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[The Chronicle
DUKE UNIVERSITY Ninety-Ninth
Sportswrap
Year,
issue
DURHAM, N.C.
MONDAY, APRIL 19,2004
139
WWW.CHRONICLE.DUKE.EDU
Popping a cork for a deans departure
Outsource draws ire from Duke students
by Cindy Yee THE CHRONICLE
until her successor was named by a new chancellor, the appointWhen Mary Champagne bement of whom is expected to be came dean of the School of announced later this month. As the most senior dean at the Nursing in 1991, she had her work cut out for her. University, Champagne has seen The school was marked by a lot of change, not least of all in empty offices, a dwinher own domain. For dling faculty, a defimct instance, she oversaw bachelor’s degree and the creation of the disaffected alumni. Accelerated Bachelor There were no exterofScience in Nursing nal research funds, program in 2002, and the master’s probringing a bachelor’s gram offered only degree back to the three majors. A nationschool for the first al ranking was but a time since 1984. pipe dream. President Nan Today, the school Keohane said the creis poised to take its ation of the acceleratplace among the top Ed BSN program 20 nursing schools in the nahelped restore alumni’s faith in tion. Once too small to fill its the school. “When [Champagne] came to 10,000-square-foot facility on Duke’s North Campus, the the office in the early ’9os, the school has now spread to five alumni were disaffected because sites across campus and awaits of the decision to close the underconstruction of a new $16.8 milgraduate program that many of lion structure that will reunite it them had enjoyed,” Keohane under one roof. said. “Now, the nursing school alums are among those most “Simply stated, Mary Champagne resurrected the Duke proud of Duke and of their School of Nursing,” said Nancy school because of the new visibiliShort, assistant dean of special ty of the School around the counprojects at the School of Nursing. try, the exciting new programs Champagne announced last she has launched in distance May that she would not seek anlearning and aging and, especialother term as the nursing ly, the new accelerated BSN.” school’s dean. She and outgoing Since Champagne became CEO and Chancellor of Duke dean, the School of Nursing has University Health System Ralph also established a number of Snyderman agreed that Champagne would stay on as dean SEE CHAMPAGNE ON PAGE 7
by
JENNY
MAO/THE CHRONICLE
Alana Beard was drafted by the Washington Mystics of the WNBA.
Beard, Tillis go No. 2, 11 in draft by
Catherine Sullivan THE CHRONICLE
When the women’s basketball team hosted Tennessee January 24 at Cameron Indoor Stadium, former Lady Vols star and three-time WNBA All-Star Chamique Holdsclaw gushed about the possibility that Duke senior Alana Beard could be selected by her Washington Mystics, in the 2004 draft. “We’re definitely in need of a player like [Beard],” Holdsclaw said. “She’s a great player, but I am really also impressed with her as a person. She can get it done from
all different areas of the floor, so I’m hoping and I’m praying that I’ll be playing with her next year.” Saturday afternoon, Holdsclaw’s wish became a reality, as Beard was selected second overall by Washington and will make her first appearance as a professional when the Mystics host the Indiana Fever in a preseason game May 11. “I have been waiting for this for a while, and I cannot express how excited I am to be going to play for Washington,” Beard
by
Andrew Collins THE CHRONICLE
Funnyman Paul Downs will inject a dose of his Duke University Improv humor into this year’s commencement, as Duke has tapped the DUI veteran and senior to be the student speaker at the May 9 ceremony. He will warm up the audience for the keynote speaker, former U.S. Secretary of State Madeline
Albright. While Downs described his speech as occasionally off-color and humorous, he said the general feel was more sentimental than some may expect from the com-
edy veteran. Senior Paul Downs will speak at graduation this May alongside Madeline Albright
“I’m kind of typecast as this zany wacko, but there are parts of the speech that are more subdued and heartfelt,” he said. “I think some people who don’t
Hauptman THE CHRONICLE
Following Duke University Health System’s decision to sell its laundry facility to Angelica Corp., a national laundry and textile services provider, union representatives and University students have voiced concerns about the company’s safety standards and labor practices. The outsourcing move, finalized last month, prompted Students Against Sweatshops—with the support of representatives from the Union of Needletrades, Industrial and Textile Employees—to lobby the administration with their concerns about the corporation’s alleged history of hazardous labor conditions and union-busting tactics. Last Tuesday, SAS and UNITE presented the administration a report containing testimonials from Angelica workers, citations ofhealth and safety violations filed with the Occupational Safety and Health Administration and charges of unfair labor practices filed with the National Labor Relations Board. The University said it would review the report and forward any concerns it raised to Angelica officials. SAS member Jessica Rutter, a senior, said her
SEE BEARD ON PAGE 8
Downs given podium
Karen
SEE ANGELICA ON PAGE 6
W. Golf takes ACC
know me will be surprised that it’s offkilter, but those people who do know me and expect it to be just that will be surprised by the dimensions of it.... There’s a lot of seriousness to it.” He will discuss the feeling shared by many students that there was simply “not enough time” to accomplish all they wanted to at Duke. He said he will urge students to remember that feeling of regret and, accordingly, never let things go left undone. “In the end, the message is you can’t really ever feel like you’ve done enough at every place. You always want 10 more minutes with your friends, or take one more class, or one more production,” he said. “The overarching mesage of it is that
The Duke women’s golf team has dominated its competition this entire year, and at this weekend’s ACC Championships at the Salem Glen Country Club in Clemmons, N.C. things were no different. Brittany Lang captured the third individual tide of her freshman campaign, as the No.l Blue Devils shot 14 under par en route to winning their ninth-straight ACC crown by 19 strokes over Wake Forest.
SEE DOWNS ON PAGE 5
SEE CHAMPS ON SPORTSWRAP PAGE 9
crown by
Mike Van Pelt
THE CHRONICLE
2 I
MONDAY,
THE CHRONICLE
APRIL 19, 2004
World&Nation
[ New York Financial Markets Dow Up 54.51
by
Lee Keath
toppled Saddam Hussein last year.
BAGHDAD, Iraq Iraqi security forces will not be ready to protect the country against insurgents by the June 30 handover of power, the top U.S. administrator said Sunday—an assessment aimed at defending the continued heavy presence of U.S. troops here even after an Iraqi government takes over. The unusually blunt comments from Paul Bremer came amid a weekend of new fighting that pushed the death toll for U.S. troops in April to 99, already the record for a singlemonth in Iraq and approaching the number killed during the invasion that
Even after June 30, when the U.S. planned to hand over sovereignty, the U.S. military will remain in Iraq. In recent months coalition officials acknowledged the transfer of security will be significandy slower than hoped because Iraqi forces were not prepared. But Bremer said the fighting across the country this month exposed the depth of the problems inside the security forces. “Events of the past two weeks show that Iraq still faces security threats and needs outside help to deal with them. Early this month, the foes of democracy overran Iraqi police stations and seized
public buildings in several parts of the
country,” he said. “Iraqi forces were un-
able to stop them.” “It is clear that Iraqi forces will not be able, on their own, to deal with these threats by June 30 when an Iraqi government assumes sovereignty,” Bremer said in a statement issued by the U.S. coalition. With U.S.-led forces fighting on two fronts, at least 99 U.S. troops have been killed in combat since April 1. In the latest violence, five Marines and five soldiers were killed Saturday. A total of 115 U.S. servicemembers were killed in combat from the start of the U.S.-led invasion in March 2003.
Spain's troops ordered home from Iraq by
Maruse Simons
THE NEW YORK TIMES NEWS SERVICE
Spain’s new Socialist prime minister, Zapatero, announced Sunday that he was ordering Spanish troops to leave Iraq “as soon as possible.” Zapatero, speaking just 24 hours after he was sworn in, said he had ordered Defense Minister Jose Bono to “do what is necessary for the Spanish troops stationed in Iraq to return home” in the shortest possible time. Zapatero said he had made his decision because it was unlikely that the United Nations would be playing a leading role in Iraq any time soon. Involvement of the United Nations had been his condition for Spain’s 1,300 troops to remain. MADRID, Spain
Jose Luis Rodriguez
The prime minister spoke 'briefly at the Moncloa Palace shortly after appointing his Cabinet. His new foreign minister, Miguel Angel Moratinos, is leaving for Washington this week for meetings Wednesday with Secretary of State Colin Powell; Condoleezza Rice, the national security adviser; and members of Congress. Iraq is expected to figure prominently in his discussions. Zapatero’s move, though a serious setback, will not come as a surprise to the United States. Two high officials of the new Spanish government, in a briefing for reporters, said that since Zapatero’s election victory on March 14, intense consultations had been held with the heads of government or top officials of 12 nations.
Down 6.43
@1,995.74
10,451.97
Bremer finds weakness in security THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
MAM
Nasdaq
NEWS IN BRIEF Hamas makes threat after leader is killed
Hamas threatens"100 unique reprisals" against Israel for an airsthke that killed its leader Abdel Aziz Rantisi, as hundreds of thousands of enraged Palestinians flood the streets in mourning.
Sudan clashes force over 50,000 to move At least 50,000 people have fled their homes in recent weeks because ofmilitia attacks and fighting between Sudanese government and rebel forces in southern Sudan, the United Nations said.
U.S. death toll in Iraq rises to at least 700 As of Friday morning, the Department of Defense said at least 685 U.S. service members had died since the beginning of military operations in Iraq last year. Of those,491 died as a result of hostile action and 194 died of non-hostile causes.
Border crossers take path into New Mexico With the Border Patrol cracking down in Texas and California and enforcement being boosted in Arizona, many say a shift toward more illegal immigration through New Mexico is inevitable.
GOP squabbles over tax-cut restrictions A Republican fight over proposed restrictions on
has hamstrung congressional approval of next year's $2.4 trillion budget. It's a battle between tax reductions and deficit worries. tax cuts
News briefs compiled from wire reports: “If you have to have a job in this world, a high-priced movie star is a pretty good gig.” Tom Hanks
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THE CHRONICLE
MONDAY, APRIL 19, 2004
I 3
4,000 alumni
Celebrating Life!
swarm campus by Cindy Yee THE CHRONICLE
PHOTOS BY PATRIC PHELAN/ THE CHRONICLE
Duke students (above) and other community members turned out in droves this weekend for Duke's version of Relay for Life, one of the American Cancer Society's most famous events. The participants enjoyed beautiful weather and raised $42,061. One walker (left) found himself strolling beside theBlue Devil.
