October 1, 2004

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cent ennial MSgj homecoming The Chroniicle looks back on the pas 1100 years

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FRIDAY, OCTOBER 1, 2004

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THE INDEPENDENTDAILY AT DUKE UNIVERSITY

ONE HUNDREDTH YEAR, ISSUE 31

Re-focused Duke may Candidates clash on Iraq war boost financial aid ,

by

Terence Hunt

THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Kelly Rohrs THE CHRONICLE

by

The only way Carl Harvey graduated from Duke last year was by signing papers. He signed federal forms and loan applications, scholarship acceptances and a slew of other docume nts. As a double major in English and public policy, he wrote plenty of papers too, but it was an extensive financial aid package and a parade of forms that covered the cost of his college education. “I have not a single negative thing to say about Duke financial aid,” he said. “Basically, I just signed stuff, and they paid for everything.” The University has pledged that its primary priority is keeping its gates open to students like Harvey who have earned access to Duke’s aca-

news analysis -

.

demies but

cannot

CORAL GABLES, Fla.

pay its

foreign >licy and terrorism Thursday

ight, Sen. John Kerry, D-Mass., id President George W. Bush mg accusations and differing /eign policy theories at each •ther as the Iraq War dominatdiscussion. Kerry accused Bush of a dossal error in judgment” in dering the invasion of Iraq. ‘The world is better off without iddam Hussein,” Bush shot ick, adding that his rival once id so himself. “I agree with im,” the president jabbed sarstically at a rival he depicts as one to flip-flops. Kerry called the conflict a dision in the broader struggle igainst terror. The four-term senasaid he could do a better job tan Bush of protecting the na>n against another Sept. 11-style

missions in favor of strategic goals, the University has adjusted its resources to ensure that financial limitations are not a factor in students’ ability to get into Duke—or their choices to come. About a year ago, University administrators realized that they were failing to consider the effects that financial aid dependence has on students currently enrolled. After years of using matriculation numbers as a barometer for success, the University is now developing ways of comprehensively examining the experience of financial aid. “The new goal is assuring that students who are financially aided have the opportunity for tiip same exoeriences as SEE FINANCIAL AID ON PAGE 9

In a

•minute debate on

costs. As other colleges have had to abandon need-blind ad-

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Senator John Kerry and hresiaemueuiye debate at the University ofMiami in Coral Gables, Fla.

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and resolute in fighting terrorism

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SEE DEBATE ON PAGE 8'

Students push tailgate changes A&S dominates Founder’s Day talk by

Jake Poses

and Mike Van Pelt THE CHRONICLE

Clean up tailgating, or risk potential administrative intervention. That’s the message student leaders are sending to undergraduates in advance of Saturday’s Homecoming game against The Citadel. Duke Student Government President Pasha Majdi and Interfraternity Council President Will Connolly are spearheading a lastminute effort to encourage more responsible tailgating. A coalition of campus leaders met with administrators and Athletic Department officials Thursday night to discuss concerns about last weekend’s tailgate and reached agreements about the necessary changes. The initiative comes as athletics works to boost lagging student attendance at football games. “I was very, very impressed with the fact that in a short amount of time they were able to get that much student leadership in one spot,” said Jon Jackson, assistant director of athletics for communication and media relations. He added that all parties left the meeting satisfied with the

Paul Crowley THE CHRONICLE

by

In Thursday’s Founder’s Day Convocation, University leaders

NOAH PRINCE/THE CHRONICLE

Dressed for thefestive occasion, studentfans enjoy thefirst tailgate of the 2004 football season in theBlue Zone last weekend. plan address safety concerns at the tailgates. As part of their effort to inform to

students that unsafe activities such as excessive drinking will come under closer scrutiny, student leaders drafted an e-mail to the entire undergraduate body explaining the reasons that behavior needs to improve. “We want to make this a sustainable tradition,” Connolly said. “We want students to take

action so the administration doesn’t get involved.” The student leaders said they have requested an increase in the presence of Duke Emergency Medical Services and greater numbers of trash cans and portable toilets in the back of the Blue Zone, where student tailgating takes place. They are also asking students to refrain from bringing SEE TAILGATE ON PAGE 11

honored members of the Duke community and likened the boldness required to found a university to the audacity needed to direct that same school into an uncertain future. President Richard Brodhead conferred awards upon alumni, faculty, students and staff for academic excellence and service to the University. Trustee emeritus Roy Bostock, Trinity ’62, cited the need to emphasize and perhaps revamp the undergraduate experience, both inside and outside the classroom. “No other university is like Duke,” Bostock said in his convocation address. “We do not aspire to [emulate other universities]. We aspire to be better than we were yesterday, better than we were a week ago. Our standards are set and met by ourselves.” Bostock said the Trinity College experience is the central

Trustee emeritus Roy Bostock extols the importance of a balanced education.

component of the Duke experi-

ence and called for greater focus on liberal arts at the University. In an age of increased specialization, he said, generalists will become the most effective leaders, and a liberal arts education best prepares Duke students to be those generalists. SEE FOUNDER’S ON PAGE 10


2

FRIDAY,

THE CHRONICLE

OCTOBER 1,2004

world andnationmore

Iraq bombings kill 35, hurt many by

Alexandra Zavis

THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

A string of bombs BAGHDAD, Iraq killed 35 children and wounded scores of others as U.S. troops handed out candy Thursday at a government-sponsored celebration to inaugurate a sewage plant. It was the largest death toll of children in any insurgent attack since the start of the Iraq conflict. Grief-stricken mothers wailed over their children’s bloodied corpses, as relatives collected body parts from the street for burial and a boy picked up the damaged bicycle ofhis dead brother.

The wounded were rushed to Yarmouk Hospital, where angry relatives screamed for attention from the overwhelmed doctors, many ofwhom wore uniforms covered in blood. One woman tore at her hair before pulling back the sheet covering her dead brother and kissing his body. The bombings in Baghdad’s western alAmel neighborhood —at least two of which were in cars —came amid a series of savage attacks that killed at least 51 people and wounded 230 nationwide. At least one U.S. soldier was among the dead and 13 were wounded.

Jordanian terror mastermind Abu Musab al-Zarqawi’s Tawhid and Jihad group claimed responsibility for bloody attacks in Baghdad Thursday, according to a statement posted on a militant Web site. The authenticity of the statement could not be verified, and it was unclear whether the three “heroic operations” it cites—attacks on a government complex and “a convoy of invading forces” —included the bombs that killed the children. Early reports said a U.S. convoy was SEE BAGHDAD ON PAGE 12

Israelis strike Palestinian refugee camp by

Ibrahim Barzak

THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Gaza Strip Israeli troops struck inside the Palestinian largest refugee camp Thursday in an deep unprecedented campaign to stop deadly rocket fire on Israeli towns. Twenty-eight Palestinians were killed and 131 wounded, the bloodiest single-day toll in fighting in 30 months. Three Israelis—two soldiers and an Israeli woman jogger—were killed in two Palestinian shooting attacks in northern Gaza. Prime Minister Ariel Sharon approved a large-scale military operation in the northern Gaza Strip after meeting with advisers late Thursday, an Israeli official said. The plan was a response to the killing of two Israeli children, ages two and four, by a Hamas rocket attack on an Israeli border town Wednesday. However, he stopped short of ordering a call-up of reserves. The approval clears the way for Israeli troops to move in force into the Palestinian towns of Beit Lahiya, Beit Hanoun and the

JEBALfVA REFUGEE CAMP,

sprawling Jebaliya refugee camp, an official said, speaking on condition of anonymity. The army’s push Thursday into the center ofJebaliya—a first in four years of fighting —signaled a change in military tactics. Since fighting erupted in 2000, the military has refrained from reoccupying large areas of crowded Gaza for long periods, for fear of getting bogged down in urban combat. The army has felt less constrained in the less densely populated West Bank. Armored vehicles rolled into squalid Jebaliya, a militant stronghold with 106,000 residents, Thursday morning. Throughout the day, masked Palestinians taking cover in camp alleys fired assault rifles—and occasionally anti-tank missiles and grenades—at tanks, which responded with machine-guns. Militants were seen laying explosive charges and unraveling detonation wire. U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan expressed grave concern at the escalation of violence and “especially mourns the death and injuries of children,” U.N. spokesperson Fred Eckhard said.

newsinbrief Russia approves Kyoto treaty

Russia's Cabinet approved the Kyoto Protocol Thursday in a crucial step toward putting the long-delayed treaty into effect The treaty, rejected by the United States, seeks to reduce emissions of carbon dioxide and other gases that are widely seen as key factors behind global warming.

House protects gay marriage

The House emphatically rejected a constitutional amendment banning gay marriage Thursday. The vote was 227 to 186,49 votes shy of the two-thirds needed for approval of an amendment that the Senate had previously scuttled.

Merck recalls arthritis drug

Vioxx, the arthritis drug taken by tens of millions of people, was pulled from the market by its maker Thursday after a study found It doubled the risk of heart attacks

and strokes. Experts advised patients to immediately stop taking Vioxx and talk to their doctors about alternatives.

California hit by aftershocks

A powerful aftershock rattled central California Thursday, two days after a magnitude-6.0 quake struck one of the state's most seismically active areas. There were no immediate reports of damages or injuries in the latest temblor. News briefs compiled from wire reports

"A single death is a tragedy; a million Joseph Stalin deaths is a statistic."


THE CHRONICLE

FRIDAY, OCTOBER 1, 200413

Chronicle celebrates centennial Kelly Rohrs THE CHRONICLE

by

LUCY

STONE/THE CHRONICLE

Nadine Strossen, president of the American Civil Liberties Union, denounces the Patriot Act Thursday night in Page Auditorium.

ACLU president decries Patriot Act by

problem is bureaucratic barriers that have still not been addressed, not political bar-

Emily Rotberg THE CHRONICLE

Focusing on the ACLU’s efforts to protect civil liberties since the Sept. 11 at-

riers,” she said.

tacks, American Civil Liberties Union President Nadine Strossen spoke to a diverse crowd of students and Durham residents Thursday. Many of the ACLU’s efforts since September 2001 reflect the organization’s concerns with the Patriot Act, the 342page law that was passed 45 days after the Sept. 11 attacks and greatly increased governmental powers of surveillance. “We have a little competition,” Strossen said before beginning her remarks, conscious of many attendees’ parallel interest in watching the presidential candidates’ televisedface-off. “We couldn’t get them to reschedule their debate.” Strossen said the Patriot Act was enacted on the faulty perception of governmental inability to gather information. “The

By curtailing civil liberties, Strossen said, the Patriot Act has restricted Ameri-

can freedoms without augmenting collective security. She cited as an example the “1,200 immigrants since September 2001 who were swept up just because they were immigrants from a certain part of the world and a certain religion.” Strossen repeatedly emphasized that criticism of the Patriot Act has not been limited to the political minority. “We’ve all seen the demonization or simplification that everyone making these criticisms is participating in partisan sniping,” she said. “But the opposition to the unjustified violation of freedom and privacy cuts across party lines.” She noted that the harshest indictmentof the Patriot Act came from Rep. Don Young, a staunch Republican from Alas-

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ka, who called the law “the worst legislation we have ever passed.’” Strossen described the difficulty of challenging legislation that allows inherently secretive actions on the part of the government. Section 215 of the Patriot Act, which she said states that the “government can get any tangible item, from anyone who holds it, about any of us,” includes what she called a “gag order” on anyone ordered to submit information about another party. Strossen said this section and others violate several amendments in the Bill of Rights. Just Wednesday, Strossen said, the ACLU won a suit about a lesser-known section of the Patriot Act. Like Section 215, Section 505 pertains to governmental informationseeking, but without the court as an intercessor. “The record-holder cannot protest, and there’s the same gag order [as in 215],” SEE ACLU ON PAGE 12

It was December 1905, and a pair of students at Trinity College wanted to start a newspaper, but they didn’t have the money. So Tom Stokes and U.N. Hoffman—l9o7 graduates of the school that would become Ditke—turned to the two literary societies on campus and convinced them to fund a newspaper. About two weeks later, The Trinity Chronicle published its first issue. Since then, more than justthe name has changed. The Chronicle now boasts a $1.3 million annual operating budget, an incorporated firm with a board of directors and no official ties to the University that spawned it. And what used to be a gossip sheet with pages full of faculty happenings and beauty pageant winners has become a forum for community discussion, University administrators and former staff members said. “You get chills looking at all the old front pages,” said Ann Pelham, Trinity ’74, chair of the Duke Student Publishing Company Board of Directors and editor of the 69th volume ofThe Chronicle. “It’s just amazing that over so much time the paper has managed to continue and be of high quality, making sure the campus is informed and that debate is not in a vacuum.” This weekend The Chronicle will celebrate its 100th birthday with parties and panels and plans for the future. Roughly 150 Chronicle alumni will descend upon campus to rehash old memories of late nights in suite 301 of the Flowers Building, where students have produced The Chronicle for several decades. The editorial content is generated by a core group of about 20 undergraduates who spend as much as 80 hours a week writing, editing and producing the paper. A SEE CHRONICLE ON PAGE 14


4]FRIDAY,

OCTOBER 1, 2004

THE CHRONICLE

When fishnet stockings appear; its time to dance by

Kate Stamell

THE CHRONICLE

Serious and uptight Duke students beware: KAADATT could be dancing around any corner. Members ofKids All About Dancing All the Time, a new spontaneous dance club, will shimmy, twirl and leap in the most unlikely places—and even you may have to bust a move. Led by junior Colin Crowe, 12 to 18 club members danced beneath the Bryan Center walkway arch to the beats of Paula Abdul, Justin Timberlake and popular show tunes Wednesday afternoon. “I would like to take credit for the idea, but it’s not mine,” Crowe said. The club originated at Macalester College in Minnesota last year; since then it has expanded to Harvard University and the North Carolina School of the Arts. The Macalester, Harvard, NCSA and Duke clubs share three basic rules. First, the leader must always dance in neon yellow fishnet stockings and a white headband painted with the word “KAADATT.” Second, every' dance meeting must end with Paul Simon’s “Me and Julio Down by the Schoolyard.” And finally, every member of

the group must stop and dance when they see a fire truck with lights on because, as the dancers say, those are the best dance lights. The group prefers ’Bos and ’9os “trash”—as Crowe put it, “whatever’s got a fast beat.” When 5:15 p.m. rolled around Wednesday, “Sweet Home Alabama” reverberated through the arch, and students could hear the music all the way down the walkway. As sophomore Bradford Morris moonwalked and did the rabbit, he grabbed unsuspecting students on their way to class. “Sometimes I spin around on them and see if I can get them to dance,” Morris said as he continued to move his feet to the Dirty Dancing theme song, “The Time of My Life.” “It breaks social barriers—a planned moment going against the mold.” Dressed in red plaid pants and a tie-dyed International Delights T-shirt, Morris kicked off his flip-flops before dancing. Senior Jen Davis requested “Dance with Me” just as juniors Lee Melchionni and Shelden Williams quickly walked through, trying not to provoke the dancers spinning around them. They PETER

SEE DANCE ON PAGE 14

GEBHARD/THE CHRONICLE

Kids All About Dancing All the Time draw spectators at their impromptu performances on campus.

Band, Real World vet headline Oktoberfest by

American Gladiator-style jousting will be just one of the many activities scheduled for today's Oktoberfest.

Paul

Crowley and Saidi THE CHRONICLE

Chen

Duke University Union is bringing a little bit of Deutchland to Durham today with Oktoberfest, Duke’s annual version of the famed Munich festival. This year, Oktoberfest will have several features beyond those of its German counterpart, most notably a former star of MTV’s The Real World and a musical group featuring Duke alumni. “Oktoberfest is Duke’s version of a fall carnival with German flair,” said Will Case, a graduate student in chemistry, chair of the Union’s Special Events Committee. “As a festival we bring in outside foods and crafts vendors, we’ll have live entertainment... and beer will be sold in the afternoon.” Oktoberfest will also feature vendors from across the Southeast selling crafts and jewelry and booths serving ethnic food. The most novel aspect of this year’s Oktoberfest is that beer will be sold on food points in addition to FLEX; in other respects, this year will resemble

the popular festivities of years past. “It’s really hard to pin a number on turnout, but Oktoberfest is always well-attended,” Union President Kevin Parker said. The attendance should be boosted by the presence of Cameran, the Southern belle from MTV’s The Real World: San Diego, who will be acting as the guest master of ceremoniesfor the event’s performances. The musical acts will be headlined by Kenin, a Washington, D.C.-based band featuring two recent Duke graduates. “The day show will be chilled 0ut.... There’ll be maybe one to two covers per set; we always try to play as many originals as possible—that’s been kind of our schtick,” said Devin McGaughey, Trinity ‘O3, Kenin’s drummer. “The problem with Durham is that there aren’t that many great venues. Since we’re from Duke we wanted to come back, but it’s tough without big events like Oktoberfest and the big quad show.” SEE OKTOBERFEST ON PAGE 8


THE CHRONICLE

FRIDAY, OCTOBER 1,200415

No love lost for Heart of Durham City begins destruction of infamous downtown motel, making way for transit hub Emily Almas THE CHRONICLE

by

There was no heartbreak for this hotel Community leaders and Durham residents gathered Thursday to toast the scheduled demolition of one of Durham’s most notorious and well-known blemishes, the Heart of Durham motel. Located near downtown Durham on the corner ofPettigrew and West Chapel Hill streets, the boomerangshaped motel built in 1968 was once one of the city’s finest establishments. After being closed for nearly a decade and years of legal wrangling over issues of imminent domain, asbestos clean-up and price negotiation, the deal is done—Durham will pay $1.4 million for the site, well worth the faded red bricks and three floors of disintegrating plaster, residents say. “A lot of people in the community have said, ‘Gee, we want to see... or be a part of it coming down,’” said Beverly Thompson, spokesperson for the city of Durham. “It is a ceremony to celebrate the fact that this eyesore is coming down.” The end of one of downtown Durham’s most notorious blights is also a symbolic act, leaders say. This is the beginning of the future of the area, they argue, a senti-

VARUN LELLA/THE CHRONICLE

Mayor Bill Bell joined city officials and residents Thursday to begin the destruction of the Heart of Durham hotel.

St Sta

SEE MOTEL ON PAGE 12

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61 FRIDAY,

THE CHRONICLE

OCTOBER 1,2004

After Braveheart, alum pens novel CC mulls quadrangle by

Robert Samuel

THE CHRONICLE

He was a Duke religion major who ended up in Hollywood. Struggling as a musician, he was unable to explain to his friends and family in Lynchburg, Va., why he did not take a more traditional route. All he knew about life was that he must be a writer. Thirty years later, Randall Wallace, Trinity ’7l, made a trip back to his alma mater as a New York Times best-selling author with an Academy Award-nominated screenplay for Braveheart to his credit. Wallace said his journey was at times lonely and depressing, but ultimately rewarding and successful. Wallace developed his natural proclivity for writing after an early experience that indicated his gift. “There was a city-wide poetry contest for the elementary schools, and the teacher told each of us to write a poem,” he said. Despite his efforts, his poem was rejected as his teacher charged him with plagiarism. “I realized at the age of the seven that, ‘She thinks I stole the poem,’ so it must have been a pretty good poem.” Wallace’s aptitude for writing only increased as he progressed through school. Once Wallace enrolled at Duke, he applied for the renowned James B. Duke Professor of English Reynolds Price’s competitive creative writing class, certain of rejection; yet his talent had not gone

unrecognized. Although Wallace had always loved writing, only through his relationship with Price did he develop a formal model on whom to base a professional career. In his spare time, Wallace pursued other creative oudets, including music. As

autonomy Sophia Peters THE CHRONICLE

by

Campus Council’s meeting Thursday night focused primarily on the implemen-

“Screenwriting felt like a welcoming form because novels were intimidating to me,” he said. ‘They were massive and had an unlimitedframe. With a screenplay you have a fairly set length, and all you can portray is what you can see a character do or what you can hear a character say.” Wallace was able to find employment

tation of the Quad Council Autonomy Resolution, which would allow Quad Councils to control the aesthetics of their quadrangles. It also touched upon a recent inquiry into cross-quad consistency in alcohol policy enforcement. Fidelia Thomason, director of residence hall operations, and Timothy Henshaw, fire protection specialist for the University, offered an administrative and safety perspective about the feasibility of the Quad Council Autonomy Resolution. The resolution, first proposed in mid-September, would urge Residence Life and Housing Services to allow quad councils greater freedom in personalizing the interior common areas of their dormitories. Thomason, speaking on behalf of RLHS, noted that any changes or additions to the common areas would still have to be passed by facilities managers and residence coordinators. Henshaw informed members of fire code regulations that would restrict certain hallway decorations. He concentrated on the danger of “home-made” decor and the necessity of the fire department’s approval of any major alterations to the hallways and common areas.

