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MONDAY, NOVEMBER 22, 2004
•
THE INDEPENDENT DAILY AT DUKE UNIVERSITY
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ONE HUNDREDTH YEAR, ISSUE 65
CIEMAS launches with eye to future by
Sarah Ball
THE CHRONICLE
1
LAUREN PRATS/THE CHRONICLE
Cara Lynn Lopresti tries to move the ball through the midfield, which Wake dominated as it beat Duke in the national title game.
WAKE WIPES OUT DUKE by
Jason Strasser
THE CHRONICLE
WINSTON-SALEM The field hockey team suffered another Sunday catastrophe against its recent nemesis. DUKE Wake Forest (20-3) capWAKE tured its third consecutive national championship Sunday with a dominat-
ing 3-0 victory over Duke (18-5) at Kentner Field. It was the third time these two teams have met
with championships on the line in the past two years, and the Demon Deacons have prevailed in each, having beaten the Blue Devils in last year’s ACC and NCAA title games. “Our whole dream and goal for this season was to play on
Corporate executives, academic elites, senior administrators and a handful of alumni flocked to Science Drive this weekend for a slew of events honoring the opening of the Center for Interdisciplinary Engineering, Medicine and Applied Sciences. Completion of the almost $lOO million center—home to interdisciplinary research initiatives in biology, photonics, materials and integrated sensors —marks the latest in a series of moves to expand the Pratt School of Engineering under Dean Kristina Johnson’s guidance. Panels and discussions held during the two-day celebration focused on the University’s po-
tential to remain on the cutting edge via cross-disciplinary, intercurricular study. “I have always said that it’s good for an engineer to go to a liberal arts school,’’Johnson said. “[Students] need to know the societal implications of the techthey’re studying.” nology CIEMAS, she added, represents a shift from myopic, departmentalized teaching to a more holistic and practical approach. Assembled faculty and notable guests also discussed obstacles facing young engineers, including the overwhelming trend of job-outsourcing to foreign workers. Increased undergraduate research, interactive learning and industry-relevant training SEE CIEMAS ON PAGE 6
Sundays,” Wake Forest head
coach Jennifer Averill said. “If you play on Sunday in the ACC [Tournament] that means you’re doing pretty good. If you play on Sunday on November 21st, you are doing really good.” Heading into the national tide game, Duke had reason to SEE F. HOCKEY ON PAGE 7
Tar Heels surge to Ruckus reigns affinal tailgate stomp Blue Devils Mingyang Liu THE CHRONICLE
by
All over campus, alarm clocks
by
Lauren
Kobylarz
THE CHRONICLE
Leaping into the air, Duke defensive tackle Casey Camero batted down a Connor Barth field goal attempt with 1:38 remaining in the first quarter. Blue Devil fans raised UNC 40 th exciteDUKE 17 in ment as cornerback Kenneth Stanford scooped up the ball and ran untouched for a 70-yard touchdown. When the successful extrapoint attempt put the Blue Devils ahead 10-7, Duke fans seemed to hear echoes of the Victory Bell ringing in the stands. As the game progressed, however, Blue Devil hopes were silenced. In the final regular-season game North Carolina (7-5, 6-3 in the ACC) defeated Duke 40-17
in Wallace Wade Stadium Saturday, reclaiming the Victory Bell from the Blue Devils. Repainting the bell immediately after the game, the Tar Heels also celebrated achieving bowl eligibility as well as their first winning season in two years. Although Duke (2-10, 1-8) was able to remain competitive during the first half, the Tar Heels’ overpowering rushing game eventually broke the contest open against a tired Duke defensive front. North Carolina outscored Duke 20-0 after the break, and Blue Devil miscues stunted the team’s momentum. “They just controlled the ball,” said Duke senior linebacker Giuseppe Aguanno, who finished his career with an 8-39 record. “They took advantage of
went off early Saturday
morning.
Although the football game against rival UNC would not kick off until noon, there was another University-wide event chugging along. More than a thousand students flocked to cap off another fall full ofbeer pong, beer bongs and barbecue at the final tailgate (and football game) of the school year. As senior Bill Gerrish said: “In life, you have to carpe diem that shit. You sleep, you’re dead.” For those aware of the game, it was obvious that there was more action in the Blue Zone than in the end zone. “Is there even a game?” freshman Travis Morrison asked jokingly. “Who’re we playing against?” The first students arrived at STROUSE CAMPBELL/THE CHRONICLE
SEE FOOTBALL ON SW PAGE 5
Hordes of students pack theBlue Zone before—and during—the UNC game Saturday.
SEE TAILGATE ON PAGE 4
21 MONDAY, NOVEMBER 22, 2004
THE CHRONIC! ,E
worldandnation
newsinbrief Leaders hope to revisit bill
Iraq sets election date amid violence Maggie Michael THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
by
Iraqi authorities set 30 the date for the nation’s first as Jan. election since the collapse of Saddam Hussein’s dictatorship and pledged that voting would take place throughout the country despite rising violence in many areas and calls by Sunni clerics for a boycott. Farid Ayar, spokesperson of the Independent Electoral Commission of Iraq, said voting would push ahead even in areas still wracked by violence, including Fallujah, Mosul and other parts of the BAGHDAD, Iraq
volatile Sunni Triangle The vote for the 275-member National Assembly is seen as a major step toward building democracy after years of Saddam’s tyranny. But the violence, which has escalated this month with the U.S.-led offensive against Fallujah, has raised fears voting will be nearly impossible in insurgency-tom regions—or that Sunni Arabs, angry at the U.S.-Iraqi crackdown, will reject the election. If either takes place, it could undermine the vote’s legitimacy. Ayar insisted that “no Iraqi province will
be excluded because the law considers Iraq as one constituency, and therefore it is not legal to exclude any province.” To bolster Iraq’s democracy, 19 creditor nations agreed Sunday to write off 80 percent of the $42 billion that Iraq owes them. U.S. and Iraqi troops have been clearing the last of the resistance from Fallujah, the main rebel bastion stormed Nov. 8 in hopes of breaking the back of the insurgency before the election. In Fallujah, Marine Maj. Jim West said SEE
IRAQ
ON PAGE 6
Bush seeks to mend Latin American ties Terrence Hunt
“We would much rather have security
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
guards chasing down terrorists or drug runners or drug smugglers than people coming to work,” Bush said at an econom-
by
SANTIAGO, Chile President George W. Bush, trying to mend relations with Latin America, pledged Sunday to make a fresh push for stalled immigration reforms and defended the U.S. invasion of Iraq, saying that “history will prove it right.” Although the Iraq war is widely opposed in Latin America, Bush said, ‘The United States of America will stay the course and we will complete the task.” Immigration is a sensitive issue throughout the region and Bush said his proposed guest worker initiative would strengthen border security and help the economy.
ic summit in Chile. “I think a guest worker program is important.” Finishing up a three-day visit, Bush spoke at a news conference as a new security flap surfaced following an embarrassing fracas Saturday in which Bush intervened and pulled his Secret Service agent away from Chilean guards. An elaborate state dinner with 200 people Sunday was downgraded to an official working dinner, reportedly because Chilean President Ricardo Lagos balked at Secret Service demands for guests to walk through metal detectors.
There was no mention of either incident when Bush appeared with Lagos at the end of the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation forum, which closed with pledges to shore up global security, fight terrorism and push ahead with negotiations to lower trade barriers. Both Bush and Lagos acknowledged they had disagreed about Iraq. “Most of the time we will be in agreement. Sometimes we won’t,” Lagos said. “But that’s life.” Bush said he respected Lagos’ decision and said they were still friends. “What we’re doing is the right thing in Iraq,” the president said. Bush said no one could argue that Iraq was better off with Saddam Hussein out of power.
Unwilling to concede defeat, Congressional leaders expressed hope Sunday that lawmakers could return next month to resolve a turf battle that has blocked passage of an overhaul of the nation's intelligence agencies. President George W, Bush pledged to work with them for passage.
Graham ends 55th crusade More than 80,000 people gathered in the Rose Bowl Sunday to hear the Rev. Billy Graham preach on the last day of what probably was one of his final crusades. About 312,500 attended the four-day crusade.
Scientists flood canyon Seeking to restore beaches and save fish and plants that have been disappearing since sediment-free water began flowing from a man-made dam 40 years ago, scientists flooded the Grand Canyon Sunday.
