision was “received with joy” and called it “a victory for international rights, for human rights.” Arturo Dager, a senior legal adviser to Mexico’s foreign ministry, said Mexico “totally trusts that the United States will do the right thing and the necessary thing to fulfill this decision.” It was unclear Wednesday night that American courts would heed the ruling, and federal officials reacted cautiously, saying they need time to study the ruling. “It’s a very complex ruling,” Adam Ereli, a State Department spokesperson, said. “We’ll decide, based on studying it, how we can go about implementing it.” The -United States acknowledges the jurisdiction of the international court to resolve disputes between it and other nations arising under the Vienna Convention on Consular Rights, which allows people arrested abroad to meet with representatives of their government. The United States regularly invokes the convention to visit Americans in foreign jails. The George W. Bush administration has sometimes been skeptical, even hostile, toward the application of international law, however. Even if it bows to the ruling, federal officials may not be able to compel states to heed the court. i U “Tlte, International Court of Justice does not have jurisdiction. in Texas,” said Gov. Rick Perry, who succeeded George W. Bush as governor. Mexican officials noted Wednesday that nations that flout the court can be referred to the U.N. Security Council for “appropriate action.” But the court has no power to enforce its rulings. The court said that the United States had repeatedly violated a 1963 international accord, the Vienna Convention, which requires police to tell foreigners under arrest that they have a right to contact their country’s diplomats without delay. It said that the agreement should apply to all foreigners imprisoned for serious crimes. Today 121 foreign citizens are on death row across the United States, including 55 Mexicans, according to the Death Penalty Information Center. Mexico was the third country to sue the United States for similar violations in the past five years, after Germany and Paraguay. It filed a complaint in January 2003 to halt the imminent execution of three of its citizens. The United States did not deny thatit had breached the convention. In the past, it apologized and promised better compliance, clearly eager to avoid further embarrassment. It also argued that the American practice of allowing defendants to ask for mercy provided an adequate remedy because it often resulted in pardons or in sentences commuted before an execution. But the court, in a firm ruling read out before 14 international judges in the stately hall of the Peace Palace in the Hague, said an apology or a clemency hearing was not enough. Instead, it said, each case should be examined to see if a defendant suffered legal prejudice from not having early access to a diplomat. ‘This is great news; it means my client’s case will now be looked at again,” said David Sergi, an American lawyer from San Marcos, Texas, who represents Roberto Moreno Ramos, a Mexican awaiting execution in Texas. Ramos was sentenced to death in 1992 for killing his wife. Sergi said he had evidence that Ramos was mentally retarded, which was not raised by his previous lawyers. Mexico’s 2003 filing with the court specifically covered the death-row cases of Ramos, another Texas prisoner, Cesar Fierro, and Osbaldo Aguilera Torres, who is scheduled to be executed by the state ofOklahoma on May 18. Mexicans are on death row in a number of other states, seven in all. _
They include Arizona, Arkansas, California, Florida, Nevada, Ohio, and Oregon. American diplomats attending the session seemed deeply disappointed. A State Department spokesperson said that the decision would be studied carefully. Human-rights lawyers said the court’s ruling had respected American sovereignty. The international body ruled that it was up to the United States to decide how it would review the cases and stressed that it was not debating whether any conviction or sentence was correct. “It is for the courts of the United States to examine the facts,” the ruling said. The court also rejected the demand by Mexico that all of the 51 convictions and death sentences should be annulled. The decision, Mexican diplomats said, may affect the
cases of close to another 100 Mexicans now facing potential death sentences before American courts. But the ruling aims to have even broader applications. The court said that because it was deciding on a principle, namely the obligation to abide by the Vienna Convention, its ruling applied not only to Mexicans but also to “other foreign nationals finding themselves in similar situations in the United States.” Reed Brody of Human Rights Watch, based in New York, said the ruling applied to the more than 120foreigners from 29 countries on death row in the United States. ‘The right to see your consul is not just a technicality, it is away to avoid all kinds of errors or miscarriage of justice,” Brody said. “Of course, this right is just as important to Americans abroad.” At present, 165 nations are parties to the convention.
8 I
THE CHRONICLE
THURSDAY, APRIL 1,2003
Militant Jews lay claim to by
disputed property
Ravi Nessman
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Ultra-Orthodox Jews JERUSALEM armed with assault rifles lugged boxes, sofas and potted plants into two buildings in a crowded Arab neighborhood of Jerusalem at daybreak Wednesday, sparking clashes between Israeli troops and angry residents. Israeli officials said the group had the right to live in the buildings in east Jerusalem, which Israel annexed after capturing it in the 1967 Mideast War. Palestinian officials said the incident proved Israel was less interested in peace than in tightening its grasp on east Jerusalem, which they want for the capital of a future state. Later Wednesday, Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon defended his plan to unilaterally withdraw from most or all of the Gaza Strip and parts of the West Bank. A day earlier, he agreed to a binding referendum among his rebellious Likud Party members on the “disengagement” plan. Sharon said Israel must draw its own security line, which would mean “withdrawal from areas which it is understood will not be under Israeli control in any permanent agreement to be signed in the future, which cause great friction between Israelis and Palestinians—the Gaza Strip, for example.” A poll published Wednesday in the Yediot Ahronot newspaper showed 51 percent of Likud members support the plan, while 36 percent oppose it. Sharon blamed the Palestinians for not
acting to stop violence. An Israeli pullout from Gaza would remove their main “excuse,” he said, and then, “we need to tell them, please gendemen, when there is no Israeli presence, let’s see you start to act.” Palestinian Prime Minister Ahmed Qureia cautiously welcomed the Gaza plan, but only as a first step to a full West Bank withdrawal. “In principle, we welcome the Israeli withdrawal from our Palestinian land,” Qureia told Palestinian lawmakers. “But for any withdrawal to have meaning for us it should be followed by a complete Israeli withdrawal from the West Bank, too.” Palestinians want a state in all the West Bank and Gaza. But many in Sharon’s hard-line government view his limited withdrawal plan as the most they are willing to concede. Qureia also condemned Palestinian suicide attacks, which have killed more than 450 Israelis in the past three and one-half years of violence. He said the bombings directed at Israeli civilians have damaged the Palestinian economy, given Israel cover to continue settlements and a building contentious West Bank barrier, and were morally wrong. “Such attacks were used as excuses to continue the comprehensive aggression and impose collective punishments, inthe road blocks and incursions, cluding which cause daily harm to the dignity of hundreds of thousand of innocent Palestinian citizens,” Qureia said. ...
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away to maximize this [undergraduate] experience for the students because the depth of the communication is much richordinating appointment times between er and [more] personal,” he said. These first changes are only the beginstudents and advisors. ‘The [online] system has some bugs ning of administrators’ efforts to evaluate and some of the main features aren’t Pratt advising. “We will continue to tweak [the new advising system] as time goes working, but if it were improved and working properly it would be very useful to 0n.... It is very much a work in progress,” both the students and the faculty,” said Sil- Laursen said. ‘We are trying to get on the via Ferrari, assistant professor ofmechaniright road to improve the system and this cal engineering and materials sciences was one of the first steps.” and a mechanical engineering advisor, Some Pratt students believe these upwho has experienced the online appointdates in the advising system will eventualment setbacks. ly provide benefits beyond mere knowlOfficials said the new website will faciledge of curriculum requirements. “The adviitate Pratt administrators’ sors have a pretty good tap goal of interpersonal communi“It’s good in theory, in that you on what the industries cation beyond are have more opportunities to talk discussion of doing and in what directions next semester’s to people who understand your the companies schedule. field... but I haven’t been able are “If we can moving,” said make curricusophoto see the benefits quite yet.” lum information more Sara OlivEmily Spataro, er, a civil engiavailable on the Internet, then rt e e r Pratt the student-advi“Consequently, sor talks can they know what evolve into conjobs are best versations about tailored to you summer internships and research inter- and what internships are best suited for ests,” Laursen said. “The website was an efyour interests.” However, some students have yet to fort to try to improve the frequency and see the effects of the advising updates. quality of the interaction between students and their advisors.” “It’s good in theory, in that you have Gary Ybarra, director of undergraduate more opportunities to talk to people studies for electrical and computer engiwho understand your field... but I neering, helped develop the new system haven’t been able to see the benefits and believes it will encourage students to quite yet,” said freshman Emily Spataro, take advantage of their undergraduate opa biomedical engineer. “I think that it will be much more useful when I’m a portunities. ‘The new advising system helps provide sophomore or junior.”
PRATT from page 3
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Second Annual UNC-Duke Lecture in Women’s Studies April 5,2004 5:30 PM in East Duke 2048
Reception to follow East Duke Parlors
DOROTHY ROBERTS Kirkland Ellis Professor, Northwestern University Law School Professor, Department of Sociology (courtesy), Faculty Fellow, Institute for Policy Research
“Family Planning Discourse and Development Policy in Trinidad & Tobago: A Case Study in Nationalism and Women’s Equality” This lecture is co-sponsored by Women’s Studies at Duke through the Charlotte Bunch Endowment and Women’s Studies at UNC through the Charles M. and Shirley F. Weiss Endowment Fund For Women’s Studies, African and African American Studies Program, Center forLatin American & Caribbean Studies, Duke University Law School, the English Department, the Franklin Humanities Institute, Germanic Languages and Literature, Markets and Management Studies Program, Master of Arts in Liberal Studies, the Department of Philosophy, Patterson Lecture Fund, the Department of Psychology: Social and Health Sciences, Romance Studies, the Sociology Department, the Vice Provost for Academic Affairs and the Provost’s Office, the Vice Provost for Interdisciplinary Studies.
h' )' i. ■ ( I’) f I v >) r 1 THURSDAY, APRIL 1,2003
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CIVILIANS from page 2 Instead, Fallujah’s streets were thick with men and boys and chaos. Men with scarves over their faces hurled bricks into the blazing vehicles. A group of boys yanked a smoldering corpse into the street and ripped it apart. Someone then tied a chunk of flesh to a rock and tossed it over a telephone wire. “Viva mujahadeen!” shouted Said Khalaf, a taxi driver. “Long live the resistance!” Nearby, a boy no more than 10 years old ground his heel into a burned head. “Where is Bush?” the little boy yelled. “Let him come here and see this!” Masked men gathered around him, punching their fists into the air. The streets filled with hundreds of people. “Fallujah is the graveyard ofAmericans!” they chanted. Several news crews filmed the mayhem. The images of a frenzied crowd mutilating bodies were reminiscent of the scene from Somalia in 1993, when a mob dragged a corpse of an American soldier through the streets ofMogadishu. That moment shifted public opinion and eventually led to an American pullout. The White House blamed terrorists and remnants of Saddam Hussein’s former government for the attack. ‘This is a despicable attack,” Scott McClellan, the White House spokesperson, told reporters, adding that “there are some that are doing everything they can to prevent” a transfer of sovereignty to an Iraqi government on June 30. American military officials said the violence in Fallujah, however chilling, would not scare them away. ‘The insurgents in Fallujah are testing us,” said Marine Capt. Chris Logan. ‘They’re testing our resolve, but it’s not like we’re going to leave. We just got here.” Logan, who is stationed at a large walled base on the outskirts of the city, said Fallujah is becoming “an area of greater concern.” Last week, a contingent of Marines, who recendy took over responsibility for Fallujah from the Army, fought gunmen in a running batde in which one Marine, a television cameraman and several Iraqi civilians were killed. ‘This is one of those areas in Iraq that is definitely squirrely,” Logan said. Christine Hauser contributed to this story.
