August 23, 2004

Page 1

profi le

inside

1

I|i

DSG Presid ent Pasha Madji is set to take on Duke's issues ijjjr

H sports

Kilgo residents return to updated dorms In Houses I,J

/1 I

rI 1 I

|HHH|

%

Mike Gminski has gone from star player to TV commentator

100th Anniversary

* _

1 ne Lnromde»

MONDAY, AUGUST 23, 2004

THE INDEPENDENT DAILY AT DUKE UNIVERSITY

—,

ONE HUNDREDTH YEAR, ISSUE 2

Driver robbed at gunpoint

Extra cops crack down on parties

Kelly Rohrs THE CHRONICLE

by

Neighbors still upset with noise off East

A delivery person for Satisfaction Restaurant was robbed at gunpoint near 302 Anderson St. on Central Campus at approximately 9:19 p.m. Saturday. The suspect is described as a black male in his mid 20s with a small m tache and thi< short dark hair. ' was last seen we ing a blue and sports jersey a navy blue shorts. The Duke U versity Police partment release* composite skei Sunday afternoon, Criminal Composite but the name of the victim is not being released because police are working with him to identify his alleged robber through a photo line up, said Maj. Phyllis Cooper, a DUPD spokesperson. “We have some very strong leads that may or may not pan out,” Cooper said. University officials sent an e-mail to Central Campus residents Sunday morning informing them of the armed robbery. In the e-mail, Eddie Hull, executive director of housing services and dean of SEE ROBBERY ON PAGE 22

|

by

Kelly Rohrs

THE CHRONICLE

PETER GEBHARD/THE CHRONICLE

Students streamed in and out of a party at 704 Buchanan St. as police patrolled the area regularly.

It wasn’t exactly all quiet on the Eastern front on the first weekend Duke students were back at school. Frustrated residents in neighborhoods near East Campus said they saw more students than ever before stream past their sidewalks to the houses unrestricted by Duke’s on-campus regulations. And as undergraduates stumbled by front porches, they made as much noise as the thumping basses of the stereo systems at the parties down the street. Friday night, police broke up at least five parties in the area off East Campus, and Saturday they raided several more. Neighbors noted that the police responded promptly to complaints this year, and several students said authorities were cordial as they shut down the gatherings that drew hundreds of people. ‘They were pretty cool about it,” senior Matt Nusnbaum said of the police who ended his house party on 913 Dacian Ave. early. “As soon as people scattered, they were joking about it.” Joint teams of Duke University and SEE PARTIES ON PAGE 28

Duke remains sth in U.S. News University ranks 9th toughest by

Tract Ke

THE CHRONICLE

The perennially popular U.S. News and World Report rankings of “America’s Best Colleges” were released last week, to the eager anticipation of over-ambitious high school seniors. Duke remained in fifth place in this year’s rankings, tied with Stanford University and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. “We’re always pleased if we’re holding steady or going up,” Provost Peter Lange said. “However, we recognize the limitations of these rankings.” Harvard University and Princeton University remained tied at the number one spot and Yale University stayed at third place. The University of Pennsylvania, which was grouped with Duke last year, moved up to fourth place. The California Institute of Technology, Columbia University, and Dartmouth College rounded out the top 10. In rankings for specific categories, the Pratt School ofEngineering earned 22nd place for best undergraduate engineering program, up from 24th last year. Its specialization in biomedical engineering was named the second in the nation. Duke was also rated as eighth in the “Best Value” cate-

to get

into in Princeton Review

gory, in large part because of its financial aid program which provides, on average, a 53 percent discount on Duke’s total cost of $39,240. Approximately 38 percent of Duke students receive grant aid. The rankings, which are released annually, are often criticized for their methodology, which ranks universities statistically in 18 categories, including selectivity, graduation rate and student-to-faculty ratio. The weightiest factor, peer assessment by top administrators at other universities, remains qualitative The administration at Duke, however, does not put great stock in the rankings. Many say the only place where they really matter is in college admissions, as high school seniors often use them to decide among peer schools. The rankings are flawed because they take “one magazine’s particular view of what should be important and elevate it to the level of what is perceived to be objective reality,” said Christoph Guttentag, director of undergraduate admissions. “What bothers me is that people think these rankings are objective.” SEE RANKINGS ON PAGE 20

YALE UNIVERSITY

UNIVERSITY OF PENNSYLVANIA

DUKE UNIVERSITY MASSACHUSETTS INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY STANFORD UNIVERSITY

8 9

CALIFORNIA INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY DARTMOUTH COLLEGE


21 MONDAY, AUGUST 23, 2004

THE CHRONICL -E

worIdandnat ion

newsinbrief Pakistanis curb terror plot

Fighting continues in Najaf's Old City by

Abdul Hussein Al-Obeidi THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

NAJAF, Iraq

Explosions and gunfire

shook Najafs Old City Sunday in a fierce battle between U.S. forces and Shiite militants, as negotiations dragged on for the handover of the shrine that the fighters have used for their stronghold. Late Sunday, U.S. warplanes and helicopters attacked positions in the Old City for the second night with bombs and gunfire, witnesses said. Militant leaders said the Imam Ali Shrine compound’s outer walls were damaged in the attacks. The

U.S. military had no immediate comment, though it has been careful to avoid damaging the compound. Also, five U.S. troops were reported dead in separate incidents, and an American journalist held hostage for more than a week and threatened with death if U.S. forces did not leave Najaf was released by his captors. Sunday’s clashes in Najaf appeared more intense than in recent days as U.S. forces sealed off the Old City. But Iraqi government officials counseled patience, saying they intended to resolve the crisis with-

1

raiding the shrine, one of Shia Islam’s holiest sites. ‘The government will leave no stone unturned to reach a peaceful settlement,” Iraqi National Security adviser Mouaffaq alRubaie told The Associated Press. “It has no intention or interest in killing more people or having even the most trivial damage to the shrine. We have a vested interest in a peaceful settlement.” Senior government officials said last week an Iraqi force was preparing to raid out

SEE NAJAF ON PAGE 24

Controversial overtime laws take effect by

Steven Greenhouse

NEW YORK TIMES NEWS SERVICE

The Bush administration’s new overtime rules go into effect

Sen.

John

Edwards of North Carolina, the Democratic vice-

presidential candidate, assailed the new rules in his party’s weekly radio address Saturday, making it clear that the Democrats view them as an issue to exploit when many Americans are worried about the economy and stagnating wages. “Why would anyone want to take overtime pay away from as

Monday, but the Kerry campaign has already begun attacking the regulations, saying they will hurt millions of American workers. Urging President George W. Bush to scrap the rules, the Kerry campaign and organized labor say the regulations will exempt up many as six million Americans at a time when they need that to six million additional workers from receiving time-and-a-half money the most?” Edwards said. That follows attacks by Sen. John Kerry, the Democratic prespay by redefining which workers qualify when they work more

than 40 hours. The administration asserts that no more than 107,000 workers will lose their eligibility, while 1.3 million workers will gain the right to overtime. In essence, the hundreds of pages of new rules redefine the criteria for which administrative, professional and managerial workers qualify for overtime, among them nurses, chefs, pharmacists, funeral directors, claims adjusters and restaurant managers.

idential nominee, who said last month, “The new overtime regulations represent a shameful assault on the paychecks of hardworking Americans at a time when they are already putting in more hours, paying more for everyday costs and saving less than ever before.” The AFL-CIO says it will hold a news conference Monday and SEE OVERTIME ON PAGE 24

Security forces in Pakistan hunted for terror suspects Sunday as the government revealed it has arrested a dozen al Qaedalinked militants planning to launch simultaneous suicide attacks on government leaders and the U.S. Embassy.

Hondurans tighten security The Honduran government tightened security at foreign embassies and declared a national terror alert after receiving information that al Qaeda was trying to recruit Hondurans to attack embassies ofthe United States, Britain, Spain and El Salvador, a government official said Sunday.

Iran reveals plans for reactor Brushing aside U.S. accusations that the Islamic state wants to build atomic weapons, Iran said Sunday that it plans to build a second nuclear reactor with Russia's help and that at least two other European states have expressed interest in such a project.

Robbers snatch Munch works Armed robbers stole two of artist Edvard Munch's paintings, including his masterpiece "The Scream," from an Oslo, Norway museum Sunday. After seizing the paintings during daylight hours, the thieves escaped in a black station wagon. News briefs compiled from wire reports "Education's purpose is to replace an empty mind with an open one." Malcolm Forbes

Rent It. Buy It. Either Way It’s A Smart Move. Affordable furnished apartments Extensive selection, quality furniture Housewares & Electronics Convenient ordering by phone or fax Immediate delivery (set up before you arrive) Purchase Options Available

I SIGN UP NOWFOR IMMEDIATE DELIVERY! I

2 5 OFF 0/0

First Month’s Rent Or 10% Off Any Retail Purchase (with coupon, limit one coupon per purchase.)

Rental Showroom:

Rental/Sales Showroom: Raleigh 1905 New Hope Church Rd (919) 876-7550

I

(919) 493-2563

Far (919) 876-7949

Far (919) 490-8466

Durham 4600 Chapel Hill Blvd. 1 Oak Creek Village Shopping Center

Visit our web site at www.COßTl.com

CORT FURNITURE RENTAL


THE CHRONICLE

MONDAY, AUGUST 23,

200413

Majdi aims for visibility at DSG helm Wilder to lead alumni affairs dept. by

Julie

Stolberg THE CHRONICLE

The “work-hard, play-hard” mentality is still alive and well at Duke, and Pasha Majdi is here to prove it. On three hours of sleep a night, Majdi has tackled a double major in public policy and philosophy, three years as a leader on three years in Campus Council, Krzyzewskiville’s tent No. I—and now he’s facing even more sleep deprivation as president of Duke Student Government. Majdi, who admits that his greatest weakness is not knowing when to give up, pursues almost everything he does with intensity—whether it’s his involvement with Campus Council, his academic pursuits, his membership in Maxwell House or his renowned status as a Cameron Crazy stalwart. “IfI’m going to do it, I’m going to do it right,” he said. The Vienna, Va., native’s decision to run for the position ofDSG president was motivated by his feeling that he had the potential—even as a newcomer to the organization —to “do DSG right” by utilizing his campus presence and making himself as accessible as possible. “I wanted to be the DSG president that everyone knows and can come and talk to and complain to,” Majdi said. “I just wanted to be a different type of leader, be someone that is extremely accessible and visible and people feel comfortable just coming and talking to and asking for help.” Acting on that promise of heightened DSG accessibility to students, there will be a dinner once a week at the Loop for students to express their concerns to student government representatives. The town hall-style meetings are just the beginning of Majdi’s plans for DSG thisyear to deviate from the traditional paths of past administrations. He wants to address race relations, sexual assault and the prevalence of eating disorders on campus, issues that DSG has avoided in the past but that have come under greater campus scrutiny of late. “I think student government is pretty much too scared to deal with it. They think it’s too big and feel powerless,” he said of those hot-button topics. “Most people think we can’t do anything about it, and I don’t think that’s true. What we want to do this —

by

Matt Sullivan THE CHRONICLE

Senior Pasha Majdi hopes to be "a different type of leader" as DSG president this year. year is address all three of those issues, and because you can’t really pass legislation on it, it’s a different type of leadership that’s needed. And so I’m going to try to be at the forefront of that, essentially leading a movement as opposed to like passing a law.” Senior Aneil Lala, a close friend of Majdi’s who lives with him in Maxwell House and worked with him on residential councils their freshman year, said Majdi’s drive should result in effective resolutions to those types ofcampus problems. “He’s a motivator. When he gets excited he gets people around him excited about an issue. He can recognize problems... more readily than the average student,” Lala said. “In general he’s probably the most energetic person I’ve ever met. I don’t see him sleep.” During a summer spent at Duke, Majdi, other members ofDSG and members of the University administration did not take much of a break. They moved toward implementing changes to die freshman meal plan, constructed a web site modeled after eßay where students can exchange goods and SEE

theimportantstuff If you could be any type ofsalad

dressing, what type of salad dressing would you be?

"Balsamic vinagrette" What is your favorite color?

"Brown"

What is your favorite place campus?

to eat on

"Grace's" What is yourfavorite movie?

"Doctor Zhivago"

Who is your favorite super hero?

"Li'l John"

What is your favorite word?

"Hilarious"

If there were any worries about replacing Laney Funderburk, the alumni affairs czar and shmoozing ambassador for Duke who announced in April that he would retire after 22 years in his post, graduates near and far can now breathe easy. A search committee announced Thursday that it had tapped Sterly Wilder, director of annual giving for the past 12 years and a Dukie for life, to take over as the University’s new executive director of alumni affairs, effective Jan. 1. “Sterly’s been around forever also and that has us really excited,” said Robert Shep- Sterly Wilder ard, vice president for alumni affairs and development. “She’s highly regarded, well respected, she knows many, many alumni and obviously bleeds Duke Blue.” Funderburk is known for his cheery disposition and status as a community icon—he can often be found hollering on his feet at Cameron Indoor Stadium—not to mention his work in revamping operations within alumni affairs and bringing the department forward to the digital age. But Wilder too is seen as a people person around the alumni house on Chapel Drive and already leads a staff of 10, which deals primarily with development. “They are big shoes to step into,” Wilder said. “But we want to build on the success of [Funderburk’s] programs

MAJDI ON PAGE 20

SEE WILDER ON PAGE 20

OFFBEAT HUS DURHAM’S INDEPENDENT MUSIC STORE Offering a wide variety of music genres

� Imports � Indie Music � World Music � Classical Music � And More 6268 Ninth St. Durham 919.286.5112 One block west of Duke's East Campus Hrs. MTWSat 10-6 ThF 10-8 Sun 12-5 •

688-7022

Brightleaf Square Durham 2 blocks from East Campus -


MONDAY, AUGUST 23,

2004

THE CHRONICI

thechronicleatl 00 Academic freedom Duke reigns at

by

Matt Sullivan

tial candidate Norman Thomas passed through with a grace of his own, accompanied by the poise ofDuke President William Few. First Few set forth the University’s support of the clubsponsored speech, but he was out of town for Thomas’s visit and returned to angry letters and an editorial in a local trade publication insinuating that certain Duke professors had used personal political motivation to lure Thomas to campus. So Few, underscorer that he was, used the opportunity to hearken back to Bassett, to Duke’s ability to maintain some freedom of religion, and to his personal contempt for opinions that turned a blind eye to freedom of speech in the name of lewd speech that was “the ruin of the Old South.” But the New South still struggled to fully grasp a new wrinkle in political discourse in 1954 and 1955, when the Duke debate team was set tackle the question of whether the United States should recognize Communist China in international relations. A freshman debater sent a measly letter to his local congressman asking for advice. The politician was astonished that the team might even fathom a pro-Chinese position. “I have no personal acquaintances,” he went on to say, “either in Congress or elsewhere who have indicated favoring such recognition.” When the debate team argued in favor of recognizing China, Duke President A. Hollis Edens remained relatively out of the spotlight for the group’s triumph, allowing the team to carry on in competition and encouraging its faculty advisor to be filmed for Edward R. Murrow’s “See It Now.” Edens had already been a champion of freedom three years earlier, when Senator Joseph McCarthy threatened legal action against the University. Sociology professor Hornell Hart had written a pamphlet criticizing McCarthy’s investigation of accused Communists in the U.S.

THE CHRONICLE

When Duke officials announced earlier this month that the University would permit a pro-Palestinian conference to rumble onto campus in the fall, they did so with a vigor that reached from the First Amendment to a modern moral conflict, that swept through the history of the institution and invoked the moral gravitas of higher education and that reestablished Duke’s bedrock of academic freedom. “We recognize the topic of this conference will generate strong emodons and may spark protests, as it has elsewhere,” wrote John Bumess, senior vice president for public affairs and government reladons, in an Aug. 5 statement. “However, we believe the best anddote to speech that others find disagreeable is more speech, not less.” Indeed, the collective voice of the University has come to unify and distinguish itself in the name of free speech ever since Dec. 2, 1903, when Trinity College stood fast in refusing to accept the resignation of professor John Spencer Bassett, who had written in an editorial that Booker T. Washington was “the greatest man, save General Lee, born in the South in a hundred years.” When Bassett crossed racial boundaries with his praise, he drew the ire of local and regional community members still entrenched in the legacy of slavery. Despite the immediate threats the Bassett Affair prompted for the school—the entire faculty and President John Kilgo were all but set to step down in protest —the precedent the Board of Trustees set gave Duke the basis for deciding a multitude ofother threats to academic freedom in the years to come. Controversial speakers brought to campus have often prompted negative responses. During the week of the Bassett Affair’s 27th anniversary, Socialist Party presiden-

for

*^

l*i

:|rSWr

V. Bedroom

vrstrr

One Bedroom Deluxe

Two Bedroom Deluxe

554 sq. ft. to 792 sq. ft.

Three Bedroom

1009sq. ft. to 1022 sq. ft. Ideal For Roommates

1280 sq. ft.

*

Only 7 minutes from Duke Medical Center/University Blue line bus service to Duke and UNC Six floor plans Sunken living room and dining room W/D connections/ 2 laundry facilities on site

Two designer swimming pools

Fitness facility Lighted tennis Sc Volleyball courts Vaulted ceilings/ceiling fans Garden tubs

Fireplaces (wood-burning) Ice makers, frost-free freezer

Bay windows Large pets welcome Free Video Library

Free Car Care Center Garages w/Remotes Business center (free fax, copy service and internet) Outdoor Pool Table

614 Snowcrest Trail Off University Dr. Near Super Target and Sam’s Club Durham, NC 27707 (919) 490-1400 Fax: (919) 493-2376 •

laureltrace@harborgroupmanagement.com

I*—T E.H.O.

www.harborgroupmanagement.com

over

,E

the years

State Department, and Edens responded to the senator’s repeated threats with a rock-solid response calling freedom of research “axiomatic in University circles.” An editorial in The Chronicle praised the school’s decision in the 50th anniversary year of the Bassett Affair to take academic freedom and make it “augmented and reemphasised [sic], rather than endangered.” But well after the boon of dissent in the 19605, when the University dealt with a state ban on speakers, not to mention Vietnam and integration, the University is again faced with being at the forefront of freedom of speech issues in SEEFREEDOM ON PAGE 25

I? Oi'iCSSiClf,

1, 1522

Mt UrimriifittSMi


THE CHRONICLE

MONDAY, AUGUST 23,

200415

Panelists discuss summer reading Emily Almas THE CHRONICLE

by

“You can get all A’s in college and flunk life.” This senti-

ment from author Walker Percy was just one nugget ofadvice shared by panelists at Sunday’s freshman-oriented summer

reading discussions. For their first college reading assign-

ment, the newest Duke students read Mountains Beyond Mountains by Pulitzer-prize winning author Tracy Kidder, which chronicles the life of Dr. Paul Farmer, a Duke alumnus who has committed his life to providing health care in the de-

veloping world.

Hundreds of students and First-year Advisory Counselors filled Baldwin Auditorium as part of the University’s PATRICK PHELAN/THE newly expanded approach to its summer reading program. As part of ongoing efforts to extend the summer reading experience, freshmen attended a panel discussion Sunday afternoon. In two sessions, new this year, panelists with diverse academic backgrounds—including professors who teach classes in medicine, women’s studies and theater, among others—discussed the book and explored its connections to their own disciplines. As freshmen flooded out of the auditorium they banded into groups, clutching their free hardcover copies of the nonfiction work and joining their FACs for discussions around campus. This year several professors, particularly those involved in the University Writing Program and FOCUS classes, planned to join in on some of those discussions, said senior Ryan Welsh, co-chair of the FAC program. W f TRAcy 3 “Dean [Robert] Thompson and I some upper level academic adminI istrators said we need to do a better T job of integrating the summer readSfiVo-vi) ing into the rest of the freshman year,” Welsh said. “Ideally the freshman summer reading program is a means of providing an example of a shared intellectual experience.”

St

KIOXJEr f*o^ f '

>»JK

~

Sta

»»»,

SEE READING ON PAGE 21

Shelving An

avi

No One

Stacks

Else life Durham: 626 Ninth Street

-

I

Commons at University Place

FUEE 'Bagel Sandwich

Over 9,000 of the coolest move-in ideas.

J

Open £evev\ Vat(4 a Week

(

Ud!

')

Purchase any bagel sandwich deli style, cream cheese, specialty or Softwich and get a second bagel sandwich of equal or lesser value absolutely FREE! -

|

.

i

-

With this coupon only. Not good in combination with other offers. Limit one offerper coupon. One coupon per customer pervisit. Offer expires Thursday Sept. 30 2004.

|

j

Organization and Storage Solutions

lirnnrnßfiHEEirofiHHl Durham: 626 Ninth Street Commons at University Place Open £eVev\ t>ai{4 a Week

I

J

-

J

15-501 no

|

CHAPEL HILL

RALEIGH

w

Eastgate Shopping Center 1800 East Franklin Street 969 7 1 Mon-Sat 10-9 Sun 12-6

Pleasant Valley 6234 Glenwood Avenue 781 7775 Mon-Sat 10-8 Sun 12-6

m

S

m

Franklin St.