Stern suspends NBA players After punches were thrown with spectators in the stands at a game Friday, NBA commissioner David Stern suspended Ron Attest and his Indiana Pacers' teammates Stephen Jackson and Jermaine O'Neal for a total of 128 games and cost them a combined $l2 million in salary. Several other players were also suspended. News briefs compiled from wire reports
"If opportunity doesn't knock, build a door." —Milton Berle
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Come early! 6:30 pm: Seasonal Carillon Music & Christmas Music for the Organ
THE CHRONICLE
MONDAY, NOVEMBER 22,
2004 3
Service projects draw students into community
Driven to protest
by
Rebecca Friedman THE CHRONICLE
Only tenths of an inch taller than the second-graders she stands with, sophomore Gariy Knight may not have a physical presence that commands attention—but what she lacks in stature she makes up for in enthusiasm. With 20 seven- and eightyear-old kids clinging to her sides, it is evident that they care just as much for her as they do for the candy she holds above them as a prize. “We’re going to play another game of sharks and minnows, and then the winners will get candy,” Knight says. In reality “everyone gets candy in the end,” Knight whispers, “but for now it’s just good for them to be out, and practice group skills like how to work together.” Knight, along with 15 other students from Duke and the University ofNorth Carolina at Chapel Hill, coordinates, leads and participates right along with the elementary schoolers of Carter Community Charter School in the debut year of their gym program. Participating in the program, which began about a month ago, involves two hour-long trips to the school each week. “Volunteering at Carter is so enjoyable because I get to go off campus and be with people that aren’t only 18 to 21 years old,” Knight said. “You don’t have to go very far to remind yourself about the rest of the community.” Knight is part of what the Community Service Center reports as an ever-expanding corps of studentvolunteers. As of April 2004, the center found that of 180 student responses, 25 percent participated in service activities at least once a week, with the most students, 26 percent, exhibiting an interest in children’s issues. “Duke students become passionate with particular groups, organizations and causes,” CSC Director Elaine Madison said. “Although it may be a relatively short time frame, there’s a more intense pattern of involvement.” For many students, volunteerism in college entails a personally motivated com-
BROOKS FICKE/THE CHRONICLE
Bus driverDeoncio Akins takes part in a sit-in with students on behalf ofhis colleagues at the West Campus bus stop Friday afternoon.The spontaneous protest featured about a dozen students camped out in quiet frustration—large signs read "we're waiting"—stemming from recent complaints from campus bus operators upset with management at Parking and Transportation Services/'We're coming peacefully, and we just want to come and see these things resolved," said Akins, who said he felt that recent treatment by management had developed "in hopes to undermine"student-driverrelations. —Matt Sullivan
SPECIAL TO THE CHRONICLE
President Richard Brodhead accompanies students on into the City, the CSC'sannual fail service day. mitment since the University does not require service hours for graduation like many high schools do. “There is a trend of long-term commitment and students with extensive community service in high school,” Madison said. In college, she said, students “tend to take leadership positions and participate in a more sophisticated kind of involvement.” The CSC aims to involve the Duke community in service both inside and outside the University’s walls. Often this involves the Durham community and other associations outside of the University alerting the center about its needs for volunteers, which are then relayed to students byway of its student representatives and CSC staff. “We serve as an umbrella organization,” said senior Alice Williamson, one of two CSC student directors. “A lot of clubs are under the CSC, which they then SEE CSC ON PAGE 5
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THE CHRONICLE
41 MONDAY, NOVEMBER 22, 2004
TAILGATE from page 1 the familiar back-left parking lot as early as 7:30 a.m. As the hours passed, different sports teams, groups of friends and fraternities set up their own stations in the parking lot, with Bojangles’ tailgate special and deep-fried turkey in hand. Even Duke Student Government had its barbecue tables set up this weekend ‘Tailgating is the quintessential foundation of groups at this university,” said senior David Misler, dressed as an old-school news reporter along with his always-extravagant varsity lacrosse teammates. “[lt] is the greatest unifying force for students.” The feeling of unity was everywhere Saturday, even for mimes, superheros and giant yellow chickens. ‘This is my last tailgate ever and the fratmosphere is unrivaled,” said senior Bayard Collins, a member of Delta Sigma Phi fraternity, after taking off halfof his chicken costume because of the surprisingly nice weather. Besides the usual fraternity and sorority T-shirts, different groups of friends were dressed in theme costumes, ranging from ’Bos prom queens to Santa and all of his reindeer to other absurdly coordinated outfits. A barbecue grill sat next to just about every SUV or pick-up truck, along with garbage cans full of cases of beer. At tailgates, sharing Just about anyone can walk up to an SUV and be handed a beer in one hand and a hot dog in the other. By the end of the day, the parking lot was flooded with beer and littered with crushed cans. “This is the best day of my life,” senior Delta Sig Matt Widham said. “It’s a great scene with a lot of great people having a great time. There isn’t anyone who’s not having fun here Toward the end of the tailgate, however, the beersoaked atmosphere turned sour. At around 2 p.m., junior Paul Musselwhite, a columnist for The Chronicle, was arrested for possession of cocaine. An hour later, a fight erupted and senior Chris Anthony was taken to the hospital as a result of a bloody face and a punched-out tooth. After the game ended, President Richard Brodhead stopped by to check up on the well-being of another student who had to be taken to the hospital for excessive drinking. “If it’s done right, [tailgating is] terrific, and if it’s done wrong, it’s terrible,” Vice President for Student Affairs Larry Moneta said. “The goal to is find away to get it done right.” For the most part, students are responsible for their own safety at these “spontaneous gatherings.” Most of the time, thousands of early risers enjoy themselves in the Blue Zone at one of the only opportunities where the student body can come together on campus. “Honestly, it’s the best time of the year,” sophomore Mariel Moscatello said. “I’m definitely going abroad, but if anything can keep me at Duke, it would be tailgating.” ”
nCs
STROUSE CAMPBELL/THE CHRONICLE
Students—some dressed in elaborate costumes—set up stations with beer and barbecues at Saturday's tailgate. Some stayed through the game and even afterDuke fell to UNC in Wallace Wade.
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CSC from page 3 receive funding from us because we get a lump sum from Duke Student Government and then can act as an advocate for them and track their volunteer records.” Williamson noted that involvement tends to drop off after freshman year when students move from East Campus, where the CSC is based, to West Campus. To combat this trend, the center added 14 quad representatives for upperclass students to. the 24 freshman representatives and 22 student staff volunteers this year. Francesca Tenconi, a junior and third-year CSC representative, said she got involved to get to know the Durham community. “I participated in community service in high school,” Tenconi said. “It gives me a sense of reality because here we get consumed with everything we have to do, but volunteering lets you know the community.” Even though many students claim to presently be volunteering, or have done so in the past, the extent of their involvement varies gready. According to the CSC, 49 percent of those surveyed only participated once or twice a semester; 60 percent acknowledged that they do much less volunteering than they did in high school; and 68 percent claim to be unsatisfied with the amount of service they do now. The main reason students report for their lack of involvement is they are “too busy.” “Academics can be overwhelming here and students develop this tunnel vision about them, losing sight of all the opportunities they can give back to the community,” said Jacqueline Grassi, a sophomore and CSC representative. “Really dedicated students return to a program because it holds their interests and they realize they gain as much as they give.” Motives for involvement certainly range for students. Freshman Chad Hayes first became involved with community service on campus to satisfy requirements for a
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THE CHRONICLE
6 MONDAY, NOVEMBER 22, 2004
Cl EM AS from page 1
PETER GEBHARD/THE CHRONICLE
PresidentRichard Brodhead listens as GlaxoSmithKlineVice Chair Robert Ingram speaks at a panel Friday.