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GAY MARRIAGE from page 2 already deeply divided. Utah’s Legislature also approved putting a ban on same-sex marriage on this year’s ballot, and a few other states may approve such measures before the end of this year’s legislative sessions. At the same time, Congress is considering an amendment to the U.S. Constitution. However, state lawmakers around the country have said they do not want to wait the years they expect it will require to get Congress to pass a federal amendment to the Constitution. In Georgia, surveys have shown that given the chance, most residents would support an amendment restricting marriage to heterosexuals. The 122-52 vote in the Democratic-con trolled House passed by just two votes. It had to pass by a two-thirds majority, an indication of how deeply the measure has divided lawmakers. The same bill was defeated by three votes when it came to the floor last month, and both supporters and opponents had been waging a fierce lobbying and public relations war ever since. With both Republicans and Democrats backing the resolution, the opposition fell largely on two groups those representing Atlanta and its suburbs, and a solid bloc of black legislators. More than three quarters of those who voted against the measure were members of the black caucus. In speeches before the votes were tallied, several black legislators compared the resolution to laws that once restricted the lives of blacks. “I believe marriage should be between a man and a woman, but never before have we amended the Constitution to take away rights,” said Rep. Calvin Smyre, a Democrat from Columbus and chair of the House Rules Committee. “I’m wondering today what the nation is thinking.” “This is a step backwards for the state of Georgia,” Smyre added. Until Wednesday, Smyre had successfully kept the measure bottled up in committee, but with two days left in the legislative session he yielded to pressure from the House speaker. —
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DIVERSITY
from page 3
pretty integrated,” freshman Shaundra Harris said. Harris, who is black, will be living with a Mexican-American, a second-generation Polish immigrant, a Lebanese student, an Asian-American and two white girls next year. And she thinks nothing of it. That sentiment is common among students, many of whom have to pause a moment before even remembering the race of their roommates. “Each residential college thinks a lot about diversity, and we like to do things to instill diversity in our communities,” said Steven Smith, master of Branford College. For faculty appointments, however, it is a slightly different story. In 2001, blacks made up 2.8 percent of the faculty, Asians comprised 8.2 percent, Hispanics were 1.9 percent and women made up 25.8 percent. In 1999, the university issued a number of policies designed to help diversify the faculty, including offering to help fund professorships given to women and minorities. Yet even after the policies were in place, there was only a 2 percent increase in minority faculty and a 2.1 percent increase in women since 1996. There is a prevailing sentiment among students that most faculty members are white men. Only one woman of color is tenured on the faculty and most students said they had never had a black professor. Faculty said the commitment to diversity is strong at the university level but departmental hiring does not necessarily take that into account. “A lot of authority for faculty hires is at the department level,” said Elizabeth Dillon, a member of the member of the
Women Faculty Forum and assistant professor of English and American Studies. “There is a disconnect between the administration’s interests and different departments that can have different cultures. Some are committed to diversity and some aren’t.” No university-wide mandates to increase the number of women or minorities among Yale’s faculty have been made public. Several students familiar with tenure affairs at the university said that even if such endeavors existed, the administration particularly Brodhead, who is partly responsible for tenure decisions—would likely not disclose them. In light of these observations, students have begun to question the institutional commitment to diversity. “Why is it that Yale works so hard to have this diverse undergraduate community yet the faculty and administrators aren’t as diverse?” asked sophomore Suriaya Jetha, a moderator of the Asian American Student Alliance. “Are they working from the ground up, or is it something else?” Controversies over issues of race in other areas of campus have been on the upswing since the spring of 2003, when students claim Yale President Richard Levin and Brodhead did not take enough action following a series of alleged incidents against anti-war protesters and minorities. The first incident came as a surprise to many students at Yale, who considered the historically tolerant school to be beyond threats against minorities or individuals expressing particular beliefs. Junior Katherine Lo reported to Yale officials and police that on March 27, 2003, a group of males entered her dormitory suite brandishing a wooden plank and wrote anti-Muslim hate speech on her locked bedroom door’s message board. —
The day before the purported incident Lo hung an American flag upside down in her window in response to American intervention in Iraq. Two weeks later, students reported discovering a threatening message on an anti-war flyer in front of the Afro-American Cultural Center, one of seven reported acts of alleged harassment or intimidation at the time. Many students in the school’s several cultural groups said the administration was less than responsive to the discrimination and threats. They criticized Brodhead for not disseminating enough information about the events to the entire community via e-mail and for not reacting to address the underlying ideas that motivated the events. Around 25 students, mosdy black and Arab, entered Levin’s office April 11 and refused to leave until Levin, Brodhead and Dean of Students Betty Trachtenberg agreed to sign a list of three demands—including e-mailing the student body an acknowledgment of the seven “violent events,” instigating disciplinary investigations of the incidents and arranging three meetings between Levin and the group. The administrators refused to accede to the conditions. However, Levin sent the Yale community an e-mail asserting that if the allegations were true, the perpetrators of the reported incidents could be subject to university sanctions. A group of students formed a new student organization, Concerned Black Students at Yale, specifically to force the administration to examine racial and diversity issues at the university. So far they say the administration is listening, but they have seen few results. ‘They take it seriously, but only to the extent of how they’re going to be regarded
by the outside community,” said sophomore Adrian Hopkins, a member of CBS. In response to student activism, Yale reinstated the Minority Advisory Committee in Fall 2003 after an eight-year hiatus. The committee —composed of 10 university officials, two graduate students and three undergraduates—is meant to address minority concerns on campus and provide the administration with policy advice. The group immediately came under fire, however, because the Yale College Council—the university’s student government body—was responsible for selecting the three undergraduate representatives on the 15 person committee. From 80 applicants, the YCC chose a white Jewish male, an Asian female and a homosexual man of mixed ancestry who identifies himself primarily as Hispanic. Students criticized the administration giving selection power to the YCC, which many describe as an overwhelmingly white body, and for the lack of a black-identified student. “Without the demands of CBS, who met often last spring with President Levin, the Minority Advising Committee would not exist now,” Pamela George, assistant dean ofYale College and Afro-American Cultural Center Director, told the Yale Daily News in January. “Even though CBS has worked tirelessly, how ironic that the AfricanAmerican student voice is now the one missing from the table.” Junior Elliot Moghul, president of the YCC, said the organization had taken considerable effort to include as many different perspectives as possible. For a long time, Yale has underscored its commitment to widespread diversity through special programs aimed at minority interests. SEE DIVERSITY CONT. ON PAGE 12
The Center for Judaic Studies and Asian and African Languages and Literature Welcomes
Professor Sidra DeKoven Ezrahi Senior Lecturer at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem
As Visiting Professor of Judaic Studies
Offering this Fall:
Representing the Holocaust Issues ofrepresenting the Holocaust through various cultural media. TTH at 4:25-5:40 AALL 156/256; C-L: Lit 1658,
Religion 16IK, Judaic Studies Advanced Modern Hebrew TThat 1:15-2:30 1255; C-L: CAS and Judaic Studies
THURSDAY, APRIL 1, 2003
THE CHRONICLE
NPI from page 3 Neighborhood Association, said some residents in her neighborhood have also talked about pulling out of the Neighborhood Partnership, especially after the University and neighborhoods failed to see eye-to-eye on initial rezoning plans for Central Campus. Some neighbors expressed concern last summer over the language in the terms governing a university-college zoning designation, which the University sought for various parts of its campus. More specifically, the University did not want to limit its retail options for future developments, while neighbors worried that certain types of retail on campus could hurt business in nearby shopping centers like Ninth Street. The University is considering rezoning Central Campus as a UC zone, but has not yet made a final decision on which zoning designation it will seek. ‘There were a lot ofcontentious feelings surrounding the UC zoning issue,” Dondero said. ‘There were some very vocal people involved in that process, and I think that at least one person would support removing all ties to Duke. There are probably some others who would support her in that.” Dondero noted that many people in her neighborhood perceived Duke’s role in the Neighborhood Partnership as “paternalistic” rather than as a true partner. Risa Foster, president of Trinity Heights Neighborhood Association, said she had also heard that some neighbors wanted to pull out of the Neighborhood Partnership, though she noted that she had heard no such requests from Trinity Heights residents. John Burness, senior vice president for public affairs and government relations, said those who want to pull out of the Neighborhood Partnership may be misinterpreting the University’s actions with regards to the initiative. He stressed that the University has tried since the Neighborhood Partnership was established in 1996 to communicate openly with its partner neighborhoods and that the initiative has never been guided by self-serving, image-driven motives as some neighbors have claimed. “It’s not surprising given the size and scope and power of Duke that any time we get involved in any type of partnership, there will be folks with concerns that we’ll wield that power,” Bumess said. “But one of the realities of the partnership, which makes it different from others around the country, is the degree to which we’re using an empowerment strategy. I can’t think of a program that we have initiated that didn’t come either directly out of a community discussion or wasn’t an idea we heard about and then brought to the neighborhoods to get their opinions on it first.” Bumess acknowledged that the University’s relationship with some of the neighborhoods has taken a hit since discussions began last year about UC zoning and retail space on Central Campus He added, however, that recent complaints have been largely unfounded. “With the zoning issues, some folks made a whole series of assumptions about Duke’s intentions,” he said, noting that concerns culminatedaround a “bogus issue” of a potential fence around East Campus. Bumess said the University has no plans to build a fence around its campus, but some neighbors have gotten caught up in the fact that the University refuses to enter a zoning agreement that would absolutely prohibit such a construction 50 years down the road. This disconnect, coupled with neighbors’ anxieties about retail plans for Central Campus, have combined to create a frustrating situation for University and neighbors alike. “I understand that there is a lot of concern about the Central Campus project, and as we try to clear up misconceptions and work towards a good solution, it’s not surprising that some neighborhood people would express uneasiness,” President Nan Keohane, who provid* ed the impetus for the creation of the Neighborhood Partnership, wrote in an e-mail. Keohane added, however, that the University has done its part in ensuring that the Neighborhood Partnership is a true partnership. “We began by asking neighborhood leaders—heads of neighborhood associations, pastors, business leaders, elected representatives, members of neighborhood betterment organizations—what their neighborhoods really needed, all 12 of them,” she wrote. ‘The ‘we’ was not Duke officials, but people we asked and members of city or county government who had left office and were interested in doing this job for a while.... And at every step of the way, we have continued to collaborate with these same neighborhood leaders and oth-
ers who have joined them.” Many neighbors believe the Neighborhood Partnership has been all that Duke promised when it was first established—open with communication and supportive of grassroots initiatives. “I feel like we have a very true partnership in every sense of the word,” said Rev. Luther Brooks of St. James Baptist Church, one of the University’s partners in the Neighborhood Partnership. “We’ve kept open lines of communication, which is what really makes it work for us. There have even been differences that we discussed, and we were able to come to amicable agreements.” John Heffernan, president of the Tuscaloosa-Lakewood Neighborhood Association and a member of the West End Quality of Life committee, also praised the Neighborhood Partnership for its collaborative approach. Both Brooks and Heffernan said they had heard no talk of pulling out of the Neighborhood Partnership. Others neighbors said they recognized a growing frustration with the University, noting, however, that pulling out of the Neighborhood Partnership may not
be the wisest decision “I know people’s levels offrustrations rise and fall when Duke makes decisions that aren’t necessarily what they’d like to see happen, and Duke sometimes still operates in a way that shows they’re not fully on the same page as everybody,” said Mark Eckert, a Burch Avenue resident. “But they’ll probably never be able to please everyone from all 12 neighborhoods, so they’re always going to have to make decisions that don’t sit well with some people.” Eckert said some ofhis neighbors have expressed an interest in withdrawing from the partnership, but noted that even an imperfect partnership might be better than no partnership at all. Myers Sugg, a Tuscaloosa-Lakewood resident, echoed Eckert’s sentiment. “What would you get by pulling out? Are you going to cut off your nose to spite your face?” he said. “People might not like everything that’s happening in the partnership, but unless they have the time, energy and commitment to spend on a project, Duke’s the only game in town for facilitating this type of change. So why not make the best of what you’ve got to work with?”
A panel and public conversation for Duke students, staff,faculty, and Durham community at large. Speakers will include:
Martina Dunford
.
Director, New Horizons School, Durham
John Schelp President, Old West Durham Neighborhood Association
Melvin Whitley President, Career Nursing Assistant Network of North Carolina (C.N.A.); Co-Facilitator, Durham Northeast Central Neighborhoods PAC 1
Rania Masri Southern Peace Research and Education Center Director, Institute for Southern Studies
Wahneema Lubiano Professor, African & African-American Studies/Literature Program, Duke University
Susan Kauffman Office of Public Affairs and Government Relations, Duke University
Donna Lisker Director, Women's Center, Duke University The program "Security;The Comforts and the Costs" will look at the issue of security in a broad context from Durham to the national and international levels. Speakers will call attention to the relationship of security to issues of Justice, legal as well as economic, and in relation to race and gender. We would like to ask if security and comfort can be secured by more gates, more police, more vigilance, more separation from those who we fear, and at what cost.
Sponsored by the Duke University Franklin Humanities Institute as part of the year long institute focus "Dissent: Past & Present." For more information, see:
111
http://www.duke.edu/web/institute/events/dissentoverview.html
THE CHRONICLE
THURSDAY, APRIL 1,2003
from page 3
who drafted and presented the resolution. “If Moneta is allowed to allocate this fee, what’s stopping him from reallocating in the future, taking money away from student groups?” Moneta could not be reached for comment. The resolution cited DSG SOFC bylaws stating that DSG was the only body that could collect, distribute and change the fee. DSG Executive Vice President Cliff Davison said the increase also violates bylaws of the Board of Trustees. Slovik said the fact that the resolution was absent from the agenda may have added emphasis to the overwhelming support senators gave it. “It’s a significant way to do it,” Slovik said. “Senator Rausen drafted the resolution and it was taken from the floor. Legislators listened to it, debated it and passed it.” DSG representatives noted they were not against the al-
location of additional funds, just the way in which it was implemented. “All we’re saying is that [Moneta] can’t institute a fee increase without asking us,” Rausen said. In the past, Moneta has defended the fee increase as necessary funding for improvements to resources for student groups, especially in the Office of Student Activities and Facilities. He could raise the fee without DSG’s approval because the money would go toward administrative costs and not student programming costs, he told The Chronicle in March. Following the activities fee resolution, Slovik introduced an amendment to the organization’s bylaws that would establish an independent auditing committee in response to the recent discovery of $140,000 in unspent DSC funds. The five-member committee would audit DSC three times a year and one randomly selected student group each week. “We’ve talked about fiscal responsibility, now we need to show it,” Slovik said. He added that the amendment, which will be put to a
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provide stricter oversight in allocating funds. “With such large amounts of money involved, we need to make sure that things are being double-checked,” Slovik said. Three resolutions on the agenda passed, including one promoting study abroad programs for the spring semester. Three times as many students enroll in study abroad programs for the fall semester as compared to the spring semester, an inequality University officials worry leads to housing problems. “DSG wants to maintain student choice for study abroad [programs],” Senator Josh Solera said. “But it realizes there are practical problems with such a disparity between the semesters.” Another resolution involved improving student access to study areas and a third resolution proposed changes to pre-major advising that would allow students to change advisors once if they feel their academic needs are not met.
DIVERSITY CONT.fro. page
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There are four cultural centers—the Afro-American Cultural Center, the Native American Cultural Center, the Asian American Cultural Center and La Casa Cultural, the latino cultural center —dedicated to programming for and representing specific groups. Three associate deans oversee the programs. Additionally, the university maintains about a dozen ethnic counselors, who live in frfcshman residence halls and offer support for minority issues, especially those concerning race. ‘They’re definitely there to let students know about activities and cultural shows,” said Jetha, adding that the counselors are there to help students adjust to Yale but also to spread diversity issues beyond the minority community. Cultural Connections, a pre-orientation program, used to be another mainstay of Yale’s support network for minority students. Brodhead, however, announced in an e-mail to undergraduates February 20 that he was opening up CC to any interested freshman. “It makes sense to invite all students to participate in the study and affirmation ofcultural difference and connection at the start of their college careers,” Brodhead wrote. The decision attracted criticism from some undergraduates because, they alleged, administrators did not seek community input. Duke recently decided not to open up its minority programs to all students, citing the historic lack of such opportunities for minority students. Many students at Yale, particularly former participants in CC, argued that the program is an essential part of integrating new students into the university. They noted that, especially given the scarcity of minority role models among the faculty, it was necessary to knit together the greater ethnic community at large.
See news happening? Call 684-2663 or e-mail university@chronicle.duke.edu
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The Chronicle's Arts and Entertainment Magazine
April 1, 2004, Vol. 6, No. 25
Hoad to the Final 66
66 outstanding documentaries will be screened this weekend at Durham’s Full Frame Film Festival, America’s premiere documentary competition. Bv C'orinne Low *
From
over 700 submitted films, 66 of the best new documentaries in the world have been selected for competition in this year's Full Frame documentary film festival. Filmmakers Michael Moore (,Bowling for Columbine) and Harry Shearer {This is Spinal Tap) will be discussing the role of documentaries in politics. MTV's Lauren Lazen and Entertainment Weekly's Owen Gleiberman will talk about the rising popularity of documentaries. Morgan Spurlock's critically lauded Supersize Me will be shown for the first time on the east coast. And it's all happening less than a mile from East Campus.
The nation's most comprehensive documentary film festival, Full Frame will bring everything from big Hollywood names to films that otherwise wouldn't be shown in the U.S. to Durham's own Carolina Theatre beginning tonight. Journalist and documentary photographer Nancy Buirski founded the festival in 1998, to fill what she saw as a void in forums for documentary filmmakers to showcase their work. Buirski said she picked Durham because she saw the Triangle as"a community full of people interested in new cultural opportunities." She enlisted the help of friend Martin Scorsese as well as the
Center for Documentary Studies to build a budget for this ambitious project. Since that first year, the festival has expanded to screen ninety-seven films before an audience of thousands. Chair of the film selection committee and Duke professor David Paletz noted that he saw this year's films as fitting into distinct subject categories, including war, politics and American society. Some of the most interesting films, though, are those that refuse to be categorized, like Chinese filmmaker Weijun Chen's To Live is Better than to Die. Paletz was pleasantly surprised that Chen's film, which follows a rural Chinese family living with AIDS,
chooses to focus on "the wonderful sense of life" of the family, rather than their impending deaths. Other standout films include Texas Hospitality, which analyzes the lastmeal requests of ten executed Texas criminals in relation to the killers and their crimes; Alone Across Australia (pictured above), the first-hand account of one man's trek on foot from coast to coast of Australia; and Chisolm '72, the story of the first Black congresswoman, Shirley Chisolm, who stunned America by running for the U.S. Presidency. continued on page 5
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Recess Editor
David Walters has a new girlfriend.... Meet Janey
Janet Jackson's new release dis-
appoints; her photo does not.