SEE WALLACE ON PAGE 13

SEE COUNCIL ON PAGE 8

ROBERT SAMUEL/THE

CHRONICLE

Randall Wailacejrinity 71, signs copies of his new noveUove and Honor, at Branch's Book Shop in Chapel Hill. the lead singer of a band with several local hit songs, Wallace concentrated on songwriting. These experiences propelled him to attempt a career in the music industry after attending Duke’s Divinity School following his undergraduate education. He went to Nashville, Tenn., to hone his musical writing abilities, but realized that Tennessee’s culture of country music was not a good fit for him. “I realized Nashville wasn’t the place for me,” he said. “Los Angeles had a real allure. I’ve always been drawn to the hardest thing to do; if that’s the biggest, scariest place, that’s almost invariably where I’ve gone.”

In Los Angeles, he found more loneliness than success. He decided to no longer pursue his career as a musician and turned to prose, first setting his sights on screenwriting.

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THE CHRONICLE

FRIDAY, OCTOBER 1,200417

New DHRH building adds office space for doctors by

Blayne Alexander THE CHRONICLE

The Duke University Health System is helping a new medical office building take shape on its Raleigh campus. The five-story, 82,000 square-foot office

building will contain only doctors' offices and is part of the Duke Health Raleigh Hospital. Construction is set to begin in January 2005 and last approximately 12 months. DHRH administrators said they hoped incoming doctors will be encouraged to use the hospital and its resources as their primary work facility. “The location near the hospital will be very convenient for physicians,” said Carla Parker Hollis, vice president of marketing and development. “By having their offices

so close to the over 20 years, hospital, doctors “Because of the very high quality with almost 5 milare able to see lion square feet their patients, run of this building, it will be a good of developed tests quickly and property. reflection upon the doctors who “We get their work apdone easily and practice there.” the proached more efficiently.” Duke Health SysPat Henry tem because we The building seek to work with project will be headed by Tramthe best compamell Crow Company, one of the world’s nies in each respective field, and Duke is largest commercial real estate service certainly one of the premier health syscompanies. The firm will own the build- tems,” said Pat Henry, managing director of Southeast development and investment ing and will lease the offices out to physicians. Although the company is based in group for the Trammell Crow Company. Dallas, Texas, Trammell Crow Company “Because of the very high quality of this has been building in the Triangle area for building, it will be a good reflection upon

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the doctors who practice there.” Although the new building is the first major outward sign of construction since the hospital came under DUHS ownership, DHRH has been expanding its programs internally. In May, the hospital added a cardiovascular center, which includes a state-of-the-art lab with imaging technologies. More recendy, the cancer center opened in July to include radiation therapy technology. DHRH officials said they hope these new technologies will attract medical specialists. “Cancer and heart services are supported by a number of specialists that may choose to have a practice location in the SEE DHRH ON PAGE 8


81 FRIDAY,

THE CHRONICLE

OCT()BER 1,2004

voters’ first impressions were good for Kerry, with most of those surveyed saying he did better than Bush. “This president, I don’t know if he real“You cannot lead the war on terror if ly sees what’s happening over there,” you keep changing positions on the war Kerry said of Bush. on terror,” retorted the president. Bush swiftly returned to his theme of Kerry appeared to taunt the commandKerry as a man who changes his mind too er in chief at one point during the debate often to be president. “He voted to authorwhen he said his father, former President ize the use of force and now says it’s the George H.W. Bush, had stopped troops wrong war at the wrong time.... I don’t from advancing on Baghdad after they think you can lead if you say wrong war, had liberated Kuwait during the 1991 Perwrong time, wrong place. What message sian GulfWar. does that send to our troops?” said the ReNow, Kerry said, the son ordered an invasion of Iraq anyway, without an exit stratpublican incumbent. The debate unfolded less than five egy and under conditions that mean the weeks before the election, with polls showUnited States has incurred “90 percent of ing Bush with a narrow lead and several the casualties and 90 percent of the cost.” battleground states exceedingly close. In response, Bush ridiculed his oppoEven some Democrats said the debate repnent, saying he denigrated U.S. allies in resented Kerry’s best chance to gain latethe war, voted against an $B7 billion meascampaign momentum. ure to aid Afghanistan and Iraq and sent Both men used well-rehearsed lines mixed signals. during their face-to-face encounter, and “What’s his message going to be? this was the first time the two presidential ‘Please join us in Iraq for a grand divercandidates have sparred in person. sion?”’Bush said to Kerry’s contention that Bush appeared perturbed when Kerry he could summon broader international leveled some of his charges, scowling at support for the war. ‘They’re not going to times and looking away in apparent disfollow someone whose core convictions gust at others. Kerry often took notes keep changing because of politics.” when the president spoke. In response to one question, Kerry Bush and Kerry differed over North said Bush had misled the country on the Korea, Iran and Russia as well as Iraq. war by pledging to plan carefully, give Kerry charged that NorthKorea and Iran diplomacy every chance to prevail and both have advanced their nuclear more. He said Osama bin Laden, the al weapons programs during the Bush adQaeda leader responsible for the Sept. 11 ministration. terrorist attacks, had used the invasion as Bush said he believed that a diplomata recruiting tool for terrorists. ic initiative currently under way could Bush said that was an “amazing claim,” solve the crisis with North Korea. “On and said the United States, not bin Laden, Iran, I hope we can do the same,” the should decide America’s strategy in the president said. war on terror. Kerry voiced concerns about conditions Again, he said Kerry had changed his in Russia, saying that crackdowns initiated mind on the war, but this time, Kerry insisted that he had held one consistent by Vladimir Putin go beyond what’s necessary to combat terror. Bush said he had a position. good personal relationship with Putin that “The only thing consistent about ray “enables me to better comment to him and opponent’s position is he’s been inconsisthe better to discuss with him some of the tent,” said Bush, eager for the last word. decisions he makes.” Given the stakes, it was not surprising The two men clashed again over Iraq that the two campaigns negotiated what and the broader war on terror. Kerry said amounted to a 32-page contract that covhe had a four-part plan to batde terrorists, ered debate details. They ranged from the and said Bush’s could be summed up in choice of moderator—Jim Lehrer of four words: “More of the same.” PBS—to the distance between the candiThree post-debate polls suggested that date lecterns—lo feet.

DEBATE

from page 1

COUNCIL from page 6 “We are going to reevaluate our recommendations in light of the fire information that we have received,” said senior Anthony Vitarelli, Campus Council president. “We are happy to spend time dedicated to ensuring that we comply with fire code regulations.” Part of the meeting was spent on Campus Council’s recent foray into what Vice President Damian Denoble called “the perennially changing and always dynamic issue of alcohol enforcement policies.” Quad representatives gave varying reports on the information they had sought from their respective constituents about the University’s alcohol policy and its enforcement.

DHRH from page 7 new building,” DHRH Public Relations Specialist Paige Rogers said. “In that respect, the new site supports specialty programs as well as general hospital services.” Officials said they expect have 20 to 30 different physicians occupying the new building. They added that physicians can choose from small 500 square-foot offices to entire 20,000 square-foot floors. The hospital will put up its own funds for the expansion of an existing parking garage to serve the building that will total approximately 1,000 parking spaces. DHRH has been serving the Wake

OKTOBERFEST from page 4 Oktoberfest coincides with Homecom-

ing Weekend this year, and the event’s organizers hope that alumni will bolster the

ranks of Oktoberfest revelers. “I really don’t think attendance is going to be a problem if anything, because ofall the people in town for Homecoming, our attendance will be better —

Junior Brenna Benson,

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was consistency with residence coordinators,” he said. Vitarelli emphasized the necessity for caution and neutrality when investigating the issue. ‘This is obviously a touchy and complicated issue, and we will not rush to any conclusions,” he said. “We are going to eliminate all hearsay and make sure that everything is testimonial-driven.”

County community since the hospital was built in 1978. The hospital includes a staff of over 500 resident physicians who are mosdy from Raleigh and Wake County. Formerly known as Raleigh Community Hospital, the name was changed June 1, 2004. The name change was implemented to demonstrate Duke’s ownership of the hospital, taken over six years earlier. “We did not want to change the name to show the partnership until we had made changes in the hospital that were reflective of Duke,” Hollis said. “Once we added more services, such as the cancer and cardiology programs, we felt we were ready to make the name change.” than in the past,” Parker said. “We’ve been working very closely with the alumni affairs office.... All the events going on this weekend will bring more people to everyone’s events.” At the festival, food vendors will accept cash and FLEX points, but it will also be possible for students to use food points to buy tickets—likened to “Monopoly money” by the event’s organizers—that can be redeemed for food and beverages.

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THE CHRONICLE

FRIDAY, OCTOBER 1,200419

FINANCIAL AID frompagel

will be adopted—nor would they drastically change financial aid.

non-financial aid students,” Provost Peter Lange said. He commissioned a year-long study of financial aid—the first in more than a decade—and is currendy choosing from among dozens ofrecommendations for improvement. As the University mulls its immediate options, it is haunted by the need to permanendy fund the entire aid program—a nearly $1 billion undertaking. “If it’s only moving pieces around on the same chessboard, there’s not much we can do,” said George McLendon, dean of the faculty of Arts and Sciences. “If we’re just talking about slicing the pie in some different ways, there’s not much we can do. “We’re in a position where we need to make more pie.”

The Base of Capital In President Richard Brodhead’s inaugural address Sept. 18, he virtually announced that the next capital campaign will create an endowment for aid. “Recruiting the support to assure that this school never closes its doors to a worthy applicant will be a project especially dear to my heart,” he said. With the current resources, the University cannot even consider wholesale improvements to financial aid such as increasing grants or capping tuition. Duke’s endowment, which now totals $2.7 billion, is not sufficient for the needs of the financial aid program, so the University must take money from its annual working budget. As administrators look to the long-term future of aid and discuss ways to elevate Duke, they are talking about ways to raise the nearly $1 billion necessary to fully endow financial aid. “If we don’t make a choice to strengthen the endowment now, it won’t immediately affect the current generation of students, but it would affect the future Dukies among their children,” McLendon said. Tuition, room and board has steadily climbed and will likely exceed $40,000 next year. The University’s ability to provide financial assistance has kept pace with the increases, and most aided families still pay_ about the same amount to send their children to Duke. The additional costs have fallen upon the University. In the 1999-2000 school year, the financial aid bill was $24.5 million. Last academic year, Duke paid out $39.5 million. ‘That’s money that could be spent developing more programs and academics,” Lange said. Duke has, however, put some safeguards in place to prevent its academic programs from being consumed by the growth ofaid. In 2003, the University capped the rate at which the contribution from Arts and Sciences, the area largely responsible for financial aid costs, could increase. “We are deeply committed to needblind financial aid,” Executive Vice President Tallman Trask said. “And for us to say that takes more money directly out of our pocket than anyone else who says it.”

The Promise of Aid Students on financial aid are indistinguishable from unaided students by a variety of indicators, administrators said. Aided students, however, are less likely to participate in programs, such as study abroad and summer internships, that limited their ability to hold paying jobs. Senior Jennifer Beall said her financial needs factored into her decision to become a resident assistant for a year. “I didn’t feel forced to do it, but I knew that it would make a big difference,” she said. Since she could not afford to spend summers at low-paying internships, Beall took eight months off school to work fulltime before her senior year. The University thinks that despite its dearth of funds, it can have an immediate impact on students like Beall, who stretch the limits to stay at Duke. One of the proposed reforms is to waive the summer earnings requirement for students who spend their summers at internships with academic or career merit. Sheila Curran, executive director of the Career Center, said that her office sees fewer aided students searching for internships because they opt for higher-paying, lower-skill jobs such as construction. Another short-term option the University may consider for adjusting financial aid is to allow outside scholarships to lessen the family’s bill rather than detracting from the student’s loan allotments, the area most additional money currendy offsets. The provost’s review also found a number of “annoyances” in the financial aid policy that had accumulated over time, Lange said. For example, the cost of the required freshman meal plan exceeds the allotment for food in the aid formula. Recent student fee increases, which now total about $250, have not been factored intoaid packages, and the disparity of room prices across campus also raises issues. “Making some of these changes that are being offered is making sure that we walk the talk and are really defending our promises,” Lange said. “These are options—not recommendations—because they all involve significant trade-offs.” In the longer term, Duke will also look at whether students receive enough money to buy their books. “If I hadn’t worked summers, I would never have been able to buy any of my books,” said senior Nick Chong, explaining thatseveral semesters his grades suffered because he could not afford his $l2O textbooks. He did not want to ask for an emergency loan. “I feel they give me a lot, so I don’t really ask for more unless it’s in the thousands range,” Chong said. The cost of instituting the majority of reforms in the report would eventually be more than $l5 million annually. While the University will likely find money for some of these programs, it is unlikely all of them

The Challenge of the Ivies At most of Duke’s peer schools, financial aid money is kept separate from the fund for the rest of the university. Harvard University, Yale University and Princeton University have all revamped their aid programs, making it much easier for students with minimal financial resources to attend. In 2001, Princeton entirely eliminated student loans and now supplies grants for the gap between family contribution and total cost. Administrators have acknowledged that Duke is not in a financial position to even consider such reforms, although McLendon and Lange have both said it may be an eventual goal. Lange said the University rarely loses students to other schools primarily due to financial aid, but the report does suggest several options for greater flexibility to choose loans instead of a family contribution. Since Duke doesn’t have a flashy aid draw, it is trying to make prospective students who write Duke off as too expensive aware of its classic commitment to need-blind aid. “We talked about how financial aid impacts decisions,” said James Belvin, director for financial aid. ‘The immediate question is: Do the financial aid awards that we offer allow students to matriculate at Duke? And the answer is yes.”

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THE CHRONICLE

101 FRIDAY, OCTOBER 1,2004

FOUNDER'S

from page 1

Bostock acknowledged that some changes to undergraduate education would be unpopular but said that did

not detract from their necessity.

“We might have to grind some sacred cows into meat loaf in the process —we might have to take some risks,” he said, adding that any improvement to “the heart and soul of this University” would be worth the risk. Although he did not suggest any specific changes, Bostock singled out the undergraduate curriculum and selective living as areas of the University that were ripe for re-evaluation. “Do [selective living groups] provide the kinds of experiences we want for undergraduates at our University?” he asked. “Some would say yes; some argue no. I say put it on the table.” Bostock compared the fearlessness needed to make any major change to the University to the fearlessness exhibited by the celebration’s namesakes, Washington and James B. Duke. “Were they not focused on the future? Were they not looking forward?” he asked rhetorically. “Our founders were bold and audacious. Let us be true to that heritage.” University administrators said they were pleased with Rostock’s call for sweeping self-analysis on the part of the University. “We’re very appreciative of Mr. Rostock’s encouragement that we look at any and all options,” said Larry Moneta, vice president for student affairs. In his first Founder’s Day, Rrodhead presented numerous awards to students, faculty, staff and alumni, including the University Medal for service to Duke to Ernestine Friedl and Samuel Katz. Friedl, a pioneer for women at Duke, was the University’s first female dean of Arts and Sciences and Trinity College and oversaw the inception of the Department of Women’s Studies. “Refore it became fashionable to break intellectual boundaries, she was an interdisciplinary thinker,” Rrodhead said. Katz, former chair of the pediatrics department at the School of Medicine, is a vaccine expert who has worked against such diseases as influenza, rubella and HIV. Most

PETER GEBHARD/THE CHRONICLE

President Richard Brodhead congratulates Trustee Emeritus Raymond Nasher on winning the Distinguished Alumni Award.

pected to open in Fall 2005. Randall Kramer, professor of environmental economics, won the University Scholar/Teacher of the Year Award, and Parviz Ghadimi, a professor in the math department, received the Alumni Distinguished Undergraduate Teaching Award. Brodhead presented the Humanitarian Service Award

notably, he has worked to make measles vaccines available around the world. ‘There’s no finer example of what we human beings should aspire to be” than Katz, one colleague said in a recommendation read by Brodhead. Trustee Emeritus Raymond Nasher, Trinity ’43, the Dallas housing developer whose gift helped fund the University’s new Nasher Museum of Art, claimed the Distinguished Alumni Award. Brodhead described Nasher as an “avid builder and am-arts visionary.” The museum is ex-

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FRIDAY, OCTOBER 1, 2004

TAILGATE from page 1 hard liquor to the tailgate. ‘The consequence is that if we don’t make [tailgating] safer, it’s going to shut down—it has to be,” Majdi said. An increased number of officers from the Duke University Police Department will be present on the periphery of the student tailgating area, Majdi added. He stressed that student affairs officials said they want tailgating to continue as a spontaneous studentinitiated event. “It’s a very delicate issue in that they want to let us have our fun, but they also know they are responsible for our safety,” Majdi said, noting that changing the tailgating culture would take time. In several meetings with student affairs officials, the Athletic Department has emphasized the importance of tailgating in its efforts to bolster student attendance and support. During last week’s game against Maryland, about 1,000 students attended the main student tailgate. Many remained outside the stadium at the game’s start, but Athletic Department officials said they were pleased with the attendance, especially in the second quarter when the Blue Devils took the lead. Athletics estimates that 3,000 students were among the 16,298 in attendance at the game, but with students moving in and out of the gates, the figure may be artificially inflated. “It was very noticeable what [the students] were doing for our football team,” head coach Ted Roof said. ‘They were really helping us. I couldn’t impress

the fact ofhow important they are to us.” The sports promotions department is not planning to make any changes in its methods of attracting fans, said Bart Smith, the department’s director. Although there were originally plans for the team to participate in Oktoberfest events Friday afternoon, the coaches and players do not plan to appear. Smith canceled a pep rally planned for the Great Hall last Thursday when very few students came to the event. Even without any additional publicity this week, Smith said he hopes more students will make their way to the game because of its 2 p.m. start time than were present at last week’s noon kickoff. “Obviously it gives more people time to get up and get going and do all those types of things,” Smith said. “Hopefully it will improve things.” Plans for a bluegrass band performance from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. sponsored by the Kappa Alpha Order in conjunction with members of off-campus fraternity Eta Prime were canceled because University administration refused to register the event, student organizers said. “Right now, the tailgating as it’s organized, is basically spontaneous —it’s not a registered event,” Wasiolek said. “By adding a band, which requires electricity or staging or whatever, the event would therefore need to be registered. Someone would need to be in a position to take responsibility for the event, the event being tailgating—not just one small portion.” Connolly said he hoped to plan concerts and other activities for upcoming tailgates, but no such events are lined up for Saturday. Emily Almas contributed to this story.

NOAH PRINCE/THE CHRONICLE

Junior Matt Zash masquerades as the Hamburgler at last weekend's tailgate.