IRAQ from page 2 Sunday that U.S. troops have found nearly 20 “atrocity sites” where insurgents imprisoned, tortured and murdered hostages. West said troops found rooms containing knives and black hoods, “many of them blood-covered.” The storming of Fallujah has heightened tensions throughout Sunni Arab areas, triggering clashes in Mosul, Beiji, Samarra, Ramadi and elsewhere. In Ramadi, 70 miles west of Baghdad, insurgents ambushed an Iraqi National Guard patrol Sunday, killing
eight guardsmen and injuring 18 others, police said. U.S. forces conducted a raid to capture a “high value target” associated with Jordanian terrorist Abu Musab al Zarqawi in Haqlaniyah, 135 miles northwest of the capital, a U.S. spokesperson said Sunday. Six people were detained, although the military did not say whether the target was among them. Witnesses said U.S. troops raided a Sunni mosque in Haqlaniyah, arresting its cleric Douraid Fakhry, and detaining dozens of residents in nearby homes. The U.S. military denied that a mosque was raided in the area. South of Baghdad, a convoy of Iraqi National Guard
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are seen as ways to return jobs to American engineers. These new learning approaches, all championed by Johnson and others in Pratt’s administration, will now be possible with the added facilities. “Leadership is not so much taught as it is revealed,’’Johnson said. “We need to educate leaders to be well-rounded—that’s the stuff that sustains major innovation. I don’t think you can outsource leadership.” The four new buildings, which combine for a total of more than 300,000 square feet, more than double existing teaching and research space. This increase allows for the ease of integrating different disciplines such as photonics, genomics and environmental engineering. Another cited aim is for CIEMAS, through its architectural design, to foster a more social atmosphere conducive to faculty-student collaboration, which was noticeably absent in the past. “If you were an engineer before, where did you hang out? In the street? There was nowhere. There was no sense of belonging to a place. There was no sense of meeting your friends and gathering in a place,” Executive Vice President Tallman Trask said. “Now there’s a real big sense ofit.”
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Landscaped pathways, courtyards and a new Engineering Quadrangle are designed to integrate the building fluidly between the Medical Center and the Nicholas School of the Environment and Earth Sciences. Other highlighted features that encourage increased faculty-to-student and student-to-student communication include several interactive common rooms called “intellectual collision spaces” as well as a new cafe. Decoratively speaking, architects spared no detail. Glass windows were etched with patterns chosen in a Pratt-wide contest one a Leonardo da Vinci sketch, the other a bio-networking “tree” symbol. The genetic code for breast cancer is tiled on the women’s bathroom floor, and the configuration of a protein molecule is tiled in the men’s bathroom. Construction began on CIEMAS in May 2002 and was finished on schedule this past August. The four buildings of the complex are named for the benefactors who made their construction possible, most prominently Michael and Patricia Fitzpatrick, Trinity ’7O and Woman’s College ’69. Now completed, the state-of-theart facilities are also intended to attract more famed faculty and talented students; Pratt currently seeks to expand by 200 students over the next four years. —
and police came under attack by insurgents armed with small-arms fire, rocket propelled grenades and roadside bombs in Latifiyah, the U.S. military said. There were several Iraqi casualties. To the north, American soldiers in Mosul Sunday discovered two more bodies, including one of an Iraqi Army soldier, near a site where the bodies of nine Iraqi soldiers were found a day earlier, said Lt. Col. Paul Hastings with Task Force Olympia. Four large explosions shook the area near Baghdad’s U.S.-guarded Green Zone, a frequent target of insurgent mortars and rockets, after sundown Sunday.
SENT HOME
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MEN'S SOCCER TEAM ADVANCES TO NCAA SECOND SOUND PACE 3
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sport
thechronicle
rap vember 22, 2004
A NECESSARY WIN After losing to Notre Dame Wednesday, the women's basketball team returns to knock off No. 23 Penn State. 1
Veterans slam Duke into new season by
Roles continue to be defined for Blue Devils
Chrissie Gorman THE CHRONICLE
After months of preparation and two exhibition games, the No. 11 Duke men’s basketball team (1-0) seemed to be coming out of hibernation in its 88-46 victory over Tennessee-Martin (01) Saturday night in Cameron Indoor StaUTIVI dium. ShakDUKE 88 ing off the dust after a pair of preseason games when the team was hardly tested, Duke looked like a squad that had not quite learned to play without departed point guard Chris Duhon and versatile forward Luol Deng. Even though the game’s outcome was never in doubt, the Blue Devils shot only 32 percent from the floor and 4-of-16 on three-pointers. Daniel Ewing adjusted to his new point guard role, dishing out three assists while scoring 20 points. “I didn’t think we were playing poorly in the first half. We were shooting poorly,” head coach Mike Krzyzewski said. “If the other team quits on you, you don’t have to worry about those things, but Tennessee-Martin played hard all game, so they stayed in there. I thought we were a little bit nervous shooting the ball in the first half.” The Tennessee-Martin attack still could not challenge Duke. Big men Shelden Williams and Shavlik Randolph controlled the paint and the Skyhawks’ shot 37 percent. Husde plays at the start of the second half, coupled with improved shooting, allowed the Blue Devils to build momentum as the team fed off the responsive crowd. As part of a 34-6 run to start the second half, McClure stole a Skyhawks’ inbound pass. Ewing quickly moved through the key, taking a McClure pass in for a layup that riled up the team and the Cameron Crazies for the first time this season. “Anytime people on our team make energy plays, it gets the team into it [and] it gets the bench into it,” McClure said. “We feed off the energy of the crowd. We do get sluggish at times, when we can get the energy in the crowd, it definitely helps us out.” •The McClure-Ewing scoring play ignited the Duke players. On their next defensive stand, McClure quickly blocked a shot, SEE M. BASKETBALL ON PAGE 7
Greg Czaja THE CHRONICLE
by
Duke’s 2004-2005 men’s basketball team is slowly coming together. Although drawing hard and fast conclusions from Duke’s 88-46 victory against TennesseeMartin would be fairly foolish, and although it’s anybody’s guess how this team will respond to its grueling ACC schedule, it is this time of the when y ear analysis players
begin
to step up and
define the niches they will fill for the rest of the season. “Guys are pretty much setded into their roles,” senior Daniel Ewing said. “We’ve been practicing this since preseason. I think guys are getting more comfortable in their roles that they’re going to have during the season, and I think tonight showed how our guys can play different positions in the different lineups we have.” As expected, all 10 players who saw playing dme Saturday night showcased the defensive hustle that has become a trademark of Duke Basketball. What is less certain, however, is how the Blue Devils intend to score points. Against Tennessee-Martin, Ewing demonstrated that he has evolved into a guard who can both run the point and still remain a dangerous scoring threat. Ewing is the best on the team when it comes to creating points off the dribble, but we saw little penetration from the senior Sat-
urday night.
TIAN QINZHENG/THE CHRONICLE
JuniorShelden Williams dunks over Tennessee-Martin's Justin Cagle during Duke's season-opening rout of the Skyhawks.
COMPARING DUK Second Half
First Half 39
31.7 25.0
Points Assists Defensive rebounds Offensive rebounds Steals Blocks Turnovers FG percentage 3-Pt F6 percentage
50.0 45.5
Instead, Ewing opted to remain on the perimeter. Twelve of Ewing’s 20 points came byway of the three-point shot, a result of an undisciplined Skyhawk defense that often collapsed in the paint and left the senior with numerous open looks. Whereas Ewing stayed on the outside, JJ. Redick attempted to create his own scoring opportunities and rely less on the threepoint shot. Against Tennessee-Martin, Redick didn’t execute the allaround game he has been working on. After a few failed attempts to put the ball on the floor and SEE ROLES ON PAGE 7
SPORTSWRAP
2 1 MONDAY, NOVEMBER 22,2004
WOMEN'S BASKETBALL
Whitley sparks come-from-behind surge Greg Czaja THE CHRONICLE
by
Trailing their opponent by 11 points with 15 minutes left to play and on the verge of losing their second straight game against a nationally ranked opponent, the No. 6 Blue Devils (3-1) were in desperate need of a savior. Fortunately for Duke, divine intervendon came in the form of senior Wynter Whitley, whose 58 seven-point run PENN ST. DUKE 55 sparked a dramade comeback, and the Blue Devils went on to win 66-58. With her team trailing No. 23 Penn State 32-43, Whitley found herself with a wide open three-point shot at the top of the key and nailed it. After Penn State (0-3) missed on the opposite end of the court, Duke jumped out to a fast break. Monique Currie pulled up at the right elbow for a jump shot, which clanged off the rim. The ball, however, landed right into the waiting arms of Whitley, who converted an easy lay-up to close the deficit to six. After another missed Lady Lion jump shot, freshman Laura Kurz found a wideopen Whitley on the right side of the court. The senior nailed the 17-footer, sending the Cameron crowd into a frenzy. The Blue Devils would never look back. Six minutes later, Whitley would score her 11th point to give Duke its first lead of the half, and the Blue Devils went on to cruise to victory. “After Wynter hit that three, at that moment we started to come together and understand that it was going to take a team effort to win this game,” junior Mistie Williams said. “It can’t be a bunch of individuals out there—it has to be a team. After that moment it clicked. The energy started going, the crowd started getting into it, and it was hard not to get on fire after that.” Whitley, who also led her team with eight rebounds and four steals, almost did a double take upon realizing how unguarded she was on her three-point attempt. “I had to think about it,” the senior said. “I was open. I’ve been shooting after practice, so I felt comfortable with it, and I like the top of the key. No one was guarding me, so I shot it. It felt good.” The comeback came after a sloppy first half that saw several scoreless periods from both teams. Duke shot a paltry l-for-7 from behind the arc in the stanza, and the Lady Lions out-rebounded the home team 21-9. “It wasn’t a happy halftime,” head coach Gail Goestenkors said. “I don’t think I’ve ever coached a team that’s only had nine rebounds. That’s a lack of aggression, lack of discipline and a lack of heart. There’s no excuse for that.” The Blue Devils came out after the break with a strong man-to-man pressure defense and dared Penn State to beat them off the dribble. The gamble worked, and the Lady Lions turned the ball over seven times in the second half. “They definitely came out and picked it up,” Penn State guard Jess Storm said. ‘They were down 12, and I think when they [pressured the ball] we got a little bit rattled. I think we need to stay clam when other teams do that to us.” Duke also corrected its rebounding problem. In the second half the Blue Devils pulled down 21 rebounds and bested their opponents in secondSEE W. BASKETBALL ON PAGE 8
NENA
SANDERSON/THE CHRONICLE
lunior Jessica Foley contributed five points and five assists in the No. 6 Blue Devils' win over No. 23 Penn State Friday night in Cameron Indoor Stadium.