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Celebrity designer disasters Celebrities morph from actor to model to pop-diva faster than a J.Lo marriage falls apart. The newest incarnation of fame7 Everyone is a designer. Celebrity clothing lines are now taking over our closets with less than stellarresults. Recess looks at some notable names and their not-so-notable creations:
•Hillary Duff has been too busy writing witty lyrics to think of a name for her new teen clothing line. As a result, the line of Disney-friendly PG duds has been labeled "Stuff." •Gwen Stefani may be "just a girl," but there is no doubt that this girl has fashion sense. Don't be fooled by the beaded bags bearing her L.A.M.B. (Love Angel Music Baby) logos—underneath it all they are just Le Sportsacs. •You may not look like J.Lo or be able to afford to dress like her, but at least now you can have her name stitched on everything you own. Her whole line (even the workout clothing) is pretty much guaranteed to skankify and flaunt your bootylicious assets •Football-crazed blokes have been scooping up David Beckham's creations at Marks & Spencer since September of 2002. Now Beckham is reaffirming his metrosexuality by pushing a line of male cosmetics for Japan's Tokyo Beauty Centre. Not to be out-poshed by her husband, Victoria Beckham has informed "Hello" that her own line is in the works. •ChristyTurlington's Nuala yoga wear promises outstanding style and quality. But somehow we doubt that her $ 130 crop-yoga pants will elevate our derriere to supermodel status the next time we attempt downward-facing dog. —Gillian Barnard
•HAS SPRUNG ¥/Z the Brat Pack ¥/9 Mississippi Steve ¥/■/(> Trlstln Marlev ¥/17 Paddy Gi&oev ¥/13 Swaso ¥/i¥ Jesse Jane visit Jat*esJoycelrlshpuf>»cot* for the latest entertainment updates
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April 1,2004
oeces^—
Well beyond the bounds of good taste...
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Recess Exclusive:
this week in entertainment Over the weekend, we sent our devoted intern Recess Boy out to LA. to dig up the dirt on your favorite celebs, and we were not disappointed (like we usually are). The headlines: •Members ofThe Strokes, The Vines, The Hives, and The Shins Unite to Form The Thes •Recent Success of The Passion of The Christ Spawns The Passion ofThe Jenna Jameson •Bill Pullman, Bill Paxton Plan Merger •Randy Newman to Record Soundtrack for New Holocaust Epic •Christopher Walken Discovered to be Android; Few Shocked •Goober Grape: Condiment to the Stars •Oprah and Steadman Wed Drunken Late-Night Vegas Ceremony; Marriage Annulled Following Morning •Dolph Lundgren: Will Act for' Food •Peter Sellers, Dudley Moore Ri from the Dead for New Buddy Fill •Joe Dirt: Special Edition Se Release amid Oscar Buzz •'Charles in Charge' Charged; Scott Baio Accused of Assault with a Deadly Weapon •Ben Affleck Loses Left Testicle in High-Stakes Poker Game •Curious George to Appear for Prosecution in Jacko Trial —Sean Biederman
Hilary Lewis Pretend Petting Meghan Valerio Virtual Flirt Julia Fryett Fabricated Fondling Malavika Prabhu False Fornication Jon Schnaars Bogus Baby-making Paul Crowley Ersatz Straddling Robert Winterode Fictitious Fawning Gillian Barnard
Counterfeit.Kissing
Jen Wei Pseudo Sucking Jenny Mao Made-up Massage Recess is still looking for next year's Arts editor! Email jtsl4@duke.edu for information.
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A match made in imaginary-heaven This is the first of a three-part series chronicling the relationship of Recess Editor David Walters and his real imaginary girlfriend, ianey. Bad news, ladies. Yours truly is once again "off the market," and to be honest,! wish you could just be happy for me. Never in my wildest dreams could 1 have imagined finding a love like this: romantic letters professing undying affection in what I believe to be my darling's handwriting; light and lusty snapshots sent weekly of what I can only assume to be my sweetheart's honest-to-God, angelic visage; short but meaningful phone message forget-me-nots reminding me that, even though we've never met, 1 am handsome, witty and —above all—loved by Janey.Yes, Janey, my one-and-only imagi-
nary love.And it only cost me $39. Let's face it. Relationships are hard more trouble than they're worth, perhaps. You don'thave to be Emin Hadziosmanov to know that dating is dead at dear ol' Duke, and romance is a stressful, costly endeavor. Woe is you. What to do? The answer, of course, is in that big, lovable,"! don't mind testing the waters of prostitution" head ofyours. It's not online dating; that requires effort, it's www.imaginarygirlfriends.com, and it only requires a credit card. In mere minutes, love blossoms—no meeting, no greeting, no wining, no dining —just —
The happy couple poses for their very first picture together.
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sweet, simple pointing and cl your way to beautiful, fabricated that lasts two whole months honestly better than my average Imaginary Girlfriends calls itself a "service provided by a real life girl where she will pretend to be your long distance girlfriend by sending you personalized love letters, emails, pictures,... phone messages... and other girlfriend-like services." I call it just plain awesome.There are several reasons one might choose to purchase an imaginary girlfriend. It's a great way to trick your friends into thinking you have game. It's also good for making ex-girlfriends jealous that you've rebounded so quickly (and your new girlfriend doesn't even mind your unsightly back hair or cleft palate!). Or perhaps you're just lonely. Wanna know my reason? I'm a lazy sonofabitch. It's less expensive than buying dinnerand drinks every weekend, and my sweet little Janey hasn't pestered me once for leaving the toilet seat up or not returning her calls. Now that's what I call love. Admittedly,the initial selection process was a little off-putting. You only have about six options at any given time. I chose Janey because she reminded me of my first crush: Dottie from PeeWee's Big Adventure. My only real concern was her age. She's 18, and I'm 22, but true love knows no age—plus, she was the cheapest option. The 22-year-old was a whopping $45. You may call it robbing the cradle, but I call it being economical My first e-mail from Janey just this week was formal and instructional because there are rules. 1 needed to come
:h a history of our ;hip and let her anted her to play a ;ourse, I didn't want her to be anything but her sweet and genuine self. After all, true relationships are built on honesty. Next, I was informed that she would leave phone messages, but if I actually picked up the phone, she would not talk to me. I think it was the first time I told a girl, "I'll be out of the apartment from 2 p.m.to 5 p.m.on Wednesday, so that would probably be a good time to call." Ah, the games lovers play. And sure enough, when I checked my voicemail today, I heard the dulcet voice of my temporary soulmate, and to my delight, she "loves me" and "can't wait to see me again." She sounded a little strung out, but if I know my Janey, she was just flustered because she misses me so much. The best part about Imaginary Girlfriends is that I can break up with Janey any time I want, and she'll spend the rest of the two-month period begging me to take her back! But if these past few days have been any indication, 1 think I'll hold onto this imaginary love as long as I can. In fact, pick up a copy of Recess next week to read a hot new chapter in my freshly revamped love life. I'm expecting more letters, an IM conversation, maybe even an imaginary marriage proposal.... Who knows? And that's the best thing about love: It's a journey—a magical, sometimes terrifying road that leads to indescribable joy and, sometimes, costly therapy later in life.
Music
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Janets new album: Not so ‘super’ after all By Robert Winterode The ever-present beat and flawless production values are the hallmarks of every single Janet Jackson product since the'Bos. For all intents and purposes though, her latest album DamitaJo sounds more like "Jenny From The Block"than Janet from Rhythm Nation. On her new stuff, she's sporting a new J.Lo-ed-up name,the requisite'it'hip-hopper of the month cameo (Kanye West) and a set of vocals so brittle and sharp that in an effort to hide them, the album consists primarily of whispers and overwhelming club samples. While she's still on the dance floor, though, Janet's not commanding the beats like she has in the past.The former sometimes cybernetic (think of her collaboration with Busta Rhymes on "What's It Gonna Be?"), sometimes sensual, pop-dominatrix moans over a bunch offlat beats stolen haphazardly from the last thirty years of pop. This is not to say that DamitaJo is without a few gems."Strawberry Bounce," a multi-layered and insanely catchy collection of dance-track samples, works despite Janet's weak presence. On the album's eponymous track, where she introduces her new persona, another strong groove-filled framework again supports Janet's vocals.The same merits work for the songs"R&B Junkie"and"All Nite." And to prove that she's still got it, on "I Want You," she even slows down the melody to show that she can carry a note with minimal musical support. However, these cuts are rare on the sixty-nine minute stretch offlaccid beats and produced-todeath tracks.You realize the album is a multi-tiered failurewhen you hear the oddly-placed final track and first single,"Just A Little While." It starts out with a promising guitar riff, which is then mistakenly looped and spun out under a layer of toxic saccharine. By the end, it sounds like the soundtrack to a Six Flags commercial. This lack of imagination is depressing given the fact that Janet practically pushed musical sensuality farther than any other recent artist. Now, all we get is a sex track like "Moist" that rivals, only in terms of insipidness, the work ofher teen-pop rivals. Indeed, the dearth of creativity is present on every portion of the record, including the breasts-baring cover art and the lyrical content. As she's trying to get away with a copycat record, she—and her producers—seem to have truly forgotten the importance of audience-relevant songwriting.The spoken-word portions (e.g.'The Islands, Anguilla, that's my favorite,! love the islands, that's my escapism... I love humidity") are dreadfully banal and out-Glitter even Mariah. Indeed, the low point of the album comes three tracks in with "Sexhibition," which takes the idea present in the song title and extrapolate; it further, creating the new words "sexcapade,""sexploitation,"and "sexplore As Janet would say, this is my sexit "
Take Dis: Revenge on the radio By Robert Winterode For the past few months, Top4o radio has been a battleground. Two vengeful musicians have conquered the airwaves, lashing out at each other in song. First, Eamon's single,"F-ck It (I Don't Want You Back)," a jilted lover's tune, quickly won over the airwaves, but then an MC named Frankee utilized Eamon's own melodic formula to fashion a revenge-track of her own,"FU Right Back." The theatrics have progressed since then with Eamon first claiming and then denying that he was involved in the song's production in order to his original promote song, Frankee, for her part, says that not only did she create the song, but that she is also Eamon's ex-girlfriend, which he in turn denies. Frankee's musical response is typical of the "dis-track" genre. This unique facet of the pop music world demonstrates that any hit can be flipped on its head and re-recorded in a new way with the result manifesting itself as a biting put-down to an artist. Think Sporty Thievz's "No Pigeons," which inverted TLC's feminist rant,"No Scrubs/'The lines,"lf you don't have a car and you're walking / Oh yes son I'm talkin'to you" are replaced by "If
you got more than one baby father/ oh yes girl we's talkin'to you." Often "dis tracks" like the Frankee and Eamon affair will have a few wrinkles with respect to the identity of the adversaries. When Christina Aguilera seemingly spoofed Eminem with "Will the Real Slim Shady Please Shut Up?" the singer wasn't our favorite X-tina, but an unknown artist named Emily Ellis posing as her. Even then, verbal quips like "You all act like you never heard a white person before"and "And Dr. Dre (laugh) did everything, you idiot" are some of the most memorable pop tidbits in years. While the disses usually manifest as responses to expendable radio songs, they do make pop just a little more interesting. They perform two contradictory functions: While they seemingly degrade an artist's music and reputation, the tracks also pay ironic tribute to the musical artistry of the musician or band behind the original song. Then again, the most heinous "dis tracks"can just be badly performed cover songs like Britney Spears'rendition ofThe Rolling Stones' "Satisfaction." Britney botching classic rock-and-roll: Now that's just mean.
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An emphasis on the South By Corinne Low
Supersize Me director Morgan Spurlock isn't Michael Moore, but his new documentary will be going into wides release soon. Above, a scene from the film,
$4O Million Man? A jaded movie-going audience rediscovers the documentary.... Bv Corinne Low According to legendary filmmaker Ken Burns, "big dick" and all. Although footage of the genital documentary filmmakers "take a vow of poverty reconstruction surgery might seem too reminisand anonymity." Burns' documentary on the Civil cent of "Extreme Makeover," Buirski explained War has been seen by over 100 million people that the difference between this type of film and worldwide. So much for anonymity. Michael reality shows on Fox is the complexity with which Moore's Bowling for Columbine has grossed over the story is told. Rather than offering what she called "a capsule of reality," documentaries such $4O million. So much for poverty. Gone are the days when documentary filmmakas Rene's Story follow their characters over an extended period of time. ing was considered the "second Additionally, Buirski pointed out cousin" of the movie business. Festival founder Nancy Buirski, who that several big documentaries have gained large audiences with will be moderating a panel on "the less flashy subjects. An early festiheyday" of documentaries, believes favorite, Morgan Spurlock's docuval this phenomenon .of popular Supersize Me, uses the gimmick of a mentaries represents the ushering in new era. across thirty-day all fast-food diet to of a Audiences are that documenbreathe life into its subject of realizing America films are art their own in tary right, weight gain and fast food. Other and deserve to be seen on the big high-profile documentaries, such screen just like any other movie. as Moore's Bowling for Columbine, have successfully used unique narDuke Political Science professor David Paletz pointed to the "death of ratives to give policy issues mass appeal. Buirski noted that in these narrative in Hollywood movies" as the cause of the documentary types of films, "whether you agree The protagonist of Rene's Story. boom. Buirski, however, commented with [the filmmaker] or not, you're that perhaps people are finally realizing that "truth seduced by the storytelling." What the documentary craze really comes down really is more exciting than fiction." With the age of reality-TV, it's easy to dismiss to is our fascination with the human condition. popular documentaries as just another outlet for Buirski concluded:"lfyou have a true story told well, America's voyeurism. After all, one of the films at people are going to be grabbed by it." this year's festival, Rene's Story: the Opposite Sex The panel discussion "Docs in their Heyday: follows a character undergoing the transformaComing to a Multiplex near You" will be held at the tion from woman-living-as-man to full-out man, Durham Arts Council tomorrow at 1 p.m.