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Crimeßriefs
THE CHRONICLE
News Briefs
from stair™,or.*
Alarms set off by unlawfully discharged short brunette hair, started verbally harassfire extinguishers ing him about parking in the handiOfficers responded to a fire alarm in capped space and not looking like he was House HH2 at 4:57 a.m. April 18. Officers handicapped. When the victim respondnoticed a white male with dark hair runed, “Well look at you and your fat ass,” the ning from the rear entrance of FF2. Offisubject slapped the victim across his face cers found that someone had unlawfully with her hand. discharged a fire extinguisher on the first, second, third and basement levels of Open door allows for morning heist House FF2, causing the fire alarm to Students living in Blackwell Dormitory sound. The discharged extinguisher was reported at 3:19 p.m. April 14 that cash found by room 05 in House FF2. had been stolen from their wallets. The Officers also responded to a fire alarm students said they left their room door at Wannamaker 4 Residence Hall at 2:47 open between 3 a.m. and 9 a.m. April 9 a.m. April 15. Officers found fire extinand someone came into their room, guisher dust near room 04R as the cause opened their dresser drawers and took of the activation. The lost extinguisher un$2O from one victim’s wallet and $55 from lawfully used to activate the fire alarm is the other victim’s wallet. valued at $lOO. Student naps, wakes up minus items License plate numbers may lead to windA student reported at 10:17 p.m. April 16 that three keys, two credit cards, a drishield-cracking culprits Burns Security officers reported at 1:19 ver’s license, a Duke Card with holder and a.m. April 18 that a green 1994 Toyota $6O in cash were taken from her room in Camry was damaged while parked in the House 2C. The victim left the items in her Allen Building upper lot. The officers unlocked room while she took a nap at 2 heard what sounded like something hitp.m. April 14 and discovered the items ting a vehicle and saw two groups with missing at 5 p.m. the same day. four individuals in each group disperse and enter two cars. The officers were able Trail jogger out cash, credit card to get the license plate numbers of the veAn employee reported at 5:45 p.m. hicles as they left the area. The cracked April 16 that $l2O in cash and a bank card windshield damage was estimated at $250. were stolen from his car. The employee said he parked his car at the dirt lot to the Man slapped for “fat ass” comment right of the Washington Duke Inn at 4:30 An employee reported at 4:24 p.m. p.m. April 16 and went jogging on the jogApril 17 that he was assaulted by an unging trail after concealing a car key under known female. The victim parked his vehihis car. When he returned at 5:30 p.m., he cle in a handicapped space in Parking noticed his car was unlocked and the Garage 11. As he was walking from his vehimoney and bank card were missing. The cle, a white female, approximately 35 to 40 victim notified the credit card company of years old, 130 to 135 pounds, 5’4” tall with the theft when he returned home and
found that $BB4 in unauthorized charges had been made on the Visa card.
Foolhardy ‘Texan’ damages emergency
phone in climb An employee reported at 2:39 a.m. April 15 that a student was seen climbing on the emergency phone pole located at the intersection of Campus Drive and Anderson Street. The student was found and asked to climb down from the pole. The two “Help” signs on the pole were bent due to the student climbing on the pole. The underage student had been drinking and was found in possession of a fraudulent Texas driver’s license. Report to police sends potential thiefrunning A visitor reported at 3:10 p.m. April 15 that she saw a black male in his 40s (short black hair, approximately 5’9”, 175 pounds, medium build, wearing a blue hat, green plaid shirt, black pants, white socks and black shoes) climb onto the cab of a truck parked on level IB of Parking Garage 11. She saw the suspect shatter the left back window and saw him enter the truck. The witness said the suspect fled when he saw her calling the police on her cell phone. Damage to the truck window was estimated at $4OO. Eye Center theft leaves employee without phone, keys An employee reported at 11:11 p.m. April 15 that her $199.99 cell phone and $lOO set of keys were stolen. The victim said she remembered seeing the items on the top of her desk in the Duke Eye Center at 6:30 p.m. April 15. The main office door, was locked but her office door was open.
from staff reports
Three win Graduate School’s inaugural mentoring awards Three faculty members have been awarded the Graduate School’s inaugural Dean’s Award for Excellence in Mentoring, which was established this year to recognize good mentors and to improve mentoring at the University. This year’s honorees are Lori Setton, associate professor of biomedical engineering and Harold L. Yoh Faculty Scholar; John Aldrich, Pfizer-Pratt University Professor of Political Science; and Dr. Salvatore Pizzo, chair and professor of pathology. The honorees were chosen from among 57 nominees, by a selection committee consisting of five doctoral students and two of the senior deans of the Graduate School. Setton, Aldrich and Pizzo will be honored April 21 in conjunction with recipients of this year’s teaching awards. The Graduate School will present each recipient of the mentoring award with a plaque and $2,000 cash prize.
GORGEOUS WEATHER ALL WEEK LONG TUESDAY H 83° Sunny WEDNESDAY Sunny H 85° THURSDAY Sunny FRIDAY Sunny
HOLOCAUST REMEMBRANCE DAY 20 HOLOCAUST SURVIVOR TANIA ROZMARYN SPEAKS TONIGHT APRIL 19 at 7:3opm
MULTI-CULTURAL CENTER First they came for the Jews and I did not speak out because I was not a Jew.
Then they came for the Communists and I did not speak out because I was not a Communist. Then they came for the trade unionists and I did not speak out because I was not a trade unionist. Then they came for me and there was no one left to speak out for me. —Pastor Martin Niemoller
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THE CHRONICLE
DOWNS from page 1 everything works out okay, and what you should remember is to let this moment inform the rest ofyour days.” Sterly Wilder, director of the Annual Fund and chair of the student speaker selection committee, said Downs’s speech had broad appeal, humor and good delivery that distinguished it from other qualified applicants. She added that Downs’s on-stage experience with DUI benefited him insofar as it gave him poise and a sense of comfort while speaking. However, she pointed out that the speech is not a comedy sketch. “It’s a graduation speech,” she said. Dean of Students Sue Wasiolek, who made a guest appearance at DUl’s annual Big Show Thursday night, said Downs was a natural speaker on stage. “I think what was the most impressive part is [his speech is] really not a speech,” she said. “His delivery is more like telling a story. Paul is just such an accomplished presence on
The Mary Lou Williams Center for Black Culture is proud to present:
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The Haitian Revolution and its Aftermath in Pan-African Context Monday, April 19th 12:00 Noon Mary Lou Williams Center for Black Culture Dr. Edmondson, Professor in the Africana Studies and Research Center at Cornell University since 1983, is a political scientist with specializations in international relations (especially concerning Africa and the Caribbean) and race relations (especially concerning the Black World).
MONDAY, APRIL 19,2004
stage and he’s just very captivating.” Despite his considerable performance experience, Downs said he will likely be nervous when he steps up to the microphone at Wallace Wade Stadium. The difference between the speech and DUI, he said, is that he will not be playing a character—it will be just him, exposed, emotionally naked and trying to convey his own bits of personal wisdom. The student speech lasts about five to seven minutes and must appeal to undergraduates and graduate students, Wilder said. Last year’s speaker was Terry Schuster, Trinity ‘O3, who combined elements of humor with an abiding sense of wistful nostalgia in his address. Wasiolek said a good student graduation speech “really invites everyone—the graduates as well as their families and friends—to identify with what’s being said [and] to feel the speaker is including them in their remarks, and [strikes] a balance between reflecting on the past and challenging folks to the future.”
“The overarching message of it is that everything works out okay, and what you should remember is to let this moment inform the rest of your days.” Paul Downs
I 5
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MONDAY, APRIL 19, 2001
THE CHRONICLE
ANGELICA from page 1
tals, the Duke University Medical Center and several smaller health care operations—is one of Angelica’s largest clients in the region. DUHS sold its 65,000 square-foot laundry facility to Angelica in March and has negotiated a service agreement that names Angelica as the laundry provider for DUHS for the next several years. The contract also contains a
Burness said. “[The proviso] would be pus, they fall short on their principles,” Rutter said, adding that she and other SAS specifically for the Duke plant, but it’s pretty clear that we’d take a look at Angelica as representatives are meeting Monday with a company.” Donelan. “We will definitely be asking for a The University is no stranger to labor response [to the allegations] at the rally, concerns with its partner companies. In since they’ve had a week to look over the 1998, SAS protests drove the University information.” The allegations against Angelica range to adopt a policy aimed at eliminating the use of sweatfrom health and safety violations, such as shops in the improper handling of linens soiled with manufacture of bodily fluids, to charges of intimidation University ap- and harassment of workers who supported “Duke has been involved with the Since unionization. In total, the report SAS and stipulation parel. that specifithen, Duke has UNITE submitted to Keohane and antisweathshop movement across taken anti-sweatcally manDonelan documents OSHA citations rethe country, but when it comes to dates Angelishop action on sulting in over $50,000 in fines and 19 ca abide by several occa- charges filed with the NLRB. issues on their campus, they fall all state and sions. The UniUniversity officials maintain that they federal labor short on their principles.” versity, driven by will not ignore workers’ and activists’ conSAS and the cerns, and that they will monitor the situaregulations, Rutter Burness said Farm Labor Or- tion to ensure Angelica’s compliance with When DUHS ganizing Com- its contract and with all state and federal first selected mittee, has also regulations. Burness said Keohane has made clear Angelica through a competitive bidding been entangled in protests concerning process, the laundry provider told Duke unionization of the Mt. Olive Pickle her personal feeling that “workers ought that complaints had been filed alleging Company. to have the right to bargain collectively, various labor violations. Burness said The Angelica controversy will become but that doesn’t mean they ought to barDuke officials investigated those claims much more visible tomorrow in a rally SAS gain collectively.” Even if the allegations with “due diligence” before putting any and UNITE have planned to take place on are true, he said, administrators might the Chapel Quadrangle at noon. agreements in ink. instead concentrate on what can be “[DUHS officials] expect Angelica to “Duke has been involved with the antidone to improve workers’ conditions abide by and comply with all of the OSHA sweatshop movement across the country, while the unionization battles are being and NLRB federal regulation contracts,” but when it comes to issues on their camfought.