'

°° •

'

CHRONICLE


MONDAY, AUGUST

THE CHRONICLE

23, 2001

Palestine conference draws heated debate Kelly Rohrs THE CHRONICLE

by

The Palestine Solidarity Movement is used to opposition. Its first controversial conference, in sunny California, was barely a blip on the radar screen. By its third meeting, there was a minor uproar over its location, leadership and intent. As the organization prepares for its fourth convention here at Duke, it’s getting used to the attention. PSM periodically makes headlines for its annual conference, which began four years ago at the University ofCalifornia at Berkeley. It is an umbrella organization that joins together various pro-Palestinian groups, most of them university-affiliated. The conference is their primary interaction point. PSM’s ultimate goal is to end the fighting between Palestinians and Israelis by ending the Israeli occupation of land it considers Palestinian. “We aim to end all these troubles by focusing on the root cause, the disease itself, which will eliminate all other problems,” said Fayyad Sbaihat, a national spokesperson for PSM. The organization is comprised primarily of university students, and Jewish people comprise almost a third of its members. Palestinian people comprise another third of the several hundred members. The group is intensely democratic. Sbaihat said every decision, from conference location to the roster of speakers, is put to a vote of the 73-member organizing committee. “We’d like to be fair,” he noted. Voting helps quell some of the dissent

among the range of pro-Palestinian opinions that exist within PSM. The organization has had several heated debates about whether to explicitly condemn suicide bombings and other terrorist-type violence. Since PSM is a coalition of other groups, not every member stands in the same place along the continuum of Palestinian advocates—some are extremely moderate while others border on radical.

A wide array of positions That range of opinions has driven PSM into the news before. The group came under national scrutiny last year when organizers for a planned conference at Rutgers University spoke to the media, advocating Palestinian liberation “by any means necessary.” New Jersey officials denounced the conference. Meanwhile, PSM was growing increasingly frustrated with the Rutgers hosts’ attempts to bypass the conference planning structure and act unilaterally. PSM decided to move its official conference to Ohio State University. The student organizers at Rutgers decided to host the conference they had planned—an event featuring a relatively incendiary position on what pro-Palestinian groups call the Israeli occupation—but they failed to follow university regulations and were forced to hold their splinter conference in a hotel. Planners say the group is unified once again, though, and delegates who went to the Rutgers conference last year are back on the organizing committee for SEE PALESTINE ON PAGE 19

STROUSE/THE CHRONICLE

The Super Target off Highway 15-501 will reap the benefits of students arriving back at school.

Local businesses pick up with students’ return Emily Almas THE CHRONICLE

by

Each August, Durham residents get visible reminders of Duke students’ arrival on campus—lines of overflowing minivans with New Jersey license plates, a mass of students at the local grocery store and an absence of parking spaces at shops off of East Campus. Many say the return of the roughly 10,000 students enrolled in Duke’s various schools and programs, as well as the parents and families who come for first-year student orientation, breathes much-needed energy and money into the local economy. At Super Target off of Highway 15-501, store manager Nick Pence and his staff

were prepared for the increased spending and foot traffic driven by the return of students to Duke and the neighboring University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. The store, which opened this past spring, was outfitted with rows of bright pink bean-bag chairs, flowered shower curtains, colorful hangers and hundreds of other items ranging from the essential to the accessory. “We plan for about a 30 percent increase in business when [students] come back, and 40 percent for this week,” Pence said. “Futons are flying off the shelves.” A study released last week by the National Retail Federation found that college students and their parents plan to spend SEE MERCHANTS ON PAGE 20

Serve yourself a semester of

Study Abroad p!

Visit our office. 2016 Campus Dr. abroad@aas.duke.edu http://www.aas.duke.edu/study_abroad/

684-2174


THE CHRONICLE

MONDAY, AUGUST 23,

ALTEC SS. LANSING.

®

INMOTION

inMotion Speakers

m

PODCIG

Car Charger

m

*

I

4

jqc

SftftQß

*“5l

200417


»

81 MONDAY, AUGUST 23, 2004

u-rr

THE CHRONICL ,E

Kilgo renovations bring quad to meet codes Paul Crowley THE CHRONICLE

by

Debbie Palacios has learned the value of staying in one place. The senior is beginning her third year as a resident in Kilgo Quadrangle, and has recently set up shop—along with her roommate, Kimberly Buehring—in the largest room on West Campus, colloquially known as “the barn.” The approximately 405square-foot room stands out amongst other campus digs, but it is also an improvement over years past in Kilgo. This summer, the University renovated Houses I and J, completing its threeyear renovation of Kilgo Quad. The residence halls are now air-conditioned, more accessible to handicapped people and environmentally certified by the U.S. Green Building Council. In addition, the building has been altered to make it more livable; the rooms were made larger, the hallways cleaned, and new internal features such as well-lit mini-common spaces were added while the Gothic exterior remained unchanged. The changes made to Kilgo this summer completed the quad’s update, which began in the summer of 2002 and continued during the summer of 2003. Contractors only worked on the quad during the summer months in order to avoid taking the building offline during the school year. Kilgo is the first quad to be renovated; eventually, the University hopes to revamp all “the Gothics” in a similar way, said Eddie Hull, executive director of housing services and dean of residential life. The renovation to Kilgo is part of a comprehensive effort to modernize dorms that had reflected the early days of

the University. The air conditioning and handicapped access are improvements which have long been sought. The Leadership in Energy and Engineering Design certification given by the USGBC makes

Kilgo the first residential quad at Duke to those environmental criteria, and the first residential renovation at any American university to bring dormitories up to LEED standards. Though the meeting of environmental and other standards may be the most notable achievement to University administrators, students seem more enthused by the increased functionality of their living area. “They like the fact that things are new, clean, and that they can get from one house to another without going outside,” said Chris Smith, the residence coordinator of Kilgo. One aspect of the quad’s appeal to new residents is the pristine condition of their new digs. “You can tell that everything is new, and that it hasn’t been lived in,” said sophomore Alana Wrublin, who lives in House J. The renovations even influenced residents, including Palacios as well as sophomore roommates Jon Arnstein and Greg Rasor, who called the renovations “definitely a plus” in their decision to link together into Kilgo. Rasor added that the “air conditioning was probably the biggest factor.” Palacios and Buehring are living in their palatial double—which prior to the summer changes had been a triple —and are appreciating the clean carpet and cool air in a dormitory so new even the trash closets meet

SEE KILGO ON PAGE 25

BROOKS

FICKE/THE CHRONICLE

Senior Debbie Palacios moves into her newly remodeled dorm room in Kilgo Quad. Now that the makeover is complete, theentire quad is accessible for wheelchair-usersand meets the latest environmental codes.


THE CHRONICLE

MONDAY, AUGUST 23,

200419

98,187 REASONS TO SHOP

IN THE UNIVERSITY STORE

The University Store is your source for all things Duke. No other place offers our selection at competitive prices. Come to our store or shop online from the comfort of your dorm, home or office. At last count we offer 98,187 items. That is why real Duke fans shop at the University Store. And that’s not a11...

Free Gift Boxes and Gift Wrapping Free Parking (one hour with a $lO minimum) Free Blue Books Free 2004-2005 Activities Calendar Free Campus Trial Packs

The

UNIVERSITY. WHERE REAL DUKE FANS SHOP Upper Level, Bryan Center 684-2344 Shop 24/7 via our online catalog at Monday Friday: B:3oam 7:oopm Saturday: B:3oam s:oopm VISA, MasterCard, American Express, Discover, FLEX, iRIs, Cash, Personal Checks •

-

-

Department of Duke University Stores

|/\/

-

04-1081


THE CHRONICLE

01 MONDAY, AUGUST 23, 2004

crimebriefs

from staff and police reports chase the victim on foot. Officers located of a Jenkins and arrested him for violationtransdomestic protective order. He was ported to the Durham County Jail and held with no bond.

Sotted student stays in slammer Officers responded to a report of an intoxicated person in Bassett Residence Hall Aug. 20. When they arrived, officers found Dale Longfellow (DOB Jan. 28 1986, 115 Bassett, Durham) intoxicated and bleeding from his hand. Duke University Police Department Officers took Longfellow to the Duke Emergency Department, where he was said to be disruptive and hostile to staff. Longfellow also disobeyed commands from police officers and nursing personnel. Longfellow was arrested and charged with being intoxicated and disruptive and resisting a police officer. Longfellow was also cited for contempt of court. He was placed under a $2,500 secured bond and held at the Durham County Jail. His court date is set for Sept. 21.

Cell phone stolen An employee reported a break-in to her vehicle at the 751/ Jogging Trail parking lot Aug. 21. The victim reported that she parked her 2000 Kia in the lot at 7:40 a.m. When she returned to her vehicle at 8:10 a.m. she noticed that her backpack containing her Nokia cell phone, $45 in cash, checkbook, passport, several credit cards and identification was gone as well as her ashtray, which was full of change! There was no damage to the vehicle. The stolen items are valued at a total of $350.

Chasing woman lands ex-bofriend in jail Officers responded to a report of a domestic disturbance near parking garage 1 Aug. 19. When they arrived, officers spoke to the victim, an employee, who stated that she had a domestic protection order against her former boyfriend. The suspect, Gary Jenkins (DOB October 2 1970, 102 Atlantic Ave., Raleigh, NC) was seen by the victim on campus at 2 p.m. and began to

Shades lifted An employee reported the theft of two pairs of sunglasses Aug. 20, one pair of Morganthal sunglasses valued at $3OO and one pair of Escada sunglasses valued at $3OO from her office in the Duke Eye Center. The employee reported that she knew the sunglasses were in her office at noon Aug. 13 and they were missing at 2 p.m. Aug. 16.

TAVERNA NIKOS

iMIItoC

One of the few restaurants offering authentic Greek Cooking in the U.S.A. Serving a variety of salads vegetarian entrees

Brightleaf Square 682-0043 Mon-Sat

I

jA\

1 lam-3pm spm 10pm

www.tavernanikos.com

AUDITIONS

Wednesday, August 25,2004

V" ;V ’

Repertory Auditions 7:00 p.m.* The Ark, East Campus 7:00-7:45 p.m. African Repertory 7:45-8:30 p.m.• Modern Repertory

a

W

&

Main Courses: Chicken, Lamb, Fish, Beef, Pork (including Lambsteak)

Dance Program

m

8:30-9:15 p.m. Ballet Repertory •

»

Tonight

*For performance on Saturday, November 6

5:00-7:00 p.m. Sunday,November 7,2004, Reynolds Theater* The Ark Dance Studio Porch, East Campus Come and meet the dance faculty and other students interested in dance! &

Optional African Dance session 6:00-7:00pm in the Ark Refreshments Served Audition Information News ofthis year’s Dance Events Please join us for this informal get-together!

Questions Answered

*

HANDMADE

ICE

CREAMS

&

ICES

FINE PASTRIES

Your evening on the town

| |

doesn’t have to end when the house lights come up...

Join us at 706 Ninth St 286-4177 •

416-3158 Fax

Sun 11-10

Mon-Thurs 11-11

Fri & Sat ‘til midnight WWW.

Jrancescas citysearch com

ESPRESSO

BAR

\


MONDAY, AUGUST

THE CHRONICLE

23, 2004

Department of Theater Studies AnilU3l OpGVI HOUSG All Duke undergraduates are invited to this open house on the first day of class, Monday, August s>3, from 5:80-7:00 p.m. in Sheafer Theater in the Bryan Center. Meet the Theater Studies faculty and the Duke Players Council and reconnect with friends. Information about courses, auditions, backstage opportunities and other news will be available. Food will be served!

gct

course

creDix.

on sxaoe ano off.

A special workshop of scenes from plays of Shakespeare’s

Auditions for Ghosts Hapgood, and the Shakespeare’s Contemporaries Workshop ,

Ail Duke undergraduates are invited to audition for fall semester productions on Thursday, August 26 from 7:00-10:00 p.m. or Friday, August 27, 4:00-8:00 p.m. with callbacks on Saturday, August 28 from 1:00-5:00 p.m. Auditions will be held in Sheafer Theater in the Bryan Center. Sign up in advance for your audition time in the Duke Players notebook at the Info Desk in

the Bryan Center. For more info about auditions, email Amit Mahtaney at avm2@duke.edu.

era

Skin of Our Teeth by ThorntonWilder directed by Jeff Storer of the Theater Studies faculty Reynolds Theater, Bryan Center, West Campus February 35-27 and March 4,-6 A classic comedy of human history from the ice age on featuring dinosaurs, beauty queens, love, and war Cabaret Workshop directed by Rafael Lopez-Barrantes of the Theater Studies faculty Sheafer Theater, Bryan Center, West Campus April? Song, dance, comedy, and satire in an original cabaret Theater 2005: New Works in Process Branson Theater, East Campus April 18-15 New plays by students plus a professional workshop of a by a major American playwright

Off Stage If you are interested in getting involved in opportunities to work backstage on any of the productions listed, contact

Designer, atjanci@duke.edu, or Doug Martelon, Theater Operations, at

douglas.martelon@duke.edu.

new play

Duke University Department of Theater Studies 306 Bivins Building Box 90680 Durham, NG 27708 Info: (919) 660-8843 www. duke. edu/web/theaterstudies •

Jan

Chambers, Resident Faculty

111


THE CHRONICL ,E

MONDAY, AUGUST 23, 20(U

Center blends care techniques by .

Steve Veres

THE CHRONICLE

Dawn Marshall suffers from undifferentiatedconnecdve dssue disorder. Symptoms range from chronic pain and swelling to extreme fatigue and sleep problems. The Duke employee is an active member of society but constandy feels ill. Convendonal medicine has not provided her an acceptable form of relief—Marshall believes prescribed medicines often have similar side effects to already existing symptoms. As a last resort, she turned to the Duke Center for Integrative Medicine for help. Currendy located within the Duke Center for Living, the Duke Center for Integrative Medicine has offered a patient-centered approach to health care for the past four years. As an emerging field, integradve medicine combines the effectiveness ofconvendonal medicine with the benefits of carefully selected alternative therapies, including acupuncture, herbalism and meditadon. Together, clinicians treat the body as a whole rather than focusing on specific symptoms “I was seeking alternative means of care for problems that my primary care physicians were really not able to help me with,” Marshall said. ‘They tried, but have not been able to improve the quality of my life. Integradve medicine seems more natural.” With the care of doctors who have pioneered this form of medicine, Marshall’s pain has subsided Duke is a recognized leader in this type of health care, partly through the vision of former Chancellor for Health Affairs Dr. Ralph Snyderman. Always a proponent of prospective and personalized health care, Snyderman believes integrative medicine could be the cure for the depersonalization of health care. “We currently spend $1.5 trillion a year on health care, but we aren’t getting our money’s worth,” Snyderman said in a statement included with DCIM’s publicity materials. “What has been missing in America is a health system designed to facilitate the ability of individuals to enhance their health by being more involved in their care and helping them focus on preventing those illnesses most likely to cause them great harm.” And America seems to want a change. A 1998 study reported that 40 to 42 percent ofAmericans have tried alternative medicines in order to improve their health, and SEE MEDICINE ON PAGE 22

ANTHONY

CROSS/THE CHRONICLE

In hopes of unifying noise policies across Duke's campuses, Campus Council recommended an end to 24-7 quiet hours on Central.

Hull rejects Central noise policy Campus Council looks by

to open

Emily Rotberg and Sophia Peters THE CHRONICLE

discussions with residents

quired by their academic disciplines,” Hull wrote. Vitarelli expressed an interest in Campus Council en-

On Central campus, silence is golden—or at least gaging in discussions ofnoise concerns with the graduate writen in black and white. students themselves. “If 10 to 12 on Fridays and Saturdays In late July, Executive Director of Housing Services are not prime study hours for them, then we can come to and Dean of Residence Life Eddie Hull denied a January a compromise,” he said. 2004 resolution by Campus First-year graduate student Gavin Guo appreciates quiet hours, but like Council seeking to standardize noise policy across the Universi“With a shortage of beds on Vitarelli, sees weekends as exceptions. “Quiet hours are a good thing ty’s three campuses West, some students who for me,” Guo said. “For post-graduate The resolution recommended a departure from the current students a quiet living environment wanted a social residential noise policy, which allows “rearelated to academic things is of the experience are being sonable” noise levels on East and highest priority. It might be acceptWest campuses until 2 a.m. Friable to have louder times on the denied that.” weekends, but post-graduates tend to day and Saturday nights but imAnthony Vitarelli do something relatively quiet when poses 24-hour quiet on Central. Instead, the Council sought the they are socializing anyway.” establishment of a consistent Also prominent in Hull’s rationale for denying the Campus Council measure were noise policy for all three residential campuses. Hull cited both the campus’ character as home to a acoustic realities of the campus. According to his re“community of scholars” and the acoustic challenges of sponse, spoken conversations can be overheard up to Central architecture in a written response to Campus distances of 100 feet, and loud music can be heard for Council President Anthony Vitarelli. hundreds of yards. “Central Campus is a mixed community of under“Campus Council understands the structural problems graduates and graduate students, many ofwhom rely on SEE COUNCIL ON PAGE 22 the quiet of this community to support the rigor re-

heart 0 f Religious

LSAT* GRE* GMAT* MCAT Prep Satisfaction Guaranteed

Classes start soon. Call now to register.

800-2Review

|

Princetonßeview.com

Life

Groups

Agape Campus Ministry Baptist Student Ministry Black Campus Ministry Buddhist Student Fellowship Cambridge Christian Fellowship Campus Crusade for Christ Congregation at Duke Chapel Episcopal Student Fellowship Freeman Center for Jewish Life Hindu Students Council

Intercultural Fellowship Interfaith Dialogue Intervarsity Christian Fellowship Latter-Day Saint Student Association Lutheran Campus Ministry Manna Muslim Student Association

Navigators

v —-Review

There are many ways to get involved in the exciting & diverse religious life program at Duke

Usher, read scripture, or serve communion in Chapel worship "Join one of the many religious organizations Be a part ofa mission project or social outreach opportunity Join in an interfaith dialogue "Join the Chapel Choir “

"

Newman Catholic Student Center

/The ( Princeton

Become Involved

Wesley Fellowship (United Methodist) Westminster Fellowship (Presbyterian) Unitarian Universalist Fellowship

Duke Chapel

919.684.2572 www.chapel.duke.edu

"

For more information, contact Craig Kocher, Assistant Dean Director of Religious Life at 684-2909 Weekly Chapel Activities

ofthe Chapeland

Include

University Service of Worship Sundays at 11:00 a.m. Taize Evening Prayer -Tuesdays at 5:15 p.m. (Memorial Chapel) Choral Vespers -Thursdays at 5:15 p.m. (Chancel Area) -


THE CHRONICLE

MONDAY, AUGUST 23,200411

Community-based study confronts alcohol abuse Liana Wyler THE CHRONICLE

by

In the University’s most recent effort to curb high-risk drinking activities, Duke is reaching out to community members in order to discuss strategies to reduce alcoholrelated problems. As one of 10 universities participating in a $3.2 million statewide research study conducted by the Wake Forest University School of Medicine, Duke is one offive universities developing an intervention program that will last from January 2004 to December 2006. The other five schools in the study with serve as comparison points. ‘The idea of this program is about involving and connecting students with the community,” said Vice President for Student Affairs Larry Moneta, who was involved with preparations for the Wake study to come to Duke. “I don’t think there’s any other way to deal with this.” BIueSPARC, the Duke branch of the Wake project called the Study to Prevent Alcohol Related Consequences, is spearheaded by Campus-Community Organizer Claire Feldman-Riordan, whose mission is to develop a community-based approach to reduce college students’ high-risk alcohol use. “It’s a really difficult situation. I hear so many people who are critical and upset about the alcohol policy on campus,” Feldman-Riordan said. “We need to look at this in a community-based, grassroots way to provide more options that make high-risk drinking less likely to occur.” The study comes at a time when campus attention is focused on the tensions between students living off-campus and the Durham residents. “I think the greatest challenge will be the process —getting groups to talk together who generally don’t have the chance to,” Feldman-Riordan said. “But I don’t see any reason why students and neighbors can’t work together to come up with some solution.” As part of larger collaborative efforts between the Duke University and Durham Police Departments to curb off-campus drinking, BIueSPARC worked with neighbors during the first days of move-in period to distribute door hangers and welcome bags with cookies and a letter warning students ofalcohol-related rowdiness.

Senior Joe Kennedy lives in one of the houses targeted by BIueSPARC’s welcome bag initiative. “It was nice. The cookies were good,” said Kennedy, who lives in “Blue House” on Markham Avenue with seven of his fellow lacrosse teammates. ‘They’re still going to call the cops on us. You obviously can’t have big parties with 200 people anymore. I don’t want to go to jail.” Despite immediate positive responses from students and community members, University-neighborhood antagonism will continue to remain a challenge to the BIueSPARC initiative, Feldman-Riordan said, noting this past weekend’s onslaught of student arrests at off-campus parties. “There’s been a whole history behind why there were so many police out,” she said. “Alcohol policies on campus changed, so students said they’re going to drink off campus. Neighbors said that’s not fair and that they’re going to call the police. The students still partied and the neighbors got really, really unhappy, criticizing the police. The

neighbors got pitted against the students. The police were pitted against everyone. “The key to success will be a community-based approach—putting our heads together and figuring out strategies together,” Feldman-Riordan said. To Durham resident Christina Headrick, the issue of college high-risk drinking goes beyond the loud music at 3 a.m. and students vomiting on neighborhood cars. She pointed to a recent statistic that states 70,000 cases of sexual assault and date rape involve alcohol each year, citing a 2002 report by the National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism that summarizes data on college-age drinking research. “For me it’s more than the trash and the noise from the parties,” said Headrick, who hosted a party for 40 people at her home last weekend. “I really think it’s a public health SEE BLUESPARC ON PAGE 25

We’re glad you’re here! It sure is quiet when you're gone! Remember to pick up your NEW Career Guide and schedule a half hour appointment with your career counselor. Call 660-1050 today. Here are a couple of dates you’ll want to remember: v

TechConnect

-

Tuesday, September 21, 7to 9pm

Job Search Tips and Interview Techniques panel discussion and informal networking reception, for undergrad students interested in technical careers, held the night before the Career Fair.

y

Career Fair

-

Wednesday, September 22, 10 to 3pm at the Bryan Center

This event provides an opportunity for students to find out about organizations in a variety of career fields.