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THE CHRONICL.E

turned on the ground and the large Heart of Durham sign that has hardly missed a beat. ment captured by the event’s slogan, With its giant white satellite on the ‘Jump Start the Heart.” roof, its scalloped ruling long since “Tear this mother down,” Mayor rusted and its openly exposed rooms Bill Bell told the crowd of nearly 75 of blue, yellow, green and orange people. The Durham School of the walls, the Heart of Durham will reArts drumline sounded off as a yellow quire five months of demolition to be earth-mover destroyed part of one of completely destroyed. the building’s bricked walls. “Good A 14,000 square-foot transportathings are happening in Durham and tion hub, nicknamed Durham Stawe are creating a new era with the tion, will be built in its place —a demolition of the Heart of Durham planned structure of glass, articulatmotel,” Bell added. ed metal and architectural lighting And while Durham residents are that will look nothing like the old glad to see the building destroyed, the Heart of Durham. Heart of Durham holds a history beDurham Station will provide space for both the Durham Area Transyond its own notorious exterior. In 1979, a Bloody Mary served at portation Authority and Triangle its Golden Stairs Lounge was the first Transportation Authority and will feamixed drink to be legally sold in ture pedestrian walkways connecting Durham in 80 years. it to other parts of downtown. But there are few signs left from “This site serves as a bridge from that once-flourishing motel: a dentits past industrial heritage,” said ed-in stainless steel refrigerator sits Chris Garris, an architect with The in pieces on the sidewalk, a metal Freelon Group, which designed the new complex. sign embossed “RATION” rests over-

MOTEL from page 5

VARUN LELLA/THE CHRONICLE

The Heart of Durham motel is being destroyed to make way for a 14,000 square-foot transportation hub.Durham residents hailed the building's demolition as one sign of a "Durham renaissance."

BAGHDAD from page 2 passing by the celebration when the attack occurred. The U.S. military said later that American soldiers were taking part in the celebration but that no convoy was passing through the area. Deputy Interior Minister Gen. Hussein Ali Kamal said intense military pressure on insurgents holed up in Fallujah, west of Baghdad, was forcing them to turn their bombs on the capital. He said the day’s attacks were “definitely coordinated.” ‘They are killing citizens and spreading horror. They have no aims except killing as many Iraqis as they can,” Kamal

told The Associated Press. American jets, tanks and artillery units have repeatedly targeted al-Zarqawi’s followers in Fallujah, as coalition forces seek to assert control over insurgent enclaves ahead of elections slated for January. Sixty miles north of Baghdad, U.S. troops and Iraqi national guardsmen JJJJ W

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launched a brigade-sized operation in Samarra, one of the country’s major insurgent strongholds, according to a CNN reporter embedded with the military in the area. Brigade operations could involve several thousand troops. The report, broadcast early Friday, said the troops were moving against some 2,000 rebels believed to be inside the city. They were clearing buildings and mosques, CNN said. After the bombings at the governmentsponsored celebration in the capital, Yarmouk Hospital received 42 bodies, including 35 children, said Dr. Azhar Zeid. The hospital also treated 131 wounded, 72 of them under age 14, added Dr. Mohammed Salaheddin. Interior Ministry spokesperson Col. Adnan Abdul-Rahman said a car bomb and an explosive device planted in the road detonated in quick succession at the site of the celebration. Soon afterward, a second car bomb plowed into the area as crowds rushed to help the wounded, he said.

ACLU from page 3 Strossen said. She said the section is so sensitive that the ACLU’s litigation team had to file its lawsuit under seal April 6 and could not publicize the suit until a Unionwide memo went out April 28. “Even I, as the president of the ACLU, did not know our lawyers had submitted this lawsuit until several weeks later,” she said. She repeatedly expressed her disbelief at the secrecy—necessitated by the Patriot Act—required to challenge a federal statute on constitutional grounds. Every time the ACLU defeats an “Orwellian proposal,” another with a different acronym arises in an attempt to accomplish the same ends, Strossen said. Despite constant efforts by the ACLU to challenge perceived infringements on

civil liberties, Strossen said she was encouraged that courts were thus far fulfilling their responsibility to balance against the other branches of government. She said some legislative proposals following the PatriotAct were intended to be serious but had in fact reached the point of absurdity. The Total Information Awareness Act, for example, sought to make all private information available to the government without regard to potential threat. The act’s logo, which featured a pyramid with an eye at the pinnacle, struck one Silicon Valley software executive as a policy move designed to generate satire. To illustrate her example, Strossen lifted a logo-bearing thong. Continuing with the apparel theme, Strossen quoted her favorite ACLU Tshirt. “You have the right not to remain silent,” she said.

The 100th volume of The Chronicle would like to salute all of the former staff members over our illustrious history. Today, we stand on your shoulders. Thanks for joining us this weekend as we celebrate our centennial. (Please don't lose our resumes.)

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THE CHRONICLE

FRIDAY, OCTOBER 1,200411 3

WALLACE from page 6 writing screenplays throughout the 1980s, although none of his works made it to the theaters. He also published his first novel, The Russian Rose, in 1980, which was based on one of his screenplays. After publishing another book, he was finally beginning to find his voice as a writer. “[Price] told me writers oftentimes develop their voices later in life,” he said. ‘That’s exacdy what happened to me.” Wallace wrote steadily for four years and produced 1,600 pages of manuscript for his masterpiece, yet no publisher would touch the piece. So Wallace once again concentrated on being a screenwriter. Success was sweet when a Wallace screenplay finally made it to the big screen in 1995. Although Braveheart told the obscure story of a 13th century Scottish rebellion, the movie became an instant classic. The Mel Gibson-directed piece won five Academy Awards, including Best Picture. Braveheart lifted Wallace into the upper echelon of Hollywood writers. His career has blossomed as he has both written and directed several major motion pictures, including Man in the Iron Mask and We Were Soldiers. His success has allowed him to finally publish a succinct version of his 1,600-page manuscript. Entitled Love and Honor, the novel follows an American Revolution soldier’s journey to Russia in the hopes of dissuading Catherine the Great from sending troops to help the British defeat the American insurgency. Wallace’s return to the Triangle area has been marked by his new role as member of the Divinity School’s Board of Visitors and the promotion ofLove and Honor. After a reading at Branch’s Book Shop in Chapel Hill, individuals at the event were pleased to see how grounded Wallace is. “I am awed by his work and I am awed by him as a person,” said Kate Branch, Wallace’s friend and owner of Branch’s Book Shop “He’s the most genuine, authentic person.” Additionally, Wallace has found time on his trip to the Triangle to spend with his son, Andrew, a junior at Duke. “It’s pretty cool,” Andrew Wallace said, in reference to his father’s fame. “He’s spoken at Duke a few times while I’ve been there.”

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A religion major at Duke, Wallace turned his love for writing into a career, penning the screenplay for Braveheart, among others.


THE CHRONICLE

14|FRIDAY, OCTOBER 1, 2004

CHRONICLE from page 3 professional staff ofadvertising and business personnel provide some consistency to the paper’s structure. Since becoming in-

dependent of the University in 1993, the paper has functioned as a hybrid of a student group and a professional organization. Constant leadership change, however, has occasionally led to inconsistencies of quality, University officials said. Nonetheless, the newspaper has been a crucial part of campus culture throughout its history as both a community forum and a vehicle for education. “While there are times we might gnash our teeth over the way The Chronicle handles a particular story, I think there’s a general recognition that this is a part of the learning process and there are times to be supportive,” said John Burness, senior vice president for public affairs and government relations. “It serves the role any good newspaper does in the community—which is providing a forum for discussion of the issues the community faces.” Even as daily production plows ahead, Chronicle administration recognizes that long-term plans for the paper must be developed. The Board of Directors, comprised ofalumni and several community members, is trying to determine its role in planning for the publication's future. “We’re just stewards. We’re just on the sidelines trying to make sure that there’s enough money to put the paper out,” Pelham said. “I don’t think we know what happens 10 years from now. I think it’s hard for the students on the ground to plan long-term while putting the newspaper out.” She added that The Chronicle does need to think ahead in order to keep pace with the way information flows. Several discussions this weekend will hopefully set the stage for The Chronicle’s long-term planning. Many students now do the crossword puzzle before they read the newspaper’s content, but junior Karen Hauptman, the current editor, said The Chronicle still has an important role to play in educating its readership. “If we’re doing our job right, then everyone who’s reading the paper is finding out something he didn’t know,” she said, noting that most University announcements are now made through other avenues. “We’re no longer just telling students what the administration said or just telling the administration what students said. There is value in seeing everything in one place at one time.”

Members of KAADAT have their very own dance party on the Bryan Center walkway, inviting passers-by to join in.

DANCE

from page 4

slipped away unscathed—this time, at least. Some students stopped and debated whether to walk through the archway, deciding to grin and bear it in order to take the fastest route to the Great Hall and The

Loop; others found a different path. Senior Patrick Winter expressed shock at the dancers. “It’s just random to see people dancing in the middle of the day,” Winter said. Senior Kirstin Hopkins didn’t think it was so absurd

“I think it’s kind of cool,” she said Junior Lea Harrell was walking through the archway when she decided to break it down. “I just like to dance,” she said, introducing herself to KAADATT member Meredith Tenison, also a junior. Wednesday’s KAADATT dance party ended just as spontaneously as it began. Crowe said she plans to bring the group to a number of locations, including the Marketplace on East Campus to “scare some freshmen.” But she urged people not to wait for the next spontaneous meeting to get involved. “It’s not just about dancing some of the time,” she said, “it’s about dancing all of the time.”

Help us celebrate 100 years of The Chronicle by attending our Centennial Celebration this weekend, October 1-2 Panel Discussion: Sports at Duke 3:30 pm, Friday, Oct 1, Griffith Film Theater, Bryan Center What was first published at Trinity College in December 1905 is now the award-winning daily student newspaper at Duke University. Join the centennial celebration Oct. 1 with a panel discussion on Duke Sports with some Duke alums who have made sports or sports journalism their career. Best-selling author and sports commentator John Feinstein, '77, leads a discussion with Barry Svrluga, '93 (sports reporter at The Washington Po. who recently covered the Olympics); an Bill Brill, '56 (colum for Blue Devil Week! Johnny Dawkins 'B6

Jk men's basketball

associate head coach m and Jake Poses, curr I Chronicle sports edit John Feinstein ‘77

Career Networking Reception 5:00 pm, Friday, Oct 1, Von Canon, Bryan Center Chronicle, in conjunction with Duke Career Center, will sponsor a Career Networking Reception where you can meet and talk careers with some returning Chronicle alumni, many of whom have gone on to have distinquished careers in broadcast and digital journal,

sm, journalism education, public relations, law and other fields.

Seniors, this is an especially good opportunity to talk with Duke alums who are experiencing the real world in fields that may interest you.

The Chronicleiagi

A CENTURY OF NEWS AT Dy<EAVU9


October t, 2004 THE SPACE BETWEEN HELD HOCKEY PIAYS A PAIR OF IiWKEB TEAMS THIS WEEKEND PAGE 15

MEN'S SOCCER

infocus With the super six set to graduate next year, Coach K is on the prowl for a new class of recruits to hold down Cameron. j

FOOTBALL

Undefeated Duke hosts Tar Heels by

Galen Vaisman THE CHRONICLE

Going into Sunday’s 7 p.m. matchup against rival North Carolina at Koskinen Stadium, the No. 7 Blue Devils are on a roll. Following their eighth shutout of the season Wednesday night, Duke (10-0, 2-0

in the ACC) is off to its best start since 1982—when the team advanced to the national tide game—and has outscored its opponents 33-3. Named the preseason favorite to win the ACC, North Carolina was supposed to have the edge entering Sunday’s game. Instead, the Tar Heels (2-4-2, 1-0) have been plagued by a combination of tough scheduling and inconsistent play, leading to only one win in their last six matches. Most recendy, No. 2 UNC-Greensboro shut out the Tar Heels 1-0 Wednesday night. What a difference a year makes. When the teams met in Chapel Hill last year, the Blue Devils were 2-4-1 and in the midst of a severe downslide. The Tar Heels, on the other hand, were 5-1-1 and ranked No. 8 in the country. Playing in front of the third-largest crowd in UNC men’s soccer history, the Blue Devils were able to hang around and take the Tar Heels into double-overtime but ultimately lost 3-2 on a free kick in the 109th minute. “Our players just need to realize that this game takes on a life of its own, and there’s no way to predict or project what’s going to happen,” Duke head coach John Rennie said. “It’s going to be filled with a lot of emotion, and both sides are going to SEE MEN’S SOCCER ON PAGE 19

WEIYITAN/THE

CHRONICLE

Duke's banged-up offense has struggled during its firstfour games, but may gain some momentum Saturday against the Division l-AA Citadel Saturday.

Duke hunts for first victory by

Jordan Koss

THE CHRONICLE

The key word for the Duke football team (0-4) this Homecoming weekend is

improvement. In an ACC matchup, improvement alone might be considered a moral victory—but against the winless

Citadel (0-2), significant progress may be enough to yield a win. To get that win, head coach Ted Roof wants to see improvement from top to bottom. “We all have to play better, coach better—we’ve all got to do it all better,” Roof said. When Roof says all, he is not just talk-

ing about the team itself. He means the entire program, including the fans. “I want to thank the fans that came out last weekend, and at the same time encourage fans to please come out [Saturday at 2 p.m.],” Roof said. “It makes a difference, it really does. It makes a difference for our players, it makes a difference for recruiting, it makes a difference for the perception of our program and how we support our own school. I was very thankful for the people that did come, and I would like more to come this time.” Wallace Wade Stadium was half full last week as No. 23 Maryland handed Duke a 55-21 shellacking in which the Terps

scored 38 unanswered points. After losing badly in many areas, including time of

possession (41:22 to 18:38), first downs (35 to 8) and total yards (685 to 185), the players realize they need to put one in the left column Saturday. “We’re desperate for our first win just so we can get this thing going,” sophomore defensive tackle Casey Camero said. “We’ve played well in spurts, but haven’t been able to sustain it long enough.” The Bulldogs, a Division I-AA team, are coming off a major loss in its own right, suffering a 33-3 defeat at the hands SEE FOOTBALL ON PAGE 21

Homecoming pageantry enlivens campus, teams Greg Czaja THE CHRONICLE

by

Seventy-nine years ago, Homecoming was quite different Back in 1925, the year Homecoming at Duke was conceived, Duke had just become a University. West Campus had not even been built and the Blue Devils played football on Hanes Field, a simple patch of grass in the back of East

Campus.

SPECIAL TO THE CHRONICLE

Sigma Nu fraternity built a choo-choo train outside its West Campus dormitory for Homecoming in 1953.

That year, senior Edward W.H. Lagerstedt, a transfer student who had come all the way from Brockton, Mass., in his sophomore year, led Trinity on the gridiron. A versatile offensive back, Lagerstedt was also an active member of the biology and physics clubs. There were striking similarities

between the 1925 and 2004 football teams, however—both struggled on the field and suffered from lagging attendance. “[1925 was] the most disastrous season from start to finish of any team to represent the institution since the reestablishment of football in 1920,” the Chanticleer proclaimed. ‘The chief cause of the failures of the Trinity team to annex victories was its lack of an efficient aerial attack and its inability to break up the forward passing attacks of the opposing teams.” With the team in shambles, school officials needed to find new ways to generate fan support. They decided to SEE HOMECOMING ON PAGE 20


THE CHRONICLE

.61 FRIDAY. OCTOBER 1.2004

WOMEN'S SOCCER

DUKE TRIES TO SHOOT PAST NO. 3 FSU by

nal individual seasons thus far, Duke’s success can be attributed

Taddei John CHRONICLE

THE

The women’s soccer team has been unstoppable recently. Since a difficult 5-1 loss to Florida in the Nike Carolina Classic three weeks ago, the No. 14 Blue Devils (8-2, 1-0 in the ACC) have been on a tear, netting 25 goals while yielding none. The Blue Devils face one of their biggest challenges of the season when they put their sixgame winning streak on the line against No. 9 Florida State (7-2, 1-1) this Friday at 7 p.m. in Koskinen Stadium. ‘This is a really big game,” Duke co-captain Casey McCluskey said. “I guess we’re just trying to focus really hard on some of the stuff FSU does, and they’re obviously a top team coming to our field, so it’s a great opportunity for us to upset them.” Florida State has one of the top programs in the ACC and last year made a deep charge into postseason play. Duke head Lauren Tippets dribblesaround a Wake Forest defender during Duke's victory Sunday.TheBlue Devils play two ACC gamesthis weekend coach Robbie Church is familiar want it to come to an end.” with the strong and balanced play spurt has been its ability to finish one that lost to Florida. think embarIn order to beat FSU, the Blue Church we were an “I scoring opportunities, of his team’s opponents. “FSU returns almost all of said. The Blue Devils will have to rassed team and I think we knew Devils not only have to keep puttheir players from their Final continue this trend Friday against we were better than that,” Church ting the ball in the net, but the Four team,” Church said. “[The tough competition. The Seminoles said. “We refocused and went out defense and midfield need to Seminoles’] front runners are boast the third-best defense in the and we started winning, and I continue giving the attackers quality chances. Even though very good; they have got a great ACC and have given up up two think we have really enjoyed winhas led to that like McCluskey, who was midfielders, Their their last five we players games. ning. Winning combination. goals in their backs, and their goalkeeper But regardless of what defense have played harder in each game, named to the Soccer America FSU throws at the Blue Devils, and I think the girls enjoy their National Team of the Week [are also] very good.” recent Duke is a different squad than the winning streak, and they don’t Wednesday, have had phenomeA big reason for Duke’s

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“A lot of our players have worked really hard to get [McCluskey] the ball in the right situations, and she has done a phenomenal job of being able to finish,” Church said. “Our defenders have worked hard to keep the ball out of the back of the net so she can score some game-winning goals. I think it’s a team award, but Casey has led it individually, and were very proud of. her for what she has done.” Friday’s game is only the second ACC contest for the Blue Devils, who have eight straight conference matches to close out their regular season. Currently Duke sits in third place, and each remaining ACC game has a large impact on postseason tournament seedings. The Blue Devils will play their third conference match Sunday at Miami. The Hurricanes lost 4-2 to No. 15 Clemson on the road Wednesday after falling in a 3-0 goal deficit early. Even though Duke has had a stellar start to the season, the biggest games have yet to be played. Church has the bar set high. “Our goal for the weekend is to win two games,” Church said. ‘That’s what were setting out to do, and hopefully we’ll accomplish that.”


THE

CHRONICLE

FRIDAY, OCTOBER 1,2004

in ocus

117

men's basketball recruiting

Coach K scouts class of 'O6 Super 6 out the door, Duke eyes recruits to fill numerous gaps by

by Michael Mueller

Michael Mueller THE CHRONICLE

About this time three years ago, head coach Mike Krzyzewski was putting the finishing touches on one of the most anticipated recruiting classes in Duke history. Featuring six top-100 recruits and four McDonald’s All-Americans, the class of 2002 has not disappointed thus far, accounting for at least three of the Blue Devils’ projected starters this season. Looking ahead to 2006, however, the departures of the last of the so-called “Super Six” will generate a huge void in productivity and leadership for the Blue Devils. As it stands currently, Duke will have just having six scholarship players on the 2006-2007 roster. With that in mind, Krzyzewski has acted quickly in identifying possible Duke recruits for the class of 2006. Topping the list of potential targets is shooting guard Gerald Henderson Jr. of Episcopal Academy in Merion, Pa., the son of former NBA player Gerald Henderson Sr. Episcopal Academy head coach Dan Dougherty said Wake Forest, Villanova, Notre Dame, North Carolina State and North Carolina are also recruiting Henderson, who is also one of the nation’s top golfers. He added that the Blue Devils are interested enough in Henderson that they sent assistant coach Steve Wojciechowski to his school this week. Rated the No. 17 prospect in his class by theinsiders.com, Henderson has earned a reputation as one of the nation’s top scorers. “Gerald Henderson is probably more of an all-around kind of guard whose strength is his mid-range game,” said Dave Telep, recruiting analyst for theinsiders.com. ‘This is a guy who can score.” Joining Henderson on Duke’s list of targets is Glenbrook North (111.) combination guard Jon Scheyer. Scheyer, whom Duke has already offered a scholarship, has a floor game that has attracted other scholarship offers from schools around the country.

JAMES KEEFE

PF

6'B" 200 lbs. Margarita Santa HS (Calif.) A long and lean rebounder, Keefe ranks among the nation's top power forwards. As he gains consistency, Keefe, who possesses a great motor and a solid allaround game, will evolve into one of the nation's top players. He has attracted interest from a number of Pac-10 schools.

G. HENDERSON

«SG

6'4" 200 lbs. Episcopal Academy (Pa.) The son of a former NBA player, Henderson has both the genes and the build to be an impact player at the college level. He is an explosive athlete with tremendous ability to get to the hoop. Duke, North Carolina and a host of Big East schools all covet his services.