group had not received any feedback to date. John Burness, senior vice president for public affairs and government relations, said that the administration’s response was contingent upon Angelica’s reaction and that the corporation had not yet received the report because William Donelan, executive vice president and chief operating officer of DUHS, has been out of town. “Duke really has a lot of leverage in this relationship,” said Sonny Suchdev, a research analyst for UNITE who has been working with Duke’s SAS in this campaign. “We believe that Duke can and should pressure Angelica to clean up its sweatshop conditions, respond to OSHA violations, demand that Angelica stop fighting the union and come to a neutral process where workers can organize without harassment or intimidation from their employer.” Burness noted that the University may evaluate its relationship with Angelica in light of the corporation’s response to the allegations. “President [Nan] Keohane said we’d probably have to see a pattern of behavior that we ultimately decide would require some action on our part,” he said. DUHS—comprised of two local hospi-
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MONDAY,
CHAMPAGNE from page 1 connections with its neighbors throughout Durharti and North Carolina. Duncan Yaggy, chief planning officer for DUHS, worked with Champagne to create a distance-based curriculum that would train nurse practitioners from rural areas with health care shortages. Would-be nurses from these areas could not necessarily afford a couple of years away from home to get a nursing degree on campus. Yaggy said he was initially discouraged by Champagne’s reception of the distancebased education idea because she pointed out that none ofher faculty memberswould have enough time to work on it. “I got up to go because it seemed that we were not able to move forward,” he said. “But she said, ‘But I’ll do it,’ and sure enough she did. And with the dean taking the lead, others can be persuaded to follow and contribute.” Champagne noted the School of Nursing now also has funding to educate geriatric, neonatal and pediatric nurse practitioners for rural areas. Champagne has worked to improve health care closer to home as well, co-founding the Division of Community Health, a joint division of the School of Nursing and the Department of Community and Family Medicine. The division seeks to build a bridge between Duke and the communities it serves through clinical services, educational programs and applied research. The Division ofCommunity Health is behind a diverse array of programs, including one that brings dental care to children in the public school system and one that delivers care to elderly residents of Durham’s high-rise subsidized housing. The division is also behind such initiatives as the Durham Community Health Network, Latino Access to Coordinated Healthcare and a number
ofschool-based clinics throughout Durham. “Mary was one of a very small group of Duke faculty who came together about 10 years ago, convinced that Duke could and should partner with local community organizations to improve the health of the Durham community,” said Lloyd Michener, chair of the Department of Community and Family Medicine. Michener credited Champagne with adding “a considerable degree of rigor and discipline to our plans” and with helping the rest of the Medical Center accept and support proposals regarding community outreach initiatives. Much of Champagne’s deanship was also dedicated to rebuilding the School of Nursing from the inside out. Since she took over in 1991, the school has gone from offering three to 13 majors within its Master of Science in Nursing program, and is now on the verge of creating a doctoral program. Two of the School of Nursing’s programs—the Gerontological Nursing and Certified Registered Nurse Anesthesia program—are ranked in the top 10 in the nation in nursing schools, and the school itself is rising in the rankings in both research and overall ranking. “Dean Champagne has grown the School of Nursing from almost nothing to a vibrant, research- and teaching-intensive school that is making its mark nationally,” said Ruth Anderson, associate professor at the School of Nursing. With the growth of the school came the growth of the faculty—from five in 1991 to 38 today. Champagne said she was particularly proud of her faculty because it reflected the measure of excellence she hoped to attain in all aspects as dean. “Something you know when you take the job, but that you really come to understand when you are dean, is that the most important things at any school are the faculty and
students,” Champagne said. “If you have a wonderful faculty, you can do wonderful things and recruit wonderful students.” Many at the School of Nursing said the growth of the school over the last decade has been nothing short of remarkable. “I arrived at the School of Nursing in 1996. There were empty offices and plenty of storage rooms,” said Linda Goodwin, director of the Center for Instructional Technology and Distance Learning at the nursing school. “In my eight years at Duke, I have seen [Champagne's] leadership produce incredible growth that is reflected, now, in a space crisis.” A current lack of funds is delaying the groundbreaking on a new facility that would ease the space crunch and bring the School of Nursing under one roof once again. The Board of Trustees approved plans for the building in 2002. “[Champagne] is a low-key, thoughtful, but smart and dedicated leader, who gets things done without making waves—at least until she needs to make them in order to ensure that her high priority projects, like the new building, are given the appropriate prominence on campus,” Keohane said. Champagne’s tenure has seen the School of Nursing rise from a place of obscurity within the University to one of respectability and collaboration. Before Champagne took the reins, the nursing school was at risk of being closed down completely, due in part to a lack of interconnectedness with the rest of the University, said Susan Yaggy, chief of the Division ofCommunity Health. “Dean Champagne's leadership in interdisciplinary collaborations like the Institute for Care at the End of Life has helped bring the School of Nursing much more fully into the life of the rest of the University and make it a real player on campus,” Keohane said. Michener noted that Champagne was
APRIL 19,2004 I
7
instrumental in establishing a number of innovative and interdisciplinary educational programs like the Program in Clinical Leadership, which draws on the Fuqua School ofBusiness, the Sanford Institute of Public Policy and the schools of nursing, medicine and law. Kevin Sowers, COO of Duke Hospital, noted that Champagne has helped forge a stronger link between the nursing school and the Medical Center. “It was under her leadership that the School of Nursing... partnered with the Medical Center academic department to create a positive relationship to support programs such as the nurse anesthesists and the nurse practitioner programs,” he said. Those whohave workedwith Champagne note that, despite her mammoth accomplishments as dean, she maintains her ability to connect with people on a personal level. Eileen Welch, associate dean for external affairs at the School of Nursing said Champagne is a very effective fundraiser because she is “believable.” “She presents her case with the strongest possible data, and it’s in a believable fashion,” Welch said. “So there’s nothing crazy, no smoke and mirrors—it’s all real. Therefore there’s trust and authenticity.... She’s a relationship builder.” Though most who have worked with Champagne said they are sad to see her leave her post as dean, some admitted that they were glad she was stepping down. “I draw comfort from the fact that her retirement as dean means she’ll have more time to spend with us on further collaborations,” Duncan Yaggy said. “She has spent an enormous amount of time over the last couple of years on the road raising money, and has said a number of times that she looks forward to the opportunity to work more actively with us when she returns as a faculty member. I’m going to take her word on that.”
DUKE: Angelica needs to clean up its act! Duke University Health System recently announced the sale of its laundry plant to a company called Angelica Corporation. Angelica laundry workers throughout the country face sweatshop conditions in their workplaces, including low wages, high health insurance costs, questionable health and safety conditions, and supervisors who float harassment and intimidation clouds over the workplace.
Rally to Support Duke Workers and Angelica Workers Around the Country! Tuesday, April 20 Noon, Chapel Quad Duke's outsourcing move is an example of prioritizing profits over people, and is bad for workers, students, and the community. (See www.thedirtylaundry.org for more info)
Angelica workers celebrating victory
Sponsored by: Duke Students Against Sweatshops, Student Employee Relations Committee Endorsed by: Duke Democrats, Duke Chapter of Amnesty International, Duke Progressive Alliance, United Students Against Sweatshops (national), UNITE!, Triangle Jobs with Justice, and North Carolina Occupational Safety & Health
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MONDAY, APRIL 19,
THE CHRONICLE
200-1
BEARD from page I said. ‘To join the Mystics family is very exciting and is an honor. I am blessed and cannot wait to meet my teammates. It is going to be a lot of fun.” The Shreveport, La., native, who this year joined Holdsclaw as only the second three-time member of the AP women’s college basketball All-America team, was widely expected to go No. 2 in the draft behind Diana Taurasi. The former Connecticut standout was selected first overall by the Phoenix Mercury. Rounding out the top-five picks were Stanford’s Nicole Powell (Charlotte Sting), Minnesota’s Lindsay Whalen (Connecticut Sun) and Arkansas’ Shameka Christon (New York Liberty). Despite a talented roster that includes Holdsclaw, Stacey Dales-Schuman and Coco Miller, the Mystics finished a disappointing 9-25 in 2003. However, with the offseason additions of Beard and point guard Tamicha Jackson from Phoenix, Washington should be in position to make a drastic turnaround in 2004.
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“We are very excited that we had the opportunity to pick Alana,” said Judy Holland Burton, Mystics Senior Vice President of Business and Basketball Operations. ‘This is an incredible day for the Mystics. We are sure that Alana will be a perfect compliment to this team.” As Duke’s all-time leading scorer, Beard will bring a polished offensive game to a Washington team that averaged 68.5 points per game last year, but perhaps her greatest
will be her defensive prowess. “I have seen Alana play a few times already, and I think that the most important thing that our team needed was perimeter defense,” Mystics head coach Michael Adams said. “Alana can pressure the ball, and she is physical with whoever she is guarding.” Although Beard’s selection garnered the most attention, her four-year teammate Iciss Tillis was also drafted in the first round by the defending WNBA champion Detroit Shock with the 11th pick. Tillis—who at 6-foot-5 can play from the perimeter or in the post—will bring versatility to a team led by Swin Cash, Deanna Nolan, Ruth Riley and Cheryl Ford. asset
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Learn Korean Language and Culture! Korean courses offered in the fall
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AALL 163/LIT 165E Korean literature in translation Instructor: Susie Kim
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This course is an introduction to the study of modem Korean literature through the broad theme of “individual and society.” This course will cover key works of fiction from the early twentieth century to the postwar era and will address issues such as nationalism, Japanese colonization, changing role of women, theKorean War, American occupation, and national division. Supplementary readings will provide historical contextualization f as necessary. Discussions will be based on cjose readings of the texts. All materials will be provided in English. No prerequisites. \
KOR 001 Elementary Korean Instructor: Hae-Young Kim M W 2:50 PM-4:05 PM,Tu Th 2:50 PM-3:40 PM
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This course begins with learning sounds of spoken Korean and the writing system, Hangul. The goals of the course are to develop oral skills for basic communication, to learn to read and write in Korean, and to acquire foundational grammar for constructing simple sentences. Class work involves oral practice including interactive activities as well as drills.The course is intended for students who (i) have never studied Korean before, or (ii) understand a bit of Korean, but cannot speak.
KOR 063 Intermediate Korean Instructor: Hae-Young Kim M Tu W Th U3O PM-2:20 PM This course focuses on advancing literacy and oral skills for information exchange and social interaction. It aims to develop students abilities to read stories, to write personal essays, to listen for information, to respond appropriately to conversational situations, and to improve accuracy in speech and writing by working on grammar. The course materials include traditional Korean folk tales, and contemporary TV commercials and i shows. The course can be taken by students who (i) speak Korean fairly well for basic communication or speak Korean with parents, and (ii) can read Korean,but only slowly.
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KOR 125 Advanced Korean Instructor: Yoonkyung Lee Tu Th 2:50 PM-4:05 PM This course focuses on developing higher levels oforal and literacy skills by immersing students in cultural p content and major social issues. It alms to increase students’ understanding of contemporary Korean society f and to enhance their ability to engage in discussion of complex topics. The topics of class include internet use, ■ gender inequality, social networks, militarism, and foreign workers in Korea. Reading selections will consist of i poems, short stories, newspaper reports and articles, magazine articles, and messages on internet bulletins. i Assignments include writing essays and viewing films and writing up reactions. This course can be taken by students who (i) can speak, read, and write with ease, (ii) took Korean classes in high.school, or (iii) attended Elementary school in Korea for no more than 3 years.
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KOR 183 Topics in Korean Instructor: Hae-Young Kim MW 11:40 AM-12:55 PM
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This course aims to further develop Korean native speakers’ language and cultural abilities to be on par with college-educated native Korean speaker. Towards that end, extensive reading selections covering such issues as linguistic nationalism, the educational system, the Park Chunghee regime, and the role of religion are used for analytical reading and for delineating students’positions on these issues in discussion and writing. This course can be taken by students who (i) speak Korean as native language and (ii) received education in Korean at a level higher than elementary school but lower than college.
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“[I can bring] even more versatility,” Tillis said. ‘They have great rebounders like Swin Cash and Cheryl Ford, great post players who will raise the level of my game. I’m just excited about this next part of my career and I am ready to get going.” Tillis was projected by many draft analysts to go to Sacramento with the No. 10 pick, but the Monarchs went with Georgetown forward Rebekkah Brunson instead. The selection of Brunson allowed Tillis to slip to the Shock, who are coached by former NBA star Bill Laimbeer. “I think Cam going to like playing for Coach Bill Laimbeer,” Tillis said. “He structures his team like manyof the NBA teams do. There is a lot of fast-breaking, there isn’t much structure, and it just seems like a fun style of play to be involved with.” With the drafting ofTillis and Beard, Duke became the only school to have two players chosen in the first round this year. And despite a disappointing end in the NCAA tournament to their senior season with the Blue Devils, both women are ready for the next stage of their careers. “I had only a day after the Minnesota loss [in the NCAA tournament] to just sit back and drown myself in my sorrows, and the next day I had to get started with everything—picking an agent and doing all this crazy stuff,” Beard said. T’ve been traveling for the past three weeks and it’s been hectic, but I’ve been loving it. I have had a great career at Duke, but this is a new journey and I am very excited about what lies ahead.”
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Good luck to everyone with final papers, projects and exams! Look for the exam break issue on Monday, April 26.