SENIORS mark your calendars. ,

y

Senior Kick-Off

-

Wednesday and Thursday, August 25 and 26, 7 to Bpm in 130 Soc Psyc.

Duke University Career Center presents Ray Eddy ’92, stunt actor from Walt Disney World. You’ll be motivated and encouraged regardless of your major or plans after Duke. Attend one session.

y

Senior Engineering Kick-Off

-

Monday, August 30, 7 to Bpm in 203 Teer

Seniors -jumpstart your last year. Attend the Senior Kick-Off to find resources available to help you develop a plan of action for a successful transition beyond Duke.

9

giiMra

It!)

tU

imwwiiii:::' ammmm

Duke

C


THE CHRONICLE

14 I MONDAY, AUGUST 23, 2004

newsbriefs Fire breaks out in Edens 1C At approximately 3:30 a.m. Sunday, a fire alarm alerted residents of Edens 1C that there was a fire in a garbage can. The fire was extinguished when students removed the garbage can from the premises. Edens Residence Coordinator David Montag wrote in an e-mail that he was “not quite sure” how the fire was started or discovered. The Duke University Police Department and Residence Life and Housing Services are investigating the fire. Former financial VP deals with his alcohol abuse after arrest The University’s former top financial officer was arrested on charges of sexual battery and public drunkenness in July, prompting his indefinite leave from his current position at Emory University to receive treatment for alcohol abuse. Michael Mandl, executive vice president for finance and administration at Emory, is not expected to return for the start of the year due to inpatient alcohol abuse treatment. He will transfer his duties to several members of the division during his absence. “In the aftermath of this incident, it has become apparent that Mike has had difficulty addressing his problem with al-

from staff reports cohol,” Emory President James W. Wagner wrote in a statement. “While the alleged behavior is something we must take very seriously and do not condone, we are hopeful that Mike will make a full

recovery.”

Mandl left Duke for the position Emory in 2002.

at

Duke community mourns loss of Trustee Emerita Susan King Duke University Trustee Emerita Susan Bennett King died July 22 at Duke Health Community Care hospice after a long battle with lung cancer. She was 64. “Susan will always be defined in my memory by her wonderful wit, clarity of purpose, loyalty to friends and her passionate love of Duke,” said former President Nan Keohane. “She enlivened any gathering and loved good conversation. She contributed much to her alma mater as a trustee, alumna, member of the faculty at Sanford Institute and vigorous supporter of Duke athletics, especially women's sports.” King, who served on the Duke Board of Trustees from 1989-2001, was recognized for her work at Duke in October 2001 when she received the University SEE NEWS BRIEFS ON PAGE 25

SCOTT NELSON/SPECIAL TO THE CHRONICLE

Pat Buchanan gives a thumbs-up after a speech during his unsuccessful campaign for president in 2000.

Buchanan criticizes Bush in new book by David Kirkpatrick NEW YORK TIMES NEWS SERVICE

Patrick Buchanan, the conservative Republican primary challenge and divisive convention speech weakened the first President Bush’s campaign for re-election in 1992, is publishing a book excoriating the second President Bush over the invasion of Iraq, just in time to grab a share of the limelight at another Republican convention. The arguments in the book, Where the Right Went Wrong which was released late last week, may be familiar, at least to readers of his magazine, “American Conservative,” which was founded as a forum for opposition from the right to the invasion of Iraq. commentator whose

Calling the invasion of Iraq “the greatest strategic blunder in 40 years, a mistake more costly than Vietnam,” Buchanan writes, “If prudence is the mark of a conservative, Bush has ceased to be a conservative.” But the release of the book, which coincides with the Republican National Convention, gives Buchanan a new occasion to lay out his case on television and in book promotions just as the Bush campaign seeks to project an image of unity, reviving unhappy memories of the disruptive role he has played in the past. “He has a following in conservative circles,” said Paul Weyrich, a veteran SEE

BUCHANAN ON PAGE 25

I

SCHOLARSHIP INFORMATION MEETING RHODES, MARSHALL, LUCE, CHURCHILL

http:// www. aas.duke. edu/trinity/scholarships/

Tuesday, August 24, 2004 139 Social Sciences Marshall

-

6:00 p.m.

CLASS OF THE FUTURE

Record notes, memos even classes directly into your iPod with the Griffin iTalk. Get yours now at: -

Duke Tentative Fall Application Deadlines: September 7 Mitchell September 13 Churchill October 13

September 3 Rhodes Luce October 25

-

-

-

-

Sponsored by the Office of Undergraduate Scholars and Fellows

103 w. duke bldg., 660-3070

Duke

-

Lower Level, Bryan Center w 684-8956 University '

Computer Here

Department of D

:e University Stores

-

04-1092


THE CHRONICLE

>3=s* cd S S3 s<b c® o’ CO m w • B«

—’

"

§ £.

Oct

=

Sls'i |*B

£

W<

!.§

if

C M

go

3?

@£S.< 3> eo

§ro

CD CQ

W

=

s|f|s

i|l|

l|Bt q.

2? Si

0 •

-

=

3*

O CD

iis 25 a »

§;■§

W

CD O

*1.3 £

S-»

02 7

CD -CD O

M

c

g.ZCD

ai

a

o£ r 1 to

=3

ais |i| P* CD

s

-

&5»

cti 01-0

cr g =

£= %

cl

a. a sT*< =

O CD CD

z™

i<3-a

c S> o

Is |3. «>

CO

MONDAY, AUGUST 23,

2004115


THE CHRONICLE

16I MONDAY, AUGUST 23, 2004

Army plans to bolster

Ready, set, join!

training by

Thom Shanker

NEW YORK TIMES NEWS SERVICE

The chief of WASHINGTON, D.C. the Army Reserve has set in motion plans to reorganize training and strengthen leadership skills for reservists, after preliminary findings of an inquiry into abuse of detainees at Abu Ghraib prison in Iraq. The findings described an inferior command climate and flaws in training that left some citizen soldiers ill-prepared for long-term duty in a combat zone. The Reserve chief, Lt. Gen. James Helmly, described initial assessments made in the investigation, which he ordered after members of a reservist military police unit were photographed abusing prisoners at Abu Ghraib. The new training will apply to all 205,000 Army reservists, most of whom serve in combat support and service roles, jobs like the military police, intelligence, logistics and transportation. “Frankly, the development of leaders in the Army Reserve has not kept pace with the demands on leaders that we see today,” Helmly said Friday in an interview at the Pentagon. He spoke of the challenges facing the force as it seeks to maintain sufficient numbers to meet the anticipated extended deployments to Iraq. He also disclosed proposed incentive programs that are designed to entice reservists to continue to serve after their current commitments expire.

Students descend upon East Campus to participate in the activitiesfair Saturday afternoon. ssss

TEXTBOOKS uew and used

Save 25% orr used books at

THE BOOK EXCHANGE

Your

Downtown at Five Points

first s in Du

shoul The B Excha

107 West Chapel Hill Street, Durham

682-4662

Mon.-Fri. 8:45-6:00 Sat. 8:45-5:00 Convenient City Parking Behind Store •

See us... then compare. ®®

S®l BE

®

ur

s* Year of Service to the Duke Community and Durham Area


THE CHRONICLE

MONDAY, AUGUST 23,

2004117

New York, protesters d sagree days before RNC NEW YORK TIMES NEWS SERVICE

NEW YORK With just six days left before the largest planned demonstration at the Republican National Convention, organizers and the city have yet to reach an agreement on how to handle the masses of protesters, setting up the potential for confrontations with the police just as the Republican delegates arrive. At a moment when city officials and the protest’s organizers, United for Peace and Justice, should be polishing the final details over the event next Sunday, they are instead locked in a court battle over the route of the march, which organizers say could draw 250,000 people. The group itself is fractured over how to proceed, and many protesters are vowing'to use Central Park despite the vehement opposition of the city, which wants the rally to take place on the West Side Highway. Adding to the uncertainty are the boiling tensions between Mayor Michael Bloomberg and officials and members of the police and firefighter unions, many of whom have been trailing him at his public events for weeks, threatening illegal strikes or other job actions just as the city struggles to deal with the protests and the convention. The Bloomberg administration and convention officials have dismissed their conflicts with both groups as irrelevant to the success of the convention. Both the city and organizers of Sunday’s protest say they hope to come to terms before the demonstration. “New York City has away of pulling things off,” said Edward Skyler, Bloomberg’s press secretary. “But if UPJ feels that marching past Madison Square Garden and having a rally off the Hudson River is such a tragic abuse of the First Amendment, then they have the option of not taking the city up on its offer.” Nevertheless, the potential for embarrassing or even explosive confrontations between protesters and the administration is increasing as the start of the convention looms ever closer without the final arrangements being set. Some officials and protest organizers fear a repeat of the rally against the Iraq war in February 2003, when demonstrators and the police clashed, leading to hundreds of arrests, in large part because plans for the event were not completed until the last minute. The situation has created a headache for Bloomberg, who is counting on a convention that will be good for the city’s image and will show the world how it has recovered from the Sept. 11 attack. Further, Bloomberg has to find a careful political balance between the tough labor stance he has taken with the uniformed officers and his desire to not inflame this group of city workers, who were lauded for their role after the terror attack. But in recent days, many police officers have been

pushing the legal boundaries as they hector Bloomberg, infuriating many of the mayor’s closest aides. Adding to the confusion is that many protesters getting ready to descend on the city do not know where their march is headed, leaving open the possibility that many small groups of demonstrators will wander about the city

on Central Park’s Great Lawn after a march, and it grew into a batde that pitted veteran leftist demonstrators against city officials, including a mayor whose love of Central Park led him to once sit on the board of the Central Park Conservancy and donate large sums of money to its cause. After Bloomberg’s parks commissioner, Adrian Benepe, argued that such a large rally would destroy the grass and render the lawn unusable for the better part of the fall, the mayor flady rejected the group’s request. The city has been prickly about the lawn since its cosdy refurbishing in the late 19905. The Bloomberg administration first suggested that the group hold its protest in Queens, which drew immediate accusations that the mayor was doing the Republican Party’s bidding by trying to keep demonstrators out of sight. Indeed, Bloomberg is politically torn between his Republican guests and the largely Democratic city where he will seek re-election next year.

or toward Central Park. “I’m doing a lot of organizing and I have no idea as to what’s going on,” Jose Mardn, a protest organizer from Chicago, told a crowd of hundreds gathered Wednesday evening for a United for Peace and Justice planning meeting. If the park is off in the end, he said, “what the hell is the plan?” Leslie Cagan, the group’s national coordinator, conceded that essentially there was not one. “I’m sorry I don’t have a more thorough answer about this,” she said, “but that’s where we are.” The conflict over the protest began a year ago, when United for Peace and Justice first solicited a permit to rally

r

Veur

"Classes research papers and exams will soon become my life. So anything that saves me time is definitely .

-my necessities Jist this year... that's why I need

Road Runner. :oa

lunner will allow me

iwesome

speeds. It's up to

lo pro|

researc

ister than dial-up, and

there are no disconnections or interruptions. Ifs always on. Plus, I'll be able to download huge files like iresentations and music in seconds, not hours."

king's

bossible

restrictions may apply. Subject toat appfcabte taxes and fees. This offer arable to new residents Ftoad Rumor customers only. May not beavabUe in all areas. Regular rates apply at end

:

Jennifer Steinhauer and Diane Cardwell

I

by

an related

indcia are trademate ofand O Warner Bros.


MONDAY, AUGUST 23,

THE CHRONICLE

2004

Kerry ad blames Bush for veterans’ campaign by

Adam

Jim

Nagourney and Rutenberg NEW YORK TIMES NEWS SERVICE

Sen. John Kerry released a television advertisement Sunday blaming President George W. Bush for a campaign by a “front group” of veterans that Kerry said had smeared his Vietnam record, as he intensified his drive to gain control in a fight that Democrats said could undermine his campaign for the presidency. Bush’s campaign denied any involvement with the effort by veterans challenging key portions of Kerry’s war record, and sent a letter to television station managers calling the advertisement libelous urging the stations to “insure that the record is clear.” But at the same time, Bob Dole, the party’s 1996 presidential candidate and a World War II veteran, called on Kerry to apologize to Vietnam veterans in a television interview on CNN in which he appeared to give credence to some of the charges raised by the group. “He’s got himself into this wicket now where he can’t extricate himself because not every one of these people can be Republican liars,” said Dole, whose right arm was left limp by a war injury. ‘There’s got to be some truth to the charges.” And Dole also sought to put the focus as much on Kerry’s anti-war activities as on his own war record, noting testimony he had given to a congressional committee when he returned in Vietnam 30 years ago. “I mean, one day he’s saying that we were shooting civilians, cutting off their ears, cutting off their heads, throwing away his medals or his ribbons,” Dole said. “The next day he’s standing there, T want to be president because I’m a Vietnam veteran.’”

PETER GEBHARD/THE CHRONICLE

Sen John Kerry speaks to supporters about his service in Vietnam at a Julyrally in Raleigh. The exchanges came as aides to both camps said that this small-scale summer advertising campaign by a group ofVietnam veterans was setting the agenda of the presidential debate in the week leading into Bush’s nominating convention in New York City. And some Democrats close to Kerry said that they feared that the very thing that had lead the party to see him as its strongest challenger to Bush—his record as a decorated combat veteran in Vietnam —was now threatening to undermine his candidacy. Kerry’s aides said this latest advertisement, as well as a speech he would give in New York Tuesday, was intended to move the debate away from a discussion about Kerry’s Vietnam service, and to focus it instead on what they contended was a histo-

ry of dirty tricks by Republicans around Bush and his father over the years. The Swift boat group got much of its initial financing from two men who have supported the political endeavors of the first and the current President Bush. Kerry’s advisers had originally planned not to spend any money on advertising during August, but shifted gears last week in the face of concern voiced by Democrats outside the campaign that he was not moving aggressively enough to deal with this threat. “Bush smeared John McCain four years ago,” the narrator says, referring to attacks by outside groups on McCain when he challenged Bush for the Republican presidential nomination in 2000. “Now, he’s doing it to John Kerry.” “George Bush: Denounce the smear,”

the announcer says. “Get back to the issues. America deserves better.” Bush’s advisers rejected the challenge, calling it a “false charge.” They said that Bush and his campaign had no connections with Swift Boat Veterans for Truth, the group that has financed the advertisements, and whose members published a book that dispute major details of Kerry’s account of his war injuries in Vietnam. “The ad is misleading—the ad wrongly states that the Bush campaign is associated with this campaign, which we’re not,” said Ken Mehlman, Bush’s campaign manager. “They have not presented any evidence and there is absolutely no evidence that the president is any way behind this. They have no plan for the future and they are unwilling to defend theirrecord of the past 20 years, so therefore they want to talk about what happened 35 years ago.” Kerry’s advisers said they believed that voters would turn against Bush if they are convinced that he was behind what several described as unethical campaign behavior. A senior Kerry adviser, Tad Devine, noted in an interview that there had been a number of instances over the years in which outside groups had run damaging advertisements against Democrats in races involving Bush and his father. “When those connections are made in this campaign and are imputed to this president, it’s going to be a very bad thing for the president,” said Devine. Bill Garrick, a Democratic strategist not involved in the presidential race, also said: “It may be voters presume there are two sides in this contest and one side is attacking the other and they blame Bush for the attacks.”

ITS NOT TOO LATE:

DO YOU: Play a musical instrument? Twirl or know how to perform with a color guard? Enjoy the atmosphere of college sports? Want to travel with one of the best college basketball teams in the country? Enjoy the social atmosphere of band?

REHEARSALS: WEDNESDAY AND FRIDAY 4:25-6:25 CONTACT PRESIDENT DEVIN BEAN: devin.bean@duke.edu 606-4576 Or DIRECTOR NEIL BOUMPANI; nboumpani@nc.rr.com 471 -8202


MONDAY, AUGUST 23,200411

THE CHRONICLE

PALESTINE

from page 6

the conference at Duke Even the group’s statements are completely unified. Only two people —Sbaihat and Duke graduate student Rann Bar-on —can speak on behalf of PSM to the media, and they’ve both been working overtime to explain the group. Most of the criticism has accused PSM of being a terrorist organization. But law enforcement authorities said they have found no connections between the group and any terrorist activity. Many news outlets as well as partisan groups have reported that PSM is the American branch of International Solidarity Movement, which U.S. authorities have linked to violent outfits in the Middle East. The connection between PSM and ISM, however, is at most an overlap of some goals and perhaps members. “There is no link. We are two separate organizations,” Sbaihat said as the official spokesperson for PSM. As an individual, though, he supports ISM’s goals and its ability to recruit volunteers. On its website, ISM declares itself a non-violent movement aimed at increasing awareness of the land struggle in Israel. The movement does not condemn suicide bombings directly, even as it encourages nonviolentresistance to what it dubs Israeli occupation. The ISM’s explanation of violence is what draws accusations of terrorism. “The Israeli government has long worked to crush peaceful resistance, making it very difficult for Palestinians to act nonviolently on a large scale,” the ISM website reads. Action through withdrawal The Palestine Solidarity Movement, however, stays away from such language. Its official position on actions in the Middle East is to have no position. It condemns violence at every turn, but declines comment on the day to day events in Israel. “As an organization of solidarity, it is not our position

Coffee may eventually be a to dictate what methods the Palestinians use,” Sbaihat target because the owners said. “But as an organization “As an organization of solidarare “major contributors” to Israel, Sbaihat said. So far in the United States, we use ity, it is not our position to no universities have agreed peaceful and non-violent to divest, but several churchmethods in the hope of enddictate what methods the ing the violence.” es and church groups have Palestinians use.” The primary thrust of endorsed the divestment. PSM’s efforts centers on diLast year a group of Duke Fayyad Sbaihat students, many of them affilivestment. The group has taken its cue from the presated with Hiwar, the student sure various nations exerted group sponsoring the conferon South Africa to end Apartheid in the 1980s. At the ence at the University this year, took the issue before thengroup’s first meeting in 2001, it decided to devote much President Nan Keohane. She refused to divest the Univerof its energies to encouraging universities to withdraw all sity’s holdings, citing the complicated nature of the their financial holdings from any company that produces conflict. Since that time, the University has developed a products used in Israeli military operations or to violate set of guidelines for ethical investing. human rights. But the conference will not direcdy take aim at Duke’s Caterpillar Corp., which makes a bulldozer used by investing, Bar-on said. The group’s commitment right now the Israeli army, is currendy the main target. Eventually is to foster dialogue and education. the divestment efforts will extend to companies with “We think once we get to the people and explain the more tangential connections. For example, Starbuck’s case,” Sbaihat said, “we think we have a very strong case.”

ARAMARK/Duke Dining Services iooks forward to serving you this fall in all of our Duke University locations.

THE CHEAT HALL roof;

one The most variety on campus under

Salad Garden, Grille Works, World's Fare,

Sushi, Kettle Classics, Pasta

&

"i

Wok, and Wraps

Rio Grande, Home Zone, &

Panmis.

Famous sandwiches, wraps, and salads

Jmm Eat More Chicken!

\WRAPS^ Jr coot# I BUPGERSi l R LAME.

Trinity Cafe featuring Java City fresh brewed coffees and espresso drinks and Fresh Market Smoothies '

The Marketplace

iTRffiV

All-you-care-to-eat on East Campus. A favorite spot for Freshmen!

Look out for new menu items and old favorites!