LANCE THOMAS

JamesKeefe

JON SCHEYER

:rone/icon

Michael Mueller THE CHRONICLE

Ten months ago, Josh Mcßoberts was in a little bit of a rut. Just 10 weeks earlier, Mcßoberts had verbally committed to the Blue Devils. The junior was ready to display the skills that had caught the eyes of future head coach Mike Krzyzewski and numerous other coaches across the country. But he suffered stress fractures in his back, forcing him to sit out the first 10 games of the season. “It was one of the toughest things I’ve ever had to do in basketball,” Mcßoberts said. “I’d started every game in my career, and one of my goals was to start every game in my career. It was tough coming back mid-season and it was tough on the coaches, too. It was just a bad situation for everyone involved.” The going didn’t get any easier for

weight during the absence, some muscle, but some fat. Even worse, getting reacquainted to playing with his Carmel (Ind.) High School teammates was difficult after half a season of inactivity. “He’s the heart and soul of our program right now,” Said Carmel basketball coach Mark Galloway. “It was tough trying to adjust to not having him, and when he did come back it was tough trying to get him the ball as much as we needed to.” Carmel lost in the first round of the playoffs, a major disappointment for Mcßoberts. Then, recruiting analysts observed that Mcßoberts had not completely lost the weight he had gained while recovering from his stress fracture. He fell from a top-10 player to outside the top 30 players in the nation. Fast forward to late May. With the help M f Jp

PF

.SEE MCROBERTS QNjEACR

SG

6'5" 175 lbs. Gienbrook North HS (ill.) Scheyer has the versatility to play both point and shooting guard. Known for his ability to nail the 3pointer, Scheyer has a solid all-around floor game and is a tremendous competitor. Illinois has been recruiting him hardest.

Senior Mcßoberts preps for Duke by

6'9" 200 lbs. St. Benedict's School (N J.) Thomas has a reputation as one of the nation's hardest-working players. Ranked in the top-10, he has a reliable jump shot to mid-range and is particularly adept at working the baseline. He has fielded offers from seven major programs, including Wake Forest.

SEE CLASS OF ’O6 ON PAGE 24

Josh Mcßoberts goes for a shot during an AAUTourna-

BRIAN ZOUBEK

• .

C

J 7'o" 243 lbs. Haddonfleid Memorial HS (N J.) The son of a former Princeton football player, Zoubek has both the size and the smarts to become a powerful force in the paint. Duke has long been suspected to be one of his top choices, but Stanford, Villanova and Wake Forest are also making a push for his commitment.


THE CHRONICLE

18 I FRIDAY, OCTOBER 1,2004

FIELD HOCKEY

No. 5 Blue Devils set to plow through duo

Bozman set the tone for the week in practice, and her team has followed. Duke has The dust has cleared from North gone from being an angry, disappointed Carolina’s recent visit, and Maryland team to having a “let’s just fix this and looms next weekend. But sandwiched move forward” attitude, Bozman said. between the pair of top-five opponents are A primary source of concern for the Radford (3-4) and Davidson (3-6), teams Blue Devils has been avoiding the types of not likely to threaten the fifth-ranked Blue mistakes that Bozman said cost the team a Devils (7-2). The Highlanders and victory against the Tar Heels. “We had a lapse for 10 to 15 minutes in Wildcats square off against Duke Saturday and Sunday, respectively, in 1 p.m. the second half where it was clear that we were not playing our game,” senior back matchups at Williams Field. Both opponents are below .500, play in Gracie Sorbello said. “But overall, we doma weak NorPac conference and do not inated some parts, but there were also a lot have head coach Beth Bozman worried. of parts that we didn’t do certain things “We kind of go from the fire to the' that are just standard.” Still, any adjustments Duke has made in refrigerator,” Bozman said of the team’s recent schedule. practice this week will likely have to wait Although this weekend’s competition until Maryland to be scrutinized. The two teams visiting Durham played may not be tough, Duke has had an emotional week following its hard-fought 2-1 each other earlier this season and are home loss to the No. 1 Tar Heels Saturday. evenly matched. Radford traveled to After taking Sunday and Monday off, the Davidson last week and beat the Wildcats Blue Devils came to practice Tuesday bracin a 1-0 defensive battle. Davidson lost 4-0 at North Carolina ing for the worst from their coach. “We thought we were going to be hamTuesday night, in what its head coach mered and yelled at,” sophomore Cara- Lisa Thompson called its “best team perLynn Lopresti said. “But she really brought formance of the season.” So although it is up the morale of the team. I remember certain that the Blue Devils are much betthe first thing she said was, T’m not going ter than both of their weekend oppoto quit, you guys don’t quit either. I believe nents on paper, the players know an in this team.’ She was constantiy saying upset is always possible. how much she believed in this team. She “You don’t know anything about a team wasn’t angry, but she thought we could’ve until you play them,” senior midfielder done better.” Johanna Bischof said. “If nothing else, they Despite being visibly upset and calling are great teams to work on stuff we want to her team “casual” after the UNC game, do in games ahead.’* by

Jason Strasser

THE CHRONICLE

CHRONICLE FILE PHOTO

Johanna Bischof and Duke are likely to dominate unranked Radford and Davidson this weekend.

Duke Women's Soccer #l6 Duke vs #9 Florida State

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Duke Men’s Soccer #2 Duke vs North Carolina Sunday, Oct. 3 @7:00 PM

KOSKINEN STADIUM Come out and cheer on the #2 ranked team in the country take onACC Rival North Carolina


THE CHRONICLE

FRIDAY, OCTOBER 1, 2004 119

MEN'S TENNIS

Duke tunes up at N.C. Invite by

Andrew Davis

THE CHRONICLE

After playing its first match of the year, the men’s tennis team is back in action today at the North Carolina Invitational in Chapel Hill. As was the case a week ago, this weekend is more about player development than team results. Duke will send a trio offreshmen and some ofits less experienced juniors to the event. “This [tournament] is important to give individuals a chance to work on their game,” head coach Jay Lapidus said. Lapidus will send freshmen Ned Samuelson, Alex Stone and Vincent Perna to the tournament. Samuelson is coming off a strong showing at Georgia’s Southern Intercollegiate Tournament last weekend, where he reached the quarterfinals and beat the second-seeded player. Stone and Perna will see their first college match experience this weekend in Chapel Hill. Juniors Stefan Rozycki, Stephen Amritraj and Christopher Brown also hope to polish their games after the summer break. Amritraj and Brown were regular starters in the Blue Devils’ lineup last season, Amritraj competing in doubles while Brown played singles. Rozycki is looking to make a bigger contribution this season. “Brown has been playing very well,” Lapidus said. “He had a good tournament last weekend.” Although it is still early in the fall season, the strong competition in the tournament should give Lapidus a good indication of where his team stands. “We can try to assess where we are and what we can improve upon after this weekend,” Lapidus said. Duke’s top players Ludovic Walter and Jason Zimmerman, both named to the ITA Collegiate All-Star Team, will wait another week to kick off their fall seasons. They will start action next weekend at the important ITA All-American Tournament.

MichaelVideira and the Blue Devils'freshman class have been instrumental in Duke's undefeated record and rise in the nationalpolls this season.

MEN'S SOCCER from page 13 put everything they have out there to win. “[We need to] remind our players that the roles are reversed from last year. We were a heavy underdog, we were in a terrible time in our season, and yet we came very close to winning the game.” The Blue Devils understand, that North Carolina’s record is not indicative of its talent and the team remains extremely dangerous. First team All-ACC senior Marcus Storey and sophomore Jamie Watson are two of the fastest and most talented forwards in conference. Of the two, Storey, a National Player of the Year candidate and team’s leader in points and assists, could prove to be the biggest problem for Duke’s young defense. “They’re not playing the best—yet,” Rennie said. “A game like this can turn their season around.” Despite this quick Tar Heels attack, neither Rennie nor his players foresee any major changes to the team’s defensive strategy. Led by Danny Miller, Duke has prevented

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opponents from penetrating into box and has quickly initiated counterattacks to jump-start the offense. “We won’t really be changing anything,” defender Kyle Helton said. ‘We’ve played good forwards all year and we’ve seen [them] before. Right now, we just need to get mentally prepared for the game.” This mental strength will be a key theme for the Blue Devils as they try to cope with the added burden an undefeated record brings to an already intense rivalry game. ‘There’s a bunch of added pressure,” said freshman Michael Videira, who will be playing in his first Duke-UNC game Sunday. ‘With every win we have, there’s more pressure added onto us... every game has an impact on our season.” Although the team does not think this added pressure will have an effect at gametime, Rennie said his team will not be caught off guard. The Blue Devils are acutely aware of this role reversal and feel ready and prepared for it. “To be quite honest it doesn’t matter who’s had the better season,” said Helton. “Anytime UNC plays Duke, it’s going to be a crazy game. We’re just getting ready now, and hopefully we can have a nice victory on Sunday.”


THE CHRONICLE

!0 I FRIDAY, OCTOBER 1,2004

HOMECOMING from page 15 expand upon a tradition that had been created the previous season, when a pep rally prior to the season finale against North Carolina had whipped Trinity supporters into a raucous frenzy. “At this game more spirit was shown by Trinity students than has ever been shown at his institution,” the Chanticleer reported. “All restraint was cast with the hats to the winds, and alumni and under: graduates joined in the frantic contortions of a saddled steer when expressing their emotions after an advantage gained by Trinity.” Although the Blue Devils went on to lose the ’24 matchup against the Tar Heels, campus officials had every reason to believe similar support could be generated by a “homecoming” game, where alumni would return to Durham to cheer on their team. The first official homecoming game was played on Armistice Day, 1925, against Wake Forest. In the opening moments, it appeared as ifTrinity would dominate the Demon Deacons line all day. The momentum turned, however, when junior John Prather threw an interception that set up a Wake Forest touchdown, the only score of the first half. The Demon Deacons went on to cruise to a 32-0 victory, but Homecoming was a great success. By 1935 the event had transformed into a spectacle. Railway companies lowered their fares for the throngs ofalumni returning to Dear Old Duke. Crowds of more than 100,000 people lined the streets of downtown Durham as the “Durham-Duke Civic Parade” made its way from the Melbourne Hotel to campus. The celebrations continued until 1941, when wartime regulations halted the festivities. The post-war era reinvigorated homecoming, however—in 1948 the first Homecoming Queen was crowned, and by the 1950’5, Homecoming was back in full swing. The 1959 Homecoming featured numerous open houses and coffee hours as the professional schools and fraternities pulled out all the stops to impress returning alumni. The weekend also included a golf exhibition featuring leading PGA Tour money winner and former Masters champion Art Wall and his col-

SPECIAL TO THE CHRONICLE

The Blue Devil drivesaroundWallace Wade Stadium with the 1958 Homecoming Queen.

lege roommate Mike Souchak. Rumors circulated that singer Perry Como might attend the event, but the crooner did not make an appearance. The crescendo of the festivities was once again the Friday night Homecoming Show, and the 1959 celebration did not fail to disappoint. The Duke Ambassadors, the sfhoofs jazz band, opened the show, and several East Campus dormitories (which were occupied exclusively by women) performed skits mocking Army, Duke’s Saturday opponent. Brown’s sketch, ‘This is the Army,” took home first place honors, and Sigma Nu fraternity won a blue ribbon for the extravagant display it created for the floatbuilding contest. The displays constructed to rally school spirit varied greatly—some were built with simple chicken wire, while others were more lavish. Many were several stories high and sometimes featured moving parts and audio. The evening concluded with the pres-

entation of the Homecoming Court and the crowning of the Homecoming Queen. Each of the East Campus houses presented a candidate, and in 1959 Southgate resident Carol Corder was named Homecoming Queen. The football captain, first team All-American and future Duke head coach Mike McGee, presented the crown to Corder, who was crowned in front of 40,000 fans the next day. The Blue Devils once again lost the Homecoming game, but the unfortunate result did not dampen evening’s revelries. An estimated 5,000 to 6,000 people attended the Homecoming Dance as Duke broke all ofits unofficial dating records thanks to the eager Army cadets who had raided East Campus dormitories in an effort to find the female students who had been unable to procure dates. Student interest in Homecoming took a dramatic turn in the late 19605, when world events forced local issues to the back burner. In 1976, Dean of Cultural

Duke Parking & Transportation Services Offices move to 0100 Facilities Center On October 4, customer service locations at 2010 Campus Drive (University) and Parking Garage II RT Level(Medical Center) will move to one shared location at 0100 Facilities Center off Research Drive. Employees and students will benefit from extended office hours 7:30 5:00 pm Monday-Friday, a central location, and staff knowledgeable of the entire Duke parking system. -

-

-

Services offered at this location include: issuing parking permits, ability to appeal citations, pay parking fines, sign up for payroll deduction, pick up maps and obtain general parking information 5

In addition, the Duke Card Office Medical Center will be moving to this new location. This office provides the same services as before to employees and students of the Health System and Medical Center only.

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Affairs Ella Fountain Pratt, in an effort to revive Homecoming, explained the effects of the times. “Everyone was so shocked by the assassination of the president and Martin Luther King, homecoming seems trivial,” Pratt said. In 1970, homecoming died. That year, one dorm nominated Jofm Terrell to the Homecoming Court. Although Terrell received twice as many votes as any other candidate, he was disqualified from the contest and Brown’s Christy Stauffer was declared the winner. “It really didn’t bother me that I was not crowned Homecoming Queen,” Terrell said after the game. “I think everyone that voted for me stood up and cheered Saturday when I was introduced, so I guess they knew that I had gotten the most votes.” The following Monday The Chronicle published an editorial that praised Terrell’s actions and derided the Homecoming pageant as “a continuing symbol of how women are viewed as objects in our society.... We believe the only constructive action that can be taken would be to end the annual Homecoming Queen Contest.” Campus officials agreed, and no Homecoming show was held in 1971. “By far it was one of the most enjoyable things I remember doing with a group at Duke,” Dean of Students Sue Wasiolek said during a 1983 effort to resurrect Homecoming display construction. “Groups often structured a party atmosphere around building the displays. Sometimes they would even have a band playing while they built.” Homecoming has never been the same since. Over the past 30 years, various attempts have been made to revive the old traditions, but none have enjoyed any success and Duke may never again see the displays, banners, parades, pageants and school spirit that accompanied the previous Homecomings. To some, however, the end of Homecoming was inevitable. “I think it was a natural phasing out,” Former Vice President for Student Affairs William Griffith told The Chronicle in 1978. “Many of the activities were for children and the public. In the late ’6os, the displays and the skills became kind of gross... some weren’t even subtle. It got to be embarrassing. I think Alumni Affairs was probably glad when the whole thing died a natural death.”


THE CHRONICLE

FRIDAY, OCTOBER 1. 2004 121

FOOTBALL fr m page 15 „

of No. 10 Auburn. First year head coach John Zernhelt, Duke’s offensive coordinator in 1995, emphasizes the running game on offense while employing a twoquarterback system similar to that of the Blue Devils. Senior running back Nehemiah Broughton, a 6-foot, 240pound bruiser, gained 73 yards last week and will be counted on for more against the Blue Devils. The Citadel will start senior field general Justin Hardin, although freshman Duran Lawson is likely to receive a decent share of the snaps. Both will be looking for the wide receiver tandem of Jermaine Anderson and Rontreal Tyler to spark the offense. “They’ve got an excellent tailback and a couple of different quarterbacks,” Roof said. “[Lawson] is mobile and [Hardin] is a little bit better thrower, and they’ve also got some big-play wideouts.” Leading the defense are outside linebackers Julian West and Shawn Grant, who combined for 10 tackles for loss in the team’s first two games. For Duke, questions continue to arise about the quarterback position. Sophomore Mike Schneider saw most of the action against the Terps, while fellow sophomore Curt Dukes took several snaps and senior Chris Dapolito sat on the bench for most of the game. This week, Roof plans to divide up the playing time in roughly the same manner. “Mike Schneider’s going to start and play quite a bit,” Roof said. “Curt Dukes is going to see some reps, and Chris Dapolito... I’ll see.” Blue Devils freshmen Justin Boyle and Ronnie Drummer will share the load once again at tailback with Cedric Dargan injured, and they will look to better their combined total 36 rushing yards a week

Duke playsfor its first win of the season Saturday at 2 p.m. in WallaceWade Stadium.With rotating quarterbacks, Duke has struggled offensively in eachof its games. ago. Wide receivers Ronnie Elliott and Corey Thompson and tight end Ben Patrick will look to take advantage of a Citadel defense that allows an average of 300 passing yards per game. On the defensive side of the ball, sophomore cornerback John Talley has

already provided many big plays with three interceptions and a school-record two interception returns for touchdowns. Fellow cornerback Kenneth

Stanford, defensive end Eli Nichols (two sacks) and linebacker Giuseppe Aguanno will do what they can as defen-

sive leaders to secure Duke its first victory of the season. ‘The Citadel is the next team on our schedule so we’ll go out and play as hard as we can,” freshman safety Chris Davis said. That is all we can do; prepare for the game all week and then play the game.”

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THE CHRONICLE

FRIDAY, OCTOBER 1,2004

MCROBERTS from page 17 of conditioning drills forwarded to him by Duke’s coaching staff, Mcßoberts got himself back into game shape. It’s the opening night of the AAU Tournament of Champions, and Mcßoberts and his Spiece Indy Heat team are playing. Mcßoberts fired pinpoint passes into the low post and behind-the-back bounce passes on the perimeter. A few minutes later, he took off flat-footed to come around the other side of the bucket for a reverse jam. In the second half, Mcßoberts faced up to the basket and used a crossover dribble to shake by his defender for the bucket and a foul. Spiece Indy Heat bulldozed through the tournament, leaving opponents and coaches alike slack-jawed in its wake. Mcßoberts might not have been the team’s best player, but Mcßoberts had re-established himself as one of the nation’s elite. Later that summer, Mcßoberts proceeded to turn in dominant performances at the Nike camp and the USA Development Festival, solidifying his position as one of the nation’s best players. After the summer, Mcßoberts was the consensus No. 3 player in the nation, according to both rivals.com and theinsiders.com’s rankings. “I don’t really get too worried about that kind of stuff,” Mcßoberts said, adding that he had not realistically considered forgoing his Duke commitment for the NBA. “It’s an honor that people think so highly of me right now.” As highly as his skills are regarded, however, his leadership skills may be even more deserving of praise. “He really communicates well with his teammates,” Galloway said. “He leads by example and he’s very vocal.” Additionally, Mcßoberts has managed to maintain humility throughout the summer months despite his accolades and his locker room presence. True to his character, Mcßoberts is not focused on improving his status as one of the nation’s best. “Hopefully we’ll just have the best season we can,” Mcßoberts said when asked about his season goals. “We should have a good record this year, better than we did last year.”

PETER

GEBHARD/THE CHRONICLE

Josh Mcßoberts and his Speice Indy Heat team won the prestigious Tournament ofChampions at Duke earlier this summer.

www.chronicle.duke.edu

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Online Application at: http://pmac.aas.duke.edu/focus/


CLASSIFIEDS

THE CHRONICLE

MOOD AND DIABETES PROGRAM

Announcements

Depression is common in diabetes patients. Have you ever felt “blue”? Type 1 and type 2 diabetes patients WITH and WITHOUT depression are needed to test whether a standard depression treatment can help with blood sugar control. All participants will receive Cognitive Behavior Therapy, a group treatment often used for depression or depressive symptoms. All will receive a free glucose meter and strips for testing blood sugar at home. Study period is one year. Study involves weekly or twice weekly group sessions for 3 months, and also 5 outpatient visits. For more information, call S. Minda at 919-684-3019.

FRESHMEN, ATTENTION SOPHOMORES AND JUNIORS! Interested in earning your licensure to teach elementary or high school students? Currently accepting Contact Jan applications. Ftiggsbee, Elementary: 660-3077/ jrigg@duke.edu or Susan Wynn, 660-2403/ Secondary: swynn@duke.edu,

ATTENTION

FRESHMEN, SOPHOMORES AND JUNIORS! Interested in earning your licensure to teach elementary or high school students? Currently accepting Contact Jan applications. Riggsbee, Elementary: 660-3077/ jrigg@duker.edu or Susan Wynn, 660-2403/ Secondary: swynn@duke.edu.