continued from page 1
An especially pertinent film to current world events is Home of the Brave —Land of the Free, which features footage from a Norwegian film crew following U.S. forces in Afghanistan. Paletz commented that he found the film particularly compelling because it showed a view of the war that hadn't been shown on television at all. The film presents depictions of American soldiers whose good—though naive—intentions "don't necessarily achieve good results." A particularly crowd-pleasing film promises to be Metallica:Some Kind of Monster, which follows the band as they ironically undergo group therapy for, among
In honor of its North Carolinian roots, Full Frame will feature five films with Southern themes.Three of these films are included in the Southern Sidebar, a Full Frame tradition of revisiting documentaries set in the South or directed by Southerners.This year's sidebar will discuss southern politics through the century. Ken Burns' 1985 film Huey Long tells the story of a corrupt but fascinating politician who gained near-dictatorial power by championing the poor in the poverty-stricken state of Louisiana. Paul Stekler's The Last Man Standing follows two hotly contested 2002 elections in the home state of George W. Bush. Rounding out the Southern theme, David Grubin's LBJ chronicles the fascinating political career of a true Southerner turned American president. Two other films with Southern themes happen to be set in North Carolina. Tobacco Money Feeds My Family, a film in competition, tells the story of three farmers battling a changing industry and uncooperative landscape. Beyond simply being set in the South, this film addresses the unique challenges facing Southerners in the face of a newly globalized and modernized industry. An invited film, Where Do You Stand? Stories from an American Mill, shows the same struggle from a different perspective: that of workers battling unfair conditions in a notoriously anti-union area of the country. Stand is set in Kannapolis, N.C., against the backdrop of the faltering textile industry. The unionization of Canon mills came after twenty-five years of struggle and represented the largest union victory in a nonpublic Southern industry. Filmmaker Alexandra Lescaze described her film as an effort to show that "the right to unionize exists on paper, but in practice it's very different." Mill chronicles the struggle of prounion workers as they are threatened and abused by a company where loyalty, although touted as the number one value, is frequently one-sided.
other things, the anger that has served as the catalyst for so much of their music. In addition to the films in competition, the festival will also feature nine invited films from more established filmmakers, including Heir to an Execution, by Ethel and Julius Rosenberg's granddaughter Ivy Meeropol, and excerpts from Ken Burns' new work-inprogress, Unforgivable Blackness: The Rise andFall ofJack Johnson. Other exciting events at the festival will include a curated program on hybrid filmmaking, the new phenomenon of films that blend documentary footage with acted material. The festival will screen fifteen of these fact/fiction mergers, including Martin Scorsese's
Goodfellas and Al Pacino's critically acclaimed Looking for Richard. Two notable panel discussions are "Docs in their Heyday: Coming to a Multiplex near You," a look at the boom of documentaries in the popular genre, and "Documentary as the Swing Vote," which will examine the effect of information in documentaries on the voting public. There will also be special evening events with Harry Shearer, who, in addition to his film credits, voices several characters on "The Simpsons," and controversial filmmaker Michael Moore. The Full Frame Documentary Film Festival will run this weekend at the Carolina Theatre. Visit www.fullframefest.org for schedule and ticketinformation.
Arts
Watch out, Chapel Hill! Durham is set to bring on the Arts with its Cultural MasterPlan By Meghan Valerio In an effort to open up opporunities for involvment in the Arts, the Durhajn Convention and Visitors Bureau and Durham Arts Council has unveiled the Durham Cultural Master Plan. Intended to preserve what exists in Durham's cultural landscape, such as Durham's extensive murals, and promote its expansion, the Master Plan will promote cultural festivals and events like the Durham Blues Festival. It's part of the "build it and they will come" philosophy of tourism and promotion. For the Plan's purposes, "culture" is "a broad range of traditional and nontraditional, commercial and non-profit providers, venues and participant groups in arts, history, sciences and humanities."From the Museum of Life and Science to Manbites Dog Theater, to the Duke Homestead and Tobacco Museum, Durham has a bit of culture for everyone.The key is letting people know about itâ&#x20AC;&#x201D;and developing even more for people to know about.
Part of the Plan's objective is to make Durham more competitive with the more culturally well-known and well-funded Chapel Hill, with its abundance of galleries, concerts and festivals. Although Chapel Hill has more prominent programming and a more recognizable cultural reputation, Durham's variety of theaters, scientific projects, art spaces and venues could serve as an attraction in North Carolina and provide Durham residents with more ready access to cultural enrichment. The Plan's steering committee argues that a culturally aware and involved citizen is a more productive one, and that Durham has the potential for a thriving "creative class" of writers, teachers, researchers and even homemakers. Someone actively involved in community culture becomes, de facto, involved in the community.Creative pursuits, because they tend to have an air of fun and relaxation, bring people together in a
'More opportunities for the arts' is the message from the Durham Arts Council (above) in downtown Durham
positive atmosphere To maximize the work of the Master Plan, the Convention and Visitors Bureau, which works primarily with Durham businesses catering to Durham visitors, has been soliciting resident feedback and encouraging community members to hold their own meetings on what they would like to see in a culturally thriving Durham.The Bureau has been investigating the presence of cultural events
in neighborhoods and families, and how people find out about such events. It looks to include the arts in cross-cultural understanding, and in retaining and attracting business to the area. What, then, will all the focus groups and discussion sessions lead to? The next step is to evaluate the information and make a cultural road map for Durham. Hopefully, that map will put Durham on the map in years to come.
Bbod Weddings-. A passionate affair By Lexi Richards The theater department's rendition of Blood Weddings by Spanish playwright Federico Garcia Lorca is an intense production of an already emotionally loaded story. All aspects of the show including the acting, makeup and set designâ&#x20AC;&#x201D;are effective in expressing the emotion involved in the play's main conflict between desire and reality. The principle actors are all convincing, but the two lead actresses Caroline Haubold and Kymberlie Stansell are the standout performers. As the groom's mother, Haubold not only executes the part of a grieving and angry woman, but also provides necessary comic relief when appropriate. The show is divided between the plot acted out by the lead actors and Lorca's poetry performed by the supporting cast. Unfortunately, these performers are overly dramatic in a manner typical of many college actors. While the leads are able to act out the plot of the play, the rest of the ensemble should have concentrated on delivering their poetic lines as opposed to prancing around the stage, overdoing every movement. The scenery is well done and is a vast improvement over many of the other productions that have been put on recently in Sheafer Theater. The music, a live guitar, is an asset as well, adding to the emotion of each scene without distracting from the action. The few lyrics are in Spanish, along with sporadic ,
â&#x20AC;&#x201D;
phrases which are helpful in reminding the audience of the play's origin. The theatrical importance of Blood Weddings will be apparent to all those who have any knowledge of Spanish theater or literature, but the style of Lorca's play may seem emotional and outlandish to those unfamiliar with it. Death and the moon are characters in the play, and their sudden appearance in the third act can be somewhat confusing to the viewer. In fact, a little boy in the audience cried upon death's appearance onstage. As often as inexperience is evident in productions on campus, Director Rafael Lopez-Barrantes' skill and experience shows up in Blood Weddings. Compared to performances done completely by students, this play has a polished and professional quality that comes from the involvement of a theater professor. The play is the final product of a semester's worth of work by Professor Barrantes' theater studies class, and he is very pleased and proud with the results. He chose this particular work to perform because he believes it can appeal to young adults such as Duke students, who are in the process of making decisions between desire and obligation. Performances of Blood Weddings will be held April 1-3 at 8 p.m. and April 4 at 2 p.m., in Sheafer Theater, located in the Bryan Center.
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(heck out Chekhov: celebrating the work of Russia’s greatest storyteller By Irie Turner It's the weekend, and you need an intoxicating setting the story in a rural, southern trailer park Russian eye opener. For stimulation, put down the and naming it Trailer Park Chorus Girl. Another Absolut and instead try out this weekend's centengroup of UNC students will be putting on their vernial Chekhov celebration to explore another of sion of A Work of Art —in Russian. Duke Theater Russia's great exports, dramatist Studies professor Jeffrey and short-story writer Anton West will round out the afterPavlovich Chekhov. This weeknoon performances, directing end's conference culminates a theater students in short year-long project between scenes from one of Chekhov's Duke and UNC designed to celmost famous plays, Three ebrate 100 years of Chekhov's Sisters. The Duke Russian life after [his 1904] death. The Chorus (yes, Duke has a word "conference" doesn't usuRussian chorus) will serenade ally scream entertainment, but the audience after the skits. this isn't your typical conferIn the evening, Duke ence: The schedule includes Students will perform anothstudent performances, food er Chekhov-inspired play and, of course, scholarship based on The Siren. Chekhov's The conference features sevstory features a group of huneral student performances writworkers who gry civil ten or inspired by Chekhov; become so engrossed with their comic plays prove that discussing food that they are Chekhov "was not all moaning unable to work because of and as Duke groaning," their whetted appetites. The Professor Carol Flath, conceiver Duke version, set in a law and planner of the conference, Anton Chekhov, Russian dramatist, short-story writer and firm, is called The Siren's Song said.Three of Saturday's perforfaithful LensCrafters customer since 1887. and will be followed by a mances, Trailer Park Chorus Girl, S/ren-inspired dinner in case A Work of Art and The Siren's Call are winners of a the audience is similarly paralyzed with hunger. UNC student contest to adapt a Chekhov story into (Note: A full-length performance of Chekhov's The a short scene. Saturday afternoon, one group will Seagull produced by Duke alum Carla Brackman is perform a rethinking of Chekhov's The Chorus Girl, playing at Temple Ball Gallery in Carrboro.The 8:15
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p.m. performances started yesterday and run through April 3.) "[What is] unique to this conference is that it's a combination of students and scholars," said Flath. Indeed, though there is a heavy scholarly aspect to the conference, the Wilson faculty-in-residence professor said that speakers understand the event is not a scholars-only club. Speakers will include one of the best-known Chekhov scholars, Moscow's Vladimir Kataev, Columbia University's Cathy Popkin, playwright Brook Stowe and UNC's professor emeritus Paul Debreczeny, who will discuss the connection between Chekhov and Russian landscape artist Isaak Levitan. The Chekhov conference is a chance for lovers of Chekhov or performance and literature in general to enjoy one of literature's finest writers. Planners hope the conference will be a place where students and faculty can get together, have some fun and share an appreciation for great writing. Events begin tomorrow and take place on the campuses ofDuke and UNC; most talks are Saturday from 9 a.m. until 12:15 p.m. in Perkins' Breedlove Room. Performances take place Saturday from 1:30 p.m. to 3:00 p.m. in 305 Languages and before the 6:30 dinner in the Marketplace's Upper East Side. Lunch and dinner will be provided at 12:45 p.m. and 6:30 p.m., respectively. Those interested should e-mail Carol Flath today to RSVP. Tickets are free, but dinner tickets must be picked up at an event. For a complete schedule or to RSVP for lunch or dinner, e-mail Carol Flath at flath@duke.edu.
Sports
The men’s tennis team shutout ACC foe N.C. State 7-0 in a re-scheduled match against the Wolfpack at Sheffield Indoor Tennis Center last night. SEE PAGE 14
Check out The Chronicle’s 2004 Final Four Preview, featuring matchups, breakdowns, player profiles and opinion pieces for everything you need to know about Duke at the Alamo. COMING TOMORROW
THE POINT OF} Ulx t»-
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Elon thumps Thompson, shaky bullpen
PERSONALITY *»
A little over a year away from Duke, Greg Paulus already plays like a champ by
f
After the High Point Panthers’ poor
pitching handed Duke many of its runs in a comeback win Tuesday, the baseball team’s hurlers did in the Blue Devils as
THE CHRONICLE
they lost, 13-5, to Elon yesterday
Paulus is not your
defense. His smooth, nearly effortless throwing mechanics allow him to throw the football with great accuracy and velocity up to 50yards down the field. In addition to being one of the nation’s top point guards, he is also the nation’s top
BASEBALL afternoon. A total of six LATHAM PARK pitchers took the ETON, N.C. mound for Duke (15-14) yesterday, and only two of them were able to keep Elon (14-15) from scoring. Senior Kevin sufThompson fered his second loss of the season, giving up eight runs in two and a third in innings pitched. The Blue Devils’ bullpen, while it has improved, was inconsistent again, combining to allow nine hits and five earned runs. “Basically, we didn’t pitch well,” head coach Bill Hillier said. “Kevin Thompson had a chance to get out of the second inning and give up only one run, but we made an error, and then there were a couple of hits. We just had one of those days where things just did not go well for us.” The Blue Devils jumped out to an early 3-0 lead after the first inning when Mike Miello and Bryan Smith combined for the three RBIs. Elon answered in the bottom of the inning with a run off a sacrifice fly in foul territory when Javier Socorro was not able to throw the ball in to catch Evan Tartaglia at home. However, that was just the beginning for the Phoenix, who scored eight more runs in the next
SEE PAULUS ON PAGE 16
SEE ELON ON PAGE 18
ordinary Duke basketball
William Avery
Jay Williams
Livingston/Dockery
recruit. Head coach Mike Krzyzewski has recruited immensely talented point guards before. Guards such as Tommy Amaker and Bobby Hurley were program-changers, players who won game after game for Krzyzewski, putting the Blue Devils on the national map and turning Duke into one of basketball’s winningest programs. Paulus is certainly that type of recruit. A 6-foot-2 junior point guard from Manlius, N.Y, Paulus, is the consummate floor general, capable of nailing a three-pointer or dishing out a nifty assist in a pinch. Like many Blue Devil recruits before him, he is one of the nation’s top players. He battles through nightly double- and triple-teams to average a staggering 23 points and eight assists per game, and he has already scored a whopping 1,861 points in his career for Christian Brothers Academy (CBA). He is a winner, too; Panins’ high school basketball teams have won two sectional championships and four straight league championships. He has taken—and made—several game-winning shots in his career. According to Buddy Wleklinski, Paulus’ coach, the Duke staff often likened him to Bobby Hurley. “They put him in the frame of the [John] Stocktons and the [Steve] Nashes, a tough, poised
:
Pauius has drawn comparisons to Bobby Hurley, John Stockton and Steve Nash on the basketball court—and he's still the No. 1 quarterback prospect in the country.
point guard—the leaders,” Wleklinski said. “That’s what he is and that’s what they like about him.” Paulus is also an accomplished quarterback; in fact, he is the reigning New ’fork State Player of the foar in the top classification. He has the capability to outrun a
Before by
Sarah Kwak
THE CHRONICLE
Michael Mueller
Greg
by
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Chrissie Gorman THE CHRONICLE
Last week Liz Janangelo teed off in Rancho Mirage, Calif., for the LPGA Kraft Nabisco Championship against some of the best golfers in the world, including Annika Sorenstam and Michelle Wie. Tuesday, she was back in the Gothic Wonderland as the ultimate student athlete—balancing her courses as a sophomore history major with her place at the top of the Duke women’s golf team and the national
collegiate rankings.