Even after by
Michael Moore THE CHRONICLE
The women’sbasketball team showed it still has many questions in its win over Penn State Friday, but the squad is starting to provide some answers. The Blue Devils bounced back from their Wednesday loss to No. 10 Notre Dame by using superior post play and a^ressive aamec man-to-man defense to offset the damage done analysis by ineffective zone defense and a poor firsthalf rebounding effort. Wynter Whitley and Mistie Williams stepped up when the Penn State defense was able to frustrate Monique Currie, who shot 5-for-15. Williams dominated inside, scoring 20 points on 8-for-13
win, questions remain shooting. Whitley came alive in the second half, grabbing seven rebounds and scoring seven straight points during one key Blue Devil run. Penn State’s defense had no answer for Duke’s inside game as the Blue Devils dominated points in the paint 40-16. The Nittany Lions were further hurt when one of their best interior defenders, forward Ashli Schwab, sat down after picking up her fourth foul with 11 minutes remaining in the second half. Duke immediately went on a 15-3 run during which the Blue Devils continuously pounded the ball inside. “I don’t think there was a post player on our team that could handle their post offensively,” Penn State head coach Rene Portland said. “Their post game was so much stronger than ours was.” Despite Duke’s interior advantage, the
Blue Devils were outrebounded in the first half 21-9. Penn State had seven offensive rebounds and nine second-chance points in the first half alone. The Blue Devils did narrow the rebounding differential in the second half but were still outrebounded for the game 38-30. Duke came out in the second half playing a 2-3 zone—most likely in an attempt to improve its rebounding. The zone, however, was counterproductive. The Blue Devils gave up many open looks and Penn State capitalized, scoring 13 points in the first five minutes. Duke then switched to a man-to-man defense, which energized the team and limited the Nittany Lions’ opportunities. The Blue Devils held Penn State to 17 points in the last 15 minutes of SEE
QUESTIONS ON PAGE 8
SPORTSWRAP
MONDAY, NOVEMBER 22, 2004
MEN'S SOCCER
I 3
WOMEN'S SOCCER
UCLA knocks Duke out of NCAAs by
Mike Van Pelt
THE CHRONICLE
LAUREN PRATS/THE CHRONICLE
Michael Videira dribblesthe ball up the sideline. The midfielder assisted Danny Kramer on Duke's first goal as the team moved on to the secondround ofNCAAs.
Tight defense keeps Duke in tourney by
Sarah Kwak
THE CHRONICLE
For the first time since 2000, the men’s soccer team advanced to the second round of the NCAA Tournament, defeating Coastal Carolina 3-0 Friday night at Koskinen Stadium. Tomek Charowski, who moved up to forward for the COSTAL first time Friday, found the net DUKE 3 twice to extend the lead that Danny Kramer established in the 30th minute. The Blue Devils (15-5) will face No. 12 Old Dominion, which received a firstround bye, in Norfolk, Va., Tuesday. With less than 15 minutes remaining in the first half, assist-leader Michael Videira fought off a Chanticleer defender to keep the ball in bounds. Videira then sent a pass to Zachary Pope, who crossed the ball in frontofCoastal Carolina’s net. Nigi Adogwa overran and missed the pass, but a charging Kramer followed and found the cage, scoring the only goal Duke would need. The Chanticleers were not able to muster a shot until five minutes had gone by in the second half, when point-leader Jordie Hughes drew Duke goalie Justin
Trowbridge out. Beating Trowbridge, Hughes fired a shot deep from the left
side that barely missed the goal. “[Duke] did a very good job defensively of shutting us down, of stopping us, of letting us get into a rhythm and getting our guys forward,” Coastal Carolina head coach Shaun Docking said. ‘They defended us very we 11.... They never really let us settle in the game.” Coastal Carolina (14-8-1) sustained a pair of severe injuries that prevented the team from getting into the game. Two Chanticleer players were taken off the field on stretchers, one with possible nerve damage and one with a concussion. In the first half, Patrick Robertson and keeper Aaron Weant collided in Coastal Carolina’s box to keep Duke’s Spencer Wadsworth from getting the ball. Robertson finally limped off the field, and Docking said his defender had felt numbness down his leg. Then, with only 13 minutes left in the game, another Chanticleer, Kevin Van Den Berg, suffered what seemed to be a severe concussion when he bumped heads with Duke’s Chris Loftus on a Coastal Carolina comer kick. Van Den Berg had a seizure when he first hit the ground and was taken off the field following a 20minute delay. “[Duke] is a very good team, and in order for us to stand a chance ofwinning,
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we needed everyone to be fit and healthy. We didn’t have that,” Docking said. When Van Den Berg went down, the Blue Devils led by two after Blake Camp sent a cross that Charowski knocked into the net on a sliding kick in the 51st minute. Just 30 seconds after Van Den Berg’s injury, Charowski found the net again following a Pope pass. Duke enjoyed a 15-4 shot advantage, and Coastal Carolina’s standouts— Hughes, Mamba Chisoni and Boyzzz Khumalo—were the only players to take shots on Trowbridge, who had two saves on the night. Both of Trowbridge’s saves were impressive diving stops, one on a penalty kick by Hughes. “On the whole team, there wasn’t anybody who didn’t have a great game,” said head coach John Rennie, noting that the team was successful despite a week-long hiatus. After falling to Virginia in the first round of the ACC Tournament, the Blue Devils had nine days to rest and practice before the NCAAs, something the coaches and players agreed they had needed. “We were really anxious to play,” Charowski said. “We were kind of happy we didn’t get the bye in the first round because we had so many days off. I think it’s better that we got this game in now.”