The Chronicle
Sportswrap
2 1 MONDAY, APRIL 19,2004
I
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MEN’S GOLF
SIXTH PLACE
Inconsistent play yields sixth place finish for Duke by
“We were dueling it with Carolina for a Caryle Cup point,” Myers said. “We knew it was really
Stephen Harward THE CHRONICLE
With three top-fives in their last three events, including a win in Raleigh last week, the Blue Devils
Mike Castleforte played consistently for the Blue Devils shooting rounds of 70,73 and 72 over the weekend.Despite his effort, Duke finished sixth.
traveled to Badin Lake, NC this weekend to play in the ACC Championships. Before the event, there was a consensus among the team that the time had come for head coach Rod Myers to win his first ACC Championship and this year was the best opportunity he has had in his 31year career. Unfortunately though, Myers will have to wait at least one more year before he will be able to bring that all-elusive ACC title to Durham. This weekend, at the Old North State Club, the Blue Devils struggled to a sixth-place finish by shooting a three-round total of 857. During the firstround, Duke came out strong, shooting 287—only four shots behind the leader Wake Forest. Sitting in the fourth going into the second day, the Blue Devils looked to move into good position to compete for the tide during the final round. Instead of moving closer to the leaders though, Duke moved in the opposite direction. ‘We just never got anything going [Saturday],” coach Myers said. “There was some awfully good golf played but not by us.” With a second-round total of of 293 —the second worst score of the day—the Blue Devils fell to sixth position, 21 shots behind the eventual winner, Clemson. Needing a miracle to win, the focus for Duke shifted from capturing the ACC tide to defeating its tobacco road rival, North Carolina. Up until the very last shot, the Blue Devils battled with the Tar Heels. During the entire round, only a few shots separated the two teams.
Summit Square
dose. It came down to Blaum and Dustin Bray on the 18th.” With the final two players —Duke’s Ryan Blaum and UNC’s Dustin Bray—going into,the last hole, the Tar Heels and Blue Devils were tied at six under par for the tournament. On the par-five 18th, Blaum hit the green in two while Bray sat about 15 yards short of the green after two shots. Even though Blaum appeared to have the upper hand, Bray was able to propel his team past the Blue Devils by chipping in for a three while Blaum two-putted for a four. Despite a disappointing weekend, there were some very strong individual performances for, the Blue Devils. Leading the way were sophomores Nathan Smith and Ryan Blaum who both recorded three-day scores of three-underpar, good enough for a 11th place. Smith played fairly well all weekend but the highlight of his play was-final nine holes in which he recorded a 32 with five birdies and one bogey. ‘Today [Smith] started out slow,” Myers said. ‘Then he just started to convert on every opportunity he had.” Following Smith and Blaum were senior Mike Casdeforte who finished in a tie for 17th, sophomore Alex Wilson who placed in a tie for 25th, and senior Rob Beasely who finished tied for 35th. Even though the Blue Devils were unable to bring home the ACC title, they are still confident and feel they are ready for the NCAA Regionals in a few weeks. “We had really high hopes coming in,” Casdeforte said. ‘We are all playing really well, but at the same time, I think we got a lot better this week.”
DUKE MEN’S BASKETBALL Coach K invites all undergrads and grad students to join in the celebration of this past season at this year’s Banquet Program this Friday, April 23, in Cameron Indoor Stadium.
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The Chronicle TRACK & FIELD
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Sportswrap
MONDAY, APRIL 19,2004 I 3
I MEN: EIGHTH, WOMEN: EIGHTH
Duke unable to keep up with the pack by
Jason Strasser
THE CHRONICLE
The Duke track and field team did climb far out of the ACC cellar this weekend. Both'the men’s and women’s teams finished eighth at the ACC championships at North Carolina’s Fetzer Field, scoring 23 points and 46 points, respectively. However, there were a few standout individual performances. Four Blue Devil women claimed All-Conference honors, and all four finished third in their respective events. Sophomore Clara Horowitz crossed the finish line in her 5,000-meter run with a time of 16:28.10, tying her personal best. Freshman Kelly Reynold’s hammer throw went a distance of 167-8 and freshman' Debra Vento’s jump cleared a height of 5-8. The last All-Conference performance was delivered by junior Paige Miller, who turned in an NCAA provisional qualifying time of 34:15.36. “I think everyone just went out there and did their best,” Vento said. “A lot of other teams might send a lot more people to a certain event, but we spread it out a little bit. I know that we got a place in throws, and we had some distance runners. I think some teams put them out in five events or four events, so that you have so many people in each event. But if you’re doing all those events, you can’t always put your best effort towards them.” On the men’s side, the best performance was by senior Brent Warner, who finished third in the pole vault by clearing a season-best height of 16-8.75. The mark earned him All-Conference honors for the second consecutive year. Junior Nick Schneider and senior Casey Reardon ran well in the 1,500meter race, finishing fifth and eighth, respectively. Schneider hit the tape in 3:48.64, and Reardon crossed the line with a time of 3:49.32. Senior Jon Amt also registered points in the 800-meter run with a time of 1:52.92. Two Duke freshman runners signifinot
1 2ND PLACE
I
WOMEN’S ROWING
Rowers earn second place finish by
Catherine Sullivan THE CHRONICLE
LEA HARRELL/THE CHRONICLE
BrentWarner vaulted to a season-best height of 16-8.75at the ACC Championships.
cantly improved on their personal bests. Keith Krieger knocked 40 seconds off his best time to finish fifth with a time of 30:17.23 in the 10,000-meter event. And Dan King registered a time of 48.01 in the 400-meter dash. Both runners qualified
for the IC4A Championships The next event for Duke’s track and field teams are the prestigious Penn Relays. The event is the oldest and largest relay carnival in the world, and it takes place April 22-24 in Philadelphia.
For the third consecutive year, the No. 20 women’s rowing team came in second at the ACC Championships. Sixth-ranked Virginia won its fifth-straight conference title with 40 points, while the Blue Devils (25 points) defeated Clemson (23) and North Carolina (11). “We all feel like we had one of the best races of the season,” senior Courtney Triffletti said. “It was a championship race, and we were all hungry for it.” The Cavaliers, who have only lost one race in the five years of the championship, claimed first place in all four events Saturday at Lake Hartwell in Clemson, S.C. “[Virginia] has a long history as a team, and they’ve been a varsity program for a while,” Triffletti said. ‘We always wanted to try to get UVa, but they’re very fast. Duke picked up four points in the first race of the day with a third-place finish in the varsity four competition. The crew of coxswain Kareen Murray, Triffletti, Missy Buckmiller, Sarah Miller and Leah FrankFinney obliterated North Carolina (8:24.7) on the 2000-meter course with a time of 8:06.1, but finished well behind Virginia’s 7:45.1 and Clemson’s 7:50.8. No Blue Devils raced in the day’s second event, the novice eight, which was dominated by the Cavaliers. Duke used several freshmen in its varsity eight boats, so it did not enter a boat of just first-year rowers. The most points of the day were won in the second and first varsity eight races. The second varsity eight was led by coxswain Sarah Shapiro, Tonia Boock, Krista Harryman, Lauren Case, Caroline Wray, Carrie Wilkerson, Julia Gelfand, SEE CREW ON PAGE 7
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The Chronicle
Sportswrap
DAPOLITO LEADS OFFENSE TO WIN by
Robert Samuel THE CHRONICLE
While most visitors reminisced about the past this alumni weekend, the football team attempted to give fans an optimistic look at the future in its annual spring game Saturday. The Blue team (offense) defeated the White squad (defense) 37-23 Saturday behind four touchdowns from quarterback Chris Dapolito. The winner of the Most Improved Quarterback award for the spring practice session threw for three scores and added six more points with the play of the game on the ground. Dapolito faked out the entire defense with a bootleg play that allowed the New Jersey native to skirt into the left side of the endzone untouched in the second half. Throughout the game, the offense relied on a normal scoring system with seven points for a touchdown and an extra point and three points for a converted field goal, while the defense received two points for a three-and-out and seven points for stopping the Blue team inside the three-yard line. Despite this seemingly unfair scoring system, the game came down to the wire as the offense held the ball on the two-yard line with a 30-23 lead on the last possession of the game. Had the defense stopped the Blue team, the game would have ended in a tie. But Dapolito found tight end Andy Roland, an All-ACC candidate for next season, in the endzone to complete the victory for the offense. Fans did not get a full glimpse of the team as the Blue Devils were slowed by a number of nagging injuries. Mike Schneider, who was named the starting quarterback for next season by head coach Ted Roof, sat out the game with a broken thumb. Roof has also said Schneider will split snaps with Dapolito and Nebraska transfer Curt Dukes. In addition to Dapolito’s stellar play, Dukes completed three of his seven passing attempts for 27 yards, while also rushing for 14 yards. Dukes’ ground total would have been much higher if sacks had not taken away much of his positive yardage. “[Dukes and I] weren’t worried about competition,” Dapolito said. “As long as we execute the offense and show that we’re leaning, that helps the team.” In addidon to Schneider’s ailment, running back Cedric Dargan injured his ankle on his first carry, fellow tail back Aaron Fryer sat out the game with an undisclosed leg problem and expected offensive linemen starters Jim Moravchik and Dan Mooney did not practice in the spring because of injuries.
The defense played without defensive end Phillip Alexander (sprained wrist) and cornerback John Talley (left shoulder). In addition, linebacker Alex Williams sprained his left knee during the scrimmage and did not return. ‘That’s football,” Roof said. “We’ve got to be smart in how we practice, and not get our players in those types of [precarious] situations. Everybody on the football team needs some reps, but at the same time it gives us a chance to look at some other guys and develop some depth which we know we’re going to need as the season goes along.” Perhaps the player who benefited most from the increased repetitions was John Paul Kimbroguh, who is a converted running back after playing defense a yearago. The junior led the Blue Devils with 63 rushing yards. The game began with a trick play, as Dapolito lateraled the ball to wide receiver Lance Johnson, who subsequendy threw a lofting pass down the field before it was batted down by the White team. The rest of the contest saw mosdy routine plays, as Roof feared opponents may be scoudng the team. “You see that security up there... there is none,” Roof said with a smile as he pointed to the surrounding ring above the playing field. “People that don’t have tape on us might have been [here]. We kept it basic.” Despite the nearly five months that have passed since Roof s promotion to head coach from interim head coach, the Duke players still talk of a honeymoon between the players and coach that has led to a more cohesive team. “Coach Roof is like a father figure to me and everybody else on the team,” said Johnson, who led Duke with 70 receiving yards. “Everybody loves him, and he loves us. On and off the field he cares about what’s going on. He’ll come out [on the field] and tell you what you’re doing wrong to make you better. And then you go to the mess hall and he asks you about your girlfriend, your mom and dad... he really cares about you. He’s just pushing us all to be a family. You want to do good for your family, and that’s what he’s really stressing.” The Blue Devils begin their season at Navy September 4 where they hope to build on a new expectation level for Duke football. “It’s going to be a more intense Duke team,” senior linebacker Giuseppe Aguanno said. “Our main focus on this team is effort. As long as everybody is giving effort, we feel we have a chance in every game we play.”
THE QB CONUNDRUM Chris Dapolito Dapolito dominate Saturday’s spring game with a four touchdown performance. Three of th diverse threat’s scores came via the the fourth byway o
ground. Dapolito g; Most Improved Qu award for his play recently completed
Mike Schneider Schneider has already been named next season’s starting quarterback, but the solid pocket passer sat out Saturday’s game with a brothumb. Despite being named ipening day starter, Schneider ly have a tight leash if things his way early in the season. Curt Dukes
The Nebraska transfer will finally become eligible when the team kicks off the season in the fall. Dukes is an option expret who will likely get his chance to shine in a revitalized, wide open Duke offense. Some thought Dukes would be handed the job, but Dapolito and Schneider have proven viable candidates.