Janangelo played with thethe boys'golfteam in high “It’s difficult,” really schooland Is now college's No. 1 women'sgolfer. Janangelo said. “I think peo-
LPGA, Janangelo living it up pie don’t realize the amount
of time that we miss [for a tournament]. We leave on Wednesday and get back Sunday. I try to take my work on the road with me. I have a lot of respect for athletes who have incredible GPA’s.” At the Nabisco Championship, Janangelo finished in a 40th place tie in a field filled with the some of the best professional golfers in the world. the In field, amateur Janangelo was only behind Wie and Jane Park. “It was an honor to receive the exemption to play,” Janangelo said. While she golfed in the first
of the LPGA’s four major
practice and you tee the ball, you’re playing with the best teammate Virada Nirapathplayers in the country,” pongporn, the rest of the Duke Janangelo said. The team is not only comsquad competed in the Liz Murphy Collegiate. While posed of the best players, but Duke did suffer its first lost of also Janangelo’s best friends. the season, it managed a Janangelo, who plans to go remarkable third-place finish pro after college, cites the without its two best golfers. team camaraderie as reason Janangelo may lead the enough to play as a collegian team and the nation, but her before starting a career on the fellow Blue Devils are not far LPGA Tour. behind on the national rank“The relationships you build ings. Freshman Brittany Lang is through college tour play are ranked fourth, Nirapathpongimportant because golf is a porn sixth, freshman Anna lonely sport,” Janangelo said. Grzebien ninth and Leigh “You want to build friendships Anne Hardin 16th. SEE JANANGELO ON PAGE 18 “Everyday when you have
championships
alongside
THE CHRONICLE
U\ THURSDAY, APRIL 1,2004 MEN’S TENNIS 7 |N.C. STATE 0
Rain or shine, it's a sweep by Ryan Pertz THE CHRONICLE
The men’s tennis team, making its case as one of the top teams in the country, dominated N.C. State yesterday in a rescheduled match at Sheffield Indoor Tennis Center. The Blue Devils (14-5, 4-1 in the ACC) swept the Wolfpack (5-11,1-4) with a perfect score of 7-0 by winning eight of the nine matches on the night. Against a basement team of the ACC Duke did not falter, defending its number eight team
LEAH HARRELL/THE CHRONICLE
Phillip King won in singles play, 6-1,6-1about as handily as his teammates did last night.
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ranking nationally. “N.C. State is very improved, and they’re fighting a lot harder than they used to,” head coach Jay Lapidus said. “We played a very good match up and down.” The evening started out well, as thirdranked partners Ludovic Walter and Jason Zimmerman won big with a score of 8-1. A second Duke duo of Phillip King and Jonathan Stokke, ranked 12th nationally, also dominated N.C. State’s doubles at the No. 2 slot, Connor Taylor and Andre Iriarte. One of the few close battles of the night came at No. 3 doubles. Duke’s Stephen Amritraj and Peter Rodrigues started the match strong, taking the first three games. But N.C. State’s Val Banada and William Noblitt battled back to bring the score to a tie at 5-5. The Duke tandem was not able to come out on top, with the only loss of the night a close 8-6 score. Despite the loss, the Blue Devils still had the 1-0 match advantage going into singles play. “Playing indoors is good for Jason and I. At the start of the spring season we won almost every match because they were indoor,” Walter said. “Tonight we played more aggressively, which is what we’ve been working on: getting closer to the net.”
In singles, it was more of the same strong play from team standout and senior leader King. The seventh-ranked King controlled his match against Taylor, scrambling for the ball in two straight 6-1 sets. “Phillip wins a lot with his legs,” Lapidus said. “He’s very quick, and he wins a lot by frustrating guys by getting a lot ofballs back.” Rodrigues, after losing his doubles match, started his singles off with a strong 50 jump and was able to handily defeat the Wolfpack’s Will Shaw 6-2, 6-3. Stokke struggled at first with his Wolfpack counterpart, Jon Davis, finding himself in a small 2-3 hole. But Stokke rallied for 10 straight games to win his two sets, 6-3, 6-0. Walter also easily handled his opponent, Banada, playing aggressively and in control in his 6-2,6-3 win. “I was playing serve and volley because 1 want to take advantage of my serve,” Walter said. [Earlier] in the season I was getting tired a lot, but now I’m fresh again since I had a couple of days off.” Zimmerman played the longest match of the night in a closely contested battle for the. first set at the No. 4 spot. He was consistently ahead for the start of the match, but the Wolfpack’s Iriarte would not bow out, coming back to lead the first set 6-5. But Zimmerman prevailed in that stanza and was able to find the breaks to win the second set. There was a lineup change at the No. 6 six spot, where junior Peter Schults made his first appearance for the Blue Devils this season. Schults made the best ofhis opportunity, oudasting his N.C. State opponent 7-5 in the first set and winning the second set by a large margin, capping off a successful team effort on the night. ‘Tonight, we fought well and played a strong match,” Lapidus said.
ive
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12:00 Noon
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Lou Williams Center West Union*
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APR 12, 2004 4:00 PM
Rare Book Room, Perkins Library '
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Apr
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Franklin Center 240 Series coordinated by the Fi
President, the Office of the Office of the Provost; the departments of African Cultural Anthropology, English, History, Literature, i &
Women’s Studies: the Center for Global Studies and Studies, the Duke Fllm/Video/Olgltal program, the r University Press, Duke OUT, the Duke Women's Franklin Center. Additional support provided by Humanities Central" project at Duke.
on Duke University’s East Campus 12pm,Fun Run 12:30pm, Competitive Race Register today at www.active.com (click on Running and then search for Active Bodies for Active Minds), or use $lO Flex, Check, or Cash on the BC walkway First 300 registered participants receive a free t-shirt For more info visit www.duke.edu/web/activeminds
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For more detailedInformation on any of these events.
Student Health (enter A Joint Program of Community & Family Medicine and Student Affairs.
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THECHKdNICLE
THURSDAY, APRIL 1, 200 4 |l5
WOMEN’S TENNIS 5 | WAKE FOREST 2
Comeback slam of Wake makes it 12 straight by
Mike Van Pelt
THE CHRONICLE
After beginning the match poorly, the third-ranked Duke women’s tennis team rebounded to defeat No. 22 Wake Forest, 5-2. The team began the match flat, losing the doubles point 2-1. Kristin Cargill and Jennifer Zika fell 8-4 to put the Blue Devils (13-1, 4-0 in the ACC) down a match to Wake (9-8, 1-4). Then Tory Zawacki and Julia Smith earned the lone doubles win for Duke by defeating the Demon Deacons’ Ashlee Davis and Katie Martzolf 8-4 in No. 1 doubles. In the deciding contest, Amanda Johnson and Saras Arasu were unable to hold on for the win. They had a 6-5 advantage but faltered, giving Wake Forest a 9-7 victory and the team doubles point. “At the beginning of the match our doubles played sloppily,” Duke head coach Jamie Ashworth said. Recognizing his team was not playing up to its potential, Ashworth tried inspiring his team before it returned to the court for singles action. “All I said after the doubles was, ‘Believe in yourselves, believe in each other, and the results will take care of themselves. Talent-wise we have a better team.’” Even at the start of the singles action, the women were struggling to find their game. Zika was quickly defeated by the nation’s 22nd-ranked player, Karin Coetzee, 6-1, 6-0, at second singles and Duke trailed 2-0. But then the Blue Devils won their first contest of the night, and the first of five consecutive victories, as sophomore Julia Smith earned a fi-4, 6-1 decision.
BEN WOLF/THE CHRONICLE
Amanda Johnson, the nation'sNo. 7 player, fell in doublesaction as the Blue Devils fell behind early, but she shot back with a 7-6,6-1 victory in singles play. “We got a tougher match than we expected,” Ashworth said. “That comes from working with the freshmen. Once they realized they were in for a fight they started playing.” The other two freshman, Cargill and Zawacki, were able to win their respective matches in straight sets. Cargill defeated her opponent 6-4, 6-1 at the sixth-slot, and
Zawacki won 7-5, 6-2 at third singles. Saras Arasu, who is currendy ranked 93rd, won her tenth straight singles match. It was not without a fight, however, as she had to overcome an early 3-0 first set deficit before going on to win 6-4, 6-0. Seventh-ranked Amanda Johnson finished the match with a 7-6, 6-1 win against Wake Forest’s Davis.
According
to
their coach, the lackluster
performance taught the Blue Devils, especially the freshman, about how they need to approach every contest. “Being ranked where we are in the country, they have to expect that they will have a target on their back,” Ashworth said. “They’re going to get the best of whoever they play.”
Summit Square 100S: Communication, Improvisation, and Business AL, lAA
Location: East skills and presence
Communication for leadership in the business world through empowerment of others. Use of theater techniques (presence, voice, body gesture, text presentation and listening) to teach methods of leadership, action, and self-expression that motivate the results, enhance collaboration, and heighten confidence in oneself and others. Instructor: Hemphill
1495.1: Movement for the Theater Location: East AL, lAA This course will use a challenging mix of stretching, yoga, Pilates, balance, strength building, and acrobatics to increase physical presence for the actor. Students will work individually and with partners to obtain an increased physical awareness, liberation from
injuries, and heightened charisma on stage.
Consent of instructor is required. Instructor: O'Berski C-L: Dance 181S.1
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Through research and performance students will explore the work of The Federal Theater Project and the Living Newspaper; Bertolt Brecht and
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The Berliner Ensemble; Peter Schumann and The Theater; The San Francisco Mime Troupe, Augusto Boal, and the Theatre of the Oppressed; and Reza Abdoh, Tony Kushner and the Politics of Plague. The work of these
Bread and Puppet
artists will be studied in their historical context as well as to their contemporary relevance. A balance between weekly reading assignments,
writing and performance comprise the work required in this course. Consent of instructor is required. Instructor; Storer C-L: English 179ES 5
181A.3: Shakespeare’s Contemporaries (Workshop) Location: East An in-depth study of selected plays and songs of the Jacobean period of English theater, with particular emphasis on the theater’s role as a
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reflection of the culture of its time social, and its political, economical, historical relationship to the “New World”. Consent of instructor required. Instructor; Morris C-L:
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1495.3: Acting for the Camera Location: East AL, lAA An introductory course designed to acquaint students with the unique requirements of working in film and television. Work will include investigating the practical world of a television and
film set, the vocabulary of production, physical demands on the actor, and looking at the same text on stage and on film. Students will work both behind and in front of the camera to gain experience. Consent of instructor is required. Instructor; West
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Career over, but more awards for Beard
JANE HETHERINGTON/THE
CHRONICLE
AlanaBeard won the USBWA player ofthe year.
Despite a disappointing end to her collegiate career in the Elite Eight of the NCAA tournament, women’s basketball star Alana Beard continues to receive recognition for her accomplishments, being named the United States Basketball Writers Association Player of the Year Wednesday. Beard, who earlier this season was named the ESPN.com Player of the Year, averaged 19.7 points, 5.4 rebounds, 3.9 assists, 2.4 steals and 1.4 blocks per game while leading Duke to its first-ever season-ending No. 1 ranking in the Associated Press Poll. With 2,687 career points, the Shreveport, La., native will leave Duke as the all-time leading scorer in school history, having surpassed
Johnny Dawkins’ previous record of 2,556 in her final regular season game against North Carolina State. She is also the first man or woman in NCAA history to record 2,500 career points and 400 career steals during her four years with the Blue Devils. Also Wednesday, Beard was named one of the top-five finalists for the inaugural Women’s Wooden Award All-American team. She and fellow finalists Kelly Mazzante of Penn State, Nicole Powell of Stanford, Diana Taurasi of Connecticut and Shereka Wright ofPurdue will be invited to Los Angeles for the presentation of the Wooden women’s college basketball player of the year award on April 9. —Catherine Sullivan
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An Interdisciplinary Certificate Program at Duke University
Fail 2004 COURSE OFFERINGS SOC 142 D SOC 144 SOC 155 SOC 159 PPS 146 MMS 190.01 MMS 190.02 MMS 190.03 MMS 190.04 Elective
Organizations Global Competitiveness Technology and Organizational Environments &
K.Spenner P. Volpe E.Jones C.Nordgren
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Organizations & Management
Sociology of Entrepreneurship Leadership, Development, & Organizations
Markets & Markets & Markets & Markets &
11:55 12:45 pm 10:20-11:10 am 7:30- 8:45 pm 6:00- 7:15 pm 1:15- 2:30 pm 1:15- 2:30 pm 2:50 4:05 pm 4:25 5:40 pm 7:30 -10:00 pm
Management (capstone) Management (capstone)
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Management (capstone)
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Management (capstone)
G. Gereffi B.Gao S. Veraldi E.Jones A. Brown
Cultural Anthropology CA 110 D Economics ECO 140 ECO 151 ECO 157 ECO 165 ECO 181 ECO 188 ECO 189 Education EDU 140
Advertising & Society: Global Perspective
MW
10:20-11:10 am
W. O’Barr
Comparative Economic Systems Basic Finance & Investments Financial Markets & Investments American International Economic Policy Corporate Finance Industrial Organization Business & Government
MW TTH TTH MWF TTH WF TTH
10:20-11:10 am 1:15- 2:30 pm 1:15- 2:30 pm 8:45- 9:35 am 2:50 4:05 pm 10:05- 11:20 am 10:05- 11:20 am
V.Treml CPullenkamp B. Eraker M. Hoffman C. H. Yildirim J. Vernon
The Psychology of Work
4:25- 6:55 pm
R. Ballantyne
Ethics in Professions
10:05- 11:20 am
D. Vallero
American Business History
1:15- 2:30 pm
E. Balleisen
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Engineering EGR 108S
History HST 158AD Markets & Management MMS 120 MMS 175 MMS 182 Political Science
Business of Sport Strategic Financial Management
MWF M MW
11:55 -12:45 pm 6:00 8:30 pm 6:00- 7:15 pm
J.Barden G. Stevenson S. Veraldi
PS 113 PS 158
International Political Economy Transnational Relations
TTH TTH
4:25- 5:40 pm 1:15- 2:30 pm
T. Buthe T. Buthe
Psychology PSY 115
The Psychology of Consumers
2:50- 5:20 pm
T. Chartrand
Enterprising Leadership
4:25- 5:40 pm
A. Brown
11:40- 12:55 pm 10:05-11:20 am 4:25- 6:55 pm
N.Lin J. Wilson
2:50- 4:05 pm
M. Reeves
Managerial Effectiveness
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Public Policy Studies PPS 144S
Sociology SOC 114 SOC 141 SOC 147
Cybemetworks & the Global Village Consuming Passions Business in Literature
TTH TTH W
G.Hull
Women's Studies WMN ST 150
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THE CHRONICLE
16 I THURSDAY, APRIL 1, 2CX)4
Women at Work
Permission numbers available from Bonnie Wilson, 254 Soc-Psych Bldg. For more information, contact Bonnie Wilson at 660-5763 or bwilson@soc.duke.edu To enroll in the Markets & Management certificate program, visit the M&M web site; http://wwwmarkets.duke.edu/register/
PAULUS
from page 13
quarterback and still draws heavy footballrecruiting interest.