The women’s soccer team’s most successful season of the past decade came to a screeching halt Saturday in Los Angeles. No. 11 UCLA (16-6) knocked the 18th-rankedBlue Devils (15-8) out of the NCAA Tournament’s Sweet 16 with a 2-0 shutout. “It was a great experience and a great run,” head coach Robbie Church said. “Obviously when DUKE 0 you get down to UCLA 2 the final 16 you can smell the Final Four. Everybody was very proud of themselves and their teammates.” The Bruins’ DaneshaAdams scored the eventual game-winning goal midway through the first half. Teammate Lindsay Greco hit Adams with a pass, and the freshman split two Duke defenders before firing a shot into the right corner of the net. The score was Adams’ third of the NCAA tournament. From the start, the Bruins controlled the tempo, and Church said UCLA competed harder than his team throughout the first half, boasting a 10-2 shot margin over the Blue Devils. Still, Duke goalie Allison Lipsher made five saves in the period to keep the game within reach at the break. “She had a very solid game and made seven saves,” Church said. “Some of those were long-distance shots. There was one in the first half that was a really good save. If we had been down 2-0 [in the first half], it could have gotten really ugly. She kept us in it.” Duke emerged from the locker room with much more energy, knowing that a loss would end the careers of the Blue Devils’ three seniors, Casey McCluskey, Lauren Simel and Kate Straka. At the 47-minute mark, forward Carolyn Riggs barely missed a shot to the right side of the goal and McCluskey kicked a ball over the crossbar minutes later. The Duke offense, however, was unable to muster many strong opportunities on goal. SEE W. SOCCER ON PAGE 8
4 I
MONDAY, NOVEMBER 22,
SPORTSWRAP
2004
Despite progress, Duke falls flat at season's end Leslie Cooper THE CHRONICLE
by
Old demons came back to haunt the Duke football team in this weekend’s disappointing 40-17 loss to North Carolina. In what the team hoped to be a strong season finale, the Blue
FLORIDA 20 FSU 13 -
This one was for The Zooker. Chris Leak threw a touchdown, Ciatrick Fason ran for a score, and Florida upset Florida State 20-13 Saturday night to win in Tallahassee for the first time since 1986. It also gave fired coach Ron Zook a victory in his final regular-season game. Condemned since the day he replaced Steve Spurrier in 2002, Zook finally did something the ol' ball coach didn't in his 12 glorious seasons with the Gators. He won at Florida State. The players carried Zook off the field, and the coach flashed a big smile that had been missing for much of his three seasons. (AP)
MIAMI 52-WAKE FOREST? Knowing another loss would doom Miami's hopes of winning the Atlantic Coast Conference, Brock Berlin quickly ensured that the Hurricanes would stay in the thick of the title chase. Berlin threw for a career-best 361 yards and four touchdowns in just over a half Saturday, leading Miami past Wake Forest 52-7. He set the tone fo( Miami's big-play bonanza by hitting Sinorice Moss with a 42yard pass on the game's first play, enhanced his chances of winning the ACC Player of the Year honors and helped Miami set up a Dec. 4 showdown with Virginia Tech that may decide the conference title. (AP)
CLEMSON 29 S. CAROLINA 7 VIRGINIA 30 -GA. TECH 10 -
ACC 5-1 6-2 5-2 5-2 5-3
Virginia Tech Florida State Miami Virginia
North Carolina Georgia Tech Clemson
OVERALL 8-2 8-3 8-2 8-2 6-5 6-4 6-5 4-6 4-6 4-6 2-9
4-4 4-4 3-5 2-5 1-6 1-7
N.C.State
Maryland Wake Forest
Duke
2 Auburn 21 Alabama 13 2 Oklahoma 35 Baylor 0 4 California 41 Stanford 6 5 Utah 52- BYU 21 7 Michigan 37 Ohio State 21 8 Louisville 65 Houston 27 No. 9 Wisconsin 7 No. 17 lowa 30 No. 10 Florida State 13 Florida 20 No. 12 Miami 52 Wake Forest 7 No. 13 Boise St. 55 Louisiana Tech 14 No. 14 LSU 27 Mississippi 24 No. 15 Tennessee 38 Vanderbilt 33 No. 15 Virginia Tech 55 Maryland 6 No. 18 Virginia 30- Georgia Tech 10 No. 19 Boston College 34 Temple 17 No. 24 UTEP 57 SMU 27 No. No. No. No. No. No.
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game
Devils instead repeated
mistakes they seemed to have corrected earlier in the year. Duke ended last season optimistically with a celebratory 30-22 win in Chapel Hill. After Saturday’s game, however, the Blue Devils head into the off-season without much positive momentum. “We made a lot of strides this season,” Duke head coach Ted Roof said. “We didn’t finish the deal today.” Saturday Duke looked like the team that surrendered 348 rushing yards to Virginia in the Oct. 23 loss to the Cavaliers, not the team that upset Clemson 16-13 last week. The Blue Devils allowed North Carolina, who entered the game averaging 172.4 rushing yards per contest, to run the ball for 285 yards. From the first Tar Heel possession—in which North Carolina tailback Chad Scott completed four successful rushing attempts in a 53-yard scoring drive in the first 1:43 of the game—it was clear that North Carolina intended to challenge the Duke rushing defense. The Tar Heels continued to take advantage of holes in the Blue Devil defensive line to produce significant gains on the ground throughout the game. The defense has struggled against the run all season, but Duke also had trouble Saturday in areas in which it has excelled in recent weeks. The Blue Devils allowed the Tar Heels to convert 9-of-16 third downs, after allowing Clemson to move the chains on l-of-12 third down attempts last week and surrendering no third down conversions to Florida State during their Nov. 6 matchup in Tallahassee. “We had our chances, but we didn’t take advantage,” Roof said. “We weren’t very good on third down on either side of the ball, we made some poor decisions, and we just didn’t execute. They just ended up winning the game in the second half.” Trailing by three at halftime, a tired Duke squad allowed North Carolina to score 20 unanswered points in the latter portion of the game. The defense was on the field for 42 snaps during the first half, and with an offense that had nine three-and-outs, the Blue Devils defense did not have much time to regroup. This contributed to Duke’s lack of pressure on the quarterback and its difficulty resisting the run. On the other side of the ball, poor pass protection continued to plague the Blue Devil offense. Quarterback Mike Schneider was sacked six times, often as a blitzing Tar Heel defender broke through the line and brought him to the ground. The constant pressure seemed to keep Schneider off balance, and the sophomore committed the Blue Devils’ second turnover of the game when he threw into heavy coverage, allowing UNC strong safety Kareen Taylor to snag an interception and run the ball 67 yards into the end zone for the Tar Heels’ final score of the day. The Duke defense, which came into the game leading the ACC in takeaways,
DAN
RYAN/THE
CHRONICLE
North Carolina defensive end Khalif Mitchell sacks Mike Schneiderfor one of UNC's six sacks Saturday. had no pickoffs for the first time since the Virginia game. UNC quarterback Darian Durant, however, played an accurate, intelligent game and kept stray passes from the hands of Duke defenders. The Blue Devils only forced the Tar Heels to turn the ball over once—trailing 33-17 in the fourth quarter just prior to the Taylor pickoff. Special teams produced Duke’s most significant plays Saturday. The team blocked two Connor Barth kicks, one of which senior Kenneth Stanford recovered for a 70-yard touchdown run. After his 53yard, game-winning field goal last week, kicker Matt Brooks continued to excel, going 2-for-2 on extra points and scoring a 51-yard field goal.
This weekend’s play was not indicative of the improvements Duke football made throughout the season. Going into the offseason, Roof said he is looking to work on conditioning by increasing players’ time in the weight room and focusing on securing next year’s recruiting class. After buttressing the underclassmen all season to turn Blue Devils into a competitive team, the seniors leave disappointed, and the Victory Bell has returned to Chapel Hill. “We would have loved to have had more success this year, but I’m so proud of this group of guys,” senior Giuseppe Aguanno said. “We weren’t giving up. We never give up. That’s what this program is about We’re never going to quit.”
SPORTSWRAP
MONDAY, NOVEMBER 22,
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2004
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Playing in his final game,Kenneth Stanford slams a North Carolina widereceiver as theTar Heel catches a pass from quarterback Darian Durant. TheTar Heels won back the Victory Bell, outscoring Duke 20-0 in the second half.
FOOTBALL
from TC page 1
their strong running game, and as a defense we didn’t tackle very well.” Ahead by three going into halftime, North Carolina took control during its first second-half drive. With the ball at the Tar Heel 36, UNC tailback Ronnie McGill evaded the Blue Devil defense, hugging the sideline for a 47-yard gain before Stanford forced him out of bounds. Facing third-and-three at the Duke 10, quarterback Darian Durant shot a sharp pass to wide receiver Jarwarski Pollock, who dodged a tackle and scampered into the Blue Devil end zone to increase the Tar Heel lead to 10. “At the end of the first half we took it down and scored and gained some momentum, hoping to come out in the second half and establish something offen-
■I PUMBIWS
iraMI6BSGM*t
sively to keep the momentum,” Duke
head coach Ted Roof said. “But we traded punts and then they were able to stick one in after that.” Duke looked as if it would quickly close the gap after a 30-yard Ronnie Drummer run gave Duke first-and-10 on the 50. A holding penalty followed by a errant snap that sailed over quarterback Mike Schneider’s head left the Blue Devils with second-and-32. Duke ultimately had to punt, stalling the drive and its own comeback effort. A second Duke turnover produced North Carolina’s final touchdown. Late in the fourth quarter, Tar Heel free safety Kareen Taylor picked off quarterback Schneider at the North Carolina 36-yard line. Taylor outran the Duke offense to tally the 64-yard touchdown. ‘They just ended up winning the game in the second half,” Roof said.