2( 10 I MONDAY, AUGUST 23,

THE CHRONICLE

2004

WILDER from page 3 and look toward the future. It’ll be fun and challenging.” For her part, Wilder, 42, has had plenty of challenges on her hands as director of the Annual Fund, coordinating with class reunion leaders and soliciting gifts from some of the school’s major donors to pile on to the Fund’s yearly goal—usually around $2O million. Shepard, who was also an internal hire when he stepped into his expanded position July 1, said Wilder’s role will expand in scope as she becomes the primary liaison for alumni but the “wonderful overlaps” from her previous experience will make this important transition seamless. “I’m sort of working two jobs right now,” Wilder said, “but it’ll be good. It’s all sort ofcrazy, but good right now.” The day after her appointment, in fact, she was busy —not accepting congratulations, but counseling freshmen as a premajor advisor. Wilder also doubles as an interviewer for the admissions office and will help coordinate President Richard Brod-

MAJDI from page 3 created an e-mail and instant messaging program called the Devil Daily as a central forum for information about what’s happening on campus. Campus Council President Anthony Vitarelli remarked on the strength of the programs Majdi developed last year when Majdi was communications coordinator for Campus Council. Vitarelli, whom Majdi beat out for the DSC presidency, said you “can’t beat Pasha’s energy 1eve1.... He’s a great relationship builder and has an incredible passion for Duke.” But both Majdi and Duke have changed since he entered three years ago with less mature energy, as a self-described “fun and sociable, but also loud and obnoxious” chemistry major, uncertain what to expect stepping onto a campus he had never visited before. Many of the changes Majdi has seen since then in the Duke social scene are behind his drive to improve it during his presidency. “My favorite thing about Duke freshman year was that it was a small school where socially everyone was welcomed everywhere,” he said. “You went to West Campus on Friday and Saturday night and

head’s Sept. 18 inauguration in her position as assistant university marshal. Her father, Pelham Wilder, Jr., was the head university marshal for years and taught in the chemistry department for a half century, while Sterly and her brother were undergraduates in the Class of 1983 and 1973, respectively. Wilder’s nephew, Pelham Wilder, IV, is a senior at Duke who strolls campus with the same infectious presence as his aunt. “Sterly is smart, capable and funny, but most extraordinary is her passion for Duke,” Brodhead said. Tve been impressed since I arrived here that everyone seems to know Sterly and love working with her.” For a position that puts conferring with some powerful people at the forefront and has a hefty reputation behind it, Wilder’s personality helped her beat out over 30 other applicants and will cement a new top administration for Duke’s alumni and development offices. “Nervous? Yeah!” Wilder exclaimed when asked if she might have cold feet in filling bigger shoes. “I’m nervous, but really excited.” all the doors were open.” But now Majdi is disturbed by changes in the social scene catalyzed by stricter enforcement of both alcohol and fire policies. “I think somewhere between my freshman year and this year, Duke’s opinion changed on hundreds of people hanging out in a hallway on a Friday night.... I think [the changes are] going to have very negative repercussions on race relations, in particular, and it’s making the school a lot less fun.” Majdi hopes that the implementation of programs like regular Friday weekend kickoff activities on the main quad should help to liven up a campus that he says has been “dull.” Majdi is also working with the administration to discuss the enforcement of the alcohol policy. As Majdi enters his senior year, he credits Maxwell House as helping to define his own social experience at Duke and stresses the value of selective living groups as “absolutely incredible.” Tve made my best friends for life,” he said. “Every single time the administration talks about developing a sense ofcommunity on campus and all these good things they want to foster and bring to Duke, we all just look at each other and we’re like, ‘Yeah we have that, and it’s great.’”

RANKINGS from page 1 One criticism that is leveled at U.S. News is that there are often significant changes in rankings over the course of a year while, as Guttentag noted, institutions don’t change that quickly. “What these rankings do tell you is what company this magazine thinks we keep,” he said. Willis Stetson, dean of undergraduate admissions at the University of Pennsylvania, shared Guttentag’s opinion. “Clearly we did nothing significant in the last year that would have changed our position with Duke and MIT and Stanford,” he said. “I don’t think the difference of one place means a great deal to the public. The precision of the rankings is not as im-

MERCHANTS from page 6 $25.7 billion in back-to-college shopping, with the average freshman planning to spend $1,205.97. And while many students say they plan to shop at traditional destinations—college bookstores and discount stores like Super Target—others will hit up local shops for college merchandise. One such store is the Duck Shop on Ninth Street, a natural hot-spot for its variety of Blue Devil-themed apparel. Employees have been dishing out tips and area di-

rections with the Duke sweatshirts and flip-flops many parents have been buying, store manager Virginia Rhoton said. ‘We have been really busy this past week,” Rhoton said. ‘They started coming Tuesday. We know when the students move in we’re going to be busy.” Across the street, the Regulator Bookshop was also seeing an upswing in patronage. “It’s great, but we have to speak loud because they all have iPods,” joked John Valentine, one of the store’s owners. Valentine reported that the store, which features the textbooks for 120 of Duke’s fall courses as well as a cafe, was selling dozens of area maps and postcards. “Mom and dad come down in the SUV and they’re lost,” he said. Area hotels saw increased occupancy as parents booked rooms for move-in. The Washington Duke Inn started taking reser-

portent as being in that top group.” The Princeton Review also released its rankings of the nation’s top universities last week. Duke is ranked as the ninth toughest school to get into as well as a “jock school” and a place where “students pack the stadiums.” Duke also made the lists of schools where there is little race/class interaction and where relations with the town are strained. Larry Monete, vice president for student affairs, noted that most administrators give little weight to the Princeton Review rankings. “Sure, we all want to come out as high as we can, but few believe that complex institutions like ours can be differentiated so easily on the basis of a simple numerical ranking,” he said. Kelly Rohrs contributed to this story.

vations for Orientation Week in March, before many new students even knew they had been accepted. “We were sold out Tuesday and Wednesday,” said Jim Bressler, director of sales and marketing for the on-campus hotel. ‘Those two days are one of our four big [times] of the year. We are totally and have always been full.” Bressler said the hotel worked especially hard to be accommodating and appealing to its guests as it tries to impart a “home away from home” feeling, particularly for new Duke parents. He added that many made reservations for Parents’ Weekend and that the hotel is already fully booked for the October event. Brian McGhee, general manager for the Hilton Hotel of Durham, said some ofhis hotel’s guests also made return bookings. The Hilton was nearly full during the orientation period, he said. “We can certainly tell from a business level that school’s back in session,” McGhee said. “It’s been that way for the last two weeks.” While some local residents may bemoan the off-campus parties, the increased traffic and the general flurry of activity on Duke’s campus, many see the return of students as a fiscal—and psychological—boost to Durham. “There are a lot more people walking around [near] dinner time,” Valentine said. “It’s an exciting time; it’s re-ener-

gizing.”

Please recycle this paper!

2005 LAW SCHOOL APPLICANTS Plan to attend one of these Workshops on the Application Process: Monday, August 23, 2004 Tuesday, August 24, 2004 Thursday, August 26, 2004 Tuesday, September 7, 2004 Thursday, September 9, 2004

5:45 pm 116 Old Chem (To classroom 015) Sponsoredby

TRINITY COLLEGE OF ARTS AND SCIENCES PRE-LAW ADVISING CENTER 116 ALLEN BUILDING


THE CHRONICLE

MONDAY, AUGUST 23,

READING

PATRICK PHELAN/THE CHRONICLE

Freshman attend the discussion panel on Mountains Beyond Mountains during theirorientation week.

CONTINUING STUDIES

OGRE ID 8700: 6 Mondays 6-10 pm starting September 13 ID 8702; 6 Tuesdays 5:30-9:30 pm starting September 21 ID 8703: 6 Wednesdays 6-10 pm starting September 22 ID 8715: 6 Sundays 5-9 pm starting October 31 All materials included 0 $470

Space is limited to the first 30 people-Sign up

OGMAT ID ID ID ID

Thompson, dean of Trinity College, moderated the panels and gave encouraging advice to the audience. “Undergraduate education at Duke is not a spectator sport,” Thompson said, urging freshmen to seek out faculty mentors and to be open to growth and change. Freshman Jennifer Windh listened attentively to Thompson’s advice. She said she thought Mountains Beyond Mountains was a good selection for the summer reading program, which started with the Class of 2006. “I thought it was kind of overwhelming in the sense that Farmer was such a great role model,” she said. “It shows a lot about what Duke students can accomplish.” Assistant Dean ofStudents Ryan Lombardi and a committee of 10 students, faculty members and administrators selected the book

from roughly 40 nominations gathered last fall. Senior Josh Alien-Dicker and Associate Dean Kacie Wallace both nominated the book, which the committee selected unanimously from seven finalists. Farmer, a 1982 graduate, is currently a professor of medical anthropology in the Department of Social Medicine at Harvard Medical School and chief of the Division of Social Medicine and Health Inequalities at Brigham and Women’s Hospital in Boston. Farmer began his work outside the realms ofAmerican medicine and academia. He established a health program in Haiti, has worked on health care issues in Peru and is currently working to improve health care in Russian prisons. “It shows that you have other options,” said Chelsea Salyer, a first-year student. “People who go to a prestigious college sometimes expect that they have to go on to prestigious jobs.”

Whitewater Rafting Trip Gauley River inWVA

DUKE (<>,/>

from page 5

2004121

October Bth through 10th, 2004 Cost is $225-$295 Per person

8718: 6 Saturdays 9am -1 pm starting September 11 8719: 6 Mondays 6-10 pm starting September 13 8720: 6 Saturdays 9am -1 pm starting October 23 8721: 6 Mondays 6-10 pm starting November 1 All materials included 0 $470

Enjoy the wet and wild beauty of West Virginia over Fall Break

0 SAT ID 8697: 6 Sundays 6-9 pm starting August 29 ID 8698: 6 Sundays 2-5 pm starting September 26 ID 8699: 6 Sundays 6-9 pm starting October 24 All materials included 0 $450

Day I: Depart East Campus Saturday morning, breakfast & lunch on the road. Arrive at Appalachian Wildwaters Outpost early afternoon. Choice ofMountain Biking or Rock Climbing that afternoon, dinner at the Outpost. Day 2 Breakfast then off to raft the lower Gauley. This section includes more than 35 rapids including M.A.S.H., Stairsteps, RS.H, and more. Lunch is on the river and then back to Appalachian Wildwaters Outpost for dinner. Day 3 Breakfast then off to the world-class rapids of the Upper Gauley. This section of the river offers more than 60 action-packed rapids like Insignificant, Pillow Rock, Lost Paddles and more. Lunch on the river, return to Appalachian Wildwater Outpost, return to Campus. :

:

GO TO experiraetrix.com/fuqua

Space is limited to the first 30 people-Sign up today! Participate in business research at the Fuqua School of Business 18 yrs or older to participate, more info, call 660-7988 or is@duke.edu. There is no direct benefit in our studies beyond the payment offered for each study; no commitment, no medical ig, voluntary, sign up anytime, students, faculty, staff welcomed.

it be

Sign up and payments made at 112 Brodie Recreation Center East Campus

For more information, contact Jan Hackett Phone:6l3-7537 Email: jh29@duke.edu

Trip includes: •

Transportation

PlatformTent Lodging

Two Days of Rafting

Breakfast Sunday & Monday

Lunch Sunday & Monday

Dinner Saturday

&

Sunday

of Mountain Biking or

Rocking Climbing on Saturday

*Additional cost for Biking

Trip limited to 30 participants. Sign up today!

&

Climbing

Outdoor Advoaturoo HPBE


MONDAY, AUGUST 23,

2001

THE CHRONICLE

MEDICINE from page 12 91 percent of physicians acknowledged that patients have mentioned that they use or have considered using alternative therapies. Linda Smith, director of programs at DCIM, noted that people are also spending more money on alternative approaches than on conventional medicine. ‘The public is saying that they want to learn from the best of both worlds,” Smith said. DCIM Director Tracy Gaudet believes alternative medicines are often more effective than conventional medicines—especially in areas like chronic pain, which Gaudet feels are not addressed well by conventional medicine. ‘The therapy [of alternative medicines] is less invasive and less costly. The potential benefit is effective treatment without as much risk and as much cost,” Gaudet said. But even with the demand for alternative approaches, one stigma integrative medicine must first overcome is patient and professional skepticism about its effectiveness. “I did have a healthy skepticism,” Marshall said. “I was concerned it would be too far out there, or too new age. I thought they would work with all natural methods and not integrate with convendonal medicines. I think Duke has done a good job at integrating the normal medicine with the integrative side. I was concerned that that was not going to be the case.” And clinicians have diligently worked to create a balanced treatment. Gaudet said that doctors often help patients sort through what medicines they currently are taking. She added that “most people leave here taking less self-prescribed medications and supplements.” Before the patient even arrives for his first appointment, a doctor asks him to fill

out a health questionnaire, which includes questions about spirituality and health history and is designed to sort through the needs of the patient. “It is surprising that some patients have never thought about their spiritual side before,” Gaudet said. The typical first appointment lasts about an hour and involves some diagnostic testing as the doctor begins to understand the patient and his illness. The doctor also introduces the “Wheel of Health”—a wheel with wedges of the different aspects of health, which help patients visualize problem areas. “If the patient is just interested in maybe one thing, we will respond to that interest,” Smith said. “Other patients want a more comprehensive look at the multiplicity of symptoms and health history and preventing further risk of complications down the road.” After specialists and a multidisciplinary team review the case, follow-up appointments involve the creation of a customized wellness plan. “My doctor went over issues and concerns of why I was there that day,” Marshall said. ‘The doctor made recommendations on my health plan. It was easy to follow and included short-term goals and longterm goals—all of which I had a say on.” Each patient then chooses a plan that involves one to four follow-up appointments and a personal wellness coach who checks in with the patient via e-mail to verify that the personal plan is working. Integrative health is only becoming more popular. Some insurance plans now cover alternative medicines, and Duke has even offered a plan to its employees that includes integrative medicine. With educational classes for health professionals, conferences and a new building specifically designed for integrative medicine, Duke’s Center for Integrative Medicine seems poised for the future.

Wanted! Healthy

Devil

peer educators “We don

do ’tjust better we do it safer. ...

Healthy Devil Peer Educators PARTY ESTEEM SHARP DELISH MINDS

Promoting Alcohol Responsibility To You Educating Students to Eliminate Eating Misconceptions Sexual Harrassment And Rape Prevention Duke Educational Leaders In Sexual Health Mental Issues and Needs Of Duke Students

COUNCIL from page 12 with the apartments, but wishes that those concerns would not trump the potential for an excellent social experience on Central,” Vitarelli said. Senior Rob Liebert, now entering his second year on Central, is among many undergraduate residents of Central who deem full-time quiet an unrealistic ex-

pectation.

“Its understood on Central that the weekends are going to be loud,” Liebert said. “There’s an understanding [about the noise level], so people don’t really

complain.” The widespread acceptance of weekend noise reflects a residential trend. In

ROBBERY from page 1 residential life, reminded students to lock their doors and keep their entrance lights on and to not walk alone. The late evening robbery occurred on the first weekend DUPD began to exercise its extended jurisdiction in the neighborhoods around East Campus. Police presence on campus and in the area near East was also heightened due to the typically rowdy parties students throw at the beginning of the year. A mobile Durham Police Department substation was also parked on Buchanan Street behind Epworth Dormitory, and teams of Duke and Durham officers patrolled the area regularly. Cooper emphasized that DUPD’s presence off campus did not translate to insufficient patrols on Central. “You can’t say that having a police officer everywhere on campus would prevent every crime,” she said. “There’s

recent years, an on-campus

housing

crunch and the requirement for all sophomores to live on West Campus has pushed many unaffiliated undergraduate males to Central. But a move to Central does not change social habits, and the disparate policies are frustrating to those who wish they could be loud. “With a shortage of beds on West, some students who wanted a social residential experience are being denied that,” Vitarelli said. Despite their opposing views on policy recommendations, both Hull and Vitarelli acknowledged that Central’s architectural constraints mean a significant amount of time will pass before the issue may be seriously re-approached. Paul Crowley contributed to this story. never 100 percent safety. There’s always a criminal out there.” Several armed robberies occurred on campus last year. In November 2003 a student reported that he was robbed at the ATM in the Bryan Center; another student was allegedly robbed at gunpoint on Erwin Road the same week. Last April a student reported being held up at knifepoint at the comer of Erwin Road and Anderson Street. In the wake of those incidents, the University instituted several new safety measures, including additional security patrols on campus. “What we’re trying to do is raise people’s awareness of what it means to be safe and taking some personal security measures and also contacting us if you see anything suspicious in the area or any suspicious activity,” Cooper said. If anyone sees any unusual people or behavior or has any information that might help police locate the suspect in

Saturday night’s robbery, please the DUPD

at

684-2444.

contact


THE CHRONICLE

MONDAY, AUGUST 23,

Duke University Department of Music AUDITIONS & OPEN REHEARSALS for Applied Music Lessons and Ensembles Need more information?

DUKE UNIVERSITY DEPARTMENT OF

nu

)f fjr\ (t

\\

Music 70

Sign-up sheets are posted outside the audition rooms for ensembles and private lessons, except for choral auditions (call 684-3898), Collegium Musicum (kmccarth@duke.edu), and Voice lessons (Sign up outside 075 Biddle) io:ooam-5:oopm

Mon, Aug 23

3:oopm-6:3opm Classical Piano 085 Biddle 019 Biddle 3:3opm-6:3opm Voice Jazz Saxophone, Flute, Clarinet 4:oopm-7:oopm 064 Biddle 7:oopm-io;oopm Jazz Rhythm Section: 064 Biddle (Guitar, Percussion, Bass, Piano) and Jazz Vocalists Bass 7:oopm-n:oopm Viola, Cello, 084 Biddle 7:3opm-B:3opm Saxophone & Euphonium 019 Biddle Chorale Sing-Along: Duke Chapel 7:3opm Faure, Requiem 8:oopm-9:oopm Classical Guitar 024 Biddle

Chorale & Chapel Choir

03 Union West

Music 74

Voice 3:3opm-s:3opm Jazz Trumpet 4:oopm-7:oopm 7:oopm-io:oopm Jazz Trombone 7:oopm-n:oopm Flute, Oboe, Clarinet,

7:lspm-B:lspm 7:3opm-9:3opm

4:3opm-6:3opm 7:oopm-n:oopm 7:oopm-9:oopm

Thurs, Aug 26 5:45pm-6;45pm 7:oopm-9:oopm 7:oopm-n:oopm

Music

[l4

|_

Music 135

SHOP

if

The Humanities and Music

Bartlet

Music in South Asia

Music traditions within cultural and social contexts in South Asia (India and Pakistan) and in the world-wide South Asian diasporic communities. Examines the components of these music-cultures and the ways in which tradition and change, identity and hegemony, belief systems and patterns of social interaction are encoded and made manifest in musical practices.

019 Biddle Baldwin 083 Biddle

Kramer

M 7:15-9:45 pm

Baldwin 019 Biddle Baldwin

Music 136

World Music

Musical styles and practices from diverse regions in relation to issues of creativity, forms of power, and cultural survival; focus on the music and experiences of indigenous peoples, refugees, migrants, and immigrants

MWF

East Campus Stare is a great place lo ram voni' pinto money.

10:20-11:10

am

Meintjes

Located one floor below (he Marketplace in theLast Campus Union, The DevilwearSbopis conveniently right wliere you go to eat and pick up your mail. Von will find a wide selectionof the items you need-everything from food to sportswear, from computer supplies to health and beauty aids-and its all right here on East Campus wliereyou live. We earn (he things you need for day-to-dav living so when you shop, look to us first so you can focus on (he

For information about employment contact Joe Powers at 681-3579. Th The

119S

TTH 1:15-2:30 pm

Percussion Baldwin (Orchestra and Wind Symphony only) Baldwin Wind Symphony Open Rehearsal Violin 084 Biddle

TTT /k I I a\ 11. \l lAf ¥ ill WT Ufl

Brown

Music's relationship to the humanities (literature, art, philosophy, cultural and social history) through selected topics including German Romanticism, aesthetics of opera, music and dance, and English theatrical music

064 Biddle 064 Biddle

Opera Workshop Horn, Trumpet, Trombone, Tuba Jazz Ensemble First Rehearsal

Introduction to Jazz

WF 1:15-2:30 pm

019 Biddle

Bassoon Chorale Open Rehearsal Chamber Music

EAST CAMPUS STORE S

rm

McCarthy

A comprehensive overview of the evolution of jazzperformance practices from its beginnings to the present day. The course is structured around differences in stylistic periods and the progressive development that defines today’s jazz;

&

Wed, Aug 25

Music, Sound, and Style

Study of the components of music (e.g. melody, rhythm) through comparative listening to styles from different places and times, ranging from current popular artists to classical, jazz, and world music

MWF 1:30-2:20 pm

Fri, Aug 27

Tues, Aug 24

music

There are still openings in thefollowing non-major courses for thefall semester.

\

Auditions are required for admission to these courses.