Part-time research assistant position in the Department of Psychiatry & Behavioral Sciences. Position involves assisting with studies on psychosocial functioning of patients undergoing organ transplant and their caregivers. Good computer and organizational skills and attention to detail needed. Must be available 8-10 hours per week. Please e-mail resume and letter of interest to Dr. Rick LaCaille at lacaiool @ mc.duke.edu

Attention Sophomores And Juniors! Did you know... You can earn state licensure to teach secondary school as part of your undergraduate studies! Contact Dr. Susan Wynn at 6602403 or swynn@duke.edu for information.

Pet sitter needed that would enjoy being paid with art. Non smoking, clean, reliable, loves cats and able to stay here while I am gone. 402-0160. Write poems? Dabble in fiction? Check out our weekly writing group at Trinity Cafe, 3:00-4:30pm on Fridays. Contact as26@duke.edu for more information.

GRAD & PROF’L SCHOOL DAY Thursday, October 21. Don’t miss your chance to meet representatives from more than 75 Business, Graduate, Law and Medical Schools. From 10am-4pm visit tables and meet reps on the Bryan Center-upperlevel.

After school care for Ist grade boy. MF 6-Bpm. Sat. & Sun. afternoons on occasion. Prepare simple meals, play games, do homework. Off Homestead Rd in Chapel hill. Call 932-1332 after 6pm.

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Duke family seeking BABY-SITTER for adorable toddler. 8-10 hours a week, Tuesdays and Thursdays 12:30 4:30/5:30. $lO/hour. Experience and references a must. Email Julie: mell@email.unc.eduor call 220-7611 -

Duke Professors seek occasional weekend babysitting in our home near Duke and occasional weekday babysitting on East Campus for 2 yr old daughter and 7 yr old son. References. 402-0400.

Experienced babysitter wanted most Saturday evenings and occasional weekdays for 21-month-old daughter. Ten minutes from Duke Hospital. Reference and car required. $lO per hour. Call 383-2512 or e-mail cmcquaid@nc.rr.com Seeking child care/mother’s assistant for three-month old and work-at-home mom. Part- full-time. Five minutes from campus. $B-10/hr. 401-4122. Sitter needed in my home for 2-yr-old, MWF. 12-15 hrs. per week. Pay negotiable. Call 477-5287.

Stay-at-home-mom needs responsible, child loving, and fun caregiver for occasional/as needed babysitting. Schedule is flexible. Rate negotiable. Home is in Trinity Park, close to campus. Children aged 4 and 7 years. References required. 683.8287.

Help Wanted Ad

Spice, a local established Marketing and Promotional products company is looking for an intern for the fall semester. Duties include office assistance and oncampus promotions, including flyering. 5 hrs per week. Bonus available for good work. Potential for full time job fall of 2005. Email jamie@adspicepromo.com with resume.

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Busy two doctor veterinary hospital seeks motivated individual for full or part-time help. Duties include tech assistance, receptionist, and kennel. Experience a plus but not required. Fax resume to St. Francis Animal Hospital, 286-1668 or call 286-2727.

The Chronicle 1

classified advertising rates

business rate $6.50 for first 15 words private party/N.R $5.00 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 -

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deadline

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Chronicle Classifieds Box 90858, Durham, NC 27708 0858 fax to: 684-8295 e-mail orders classifieds @ chronicle.duke.edu phone orders: call (919) 684-3811 to place your ad. Visit the Classifieds Online! http://www.chronicle.duke.edu/classifieds/today.html -

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

AmeriCorps is looking for p/t members to work at campuses and community centers in the triangle. Must make a 10month commitment. Will receive a Living Allowance and an Educational Award. Training will be held at UNCChapel Hill. Help build Literacy capacity in North Carolina! Please contact SCALE at 919.962.6675. Grants Accounting Specialist, Duke Computer Science. Pre, post award administration for federal/industrial grants. Budget prep, submission management, compliance oversight, accounting, financial reporting. Must be organized, efficient, accurate, skilled communicator. Duke experience desirable. Resumes: jewel.wheeler@duke.edu/Duke Box 90129, Durham, 27708.

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Two students who have written papers for psychology classes needed to find, copy, and summarize journal articles pertaining to psychotherapy. Call Dr. Talley at 660-1000 We are looking for volunteers to take part in a research study on mind over matter. Please contact Dr. Christine Simmonds on Christine@rhine.org or 919-309-4600 ext. 212 at the Rhine Research Center, 2741 Campus walk avenue, Durham.

WORK STUDY Competitive pay. 2-3 hours/week; occasional evenings. Call 668-1945 or email clight@duke.edu.

MATH TUTORS Are you still looking for a part-time job? Math tutors are needed for the Peer Tutoring Program in Math 25L, 31L, 32L, 32, 41. Undergraduate tutors earn $lO/hr and graduate student tutors earn $l3/hr. The minimum time commitment is 2 hours a week. Print off an application from our website: www.duke.edu/web/skills. PTP Office is 201 Academic Advising Center, east campus, 684-8832.

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THE CHRONIGL ,E

FRIDAY, OCTOBER 1,2004

CLASS OF 'O6 from page 17

amount of time they put into him,” Doherty said. “After his freshman year... I asked him, ‘Lance, pick any school you want to go to,’ and he did say Duke at that time.” Joining him at Duke could be 7-footer Brian Zoubek, a cerebral center with deft footwork. Although he is not the most athletic player in the class, Zoubek—whose aunt attended Duke—could become a potent force in the paint, Telep said. “The thing about Brian Zoubek is getting more mobile, getting faster, and getting a lot quicker inside,” Telep said. “But this is a guy who’s going to be consistent and a reliable scorer inside the paint.”

“[Duke’s coaching staff] thinks he’s theirkind of player, and he fits their mold of being a real competitive, hard-nosed smart player,” Glenbrook North coach Dave Weber said. Rated No. 21 in the class of2006, the 6fobt-5, 175-pound guard has also received a scholarship offer from Illinois, which Weber says is currently recruiting Scheyer the hardest. In addition to stabilizing the backcourt—Duke currently projects havingjust two guards for the 2006-2007 season to Krzyzewski may also attempt to bolster theinsiders.com, According Duke’s frontcourt with a number of talentZoubek’s two favorites are currently Duke ed forward and center prospects. and Stanford, neither of which have One of those recruits, power forward offered him a scholarship. He is currently Lance Thomas, has earned rave reviews for ranked No. 25 in his class. his maturity on and off the court. James Keefe, a 6-foot-9, 200-pound “If he wants something, he’s going to power forward from Santa Margarita, work at it and that goes into the classroom, Calif, also awaits a Duke scholarship offer. too,” said Dan Doherty, Thomas’ former Keefe, who checks in at No. 12 on theinsidcoach at Scotch Plains-Fanwood High ers.com’s class of 2006 rankings, has School. “I’ve had [North Carolina State already attracted interest from high-major coach Herb Sendek] say he’d never seen a programs all over the country. kid work like that.” “He is athletic, kind of long body, he That attitude has propelled Thomas rebounds well—those are the things the into the upper echelon of recruits, with a big-time D-l schools are saying. They say long scholarship offer list that includes he could play at the three or four,” said Arizona, Connecticut, Wake Forest, Santa Margarita high school (Calif.) Kansas and Georgia Tech, which called coach Jerry Deßusk. “The college coaches Doherty the day after the national chamsay he plays every play. He just has a great pionship game to offer him a scholarship. motor.” Because it is so early in the recruiting Despite his long list of suitors, however, several schools do appear to stand out in process, Keefe does not have a preferred his recruitment. collegiate destination, said Deßusk. He “I know Arizona was always his school did, however, mendon that the star power that he rooted for when he was younger, forward would visit Duke if the Blue Devils and I think [he favors] Georgia Tech and extended him a scholarship offer. Wake Forest more because of the JakePoses contributed to this story. —

AJ

MAST/ICON

Brian Zoubek, one of Duke's recruiting targets for the class of 2006, shows off his post moves at Nike Camp.

www.chronicle.duke.edu

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FRIDAY, OCTOBER 1,2004

the chronicle

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The Chronicle Our anniversary presents to The Chronicle: Karen Open bar, maybe tailgate the (thank you!) Liana, visit from Alex A surprise gremlin: Sully, Kelly Broadsheet:. Tracy, Jim Lehrer A new server: The Duke Chronicle New cameras: An alumni fund Kenin!: Shots with Roily:

oxTrot Bill Amend I ALWAYS FoRGET MY LOCKER COMBINATION.

Do WHAT I Do.

I ASSOCIATE EACH NUMBER WITH something easy TO REMEMBER.

MINE IS THE ATOMIC NUMBER OF CARBON LEFT, THE ATOMIC NUMBER OF PHOSPHORUS RIGHT, AND THE ATOMIC NUMBER OF MANGANESE LEFT.

I ALSO ALWAYS FORGET NOT TO DISCUSS THESE THINGS

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!6| FRIDAY,

THE CHRONICLE

OCTOBER 1,2004

The Chronicle The Independent Daily

at

letterstotheeditor

Bush’s message too simplistic

Duke University

Kerry makes strong case Hussein does not prevent him from criticizing Bush’s execution of the war. In particular, he stated that he would have kept the focus on al Qaeda in Afghanistan, while being more patient with building an interpecially pertinent StSTI Qi-:ori3l national coalition. earlier in the day the Bush, in contrast, reUnited States and Iraqi forces launched a major offensive lied heavily on his stump speech accusations of inconsistency, and he was not at the insurgent stronghold of Samarable to effectively adapt to the logical ra. Iraq and the War on Terror dominated the 90-minute debate, in which intricacies that Kerry presented. There are, however, several points Kerry firmly established his position on that Kerry did not clearly explain. On Iraq and presented consistent arguthe question of what would be his critements for his presidential bid. rion for preemptive strikes if he beAfter months of airwave accusacomes the next president, Kerry outtions of flip-flopping and counteratlined a vague notion of “global test” of tacks; recent polls show that the majorwhich drew immediate atof the American is not approval, ity public tacks from Bush. familiar with or holds a negative perEven though Kerry did a better job ception ofKerry’s foreign policy, espea logically persuasive foroudining in its application in cially concerning Iraq. The central challenge facing eign policy, Bush was more effective in communicating his case to the average Kerry in this debate, then, was to conviewer. He kept direct eye contact with vince the public that he has “one conthe television camera—and hence the sistent foreign policy” that would keep audience—while Kerry talked at the America safe —a task that he accommoderator. Bush repeatedly emphaplished with clarity. Much of the “flip-flop” criticism sized the main themes ofhis policy in levied against Kerry is founded on the short, declarative sentences, and he apparent contradiction that while he left strong impressions with catchy slooriginally voted in support of war in gans, such as “it’s hard work” in deIraq, he recendy declared it to be “the scribing Iraq. These two contradictory percepwrong war, in the wrong place, at the tions of the debate stem, in part, from wrong time.” In his defense, Kerry statthe very format of the event, which ed that he has always held one consistent position: Saddam Hussein is a makes it not so much a debate but two great threat to the United States, and simultaneous stump speeches talking the United States should find an effecpast each other. The moderator, Jim tive way to eliminate this threat while Lehrer, asked open-ended, topical questions without incisive follow -ups. improving stability in the Middle East. Kerry argued that there is a right This allowed both candidates to often way to accomplish this goal and there is elude crucial details while falling back on rhetorical flourishes that place style a wrong way. His support of the ultiabove substance. mate objective of eliminating Saddam

Thursday

night President George W. Bush and Sen. John Kerry met in the first of three presidential debates. The topics, foreign policy and homeland security, were es—

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ontherecord Were they not focused on the future ? Were they not looking forward? Our founders were bold and audacious. Let us be true to that heritage. —Trustee emeritus Roy Bostock, Trinity ’62, in his Founder’s Day convocation address. See story, page 1.

Est. 1905

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 GEBHARD, PhotographyEditor DAVIS WARD, City & State Editor MARGAUX KANIS, Health& ScienceEditor MIKE VAN PELT, Sports Managing Editor SOOJIN PARK, Recess Photography Editor MOLLY NICHOLSON, TowerView Managing Editor EMILY ROTBERG, Wire Editor ANDREW COLLINS, Senior Editor 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

PATRICK PHELAN, PhotographyEditor ROBERT SAMUEL, Features Editor STEVE VERES, Health & ScienceEditor JON SCHNAARS,Recess Editor MIKE COREY, TowerViewEditor SEYWARD DARBY, Wire Editor MALAVIKA PRABHU, Staff DevelopmentEditor CHRISTINA NG, SeniorEditor HILARY LEWIS, Recess Senior Editor KIM ROLLER, Recess SeniorEditor RACHEL CLAREMON, CreativeServices Manager SUE NEWSOME, Advertising Director MARY WEAVER, OperationsManager

TheChronicle is published by the Duke Student Publishing Company, Inc., a non-profit corporation independent ofDuke University.The opinions expressed in this newspaper are not necessarily those ofDuke University, its students, faculty, staff, administration or trustees. Unsigned editorials represent the majority view of the editorial board. Columns, letters and cartoons represent the views of the authors. To reach the Editorial Office at 301 Flowers Building, call 684-2663 or fax 684-4696.T0 reach the Business Office at >O3 West Union Building, call 684-3811.T0 reach the Advertising Office at 101 West Union Building call 684-3811 or fax 684-8295. Visit The

ChronicleOnline at http://www.chronicle.duke.edu. 0 2004 The Chronicle, Box 908S8, Durham, N.C 27708. All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced any formwithout the prior, written permission of theBusiness Office. Each individual is entitled to one free copy.

in

Beware The Simple Answer. That should be the slogan for this campaign. In Thursday’s presidential debates, President George W. Bush repeated the same few answers over and over: “Kerry’s a flipTlopper. We should be strong.” Whenever Sen. John Kerry would point out the perfect consistency of his positions or lay out a specific policy to deal with Iran, Sudan or Iraq, Bush would utterly ignore them and keep repeating the same words, as if mere repetition would make them true. Bush’s simple answer on Iraq and Afghanistan is that it’s good to fight the bad guys. But he ignored the complex reality that we only have so many troops and we should have committed them where they were most needed: Catching Osama bin Laden. Bush’s simple answer is that we shouldn’t

let bin Laden dictate our policies. Of course not, but we need to be smart about how we use force. Not every use offeree has the same potential to turn the Arab world against us, which the invasion of Iraq certainly did. The world’s a complex place and Kerry has proposed complex, realistic policies to deal with them. I’m frightened that, if reelected, Bush will keep repeating “stay the course, stay the course” as he steers Iraq and America into the abyss. Not because he’s evil, but because he ignores messy reality. But I’m also certain that American voters are intelligent enough to grasp the complexities of the world and elect the man who can do so. Ben Stark Law ’O6

-

Grad students deserve a voice Stefan Dolgert’s excellent column, “Mr. Brodhead, tear down the wall,” brings up a very important but neglected issue at Duke graduate employee unionization. It is naive to think that the University is doing things in the best interest of the graduate students. Running a university is a political process and requires balancing between interests. Unionization would give graduate students an effective voice in assuring that the balance does not shift too far away from our interests. Even if one argues that a union is unnecessary at Duke right now, the future is much less certain. You don’t build a fire department in response to a fire. You setup the fire —

department in advance so that the necessary tools are in place to put out any fires. But in reality, there are already some fires at

Duke that need to be put out. One salient issue is health insurance. There are no assurances that the burden of increasing health care costs will not fall entirely on graduate students. Duke also has very little incentive to find us the most affordable health insurance plan. Graduate students also don’t get any vision or dental care. All of these costs are paid entirely out-ofpocket. And our pockets are not that deep. TA’s of Duke University: UNITE! Dan Lee Grad ’O9

Keep Brown substance-free Although I commend The Chronicle for supporting the maintenance of substancefree housing on East, the suggestion to create substance-free halls within multiple

dorms will not solve the obstacles that Brown faces. I lived in Brown, and I would first like to challenge the figure that “over 50 percent” of Brownies drink—in my estimate the percentage is far lower. Unless evidence exists, nobody should assume that so many people break the substance-free contract. Also, as Katie Zimmerman noted in her Sept. 24 letter, the fact that a few students discreetly break the contract does not lessen the positive experience for everyone else. As for eliminating the Brown stigma, I feel that scattering substance-free halls throughout East could actually increase the problem. If students within a dorm are singled out as substance-free, other students may still stigmatize them. As the situation stands now, even if a Brownie feels stigmatized, he or she can return to the dorm and feel accepted. Also, instead of experiencing peer pressure not to drink, substance-free students spread throughout East would feel pressured in the

opposite direction. With alcohol use so prevalent on campus, we shouldn’t make substance-free living more difficult for freshmen. Finally, while designating one dorm as substance-free may imply that the rest of the campus is not, eliminating Brown will not change the reality that many fresh-

men do drink. Instead of scattering the substance-free students and eliminating the close-knit support network that we enjoyed in Brown, I advocate the creation of another substancefree dormitory on East. To the best of my knowledge this would not increase-Residential Life and Housing Services costs, and it would allow many more of the students who request substance-free housing to be accommodated. The fact that more students would participate in the program could have the added benefit of decreasing the stigma. Living in Brown was one of the best parts ofmy Duke experience so far, and personally, I believe that as many students as possible should have that option.

Stephanie Reitz Trinity ’O6

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

columns. The Chronicle will not publish anonymous or form letters or letters that are promotional in nature. The Chronicle reserves the right to edit letters and guest columns for length, clarity and style and the right to withhold letters based on the discretion of the editorial page editor.