Although North Carolina sealed the victory in the second half, the Tar Heels established their running game in the first two minutes, scoring off tailback Chad Scott’s 21-yard end zone push. Scott gained all of the opening drive’s 53 yards and 144 total on the day. The Blue Devil offense struck back, bringing the ball in range for a Matt Brooks 51-yard field goal, which came on the heels of Brooks’ game-winning 53yarder against Clemson last week. Duke executed its last scoring success with less than a minute left in the second quarter when Schneider sent a quick lateral to tailback Justin Boyle. Boyle rushed six yards into the UNC end zone, and the extra point brought the score to 20-17 at the half. ‘We were feeling pretty good at halftime. We just scored and were getting the ball, and then we just couldn’t play off that
momentum,” Aguanno said Ted Roof has finished his first full campaign with a frustrating loss that mirrored Duke’s season. North Carolina outplayed the Blue Devils for most of the game, but as has been the case at numerous other points, Duke was unable to capitalize on chances to take advantage ofits opponent. For a group of seniors, the loss ends a tumultuous Duke career that included a mid-season coaching change and a winless first season. “I’m so proud of this group. They left this program in better shape than they found it and that’s what everybody likes to see,” Roof said. “With some of the tough times we’ve had, they could’ve shut it down, but they didn’t. They always stayed in and kept fighting. But now we have to get back to work. We have to get going with our off-season program and just keep developing.”
Opening drive
Blocked punt
Roland delivers
UNC responds
High snap
After returning the kickoff to its own 44, North Carolina advances the ball to the Duke 21 in three rushing drives. Tailback Chad Scott breaks through a hole in the Duke defense and skirts the sideline to squeeze into the corner of
North Carolina's Connor Barth sets up for a 38-yard field goal. Casey Camero executes a leaping block, and Kenneth Stanford recovers the ball for a 70yard touchdown run with 1:48 left in the first quarter, it is Camera's third blocked kick of the season.
Down 20-10 with less than two minutes in the half,
On second-and-four, North Carolina tailback Ronnie McGill takes a quick handoff and scampers down the sideline for a 47-yard
After advancing the ball to the 50-yard line, a holding penalty pushed Duke back to the 40. A high snap sailed over Schneider's head on the next play. The team recovered the fumble at its own 18, and the Blue Devils failed to regain the lost yardage.
the end zone.
Duke halfback Andy Roland snags a 31-yard throw by quarterback Mike Schneider to move the team to firstand-goal. Two plays later, Justin Boyle scores to bring Duke within a field goal of the Tar Heels at halftime.
gain before being forced out of bounds by Stanford. The run sets the Tar Heels up to score three plays later.
6
MONDAY, NOVEMBER 22,
SPORTSWRAP
2004
CROSS COUNTRY
VOLLEYBALL
Maryland mounts 0-2 comeback B-squads run strong
Scott Bailey THE CHRONICLE
by
The Duke women’s volleyball team needed only three sets to defeat its opening opponent Virginia in this weekend’s ACC Tournament. But even with a 2-0 lead over Maryland Saturday, the Blue Devils could not hold on for the victor)', falling to the Terrapins 3-2 in the semifinals. “We were up 2-0 but we couldn’t finish,” head coach MARYLAND 3 Jolene Nagel said. 2 “We didn’t have a DUKE lot of errors, and they pulled it out when it counted.” Third-seeded Duke (20-10) was the highest remaining seed when it matched up against Maryland (15-14) in Charlottesville, Va. No. 1 seeded Georgia Tech and No. 2 seed Miami lost their first games in the tournament. With Maryland and Duke tied at eight midway through Game 5, the Blue Devils surged ahead to lead 10-8. Maryland, however, did not fold, going on a 5-1 run. Nagel then called a pair of timeouts, but the Terps still took the last two points to win 15-11 in Game 5 and complete an improbable comeback. The Maryland push started in the third game, when the refocused team returned to the court and gained the momentum. Duke’s stingy defense, led by senior Stephanie Istvan and freshman Jenny Shull, brought the Blue Devils back from the brink of defeat in the third to close within two points of the ACC Tournament finals. The Terrapins continued to roll, however, and closed out the game 30-25. The Blue Devils’ attack was slightly off in the critical third game. The team misplayed nine balls for errors, the most of any game in the match. The fourth game featured more backand-forth action as the teams batded to 12 ties. Maryland came out hard again, attacking Duke early for a 13-8 lead. The Blue Devils did not back down and took the lead at 17-16. Sophomore Tealle Hunkus knocked down six kills to keep Duke in the Game, but the Terrapins won Game 4, 3025 on a 5-2 run, forcing a fifth game. The first two games were as tight as
at
Ryan Pertz THE CHRONICLE
by
The men’s and women’s cross country to the Bronx, N.Y, this weekend to race in the historic IC4A/ECAC Cross Country Championships. The two races, which used to crown the nation’s top men’s and women’s team, respectively, are now overshadowed by the NCAA Championship meet but still host the best of the rest from the east. Senior Michael Hatch ran in his last cross country race for Duke and led the Blue Devils with a third-place finish on the five-mile course in 25:01. The No. 2 runner on the varsity team, Hatch did not qualify for the national tide race but still had the chance to close out his career in a
squads sent their B-teams
championship
CHRONICLE FILE PH(
Carrie DeMange and the Blue Devils fell to Maryland, the eventual ACC champions, in five close games. the final three, and the first included 14 ties and six lead changes. A strong defensive performance, characterized by Duke out-blocking Maryland 7-2 and multiple errors by the Terrapins, ultimately gave the Blue Devils the win in the opening game. Game 2 was similar in tone to the first, as the teams traded the lead often. With the Blue Devils up 24-21, Maryland regrouped with-a timeout and tied the game at 25. Duke struck back with its own run to end the game 30-27. Freshman Carrie DeMange recorded 10 kills to drive Duke to victory. “It was a great team effort,” said Nagel, noting Duke’s 23 kills in the second game. “We couldn’t have hit that well if we didn’t receive well and play defense well also.” Duke swept Virginia in its first match of the ACC Tournament Friday. Playing
in front of a large opposing crowd cheering on the home-team Cavaliers, the Blue Devils controlled the match. Hunkus aced Virginia six times while Istvan tallied 28 digs. “We came out in front of their crowd and didn’t give them a chance,” Nagel said. We were the only team that had to play [home team] Virginia and we completely dominated them.” The Blue Devils learn about their NCAA Tournament future next Sunday. By winning the ACC Tournament with a 3-0 victory over North Carolina Sunday, Maryland received an automatic bid. “We played well in the end stretch [of the season],” Nagel said. ‘This tournament will be in our favor. Maryland won the tournament in three sets, but they only beat us in five. Ifwe got through that, we’d be celebrating the championship.”
WRESTLING
Without top 3, Duke struggles by
Matt Becker
THE CHRONICLE
In its toughest test of the still-young season, the wrestling team finished in seventh place out of nine teams at the Keystone Classic at the University of Pennsylvania. With three of their top starters missing, the Blue Devils had strong individual performances but suffered as a team from the absences.
“Having those three guys would have put us right in the hunt of things,” head coach Clar Anderson said. Frank Comely, the defending ACC champion at 184 pounds, is currently at the U.S. Olympic Training Center and will not return to the team until December. Christian Smith was the No. 1 seed at the 125-pound weight class but hurt his shoulder while leading in the second period of his first match and was unable to continue. He is scheduled to see a doctor about the injury today. ‘We are obviously hoping it isn’t serious, but he was in a lot of pain,” Anderson said. “It is really too bad because he
IC4As
would have done very well.” Steve Smith, a 165-pounder, was the third Blue Devil who sat out. Smith injured his knee at last week’s Pembroke Open, where he had to forfeit in the finals and finished second. “The injury isn’t very serious, but it was still a little sore,” Anderson said. “Since we now have three or four weeks before our next competition, we felt it would be best for him to rest.” Still, in a tournament field that included No. 20 Pennsylvania and No. 23 Rider, Duke showed promise in several weight classes. Bryan Gibson and Wes Kuser finished third and fourth, respectively, at 133 pounds. Kuser defeated Gibson 8-7 in a wresde-off two weeks ago, but Gibson bested Kuser this time, winning 10-9. The two will batde all season for the starting spot at 133, but they are not backing down from the competition. “We keep making each other perform and we keep each other at our best,” GibSEE WRESTLING ON PAGE 8
Duke placed seventh out of nine teams at the Keystone Classic, hosted by Pennsylvania.
meet.