The Chronicle WOMEN'S TENNIS
i
Sportswrap
MONDAY, APRIL 19,2004 I 5
1 FINALS: CLEMSON 4, DUKE 2
Down to the wire, but Duke loses title match Smith fails to pull out final match: Duke defeated by Tigers by Greg Czaja THE CHRONICLE
RALEIGH
With her
team
down 3-2, and her oppo-
nent, Clemson’s Maria Brito, up 6-5 in the final set and one point away from winning the match, Julia Smith needed a miraculous second serve to stave off elimination. Unfortunately, divine intervention was not in Duke’s favor Sunday—the serve slammed into the net, and a vol-
ley ofcheers erupted from the Clemson squad upon realizing that they had just become ACC Champions. “I thought that Julia would pull it out,” said senior Amanda Johnson, who quickly exited Sunday’s competition via a 6-3, 7-5 loss to No. 8 Julie Coin. The loss marks only the second time in the past 17 years that the Blue Devils (19-4) have failed to win the ACC Championship. The defeat was also Duke’s second at the hands of the Tigers (22-3), who topped the Blue Devils 5-2 April 11th in Duke’s only regular-season ACC loss this year. “Competing-wise, I thought we were about even,” Duke head coach Jamie Ashworth said. “Physically, I thought we were about even. I thought mentally they played a little better than us in the big points.” The trouble started early for the Blue Devils when they were defeated in the doubles competition. Freshman Jennifer Zika and junior Katie Blaszak lost 8-5 to Richele Lesaldo and Karen Rombouts, while Johnson and junior Saras Arasu lost to Coin and Alix Lacelaire 8-6. “It would have definitely been more helpful to win the doubles point,” Johnson said. “You go out knowing that you have to win four out of six matches. It did add a little pressure.” Ashworth tried his best to encourage his players. “[I told them to] just believe in themselves,” he said. “I thought that if they believed in themselves and believed in each other then the results would just take care of themselves.” However, the singles competition started very poorly for the Blue Devils. Johnson fell in straight sets and freshman Tory Zawacki lost to Lacelaire, the tournament MVP, 6-4, 6-1. Blaszak was the only Duke player who cruised to victory—the junior won 6-4, 6-2 over loana Paun. Trailing Clemson 3-1, the mission was clear—Duke would have to win all of its remaining matches. SEE
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TENNIS ON PAGE
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BOBBY RUSSELL/THE CHRONICLE
Saras Arasu pulled out a tight second-set tiebreaker to swing the momentum in the Blue Devils favor, but it was to no avail, as Duke fell 4-2.
MEN’S TENNIS I
I SEMIFINALS: VIRGINIA 4, DUKE 0
Duke ousted by Virginia in ACC semis by
Jordan Koss
THE CHRONICLE
PETER
GEBHARD/THECHRONICLE
Peter Rodrigues defeated Wake Forest's Brett Ross to help theBlue Devils advance to the semifinals.
It was disappointing enough for the third-seeded men’s tennis team that they failed to capture the ACC Tournament title for only the fourth time in Jay Lapidus’ 14 years as head coach. It is even more disappointing that the loss came to second-seeded rival Virginia in the semifinals. Saturday, against the Cavaliers, the Blue Devils just could not get it going at any point during the 4-0 loss. “We wanted to beat them bad,” sophomore Jonathan Stokke said. Stokke missed the match after sustaining a wrist injury against Wake Forest in the quarterfinal round. “Virginia has been playing well and with a lot of confidence,” Stephen Amritraj wrote in an e-mail. “But I do not
think we played our A game today, and the loss ofStokes [Stokke] I think hurt us a bit as well.” Without Stokke, the doubles lineup was revamped, but Duke could not pull out the first point of the match. After Ludovic Walter and Peter Rodrigues won at No. 3 and Jason Zimmermann and Amritraj fell at No. 1, both by the score of 8-5, Senior Phillip King and junior Peter Schults lost the deciding doubles match 9-8 (7-5). While the doubles matches were close, the singles competition was far from it. Virginia captured three straight-set victories, with King, Zimmermann and Brown losing at No. 1, No. 3 and No. 5, respectively. Walter, Rodrigues and Schults did not finish. “In the Virginia match I wasn’t on top of my game,” Zimmermann said. “We
started a little sluggish in doubles and we lost a tough doubles point. In the singles matches, everybody fought really hard, just no one was able to come out on top today.” Against the Demon Deacons Friday, Duke came out hot in the doubles and continued to play well in singles, ultimately taking the match 4-1. The bottom two doubles positions claimed victories for the Blue Devils, as Zimmermann and Amritraj made quick work of their opponents at No. 2, winning 8-1. Walter and Rodrigues clinched the doubles point with an 8-5 triumph at No. 3. In singles, Rodrigues, a freshman from Estoril, Portugal, claimed the first singles win at No. 4 by the count of 6-3, 61. With Stokke forced to retire, and the SEE M. TENNIS ON PAGE 7
The Chronicle
Sportswrap
61 MONDAY, APRIL 19,2004 WOMEN’S LACROSSE I DUKE 10, JOHNS HOPKINS 7
M.LAX UVA 13, DUKE 4
On senior day, freshmen leads the way
Duke ends ACC schedule winless
by
Sarah Kwak
THE CHRONICLE
In the last home games of the the No. 6 women’s lacrosse team took on No. 20 Stanford and No. 9 Johns Hopkins at Koskinen Stadium this weekend. Under the leadership of senior Meghan Walters, the Blue Devils (1B4) won both contests and will use this momentum as they go into the ACC tournament. In Friday’s game against Stanford (7-6), Walters led Duke with three goals as the Blue Devils beat the Cardinal 9-5, The game had been scoreless after 15 minutes, when the Blue Devils’ Lauren Kickham netted her second goal of the season. Seconds later, fellow senior Walters put Duke ahead by two. Stanford came back to even the score with two goals, but the last 10 minutes of the first half belonged to the Blue Devils, who added four additional goals. In the second half, Stanford managed to cut Duke’s lead in half, but freshmen Michelle Menser and Leigh Jester helped to push the lead back to four. With less than a minute left, Stanford’s Abbi Hills put a shot past Duke goalie Megan Huether, who had 11 saves on the night; Kade Chrest prompdy answered with less than 20 seconds left on the clock, regaining the four-goal lead. “It wasn’t the prettiest game, season,
by
Jesse Shuger-Colvin CHRONICLE THE
JENNY MARRON/THE CHRONICLE
Meghan Miller led the Blue Devils to a pair of victories this weekend to close out theirhome schedule. but we got a win out of it and that is what matters,” Jester said. “Our defense especially in the eight meter was unbelievable.... I think [the defensive effort] definitely was the catalyst for the offense.” Sunday afternoon was Senior Day, but on the field, it looked like freshmen day as Kristen Waagbo, Menser and Jester combined for half of the Blue Devils’ goals in the 10-7 winning effort
over Johns Hopkins (11-2). Defenseman Meghan Ferguson kept the Blue Jays’ leading scorer Mary Key, who averages 3.27 goals a game, to two goals. “It is an important day for everyone because we wanted to go out on a good note,” Jester said. “... The underclassmen wanted to do it for the seniors especially those who could not play.” The Blue Jays’ Meagan Voight,
who led the team with four goals, scored the first goal 40 seconds into the game and added another 4:20 into the game to give Johns Hopkins a 2-0 lead. However, the Blue Devils would dominate the game from that point forward. Less than two minutes after Voight’s second goal, Kristy Dirks took a centering pass from SteSEE W. LAX ON PAGE
What was at stake this weekend for the men’s lacrosse team, who entered its game against Virginia with more losses than wins (4-6, 0-3 in the ACC)? Duke’s season wasn’t on the line—that will come next week at the ACC tournament. And beating Virginia, which hasn’t played consistently this season despite returning many of its players from its 2003 NCAA championship team, wasn’t going to give Duke a quality win strong enough to guarantee an invitation. No, the game was to determine seeding for the ACC playoffs, and more importantly for the Blue Devils, it was a chance to prove their sub-par record wasn’t what it seemed. Three of Duke’s losses have been by one goal, after all. That didn’t happen, though, Saturday. Not in a big way. Virginia turned a 3-3 contest into a 13-3 lead, eventually tossing Duke aside 13-4 at Klockner SEE M. LAX ON PAGE
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BAA 93 Intro Biological Anthropology BAA 132 Human Evolution BAA 1441 Primate Field Biology CIST 12S Roman Civilization CULANTH 180.01 Anthropology of Violence ECON 151 Basic Finance/lnvestments ECON 157 Financial Markets & Investments ECON 181 Corporate Finance EDU 100 Foundations of Education ENGLISH 265.02 Middle Ages Through the Ages ENGLISH 90A5.01 Transgressive Friendships ENGLISH 90A5.02 Reading the City ENGLISH 90A5.03 Future Forever: Utopian Community ENGLISH 169CS Omerta of American Charisma EOS 11 The Dynamic Earth GERMAN 2 First-Year German II GERMAN 69 Intensive Intermediate German GREEK 2 Elementary Greek 2 HISTORY 92D American 1877 to Present HISTORY 1065.01 Resistance/Revolution in Latin Am HISTORY 1065.02 Soul Call: Race/Cultural Politics HISTORY 124S Slave Society in Anglo-America ITALIAN 2 Elementary Italian 2 JPN 2 Elementary Japanese LATIN 2 Elementary Latin "
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The Chronicle
Sportswrap
MONDAY, APRIL 19,2004 I 7
M. TENNIS from page 5
CREW from page 3
score closed to 2-1, Walter and Zimmermann pulled out three-set victories to seal the match. King and sophomore No. 6 Chris Brown did not finish their matches. With only the NCAA Tournament left in the 2004 season, the team had mixed emotions about losing the ACC Tournament. “Losing in the ACC [Tournament] is obviously very upsetting,” Amritraj said. “But the whole season, winning [the] NCAA [Tournament] has been our main goal.” Zimmermann felt the team could do a lot to improve before the NCAA Tournament. ‘The main thing we need to do is get out there and practice as much as we can,” Zimmermann said. “Everybody needs to be focused, we need to give our best effort, and then I think we will have a good shot at doing well [in the NCAAs].
Julie Stuart and Lauren Winslow.
team
JESSICIA SCHREIBER/THE CHRONICLE
Christopher Brown lost in the fifth flight as Virginia beat Duke for the second time this season in the semifinals of the ACC Championships Saturday.
North Myrtle Bedch.
The pine-women crew picked up nine points by finishing in second place with a time of 6:56.7, less than 10 seconds behind Virginia; Clemson was third in 6:58.6, while North Carolina finished fourth in 7:17.1. “The second varsity eight walked right through Clemson and shortened the gap with UVa during the sprint,” Triffletti said. “They had a great race.” The Blue Devils wrapped up the competition with 12 points in another second-place showing in the varsity eight competition, with coxswain Jessi Batzell, Amanda Adam, Amber Straight, Natalie Zervas, Mae Joyce Gay, Emma Darling, Corbin Dunlap, Alissa Van Amain and Christine Lauro. Two Duke rowers-seniors Adam and Joyce Gay-were selected to the nine-member All-ACC team. The Blue Devils have a month offfrom competition before the Regionals May 15 in Oak Ridge, Tenn.
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Traveling this Summer? Studying Abroad this Fall? You might need an immunization or booster! To find out what you need, go to The Healthy Devil Online at
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Sportswrap
8 I MONDAY, APRIL 19,2004
Campus
on
Services
STUDENT APPRECIATION WEEK April 19 April 25. -
The employees of Campus Services invite all Duke students to take advantage of this week's Student Appreciation Week “freebies” and activities.