Mon, Aug 23

23 «C

(jLj

www.duke.edu/music/pcrformance/audltions.html or call the Music Department office at 660-3300

2004

.

|

Department of Duke University Stores®

04-1080


THE CHRONICLE

241 MONDAY, AUGUST 23, 2004

NAJAF from page 2 the shrine within hours to expel the miliShiite cleric Muqtada al-Sadr, but interim Prime Minister Ayad Allawi quickly backed off that threat. Such an operation would anger Shiites across the country and could turn them against the new government as it tries to gain legitimacy and tackle a 16-monthold insurgency In the Anbar province, the heart of the Sunni insurgency, four U.S. Marines with the Ist Marine Expeditionary Force were killed in separate incidents, the military announced Sunday. One Marine was killed in action Saturday and two others died Saturday of wounds received while conducting “security and stability operations” in the province, the military said. Another Marine was killed Saturday when his Humvee flipped tants loyal to radical

after running into a tank, the military said. A roadside bomb attack Sunday targeting a U.S. military convoy outside the northern city of Mosul killed one U.S. soldier assigned to Task Force Olympia and wounded another, the military said. The injured soldier was in stable condition. Two Iraqi children also were injured in the blast, said Dr. Mohammed Ahmed of al-

Jumhuri hospital

As of Friday, 949 U.S. service members have died since the beginning of military operations in Iraq in March 2003, according to the U.S. Defense Department. Late Sunday, U.S. journalist Micah Garen, who was kidnapped Aug. 13 in the southern city of Nasiriyah, was released along with his Iraqi translator at al-Sadr’s offices there after the cleric’s aides appealed for his freedom. Garen and his translator, Amir Doushi, were walking through a market when two armed men in civilian clothes seized them,

OVERTIME from page 2 will distribute several million fliers saying the administration has given its corporate friends a gift that will cut the paychecks of millions of Americans. The administration asserts that the new regulations are needed to replace vague, outmoded rules that have spurred many lawsuits as employers and employees tussle over which workers are exempt. The administration argues that the overtime rules are clearer, will be easier to enforce and will reduce expensive litigation. “We view this as a step in the right direction for bringing clarity and certainty to this area of the law so there can be greater compliance,” said Alfred Robinson, director of the Labor Department’s wage and hour division. “And that’s good for employers and employees.” Critics of the new rules say they are another example of the Bush administration’s taking regulatory steps that please businesses, which have lobbied for years to revamp the overtime regulations.

m

&

a

video of Garen and threatened to kill him if U.S. troops did not leave Najaf. In a brief interview with the pan-Arab television station Al-Jazeera after his release, Garen thanked al-Sadr’s representatives for their work, which included an appeal to the kidnappers during Friday prayers. Sheik Aws al-Khafaji, an al-Sadr aide, said the kidnappers mistakenly had thought Garen was working for the U.S. intelligence services “The kidnappers listened to the call that we made during Friday prayers, and they contacted us and we asked them to bring him to [al-Sadr’s] office and promised that no one would pursue them,” alKhafaji said. In Najaf, U.S. tanks rumbled down deserted streets Sunday, while sporadic gunfire filled the air. The roads leading to the shrine were muddied and filled with chunks of concrete ripped from the

The Economic Policy Institute, a liberal research group, has issued a report, which many Democrats have relied on, concluding that the rules will exempt about six million workers from overtime coverage. Among those, the institute said, are 1.4 million low-level supervisors, 130,000 chefs and sous-chefs and 900,000 workers with graduate or college degrees who will now be considered

professional employees.

Michael Eastman, director of labor law policy at the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, said companies were not seizing on the new rules to try to deny overtime pay to many workers. He praised the administration’s efforts, saying the regulations were sorely in need of an overhaul. “It’s a very easy issue to demagogue and to frighten people with claims that the worst will happen,’’ Eastman said. “It’s taken a lot of courage for this administration to take this kind of unwarranted criticism from labor unions and other opponents.” Overtime, which is governed by the Fair Labor Standards Act of 1938, is a complicated area of law. Senior managers do not qualify for overtime pay when they

streets. Black smoke trailed from a build-

ing, as the clatter of automatic gunfire rang out In the afternoon a fierce battle between the military and al-Sadr’s militants broke out when insurgents launched a mortar barrage at U.S. troops, witnesses said. Calm returned to the city after about half an hour. U.S. forces sealed off the Old City, the center of the more than two weeks of fighting here, restoring a cordon that had been loosened in recent days. Several mortar attacks targeted police offices in the city, but no one was injured, officials said. Early Sunday, U.S. warplanes bombed the Old City and the sounds of shelling could be heard in the streets, witnesses said. The U.S. military said it could not confirm the bombing. At least three people were killed and 18 injured during overnight fighting, said Tawfiq Mohammed of Najaf General Hospital.

work more than 40 hours, but the more difficult questions involve whether low-level, salaried supervisors should be viewed as managers who do not qualify for overtime or as workers who do. The new rules set forth criteria, like what responsibilities supervisors have and whether they have the power to hire and fire, to determine who is eligible.The rules largely exempt workers earning more than $lOO,OOO from overtime pay, although those with union contracts calling for overtime will continue to be eligible. Three former Labor Department officials under President Bill Clinton and the first President Bush concluded in a report that the regulations would hurt American workers. The AFL-CIO financed their study, but the three authors, led by John Fraser, former director of the wage and hour division, insisted that they were independent. Fraser called the rules ”a very big deal. Their report said that but for a provision involving very low-paid supervisors, every change the Labor Department made had expanded the reach and scope of rules that exempted workers from overtime coverage. 11

The convenience starts at:

Wr

3

police said. Insurgents later released a

m

Adjacent to The University Store

in the Bryan Center, the Lobby Shop conveniently lies in the heart of West Campus. Convenient in terms of selection, we have all you need for day-today living at Duke. So when you are on West for class, meals, meetings or practice, come here for all your snacks and supplies. We are

open from 8:30 to midnight to accommodate your busy lifestyle. For information about employment contact Alvin Puett at 684-2179 The Lobby Shop is a great place to earn your pocket money.

what we are all about. Convenience.of ItsUniversity Stores® Department

Duke

04-1079


11

/

THE CHRONICLE

MONDAY, AUGUST 23,

Duke's rigorous MBA curriculum with a strong focus on the specific needs of the European business community."

DpICCC MCIA/Q liCVv J DVMCiD from page 14 Medal for Distinguished Meritorious Service. King worked in a variety of political and governmental positions in Washington, D.C. including the United States Senate.

Jimmy John’s to Return to Merchants on

Points After a one-year hiatus, popular Ninth Street sandwich merchant Jimmy John’s will return to the Merchants on Points Program. The restaurant, which promises “Subs so fast you’ll freak,” will be available to students with food points “sometime early this week,” a representative said Sunday night.

Executive MBA Program Links Duke and Frankfurt University Duke University’s Fuqua School of Business and Frankfurt University’s Goethe Business School signed an agreement July 21, creating a dual-degree—a 22-month executive MBA program. The Duke Goethe Executive MBA program will begin in May 2005 with an anticipated class of 45 to 60 students predominantly from Germany and surrounding countries. Except for two week-long blocks of classroom instruction at the Duke campus, classes will be held mainly at Frankfurt University, with Duke faculty initially teaching two-thirds of the courses. Upon graduation, the students will have earned both a Duke MBA and a Goethe MBA. "Given Frankfurt's fine reputation in Germany, especially in finance and economics, we believe it is an excellent partner for us,” said Fuqua Dean Douglas Breeden. “Together we will offer working professionals an innovative educational experience that combines

Mary Semans to Receive Humanities Award Mary Duke Biddle Trent Semans, the former board chair of The Duke Endowment and an emeriti member of the Duke University Board of Trustees, will be awarded the John Tyler Caldwell Award for the Humanities Oct. 16 by the North Carolina Humanities Council. The Award, named after the chancellor of N.C. State University from 19591979, is NCHC’s highest honor and pays tribute to individuals whose life and work has strengthened the educational, cultural and civic life of North Carolina citizens through the humanities. Semans, a North Carolina native and Duke graduate, joins previous recipients John Hope Franklin, Anne Firor Scott and Reynolds Price.

KILGO from page 8

most other on-campus residents.

situation that would provoke envy in Crowell is the next renovation on the

look ready for an admissions catalog However, even in a dorm which was only completed Aug. 15, there are complaints. Palacios singled out smaller closets and fewer water fountains, but quickly acknowledged she had a living

schedule, and the University hopes to bring other dorms up to and beyond the benchmark it has established in

Kilgo. “The question is can we do it in three summers —or less?” Hull said. “I would like to do it in two.”

BLUESPARC

from page 13

issue. It’s clear to me from looking at these statistics that student alcohol abuse and use often leads to consequences that can really affect someone’s life. This is a national problem; this isn’t just a Duke issue.” BIueSPARC is currently in the process of its strategic planning for the program, and Feldman-Riordan said she hopes to see the plans come to fruition next spring semester. A student advisory council and a broader coalition that will participate in alcohol awareness initiatives are currently in

FREEDOM

from page 4

higher education. Since Sept. 11, 2001, and the ensuing war on terrorism, professors and community members alike have voiced concern about an increased crackdown on controversial thought in the realm of academia. The prime example was an invitation for Laura Whitehom, convicted of planning a bombing in the U.S. Capitol, to speak about

BUCHANAN

from page 14

conservative organizer. “It is not what it once was just because the religious right is not particularly enamored with him. But it is going to have an effect. In a very close election, criticism from anybody who is credible is going to have an effect.” In an interview, however, Buchanan said publishing a book during the campaign was the best way he knew to inject what he considers important ideas into the debate. “The reason I wanted it out now is, it addresses big issues that are not being addressed in this campaign: the

2004123

the planning stages. Although the BIueSPARC initiatives will bring issues of parties and drinking to the forefront for the next couple of years,, students, neighbors and administrators all recognize that changing college social habits is a longer-term project. “It’s unrealistic to eliminate alcohol from a college campus, but it is possible for a community coalidon to curb the worst of the worst abuse,” Headrick said. “Of course, it’ll take a long time —I mean, I would like to hope that we will see results in the coming years, but it’s probably going to take a lot longer.”

HIV to a race and gender class in March 2003. In typical Duke fashion, she came. “Both governmental concern about security issues and conformity in our society and on our campus are sometimes at odds with academic freedom,” then-President Nan Keohane said on the 100th anniversary of the Bassett Affair. “Thus, we need to continue to express and uphold the central value of this defining aspect of academic life. It is as relevant today as it was in 1903.” massive and growing deficit, the disintegration of the culture and a Wilsonian foreign policy that means war ad infinitum,” he said. On war, trade and immigration, “both Kerry and Bush have agreed on the positions that are producing this,” he said, with a reference to Sen. John Kerry, the Democratic presidential nominee. “True conservatives are not getting a hearing.” Buchanan also stood by his address at the 1992 Republican convention, which alarmed many moderates with talk of a “culture war,” saying that if the first President Bush had heeded the speech he might have won re-election.

CENTER FOR LESBIAN, GAY, BISEXUAL, AND TRANSGENDER LIFE FRIDAY, AUG. Information Meeting

20

7-8:30 pm

019 Biddle

MONDAY, AUG. 23 Saxophone, Flute, Clarinet 4-7 pm 064 Biddle Rhythm Section (Guitar, 7-10 pm 064 Biddle Percussion, Bass, Piano) and Jazz Vocalists

TUESDAY, AUG. 24 Trumpet

4-7 pm 7-10 pm

Trombone

064 Biddle 064 Biddle

WEDNESDAY, AUG. 25 First Rehearsal

7-9 pm

Baldwin

The Duke Jazz Ensemble and small-group Jazz Combos provide an opportunity to hone your skills and work with some of today’s finest jazz musicians. Last year’s guest artists included T. S. Monk,

Herbie Hancock, and Branford Marsalis. We’re looking forward to another great year, and you can be a part of it! For more information, contact John Brown 660-3385, jbrown@duke.edu

WCMMC

§4lfK!

*w» VISIT OS ONLINE AT IT HTTPV/LGBT.STIIDENTAfFAIRS.DUKE. EDU 919-684-6607 OR USITCEIffEReDORLEDD


THE CHRONICLE

161 MONDAY, AUGUST 23, 2004

IMPRINTED

iT-SHI IS

KEY RINGS SWEATSHIRTS

*

New Class!

CLST 180

MAGNETS BUTTONS MOUSE PADS JACKETS SHORTS HATS "T-SHIRTS BUMPER STICKERS LAPEL PINS SWEATPANTS WATER BOTTLES AND MUCH MOREI

*

*

*

*

"

*

"

"

“GENDER

&

SEXUALITY

IN THE

I

ANCIENT WORLD”

.

Class meets: Tuesday & Thursday 4:25-5:50 Allen 234—taught by Professor Micaela Janan

SIGN UP NOW! For more info: http://www.aas.duke.edu/reg/synopsis

Call 684-8109 or 684-8204 to place your order!

DUKE

UNIVERSITY

STORES®

No pre-requisites Curriculum 2000 codes: ALP, CZ, CCI

SHU m

&

R

jfa 3a

f~*ME ~

SOP

9

TEEM BRING YOUR DU

tc/j

~

Vr« ur V for DUKE UNIVERSITY &BQ, Music, Friends and ¥uv\\ ALUMNI AFFAIRS sponsored sr y° ur c/assmates from

\

CUSSCOUNaL-

The Division of Student Affairs


THE CHRONICLE

MONDAY, AUGUST 23,

1995 Mitsubishi galant. 115K miles (72K on engine, 58K on transmission). Burgundy/grey (Ext/lnt). Well maintained and runs very well. $2700. 859-

Duke University does not discriminate on the basis of race, color, national and ethnic origin, disability, sexual orientation or preference, gender, or age in the administration of educational policies, admission policies, financial aid, employment, or any other university program or activity. It admits qualified students to all the rights, privileges, programs, and activities generally accorded or made available to students. The university also does not tolerate harassment of any kind. Questions, comments or complaints of discrimination or harassment should be directed to the Office for Institutional Equity, (919) 684-8222. Further information, as well as the complete text of the harassment policy, may be found at

9778(h) 541-8562(w). 2000 JEEP CHEROKEE LTD. 2 WD/auto, 59,000 mi., 6-disc changer, silver, w/charcoal grey leather, power locks, remote entry, excellentcondition. $10,500. Call 490-1983 evenings. 96 Jeep Cherokee Sport, 135K miles 2WD, 2-door, 5-speed, cruise, dark green. $4OOO call Lane at 468-1666.

http://www.duke.edu/web/equity/ Some departments have additional means of addressing harassment/discrimination claims or questions. For example students, faculty and staff in the Physics Department may email: harassment® phy.duke.edu After school Child Carel Reading and Math Tutor needed for Bth grade student at our home. Competitive pay. Must have transportation.

Apts. For Rent

After-school child care needed for 3 children in Chapel Hill ages 14, 12 and 9. Monday-Thursday, 2:30-6:30 pm. Must be reliable, responsible, nonsmoker with a good driving record. Call 919-968-6206.

1 bedroom luxury apartment located in South Durham. Gated community, sublease $635/month. Will pay all fees. $lOO cash bonus. 308-9813. ATTRACTIVE APARTMENT AVAILABLE. Nearly new one BR garage apartment 1/2 block from East Campus on Clarendon St. Walk to Whole Foods, Ninth St. Completely furnished including full size bed, bed/bath linens, kitchen items, TV/DVD player, washer & dryer. Comfortable and attractively decorated. Landscaped yard. Quiet and safe property. $690/ month plus $7O/month utility fee (includes cable TV). Call 286-0556 o email

for 4 1/2 year-old Weekends Call (919) 479-0100. Babysitter

BABYSITTER NEEDED for kids 1 and 3 from 2:00-6:00 M-F. Also looking for babysitter for Saturday nights 5:008:30. $ll/hour. 309-2917.

Babysitter needed to help with athletic kids after school 1-3 days per week. Hours flexible. Good driving record and references required. Please call 7324442 or email mmiranda@duke.edu.

scovilj@aol.com.

WALKTO DUKE

Chapel Hill family seeks childcare provider Tues-Thurs 2:30-6:30 for 2 school aged children. Drivers license required, experience and dependability essential, bilingual a plus. Call Dan or Paula at 968-6954.

THE VILLAS. Spacious 2BR 2BA duplexes with garage or carport. 801 S. La Salle St. No undergrads. Real Estate Associates Inc. 489-1777 or 795-0204.

Childcare needed 2.5 hours a day, 3-4 days a week. Pick up kindergartner from downtown Durham school at 3:lspm; care for child at our home, located 10 minutes from West Campus. Email coguttentag@msn.com.

Childcare needed for 3 boys 10, 9, and

3, Mon 3-7:45, lues 3-6:30 in SW Durham. Must have transportation. 491-4878 lwhitson@nc.rr.com. Duke Alum Seeks Childcare provider for 3 1/2-year-old daughter. Excellent pay, lovely home, bright, engaging child. 2 1/2 mi from East campus. Must have excellent references. Call 919220-3193.

Evening sitters needed for 2 great kids, ages 11 and 8, in our Durham home. Call 489-7635 with references.

FALL 2004 HOUSE COURSE REGISTRATION. CHECK OUT THE 9 EXCITING TOPICS OFFERED THIS SEMESTER! Online Registration Deadline: September 3, 2004. House Course descriptions and syllabi available at www.aas.duke.edu/trinity/housecrs/. House Course website also located thru synopsis link on ACES.

Afterschool tutor wanted, 8-14 hrs/week depending on schedule, to tutor bright, energetic 8 1/2 yr. old in reading, writing, and math and take to library and museum. $lO or more per hour depending on experience. Transportation required. Less then 10 min. from Duke. Starting immediately. Call K. Jones at 919-220-9460 between 5-9pm. Courier/Office Assistant needed to deliver confidential and time-sensitive mail to students and staff on a daily basis. Individual will also assist with other office-related tasks (i.e. data entry, answering the telephone, etc.). Job provides flexibility and an opportunity to work away from the desk, reliability is important. Car not necessary.

Dynamic Duke Chapel Youth need Sunday School teachers and counselors. Contact George Ragsdale at gir@duke.edu or call 684-3917 for information.

Looking for someone to care for 7yo from 4-s:3opm M-F at home 2 mi. from campus. Additional overnight care needed on a limited occasion. 6842778.

GET PAID FOR YOUR OPINIONS! Earn $l5-$125 and more per survey!

www.moneyforsurveys.com.

NOW HIRING WORK STUDY

Loving caregiver wanted for 2 children aged 1 and 3 years in our home near Duke. Both set and flexible hours 8-15 hours/wk. Geat working environment and great kids. Reliable transportation needed. Call 383-4993.

Are you creative? Responsible? Computer Literate? The Chronicle Creative Department is looking for graphic artists to design and process ads for the newspaper. We offer on-thejob-training to qualified students. Hours are flexible between 9a.m. and sp.m. Monday through Friday. Contact starbuck@duke.edu or call Barb at 684-0388 for more details.

Need exper., caring individual for childcare in SW Durham home for 2 y.o. 2025 hours a week. Contact Christine at 423-8659 or christine_robers @ yahoo.com. Part-time babysitter needed to pick up two children (8 and 5 years) from Durham public schools and take to our house in Durham for the afternoon (approx. 2:30-5:30). Needed most MWF from mid-September to midDecember. Please contact at 684-5664 or 416-0931. Part-time nanny needed for 2 young children. Afternoons 4-5 days/week in Hillsborough. 919-245-0095.

The Chronicle classified advertising

Sitter needed Tuesdays, 4-7pm in SW Durham home for 2 and 5 year-olds. More hours available if desired. Experience preferred. Call 403-0126.

rates

-

866-221-7071.

Duke University Chapel needs children’s Sunday School teachers Sundays 9:45-10:45am. Small stipend available. Contact Phyllis Snyder 7323395.

Sitter needed 5 yr old boy. Good pay. Possible business from 2nd family also. 1-2 times a week. Please call 4771781.

business rate $6.00 for first 15 words private party/N.R $4.50 for first 15 words all ads 100 (per day) additional per word 3 or 4 consecutive insertions -10 % off 5 or more consecutive insertions 20 % off special features (combinations accepted) $l.OO extra per day for all Bold Words $1.50 extra per day for a Bold Heading (maximum 15 spaces) $2.50 for 2 line heading $2.00 extra per day for Boxed Ad deadline 1 business day prior to publication by 12:00 noon

S2OOK earner willing to educate. Highly motivated individual for rewarding career in financial services. Call 1

-

Part-Time

Marketing/Business Development Position Business major with interest in marketing to develop and execute industry specific marketing campaigns targeted at local midmarket businesses. 8-15 hours/week. $lO-$2O/hr based on experience. 5427003 or careers@anglethree.com.

PART-TIME POSITION AVAILABLE Ten-person law firm in Durham area seeks combination part-time Receptionist-Administrative Assistant. Polished speaking skills required, with at least moderate-to-good administrative assistant skills desired; position offers attractive office venue and environment. Forward resume to Hiring Partner, RO. Box 52394, Durham, NC 27717-2394.

Part-time secretary and research assistant. Graduate student. To help complete book on science and religion by retired, visually challenged professor. Home office about 10-15 min. from campus. To work about 3 hours a session, mornings, 2 sessions per week or more. Salarycommensurate. Two week trial. Please respond by email with brief background, qualifications, interests, flexibility of schedule, and required

salary to Saulßoyarsky39@msn.com. Expect an interview and decision in 1-2 weeks.

RAINBOW SOCCER COACHES WANTED! Volunteer coaches needed for Youth, ages 3-13. Practices M&W or T&Th, 4:15-5:15 pm. All big, small, happy, tall, large-hearted, willing, funloving people qualify. Email at rainbowsoccer@earthlink.net. Register online at www.rainbowsoccer.org or call 9678797 or 967-3340.

RECEPTIONIST/ CASHIER NEEDED Durham Automobile Dealership. Must be dependable, and enjoy working with the public. Excellent pay with benefits. Fax letter of interest to: 465-0923. Include salary and hours desired. Satisfaction Restaurant is now hiring for bartenders, barbacks, and wait staff. Please apply in person.

STUDENT EMPLOYMENT DUMC Development & Alumni Affairs Office seeking student for 10-15 hours per week starting fall semester 2004. Duties include special projects, data entry, filing and other office work. Office adjacent to Durham Bulls Ballpark. Must have own transportation. Starting salary $7.50/hour. VOLLEYBALL COACH needed for Duke Women’s Club Team. Team practices twice weekly with monthly tournaments. Contact Kasey at 919-225-3348 or Kesl7@duke.edu. WebSite Development Part-time assistance with development of informational website using Frontpage, ASP, and MacroMedia toolset. 10 hours/week. 542-7003 $l5/hour. or careers @ anglethree.com.