Two miles into the race, Hatch and an elite pack of three other runners pulled away. Hatch and Peter Hess of Maryland fell behind the top two runners in the middle stages of the race, but the Blue Devil made a move on Cemetery Hill, a large steep slope four miles into the race. In the last quarter-mile stretch, Hatch distanced himself from Hess and caught up to Yale’s Casey Moriarty, the defending champion. In the final meters, Moriarty and Hatch sprinted desperately to the finish line while watching the clock in hopes of finishing under 25 minutes, a feat that earns the runner a spot in the course’s SEE X. COUNTRY ON TC PAGE 7
SWIMMING
&
DIVING
Blue Devils surge to Ist and 2nd by
Sarah Kwak
THE CHRONICLE
In the Patriot Invitational, its first invitational meet of the season, the men’s and women’s swimming and diving teams had successful outings. The women took first place, beating teams like Yale and host George Mason, and the men’s team took second, finishing less than 40 points behind Yale. “We’ve been working really hard, so it’s really good to see the results this weekend,” Nora Stupp said. Standouts for the women’s team included both 400-yard freestyle relay teams, taking first and third. Individually, Jackie Rodriguez won the 200-yard breaststroke, the event in which she set a meet record last year, swimming 2:19.52 and finishing three seconds ahead of the rest of the competition. Julia Lewis, Alison Sundberg, Stupp and Anna Rogers swept the secondto fifth-place finishes in the 100-yard freestyle. North Carolina-Wilmington’s Apryl Kerstetter out-touched Lewis to win the race by a fraction of a second. “I think [the 100-yard freestyle race] SEE SWIMMING ON TC PAGE 7
SPORTSWRAP
MONDAY, NOVEMBER 22, 2004
I 7
MEN'S BASKETBALL
Davidson looms after short turnaround by
Chrissie Gorman THE CHRONICLE
During a final
TIAN QINZHENG/THE CHRONICLE
Co-captain JJ. Redick, who scored 20 points Saturday, will likely be a determining factor against Davidson tonight.
M.BASKETBALL from page 1
ROLES from page 1
Ewing grabbed the ball and fed fellow freshman DeMarcus Nelson, who showed his strength with a powerful dunk. Redick hoisted 12 three-pointers, several of which came either in transition or from several steps behind the arc. The junior, who hit four threes and scored 20 points, seemed resolved to shoot when he had open space. With about eight minutes left in the first half Redick, displaying his defensive ability stole the ball and brought it down the court ending his drive with a jumpshot from the left side. “I think our defense was pretty solid throughout the whole night, despite of how we played in the first half on the offensive end,” Ewing said. “In the second half, we just put together both a defensive and an offensive game, and it clicked.” Ewing fueled the defense with five steals on the day, setting his team up for some pivotal offensive strikes. Sean Dockery—whom Ewing beat out for the starting point guard spot—picked up two quick fouls upon entering the game midway through the first half. The junior did not take a single shot and never got into the flow of the game. The point guard remained assertive
drive to the basket, Redick reverted back to his old self 12 minutes into the first half, when he pulled up and converted long distance shots on two consecutive fast breaks. “I passed up some shots and put the ball on the floor when I shouldn’t have,” Redick said. “I’m going to look at that tomorrow on tape, and Coach and me will talk about it. I just have to take shots when they’re there, and if the shot’s there to take off the dribble, then I have to take that as well.” In the frontcourt, Shavlik Randolph showed early glimpses that he may have found the toughness that has lacking from his game. Six minutes into the contest, the juniorripped down an offensive rebound and slammed it back into the basket with a two-handed dunk that gave Duke an 11-8 lead. A minute later, Randolph made a similar statement on the defensive end by chasing down Tennessee-Martin’s Jason Thompson on a fast break and emphatically pinned his right-handed layup between the rim and backboard. The role of Randolph’s partner in the ffontcourt, Shelden Williams, is very well defined. If Williams is single-teamed, he will receive the ball. Unfortunately, that
offensively despite switching positions.
rarely happened Saturday night.
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He shot 4-of-8 from behind the arc. After the team’s offensive surge and even during periods of the first half, Krzyzewski used the game to try out various lineups. Off the bench, Lee Melchionni saw 20 minutes of action, scoring 10 points. Nelson, returning from an injury, played 18 minutes off the bench and contributed 10 points and nine re-
bounds.
“Shelden Williams is always in a traffic
jam,” head coach Mike Krzyzewski said. “It gets you frustrated. That’s what he has to
be careful of and show maturity, so that when he’s in a traffic jam—and he is a lot—he doesn’t extend and do something extraneous that will put him in foul trouble. I think he’s getting a lot better at that.” Duke’s greatest enigmas, however, are its freshmen. At this point, it appears as if
team meeting before the Duke Friday night men’s basketball team kicked off its historic 100th season Saturday against Tennessee-Martin, the players watched as Missouri, coached by former Blue Devil Quin Snyder, lost to Davidson, a team the Blue Devils have faced annually since 1909. As the No. 11 Blue Devils (10) prepare to face the Wildcats (1-0) tonight at 7 p.m. in the Charlotte Coliseum, they will not take the game lightly, especially given the Davidson’s 84-81 win over Missouri. ‘They really are a good team, and we know we have to go out there and play hard, because we are going to be sorry if we don’t,” Shelden Williams said. The Wildcats have a strong outside game, led by junior guard Matt McKillop, who went 5-for-8 in three-point range against Missouri. As a team, Davidson was 10-for-18 from beyond the arc and shot 60 percent on the night. Against Tennessee-Martin, Duke only shot 40 percent from the field, including a 31.7-percent shooting average through the first half. In the season-opening win, J.J
Redick and Daniel Ewing led the team with 20 points each. Although most of Duke’s offensive production will come from Ewing, Redick, Williams and Shavlik Randolph, the fifth spot on Duke’s starting lineup is still up in the air going into tonight’s contest. Freshman David McClure started against Tennessee-Martin Saturday night, but head coach Mike Krzyzewski said he is not focused on identifying a certain player to always fill this role. “Whoever plays that fifth position, that’s not what everyone on the bench should be competing for. They should be developing their roles so that I can put any of them in that fifth spot without going through psychological and emotional swings. If I wanted to start Sean [Dockery] against Davidson, it’s not a big thing to Sean, nor is it a big thing to Dave.” Regardless of who starts, Krzyzewski will rely on his entire team against the Wildcats, including freshmen McClure and DeMarcus Nelson, who made their collegiate debuts against Tennessee-Martin. McClure had three assists and four steals while Nelson, nursing a thumb injury, came off the bench for 18 minutes and 10 points and nine rebounds.
Sean Dockery picked up a pair of quick fouls when he came off the bench midway through the first half.
Krzyzewski will use the duo as wild cards. Surprisingly, it was David McClure, not the highly touted DeMarcus Nelson, who was first to ingratiate himself with the Cameron Crazies. Five minutes into the game, McClure displayed uncanny awareness by fooling the Tennessee-Martin defense with a pump fake and finishing a mid-air up-and-under layup in traffic. In the second half the freshman electrified the crowd by picking off the Skyhawks’ inbound pass and finding a streaking Daniel Ewing for the quick layup. solid,” “McClure’s been really Krzyzewski said. “He kept balls alive, he got three steals, a couple of blocks. He’s real efficient. He is actually our most ef-
ficient guy outside of the top four guys on our team.” Nelson, who was hampered by a protective brace on his right thumb, started the season by shooting a sub-par 3-for-l 1 from the field. Krzyzewski said he expects Nelson to carry a large part of the team’s offensive load and was not disappointed by his poor shooting percentage. “I was actually real pleased with [Nelson] tonight,” Krzyzewski said. “He was active, enthusiastic and playing to complement those other guys.... When DeMarcus gets in really good shape, he’s a multiple position player, and could even guard against some teams’ second big.”