Free Caffeine and Toner Enjoy free regular coffee and free regular fountain drinks at most campus dinin; Participating outlets include: The Great Hall, Subway, Alpine Bagels, Chick-fil-A, The Loop, / Sanford Deli, Rick’s Diner, Blue Devil Beanery, Terrace Cafe, The Marketplace, Trinity Cafe, P Medical Center facilities not included.) Photocopiers will be available for student use in Schaefer Mall, located in tf
Student Appreciation Store Meeting Room A, Bryan Center
For security purposes, identify your personal items with engraving from the Duke Police Department. Engrave your cell phones, laptops, Palm Pilots, bikes, microcassette recorders, desktop computers, medical instruments and more. Monday, April 19 Tuesday, April 20 & Thursday, April 22: Spin 6pm Wednesday, April 21 & Friday, April 23; 10am 11pm -
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•
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Why do we do all this? Simple. Because we appreciate your business and want to say, “Thank You, Duke Students.” This week’s program would not be possible without the extra effort and generosity of Overton Produce and IKON Office Solutions. CAPITAL ASSETS DINING SERVICES DUKECARD OFFICE DUKE GARDENS DUKE FOREST DUKE POLICE DUKE POSTAL OPERATIONS DUKE UNIVERSITY STORES* EVENT MANAGEMENT FACILITIES MANAGEMENT. PARKING & TRANSPORTATION SERVICES UNIVERSITY HOUSEKEEPING •
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Sportswrap
romc
M. LAX
from page 6
Stadium in Charlottesville, Va., Saturday afternoon. After losing to No. 2 Johns Hopkins by just a goal last week, it was, at the very least, disappointing for the Blue Devils to lose to the No. 18 Cavaliers (4-6,1-2) by nine goals. “We were off all over,” said sophomore midfielder Matt Zash, who scored a goal in the second quarter. “It was a struggle all game to get a decent possession. The way we played, the lack of effort, to lose a game like that, it’s heart breaking.” The Blue Devils spent almost 43 minutes—more than two-thirds of the game—watching their shots miss the cage or be turned aside by Virginia’s Tillman Johnson, perhaps the best goalie in Division I. If not for Zash’s score just into the second quarter and senior midfielder Grant Byczek’s goal at the very end of the game, Duke would have had less points (4) than Duke’s women’s tennis team scored in its match Sunday. Then again, there are easier things in the world than trying to score on Johnson, an All-American and the USILA goalie and player of the year in 2003. “He made some nice saves,” Zash said. “Our shooting wasn’t where it needed to be for that type of game.” Four players scored a goal apiece for Duke while three Cavaliers had hat tricks. The Blue Devils held their own in the face-off circle for the second straight game, winning 9of-20, but were outshot (40-33) and beaten to the groundballs (43-33). The loss gives the Blue Devils an 0-3 record in conference play and the bottom seed for next week’s ACC tournament in Chapel Hill. Duke will play top-seeded Maryland while Virginia and North Carolina meet in the other semifinal. If the Blue Devils want to reach their fourth consecutive ACC tournament title game, they will have to upset Maryland and the winner of the other semifinal—a team that will have already defeated Duke in the regular season. In fact, the Duke players might want to go looking for some four-leaf clovers and buy some lucky rabbits feet this week. “I think we have a great chance [in the ACC tournament],” Zash said. “We’ve always been successful, been in the finals the last three years. We don’t plan on losing another game for the rest of the season. It’s do-or-die for us. If we lose again, we are out.”
MONDAY, APRIL 19, 2004 I 9
CHAMPS from The Chronicle page 1
ously playing with better players you’re going to get better.” Through the first two days of action, the Blue Devils
“We played very well,” sophomore Liz Janangelo said. “I think what made the difference was that everyone was very supportive of one another, and we really came together as a team and that showed in our score.” Duke shot the best round of the tournament and a school record Sunday as it carded an 11-under 273, two strokes better than an impressive Demon Deacon team that finished five-over-par for the weekend. Leading the way all weekend for the Blue Devils was Lang. She was four under par through her first seven holes and finished with a 67 Friday, but still trailed North Carolina golfer Meaghan Francella by one stroke. Both Lang and Francella shot two-under 69 in Saturday’s action. The highlight of the round came on the fourth hole when Lang sank a 40-yard pitch for eagle on the par five. However, a double bogey just two holes later negated the eagle and was the only blemish on her front nine. For the McKinney, Tex. native, Sunday’s round was simply a continuation of her hot play. “I was pretty confident coming into [Sunday],” Lang said. “I’ve been playing great, but I’ve been missing some putts. I just went out there with a lot of confidence and could see another round in the 60’s.” Lang tied Francella with a birdie on the 13th hole and then capitalized on the Tar Heel’s bogey on 15, as she was able to take the lead and hold on for the victory. While excited about her win, Lang’s focus continues to be on improving her play. “I think coming to Duke was the best thing for my game,” Lang said. Tve learned so much from playing with this golf team and playing with these great players. Obvi-
W. LAX
from page 6
fanie Sparks and put it past Blue Jay goalie Lauren Riddick for the first of Duke’s 10 goals in the game. Duke kept Johns Hopkins from scoring again until 26:17 in the first half when Erin Riordan put one past Huether. However, with three seconds left in the first half Walters regained the three-goal lead, scoring off a free position shot.
found themselves up 14 strokes on North Carolina. However, they had yet to play their best golf. Janangelo, although tied for eighth heading into the final day, had turned in consecutive rounds of 73. Anna Grzebien opened Friday with an even-par 71, but struggled Saturday with 5 bogeys and a double bogey. Sunday’s action was much different. After reverting back to the golf ball she had played with during the fall and replacing the grip on her putter, Janangelo had seven birdies and just two bogeys and finished tied for fourth at 1-under par. Grzebien rebounded from her performance to shoot three-underand finished tied for 11th. “Today was a little bit more like Liz,” Duke head coach Dan Brooks said. ‘That’s what she is capable of.” Brooks also added praise for Grzebien’s resiliency. “I was real excited for Anna,” he said. “That just shows what she’s made of. A person like Anna is not going to be down very long.” Not to be overshadowed were Blue Devils Leigh Anne Hardin and Virada Nirapathpongporn, who finished tied for seventh at one-over-par for the tournament. Hardin was even on her final round, while the senior birdied her final hole of the day but still shot a 72. In winning the ACC Championship, Duke secured its ninth tournament victory of the season. Brooks has no worries about his team slowing down as they look towards the NCAA regional and championship. “I think we’ve got a lot of really driven athletes,” Brooks said. ‘They all have personal goals. I think they are achievers and people that want to get better and always work on getting better. That’s what drives them. I don’t think winning is the only thing that’s driving them.” The Blue Jays scored two goals in five minutes to begin the second half, cutting the Duke lead to one goal. But Jester and Kickham each scored an unassisted goal within three minutes. Johns Hopkins refused to give up, though, and Key and Voight scored their 43rd and 20th goals, respectively. With a one-goal lead and a little over 10 minutes to play, Duke’s Waagbo and Menser answered back to keep the three-goal lead. Their goals were left unanswered, as Duke handed Johns Hopkins its second loss of the season.
stuck inside studying for finals? find out what you r ve been missing, the chronicle archives on-line: anytime, any place, emerging from Perkins not required.
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APRIL 19, 2001
2004 to
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Announcements 2004 Graduate School and Professional School Candidates Baccalaureate Tickets must be picked up on April 19, 20 at 9:00 a.m.-12:00 noon or April 21, 22 at 1:00-4:00 p.m. in Room 215 Allen Building.
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THE CHRONICLE
W. TENNIS from Sports page 7 801 N. Duke. Adorable 2 BR, 1 bath house. Large porch, great backyard. Call 416-0393 for more details. $7OO.
Arasu was the first to answer the call. After winning the first set 6-0, the junior was trailing Rombouts 2-4 in the second stanza. Arasu proceeded to break her opponent, and then traded service holds for the remainder of the set, forcing a tiebreaker. It appeared as if a third set was imminent when Arasu slammed an easy overhand smash into the net, giving Rombouts a 8-7 advantage in the tiebreaker. Arasu battled back to win 12-10 however, and earned a 6-0, 7-6 victory that appeared to shift the momentum back in the Blue Devils’ favor. “I just missed a really easy shot,” Arasu said. “I don’t know how to explain it. I just wasn’t happy with it. But I think I did good job playing in the points after that,
Land/Lots For Sale
3 bedroom, 2.5 bath home near Duke. Bright and sunny, great neighborhood. Available 7/04. $1095.218-2523.
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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.
Lake front home for rent in Grove Park golf course community. 7 miles to Duke. 3br/2.5ba 1650 sqft. 1250/mo. 919-957-7589.
2 seat pull out bed couch. Good condition. $lOO or best offer. 3835597.
Compaq Presario Laptop 1201T Model. Battery pack. 1.5 years old with mouse. Good shape. Call 9296879 or 225-7687.
and when I got to match point again I was really aggressive with my backhand. I tried to stay positive.” With Zika rallying back from a 2-4 second-set deficit to force a deciding third set, and with Julia Smith tied 5-5 with Brito in the second after winning 6-0 in the previous frame, a comeback didn’t appear to be very far-fetched. Those hopes were shattered when Smith’s double fault gave Brito a 6-1, 0-6, 7-5 victory, and left a very distraught Duke squad in disbelief. In the end, according to Ashworth, the deficits were Just too great for the Blue Devils to overcome. “It seemed like we were always down, trying to fight our way back, fight our way back, fight our way back, and when we did, we just couldn’t get over, mentally, that hump of taking advantage of coming back,” Ashworth said.
College Smokers Give Us Your Opinions! Duke University Medical Center is looking for college smokers ages 18-24 to be part of a study to help evaluate educational materials on health. If you complete this study you will be paid $25. For more information, and to see if you qualify, call 919-956-5644. Please refer to 1.R.8. # 1434 when calling. Duke University Medical Center IRB#: 1434
150 purple ribbons tied to honor the courage of survivors of rape and sexual assault 1300 White Ribbon Campaign pledges signed by men agreeing never to commit, condone, or stay silent about violence against women Opportunities for survivors to express their strength and resiliency Heightened awareness about what sexual assault is and how we can work together to help prevent violence $3OO raised for Durham Crisis Response Center
YOU THANK making Assault Prevention Week success! Sexual
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All of the dedicated, passionate volunteers and Sexual Harassment and Rape Peer Educators who planned and executed the week’s events Duke Panhellenic Association for sponsoring 4,000 doorhangers Progressive for support with Take Back The Night Student Health, Athletics,Campus Council,and Duke Student Government for sponsoring Nobuko Oyabu’s keynote address and “Faces of Rape and Sexual Assault” traveling photography exhibit The Pitchforks Blue, Out of the Blue, DUI, Geoff, Uncle Jemima, The Members, Kody, and Two-Time All-American Wrestler for performing at benefit concerts Duke Interfraternity Council and Counseling and Psychological Services for sponsoring Men Can Stop Rape keynote speaker and workshop The English Department, Womens’s Studies Department, Sanford Institute for Public Policy, AQUADuke, Delta Delta Delta, Alpha Delta Pi, and Delta Gamma Sororities for sponsoring educational outreach Beta Theta Pi, Chi Psi, Alpha Tau Omega, Sigma Phi Epsilon, Pi Kappa Alpha, Sigma Chi, Phi Beta Sigma, and Phi Delta Theta Fraternities for helping with the White Ribbon Campaign. *
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MONDAY, APRIL 19 Multimedia Panel Presentation: 1-4pm. Sexed-Up Documents. Room 240, John Hope Franklin Center.