WORK STUDY POSITION AVAILABLE Come join the Chronicle staff as a Classified Advertising Representative. Friendly work environment and flexible hours! Call 684-3811 or just talk to Sim. Work study student needed tor childoriented research program. Duties include data entry, filing, and library work. Also involve some assistance with children during research assessments. This position requires sensitivity, confidentiality, and reliability. Must have transportation to off-campus clinic near former South Square Mall. Email wendy.conklin@duke.edu.

-

-

STUDENT ASSISTANTS needed in medical research lab to help with molecular biology protocols, genotyping, transgenic mouse care, and lab maintenance. Flexible hrs. Contact Joanna Bradley, Dept of Med, email jkbB@duke.edu, phone 286-0411, lab ext 7301.

PART-TIME RESEARCH ASSISTANT to help me and part-time secretary to draftand research manuscript on medical theology from internet to library, to drafting and editing dictation. 2 week trial period. Home office 10 minutes from Duke. Please email briefly: qualifications, background and interest, starting salary, flexibility of daytime schedule, saulboyar@aol.com.

-

payment Prepayment is required Cash, Check, Duke IR, MC/VISA or Flex accepted (We cannot make change for cash payments.) 24 hour drop off location •101 W. Union Building

JESUS He's the BIG thing at First Baptist Church, Durham!

-

or mail to: Chronicle Classifieds Box 90858, Durham, NC 27708 0858 fax to: 684-8295 e-mail orders classifieds @ chronicle.duke.edu

Find authentic friends, solid Biblical teaching, dynamic worship, exciting collegiate Bible Studies & exciting collegiate events!

-

phone orders:

call (919) 684-3811 to place your ad. Visit the Classifieds Online! http://www.chronicle.duke.edu/classifieds/today.html

Call 684-3811 if you have any questions about classifieds. No refunds or cancellations after first insertion deadline.

Sunday Schedule College Bible Study 9:45 A.M. Worship Service 11:00 A.M.

FRESHMEN: Van pick-up at 9:35 am East Campus Bus Stop

First Baptist Church Rev. Scott Markley, Minister of College/Career 414 Cleveland St. Downtown Durham 688-7308 ext. 23 •

www.fbcdurham.org

impact@fhcdurham.org

111 St Paul St. 3BR Central HVAC. New Energy Windows- W/D- stovefrig. Great neighborhood$890.00. 4933983 office. 489-8349 Hm. 113 St Paul St. 3BR Central HVAC. New Energy Windows- W/D- stovefrig. Great neighborhood $975.00.4933983 office. 489-8349 Hm. For 1920’s House Bungalow Rent/Lease to Own, 606 Gattis Street, Durham, 3BR/IBA, Central Air, Deck, Fence, Pets Welcome, W/D Included, Walk to 9th Street, $BOO, Available Immediately, Stacey 401-1981; sposton@nc.rr.com.

2004127

IBR w/ Bath. 350/mo. Utilities included 2410 Shenandoah. No kitchen. 4933983 office. 489-8349 Hm. 2500 square ft. Contemporary, 4 bedrooms, 4 bath. $l4OO/mo. plus security deposit. Call Sam (919)309-0782. 2BR, 2Bath townhome in desirable Forest Oaks community with reserved parking, minutes to Duke Medical center $BOO/month. Bonus 1 month free rental for 12 month lease. Call Ron (919)-846-0742.

3 bedroom/2 bath home available now. 5 minutes to Duke. Immaculate. All appliances including washer/dryer, fenced yard with large deck. Quiet family neighborhood. 2357 Huron St. $875/ month. 419-8500h. 475-4645C. 3 Blocks to Duke E. Campus! Old world charm completely renovated 3 bedroom, 2 bath millhouse.Bead board walls, wide pine refinished floors, huge kitchen, dining room, washer-dryer included. $825/mo. Call 313-1519, ask for Len. W/D, fur4 BR, 2 BA, appliances nished. 5 min. to Duke. Quiet and safe neighborhood. Call 620-7880 or +

(252)354-8813.

818 W. Knox St. 2BR cottage, central HVAC, tilt-in windows, nice yard, screened-in back porch. $850.00. Great neighborhood, Trinity Park. 4933983 office. 489-8349 Hm. 926-B Alabama Ave, 1/2 mile off campus. 2BR, W/D, stove, fridge and WATER INCLUDED. 600/mo. 493-3983 office. 489-8349 Hm. Duplex off Hillsborough Rd. Cabin in the woods, furnished. 1 Bedroom, 1 Bath W/D, store, refri, dishwasher, Cable, and High Speed access provided. Hottub, near Duke. 650 per month, inspection@nc.rr.com or 8106972.

CONDOS FOR RENT CHEAP RATES!!! Furnished- 2 Bedrooms/2 Bath. 311 Swift Avenue. 1.5 minutes from Duke. 919-471-3482 for Warnetta.

Country Cottage on horse farm. 2 BR, IBA, large kitchen, porches and lots of storage in beautiful, quiet setting. Central heat and air conditioning, woodstove, appliances, running trails. 15 min to Duke $750/ mo, no pets. Call for appt. 620-0137. www.fairntosh.com.

Furnished Guest House. Private, beautiful country setting. Off Infinity Rd. in N. Durham. Fully Furnished. No W/D 10 min from campus. Pets Negotiable. $5OO/includes all utilities 477-6651.

HOUSE FOR RENT 1114 Oval Drive. Watts Hillandale area. Cute Bungalow has 2 bedrooms. 1 1/2 bath, Hardwood floors in living room, diningroom, and kitchen. Fenced backyard w/ picnic area. Faces oval park. Convenient to Duke $895/ mo. 4191200. House For Rent Only 3-5 minutes to Duke: Large 3BR, 2BA, 1 garage, all brick house on Pickett Rd, about one mile from Fuqua, Law School. Newly finished hardwood floors, ceramic tiles in kitchen and laundry room. Large family room and dining room with bay windows overlook huge backyard. Minutes to shopping and gym. Only $lO5O per month. 12-monthlease preferred. Call 931-0977 for appointment. Renovated 3BR, 2 Bath home for rent. 1137 Landon Street, Durham. Available now- $B7O month-15 minutes to Duke. Phone Roz at 949-8702.


THE CHRONICLE

281 MONDAY, AUGUST 23, 2001

PARTIES

from page 1

Durham Police Department officers patrolled the area all weekend, and between 10 p.m. and 2 a.m. —prime party time—squad cars cruised by the houses every two minutes. Residents and police are still searching for ways to control the parties off East Campus, which have been mobbed in the past two years as the University has tightened enforcement of its alcohol policy. “In years past, I’ve seen kids migrate to Ninth Street,” said DUPD Lt. Jeff Best, who was on patrol offEast Saturday night. “Recently these houses have become a magnet for kids Many residents noted that despite the large crowds, students throwing parties seemed more aware of the neighbors than in years past. Several neighbors said students had contacted them before throwing parties and many students prompdy cleaned up after their late-night gatherings. Last year Duke students and neighbors clashed over the raucous and expansive parties. Neighbors complained about noise, trash strewn through the streets and delinquent behavior from drunken students. This year, their complaints were similar, but their frustration focused on the general disrespect that students showed the residents. Several neighbors called the police Friday night when music and chatter from the parties kept them awake. But the intense noise started as students loudly stumbled back to East. Jen Minnelli, who lives on Buchanan Street, said she came out of her home to remind students to be quiet because her twoyear-old daughter was sleeping. She said the students sneered back at her and then one student told the mom, who is eight months pregnant, “Shut your mouth, b—h.” Residents say such behavior is typical. Dan Morgan, who lives on Watts Street, said when he meets students during the day “they’re the nicest guys in the world.” ”

PATRICK PHELAN/THE CHRONICLE

Freshman line the sides ofroads off East Campus after a hard night of partying.

Green Leather Sofa & Love Seat $850.00. Coordinating Pier 1, “Medici”, Iron & Glass Top Tables $75. & $125.00. 919-471-4545.

Houses For Sale Why rent when it is easier to own a

Quality Used Furniture, appliances, and household goods. Habitat Hand-Me-Ups, 3710 Shannon 403-8668 Durham. Road, Tuesdays-Saturdays, 10 am to 5 pm. Web: hhmu.org.

completely furnished and equipped

condo? Enjoy smaller monthly payments than you now pay for rent. Live nicer for less. Duke Tower Condos only $BB,OOO. Excellent financing to fit your pocketbook. Cornerof N. Duke St. & W. Trinity Ave. 688-4400, www.duketowercondos.com. ,

Roommate Wanted Mature female to share 3Br house located near Streets at Southpoint. $3OO/month includes utilities. Email sonjawashburn@nc.rr.com or call 3615417.

NEED A NANNY?

Caring, energetic, loving nanny in Durham wants to play with your kids while you work. CPR Certified, nonsmoker, flexible with references can work full-time or part-time. Call Portia 919-308-9655, 919-308-9154.

DISCOUNT TEXTBOOKS! Compare prices and save! New and used textbooks! Bestßookßuys.com

When they start drinking, however, he said they become belligerent. Neighbors’ growing frustration is beginning to focus on the landlords who rent to Duke students. ‘There are two bottom lines,” said Joan Austin, a Watts Street resident. “Duke won’t letanyone drink on campus, and these houses are rented to seniors in fraternities. That’s a deadly combination.” Police, who were out in full force all weekend, were quick to break up events once neighbors called authorities. They made several arrests for underage drinking and for possession of a fake identification. MaJ. Phyllis Cooper, a spokesperson for DUPD, said official numbers would not be available until Monday at the earliest. Some students, however, found ways to curb disruption to the neighbors. Saturday night a party thrown by members ofSigma Nu fraternity at 706 Buchanan St., known to students as “Halfway House,” went well into the night. Junior Jay McKenna, president ofSigma Nu, said the hosts had hired bouncers from a nearby restaurant and made efforts to control the soiree. All evening several men stood outside the house periodically yelling at loitering students, “Get inside or get out!” “I don’t think things are that different from last year,” McKenna said. ‘The police are still going to be out there and we’re still going to be doing what we want to do.” He noted that no neighbors complained Saturday night, but Sunday morning the Trinity Park neighborhood e-mail list was abuzz with complaints about the trashed yards and the “morning after party stench” on the 700-block ofBuchanan. Ellen Dagenhart, a realtor and Trinity Park resident, noted that the parties made it difficult for her to do her job. “It’s a pain in the butt to go try to sell houses and represent Trinity Park as a place to raise a family when there is garbage and throw-up in the front yards,” she said.

www.bestbookbuys.com/duke. MOVING SALE EVERYTHING MUST GO! Large Desk with hutch, office chairs, dinette set, couch, love seat, kitchenware, microwave, washer/dryer, home decorations, and many more. Call Marie (919) 286-4955.

Room For Rent Room with private entrance. Utilities, small refrigerator, microwave, cable, and bath. Quiet, privacy. Close to Duke. Walk to E. Campus. 919-220-0523 or 919-286-2285.

Good Used and Office Furniture. New Beginnings Furniture. 301 S. Duke St. 682-1495.

i

Spring Break 2005- Travel with STS, America’s #1 Student Tour Operator to Acapulco, Jamaica, Cancun, Bahamas, and Florida. Now hiring on-

www.chronicle.duke.edu

campus reps. Call for group discounts. Information/Reservations 1 -800-6484849 or www.ststravel.com.

IMultidisciplinary

Core Course in Cognitive Neuroscience (Psychology 3595, Neurobiology 3495, Philosophy 3595)

A £

CCN

EXPRESS REAL FOOD in the

Levine Science Research Center Keep Your Resolution to Eat Healthy, Make Blue Express Your New Habit Daily Specials Meatball Sub Monday Tuesday Falafel or Kafta & Hummus Chicken Shawarma Wednesday Thursday Meat Gyro Friday Cuban Sandwiches

This year-long course taught by faculty associated with the Center for Cognitive Neuroscience at Duke offers an introduction to fundamental concepts and current research in cognitive neuroscience and has been designed for a wide range of students interested in the relation between mind, brain and behavior. All major areas of cognition will be covered, including perception, attention, memory, emotion, and language. Cognitive development and computer simulation of cognitive abilities will be also covered. A series of workshops integrated with the course provides hands-on experience in cognitive neuroscience methods such as event-related potentials, functional magnetic resonance imaging, and computer modeling; these sessions will also include visits to research laboratories at Duke where cognitive processes in human and non-human primates are being investigated.

-

-

-

-

-

Mon-Thurs Bam-3pm Fri Bam-2pm •

660-3972

660-3923

fax

Previous knowledge of cognitive theory or neuroscience is helpful, but not required. Advanced undergraduates can take the course with permission from the instructors, the appropriate deans in the Graduate School and College of Arts and Sciences, and the Director of Undergraduate Studies. For further information contact Professors Roberto Cabeza (cabeza@duke.edu or 668-2926) or Dale Purves (purves@neuro.duke.edu or 684-6122).


THE CHRONICLE

MONDAY, AUGUST 23, 200412!

Diversions

THE Daily Crossword ACROSS 1 Muscle protein

oondocks Aaron McGruder ii

..

MAKE UP A REASON

VtXHHXHO THE ISSUE OF STEM

CELL RESEARCH PART ONE;

MOST PEOPLE PONT LIKE THE IPEA OF A PRESIPENT WHO IS A RELIGIOUS ZEALOT WHO'S AFRAIP OF SCIENCE/

c

a

|

5

TO OPPOSE STEM C&L RESEARCH THAT HAS NOTHING TO PO WITH ETHICS OR RELIGION. SOMETHING THAT SCARES PEOPLE

/stem

JUST LET PUPYA MAKE SOMETHING UP. ANYTHING. THE MORE RIPICULOUS.

V

research^

cell WILL PESTROY

AMERICA/

—yT"

THE PETER.

J

((gasw)

...

V,

Q

t

■O

2

I

o

2

c

L

<

8

k

Edited by Wayne Robert Williams

*Mk&* I

Q

000HHH/ A CLASSIC'

6 Bronco prodder 10 Fair and square 14 Flora and fauna 15 Sushi fish 16 About 17 E.D.S. founder 19 Have in mind 20 10 of dates 21 Pueblo people 22 Power 24 Save 26 IBM feature from 1981 28 Young sheep 30 Make a vow 34 Painful 37 Carolina rail 39 Vivarin rival 40 Crude crosses 42 With what intention 43 Zhou of China 44 Vinegar vessel 45 Leopold's partner in crime 47 Bank seizure, briefly

48 Non-woody 4 Part of TGIF

vegetation

50 Carpenter's groove 52 Larry Storch on “F Troop" 54 Continue 58 PBS news anchor 61 Eye part 63 Buddhist Thai 64 State as fact 65 "The Path to Power" author 68 Stout's Wolfe 69 Buffalo's lake 70 Obscuring vapors 71 Was familiar with 72 Lift in Aspen 73 David of "Just Shoot Me"

ilbert Scott Adams I'VE BEEN TOLD THAT YOU IGNORE YOUR TEAM'S ASSIGNMENTS AND WORK ON THINGS THAT AREN'T YOUR JOB. ALICE,

6 c

E o <0

0)

i T3

t=

8 «

THAT'S TRUE. I DO IMPORTANT THINGS INSTEAD OF USELESS THINGS ASSIGNED BY CLUELESS NIMRODS.

E o o t <1>

s*

S\J

n ■5

CO

3

n

YOU TOTALLY RUINED THIS MEETING.

Q

d

c

U

E

w

T3

/\

<

V

s

J

\ /

3

1

j

>-

a?

T

/V

®

r

9

1"

DOWN 1 Find repugnant 2 Goddess who loved

V>

Doones

Ga

Odysseus

Trudeau

3 Restaurateur

5 City on the Merrimack 6 Procedure part 7 Jewish festival 8 Numero 9 Like a movie for 17+ 10 Doctrine president -friendly 11 12 Male affair 13 Theater award 18 Verse works 23 Nary a soul 25 Bonnie Parker's partner

27 29 31 32 33 34 35 36 38 41

Shor

Neutered Derby hat Stagnant Cleansing

agent Pinza of "South Pacific" St. Louis site Central part Appointed time Pi follower Period in a process

46 49 51 53

Pastry chef Top room

Fatalities Ancient

kingdom on the Nile 55 Public square 56 Moved the dinghy

57 Hangman's knot 58 Long and lean 59 Tied 60 In this place 62 Stray off course 66 Poetic globe 67 Ballplayer's topper

The Chronicle Our favorite fonts: Myriad Bold: Textile: Marigold: Goudy:

CAN

I HELP

I NEED A souvenir. low MUCH

is THE PoLLO 11 CAPSULE?

THE UTTLE WIND-UP ONES OR THE Bi&GER PLASTIC REPLICAS?

THE REAL ONE OUT IN THE MUSEUM.

LET ME 60 CHECK.

WHO SAYS A

VERNMENT I DEBT IS ,U BAD?

*

V

CE2 Watchdog ..Editpage

Hobo:

Sports

bodoni

Photo Sports Photo Wire

Cooper Black: Bell Gothic:.... Roily C. Miller;

oxTrot Bill Amend

Layout

Roily

Account Representatives: Monica Franklin, Dawn Hall Janine Talley, Advertising Representatives: Evelyn Chang Classifieds Coordinator Sim Stafford National Advertising Coordinator Kristin Jackson Account Assistants Lauren Lind, Julia Ryan, Jenny Wang Creative Services:.... Tim Hyer, Erika Woosley, Willy Wu Online Archivist: Edwin Zhao Ashley Rudisill, Melanie Shaw Business Assistants:


THE CHRONICLE

301 MONDAY, AUGUST 23, 2004

The Chronicle The Independent Daily

at

Round peg in a quad hole

Duke University

Two

Allowing PSM will foster debate three days in October, the Uni- tinian conflict is complex and difficult versity will open its doors to the to understand. Many Duke students are annual conference of the Pales- extremely underinformed, despite the tine Solidarity Movement. The move- fact that the conflict is one of the farment’s cridcs have already begun voic- thest-reaching events in the world today. Having the PSM ing their objections to conference on camthe University’s deciStclffcditOlidl pus will not only allow sion to allow the conference, and they are likely to continue for discussion of important issues, but it until after the event is over. Despite the will also lead to a more aware and incriticism, however, the University has formed student body. By allowing a stumade the correct decision in hosting dent group to host the conference, the University is showing that it trusts stuthe conference for several reasons. First and foremost, the University dents to engage in such discussions and to foster this sort of important political has a commitment to academic and intellectualfreedom. PSM is a group that dialogue on campus. advocates a peaceful solution to the Although the conference is expected to draw a large number of demonconflict in the Middle East. The conferstrations—past conferences have been ence will play host to speakers and panels, allowing the group to exercise its set upon by hundreds of protesters the University will likely pay for addifreedom of expression. The issue of academic freedom tional security for the weekend. As it is aside, the University has also shown currently planned, the event will not be that it will not cower when confronted putting any students in danger, which with sensitive issues. There is no reason would have been a legitimate reason for the conference not to come to for not hosting the conference. The University should take the propDuke. If the University had bowed to er precautions to ensure that students outside pressure from groups who allege PSM condones terrorism it would and faculty, as well as those attending have violated both its objectivity and its the conference and those protesting it, remain safe. At the same time the Unicommitment to academic freedom. versity has a commitment to preventing The PSM conference has the potenviolence, it also has an obligation to tial for a positive effect on Duke’s camallow the protesters their freedom of students often considare pus. Duke ered apathetic with respect to national speech. Protesters should be given appropriate space, as long as they do not and international issues, and the Uniis not versity a very politically charged interfere with the University’s functions place. The PSM conference, however, or cause any disturbances. Although there is going to be much will bring a whole new level of discusdebate on the issue of the PSM confersion to campus. The conference will receive a great deal of national attention, ence over the coming months, the Uniand it will draw participants and proversity has handled these opening testers from all across the country, all stages with aplomb, setting the stage for a well-run event that has the potential while sparking political debate and discussion on campus. to foster discussion and debate and to The whole issue of the Israeli-Palas- benefit Duke students.

For

ontherecord Duke won*t let anyone drink on campus, and these houses are rented to seniors in fraternities. That s a deadly combination.

—Joan Allen, Watts Street resident Campus. See story, page 1.