“He still continues to have...all the major football passing programs seek after him to play football,” said Dave Paulus, Greg’s father. Paulus is indeed unique in that respect; few if any recruits come in with the potential to be not only a future Naismith, but also a possible Heisman winner. He would bring instant credibility to Blue Devils football and could potentially be a program-changing player should he ever decide to go under center for Duke. “He has definitely considered the option of taking that football program down there and putting them on the map,” Dave Paulus said. “I wouldn’t say that he’s definitely playing, but he hasn’t ruled it out either.” Playing two sports at Paulus’ level requires a tremendous amount of resilience. Nonetheless, Paulus handles it with aplomb, despite admitting that the turnaround between football and basketball seasons is quite difficult. “When I come back, the conditioning is always the problem for me,” Paulus said. “Football shape is definitely different from basketball shape.” Paulus, nonetheless, is an amazingly tough player. One time, according to Wleklinski, Paulus suffered a badly sprained ankle the day before a sectional semifinal game. Just minutes into the game,Paulus then jammed his hand badly. Paulus, however, told nobody of the injury, and proceeded to play through the game. His team came up just short despite Paulus’ best effort; he still managed to score over 20 points. “Coming out of there he could barely walk,” Wleklinski said. “The next day, when I saw his hand, I didn’t even know how he was able to handle the ball.” Despite the astonishing accomplishment, Paulus remained modest. “It’s the playoffs,” Paulus said. “It’s win or go home, and you’ve got to suck it up.” For all his ability to hit wide receivers on a dime and deliver picture-perfect assists, though, it is Paulus’ personality, coupled with his leadership and toughness, that sets him apart from almost every other player ever to suit up for Krzyzewski. Charismatic, passionate and ever humble about his accomplishments, Paulus possesses an innate ability to win. “Greg is justabsolutely unbelievable in terms ofcharacter, morals, values and the support and care he shows for everybody,” said Theresa Quilty, Paulus’ guidance counselor at CBA. “Everybody in the school loves this kid, from the musicians, to the athletes, to the teachers, to the skateboarders. He treats everyone with respect, and he tries to include everybody.” Qailty continued by mentioning that Paulus’ strong faith, his ability and willingness to give speeches, and his citizenship help augment his leadership qualities off the court “Probably one of the reasons why high schools in the area like CBA and don’t look down on it is because they like Greg,” said Quilty, referring to local sports rivalries. ‘They really like and respect Greg.” Dave Paulus proceeded to elaborate on his son Greg’s leadership qualities, elucidating some of the things that have helped his son to build a commanding presence on the court. “He commands respect because he is the kind of guy who doesn’t change his disposition,” Dave Paulus said. “He remains calm under fire, he knows how to win, and he also has a tremendous confidence that he will find away to get the thing they’re trying to get accomplished done.” Paulus does not like talking about his leadership. He did, however, offer insight as to why he is so successful in rallying his troops. Tm just trying to win games,” he said. “I think it’s extremely important to know the personnel you have. I Just try to learn and grow friendships with the guys around me so that on the court you can see thatwe’re a family.” To that end, Paulus maintains regular contact with fellow class of 2005 Duke commitment Josh Mcßoberts, and has contacted Blue Devils target Tyler Hansbrough. Additionally, Paulus speaks with Krzyzewski roughly once a week. “Greg, really, our whole family thinks the world of Coach K and his staff, and I think that my son is just getting indoctrinated into the program right now,” Dave Paulus said. “When he comes down there, he will havebuilt arelationship [with Krzyzewski] for two and a halfyears. He will be a complete extension of Coach K on the floor.” The Blue Devils’ future floor general credits his family for his amazing leadership and resilience. “I have a little bit of each ofmy brothers, my sister and my parents, too, in my basketball game,” Paulus said. They have a big role in my life on and off the court.” Additionally, through all the fame and hype attached with his status, Paulus has managed to tuck away his ego, remaining modest about his accomplishments. “The thing that’s really unique about him is that he’s been able to keep his head on straight,” Dave Paulus added. “He’s been able to really not change at all in terms of the person he is, which I’m really very proud of.”
THE CHRONICLE
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THURSDAY. APRIL 1.2004 11
oommun/fy center service DUKE
UNIVERSITY
Interested in Community Service? Jointhe 2004-2005 Community Service Center Staff! Help plan campus-wide service activities and develop ways to increase student involvement in the Durham community.
Come learn about the various positions available for next year’s stall!
OPEN HOUSE Community Service Center, Basement of the Crowell Bldg., East Campus (next to Epworth) Friday, April 2nd
1:00-3:00 p.m.
Applications are due April 9th and are available at http://csuludenlaffairs.duke.eduy Questions? E-mail veh2 or hks
A&
PASSOVER AT THE ECJL first Seder April $■ 6-8
pm; TREE!!! Second Seder April sth 6-8 pm; s2s Lunch 11:50-1:50; $l2 (sls at the door) Dinner 5;50-/;00; $l5 ($l5 at the door)
Sign up for Passover at 684-6422 or http://fcjl.studentaffairs.duke.edu Freeman Center for Jewish Life 1415 Faber Street ewishlife@duke.edu
(919) 684-6422
THE CHRONICLE
18 I THURSDAY, APRIL 1, 2004
ELON from page 13 three innings. Elon’s Evan Erickson reached first on a throwing error by Tim Layden, and Paul Bennett doubled to bring Erickson in for an unearned run. Then, with Bennett on second, Gary Morris homered deep into Latham Park’s short leftfield porch. In the third inning, Billy Muldowney relieved Thompson —he allowed four more runs in that inning and finished the day with just two strikeouts while walking three walks and scattering five hits—and was able to get out of the inning without further damage. That is, until the next inning, when he gave up just another run to the Phoenix. Offensively, the Blue Devils struggled, as no one re gistered a multi-hit game against Elon starter Matt Chastain. Elon struck out
ben brod/the chronicle
Freshman centerfielder JonathanAnderson was 0-for-4 in yesterday's loss.
six batters and allowed only two earned runs. “[Chastain] did a good job pitching against us,” •Hillier said with a disappointed tone. “But, he wasn’t overpowering, velocity-wise or anything. It was a guy that we should’ve been able to hit off of a little better than we did.... Hopefully, we’ll get out offense going. We need to start scoring some runs to take the pressure off our pitching, and hopefully we can do that.” While Layden’s home run in the fifth inning tightened the score to 9-5, the Phoenix would not relent and put up another four-run inning in the sixth. Though Duke was able to gather seven hits, it could not manufacture the runs that it has been able to recendy. Without consistency at the plate and on the mound, the Blue Devils could run into trouble with this weekend’s threegame series against Virginia.
you or someone you 5 about been a victim of ice? Do you want to be part of the effort to end assault? Join us for the Back The Night March peak Out to support the courage and strength of irs and to work to make Duke a safer campus. ive
TONIGHT MARCH: ce Steps-7:oopm SPEAK OUT:
pel Steps-B:3opm
� Sexual Assault Prevention Week
Trained counselors will be at the events all night T-shirts on sale to commemorate the event
to
offer support.
1 out of 4 women and 1 out of 10 men will be assaulted in their lifetime Help
make Duke a safer
campus.
What Is It? Who Can You Call? Sexual Assault; Any sex act against your Duke Sexual Assault Support Services (SASS) 684-3897 will, without your consent, or when you are Duke Counseling & Psychological Services 660-1000 unable to freely give consent. Durham Crisis Response (24 hour hotline) 403-6562 Rape: Any sex act involving penetration of Police and Medical Emergencies 911 any body opening by any object, that is Duke Police 911 against your will, without your consent, or Durham Police 560-4209 when you are unable to freely give consent. -
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do? Face the facts, Believe and support survivors, Hold perpetrators accountable, Give respect by getting consent, Fight sexism and homophobia, Confront sexist jokes, Trust your instincts, and Get involved! What can
you
All Week Long on the Main Quad Look For... Th Pr A national project that bears witness to various forms of violence that women and men experience. View the shirts made by survivors in the Duke community. I Tied a Ribbon: Tie a ribbon on the fence to honor the strength of survivors who you know. Wear a purple ribbon to demonstrate your commitment to ending violence against women. Information Gazebo: Ask questions and educate yourself on resources available at Duke and what you can do to help make Duke a safer community. Pinwheei Project: The pinwheels displayed this week on the Main Quad symbolize the number of Duke undergraduates who will be survivors in their lifetime. :
CHRONICLE FILE PHOTO
Ranked first in the nation and first in enthusiasm for her team, Liz Janangelo expects to join the LPGA Tour after graduating.
JANANGELO from page 13 that will stick with you.” Before playing at Duke, Janangelo’s only team experience came from her two-year stint as the top player on the boys’ golf team at Conard High School in Connecticut during her freshman and sophomore year. For the second halfof high school, Janangelo practiced on her own while playing in golf tournaments. Playing with the boys was very different from her experience thus far as a Blue Devil. From six-hour bus rides to getting lost on the way to the Hooters’ Championship in Myrtle Beach this past November, Janangelo said that the team atmosphere is the aspect of collegiate golf she loves the most. “We sing songs in the van,” Janangelo said. “Guys don’t sing,” she added, laughing. For now, the West Hartford, Conn., native, whose career in golfbegan at the age of three because she “liked driving in the golf cart,” holds the No. 1 collegiate ranking in the nation, and is set to lead Duke as it makes a run at its third national championship. “Because we didn’t win last year, I think we’re hungrier,” Janangelo said. ‘We’re working even harder.”
Want to se< time in Cam
show up. the big screi required). And
Classifieds
THE CHRONICLE
ATTN INTERNATIONAL STUDENTS & TRAINEES
Announcements
If you are a J-1 visa holder or interested in obtaining a J-1 Visa, don’t miss; J-1 Visas Inside & Out. April 7 7:00 PM. Duke International House. (2022 Campus Drive). Immigration Attorney Brian Smith will discuss this restrictive visa and ways J-1 visa holders successfully enter the U.S. job market. Special attention will be given to (1) waiving the twoyear requirement, and (2) options available to Foreign Medical Graduates. Please R.S.V.P. at (919) 863-4169 or www.bdsmithlaw.com.
Fundraiser Group Scheduling Bonus. Fraternities Sororities Student Groups 4 hours of your group’s time PLUS our free (yes, free) fundraising solutions EQUALS $l,OOO-$2,000 in earnings for your group. Call TODAY for a $450
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$450 bonus when you schedule your non-sales fundraiser with Contact CampusFundraiser.
CampusFundraiser, (888) 9233238, or visit www.campusfundraiser.com.
HOLTON PRIZE Holton Prize in Educational Research application deadline is April 2. Open to juniors and seniors. A cash prize of $250 will be awarded for outstanding innovative or investigative research dealing with education. For information: www.duke.edu/web/education/s
Are you moving off campus next year? I have a two-bedroom apartment full of very nice furniture. You can buy the furniture and move it to the location of your choice, or you can leave it in place and lease the apartment as is. The furniture includes sofa, loveseat, dinette, beds, chests, bookcases, desks, lamps, the works! $750 or best offer. For more information, call Sunny at 384-7926 or 703-4479204.
cholarships/holtonprize.html or email mbryant@asdean.duke.edu jrigg@duke.edu; oi bcj3@duke.edu.
HOUSE COURSES FALL 2004
Babysitter needed for 4 & 8 year old girls. Monday through Wednesday.
Applications available online at www.aas.duke.edu/trinity/house crs or in 04 Allen for people wishing to teach a House Course in Fall 2004. Deadline for submission Monday, April 5, 2004.
Excellent pay. References requested. Call 9336177. May-August.
Summer childcare. 9am-spm. $lO/hr. 3 girls- 6, 3, and infant. Flexible activities. Call 403-3135 or email jmewkill@nc.rr.com.
WE BUY CARS Craige Motor Co. 493-1342 1102 South Duke St, Durham from the ForestHills Shopping Center
offered. Contact Prof. James Rolleston, Dept, of Germanic Languages and Literature, 6603162, jroll@duke.edu by April 6th. Awesome opportunity with fast growing personal training company. Looking for personal trainers and managers. Great pay. Very flexible hours. Call 384-7460. Bartender
neede( trainees $250/ day potential. Local position 1-800-293-3985 ext. 519.
BARTENDERS NEEDED!!! Earn $l5-$3O/hour. Job placement assistance is top priority. Raleigh’s Bartending School. Have fun! Meet people! Make money! Call now for info about our SPRING TUITION SPECIAL. 919-676-0774. www.coctailmixer.com. Be a summer tour guide—learn to walk backwards and talk at the same time! Give tours for the Admissions Office over the summer from May 2-August 21. Dates are flexible, hours are somewhat flexible. Non-work study and work-study available. E-mail susan.coon@duke.edu with tour guide or related experience and summer availability—Summer Session I, Summer Session 11, also Interim Periods—May 2-12, June 25-26, August 9-21.
’
Walt Winfrey, Jeff Bowen
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2918 Chapel Hill Blvd., Durham beside Hardees
May 2004 graduate wanted for a year-long residency position at Landheim a Schondorf, Bavarian boarding school, 1 hour west of Munich. Proficiency in German is required. Room, board, airfare and stipend are
.tfo" IC Cn
across
490-5527 11H
w
5
Walt Winfrey Pre-Owned Cars
1-YR RESIDENCY POSITION OPEN
UPpPPB
Darryl Hidden,
P
Walt Winfrey, Jeff Bowen
WE'LL BUYestimate. YOURS! Call for a free
The Chronicle classified advertising
business rate $6.00 for first 15 words private party/N.R $4.50 for first 15 words all ads 100 (per day) additional per word .3 or 4 consecutive insertions -10 % off 5 or more consecutive insertions 20 % off special features (Combinations accepted.) $l.OO extra per day for all Bold Words $1.50 extra per day for a Bold Heading (maximum 15 spaces) $2.50 for 2 line heading $2.00 extra per day for Boxed Ad deadline 1 business day prior to publication by 12:00 noon -
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LEARN TO SKYDIVE! Carolina Sky Sports 1-800-SKY-DIVE
THURSDAY, APRIL 1,2003
CHRONICLE BUSINESS OFFICE; Student needed for summer. Beginning April, 6-hrs per week to continue, May-August at 15 hrs per week. Job possibly will continue in fall @ 10-12 hrs per week. Data entry, making deposits, customer service. Call Mary Weaver @ 6840384.
DUKE UNIVERSITY CAREER CENTER The Duke Career Center is seeking a Recruiting Specialist and a Customer Service Specialist who are organized and personable individuals. These are front-line positions, working with students and employers. Good computer skills required and ability to multi-task in a very busy office. For full job descriptions or to apply, email bev.foushee@duke.edu. Duke University is an EOE/AA employer.