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Center, Room 240. Dissertation Presentation: 4pm. Andrew Yang (Duke University). Division of labor in ant colonies: variations in form and function of a superorganism..111 Bio Sci Bldg.
Developmental Biology Colloquium: 4pm. Doug
EEOB/Biology Seminar: 4pm. Andre M. de Roos (Population Biology, University of Amsterdam). Understanding and predicting cannibalistic fish populations' dynamics from individual life history characteristics. 111 Bio Sci Bldg.
DeSimone (University of Virginia). Cell adhesion in Xenopus morphogenesis. 147 Nanaline Duke.
TUESDAY, APRIL 20
Center for Late Ancient Studies.
Environmental Institutions Seminar: 12:30-2pm. Frederick W. Mayer on The Future of Trade and the Environment. Room 158 A, Levine Science Research Center (Nicholas School). Light lunch provided. RSVP; Carolyn Leith at leithc@duke.edu or 613-8131.
Exploring Issues in International Medicine Series: 34pm. Sten Vermund, MD, PhD, University of Alabama at Birmingham. “Developing an HIV/AIDS therapeutic research agenda for resource limited countries.” Sponsored by Duke University Center for International Studies, the Department of Medicine, the Division of Infectious Diseases, and the Office of the Vice Provost for International Affairs. John Flope Franklin Center.
WEDNESDAY, APRIL 21 Wednesdays at The Center: 12-1 pm. Alisa Flarrison, “Representing Slavery in the 20th-Century South: History and Memory at Somerset Place." John Hope Franklin
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Waffles anthony (cross) alex Krispy Kreme: Reduced fat triscuits: ashley, jenn .peter Blueberrry muffins: roily Congrats to Mala, Jen on MCATs!!!! (yeah baby): Monica Franklin, Dawn Hall Account Representatives: Jennifer Koontz, Account Assistants: Stephanie Risbon, Jenny Wang Kristin Jackson National Coordinator: Sales Representatives: ..Carly Baker, Tim Hyer, 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:
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Speaker: s:lspm. Jas Eisner, Late Antique Art: The Problem of the Concept and the Cumulative Aesthetic. 2048 East Duke Building. Refreshments. Presented by
Religious MONDAY, APRIL 19 Wesley Freshman Bible Study: 9:3opm, Mondays.
Wesley Fellowship-An Experiment in Responsible Learn how to live a Consumerism: 10pm, Christian Life in a world that often only focuses on profits and consumption. Contact lpb@duke.edu with any questions and for directions.
TUESDAY, APRIL 20
Elementary School Tutoring with Wesley: spm, email Tuesdays. Trinity UMC. If interested, dmp6@duke.edu.
Alpha Omega: Tuesdays, 7-B:3opm in York Chapel. All are welcome to combine prayer and song with a chance to leam more about the Catholic faith in a large group setting. Each week a speaker covers a different topic selected by students. Newman Catholic Student Center. www.duke.edu/web/catholic.
Wesley Fellowship-Getting With God Small Group: Bpm, Tuesdays. Wesley Office. How does the Old Testament help us to grow closerwith God?
Social Programming &
Meetings
MONDAY, APRIL 19 Free Vegetarian Feast: 5-7pm, Mondays. Multicultural Lounge, Bryan Center. Event is sponsored by the ISKCON.
Screen/Society Cine-East: Bpm. "Sasayaki (Moonlight Whispers)." Griffith Rim Theater, Bryan Center. Sponsored by the Asian/Padfic Studies Institute, the Department of Asian and African Languages and Literature, the Film/Video/Digital Program, and the John Hope Franklin Humanities. Institute's "Making the Humanities Central" Project with support from theAndrew W. Mellon Foundation and theVice Provost for Interdisciplinary Studies
TUESDAY, APRIL 20
Tuesday Night Dinner: Tuesdays, 6pm in the Chapel kitchen. Come eat free dinner with friends. Newman
Spanish Table: 5-6pm. Join us for coffee and informal conversations at the Spanish Table. The Perk, Perkins
Catholic Student Center, www.duke.edu/web/catholic.
Library.
Fun Among Us 5K Run and Walk. Saturday,April 24, Tam registration. WallaceWade Stadium, Duke University Campus. Proceeds benefit the Brain Tumor Center at Duke. For more information, visit angelsamongus.org or call 919-667-2616.
Upcoming: Bpm, April 24. A Reading By Lucille Clifton. Reynolds Theater, Bryan Center. This event is Free and Open to the Public. For More Information call (919)6689000. 2004 Senior Distinction Show: works by Lindsay Brown, Charlotte Dauphin,Kim Gogola, Erika Mumau, & Lizz Torgovnick. Louise Jones Brown Gallery, Bryan Center.
On Exhibit: Through June 14.Uncommon Leaders: The Presidents of Duke University. Documents and photographs from the University Archives trace the history of presidential leadership at the university from 1838 until the present, with an emphasis on presidents Few through Keohane. Perkins Library Gallery. On Exhibit: Through July 25. Highlights From the Picture File: A treasure trove of images, including photographs of the Socialist Party of America, ship building in the New York City NavyYard, and missionaries in various overseas locations. Perkins Library, Special Collections
Hallway Gallery. On Exhibit: Through May 31. "The Innocents" Photographs and Video by Taryn Simon. CDS, 1317 W. Pettigrew St. Juanita Kreps Gallery. These are the faces and voices of the wrongly condemned, of defendants in some of the most scrutinized, contested cases in fifty states, who fought to have their innocence proven.
14 I
THE CHR >NICLE
MONDAY. APRIL 19.21
The Chronicle The Independent Daily at Duke University
Farewell to top administrators
As
the 2003-2004 academic formed Duke from simply a Univeryear draws to a close, several sity hospital to a regional healthcare key members of the Universi- provider, Snyderman has focused on imty administration will be stepping down from their positions. The con- proving clinical research and was intributions of William Chafe, Ralph strumental in establishing the InstiSnyderman and Mary Champagne tute for Genome Sciences. After to the University over their tenures overseeing the medical center durhave been substaning the Jesica SantilStaff Editorial lan tragedy tial and should be last remembered as they move on. spring, Snyderman has been instruChafe, Dean of the Faculty of mental in improving the quality of Arts and Sciences, has worked to im- care in the DUMC. After a one-year prove the University’s national and sabbatical, Snyderman will be welcorned back to the medical center international academic reputation, Over the past nine years, Chafe has where he plans to do research, work worked on developing and imple- with health care policy and return menting Curriculum 2000 and the to teaching. Finally, Champagne, the Dean of successful FOCUS program as elethe School of Nursing, will be stepments of improved academic life, He has created a more diverse cam- ping down after 13 years in the posipus environment and faculty, espe- tion. Champagne has overseen the daily by hiring more female faculty rebirth of the Nursing School and has worked hard to turn it into one in the sciences Chafe’s contributions to Arts of the best nursing programs in the and Sciences, the academic environcountry. She has done this through excelment and the new residential life plan —focused on improving the in- lent faculty recruitment and promotellectual image of the University—- tion of the school. She has worked have been beneficial to students to develop a new bachelors program and important to the University as in nursing and has promoted an inan institution. Luckily, Chafe, a proterdisciplinary relationship with fessor of history, will return to other aspects of the medical comteaching after going on a sabbatical munity. After a sabbatical, Chamto travel and write. This way, stupagne plans to continue her contridents can continue to benefit from butions to the University Medical Center, focusing on the field of eldhis knowledge and expertise. erly care. Snyderman has been the ChanAll three of these administrators cellor of Health Affairs and CEO of the Duke University Health System have brought passion and enthusisince 1972. Under Snyderman’s asm to their jobs over the past several decades. Their dedication to the guidance and leadership, the medical center has grown both in size University has led to significant imand prestige. The medical center provements in the quality of underhas grown in prominence to begraduate education and the medical come one of the premier medical center. They have set the bar high for their successors, who will have institutions in America. has been He a visionary in exbig shoes to fill come fall. Chafe, Snyderman and Champanding managed care, and under pagne will all be missed in their curSnyderman, the medical center acrent roles but will hopefully continquired the Durham Regional Hospital and the Raleigh Community ue to contribute to the University Hospital. His efforts have trans- for years to come. .
Est. 1905
The Chronicle
inc. 1993
ALEX GARINGER, Editor JANE HETHERINGTON, Managing Editor ANDREW COLLINS, University Editor CINDY YEE, University Editor ANDREW CARD,Editorial Page Editor MIKE COREY, Sports Editor JONATHANANGIER, GeneralManager ANTHONY CROSS, PhotographyEditor JENNIFER HASVOLD, CHy& State Editor MALAVIKA PRABHU, Health & ScienceEditor KIYA BAJPAI, Features Editor ROBERT SAMUEL, Sports Managing Editor DEAN CHAPMAN, Recess Editor TYLER ROSEN, TowerView Editor 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, OperationsManager
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, RecessEditor RUTH CARLITZ, TowerView Managing Editor KAREN HAUPTMAN, Wire Editor JENNY MAO, Recess PhotographyEditor YEJI LEE, Features Sr.. Assoc.Editor ANA MATE, SeniorEditor 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 editorials represent the majority view of the editorial board. Columns,letters and cartoons represent theviews of theauthors. 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 the Business Office. Each individual is entitled to one free copy.
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
Yale involved in New Haven The story recently published by the Chronicle about Yale and New Haven was riddled with errors and mischaracterizations. As a proud alumnus of both Yale and Duke, and a current resident of New Haven, I feel
compelled
to
respond.
Let me site just a few examples of what your reporter characterizes as Yale’s “restrained involvement in New Haven.” Yale provides cash grants of $25,000 to all employees of the University who choose to buy a house in New Haven. The University has already committed $l3 million to this project, which has attracted some 600 Yale faculty, staff and administrators to live in the city. The University has spawned 26 biotech startup companies in the New Haven region, 19 of which are located in the city. These companies employ 1300 people and have raised over $2 billion in capital. More than 10,000 New Haven young people participate in free Yale-sponsored academic and athletic pro-
grams on the Yale campus every year. Over half of our students participate in social service activities in the city of New Haven. The University has a community investment program that has redeveloped property that houses 75 retail merchants. It has numerous partnerships with community development agencies, one of which has resulted in the opening of a much needed major new grocery store in the city. I could go on and on with a listing of Yale’s $lOO million of off campus investments in New Haven in the past decade. Fortunately your new president, a resident of our community for 40 years, knows New Haven well and perhaps can, over time, help set the record straight. Bruce Alexander, JD ’6B Vice President and Director of New Haven and State Affairs Yale University
Done with ‘effortless perfection’ All right. I’ve had enough. I’ve put up with it for a while, I’ve whined to my friends, and now I’m writing the letter I thought I wouldn’t need to write. I’m tired of being weird because I’m normal, the Women’s Initiative telling me I should be unhappy here, that campus culture is not accepting, that I want “effortless perfection” —everyone has fallen in love with that quote. To some degree I know they’re right. They really talked to girls, the girls I pass every day on the sidewalks, who are struggling with these issues. It’s beyond me to fathom how hard it is for those who are prisoners of their weight, their grades, their popularity, girls who wear painted smiles to hide true and terrifying demons. They are the reason for the initiative, drawing attention to a serious problem, and I hope that they get the help they need. I resent, though, the implication that they are the norm here, that Duke, myself included, is responsible for the misery of the female masses. In this study meant for our benefit many of us find ourselves placed in the role of outsider, nonconformist, the unexplained “other.” As has been pointed out, we are not The Chronicle stereotype. We are not either of The Chronicle stereotypes. Do we really need a scheduled discussion to realize that? Are we really at the point of having to talk about whether it’s okay? Most of us are just normal kids who own neither pearls nor stilettos. We don’t hang out with “the right crowd” at the clubs and we don’t grind on tabletops. We are not drop-dead gorgeous, and we don’t get A’s on everything we do. Some of us could find
our entire wardrobes on the Chronicle’s spring fashion “don’t” list, and during sorority rush we were playing soccer, designing web pages, studying with friends over pizza or just catching up on sleep. Still, somehow, we manage not only to exist at Duke, but to be happy. On a campus where they tell us dating has been destroyed by hook-up culture we spend weekend afternoons hanging out with our boyfriends. Where there’s no social scene on campus we get together in dorm and common rooms to talk, watch movies and basketball games or cook dinner, and we think that’s scene enough. We came here to learn and experience and grow, and we do. We don’t feel the need for feminism and we don’t consider ourselves liberated women because we don’t let being female define who we are. You can keep creating new boxes as long as you want, but there will always be at least one of us who doesn’t fit into any of them. These are the girls you won’t see, because they don’t come to the panels. They go about their lives the way they always have, and they don’t care what anyone else thinks. True, it’s not always blissful. Sometimes I wonder, “Will I be successful after Duke? Am I good enough?” Someone always says, “Don’t worry, it will all work out in the end,” and I know that they are right. I’m not perfect. No one’s perfect, and no one expects me to be. What I am—what we are—is imperfect, with or without effort, and that’s fine. Yeah, we’re girls. Give us a break.