Direct submissions to: Editorial Page Department The Chronicle Box 90858, Durham, NC 27708 Phone: (919) 684-2663 Fax: (919) 684-4696 E-mail: letters®chronicle.duke.edu


THE CHRONICLE

FRIDAY, OCTOBER 1, 2004 127

Yes, I'll have a Diet Sprite

When

I think of everything that has made me happy that corrupted the students of a decade ago. This has even last three and a half years, several things gotten better since my freshman year, when there were frathe in ternities that threw parties on campus that didn’t get brostand out in my mind. Family Guy on DVD. Reading Catch-22 for the fourth time. The “Bushisms” poster I ken up by midnight. Hell, there were fraternities back then. I’m glad they’re gone. bought in London that was a constant reminder that AmerThe situation we have now is ever so much better. Instead icans were (and still are) represented abroad by someone who cannot speak English and is therefore fluent in exactly of making students drink on campus and forcing them to zero languages. But the best thing, hands down, has been walk back to their dorms in relative safety, the administration has given any renegade who wants to drink the opporthe fantastic and gradual manner in which underage drinktunity to leave campus and choose their own adventure to ing has been removed from this campus. get back. The number of alcohol-related incidents on camA decade-old Chronicle on display in front of the circupus has decreased and our underage unlation desk in Perkins Library announces the dergraduates have developed a better sense University’s decision to eliminate those awful of community with the city of Durham. Thursday night kegs. According to the article, But I don’t think the University is going Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday night kegs far enough. Forcing the social scene off camhad been eliminated in the years prior to 1994. Sounds like a trend. Some students pus is a cure for the symptom, not the disease. To really get to the bottom of problem, voiced their concern that the decision by the to find the solution, Duke needs to ban administration would unnecessarily interfere with their social lives. Nonsense! You don’t drinking altogether. Get rid of beer on food need drinking to have a good time! You just points (it’s killing me anyway). Do not allow eric vivier social gatherings of any kind that need optimism and butterflies and exclamalead calmer than you are to alcohol consumption. Bum allmight Beirut tation points! bles. Get some pickle activists to start a new Can you imagine how detrimental it would be to our lives if we were to have Thursday night kegs on the prohibition movement. Turn the campus trend into a nationquad? Or Friday, Saturday or Sunday night kegs, which have al trend. Set an example for the rest of the world. Because, Duke, it is up to us to prevent the spread ofalcosince disappeared? Luckily, we no longer have any sort of hol alcohol distribution to There was on and off campus. Forget about preventing crime or sexweekly undergraduates. free beer at prom (or the inauguration dance or whatever it ual assault or eating disorders. Alcohol is a toxin to anyone was), but that was a one-time thing, and it was only for alum- and everyone and leads to terrible and unnatural behaviors, ni, administrators (I saw you in line for refills a few times, like a mother beating her son at beer pong in Kryzewskiville Mr. President) and those who could get a wristband. Minors, and trash talking for hours afterward. We must stop this awful, of course, were prevented from celebrating. And the senior awful drug from infecting our nation’s youth. I don’t care that picnic had beer too, but thankfully that ran out before you can vote and die for your country at 18. It doesn’t matter everyone could get a second glass, at about the same time that the people who raised the drinking age to 21 could drink at 18 and probably forgot that when they were in college they that the 25 or 30 free T-shirts were taken by the first 10 peoneeded to have a few brews now and again to dull the pain of ple who cut in line. Weekend nights on the Main Quad are so much more a badly written paper or a failed test. All right, I’ve had enough of this. Who’s thirsty? conducive to studying now than they must have been in years past. A calm silence has replaced all the partying and Eric Vivier is a Trinity senior. fraternizing and general widespread campus debauchery

America’s lost respect

As

a result of the American military,” President George come the rationale for everything we’re doing, yet it’s hard W. Bush declared last week, “the Taliban is no longer to find anyone not beholden to the administration who believes that the election, if it happens at all, will be anything in existence.” It’s unclear whether Bush misspoke, or whether he realmore than a sham. Yet Bush and his congressional allies seem to have ly is that clueless. But his claim was in keeping with his reelection strategy, demonstrated once again in Thursday learned nothing from their failures. If Bush is returned to night’s debate: A president who has done immense damage office, there’s every reason to think that they will continue to America’s position in the world hopes to brazen it out by along the same disastrous path. We can already see one example of this when we look at claiming that failure is success. Three years ago, the United States was both feared and the question of torture. Abu Ghraib has largely vanished from U.S. political discussion, largely because the adminisrespected: feared because ofits military supremacy, respected because of its traditional commitment to tration and its congressional allies have been so effective at covering up high-level democracy and the rule oflaw. Since then, Iraq has demonstrated the liminvolvement. But both the revelations and pdlll krugman its of U.S. military power, and has tied up the cover-up did terrible damage to Amerguest commentary ica , s mora amhority . To much of that power in a grinding guerrilla th of the world, America looks like a place where war. This has emboldenedregimes that pose a real threat. Three years ago, would North Korea have felt so top officials condone and possibly order the torture ofinnofree to trumpet its conversion of fuel rods into bombs? cent people, and suffer no consequences. But even more important is the loss of respect. After the What we need is an effort to regain our good name. official rationales for the Iraq war proved false, and after What we’re getting instead is a provision, inserted by conAanerica failed to make good on its promise to foster gressional Republicans in the intelligence reform bill, to ledemocracy in either Afghanistan or Iraq—and, not least, galize “extraordinary rendition”—a euphemism for sending after Abu Ghraib—the world no longer believes that we are terrorism suspects to countries that use torture for interrothe good guys gation. This would institutionalize a Kafkaesque system Let’s talk for a minute about Afghanistan, which adminunder which suspects can be sent, at the government’s istration officials tout as a success story. They rely on the whim, to Egypt or Syria or Jordan—and to fight such a public’s ignorance; Voters, they believe, don’t know that move, it’s up to the suspect to prove that he’ll be tortured even though the United States promised to provide on arrival. Just what we need to convince other countries of Afghanistan with both security and aid during its transition our commitment to the rule of law. to democracy, it broke those promises. It has allowed the Most Americans aren’t aware of all this. The sheer scale of Bush’s foreign policy failures insulates him from its politcountry to slide back into warlordism—and allowed the Taliban to make a comeback. ical consequences: Voters aren’t ready to believe how badly These days, Bush and other administration officials often the war in Iraq is going, let alone how badly America’s talk about the 10.5 million Afghans who have registered to moral position in the world has deteriorated. vote in this month’s election, citing the figure as proof that But the rest of the world has already lost faith in us. In democracy is making strides after all. They count on the fact, let me make a prediction: If Bush gets a second term, public not to know, and on reporters not to mention, that we will soon have no democracies left among our allies the number of people registered considerably exceeds all no, not even Tony Blair’s Britain. Bush will be left with the estimates of the eligible population. What they call evidence support of regimes that don’t worry about the legalities—of democracy on the march is actually evidence of largeregimes like Vladimir Putin’s Russia scale electoral fraud. It’s the same story in Iraq: The January election has bePaul Krugman is a syndicated columnist.

f

„„,

My resume sucks

Apparently,

fall has arrived: The leaves are come down, the days are getting shorter, and seniors are scrambling for jobs like it’s their... uh... job. (Wow, that cliche didn’t work so well.) I was wandering through the Bryan Center last week, in the midst of the Career Fair, in quite the blur. I thought there were going to be Ferris wheels and funnel cake. How wrong I was. For us liberal arts kids, it’s a bit of a depressing time, moving from booth to booth and saying, ‘Thanks, but I don’t think i-banking is really for me, sorry.” I gradually got depressed as the afternoon dragged on and people tossed about their job offers like embossed confetti—lighting this semester’s books on fire on the BC walkway in celebration of their newfound freedom from academics. Finally, after being turned down gendy by innumerable men and women in suits (note to self: Tunneling,’’while technically an “action verb,” does not work well with the resume) I stumbled upon a recruiter who looked interested. Dropping off my resume, they promised a call within the next few days, and sure enough, I quickly received word that I was exacdy the sort of motivated, hardworking individual they were looking for. So, look for me next year! I’ll be taking your orders at the Armadillo Grill. Duke students w?< are masters at supermatt detura ficiality. Need proof? When’s sorority ru... for good or for awesome excuse me, I think that “happy pressure-free non-discriminating selection time” is the official term for it now. No amount of Prada-armed freshwomen can top the sheer banality of job-hunting, though. A friend of mine pointed out the “top 10 interviewing tips” from The Chronicle the other day, mentioning correcdy that it was a little ironic that they made such a big deal out of being unique and original. Who are we being unique from? The 600 other kids who were reading the same tips that morning, I guess. All right, employers, I’ll call your bluff. You want unique? How about I head into my first interview with my “Meat Loaf World Tour” Tshirt on? (Don’t laugh. I actually own that shirt.) The job hunt is a mundane, idiotic, facetious process. It’s also going to determine most of the rest ofyour life. Sweating yet? This summer, my friends were doing memos for Goldman, engineering software for Bristol-Myers and working for the Federal Reserve Board. I was driving a forklift. Not kidding. I was originally substitute teaching at my old high school, but then my last summer internship came through, and I decided that working with boxes was much preferable to working with children. (Boxes don’t give you any lip.) Technically, my internship was in logistics (shout-out and free advertising to Ryder “We’re Not Just Big Yellow Trucks Anymore” Logistics), which is a fancy term for getting things from one place to another without anybody losing their job in the process. They thought, however, that it’d be good for me to do time at one of their warehouses so I could see the entire length of the supply chain. For two weeks, I got up at 6 a.m. every day, got into a car, fought through Turnpike traffic for an hour and ended up in a telecommunications warehouse in the middle of nowhere. It was repetitive scanning boxes, filling orders and working the inventory systems. I got home late and was usually so tired I went straight to bed. And you know what? I had a blast. I learned Filipino profanity, made some good friends with the guys working there and got the aforementioned forklift license (I still keep it in my wallet.) At first, I blanched a little at the prospect of warehouse work. Turns out it was the best two weeks ofmy sum-

starting

to

mer.

I guess my point is this: The job hunt is stupid and superficial, but that doesn’t mean you have to be superficial also. I met more interesting people in two weeks in an industrial town than I have in four years at Duke. You may not be able to be a banker when you get out of Duke, but it’s not that bad if you’ve got to setde for being unique. Matt DeTura is a Trinity senior.


!81 FRIDAY, OCTOBER 1,2004

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Controversies pave way for independence by

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filiated with the University. Rather, the Duke community’s daily source of news is the product of Duke Student Publishing Company, a $1.3 million non-profit, incorporated firm, whose president is current Chronicle Editor Karen Hauptman. The decision for The Chronicle to become an independent company in 1993 was the final result of a series of steps to sever its financial and influential ties with the University. Prior to 1993, a number of Chronicle editors worried the newspaper was too closely linked to the University and thus Duke could institute severe repercussions if inaccuracies were published. Past editors said University administrators had intervened inappropriately when outsiders interpreted the content of The Chronicle to represent the University’s beliefs. In the 19605, the publication of The Chronicle was halted mid-press for several days, and the editor was forced to resign after attempting to publish a parody of the nativity scene. “We knew there was the threat that if we did something unpopular, there would be retribution,” said Rocky Rosen, Trinity ’BB, who was editor of The Chronicle and is now the assistant managing editor for the Durham Herald-Sun. The Chronicle began its move toward independence in 1989 when it refused Duke’s annual $lOO,OOO subsidy and replaced the foregone funds with revenue from advertisements. Although this early move toward incorporation set the ball rolling for the newspaper to unafFiliate with Duke in 1993, the publication of a controversial advertisement Nov. 5, 1991 brought the issue of independence to a head. ‘The ad was the final straw that really pushed us with going ahead with incorporation,” said Rosen, who was an initial member of the DSPC board. The full-page ad by Holocaust revisionist Bradley Smith, who said the Holocaust never occurred, led to a major backlash

not only The Chronicle but also the University itself. Reactions ranged from a

against

flood of vehement letters directed at University officials to the withdrawal of financial support by some alumni. Yet the intention of this advertisement was to exert first amendment rights, said Ann Heimberger, editor of The Chronicle in 1991. “It is not a newspaper’s job to determine what the public should not be exposed t0... or to determine what sort of negative events an article... may generate,” she wrote in an “editor’s column” before the advertisement appeared in print. The turmoil resulting from Smith’s advertisement reopened the question of what type of involvement Duke should hold within The Chronicle’s infrastructure, and editors decided that the time was ripe to become independent from the University. “I understand the paper’s motives behind [becoming independent],” said John Bumess, senior vice president for public affairs and government relations, who along with then-PresidentKeith Brodie also advocated The Chronicle’s right to publish the advertisement in 1991. Nonetheless, severing its legal ties with the University has not fully prevented The Chronicle from dealing with issues of journalistic freedom. Gregg Pessin, editor in 2000 and Trinity ’Ol, noted that The Chronicle faced attempted intervention by University administration despite its independent status. He said Duke’s actions interfered with the publication’s goal of making decisions entirely independently of University interests. Pessin was apprehensive about University repercussions when The Chronicle published a controversial reparations ad by David Horowitz in 2001, as Duke considered pulling its advertisements from The Chronicle. Such an action would have compromised the financing and thus the publication of The Chronicle, Pessin said. “The Chronicle is one of the few remaining open forms of academic discussion and freedom at Duke,” Pessin said. “[Complete] independence? I think it’s a

continuing process.”

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Duke students protest The Chronicle's decision to publish David Horowitz's advertisement in 2001.


100th Anniversary

The Chronicle

Friday, October 1,2004 3 •

Clay Felker blazes trail for'new journalism' by Tracy Ke THE CHRONICLE

Before the likes of Vanity Fair and People

Magazine, there was New York Magazine, im-

mortalizing the antics of the movers and shakers of New York society and capturing the essence of a whole generation ofyoung Manhattenites in all their social, political and cultural savvy during the 19705. Thirty-five years ago, Clay Felker, Trinity ’5l and former editor ofThe Chronicle, founded New York with the hopes of making it the talk of the town —establishing what the upper echelon, and those who wished to be like them, “should and shouldn’t want.” New York staff writer Michael Wolff reflected on the young Felker in a 2004 story, calling him an aspiring “mogul” with “over-the-top ambition... overflowing and loquacious.” “My city is a city of ambition. Because New York is so expensive... you can’t live there and work unless you are ambitious,” said Felker, who also wrote for Sports Illustrated and Esquire Magazine before creating the genre of the “city” magazine with New

York. “I wanted to focus on one thing— l didn’t want to make the magazine about the nation; I was interested in New York City.” What made New York this “buzz-worthy,” must-read cultural phenomenon was Felker’s unique aesthetic and literary vision for a magazine that captured the fantasy of what was supposed to be New York living. From the best to the worst, the fanciest restaurants to the cheapest eats, New York helped set the bar. “We were establishing the best way to live in New York City for a whole range of ‘consumers,’” Felker said. ‘We focused on people who loved the city and those who hated it.... We suggested that some of the elected officials should be put in jail. We weren’t just a sales magazine. We SEE FELKER ON PAGE 10

New York Magazine, the original "city" magazine, was the brainchild of Clay Felker, Trinity'sl.

eiS’Tf

SPECIAL TO THE CHRONICLE

Former Chronicle Editor Clay Felker now heads the magazine program at the Univ. ofCalifornia at Berkeley.

Popular sportswriter remembers Chronicle years by

Chrissde Gorman THE CHRONICLE

Upon entering Duke,

John Feinstein did not have high

aspirations. Like many college-age males, he simply want-

ed to drink and meet girls. Yet, the native New Yorker also had a keen love for sports—from a passion for his hometown Knicks and Mets to a swimming ability that almost sent him into the pool for the Blue Devils. After a broken ankle ended a potential collegiate swimming career, Feinstein was left with a lot of free time and nothing to do until a hallmate told him that The Chronicle was a “great place to meet girls,” Feinstein said. That fall, Feinstein started as a writer, and 31 years later, the now be has not stopped writing. Feinstein has written several bestselling sports books from March to Madness, which chronicled the ACC 1996-97 basketball season, to his latest, SPECIAL TO THE CHRONICLE Caddy for Life, which profiles Bruce Ed John Feinstein, who began his sports journalism career reporting on wards, a caddy who recently died ofLo fencing at Duke, said he joined The Chronicle "to meet girls." Gehrig's disease.

He notes that his career has taken him full circle. When he began at The Chronicle, he was writing about fencing —a non-revenue sport about which he knew nothing—but wanted to cover basketball and football. Now, Feinstein finds less well-known subjects to be ofinterest. “I have covered all the glamorous events,” Feinstein said. “I am looking to get away from glamour and glitz. I want to write about athletes not in the spotlight.” Feinstein’s Chronicle experience led to an internship with The Washington Post upon graduation. He served as a police reporter, relying on journalism skills acquired as a three-year associate managing editor at Duke. Although Feinstein made his name as a sports writer, [N

ON PAGE 10

>hn Feinstein, frinity 77, is a prolific, best-selling .portswriter.


4

«

The Chronicle

100th Annive

Friday, October 1,2004

Convicted murderer sought truth as editor by

Leann Widmark THE CHRONICLE

Duke student. Sigma Nu fraternity brother. Editor of The Chronicle. Convicted murderer. Although his name is now associated largely with the murder of his wife, the recently convicted Michael Peterson had a life at Duke before he even met her. Much of that life took place in the office of The Chronicle. Elected as editor in April 1964, Peterson hoped to revitalize the paper and make it more readable. “If nothing else, I can promise a more vital and dominant newspaper; hopefully, a better and more beneficial one,” he said. Peterson wanted to print the truth—even if that truth was controversial. As editor, he “wanted the paper to be something of consequence,” Donald Bellman, former exchange editor, said. “He SPECIAL TO THE CHRONICLE was willing to tackle something the newspaper to acencouraged 1965,Michael editorofThe Chronicle Peterson in that was difficult and needed to As be worked through. If he had tively participate in dialogue involved with the Civil Rights movement. something to say, he would say it.” This direct approach probably work in the Civil Rights move- The Chronicle. In a column titled bothered some people, but “most ment and his desire to have the “Freedom from offensiveness? of the staff regarded him fairly newspaper, in his words, “be read- Nah.” Peterson wrote: “The tyranable and its opinions valued.” ny of political correctness must well,” former Assistant to the Editor Jay Creswell said. However, Peterson continued with his end. You do not have the right to wridng career after earning his silence those who offend you. Creswell did admit having personal conflicts with Peterson. diploma. After returning to live in Those who think they should enthusiastic Durham, he wrote columns for exist in an inoffensive world are “Peterson was an apguy,” Donald Manning, former The Chronicle and the Durham idiots. .So there!” managing editor, said. “A good Herald-Sun. He also published two proach was characteristic ofPeternovels, A Tim of War in 1990 and A son’s writing throughout his life, guy to work for.” ludm h time at Duke Although some of Peterson’s Bitter Peace in 1995. Peterson’s working at The fellow Chronicle alumni were Chronicle. ness to say an unaware of his recent conviction, those contacted all comthing carried mented that Peterson was, as over from his Michael Peterson, Manning said, “not a guy you college year; former editor ofThe would think would end up murand is apparen Chronicle, is also a dering his wife.” Rather, he was in his more published novelist. remembered for his columns more widely cent '

:

SPECIAL TO THE CHRONICLE

Duke graduate Judy Woodruff continues to forge a path among the politicians in Washington, D.C., as the anchor of CNN's Inside Politics.

Non-Chronicle grad succeeds by

Sarah Ball

THE CHRONICLE

If there is one thing that Judy Woodruff, Trinity ’6B, knows how to do, it’s how to break the mold. As a current anchor for CNN’s Inside Politics and a career broadcast journalist, Woodruff has resisted being categorized as just another perky blonde Georgia peach posing for the camera. “I’ve always believed that women have to work at least as hard as men, if not harder, to reap the benefits of success,” Woodruff said, speaking from the Miami outpost of the first presidential debate. Woodruff’s interest in politics began at Meredith College and blossomed after she transferred to Duke. Her political inclinations took shape at the

TY

University with positions as a student government representative, an active member of the student union and a two-year Capitol Hill intern. Melding her political savvy however, with journalism, from Woodruffs more sprang limited options as a woman than personal choice, she said. “During my summer internships, I thought I was going to come back to Washington and work—l just fell in love,” Woodruff said. “But the universal message to women—even those with law degrees —was to be careful, that job opportunities just weren’t there.” Described by her professors as having had an “insatiable curiosity” in the classroom, Woodruffs SEE WOODRUFF ON PAGE 10

lES


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The Chronicle

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The Chronicle

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THE CHRONICLE

SPECIAL TO THE CHRONICLE

While Alison Stuebe and Geoff Green were co-University editors at The Chronicle, they realized they had more in common than a passion for journalism.

Love in a time of Chronicle

The Chronicle plays matchmaker for editors yearning for'extracurriculars' by

Saidi Chen

THE CHRONICLE

The thrill of seeing your name in print, the sense of community that comes with being part of a well-respected campus organization, finding sleep-deprived friends who understand what a nutgraph is. These are all good reasons for Duke students to become involved in The Chronicle, but to this list another reason must be added; Join The Chronicle to find true love. “I owe all my happiness to The Chronicle,” former University editor Geoff Green, Trinity ’95, said laughing. Green’s marriage to his co-University Editor and former Editor Alison Stuebe, Trinity ’95, is one of numerous examples of successful

relationships between staff members of the newspaper. Whether chalked up to the non-existence of any other social life or the deep friendships that form between those who work for the paper, many former editors admit they probably would never have met their significant others if not for The Chronicle. “I think perhaps [relationships develop because of] lack of other opportunity,” speculated former Editor Kathleen Sullivan, Trinity ’B9, who is married to former University Editor Dan Berger, Trinity ’B9. “Because once you’re really involved, a lot ofyour free time gets eaten up with the paper. Whatever SEE LOVE ON PAGE 11

Although The Chronicle has seen its fair share of scandal and controversy over the past hundred years, one accusation it has avoided so far is nepotism. “My brother [former Editorial Page Editor Ken Reinker, Trinity ’o3] told me that I shouldn’t become involved in The Chronicle, that I would regret it in the long run,” Tracy Reinker, current editorial page editor said. “My brother likes to overdramatize things and even though he might say he regretted what he did, I would say he probably liked it a lot.” Associate Photography Editor Laura Beth Douglas was also was warned by her father Bob Douglas, Trinity ’73, who was a staff writer during his time at Duke. “My dad was excited that I joined the paper, but he said in retrospect that he spent too much time [in the office] and not enough time studying,” said Douglas, a junior. Former regular staff writer Rebecca Christie, Trinity ’95, gave more comforting advice to her younger brother. “I told Nick that The Chronicle is a great thing to be involved with,” Christie said. “If you work really hard, you’re going to have something to show for it... plus it’s fun!” Brody Greenwald, Trinity ’Ol, sports editor remembers feeling hesitant about joining The Chronicle as a transfer student from Tufts. “I didn’t want to go somewhere where I would be Jason’s little brother.” he said. But a friendly face in the office helped him fit in. “I remember meeting Roily Miller when Jason was at Duke, and he was an East Coast father figure to both of us,” Brody said. Ken Reinker admitted to giving ..