CAMP COUNSELORS
Part-time Ops/Admin Assistant needed in Durham! Noon-spm, M-F, $l3/hr. MUST have exp. in MS office finance industry. MUST have valid DL pass criminal/credit check. Send resume to jh@greeneresources.com. +
Busy pediatric office near SouthPoint Mall seeks dynamic person for front desk clerical work. Full-time with benefits. Fax resume 933-3473. Summer House/Dog Sitter. Live for free! Do you love dogs and have a flexible summer schedule? a responsible dog/house sitter from 5/15 7/15. Live free in a furnished home with unlimited long distance and internet. dsl/wireless Responsibilities include: Lawn and yard maintenance; Daily dog care: walking, playing fetch, feeding, bathroom breaks; House cleaning. Security deposit required. Contact Jean 919-680-8969.
Free room and board; Two room “suite” with private bath in private home in exchange for elder
Houses For Rent
milleos7 @ mc.duke.edu.
FULL-TIME RESEARCH POSITION Duke Psychology Lab seeks Lab Manager to start June 1, 2004. Lab focus is on human memory. Duties will include scheduling and testing human subjects, preparation of experimental materials, data input and analysis, library research, and general lab management tasks. Applicants with prior research experience in psychology are especially encouraged to apply; fluency with computers is required. This is a fulltime position with benefits. To apply, send resume and reference information to Dr. Elizabeth Marsh at
emarsh@psych.duke.edu. GAP, Streets @ Southpoint is now hiring P/T stock associates, sa-12p availability needed. Generous discount. Apply in person or call Shaun @ 919-544-5001.
HEALTHY KIDS CAMPS, “Where Winners Lose”- North Carolina’s #1 weight loss camp located in the Blue Ridge Mountains,. seeks summer staff for the following positions: Life Guard, Director, Program Drama/Music Department, and General Counselors. Eat healthy this summer while helping children develop lifestyle changes. Interviews locally. Call 286-4768, ask for Ira or email: HealthyKidsCamps@aol.com.
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NOW HIRING lifeguards, managers, service technicians for summer. FREE TRAINING. Call (919)878-3661 for more information.
2 bedrooms, 2 baths. 3 miles to Duke Hospital. Refrigerator, stove, W/D, AC, 2 car garage. Nice neighborhood near Durham Academy High School. $lOOO/negotiable. 919-218-3428. 3 bedroom, 2 bath. 4 minutes from Duke. Whirlpool bath, washer/dryer, lots of light. Built in ‘97. Huge deck. Call 919-264-5498. 3 bedrooms, 2 bath, 2721 Shaftbury, close to Duke. 682-4345 or cell 730-1910. Duke neighborhood. Newly renovated 2-story duplex. 2 large spacious bedrooms, 1.5 bath. New carpet, kitchen appliances. new Contemporary design and new paint job. $950/month. A graduate student’s dream home. 4335 B American Drive, Durham, NC, 27705. 383-6990. clean, professional male seeking female roommate. Home has ideal roommate floor plan. Located in Durham’s quaint Forest Hills Park. 3 bdrm, 2 bth, LR, DR, FR, W/D. Walk to park, Foster’s, Qshack, Nana’s, & tennis. Avail. May Ist. $575 plus utilities. Greg 919795-8712.
Unique country home for sale on Thunder Mountain in Orange County. Gorgeous land, 3.3 acres. Tall, light-filled modern design. Hardwood floors. Separate rentable apartment. Big Library with rolling ladder. Animal Barn. Studio Space. Open Houses 4/4, 4/11. Easter Egg Hunt on 4/11. Full description and pictures at ThunderMountainHouse.com
payment
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or mail to: Chronicle Classifieds Box 90858, Durham, NC 27708 0858 fax to: 684-8295 -
e-mail orders classifieds@chronicle.duke.edu
phone orders: call (919) 684-3811 to place your ad. Visit the Classifieds Online! http://www.chronicle.duke.edu/classifieds/today.html Call 684-3811 if you have any questions about classifieds, No refunds or cancellations after first insertion deadline.
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Ten minutes west of Chapel Hill in Orange County, one mile off Hwy. 54. Restrictions apply. $20,000 per acre. Call 919-6251073.
$5OO REWARD DESPERATE LOST Dell Laptop, Duke computer bag, history books and notes. Last seen 3/26 in front of Duke Chapel. Davis Hasty, Pegram 230, 301-2756713.
Bike reflector found behind Duke Chapel afternoon 3/22. Contact erlien@email.unc.edu.
TUXEDOS Designer Tuxedos. Own your tuxedo for as little as $BO. Formal wear outlet, 415 Millstone Dr, Hillsborough. 644-8243.15 minutes from campus.
Roommate Wanted 3BR/3BA Woodcraft townhome. Min. from Duke. N/S, furnished, wireless internet. Available Fall 04Spring 05.919-395-1506. Roommate wanted to share nicely furnished 2 bedroom apartment next year and/or summer. Email ccg3@duke.edu.
Neat,
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Prepayment is required Cash, Check, Duke IR, MC/VISA or Flex accepted (We cannot make change for cash payments.) 24 hour drop off location •101 W. Union Building
2.7 or 4.8 WOODED ACRES
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Summer Work-Study position! Assist in four Certificate Programs at Duke Continuing Studies. Eye for detail, quick study, good communicator. $B/hour, begin as early in May as possible. Send email outlining experience, interest, and availability to Laurel Ferejohn, Lfere@duke.edu.
care/companion. Stipend negotiable. Must be mature and bondable. Close to Duke. Would like to secure this position by end of April or early May. For more information, please call Kathleen at 668-8323 or email at
Land/Lots For Sale
+
Private Durham day camp is looking for experienced counselors to teach arts & crafts, drama, swimming, canoeing, tennis, and archery. Camp will provide additional training if necessary. Prefer 25 years or older. Must be available May 31 July 30. Call 873-9753. -
119
World Famous Beach Party!
SUMMER SUBLETTERS WANTED. 506 Buchanan, 3 double apartments available. Each: 2 spacious bedrooms, living room, full kitchen, bath, sunroom. Walk to East, jlrt 7@duke.edu, or (919)-452-9099.
Desperate Dallas Duke fan needs one ticket for Final Four. Just one needed! afopusx@yahoo.com. FOUR TICKETS. FINAL BUY/SELL. www.studioplayground.com 1-888-265-TIXS Final Four. Buy, Sell. All Areas. Primeseattickets.com. alamotickets.com. 800-550-7556.
THE CHRONICLE
THURSDAY. APRIL 1.2004
The Chronicle The Independent Daily
at
Duke University
Chronicle: 'Out of Control'
We
regret to inform our readers that because we moved our editorial board meeting from its normally scheduled day we were unable to reach quorum. Therefore, there will be no staff editorial today. Have no fear we are seeking advice from Duke Student Government on attendance STAFF EDITORIAL strategies. —
What’s that sound? MEXICO CITY I hadn’t been to Mexiwith India now able to export its low-wage co since 1996, so it definitely caught my ear brainpower over phone lines and fiber-optic when I started to hear two non-Spanish cables, Mexico’s advantages in the U.S. marwords on this trip that I’d never heard here ket—its proximity and NAFTA—are being before: “China” and “India.” Mexicans are eroded. Mexico can stay ahead only if it increasingly aware that these two countries does “retail reforms.” These are the micro reforms that will are running off with jobs and markets that Mexicans once thought they owned. You make its economy more flexible and prohave to feel sorry for the Mexicans: they are ductive. The government has set out five hearing “the giant sucking sound” in stereo areas for reform: labor markets; the judicithese days—from China in one ear and ary; the constitution and electoral system; India in the other. Worse, they seem stuck, tax collection, which is abysmal; and openunable to forge a coherent strategic reing the energy and electricity markets to foreign investors so a gassponse. rich country like Mexico “We are caught between India and China,” reThomas Friedman gets out of the crazy situamarked Jorge Castaneda, tion of importing natural and gasoline from gas the former Mexican foreign Guest Commentary minister who just decided America. The old autocratic Mexto run for president in ico could have ordered 2006. “We have lost about 500,000 manufacturing jobs. It is very diffithese reforms from above. That’s how China still does it, giving Beijing an advantage now cult for us to compete with the Chinese, exthat it will pay for later. But because Mexico cept with high-value-added industries. is now a democracy, and needs to remain Where we should be competing, in the services area, we are hit by the Indians with competitive, it can upgrade its institutions their back offices and call centers. . . Not only by going through the messy, time-conenough people here speak English.” And suming process of consensus building. Alas, that’s not all. While China and India each President Vicente Fox has not been very send tens of thousands of students to be edgood at building consensus. ucated abroad every year in science and en“We did the first stages of structural rethe Mexico form from the top down,” said Guillermo U.S., gineering, particularly in Ortiz, the governor of Mexico’s central sends just 10,000. Go into any discount store in Mexico and bank. “The next stage is much more diffilook at low-priced clothing, toys, shoes and cult. You have to work from the bottom up. electronics, or even some Christian reliYou have to create the wider consensus to gious objects, and it is hard not to buy Chipush the reforms in a democratic context.... nese, added Castaneda, speaking at the There is an urgency for Mexico to finish the Mexican Council on Foreign Relations. But structural reforms at the micro level.” more important, “the U.S. markets that we Why? Because while Mexico has upgradhad a corner on is where we are losing jobs. ed its competitiveness, notes the analyst Daniel Rosen in the journal The. Interna. We knew it would happen when China the World Trade [entered Organization in tional Economy, China has been upgrading 2001], but we did not get prepared.” its worker education, infrastructure, manMexico’s problem, in a nutshell, is this: agement skills, technology and quality conThe world is flat—or at least getting flatter. trols even faster. Thanks to PCs, telecommunication adWill Rogers said it a long time ago: “Even vances and market-opening agreements, if you’re on the right track, you’ll get run over if you just sit there.” Mexico has put itcapital can seek out factories and knowledge workers anywhere in the world with self on the right track. But for the moment, greater and greater ease. To get itself in it’s just sitting there. If it doesn’t start movshape to sign the NAFTA free-trade accord ing again, it’s going to get run over by with the U.S. and Canada, Mexico did what China, India, America—or all of the above. But America had better not be a passive I would call the “wholesale” reforms —and they have been incredibly impressive. It spectator, as it has been in these Bush years, made a historic transition to freer markets because if Mexico gets hit, we, too, will feel and democracy, with respect for human its pain. rights and fair elections. But with China attracting huge amounts of dollars to put its low-wage workers to Thomas Friedman’s column is syndicated by work on all sorts of industrial exports, and the New York Times News Service. —
.
In case you didn’t notice, this editorial is intended to be taken as a
joke.Happy April Fool’s Day!
ON THE RECORD The statistics say 1 in 4 women are sexually assaulted, but statistics didn’t mean a whole lot to me. What mattered to me were my nine friends. David Rider, Duke graduate and current director of consulting and training for the Washington, D.C., based nonprofit organization Men Can Stop Rape.
Est. 2004
The Duke Chomicle inc. 2004 GARINGER, Editor
ALEX JANE HETHERINGTON, Managing Editor ANDREW COLLINS, University Editor CINDY YEE, University Editor ANDREW CARD, Editorial Page Editor MIKE COREY, Sports Editor JONATHAN ANGIER, GeneralManager ANTHONY CROSS, PhotographyEditor JENNIFER HASVOLD, City & State Editor MALAVIKA PRABHU, Health & Science Editor KIYA BAJPAI, Features Editor ROBERT SAMUEL, SportsManaging Editor DEAN CHAPMAN, Recess Editor TYLER ROSEN, TowerViewEditor ANDREW GERST, Wire Editor BOBBY RUSSELL, TowerView PhotographyEditor JACKIE FOSTER, Features Sr. Assoc. Editor DEVIN FINN, Senior Editor RACHEL CLAREMON, CreativeServices Manager SUE NEWSOME, Advertising Director MARY WEAVER, Operations Manager
WHITNEY ROBINSON, Design Editor JOSH NIMOCKS, City & State Editor LIANA WYLER, Health& Science Editor CHRISTINA NG, Features Editor BETSY MCDONALD, Sports Photography Editor DAVID WALTERS, Recess Editor RUTH CARLITZ, TowerView Managing Editor KAREN HAUPTMAN, Wire Editor JENNY MAO, Recess PhotographyEditor YEJI LEE, Features Sr.. Assoc.Editor ANA MATE, Senior Editor BARBARA STARBUCK,Production Manager YU-HSIEN HUANG, Supplements Coordinator 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 editorialsrepresent the majority view
of the editorial board. Columns, letters and cartoons represent theviews of the authors. To reach the Editorial Office at 301 Flowers Building, call 684-2663 or fax 684-4696.T0 reach 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 Chronicle Online at http://www.chronicle.duke.edu. ® 2004 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 theBusiness Office. Each individual is entitled to one free copy.