Rebecca White Trinity ’O5
E RECORD g message of it is that everything works out okay, and what
remember is to let this moment
inform the rest of
—2004 graduation speaker Paul Downs on the nature of his Seee story, page 1.
LETTERS POLICY The Chronicle welcomes submissions in the form of letters to the editor or guest columns. Submissions must include the author’s name, signature, department or class, and for purposes of identification, phone number and local address. Letters should not exceed 325 words; contact the editorial department for information regarding guest columns. The Chronicle will not publish anonymous or form letters or letters that are promotional in nature. The Chronicle reserves the right to edit letters and guest columns for length, clarity and style and the right to withhold letters based on the discretion of the editorial page editor.
Direct submissions to: Editorial Page Department The Chronicle Box 90858, Durham, NC 27708 Phone: (919) 684-2663 Fax: (919) 684-4696 E-mail: letters@chronicle.duke.edu
THE CHRONICLE
Today
COMMENTARIES
3,000 years. Three thousand years. That’s a
long time to remember each year how we were once slaves in Egypt in hopes of remaining free and upholding freedom.
But what have we experienced instead
during those 3,000 years? One of my
dad’s (who is also a rabbi) favorite jokes is that “The history of Jews is this: they tried to kill us, we overcame, let’s eat!” Why as Jews have we been the victims of hatred for thousands of years? Across the Jews—Soviets, Poles, homosexuals, Jeho- world we have faced oppression, vah’s witnesses and others—who lost their pogroms and persecution, fighting for lives for one reason—they did not fit our own survival. Hitler’s Aryan ideal. Don’t get me wrong—there have been Why, though, do we remember still, prosperous times for the Jews, including sixty years after the fact? today’s time (at least in We are all familiar with America) when we can live slogans of the day such as Maital Guttman freely without fear of perse“Never cution. There has been Forget,” Guest Commentary “6,000,000,” and “Never only one instant in which we have been our own Again”—but what do they mean? Does remembering slogans from rulers. It’s called the State the Holocaust prevent future Holoof Israel, created in 1948, almost two thoucausts? Sadly, the reality of the world sand years after the Jews were exiled from shows us otherwise. There have been Palestine and living in the diaspora since. countless more mass murders, wars and Israel became a state, not coincidentally, genocides after the Holocaust? Last week three years after the world “found out” we remembered Rwanda, which is an exabout the horrors of the Holocaust, created in part as a safe haven for Jews. Sadly, ample of state sponsored ethnic cleansing a mere eight years ago. How many with the continued Middle East violence, more genocides continue to occur today? Israel is not this safe haven. Not even in Has the news covered the wars in Chechour own country are we safe. Still we are not free. Still we are fighting for survival! nya and in Sudan? We voW to Never ForIt’s a lot to take in. And I am not writing get, but does it truly help? this in order to be depressing or cynical. I find it pertinent that Holocaust Remembrance day falls right afterPassover. We No, we have lived under 3,000 years of perJews have just spent a week eating matzah secution. But we have lived.- We not only and gefilte fish in order to remember how have survived, we have thrived! we were once slaves in Egypt but were freed So what then, does it mean that we have to become a nation. It’s basically the beginbeen surviving for 3,000 years on this ning of Am Israel, aka the Jews. And we’ve Holocaust Remembrance Day? Despite all been doing this—having a seder with the of the hardships that we remember, what is family, reading the seder book, reciting the it that we keep on believing? One of the four questions—we’ve been doing this for most important themes of Jewish prayers
and songs is the passionate hoping for peace. The anthem of the State ofIsrael—“hatikvah” means “the hope.” All Jews know the “Oseh Shalom,” our song of peace. We Jews, despite the hardships, have continued to pray for three thousand years, hoping for the future, hoping for peace, hoping for “Next year in Jerusalem!” Hoping for an end to slavery of all peoples. And so this is part of remembering, of vowing “Never Again.” We, who are students in one of the best universities in one of the most, if not the most, powerful nation of the world; we, who are truly the future leaders ofAmerica—we are the ones responsible for making sure “Never Again” is more than just a slogan, but is a reality. We have grown up two generations after the Holocaust, and many of us have grandparents who are survivors and have heard their or other survivors’ stories. Sometimes I forget that my children will
RAMONA exposes
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have this privilege. Within the next decade or two there will be no more survivors to share their personal stories. They pass it on to us not just so that we hear them, but because it is our duty to tell the next generation. And it is their duty that they tell the next generation and they the next. We have to continue to “Never Forget.” This, for me, is why we must vow on Yom Hashoah, “Never Again.” We are vowing as a generation, as future leaders, future parents and grandparents, that we will make sure the Holocaust and all other forms of slavery are not forgotten, and that as we remember that we continue passionate hoping for and pursuing peace. And I know, I felt during my Passover seder, that we can do it, and that we must. That is who we are, Am Israel Chai. not
Maital Guttman is a Trinity junior. He is the organizer of Holocaust Rememberance Day.
herself
it was us. We were the worst kept secret on with the white-hot intensities of a thousand burning campus. When we signed on to this gig, we did suns. The Walters-Crowley unholy alliance has been it because we both enjoy humor writing. More teetering on the brink of implosion for so many than that, we did it because we both enjoy the indemonths now. We bicker and argue and throw soup scribable feeling of hearing you laugh, whether in the cans at each others’ heads like those drunk redneck Great Hall or on the East-West bus or in your public couples on “COPS,” whose idea of a normal Saturday policy seminar. Even more than night is dinner followed by a domestic that, however, we did it because we disturbance that gets us both on TV both enjoy credit. The kind of again, shirtless and handcuffed in the credit you just don’t get from back of a squad car. In fact, RAMONA anonymous work. So we told. QUIMBY is like the maladjusted illegitimate love child of our dysfunctional Everybody. Apparently, we just can’t keep secrets. Oops. common-law union. But every night that The most common complaint we we’d polish off a bottle of Thunderbird heard when we let the cat out of and commence to blows, we’d look over the bag (which we did so many, to the corner and see RAMONA, and Paul Crowley many times for no other reason we’d remember that we had to make it David Walters than to massage our already huge, work—for our child’s sake. So we’d bury but never truly satiated egos) was, the figurative “hatchet” and hide the acMonday, Monday “I sort of wished RAMONA QUIMtual “hatchet” that one of us bought beBY, AGE 38 had been a girl. It doesn’t seem like fehind an Indian Casino in Cherokee, NC, so we wouldmales ever get the chance to write Monday, Monday, n’t accidentally hurt each other, and we’d just write. and I was hoping, this time, you guys were actually Monday, Monday was like therapy for us, and we’re girls proud to announce that, even though this column is To this, we agree. We wish we had been girls, too. our final attempt at collaboration and we will be No, seriously. We’ve never, felt very comfortable in going our separate ways, we promise that RAMONA our manly outer shells, and we’re pretty sure there QUIMBYwiII continue to enjoy the love and affection are two beautiful and dainty princesses hiding someof two parental units. She’ll be just like Staci Keanan where deep within us. Only time (and tens of thouin “My Two Dads,” only neither of us can decide who sands of dollars in elective surgery) will tell, but until gets to be the cool dad with the beard and who has to then, we’re sorry to disappoint anyone who had us settle for the Paul Reiser nerd-dad. Either way, we’re pegged as dames. On a positive note, you probably pretty sure we’re going to recruit Dick Butkus for found the humor in this column equally as offensive semi-recurrent guest visitations when the ratings start and unfunny regardless of your gender. And that’s to drop. what we are: equal-opportunity a**holes. No need to Which brings us to another frequently asked question; What’s up with all the random, obscure ’Bos-tothank us; it’s just what we do. Another little tidbit you may not have known: We early-’9os TV references? Gosh, we don’t know. We don’t get along. At all. In fact, we hate each other just watched way too much television back in the day. ”
I 15
Yom Hashoah: A day of rememberance
is the Day of Remembrance. The day we remember the Holocaust, the period from 1939-1945 11 million innocent people were systematically murdered by being hanged, shot, malnourished, starved to death, worked to death and poisoned in gas chambers. It is one of the most evil examples of what humans can do, and it happened only sixty years ago. Today is the day we remember the six million Jews and five million non-
f- r
MONDAY. APRIL 19. 2004
And, somewhere along the way, we found a little bit of truth in Doogie Howser and Claire Huxtable and Nick Russo and Carl Winslow (but not Harriet Winslow; she was a dirty, dirty tramp.). If that makes us bad people, then so be it. We will continue to hold dear the televised heroes of a childhood spent almost entirely in front of a 17-inch Hitachi; we will cheer our parents for adjusting our bedtimes to accommodate that last meaningful season of “Perfect Strangers,” and for not really bothering with all that “reading” crap; and we will always know in our heart of hearts that we could totally kick everyone else’s ass on a Jeopardy-like gameshow that only asked questions about random, obscure ’Bos-to-early’9os TV references, if that sort of thing ever came into existence. And that, friends, is what makes it all worthwhile. Thanks are due, especially to Alex Garinger, Andrew Card and Tracy Reinker. You guys have been very nice to us throughout the whole process, and we certainly hope that rash clears up. Thank you also to anyone who ever answered one of our pop-culture queries, for example: “I need the name of a mid-level celebrity who probably has low self-esteem!” To anyone who ever correctly offered up “Richie Sambora,” thank you. Also, a shout-out to our friends and families back home, who gave us advice, guidance and numerous books on how to write good. We’ll read them soon, we promise. It’s been a great opportunity, and we hope we have brought a smile to your face, like a kid falling down in the Great Hall. Thank you for reading this far.
RAMONA QUIMBY, AGE 38 LOVES IT WHEN YOU CALL HER BIG POPPA. Paul Crowley is a Trinity sophomore and David Walters is a Trinity senior.
THE CHRONICLE
16 I MONDAY, APRIL 19,2004
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