SPECIAL TO THE CHRONICLE

Former Chronicle staffers Mary Carmichael and Tim Millington got marriedthis summer at Duke.

SEE FAMILY ON PAGE 11

Tar Holes to Chomicles: a rivalry in print by

Liz Williams

THE CHRONICLE

“Our two men’s basketball teams are once again meeting on the court. Although we at the [Daily Tar Heel] hope that the best team will win, that does not always happen given Book’s record of cheating, bribery, Mafia ties, brutality, falling down... and general unsportsmanlike conduct.” Is this treachery, you wonder? Perhaps an unheard-of string of typos? An obscene example of Tar Heel bribery? The answer to all of these questions is no. On the contrary, this quote—straight from a letter to The Chronicle by former Daily Tar Heel Editor Kim Minaugh—is merely one of many examples of the ever-popular newspaper rivalry between Duke and the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. A long-standing tradition, the rivalry centers around a bet on the outcome of the first Duke-UNC men’s basketball game of the season. Every year, the editor of The Chronicle makes a bet with the SEE RIVALRY ON PAGE 11

The deep-seeded basketball rivalry between Duke University and the University ofNorth Carolina at Chapel Hill continues in theform ofannual bets between The Chronicle and the Daily Tar Heel.


100th Anniversary

The Chronicle

Friday, October 1, 2004 7 •

Legacy of former editor remains alive by

Ryan McCartney THE CHRONICLE

Matt always carried two books, former high school teacher and debate coach Eric DiMichele remembered. Just in case he finished one book, there was another one at hand. Matt Sclafani, editor-in-chiefand consummate reporter for The Chronicle, lost his one-year battle with leukemia Feb. 7, 1992. Today, his name floods the walls of 301 Flowers Building, and his legacy is celebrated annually through the prestigious Matt Sclafani Award, which honors yearly a reporter who shows the same integrity as Sclafani once did. Twelve years after his death, The Chronicle remembers Sclafani, a young man who courageously sought the truth, and a former reporter who now stands as the very model of journalistic courage. Arriving as a freshman, Matt immediately found a home in The Chronicle. Rocky Rosen, the editor of the newspaper during Sclafani’s freshman year, remembered the young writer. “There are certain freshman who just stick out as being really energetic and aggressive and sort of newsroom rats,” Rosen said. “Matt was definitely one of those.” Nicknamed “Weasel,” Matt ascended The Chronicle ladder quickly, gaining the respect of his peers. He became editor in 1990. Matt took the job seriously. He encouraged his writers to search out the truth, even if it was hard to come by. He was skeptical, and he was curious. Michael Saul, a freshman writer when Sclafani was editor and the first winner of the Matt Sclafani Award, recalled, “Matt stood for journalistic courage. He was defiant, and he stood up to authority.” In 1990, Matt

Matt took his job seriously, but he certainly enjoyed life.

published an article unfavorably portraying Stanley Fish, a controversial former Duke law professor and chairman of the English department. When Fish challenged the young editor, Matt stood by his story and his staff. The truth preceded everything else. Matt was not afraid of confrontation and embraced the complaints of his readership because complaints meant that he was doing his job right. Sclafani was truly a debater at heart. Maybe that was what made him such a good editor. The Chronicle enabled him to search and to question. But there was a wittiness that sprung from this quest. There was a deeper love of argument. “He enjoyed a good debate, though he usually thought he was right, and he often was,” said Jason Greenwald, a fledgling writer when Matt was editor. In the editboard meetings, heated debates inevitably dissolved into futile arguments over who would get the last onion bagel! Matt took his job seriously, but he certainly enjoyed life. One evening, while watching a Duke basketball game, co-worker Erin Sullivan noticed lumps on Matt’s neck and face. Over the fall break of his senior year, he was diagnosed with cancer. Ann Heimberger, Matt’s girlfriend and fellow worker at the time, was there. “It was the only time that I saw Matt scared,” she said. “After that, he handled the disease like a superhero. He made it possible for the rest of us.” By the spring, Matt could no longer work for his beloved Chronicle. The cancer soon spread to his liver. In his final days, however, Matt maintained an unfaltering sense of humor. SEE SCLAFANI ON PAGE

11

Front to back. Chronicle tracks a rising Duke 1911: First erected in Washington Duke Building was the only campus building to have ever been lost in a fire. The blaze was first spotted on January 4, at 2:50 a.m., when flames began bursting through third floor windows. Shortly after, senior H.R. Hunter, who had been sleeping in his room on the second floor of the building, sounded the alarm. By the time emergency assistance arrived, the entire three-story building, was entirely immersed in flames. Valued at about $lOO,OOO at the time, the Washington Duke Building contained the executive and administrative offices, various classrooms, and served as a dormitory for about 60 students on the third floor. No one was killed during the fire, and most students had plenty of time to evacuate the building.

1969: At 8 a.m. Feb. 13, 1969, 70 of Duke’s black students began an occupation of the Central Records office in the Allen Building. They presented a list of demands, and the protesters threatened to bum the records if these demands were not met. This threat was later withdrawn prior to the demonstrators’ departure from the building. Ten hours later, the occupation ended peacefully. Meanwhile, a crowd of 1,500 curious Duke students had gathered in the quad during the occupation, and the onlookers remained even after the Afro-American students had vacated the building. The Durham police moved in on the crowd and began tear-gassing teachers and students alike. Chaos ensued as people fled the quad, while others retaliated by smashing a police car. A number of students were injured during the frenzy, some from inhaling gas, some from being trampled as they fled the scene.

1963:An announcement by Provost R. Taylor Cole informed the Duke community that the Class of 1967 would include black students, the first such students to enroll at the University. Two of the students were admitted to Trinity College and the remaining three to the women’s college. The undergraduate colleges were the last to admit AfricanAmericans students. Two year prior to the announcement, the trustees voted to admit black students to the graduate and professional schools. This surprise event of integration ended a 125-year period of racial segregation at Duke University.

1991: After eight trips to the Final Four, Duke men’s basketball finally won its first national championship, beating Kansas, 72-65. Duke never trailed the Jayhawks for the duration of the 40-minute contest. The players accredited their victory to a powerful defense, which shut down Kansas’ usually explosive scorers. The Jayhawks never trailed by much, but simply could not gain the momentum necessary to overthrow the dominant Blue Devils. The celebration began as soon as the buzzer sounded and lasted long into the night. A few students shed all of their clothes and ran naked around the bonfire in the parking lot outside Cameron. The singing, dancing, and drinking lasted late into the night, and the next morning the entire quad was decorated in toilet paper.

1967: It all began when the National Mobilization Committee to End the War in Vietnam organized a peaceful rally at the Lincoln Memorial in Washington, D.C. The protest attracted between 50,000 and 100,000 people to the area. As soon as the rally finished, guards stormed the protest, unsheathing bayonets. The Chronicle assistant managing editor attended the demonstration with a group of current and former Duke students, and he described the scene as “unreal.” As he and the rest of the protesters were sitting on the front mall of the Pentagon, soldiers began to close in. If a demonstrator refused to move, he was grabbed and clubbed repeatedly or hit with the butt of a rifle, and then arrested. An estimated 30 people were injured due to aggressive techniques by the guards.

1992: Ricky Lament Coffin, a 23-year-old convict, escaped from Guilford Countyjail in High Point, N.C., on Tuesday, Oct. 27. As prisoners were being loaded into a van headed for court, Coffin managed to unfasten his restraints, allowing him to grab a gun from a lockbox. He stole a car at gunpoint, after which the State Highway Patrol chased him to Durham, where Coffin crashed the car on Morrene Road. Coffin then hurried on foot toward Duke Hospital, where he made his final stand. For nearly two hours, the convict held four individuals hostage within the hospital until about 3:25 p.m., when a Durham policeman shot Coffin directly in the head. Though thoroughly shaken up, none of the hostages were injured during the incident.


8

Friday,

October 1, 2004

100th Annivei

The Chronicle

Young alumni leave The Chronicle, go to pros by

Julie

Stolberg THE CHRONICLE

Devin Gordon was used to being in charge. After a year of telling a 100-person staff what to do, he underwent self-termed “post-college whiplash” compiling upcoming movie and music lists as an intern for Newsweek magazine. Among young journalists breaking into the trade, however, Gordon’s story is unique considering how quickly he has gained professional success as a general editor for the magazine. Among recent Chronicle alumni pursuing journalism, however, internships at papers in medium sized cities are a common starting point. Former Editor Dave Ingram, Trinity ’O3, said he opted to work for a smaller paper where he immediately had the opportunity to write instead of doing research for a more prestigious paper. Ingram is covering state politics in Raleigh for the Winston-Salem Journal, one of about 50 papers at which he applied to work after graduation. “I’m covering the governor’s race right now,” he said. “I get to quiz the governor and people who want to be governor about various issues in North Carolina. It’s our job as the capital press to hold these people accountable for what they’re saying. To me, there’s no greater responsibility in journalism than to hold leaders accountable.” Another former Chronicle managing editor who began his career in journalism in-state is Rich Rubin, who spent the summer after his graduation learning the trade at The Charlotte Observer. Six months after submitting applications, The Observer offered Rubin, Trinity ’Ol, a position on a temporary basis. “I think tn

o

me having a story,” Gordon said. “We don’t have a lot of space, so every week it’s a fight for the best stuff. And other times it will come fast and furious.” Gordon saw the most difficult part of starting out as the change from having complete control over The Chronicle’s content with “an environment where if I’m lucky, I’ll get to write a caption in a year,” he said. What helped Gordon to gain more responsibility at Newsweek was his story on Tiger Woods that was featured on ■Newsweek'?, cover four years ago. The piece looked at Woods, who was unwilling to give interviews at the time, from the perspective of former ueber successful athletes in other arenas. Gordon was given the story because he pitched the SPECIAL TO THE CHRONIC! idea and the editors liked it. The story was Chronicle alumni continue to hone their journalism skills at professional publications across the nation. well received by members of the media, particularly Oprah Winfrey. When the dayto some extent they wanted me to prove Being good isn’t good enough,” she said. time talk show giant read excerpts from Gordon was qualified—and lucky Gordon’s article during Tiger Woods’ apmyself,” he said. Following the initial internship period, enough to land a highly coveted position. pearance on the show, it “was just like one Rubin has continued with The Observer ‘You’re ready to go, you want to prove of the most flattering movements of my for the past three years and has been asexacdy what you can do,” Gordon said. “I life,” said Gordon. Gordon sees his situation as unusual, signed progressively more involved beats was lucky because I didn’t have to wait to cover. After a couple years covering city nearly as long as some people have to wait. since entering as an intern and ascending governments in the Charlotte suburbs, That’s easily the most frustrating thing, but to editorial status is uncommon. “I think Rubin is now a city hall reporter. I’d say everybody experiences it.” I’ll be at Newsweek for a while. I’m doing Rachel Cohen, Trinity ’OO, started off as Gordon, who now covers movies, sports, now what I was hoping I’d be doing in 10 an intern sportswriter for The Dallas music and other features for Newsweek, fol- years. They let me write about all the Morning News, during which time she covlowed his senior year as Editor of The things I care about when I’m not at work,” ered high school sports in one of the Chronicle with a summer internship at said Gordon. The Chronicle alumni journalists all paper’s suburban bureaus. She now covers Newsweek, a job where he says he “hung on Texas A&M football. Cohen recalls feeling for dear life.” stressed the importance of their initial exconfused second semester senior year, beSwitching from newspaper journalism periences at The Chronicle in their jourcause she did not know how to find a job to magazine journalism made sense for nalistic careers and in developing their in the selective field of sports journalism. Gordon, who prefers the genre’s emphasis writing skills. “When I was editing the “There are definitely more qualified on writing style. Additionally, the transipaper, that was the best job I’ll ever have, tion also brought changes in his story turnand that’s in the context of how much I people out there than there are positions. You have to be a little bit lucky.... out. “A couple of weeks can go by without love my job now,” said Gordon.

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The Chronicle

100th Anniversary

Friday, October 1, 2004

9

Decoding the jargon of making newspapers by

Emily Rotberg THE CHRONICLE

Imagine: you are a top Chronicle editor. You’ve designed your schedule to accommodate 60-plus hours a week spent in a dirty, poorly-ventilated newspaper office. You take two classes a semester and spend more time in 301 Flowers Building than in your dorm room, more time with other staffers than with your friends, more time on the phone with Larry Moneta than with your parents. But you love it—the reporting, writing, editing, layout and the license to snoop into any comer of University business. You love the front-row seats at basketball games in Cameron, the automatic invitations to any important University event, the controversies. Most of all, you love having a hand in the one thing Duke students read every day.

Welcome to The Chronicle Before you start your new life, there’s some newspaper jargon you should know: Budget: That special time of day when articles are due. Every afternoon, Chronicle news department heads and reporters with stories gather in the lounge and figure out what’s going in the next day’s paper. Reporters describe their stories and sources and get space allotments in the form 0f... Column Inches: Length indicator used in newspapers instead of word count. One column inch is typically equal to about 42 words. If reporters write too long or too short, it gets taken care of during the... Copy-edit (abbreviated CE): This is when editors scrutinize stories for content, readability, grammar and spelling. Often a harrowing experience for new writers, the

Former editors reminisce compiled by

copy-edit goes toward making what you write look good. Every story is CE’d at least twice, so after the CE-1 comes the... CE-2: Second copy-editor. Grammar-obsessed, and makes sure you don’t get sued. The only articles that don’t go through the full CE process come off the... Wire: Source of most news not written by Chronicle staffers. Every night, an associate editor selects stories from the Associated Press newswire based on what’s important for the Duke community beyond its walls. Wire always appears on the second page and sometimes elsewhere in the paper. Yes, there is a new quote every day. Editboard: Twice-weekly meeting where editors debate relevant campus issues that make up the daily staff editorial. There must be at least six people with “editor” in their

title to make the forthcoming editorial official. Discussion can get pretty heated, which is why the proceedings of every editboard and the identity of every edit author must remain secret. Sometimes, when conversation digresses, gossip makes it into the... Staff Box: The Chronicle’s public space for private jokes. You know it as the box under the crossword. You don’t understand it. A lot of the time, neither do we. The box is the evening’s last editorial task, and punchy editors don’t always make sense at 5 a.m.. After this, it’s time for the... Watchdog: The last line of defense for The Chronicle. Any glitches lucky enough to make it through the watchdog make it into the paper. But the real last line goes t0... Roily: ’Nuff said. He’s still The Chronicle’s little secret.

TERRY

SANFORD INSTITUTE OF PUBLIC POLICY for

DUKE

DeWitt Wallace Center Communications and Journalism

Jennifer Yang

THE CHRONICLE

Nick Hennessee—assistant managing editor 1950 For the 50th class reunion in 2002 there was a large strike and picket line that The Chronicle staff led against the Duke Power bus-price hike. The strike attracted more national media attention than the closely followed and long-planned inauguration of Duke’s new president. Gary Nelson—editor 1963 The most riveting experience by far was during the time of the Kennedy Assassination. It had a profound effect on the entire student body. We received many letters and poems as contributions from grieving students. During that same year Duke enrolled the first African-American undergraduates, which we covered closely. Alan Shusterman—news editor editor 1968 I reported for ABC radio from The Chronicle office during the Allen Building sit-in in 1969, while Durham City police went from building to building in front of the Chapel spraying tear gas. Anne Newman—editor 1975 As the editor of the paper, I approved the infamous “What Missed Again?” headline on a story about the second failed assassination attempt on President GeraldFord. Scott McCartney—editor 1980 Our years were notable for the events that shaped the Duke you enjoy. When the University hired Coach K, we ran the headline, “This is not a typo.” We were later quoted in Sports Illustrated. Robert Sadoff—news editor 1983 During the Nixon Presidential Library imbroglio, we climbed the walls outside the closed Academic Council meeting to eavesdrop on the debate. The people I worked with at The Chronicle were collectively the finest, most dedicated and caring people I met during my time at Duke.

Justin Dillon—editor 1995

We put out the homecoming supplement in less than 48 hours after we forgot there had to be one. Everyone pitched in—it was brilliant.

Jay Kamm—advertising producer 1997 Sanjay Bhatt, the University editor, frantically called me at 4 a.m. because a power spike had rebooted all the computers and printers in the office. The main ImageSetter, however, wouldn't turn on—he thought it was fried. Brody Greenwald—sports editor 2001 My favorite memory comes from the night Evan dropped cheese sauce from Armadillo Grill upside down on the carpet in the lounge and the Editor, Greg, flipped out. Also, I recall the morning that I learned you had to hit “knockout” in order for your Fall Sports centerspread to come out right. There was also one morning when I was called at 7 a.m. and was told that three of my seniors missed their flight home from Chicago.

The DeWitt Wallace Center for Communications and Journalism at the Terry Sanford Institute of Public Policy Congratulates

oss?Philip Rurian^ Winner of the 2004 Melcher Family Award for Excellence in Journalism for

His article "Journeys in South Africa" published in TowerView on October 6, 2005

Emily Alix Rotberg Honorable Mention for

Her article "N.C. Textile Towns Struggle with Massive Layoffs" published in The Chronicle in a three-part series on November 5, November 4, and November 5, 2003

Applications for next year’s award are due June 1, 2005 Articles published in a recognized print publication or website by first-, second-, and third-year Duke University students

between May 15, 2004 and May 15, 2005 are eligible for submission. Applicants may submit only one article. Submissions may be sent by email to <media@pps.duke.edu> or by mail (5 copies) to The DeWitt Wallace Center for Communications and Journalism, Box 90241, Duke University, Durham, NC 27708. Faxed copies will not be eligible. Submissions should include all current contact information (phone, email, mailing address) and the source and date of publication. For more information, please contact Professor Kenneth Rogerson: rogerson@pps.duke.edu


10

Friday,

October 1, 2004

FELKER

100th

The Chronicle

inivei

the conversation pieces with compelling

from page 3

photojournalism.

This sense of urgency, newness, invention and prestige all added to the allure and myth that was, and remains, New York. Felker now heads the magazine journalism program at the University of California at Berkeley that bears his name, leav“new journalism.” ing the magazine to its new owner Bruce “New journalism is really literary jour- Wasserstein. nalism—the use of standard literary de“Bruce is a good guy,” Felker said. ‘The vices applied to reporting,” Felker said. magazine is in good hands.” “It’s a short story, with a beginning, middle and end. WTiile it was called ‘new journalism,’ there was in effect nothing new about it.” Felker came upon “new journalism” while at Duke. Wandering through Perkins’ voluminous basement periodical stash, he came across newspapers from the Civil War. After reading articles from the vintage papers for hours, Felker realized that these pieces were much more interestingly reported. “I realized that their reporting was literary journalism, where narrative form is primary,” he said, “A narrative form is the key. It was a very distinct voice for America.” This voice carried New York to new SPECIAL TOTHE CHRONICLE heights. Felker made New York's style of Felker and Gail Sheehy visit the Parliament reporting as central to the magazine as Clay the content of its stories and enriched building in England. were the best of everything possible.” But what fewer people recognize about New York is that it helped to reestablish what its former staff writer and famed novelist Tom Wolfe called

WOODRUFF from page 4 most logical second choice was journalism. The local weather girl-turned-media A-lister was first assigned to cover Jimmy Carter’s quest for Georgia governorship, a beat that ultimately led her, and Carter, to the White House. As for keeping her cool among all the political hot-shots, Woodruff insists that it is about tenacity and sharp wits. “The ad-

vice I’ve always given is to be persistent, don’t take no for an answer and to know that it’s not going to be easy—it’s what you make of your failures and setbacks that is absolutely an essential ingredient to success,” she said. And while Katie Couric makes headlines by taking her face-framing highlights a shade lighter, Woodruff would rather publicly grill the world’s leaders. It is clear that the Duke trustee emerita has no intention of backing down now.