LETTER TO THE EDITOR
Duke students are just acting The problem of unity is not exclusively a problem of the black community. Extending beyond “Blackness at Duke,” I think it is fair to say that the entire Duke community as a whole attempts to put on a show. As one weekend puts a spotlight on the liveliness and cohesion of just one community, it is easy to spotlight the extent of its strength, its weaknesses, its forced smiles, its overdue hellos. But, sadly, is this not the overall culture of our campus? On cruise control down the BC walkway, we throw our hand up to those we want to acknowledge (usually selected people of our own background), while we dart our eyes or lower our heads to avoid the looks of passing strangers. Or, we’re so involved in the music in our headphones that we drown out the rest of the world. Is this the college scene that I read about in the brochure? Whatever happened to meeting new people, having stimulating con-
versation with someone that you justhappen to sit next to on the bus, orexploring the experiences and ideas of another person? Whatever happened to seeking diversity, whether its identifying with someone of another race, or befriending someone of your own race that does not share your common background? It doesn’t always have to be a color thing. It could be just a people thing. But, a collection of people is not a community. Community is to have a driving pulse, cohesion, the desire to know of one another. However, with averted eyes and temporary hi’s this cannot be achieved. It may be picture perfect for the catalogs, but on campus the atmosphere is very evident. We aren’t fooling anyone who is genuine about finding true comradely. Friends, things need to change. Venis Wilder Trinity ’O6
COMMENTARIES
THE CHRONICLE
Finding
Before
an
than 3 or 4 days a week for less than $lO coming to Duke, my employment history was comprised an hour. Hire me!” However, I was still of two back-to-back stints at a slightly taken aback to receive just a sinPlus-Size women’s underwear store and gle reply, saying, “We are seeking other a shoe store. Here at Duke, I’ve had two interns. We don’t want you. We think work-study jobs, neither of which reyou are useless. Go away.” So I broadquires much more skill than literacy and ened my search a little. the ability to operate a water cooler. As My second batch of resumes went to instructive and rewarding as these jobs paid and unpaid jobs alike, in the Manhattan, Brooklyn, and have been, “Underwear Experience” and “ExtenLong Island areas. I sive Water Cooler Skills” emailed two guys in Calidon’t look very appealing fornia who wanted someon a resume, which is one to write for the midwhy, I guess, I’ve been dle-aged men’s magazine having more than a little they were putting togethtrouble finding an interner. I sent a letter to some kind of New York City ship for this summer. Denise Napoli The search started immigration support out all right. I went to the Rock you like a hurricane service. They were putcareer center and had ting together a pamphlet the fine folks there tell for immigrants, were me my resume sucked, a lot, twice. They based in the Bronx, and were running fixed it. On the third draft I started out of someone’s shed. The immigraemailing publishing houses, magazines tion service didn’t reply. Actually, no and newspapers that had posted jobs one replied. online. At first, I was optimistic. I only I decided what I needed to do was applied for paid jobs, in New York City. fix up my resume a little. Instead of sayI narrowed my search to jobs that listed ing that I’d spent two years working in a summer commitment of 4-6 weeks, an underwear store cleaning dropped maximum. And I only applied to places bags of pantyhose off the ground, I I had already heard of. I emailed about changed things around to read, ‘Two five different people and waited for years facilitating purchases and assisting their replies, which I assumed would be in redesigning layout in underwear desperate and begging. About a week store.” Measuring people for shoes turned into, “Generated, reported, and went by. I received one email back, and only secured accurate shoe sizes for patrons after sending 10 or 20 ‘friendly follow and managed their purchases.” I played around with the font. I added “good up’ emails that the career center handbook recommends. Granted, my friendspeller” to my list of skills. I sent out ly follow-ups went a little something more copies to even more employers. like, “Dear Employer. My name is Then I waited. Denise. I have no people skills, computIn the meantime, it seemed to me er skills, or interest in working more that everyone from Duke was getting an
THURSDAY. APRIL 1 2004
internship internship or already had one. And it also seemed like everyone else was going to work at Microsoft or J.P. Morgan or the White House or something. What, I wondered, were the kids who didn’t want to be doctors, lawyers or bankers, who couldn’t design computer programs, and who actually needed to be paid over the summer supposed to do? Where’s the career advisor for the unemployable, lazy kids with unhelpable, fundamentally crappy resumes? If I didn’t get an internship, would that mean that I was never going to get a real job? Was Duke a waste of $160,000? Weren’t employers supposed to be throwing me money and job offers, desperate to hire someone from Duke? Doesn’t it say that in the brochures somewhere? Before I had dme to demand a refund from Nan, I made a call to one of the newspapers I had sent my resume
handbook, whether or not they had received my email, and ifthey had any further questions for me. “Oh, yeah, from Duke. Denise Nippl-ee, right? or Nawpooli? Sure. When can you start?” And just like that, the most unemployable person at this school got an actual internship. The point is, don’t be disheartened. If someone will hire me based on some manipulation of the career center Action Verb list and shoe sales experience, anyone at this school can get hired. And if not, S.A.S. Shoes in Tanger Mall on Long Island will be seeking help, no fancy-schmancy resume needed. All they really require is proficiency with a water cooler. And if you can’t land that job, well, no pun intended (well, maybe slightly intended), but I’d say that’s about $160,000 tuition money down the drain.
Denise Napoli is a Trinity sophomore. Her
Read my lips: NO MORE DSG!
Next
what is necessary for Duke. Fourth, administrators have a much larger investment in I also vow that I will dissolve DSG at the end of my term. our beloved University than students do. Not only do they We do not need it, and it gulps up significant resources that stay here longer, and are able to see the larger picture, they could be put to better use. Without DSG, $140,000 would also have more life experience. So far, Nan and friends have have ended up in our societies, clubs and organizations indone a pretty good job without a functioning DSG. Fifth, as I mentioned before, we will always have Campus stead of in some accounting gap. And this 140 grand is just didn’t fail to mention in every interthe tiling they didn’t even bother to spend. What Council. This organization has truly matured under Pasha view that they have been best friends about all the money that is being wasted on actuand Vitarelli. Sadly, they naively assumed they could do the since freshman year, were the only same for DSG. ally running the mammoth organization? people running in last Tuesday’s Campus Council can give input to the adJust because a doctor can cure someone from syphilis, it ministration, and the Union can take care of doesn’t follow that he can save a patient with AIDS. I am conrace. Just like America will be ruled student activities. Life would continue as usual, fident that nothing will change over the course of next year. by a Yale Skull for another term (reand we wouldn’t have to read about DSG in Next March, let me put an end to the sad spectacle called gardless of the outcome of the NoThe Chronicle. Duke Student Government. vember elections), Duke was inDuke would be one step closer to the ideal I can see one downside to my plan. Without DSG and its evitably going to have a Campus Joost Bosland endless list of legislators, committee members and other university. Council bureaucrat heading DSC. Some of you might object that even though drones, Duke would lose a significant generator of resume But March 2005 will be my finest The caterpillar’s teachings hour. The campaign will be revoluDSG isn’t doing the best job, student input in padding. administrative decisions is crucial. A few things But that is a hit I am willing to take. tionary. Let me oudine my tentative deserve to be said in response. Like any good politician, let me conclude with a summaplatform First, administrators know how important students are at ry of what I stand for. I will completely neglect DSG when If you elect me, I vow I will not attend a single meeting. I elected. At the end of my term, I will officially dissolve the inwill appoint a bunch of my friends to my cabinet, and they a university, and will not fail to weigh our interests in the abtoo will refrain from attending any sort of official function. sence of something called Student Government. stitution. Second, DSG is often used to legitimize policy decisions, Of course, all of this is quite far into the future. I will use the Or, better yet, if you offer me money or sexual services, while don’t even the smallest fraction of stunext they couple of months to build up a think tank to support my I’ll appoint you. represent Duke Student Government is a useless organization. dents. If students could rally in the Allen Building without campaign. I’ll need to get myself a good spin-doctor. I will deMoreover, changing it or making it more efficient is utterly being told to talk to DSG about their concerns, we would see sign t-shirts. And bumper stickers would be nice... Read my lips: No more DSG! impossible. This year, no one who knows the organization more tangible results. The campaign for ethical investment from within was even running for the presidential position. has proven as much. But for now, you guys are stuck with a president who no one If that’s not a red flag, I don’t know what is. Third, I am not so sure that student opinion can always endorsed, while I am sipping on a Daiquiri on a beach in Cape Most Duke students realize that DSG is not worth their be trusted. If you ask your average Blue Devil if the Town. Let’s give Pasha—“ Anthony and I have been a team amount of reading should be cut in half across the board, since freshman year and that’s going to continue”—Majdi a time. The voter turnout, despite ridiculously easy online voting, was again pathetically low. IfI could get every single one he or she would holler YES! Moreover, 50 percent of us chance. He deserves your support. Let him please prove me ofyou who hates DSG to vote for me, my constituency will be would be classified as seriously psychologically disturbed wrong on all counts. so impressive that even Moneta and Brodhead would have to anywhere outside the Gothic Wonderland. Do we really bow down to my authority. want our University to be run by the lazy and the schizoJoost Bosland is a Trinity sophomore. His column appears every third Thursday. But they wouldn’t need to. I’d let them go ahead and do phrenic? year I am running for Duke Student Government
president And this is not an April Fool’s Day joke. Those professional undergraduate politicians should get over themselves—I’d beat them any day. Pasha Majdi and Anthony Vitarelli sound like a duo from a Marvel comic book. These two wonderful characters, who
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Edited by Wayne Robert Williams
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30 Military snack bars
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The Chronicle Alex’s favorite memories of Grandma Rose:
FoxTrot Bill Amend YOU
REALIZE I'M
GOING To DESTROY YOU,
EILEEN.
Please send calendar submissions, at least two business to the to event, days prior calendar@chronicle.duke.edu, fax 684-8295, Campus Mail Box 90858, or 101 W. Union Building.
Academic THURSDAY, APRIL 1
ha;
if YOU BREATHE
I WIN
WORD ONE OF THIS AT SCHOOL.
again;
Duke Events Calendar Israel, ill be ample time for question and answer as well. Q & A. Chapel Basement. Come and bring a
friend.
For
on
info
Grad-IV
see
www.duke.edu/web/grad-iv.
Systematics Seminar: 12:40pm. Jon Shaw, Duke University. “Phylogeny, biodiversity and speciation in peatmosses (Sphagnum). 144 Biological Sciences.
Intercultural Christian Fellowship: Thursdays, 7:3opm. Chapel basement, www.duke.edu/web/icf/ or
Panel: 2-4pm. Brown v. Board of Education and its Legacy: The Lessons of Litigation. Panelists: Anita Earls, Ronald Sullivan, Iry Joyner. Franklin Center, Room 240.
Social Programming
dsw9@duke.edu.
&
Meetings
Spanish Film Festival: 6;3opm. “Hable con ella” in Spanish with English subtitles. "Talk to her" is a story about friendship between two men, about loneliness and the long convalescence of the wounds provoked by passion. Soc Psych. 130.
THURSDAY, APRIL 1
Popßio Seminar: 7pm. Stuart McDaniel, Duke University. "Understanding population divergence in three easy steps." 140 Biological Sciences.
Play: Bpm. Blood Weddings. Sheafer Theater, Bryan Center. Written by Federico Garcia Lorca. Directed by Rafael Lopez-Barrantes of the Theater Studies Faculty.
Religious THURSDAY, APRIL 1 Weekly Eucharist (Holy Communion); s;3opm, Thursdays. Wesley Office (Chapel Basement). Graduate Christian Fellowship: 6pm, dinner; 6;45pm, program. Dr. Richard Hays (New Testament) and Dr. Grant Wacker (American Christianity) will be speaking on Christian perspectives on the nation of
BEST OF 203?
alex Playing Gin Rummy all day... and losing all day:, Long walks on the Long Beach boardwalk: ..no one again! card, corey Two words: Pot roast.: jake, matt, jordan Seen any movies lately, Grandma?: cross Wiping her own lipstick off my cheek: Swimming all day In her pool: yemil, karen Yes, Grandma, I have lost weight: issa i’ll miss you Grandma! Love you always!: betsy, jenny Rose Goodkin, 1914-2004: roily Account Representatives: Monica Franklin, Dawn Hall Account Assistants: Jennifer Koontz, Stephanie Risbon, Jenny Wang National Coordinator: Kristin Jackson Sales Representatives: ..Cady Baker, Tim Flyer, Heather Murray, Janine Talley, Johannah Rogers, Julia Ryan Creative Services:. ..Courtney Crosson, Charlotte Dauphin, Laura Durity, Andrea Galambos, Alex Kaufman, Matt Territo, Erika Woolsey, Willy Wu, Edwin Zhao Business Assistants: Thushara Corea, Melanie Shaw, Ashley Rudisill Emily Weiss Classified Coordinator:
Movie: 7 & 9:3opm. Morning Sun. Griffith Film Theater, Bryan Center. Movie presented by Duke University Union's Freewater Presentations. Free to Duke students, $1 for employees, $2 for the general public.
Ongoing
Events
Upcoming: J-1 Visas Inside & Out. 7pm, April 7. Attorney Brian Smith will discuss this often restrictive visa and ways J-1 visaholders successfully entqr the U.S. job market. Duke University’s International House (2022 Campus Dr.). Attendees must R.S.V.P. at (919) 863-4169 or www.bdsmithlaw.com. Upcoming: April 5
&
7. The Communications
Certificate program from Duke, open to the community, hosts free information sessions on East Campus. 6pm on the sth or noon on the 7th. To register for free session: 684-6259, www.learnmore.duke.edu/shortcourse/comm.
Upcoming: April 6, 7, & 12. The Technical Communication Certificate Program from Duke, open to the community, hosts free information sessions on East Campus. Noon on the 6th or 12th, or 6pm on the 7th. To register for free session; 684-6259, www.learnmore.duke.edu/techcomm. Upcoming: April 7. The Documentary Studies Certificate Program from Duke, open to the community, hosts a free information session at the Center for Documentary Studies, 7pm. To register for free session: 684-6259. Africa Night: 6-1 Opm, April 10. The North Carolina Peace Corps Association presents its 16th annual Africa Night fund-raiser. Eno River Unitarian Universalist Fellowship, 4907 Garrett Road, Durham. There will be live music, dancers, a raffle, and a potluck dinner. Proceeds to build primary school classrooms in South Africa. $6 with a covered dish or $ll without. Information at 596-8919.
Upcoming: Angels Among Us 5K Run and Family Fun Walk. Saturday, April 24, Tam registration. Wallace Wade Stadium, Duke University Campus. Proceeds benefit the Brain Tumor Center at Duke. For more information, visit angelsamongus.org or call 919-667-2616.
Display: Through April 4. Portraits of Members: the Photographs of Michael Francis Blake. Perkins Library, Special Collections Hallway Gallery. Photographs by one of Charleston, S.C.'s first African American studio photographers. Through April 9. Domestic Threats works by Barbara Rachko. Louise Jones Brown Gallery; Bryan Center. Exhibit;
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Display: Through April 11.Francesco Petrarca, Poet and Humanist. Perkins Library Gallery. Selections from the Rare Book, Manuscript, and Special Collections Library to commemorate the 700 th anniversary of Petrarch's birth and to honor Professor Ronald G. Witt on his retirement. Volunteer: Community Service Center. Contact Dominique Redmond, 684-4377 or http://csc.stu-
dentaffairs.duke.edu. Volunteer: As little as 2 hours/week. Women’s Center. 126 Few Fed, or 684-3897. DUMA exhibition: Through May 16. Koz'ma Prutkov: A View of St. Petersburg. Thirty-one handcolored etchings with aquatint by Alla Ozerevskaia and Anatoly Yakolev illustrate a 1990 edition of the writings of Koz'ma Prutkov, described as "the greatest Russian writer who never lived." Prukov was the collaborative invention of four poets in nineteenthcentury St. Petersburg and quickly became a cult figure. These prints reveal the continued relevance of the political aphorisms of the fictitious, nineteenthcentury bureaucrat and writer. Call for Museum Hours: 684-5135 Location: Duke University Museum of Art. -
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THURSDAY, APRIL 1,
THE CHRONICLE
2003
Triangle
Communities The
Apartment People Managing Agent
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Enjoy apartment living at its best! For years Triangle Communities have featured the most conveniently located, best-managed and most affordable student apartments
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for you or your furniture; or 4 months when
O [HOPEI
The closest Apartment Community to Duke University
Walk to Duke Drive to RTF Or Stay and Play
383-6677
383-6683
1-800-550-0282
1-800-443-2801
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489-7489 1-800-550-0284
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THE OTRIUm 220-7639
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FREE express shuttle to and from Duke Duke University's "Safe Rides" Undergraduate and Graduate Students Welcome
Academic leases available
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493-4509
First Class Living Top North Durham Location
HUGE Townhomes
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27 Floor Plans Reasonably Priced
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oDUKE Ullin
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Subject to availability. Some restrictions apply.
t=l OPPORTUNITY