Est. 1905

on parties off East

The Chronicle

i™. 1993

KAREN HAUPTMAN,Editor MATT SULLIVAN, News Managing Editor LIANA WYLER, Production Managing Editor PAUL CROWLEY, University Editor KELLY ROHRS, University Editor TRACY REINKER, Editorial Page Editor JAKE POSES, Sports Editor JONATHAN ANGIER, GeneralManager PETER GERHARD, Photography Editor DAVIS WARD, City & State Editor MARGAUX KANIS, Health & Science Editor MIKE VAN PELT, Sports Managing Editor JON SCHNAARS,Recess Editor MIKE COREY, TowerView Editor SEYWARD DARBY, Wire Editor MALAVIKA PRABHU, Staff Development Editor CHRISTINA NG, SeniorEditor HILARY LEWIS, Recew SeniorEditor KIM ROLLER, Recess SeniorEditor RACHEL CLAREMON, CreativeServices Manager SUE NEWSOME, Advertising Director MARY WEAVER, Operations Manager

PATRICK PHELAN, Photography Editor ROBERT SAMUEL, Features Editor STEVE VERES, Health& Science Editor BOBBY RUSSELL, Sports PhotographyEditor SOOJIN PARK, Recess PhotographyEditor MOLLY NICHOLSON, TowerView Managing Editor EMILY ROTBERG, Wire Editor ANDREW COLLINS, SeniorEditor CINDY YEE, SeniorEditor YOAV LURIE, Recess SeniorEditor KATIE XIAO, Sr. Assoc.Features Editor BARBARA STARBUCK, Production Manager YU-HSIEN HUANG, Supplements Coordinator NALINI MILNE, Advertising Office Manager

TheChronicle is published by theDuke Student Publishing Company, Inc, a non-profit corporation independent ofDuke University.The opinions expressed in this newspaper are not necessarily those of Duke University, its students, faculty, staff, administration or trustees. Unsigned editorials represent the majority view of the editorial board. Columns, letters and cartoons represent the views

units that are replacing them. What is a quad? On West Campus, the unfortunate answer is: nothing much. Do you know where Kilgo ends and Crowell begins? Why Wannamaker is lumped in with Crowell, and why Keohane and Edens are considered “quads” at all? Simply put, it is unnatural to think of Duke’s labyrinthine Gothic wonderland in a system meant for classically arranged campuses. The larger point is that Hull and other administrators have forgotten the old “Folkways” theory that you can’t legislate what is unnatural. Just as the quad model is architecturally misguided, its key precept of neutering fraternities and selective living groups in favor of wholesome quadprogramming.” oriented programming is Then City Planner #1 cackles and peels off a rubber mask to hopelessly naive. It is mind-boggling that reveal himself as Eddie Hull. Hull, who worked at the This fictional account dramSouthern atizes the real-life absurdity that hard-partying Methodist University and is the so-called “quad model.” has a college-aged child of The model was in the works behis own, would so underesfore Hull arrived at Duke in Andrew Collins timate the will of college but he has been charged 2002, students to have non-sancwith further developing and imHazzards of Duke tioned, “bad” recreation. plementing a strikingly radical Sad though it may be, if facelift ofWest Campus life that seems inevitably at odds with both the unique Quad Councils do not accommodate underaged drinking, they will not be credible as structure of the campus and the nature of stuprogramming bodies to a very large portion dents at the University. First, it helps to know what the quad of students. And without credible and busy model is. Student leaders are perhaps overly Quad Councils, Hull’s vision of quad unity fond of claiming “no one has ever told me will be a pipe dream. what the quad model is,” but the core idea is No doubt, West Campus’s architecture pretty simple: the quad is to become the unit and the necessarily wholesome nature ofResidence Life and Housing Services initiatives of residential life on West Campus, replacing are formidable obstacles for someone in the fraternity house, selective house and inHull’s position. But I do not think that cramdependent house. ming a round peg down a quad hole is the What has made greeks nervous is a presumed corollary that if quads are to replace right strategy. We need to take a serious step houses, then fraternities and selective living back—as we did in postponing contruction of the West Campus plaza—and find a more natgroups will be squeezed out. While the administration has never formally elucidated ural residential unit that does not depend on this corollary, a simple exercise of logic would advanced geography skills and a sudden mass realization by Duke students that cooking suggest that the greeks’ fears are justified. Despite occasional placations from Hull competitions really are more fun than partyand Larry Moneta, one of the driving forces ing at a frat on a Saturday night. behind the quad model was the widespread Maybe we should go back to the house belief that fraternities were inexorably linked system. Maybe we should separate Wannamaker, Keohane and Edens out as units and to underage drinking, misbehavior, non-dicall Main West a single unit. Maybe it will and lower oflife for non-affila quality versity take some construction on West Campus. iated students on West Campus. In a question-and-answer session last March Maybe we should wait for the Central Camwith fraternity members and other selective pus renovation and use Main West for classhouse residents, Hull started to show his cards. es and services. Whatever the administration’s ultimate He said in the future, quad affiliation would be expected to trump all other affiliations—in- course of action, its leaders would do well to cluding fraternity and selective living group consult Campus Council immediately on this membership. He also axed annual review, the subject. Call me crazy, but if you acknowledge procedure by which fraternities were assessed that students will do as they please with or without RLHS approval, it is a good strategy on their contribution to the residential comto look honestly at their natural proclivities munity, which many interpreted as an underand find out which model best molds to offratemitites’ status. mining So if we are dropping selective living them—not the other way around. groups or subordinating them to the point that they are to become irrelevant, it is worth Andrew Collins is a Trinity senior and former taking a hard look at the strangely misnamed University Editor of The Chronicle.

city planners sit in a cozy office one

morning, surrounded by maps and blueprints. They have shared this office for some 20 years, working as steady custodians of a burgeoning city. Suddenly, City Planner #1 sits upright in his swivel chair and looks at City Planner #2 with a deranged half-grin. “You know how we have always had our city drawn into districts? I’ve got a better idea. Let’s take the city and split it into sevenths. Since there are no natural boundaries, let’s draw them along crazy lines that defy intuition. And let’s make people go to their Seventh Council for all government services and recreational activities. Except to make it more ominous, let’s call it autumn

of theauthors.

Toreach theEditorial Office at 301 Flowers Building, call 684-2663 or fax 684-46%.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 ChronicleOnline at http:/Avww.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 formwithout the prior, written permission of the Business Office. Each individual is entitled to one free copy.

-

editor'snote Dear readers: After months ofhard work, The Chronicle Online launched its much-needed redesign last Friday. Our new website is more reader-friendly and better-equipped to deliver as much information in the easiest way possible. Check it out at www.chronicle.duke.edu, and let us know what you think! Karen Hauptman, Editor, 100th volume

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 thediscretion 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: letiers®chronicle.duke.edu


THE CHRONICLE

MONDAY, AUGUST 23,

College- let the peer

As

On iPods and sleeping in

i

someone that looks import mt due to his prime Fund has den spot in the newspaper, where you can just see the to Duke and headline after the crossword gets ripped out and problems and the rest of The Chronicle gets igno ed like the ugly girl to build a r in Tri-Delt who brings up the avert \e GPA, Sir ELTON bench. And BRAND, PRINCE OF TENNIS is pf sed to welcome the stars ofHow h class of 2008. As a word of advice f reshman guys from though Betas someone who’s been there, offerf >ur seat on the bus the humor c to a girl on the way to a party ot ay night won’t get Chronic on ( t but when laid, hit the s you you marijuana is imp you can totalbuilt for stability aren’t, unless ly lose your balance (flip-flop anyway) and fall into her (because you’re too innocent to do it on purpose). Now SIR PRINCE knows what you’re thinking, SIR ELTON? PRINCE? What’s with the name referencing two of the progenitors of cheesy 80s music that no one would admit to listening to anymore? Well SIR ELTON is an international student and it takes a while for a new pop sensation to get out of HollySir wood traffic, swing by that trendy new coffee shop for a latte, make fun of the kid that still Prince of Tennis has his collar down and board a plane for the Monday Monday less civilized parts of the world (and that’s just to get to the Midwest). In any case, it’s no surprise that the PRINCE’S name the comparisoi is considered the height of fashion where he’s from. How do yc But where is that? BRAND’S name could be Russian, it minds SIR BR could be Polish or it could be Madeup. SIR BRAND Sun... oh sorr guesses if it was Russian, it would be Brandukov, and if it relates to a: it was Polish, it would be Brandowski, so that narrows elude a mid-9( down the choices. Yes, ELTON OF BRAND hails from Now we can m the land of Make Believe (England? Peekskill? Japan?), in this millenr

2004131

Elton Brand, ,

hist

nast Frpnrh Cninpa whpr p

FT TON

snpnHs mnct

r»f

I ,ikp what’s

It’s

the half-million dollar question: why did our University purchase 1,650 iPods and give them to incoming freshmen free of charge? A lot of explanations have been offered. Provost Lange calls the iPods “an exciting new component of Duke’s strategic plan,” the Vice President ofInformation Technology says they will motivate students to “think creatively,” and GIT Director Lynne O’Brien has speculated that the iPods “will encourage faculty to experiment with adding elements such as music, foreign language and poetry to class curricula.” Specifically mentioned uses include lectures on tape, recorded course material and language lessons. The reasons given are not bad ones, but it would be a stretch to say they justify such a major expenditure. After all, calculators, tape recorders and laptops certainly have as much academic value as iPods, yet Duke gives none of these to students for free. So why did the Class of 2008 receive free iPods? The real reason might explain a bizarre news story that put Duke in the national spodight last spring. On April 19, an Associated Press piece entided “Duke Tries to Aid Sleep-Deprived Students” ran in dozens of newspapers around the world. The story reported Duke’s canceling of 8 a.m. classes and said the University was trying to help “sleep-deprived” students who “too often are struggling to survive on a mix of caffeine, adrenaline and ambition.” It then quoted several Duke administrators expressing concern with the lack of sleep American college students typically get. ‘They begin to get into a pattern of sleeping four to five hours,” remarked one. ‘They’re coming in to see us, and they’re ragged,” said another. The report, which ended up on CNN, continued to portray Duke’s scheduling shift a as a boldinitiative taken Iks in response to the problem of sleep depravity. Then, hallway through, it completely shifted Nathan Carleton gears and revealed that Feelin Froggish? Leap the changes in scheduling didn’t make the problem better, but actually made it worse by moving much more common 9:10 a.m. classes to times as early as 8:30 a.m. The piece concluded with Vice Provost Judith Ruderman scoffing at the very problem Duke was claiming to be so concerned about: ‘“We’re going to have a lot of grumbling next fall when the reality sets in,’ Ruderman said. ‘But you know what? They’re resourceful and they’ll manage.’ Ruderman’s advice to her sleepwalking students? Take an afternoon nap.” The situation looked absurd. It appeared that Duke had canceled a set ofclasses that almost no one takes, made the rest of their classes start earlier, and then ran to national reporters to say that the schedule changes were motivated by a deep concern with students not sleeping enough. In reality, Duke was not quite that exploitive. As the University quickly pointed out, it had not approached the Associated Press for the story, the Associated Press had instead picked up a (Raleigh) News & Observer piece about Duke’s research on sleep depravation and incorrectly made the canceling of 8 a.m. classes the headline and main focus of it. \fet even taking that into account, the News and Observer story itself oddly implied that Duke’s new scheduling plan was a response to the supposed sleep depravation problem. Clearly, administrators wanted their cancellation of early classes reported. The link between the sleep story and the iPod giveaway comes down to one word: publicity. University administrators want to attract the best and brightest students to Duke and so they no doubt seek national press coverage depicting Duke as revolutionary and hip. It’s unlikely anyone is actively plotting publicity stunts of zero educational value, but it is likely that some decisions are made with a heavy consideration ofnewsworthiness. iPods truly may help Duke freshmen learn more efficiendy this year, but they will have an even greater effect on the high school students trying to decide between Harvard and the almost-as-highly-ranked school in North Carolina where the students receive free iPods and get to sleep in. My money says this is no accident. -

Nathan Carleton is

a

Trinity senior.


THE CHRONICLE

321 MONDAY, AUGUST 23, 2(MM CJU

-M Sgg life-

i@ieem

Tcp

ger, lets

1

>ae4 kuhh PKiteei:

Items

&

Prices

Good Durham.

Through August 28, 2004.

In Store Pharmacy

Now through September 4, 2004

We

copyright 2004. Kroger Mid-Atiandc. reserve the right to limit quantities. None sold to dealers.

rtWeMie mI/

See store for details MNKM

Visit our Website at www.Krogef.com For Additional Savings.

f9 R

DOUBLE COUPONS

31Ml


WHERE thechronicle

HEY NOW? august 23, 2004

rail

FDR THE LOVE OF THE GAME Despite low pay and visibility, 'O3 graduate Kevin Cassese stars in S upstart lacrosse league.

From Duke Blue to varsity blues Goldsmith excels as high school coach by

Robert Samuel THE CHRONICLE

When Franklin High School head football coach Mark Leek unexpectedly left for an administrative position in Hyattsville, N.C., in the spring of 2001, the athletic department went through its usual process of advertising the position. Nothing seemed out of the ordinary until a man named Fred applied for the job. In a resume that included the 1992 Sports Illustrated National NCAA Football Coach of the Year and the 1994 Bobby Dodd Award for National Coach of the Year for NCAA Division I football, former Duke head football coach Fred Goldsmith easily landed the job for the AAA North Carolina high school. Just six years earlier Goldsmith was turning down head coaching offers from Miami, Oklahoma and LSU. How did a man known for his brilliant defensive tactics go from turning down college football’s giants to seeking a job at a high school of which few outside the 828 area code had ever heard?

The first answer Goldsmith will give to that question is that, although he was perceived as a gray-haired tough guy of the old stock, the former Blue Devil coach was naive in the spring of 1995. Goldsmithhad just led Duke to an 8-4 season and a trip to the Hall-of-Fame Bowl in his initial run through the ACC. Goldsmith thought Durham was the place he wanted to be and that the winning would continue. But the Blue Devils only finished 5-8 (17 in the ACC) the following season, and fell further into the ACC cellar by going 0-11 (0-8) in 1996, 2-9 (0-8) the following year and 4-7 (2-6) in 1998 before Duke fired him after the last game of the 1998 season. “My transition to the ACC wasn’t that tough because the conference wasn’t all that strong [in 1994],” Goldsmith said. “I thought I could recruit just based on the strength of Duke University. But the University of Virginia, GeorgiaTech and North Carolina all lowered their academic stan-

dard for their football players. The money poured into [other ACC schools] was unbelievable. I didn’trealize the commitment these guys were making. That caught up to me. At the time we could have asked for more; I didn’trealize how much to ask for.” In addition to his problems on the field, Goldsmith found himself in a public-relations nightmare when Heather Sue Mercer tried out for the 1994squad. Mercer made the team, but Goldsmith placed her on the inactive roster and forbade her from dressing out for games. Although Mercer was an All-State kicker in high school, Goldsmith was accused of making inappropriate comments to Mercer. On one such occasion, Goldsmith was heard to suggest that Mercer “sit in the stands with her boyfriend.” Mercer sued the University for discrimination and eventually won her case although it was later overruled. Goldsmith, slow to speak about the unpleasant time, only added, “That lawsuit

sure didn’t help me.” After the disappointing and tumultuous years in Durham, Goldsmith decided to retire from coaching football. He and his wife, Pam Goldsmith, chose to settle down in a vacation home they owned in her hometown of Franklin. After Goldsmith left Durham, he believed the stresses of coaching football were behind him. He spent the 1999 and 2000 seasons doing color commentary for Western Carolina football games, a job he very much enjoyed. “You never lose when you’re calling a game,” Goldsmith joked. But his competitive fire never completely diminished, so when the Franklin High position became available Goldsmith did not hesitate to apply. “His resume spoke for itself,” Franklin athletic director Doug Plemmons said. Goldsmith’s ample experience quickly paid off for Franklin. The school has gone 29-7 in his first three years as head coach, including a conference-winning 11-2 season in 2001 when Goldsmith was named Western North Carolina coach of the year. The community has responded to the team’s success, often packing the stadium by 6 for 7:30 p.m. games. The school has even purchased new concession stands to SEE GOLDSMITH ON PAGE 7


I

2

MONDAY, AUGUST 23,

SPORTSWRAP

2004

Two-sport star at Duke remains active in athletics Groat now owns golf course in by

He stood

home

town

Jordan Koss

THE CHRONICLE 6-feet at most and

barely sur-

passed 170 pounds. He attended Duke

from 1948-1952,and he was inducted into the Duke Sports Hall of Fame in its first class. Still, most current Duke undergraduates have never heard of him. His name is Dick Groat, and he is the greatest allaround athlete in Duke history. Born Richard Morrow Groat in November 1930, Dick Groat starred in both baseball and basketball at Duke. Although he would go on to a brilliant career as a baseball player, the Swissvale, Penn., native was actually more talented on the hardwood than he was on the diamond. “I still consider myself a retired basketball player,” Groat said. “The game [of basketball] was my first love. It is probably because the game came a lot easier to me. Baseball was work, but basketball was always fun and the drawbacks I had in baseball did not exist in basketball.” Even at the age of 73, Groat continues to immerse himself in the sporting world. He owns and operates the. Champion Lakes GolfCourse in Bolivar, Penn., which is approximately two miles from where he grew up and currently lives. Groat waives the $3O greens fee for any current or former professional baseball player who wants to test the links. Like he did playing two sports in his 20s, Groat remains active in two sports 50 years later. During the fall and winter, Groat is a radio commentator for University of Pittsburgh basketball games,

COURTESY OF DUKE SPORTS INFORMATION

Dick Groat set the Duke single-season scoring record in his sophomore year with 831 points. and this upcoming season will be his 26th at the mic. Sitting courtside, Groat recalls memories of when he ruled the hallowed grounds of Cameron Indoor Stadium and won National Player of the Year in 1952 becoming the first of eight Blue Devils to —

win the award. His 831 total points in his junior season would remain the Duke single-season record until eclipsed by Duke’s last National Player of the Year Jason Williams nearly 50 years later, and that was before the advent of the shot clock, Groat was so good that he was signed to

play professional basketball by the Ft. Wayne Pistons when he was finishing up his degree. In the fall of 1952 Groat flew back and forth between Durham and wherever the Pistons were playing. The biggest problem for Groat was that Duke students who missed more than three classes in a semester automatically failed the class. “I had taken my three cuts,” Groat said. “I called the Pistons and told them that I was going to have to stop playing. If I didn’t graduate, my father would have killed me.” As a collegiate baseball player, Groat began his winning ways that would continue throughout his major league career. In 1952, with Duke ranked number one for the second consecutive year, school administrators allowed the team to play in the College World Series because it was distinguished manager Jack Coombs’ final season. The day after Duke was eliminated, Groat signed with the Pittsburgh Pirates for $25,000. “I flew into Pittsburgh Sunday, watched Tuesday, and played Wednesday,” Groat said. “It took time to get adjusted and it was a lot of fun to make a living playing a game I loved.” Groat’s professional basketball career was over after 1952, as Pirates general manager Branch Rickey forced Groat to dedicate himself to baseball. His former teammates, with whom Groat still remains close, were glad he stuck with baseball. “I was fortunate enough to room together with Dick,” former Pirates outfielder Bill Virdon said. “In the 50 years I’ve SEE GROAT ON PAGE 6

DUU's Major Attractions presents:

Comedian

LEWIS BLfi Page Auditorium Thursday, September 9th

$25 student/$3O general public Tix on sale Thursday, August 26th (Duke Students only) Friday, August 27th, general public at University Box Office // 684-4444 Don't miss our first event of the year

\


SPORTSWRAP

MONDAY, AUGUST 23,

2004

1 3

Few fans, little glory, but Cassese excels for Rochester in pro lax league Greg Czaja THE CHRONICLE

by

MONTCLAIR,

NJ.

August

7 is a stereotypical New Jersey day—cold, overcast, and raining. On this day, a few hundred people brave the ominous skies and make the trek into the heart of suburban New Jersey—Montclair State University—to witness the hometown New Jersey Pride take on the visiting Rochester (N.Y) Rattlers in the penultimate matchup of the Major League Lacrosse season. They are drawn to this tiny outpost of the sporting world for a variety of reasons. Many are friends and families of the players, and many are members of various junior and high school teams. Some are attracted by the low ticket prices, ($lO for individual games, $5 per game for season tickets) and others are tempted by the free T-shirt and cap giveaways that accompany each contest. It is at this frontier of sport where Kevin Cassese competes. From 1999-2003, Cassese established himself as one of Duke’s all-time greats. He made such an impact on the lacrosse program that Locker No. 22 remained empty throughout the 2004 season, a tribute to all that the Port Jefferson, N.Y, native had contributed to the school. The three-time All-American

of

and All-ACC player was twice a finalist for the Tewaaraton Trophy, lacrosse’s equivalent of the Heisman, and finished 24th on Duke’s all-time points list, a significant accomplishment for a midfielder. Cassese was drafted second overall in the 2003 MLL draft by the Rochester Rattlers, and has since devoted four months each year to the MLL season. The pay isn’t great, and in the off-season Cassese supplements his income by working for Brine, the nation’s premier lacrosse company, as well as working the Long Island lacrosse camp circuit. On this day, Cassese’s Rattlers need a win to remain in the playoff hunt. Although a win against the 1-11 Pride does not seem to be a tall order, the Rattlers struggle in the first half and trail 8-7 going into the locker room. Cassese keeps the game close by scoring two game-tying goals. In the second half the Rattlers refocus and pull away with a seven-goal run to open the half. Cassese doesn’t score, but still finds ways to contribute with his toughness. He gets blindsided right in front of the goal during the Rochester run, drawing a penalty that results in a power play and another Rattler goal. In the fourth quarter, when a New Jersey player takes out his frustration by picking a fight with his op-

informatio

ponent, Cassese jumps in to the skirmish to protect his teammate. The Rattlers win 21-11 and after the game Rochester coach BJ. O’Hara praised the gritty twoway play of his star midfielder. “Kevin is perfect for this league because he does so many things,” O’Hara said. “He’s a great athlete, and faces off well a great offensive player and a great defensive player. When you’re only dressing 18 guys a guy like Kevin is invaluable.” The casual observer would likely question Cassese’s career decision. Why take this exhausting part time job when you could be doing something much less grueling and much more profitable? To Cassese though, the more important question is: “why not?” “This is the sport I love, and I’ve been playing since second grade,” Cassese said. ‘This league might be part time, but it’s away to keep playing and stay in the sport you love. It’s really a nobrainer for me.” Cassese might be an even better player in the pros than he ever was at Duke, despite having to adjust to the increased speed and talent level. “I think the college game is very specialized, and I think when —

SEE CASSESE ON PAGE

cessing and

transmission .al property hies and the policies, unde physical form of information. In addition to studying the influence of information sciences on a wide range of academic disciplines, students will use iPods to listen to recordings of lectures and to transfer files for digital multimedia assignments, as well as discussing other potential educational applications for iPods.