For John Feinstein, writing for The Chronicle were theformative years for his future journalism career.

FEINSTEIN

process that Feinstein learned how to write headlines, pick out and arrange pho-

from page 3

and layout all the newspaper pages. “I was far more experienced than most 21year-old kids when I got to The [Washington] Post,” Feinstein said. With such a long journalistic career, Feinstein has seen changes not only in newspaper production but also in the role of print media. He notes that with the abundance of electronic media, print media has sometimes become an tos

he noted that his four years of college news writing experience was invaluable. “I really majored in The Chronicle. That was basically what I did,” Feinstein said. “Part of being a reporter is learning about new things.” In his last two years as an undergraduate, Feinstein served as Chronicle sports editor, a position that taught the future best-selling author and journalist about the production and business of newspapers. The process, which is now run by computers, was entirely done by hand. Reporters wrote stories on typewriters. Editors would take stories and place them on the makeup board. If a story was too long, an editor would cut it with a razor. The pages, which are now sent electronically to the printer, were hand-delivered in the late 1970s and photographed. Feinstein remembers driving down 1-85 with the daily pages, sometimes in the early morning hours. It was through this

“afterthought.”

“Years ago it was routine to go into the locker room after a game,” Feinstein said. “Now most places try to shepherd you into an interview r00m.... [There is] a lack of access.” Despite changes in newspaper production and influence, the lessons Feinstein learned through his four-year experience at The Chronicle still stick with him today. ‘The Chronicle shaped me as a journalist,” Feinstein said. “My first mentors in the business were older editors at the paper.”

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The Chronicle

RIVALRY from

100th Annlvei page 6

editor of the Daily Tar Heel about which university’s team will come out victorious. If Duke wins the game, editors of the Daily Tar Heel must acknowledge UNC’s loss by delivering their newspaper with its banner printed in Duke Blue, the staff editorial replaced with a large Blue Devil and the phrase “Duke: Still The Best” prominently displayed on the front page. In the unlikely event that the Tar Heels should somehow succeed in winning, editors of The Chronicle must acknowledge the loss in a similar fashion. In addition, The Chronicle prints an amusing spoof of the Daily Tar Heel’s front page—entitled The Daily Tar Hole—on gameday. Not surprisingly, the day preceding the big game is a critical one for the staffs of both newspapers. One of the most interesting elements is the somewhat less-than-professional letters that pass between The Chronicle and the Daily Tar Heel’s editors to commemorate the occasion and affirm the bet. Some of the more memorable dialogue produced by this feud: “If the written word is a bit too sophisticated for you, feel free to call me and I will read you the letter or draw out its contents in pictures,” Chronicle editor Greg Pessin wrote in January 2001. “The Dock Comical is to journalism what Fox is to television,” disparaged Kim Minaugh,

Daily Tar Heel editor in 2002. The next day, Chronicle Editor Dave Ingram shot back, “With your school’s recent renunciation of the sport of basketball, most of us had forgotten that your team once won double-digit games in a season.” Aside from the basketball wager itself, several former editors from both papers still bleed their respective blues. “You could say the newspapers are rivals, but at the Daily Tar Heel, we didn’t really think of The Chronicle as a true rival in terms of journalistic excellence and tradition,” said Erica Beshears, editor of the Tar Heel from 1997 to 1998. Though Rich Rubin, managing editor of The Chronicle in 1999-2000, was willing to concede to the fact that The Daily Tar Heel is a “very good” as well as “ambitious” publication, he also added that one purpose of the bet is for The Chronicle staff and its readers to get more fun out of the basketball showdown. According to former Sports Managing Editor Evan Davis, Trinity ’O3, the front-page spoofs, which he eagerly orchestrated, maintain the intensity of the inter-school rivalry, even as the Tar Heels become “less competitive” on the court. In the end, Beshears said, “while there will never be any question about which school has the best newspaper—that would be UNC—there should always be debate and trash talk about which team is the best each year.”

LOVE

social contacts you had before may be on shaky ground. Proximity is 90 percent of romance.” The close quarters in office at 301 Flowers Bldg., the endless hours worked by the editors and the raging hormones of college students seem to combine to create a perfect storm for Chroniclecest. ‘When you’re working next to someone for 45 hours a week, stuff happens,” Green said. Relationships range from married with children like Green and Stuebe, to newlyweds like former Tower View Magazine Editor Mary Carmichael, Trinity ’Ol, and former Managing Editor Tim Millington, Trinity ’OO, to engaged like former co-University Editors Jaime Levy, Trinity ’Ol, and Greg Pessin, Trinity ’Ol, to those in a long-term relationship like former Editor Ambika Kumar, Trinity ’O2, and former Sports Editor Paul Doran, Trinity ’O3.

SCLAFANI from page 7

friendly, if unsolicited, advice

Saul distinctly remembered the somber tone in Chronicle office the day after Matt died. “Everyone was trying to be positive,” Saul said. “The amazing thing about newspapering is that the paper still has to come out.” In the hospital, Heimberger sat by Matt’s side. It was a peaceful death in the company of close family and friends. Saddened but undeterred, The

to his sister about her editori-

als although he admits, “I suspect that she doesn’t take my advice most of the time on the occasions that I give it.” This time his sister agreed with him, “I don’t ask for his advice, but pretty much the only time I get e-mails from him is when he sends one telling me what he thought about the editorial that day.”

and we look forward to still printing The Chronicle in 2104 (well, that's assuming there are still newspapers and presses)

mi/MGii web printing Proud Printer of The Chronicle since 1993... 514 United Drive

Durham, NC 27713

544-7839

11

Although most former editors tor impregnating a reporter. said they attempted to keep their Another problem with workrelationship under wraps in the place dating was the hierarchical office, most also admitted that it structure that often resulted in was difficult to do so for more one person in the relationship than a few weeks. “Reporters are taking orders from the other. just sort of legitimate gossipers, so Both Berger and Doran took a it would make sense that when few jabs for being the boyfriend you have an office full of reof the editor-in-chief. “I was reporters there’s going to be a lot of ferred to as [Kathleen’s] chew gossip,” said former TowerView toy,” Berger said. Magazine Editor Tyler Rosen, ’O4. “Paul got a little made fun of. For every successful ChroniOn the [Chronicle] T-shirt from cle relationship there are an my year we had a fake mastequal, if not greater number, of head,” Kumar reminisced. “And failed ones. “Yes, I think that Paul’s position was ‘special assisworking in close proximity for all tant to the editor.’” hours of the day is certainly ferAlthough Levy admitted to tile ground for relationships. being “pretty upset” to losing the Whether they last or not is anotheditor-in-chief position to her fuer question.” Berger said. ture fiancee, she now realizes Chronicle editors, it appears, that it was to her benefit in the play just as hard as they work. Ru- end. “Greg said that he could be mors abound about late night the boss inside the office and I could boss outside the office, hookups in the office lounge, betting pools at Chronicle parties and now that we’re going to be about who would end up with married forever I definitely think whom by the end of the night and I got the better end of the deal,” even about an assistant sports edi- she said, laughing.

FAMILY from page 6

Congratulations on The Chronicle’s 100 years...

(and some us have been associated with The Chronicle so long we remember when it was a Tuesday, Thursday, Saturday paper)

from page 6

Friday, October 1, 2004

Chronicle proceeded to print the next morning’s paper. Matt would have wanted that. Matt will be known as the patient editor who reworked, word by word, the articles of new writers. He will be known as the steadfast reporter who stood up to Stanley Fish, and he will be known as the kind friend who, even in illness, could tell a joke. But perhaps before anything else, he will be remembered as that ambitious editor with two books in his hand, just in case he finished the first.


I 12

Friday,

The Chronicle

100th Annivei

October 1,2004

The Chronicle ftft is DUKEfc^F%JS® A CENTURY OF NEWS AT

Help us celebrate 100 years of The Chron icle I

Whatt was first published ul at Trinity wilt 1905 is now the College ege in December Dec it 3**UUi student newspaper award-winning la rd-winnin* daily at Duke uke University. Unive it; As part of the The r Chronicle’s micle’s cei centennial celebration today otlf y f m and tomorrow, you oi will have a number aportunitic to of opportunities t< discuss interesting topics with Duke alums, and important >p student ent leaders leaders or >r administrators who have3 special expertise ex ei or experience. Panel el discussions discussic s today are Sports at ilfif/(if* Dukee and tomorrow tomo co will be Politics, ia Ethics ai Media andi Campus issues. You t e chance to network will also have the m about their careers. withi visiting at alums These professio a are active in newsse professionals broadcast and I magazine book, paper, er, magazine, digital journalis n. journalism educatal journalism, rc and other tion, law, public relations event events 5 are free. i fields. is. All

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AFTERNOON (OCT. 1: FRIDAY VY AFTERNOON, Sports at Duke: 3:30 pm, p n, Griffith Film Theater, Bryan Center Best-selling filing author and sports i pc commentator John Feinstein, '77, leads a discussion with Barry Svrluga, repo ‘te at The Washington Post who recently covered the Olympics); Bill a, '93 (sports reporter Brill, '56 36 (columnist for Blue I >lu Devil Weekly); Johnny Dawkins ‘B6, men’s basketball associate head coach; Poses 'O6 (current sports editor at The Chronicle). Dach; and Jake Poses, ,

»

5 to 6:30 pm, Von Canon, Bryan Center Career Rec< r Networking Reception: )zens of working journalists, joui lawyers, public relations experts, and others during an Join dozens informal reception. Ex-Chroniclers from across the decades will be ready to talk with students about their career experiences and answer questions. Among those expected are reporters and editors from The Wall Street Journal, The New York Times, The Washington Post, CNN, The Los Angeles Times, The News & Observer, and more. Career Center staff will provide on-site counseling and resume services, as requested.

SATURDAY MORNING, OCT. 2

John Feinstein ‘77

Election Politics and the Media: 9 to 10 am, Love Auditorium, Levine Science Research Center. Moderator Susan Tifft, '73, Eugene C. Patterson Professor of the Practice, Sanford Institute of Public Policy, tackles the current political scene with John Harwood, '7B, political editor of The Wall Street Journal; Jennifer Zeidman Bloch, 'B9, CNN executive producer for "NewsNight with Aaron Brown"; and Craig Saperstein ‘O2, regional coordinator in N.C. for the Kerry-Edwards campaign.

Susan Tifft ‘73

Media Ethics: 10:15 to 11:15, Love Auditorium, LSRC Dig into current media controversies in a discussion led by two exChroniclers now teaching communications: Clay Steinman, '7l, professor at Macalester College, and Robert Entman, '7l, professor at N.C. State University. Joining the debate are Kevin Sack, 'Bl, Atlanta-based national correspondent for The Los Angeles Times, John Drescher, M.A. in Public Policy, 'BB, managing editor of The News & Observer, and Jim Wilson, ‘74, West Coast pictures editor, The New York Times. Campus Issues Today: 11:15 to 12:15, Love Auditorium, LSRC Find out what the hot topics are from Larry Moneta, vice president for student affairs; Pasha Majdi, 'O5, president of Duke Student Government; Anthony Vitarelli, 'O5, chair of Campus Council; Stephen Nowicki, dean of the natural sciences in Duke’s Trinity College; Karen Hauptman, 'O6, editor of The Chronicle, on a panel moderated by Jessica Moulton, '99, former Chronicle editor and former chair of the Duke Student Publishing Company, now at McKinsey & Company.

Clay Steinman ‘7l


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THE CHRONICLE

120 M

FRIDAY, OCTOBER 1,2004

Weekend schedule of events West Campus Bench Competition East Campus Yard Decoration Contest Oktoberfest West Campus, 10 a.m.

-

6 p.m

Duke University Black Alumni

Connection/ BSA Career Roundtable & Reception. Lou Mary Williams Cultural 4 p.m. 6 p.m. -

Reunion

Sports

i

m Theater, Bryan mter (2nd floor), ) 4:45 p.m. hn Feinstein 77, author of A Season on the Brink, as he banters with panelists including Sports Illustrated reporter and

FRIDAY. OCTOBER 1

television analyst Seth Davis ’92, Blue Devil Weekly columnist Bill Brill 36, Washington Post sports reporter Barry Svrluga ’93, men’s basketball associate head coach Johnny Dawkins ’B6, and Chronicle sports editor Jake Poses ’O6. Duke Admissions Information Session Admissions House, 2 p.m Career Networking Reception Von Canon, Bryan Student Center (lower level), 5 p.m. to 6:30 p.m. Open house for all students and alumni interested in networking with fellow alumni currently working in professions involving print media, broadcast media, public relations, marketing, and law.

Women’s Soccer vs. Florida State Koskinen Stadium, 7 p.m. DUBAC Welcome Reception Homewood Suites Hotel, 3600 Mount Moriah Road, Durham., 7 p.m. 10 p.m. -

Duke Jazz Ensemble JohnBrown, director Baldwin Auditorium, 8 p.m. -

Young Alumni Party IM Building, 9 p.m. 12 a.m Recent alumni are invited back to mingle with friends, drink and dance. Free beer and wine will be available for young alumni and their guests 21 and over. There is no charge for this event, but you must present a valid picture I.D. -

for entry.

ATURDAY. f*

■■ ■*

West Campus Bench Competition Judging Chronicle Reunion Progra.m.ming LSRC, 9 a.m. 2:45 p.m. -

Tours of Athletic Facilities Schwartz-Butters, Yoh, Wilson, Murray, Sheffield, 11 a.m. 12:30 p.m.

Homecoming Football

Wallace Wade Stadium, West Campus, 2 p.m. The 0-4 Blue Devils take on The Citadel. Tickets are $l2 for general admission. *i

DUBAC General Meeting York Chapel in the Divinity School, immediately following the football game

-

-

The band Kenin will perform Friday during Oktoberfest.

Latino Alumni Career Panel Center for Multicultural Affairs, 12 p.m. Sponsored by LUL Fraternity, Inc., Mi Gente, and the Duke Latino AlumniReunion Committee Duke Alumni Luncheon Sheffield Tennis Center, 12 p.m

East Campus Yard Decoration Contest

Judging East Campus quad, 12:30 p.m. Field Hockey vs. Radford East Campus Turf Field, 1 p.m National Pan-Hellenic Council Step Show Page Auditorium, 7:30 p.m. The Ciompi Quartet with Yoram Youngerman, viola, and Darrett Adkins, cello

SUNDAY.

OCTOBER

DUBAC Sunday Breakfast Buffet East Campus Marketplace Dining Hall, 8-11 a.m Chapel Service Duke Chapel, 1 a.m Field Hockey vs. Davidson East Campus Turf Field, 1 p.m Men’s Soccer vs. UNC Koskinen Stadium, 7 p.m

CHRONICLE FILE PHOTO

The Duke Blue Devils will take on The Citadel at WallaceWade Stadium Saturday at 2 p.m.

Reynolds Theater, Bryan Center 8 p.m ,

Josef Haydn, String Quartet in E-flat Major, Opus 16, No. 6; Peter Lewis, String Quartet No. 2 (premiereperformance); Antonin Dvorak, String Sextet in A Major, Opus 48

Pitchforks 25th Anniversary Reunion Concert Baldwin Auditorium, 9 p.m. DUBAC Saturday Soiree West Village Penthouse, 9 p.m. (tickets required)

-

1 a.m

Step Show After Party Great Hall, 10 p.m. 2 a.m -

Duke Young Alumni Pub Crawl 9th Street or Main Street Bars, 10 p.m. 2 a.m. Join other alumni to relive college life at some of your favorite hotspots in Durham -


HOMECOMING 004

THE CHRONICLE

FRIDAY, OCTOBER 1,20041

3

Ready, set, bench: Students show their spirit by

Lauren

test may prove to be an effective step to-

Kobyiarz THE CHRONICLE

Students can showcase their Blue Devil spirit for Homecoming weekend by doing what Duke students do best: building

benches.

The 2004 Homecoming Bench Building and Decorating Contest will debut today on the Main Quadrangle. Fifteen teams —ranging from fraternity, sorority, residential and social groups—have entered the event. This afternoon a panel of three judges will evaluate the pride and spirit of each bench, and the victorious team will be announced at the Homecoming football game tomorrow. “We’re giving students an outlet to be excited about Duke,” said Kim Hanauer, Trinity ’O2, assistant reunions director for Alumni Affairs. “Every facet of the Duke community is included, and it really represents what Duke is.” The contest officially began at 5 p.m. Tuesday and ends today at noon. It was developed by the alumni affairs office, the student affairs office and Duke University Athletics. The winning group will be rewarded with dinner for 100 people catered by The Q-Shack. “The goal is that through building these benches and having them out on the Main West quad area, it will be a very visible sign of school enthusiasm and spirit and help set the tone for Homecoming,” said Joe Gonzalez, associate dean for residential life. A high level of student interest filled the participant quota for the contest. “I’m really happy that they’re doing this,” said junior Emily Mugler, who is Uo*««o>i

PETER GEBHARD/THE CHRONICLE

Students build benchesfor a campus-wide contest.The victors will win a dinner for 100 from The Q -Shack.

working on the Delta Gamma sorority bench. ‘We really wanted to have a bench, and it looked like if dbe a lot offun.” The concept of the contest began over a year ago during meetings of a special University-wide committee established to

revamp Homecoming. Until the 19705, Homecoming at the University was an inlmensely popular, tradition-laced event. Unsuccessful attempts were made in the 1990s to resurrect the Duke’s old Homecoming spirit, but this year’s bench con-

wards this goal. “There was no Homecoming tradition really when I was a student here,” said Lisa Dilts, Trinity ’B3, director of reunions and special events for Duke Alumni Affairs. “I was thrilled when this came together. It’s a great start to what could be a great tradition that’s uniquely Duke.” The freshmen have another opportunity to showcase their Blue Devil spirit by participating in a similar banner-making contest that is only open to entire dorms on East Campus. The three feet by five feet banners will be displayed with the benches on the Main Quad and will then be given back to the freshman houses to keep. The benches will be moved in front of eitherresidential sections or other preapproved locations. Benches will be approximately half the size of those currently found at the University. Event organizers provided participants with pre-approved plans for construction, and alternative designs were required to be submitted for approval before being built. Brownstone is one group constructing an alternatively-designed bench. ‘The benches that they suggest that we build are not very creative,” said senior Michael Klug, a Brownstone team member. “Given the space, an Lshaped bench fits better in the comers.” The organizing committee provided each group with the supplies necessary to build and decorate its bench, including pre-cut lumber, bolts, nuts, nails, blue and white paint, paint brushes and a tarp. The purchase of the materials for the teams totaled around $2,000.

VS«3,2oVii*£Li^

Will Willimon preaches Founders Day Sunday at Duke Chapel

7

Bishop William H. Willimon “A Great Towering Contradiction” this Sunday atl 1:00 a.m. Bishop William H. Willimon is currently the Resident Bishop of the North Alabama Conference of the United Methodist Church and Visiting Professor of Christian Ministry at Duke Divinity School. Willimon

Bishop William Willimon

was Dean of the Chapel from July 1984 through August 2004.

Bread for the Journey Undergraduates, join Dean Kocher and your classmates for a lively critique of the sermon right after worship. Meet in the Chapel kitchen, located below the sanctuary, after the service. Lunch is provided. -

www. chapel. duke.edu

www.chapel.duke.edu/studentministry

craig.kocher@duke.edu

Dean Kocher talks with students after worship


12004

FRIDAY, OCTOBER 1,2004

•epartment o

Diversity Stores

THE CHRONICLE

04-1099


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