ANTHONY CROSS/TH

Cassese, a three-time All-Americanfor theBlue Devils, is now starring for the Rochester 7 Rattlers in Major League Lacrosse.

Pick up your copy of The Herald-Sun, or subscribe by visiting www.heraldsun.com/subscribe and look for the Ticketmaster ad to receive a code which will entitle you to special dis Plus, we deliver coverage in the Bryan Strickland The Herald-Sun around campus: ■Bryan Center ■Washington Duke Inn

■East Campus Convenience Store ■Duke Hospital 7 locations -

~

■VA Hospital BExxon, Erwin Road ■Brookwood Inn

Trusted Essential &

INFORMATION.SCIENCE

INFORMATION-STUDIES

herald sun

To subscribe, call 919-419-6900. Ask about our student specials!


4

MONDAY, AUGUST 23,

SPORTSWRAP

2004

McCain hopes Open

will propel career by

Chrissie Gorman THE CHRONICLE

As the mid-April sunlight fades from the Charleston, S.C. evening sky, the artificial lights of the Family Circle Cup direct all attention to the match on center court. There Serena Williams, 5foot-10, 145 pounds, one of the most well-known and publicized players in the world, is facing Kelly McCain, a 5foot-2, 110-pound first-year professional with the nickname “LiF One.” First set: 6-1, Williams. Second set: 60, Williams. Kelly McCain is certainly not in Durham anymore. A little more than four months later, McCain, who turned pro after her sophomore year at Duke, is even further removed from Ambler Tennis Center. What would be a year of independence from the constraints of West or Central Campus as a senior is instead beginning with a trip to the U.S. Open for McCain Aug. 30 in New York. After a sophomore season that included a No. 1 national singles ranking, McCain had established a 67-11 singles record as a Blue Devil and attained the credentials to make a run at professional tennis. “Having won one of the Grand Slam tournaments [the 2002 ITA Riviera AllAmerican], Kelly didn’t want her best tennis to be behind her,” Duke head coach Jamie Ashworth said. “I knew we wouldn’t have her for four years.” McCain has always measured her success in titles and rankings. A Florida state championship with her team at Saddlebrook Academy, the No. 1 singles slot as a Duke freshman and that college Grand Slam tide, which propelled McCain in her decision to turn pro, were all marks of her tennis success.

Now, as she prepares to play the U.S. Open, a title will no longer determine success. “If Kelly were to go to the U.S. Open and win three matches and then lose, that is a great, great tournament,” Ashworth said. Although turning pro was always a goal of McCain’s, the transition has not been easy. She made a strong debut on the USTA Pro Circuit with a quick sweep of the $lO,OOO event in Eugene, Ore., but McCain has also had to cope with losing, albeit in some of the top

professional tournaments.

“It’s definitely a learning process,” McCain said. “At this level everyone is so good. It’s just a matter of believing you can do it.” The jump from college athletics to the professional ranks is sometimes perceived as glamorous in large market sports such as basketball, but in tennis, jumping straight to the U.S. Open stage is not an option. Success only comes through slowly working up the ladder in smaller tournaments. “It’s going to take two to three years to make money,” Ashworth said. “[McCain] is right on that line right now.” Instead of receiving alluring shoe endorsements and big signing bonuses, McCain has struggled with the little things—such as travel, stringing rackets and scheduling practice—which were all arranged for her as a Blue Devil. Now, McCain’s support comes from her family. Her uncle acts as her financial backer and her father as her coach. “In college, you don’t have to think about everything,” McCain said. “Now I have to worry about money and travel. You’re never flying round-trip. It’s hard with all the change fees and such.”

THOMAS E.WITTE/ICON

With a year and a half of professional experience, McCain is still close to her Duke roots. Her relationship with Ashworth has evolved into a supporting friendship kept strong by Instant Messenger conversations because McCain usually travels three weeks a month and trains a fourth week near her home in Tampa, Fla. Fellow former Blue Devil Ansley Cargill will be joining McCain at the U.S. Open this month if she advances through the singles qualifying rounds. “I know some of our past players will be in New York [for the US Open],” Ashworth said. “When you have a couple of players out there, you can still carry that family atmosphere with you.” And just as the her collegiate Grand Slam victory at Riviera propelled her jump to the pros, a strong showing later this month in New York could be an equally critical next step.

CHRONICLE FILE PHOTO

McCain, now preparing for the U.S. Open, left Duke after her sophomore season to pursue a pro career.

Kre s sets record, blazes trail for MLS by

Jordan Koss

THE CHRONICLE

SCOTT D.WEAVER/ICON

Since graduating from Duke 10 years ago, Jason Kreis has gone on to have success at the professional level playing for the Dallas Burn.

When Jason Kreis scored his 89th career goal and broke the alltime scoring record in Major League Soccer history, the former Duke All-American and current Dallas Burn forward had mixed emotions. On the one hand Kreis was at an all-time high because he had reached the pinnacle of his career; on the other hand, Kreis realized that the league is only eight years old, and that it is only a matter of time before someone else breaks his mark. “I had lots of feelings,” Kreis said. “It was something I had been waiting a long time to do. I was getting close when I tore my ACL last year and had to wait a long time to accomplish the feat, but I never thought it was that big a deal. It’s a temporary record, somebody will break it eventually.” Born in Louisiana and raised in Nebraska, Kreis was not exactly in the spotlight coming out of high school, let alone on the top ofevery coach’s recruiting list. For that Kreis is still grateful that head coach John Rennie gave him the opportunity. “Coach Rennie really found

me,” Kreis said. “It was a real leap of faith for him to take me in. If not for Coach Rennie I would not have had a prestigious school like Duke at which to play.” The feelings are clearly mutual, as Rennie glowed when he described the three-time All-American. ‘Jason Kreis was a very quiet player on the field,” Rennie said. “Nobody ever at Duke worked harder on his game, on his own, than Jason Kreis. By the end of his career it was like he was doing whatever he wanted to do on the field, and he’s one of the best players that we’ve ever had.” Under Rennie, Kreis played for the Blue Devils from 1991 to 1994, scoring 39 goals while tallying 38 assists. Memories of his days at Duke remain vivid in his mind. “My best memories are of just surviving sophomore year when we went to the Final Four,” Kreis said with a laugh. “I just remember always hanging out with the guys on the team and having a great time.” Although Kreis has been a perennial all-star in the top American soccer league over the past eight years, he has not been able to equal that success with the more prestigious U.S. National Team.

Kreis has scored only one goal playing in 14 contests, low numbers for a player ofhis caliber. “It’s a matter of timing,” Kreis said in an interview with mlsnet.com. “It’s a matter of me not having one specific thing that you could point to and say, ‘Oh, this guy is excellent at this.’ I’m not the biggest forward, I’m not the fastest forward [and] I’m not the best at running at players.” At the age of 31, and only one year removed from knee surgery and countless hours of rehabilitation, the father of two realizes that his time as a player is coming to a close. Kreis insisted, however, that his soccer career was by no means nearing its end. Now a decade removed from his Duke career, Kreis does not maintain any contact with the current Blue Devils, a relationship he regrets not fostering after his college career. Now that Kreis has an eye on the future, he is considering reopening the lines of communication and is strongly thinking about entering the coaching ranks. Rennie believes that if anyone has what it takes to be a successful SEE KREIS ON PAGE 6


SPORTSWRAP

MONDAY, AUGUST 23,

2004 I 5

G-Man moves from floor to press row All-American finds success as commentator for the ACC by

Mike Van Pelt

THE CHRONICLE

After a successful 14-year NBA career that concluded in 1994, former Duke center Mike Gminski was left pondering what to do next. “When I was planning retirement, there were a few different things I was thinking about—law school, going into politics and broadcasting,” Gminski said. Having ended his career with the Charlotte Hornets, Gminski was informed of an opening on their broadcasting team and decided to give it a try. “It was right here in my backyard. It was an option I could not pass up,” Gminski said. “Of the three, it would have been the hardest to get into but with that opening, it made all the sense in the world.” Gminski, who dominated the ACC in the late 70s as a player, returned to his roots two years ago as an ACC basketball commentator for Fox Sports Net and various other outiets.

reigned in Cameron. ‘The talent pool has diminished, but the passion for the game is still there, as is the passion from the fans,” Gminski said. The ACC

tournaments

and NCAA

tour-

naments have been just as

compelling.” In the late 19705, players were expected to graduate and Gminski certainly valued this high standard of education, earning

Academic All-American honors three of his four years in Durham. Last month he was also named as one of 25 finalists for the College Sports Information Directors of America Academic AllAmerica Hall of Fame, a recognition based on academic and athletic accomplishments in school as well as achievements in a post-collegiate career. ‘That may be something that I’m most proud of,” Gminski said, “the fact that I was honored not only as an athlete but also as a student.” His hard work in the classroom has paid dividends in his professional career, especially because of the rising academic reputation of Duke. “I tease people that I’m a beneficiary of diploma inflation,” Gminski said. “I think the reputation of the school has grown in the last 25 years. You kind of get the raised eyebrow. I don’t think there is any question that having graduated from Duke has been a huge benefit to me in whatever phase of my life.” As an ACC commentator, he has been forced to put his Blue Devil allegiances aside. For the two time All-American remaining neutral has come relatively easily. “I’ve been able to compartmentalize that devotion during the broadcast because I understand that Duke isn’t paying me to do the broadcast,” Gminski'said. “I have to be impartial.” Off the air, Gminski’s loyalty to Duke has been quite evident, as he has stayed close to the school for which he starred both on and off the court. In 1997, Mike Krzyzewski asked him to sit on the Board of Advisors for the Duke Children’s Hospital and “The GMan” served as the Board’s chair from 2001 to 2003. He was also recently asked to join the Board of Visitors for the Duke Medical Center. His involvement with the medical center and children’s center stems back to his playing days, when he often would visit child cancer patients with teammate Jim Spanarkel. He also has been a participant in the Duke Children’s Classic charity golf

When he graduated from Duke in 1980 he was the school’s all-time leading scorer, having amassed 2,323 points at a clip of 19 per game. To this day, he still holds his position as Duke’s all-time leader in rebounds and blocked shots, and he was probably Duke’s best player before the Krzyzewski era. With limited avenues available to pursue in order to stay involved with basketball after retiring, the seventh overall pick tournament. in the 1980 NBA draft readily admits he “[The Medical Center] has always been had no inclination to coach, but that a very special place for me,” Gminski said. “The child’s hospital was just a theory and broadcasting had always intrigued him. “[Broadcasting] was one of those things fragmented structure up until [the mid during my playing career that, because of .90s], so its gratifying to have that building my involvement with the media, I had it built and see how its been used.” Besides his charitable acts and broadsuggested that I’d be a natural for that,” Gminski said. casting career, Gminski’s time has been priTen years after calling his first game, marily occupied as a father to his six-yearGminski, who averaged better than 11 old son Noah at their home in Charlotte. “One of the nice things about my points and nearly seven rebounds per contest in his NBA career, is thrilled with his broadcasting career has been that I’ve been able to spend time with him, be a faposition behind the microphone. “I found I had a talent for it, and it has ther and watch him grow up,” he said. been a great way to stay around,” he said. Wine collecting and cooking are also Not wanting to leave North Carolina, hobbies that have piqued his interest and Gminski turned down the opportunity to kept him busy as he awaits the start of what move with the Hornets to New Orleans two he believes will be an incredibly competitive and intriguing ACC season. years ago. Instead, he sought opportunities at the collegiate level, which has T’m buying my time. It’s such a long offchanged substantially since Gminski season, I’m just itching to get back,” he said.

COURTESY

DUKE SPORTS INFORMATION

Mike Gminski blocked 97 shots in his senior year to set the single-season record. Healso holds the record for career blocks with 345 and rebounds with 1,242.


6 I

MONDAY, AUGUST 23,

SPORTSWRAP

2004

Jeffries driven back to soccer After time in banking, former Duke star returns to game as coach by

Jordan Koss

THE CHRONICLE

Before Mike Jeffries’ freshman season in 1981, life on the Duke men’s soccer team was a different experience than it is today. The program did not have the same reputation that it has gained since the 1986 National Championship, and that meant the team needed to bring more than just talent to plant itself among the upper tier ofcollegiate soccer programs. ‘Those years were great, because we really started the program,’’Jeffries said. “We didn’t have the same facilities that they have today, and it was because of our great camaraderie that we started winning.” Current head coach John Rennie was in his third season when Jeffries was a freshman, and Rennie remembers his forward turned defender fondly. “Mike had tremendous poise and vision, was a hard worker and very much a student of the game,” Rennie said. Mike Jeffries Despite winning the Hermann trophy in 1983 as the best player in the nation, Jeffries’ best memory ofhis days at Duke came the previous year in the NCAA Championship game. Playing against Indiana, Jeffries, Rennie and the rest of the Bltie Devils squad lost in a record eight overtimes, a game that, not surprisingly, included several controversial calls. “Those ’B2 finals were a real heartbreak,” Jeffries said. “I run into that ref every once in a while and joke with him about it.” After graduating from Duke in 1985 with degrees in electrical engineering and public policy, Jeffries received his masters in finance from Tulane University and went to work for Wall Street brokerage powerhouse Smith Barney as an analyst. After years away from soccer, Jeffries got back into the game and in 2001 became the head coach of Major League Soccer’s Dallas Burn. “Mike started coaching at the youth level, and just kind of got the bug,” Rennie said. “You know I talked to him regularly, I [asked him], ‘Are you sure you wanna coach? What are your mom and dad going to say? Are you going to give up all your education and all your experience in the business world to coach soccer?’ He just fell in love with coaching and worked his way up to be a head coach in Major League Soccer, and he’s a very very good coach.” After three seasons Jeffries was let go, but he is looking to get back into coaching rather than finance. “The pay scale is a little different,” Jeffries said. “But the competition of coaching professional soccer is fun. I wouldn’t trade it for anything, and you always feel lucky being in the game you love.”

COURTESY OF DUKE SPORTS INFORMATION

In 1952,Dick Groat became the first player in Duke's history to have his jerseynumberretired.

GROAT from page 2 been in baseball, Dick Groat got more out of his natural abilities than anyone I’ve ever seen.” As the shortstop for the Pirates from 1955 to 1962, Groat teamed with Hall of Fame second baseman Bill Mazeroski to form the league’s best double play tandem. In 1960, Groat had a dream season, winning the national league batting crown, the Most Valuable Player award and then the World Series when Mazeroski hit his legendary walk-off homer in game seven against the New York Yankees. Groat remembers it like it was yesterday. “I was just grabbing my batting helmet when [Maze-

Italian food and pizza in the state. Join us and experience our quaint, Rome

-

New Yortt

-

North Carolina

push somebody.”

coach, it is Kreis “Yes, he’d make a great coach,” Rennie said. “One of the things he did very well as a player was deal with the personalities on the team in a very positive way. He

Serving the “BEST”

neighborhood atmosphere-type restaurant. Have you had a hot piece today?

good person.” could deal with a hard worker and he wasn’t afraid to

KREIS from page 4

Have no worry or fear, “Cinelli’s Is Here”

roski] hit it,” Groat said. “Everyone was yelling for the ball to reach the wall because we didn’t think it would get over. Bill Mazeroski was one of my closest friends and he was the best second baseman that the game has ever seen.” Groat, going on to play in St. Louis, Philadelphia and San Francisco, enjoyed what he called his finest offensive season with the Cardinals in 1963,finishing second to pitcher Sandy Koufax in the MVP voting. In 1964, Groat led the Cards to a World Series tide, again taking down the Yankees in seven games. “No one turned double plays like he and Maz did,” close friend and former teammate Elroy Face said. “Dick was a captain, a good leader, and most of all, a

Near the top the scoring charts from the league’s inception, Kreis has been the face of the Dallas Bum and a pioneer for the league. When his playing days are over, don’t be surprised to see Kreis continue to remain in the spodight.

H&R Block Tax Course Begins September 13 Thousands of people are learning the skill of income tax preparation from the H&R Block Income Tax Course. H&R Block, the nation's largest tax firm, is offering instruction starting September 13, with flexible morning, afternoon, and evening classes available.

During the 11-week course,

you will learn the nuts and bolts of tax preparation from some of the finest, most experienced tax professionals

seasonal employment. Qualified students may be offered job interviews for positions with H&R Block.*

in the country. H&R Block designed this course to suit people who want to increase their tax knowledge and save money on taxes, or who are looking for training for a second career or

For more information, call 1-800-HRBLOCK or visit www.hrblock.conytaxcourses

HURRY!

Classes start September 13th Class size limited. (919) 850-0663 Fax (919) 954-8353 Classes available throughout the Triangle and surrounding communities. •Enrollment in, or completion of, the course is neither an offer nor a guarantee of employment.

1“““'

just plain smart™ EEO/M/F/D/V

C2003 H&R Block Tax Services 002


MONDAY, AUGUST

SPORTSWRAP

I 7

GOLDSMITH from page 1

CASSESE from page 3 you get into the MLL, guys can really blossom in terms of showing all the different things they can do,” O’Hara said. “Here we ask Kevin to do a ton of stuff, and he does it all real well.” Cassese has had success even while adjusting to the pro game. The pressure on Cassese to retain his level of play in the face of superior completion and more physical play is intense. “There are only six teams in the MLL, so every team’s an all-star team,” Cassese said. “It’s truly the best lacrosse players in the world out here, so the level ofplay is just amazing.... The pro game is certainly played at a higher intensity level. They clearly call the games tighter at the college level—there’s no fighting and no scrapping—but I think that stuff is very good for the pro game. It brings in fans, and it lets them get their emotions flowing, so we welcome it.” This season, Cassese raised his season goal total from 12 to 18, and his team’s record improved from 5-7 in 2003 to 7-5, enough to qualify for the playoffs. His Rattlers fell to the Boston Cannons in the league semifinals though, and now he will be forced to return to the mainstream workforce. When May approaches, however, Cassese will have no second thoughts about picking up the stick once again—his competitive spirit has yet to fade. “Your motivation should be the same in anything you do. You want to be the best, and you want to win a championship,” Cassese said. “It doesn’t matter if its an ACC Championship or NCAA Championship or MLL World Championship—it’s always a goal you have, and to reach it would be the greatest achievement.”

23, 2004

deal with the increased demand Even with his excessive credentials, Goldsmith’s new players were skeptical of his ability to make the transition to the high school game. “We were kind of iffy about him coming in,” senior free safety Daniel Gibbs said. “We didn’t know if he was going to coach like he was still in college and treat us like college players. But he has great compassion for his players. It’s an honor to play for him.” Goldsmith uses many of the same coaching techniques from the college game when leading Franklin. For example, instead of sitting the entire team down to watch game film, Goldsmith splits the team into different sections where they can observe specifics from the tape. “It’s the same system, only an easier version than college,” senior tight end and linebacker Ben Saviko said. Despite the simplified tactics, Gibbs believes his coach is a “defensive genius.” “When I was young, I was just ‘go for the man with the ball’. He’s really technical. He makes it fun for us,” he said. Goldsmith said his team is a joy to coach, as everyone is on the field because they truly want to play the game of football. “The boys are smaller, but everything else is the same,” he said. “These kids are playing just because they want to play. The games are just as important, if not more than in college. Most of these players are not going past the high school level—this is all they got.” Despite his new love of the high school game, Goldsmith still reminisces about his experience at Duke. Though he felt that Duke terminated his employment one year too soon, he continues to have a positive relationship with the University. “Duke’s been good to me,” the former Blue Devil coach said. ‘They’ve honored my contract. I haven’t had to get lawyers like many coaches do.”

Cassese's toughness has been an asset whenfacing stronger players from the MLL.

of,sS»*

The Washtub Your On-Campus Source for Your Laundry and Dry Cleaning Needs

Cff££^^^£RS Saturday, August 28,1-5 pm Brodie Rec Center, East Campus Please check out our Web site for details at

www.duke.edu/web/cheer/default.htm Questions? Contact Sarah: slsB@duke.edu

When it comes to the care of your clothes-we're the on-campus experts. We specialize in wash/dry/fold and dry cleaning services. Our accessible location means your laundry is done quickly and hassle free.

Full Service Dry Cleaner Linen Sales

Wash/Dry/Fold Service Alterations

Sub-Basement of the Union Building Under the Bryan Center Walkway 684-3546 I Oam s;oopm Monday Friday VISA, MasterCard, American Express, Discover, FLEX, IRIs, Cash, Personal Checks •

-

-

Duke

University

Stores

*


MONDAY, AUGUST 23,

SPORTSWRAP

2004

Superior Quality. Superior Service. Competitive Prices.

r

I'M TT/ 'n

UUKe

UNIVERSITY STORES® THE STORES THAT WORK FOR YOU!

Over 75 years of serving the Duke community. Textbooks, general reading books, computers and software, school and office supplies, Duke„ clothing and gift items, snacks, drinks, film processing, magazines and greeting cards. Shop with us 24/7 via our online catalog "ores.duke.edu. wwmsho Department

of Duke University Stores

at

®

03-1025


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

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