8
MONDAY, NOVEMBER 22,
SPORTSWRAP
2004
QUESTIONS from page 2 the game while scoring 35. Duke continued to miss the leadership and ball handling of junior point guard Lindsey Harding. Freshman Wanisha Smith has shown the skills and instincts to become a premier floor general, but continues to make rookie mistakes. She had seven turnovers and only three assists, but she did come up with two important baskets late in the game to secure the victory. Harding’s return would also relieve some pressure from Currie. Without the perimeter threat of Harding, defenses
W. SOCCER from page 3 “We came out in the second half and played much, much better,” Church said. “We played pretty well in the back and in the middle third, but we just could not get the last volley in for a good scoring chance. I think we had seven shots but none of them were great shots.” With just over 15 minutes remaining, the Blue Devils changed their formation and brought an extra attacker to the front, trying to score an equalizer. Although the strategy generated a few more Duke shots, UCLA capitalized on a counterattack. Bristyn Davis netted a goal with three minutes remaining, giving the Bruins a two-goal advantage. “I think if you objectively look at it, probably the best team won on the day,”
have been able to key in on the preseason All-American. Currie has continuously encountered physical defense and double teams, and the effects are noticeable. Currie has looked impressive at times but is shooting only 36 percent on the year, compared to her 48 percent average last season. Duke will travel to the Bahamas for two games this weekend and will face No. 1 Tennessee when they return. The Blue Devils must improve their rebounding to have success against a difficult upcoming schedule, but the aggressive defense and dominant post play shown against Penn State display the potential of a developing team.
W. BASKETBALL from page 2
Church said It was an emotional loss for Duke, which won 15 games during the year, its highest output since the 1994 season. In addition, McCluskey had one of the best seasons in Blue Devil history. The ACC Offensive Player of the Year finished the season with 40 points, tying a school record. “I was initially very upset, but I’m also really proud of how well we did this season and how far we got in the tournament,” McCluskey said. “My main emotion is just pride and happiness at what a great season we had.” Duke will return 22 of the 25 players from this season’s roster, and Church said that the Blue Devils earned valuable experience traveling across the country during the tournament. Although replacing this class of seniors will be difficult, he said expectations will be high.
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chance points by a 15-to-l margin. “When you give away every statistic on the bottom [of the box score]... [you] don’t deserve to win the game,” Penn State head coach Rene Portland said. ‘We made bad decisions offensively. Turnovers were awful and at key times.” Penn State senior Tanisha Wright, who had scored 30 points in an earlier loss to No. 2 Texas, turned the ball over five times. Duke’s strong defense in the middle of the court gave Wright very little room to maneuver.
from page 6
son said. “If that competition wasn’t there, we might not be working as hard. Right now we know that if we don’t work hard, the other guy is right there to take the spot.” Senior Levi Craig at 174 pounds and Junior Mark Thompson at 197 finished fourth in their respective weight classes. Although the finish was impressive for both wrestlers, each was frustrated with the result. Craig lost twice -to Pennsylvania’s Dustin Wiles, a wrestler whom Craig beat last season. Thompson was competitive in each of his losses, but both times his opponent caught him in a move and won by pin. Thompson has not wrestled competitively in three years because of a red-shirt season, an injury and a season during which he played football. “He was frustrated with his losses,” Anderson said of Thompson. “To come out after a long time away and compete like he has is very impressive. We are real pleased with his progress and I think he will con-
The Blue Devils also dominated the Lady Lions underneath the basket on the offensive end and outscored Penn State 40-16 in the paint. Williams led the team with 20 total points, 12 of which came when Duke was re-energized in the second half. “We don’t like losing,” Williams said. “Coming off a loss, that should give you enough fire to get in gear and realize that we have to get better.... We don’t accept losing, and once we saw them get ahead, it reminded me of Notre Dame getting ahead. And it’s like ‘No, this is not going to happen again.’ We just kicked it into gear.”
tinue to improve.” None of Duke’s other wrestlers placed in the top six in his weight class. Anderson was pleased with the individual performances but stressed the mental impact of having three of the team’s top wresders out of the tournament. “Missing three of our stronger competitors may have taken away confidence from the rest of the team,” Anderson said. “We lost a lot ofclose matches and I think our confidence level was a big factor in some of those. There were a lot of strong teams and nationally ranked wrestlers, and I think we gave some guys a little too much respect which may have played a role in pulling out close matches.” Anderson was optimistic that the tournament experience would help his team in the long run. “Hopefully being in so many close matches lets our guys know that we can compete at a high level,” Anderson said. ‘The ACC Tournament is basically what we’re training for so exposing these guys to nationally ranked wrestlers was my goal.”
THE CHRONICLE
MONDAY, NOVEMBER 22, 2004
17
DAN RYAN/THE CHRONICLE
Midfielder Hilary Linton, who led the team with three shots in its losing effort, also maintained a strong defensive presence against Wake in the nationaltitle game.
F. HOCKEY from page 1 be confident. In the regular season, the Blue Devils defeated the Demon Deacons 4-3 in overtime Sept. 11 in WinstonSalem. Duke had also beaten top-seeded North Carolina in the regional final to qualify for the Final Four. But when the stakes were highest, Wake Forest worked its game plan to perfection. From the start of the game, with the home crowd roaring, the Demon Deacons did not allow Duke to move the ball effectively. Wake Forest closely guarded the Blue Devil forwards and prevented them from getting many touches on the ball. “One of their strengths is low block tackles, and they just did that consistently,” midfielder Hilary Linton said. ‘We didn’t adjust our game to counteract.” Wake Forest also had no trouble slashing through the Duke defense and penetrating the circle to challenge keeper Christy Morgan. The Demon Deacons’ incessant pressure finally broke through 25
X. COUNTRY from SW page 6. record book. But the Blue Devil finished two paces behind Moriarty, who also missed the target time. The men’s team placed 14th among a field of 20 teams and Hatch earned AllEast honors for his top-15 finish. The highlight for the women’s team was junior Liz Wort’s fourth-place finish on the 5-kilometer course in 17:57. Wort ran among a lead pack of four runners for the majority of the race. With about 100 meters left, Wort took the lead on an uphill slope but could not hold on as three runners out-kicked her on the final downhill stretch.
minutes into the game. Forward Tamar Meijer found a seam in the right side of the Duke defense and beat Morgan far post for a 1-0 lead. The Demon Deacons’ nearly extended their lead before halftime, but Morgan made two clutch saves and the defense cleared the ball. The second half, however, was more of the same for the Blue Devils. Unable to advance the ball into Wake Forest territory with any consistency, Duke was left scrambling in front of its own net trying to preserve the one-goal deficit. “It’s unfortunate this is our last game because we’ve had such great games and played so well this season. Our attack players have really performed for us with a number of goals that they have scored for us,” head coach Beth Bozman said. “This was not one of their better showings.” In the second half, it only took the Demon Deacons five minutes to extend their lead when Meijer wove through a crowd of defenders and beat Morgan far postfor the second time. Wake Forest notched the final goal with
20 minutes remaining. Midfielder Kelly Wood scored off a pass from senior forward Kelly Dostal. After the game, Bozman, who has not won a national tide in six trips to the Final Four, was dejected. “I’d be lying if I didn’t say we were really disappointed in our performance today,” Bozman said. “I think we had a great run all season and just really did not perform today. I’m disappointed for the team and disappointed for the seniors because as extraordinary as this season was, this is what you remember for a long time.” For the field hockey team, the loss was much different than last year’s, considering the path to the championship was much tougher. “I think going into the game there was a big difference in the general attitude of the team,” Linton said. “I feel like we were a lot more confident going in and everybody was really excited. Last year, we felt like we were lucky to be in that spot and this year we felt like we deserved to be there.”
Wort earned All-East honors along with Elle Pishny, who placed 11th, and Paris Edwards, who finished 12th.The women’s team did not send enough runners to be scored as a team. The team focus in now on today’s NCAA Championship races in Terre Haute, Ind. The No. 5 women’s team aims to earn a trophy by placing among the top four teams. Shannon Rowbury and Sally Meyerhoff will first and foremost look to earn a team trophy, but they will also strive to earn All-American honors in the process by finishing among the top 30 American runners. “We’ve been doing so well, so we’re going about it the same way,” head coach Kevin Jermyn said of the team’s prepara-
tion for the upcoming, meet. “It’s a little bonus race.” Nick Schneider will be the sole representative of the Duke men’s team and has a clear-cut individual goal of being named an All-American. On the same course, Schneider finished 16th among American runners at the Oct. 16 Pre-Nationals meet, which featured all but three of the nation’s top teams. The performance, which head coach Norm Ogilvie called Schneider’s best race of the season, led Ogilvie to believe that Schneider is among the top 25 American runners in the nation. “One thing is for certain: It’s his last cross country meet and he’s going to lay it all out on the line,” Ogilvie said.
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SWIMMING from SW page 6 really made our team realize our potential,” Sundberg said. “We weren’t expecting to do that well and gave us confidence going into the [4OO-yard freestyle] relays, which we also won. We weren’t really expecting that either.” On the men’s side, Kevin Arthofer set a jmeet record in the 200-yard breaststroke with a time of 2:03.80. Ryan Packer, John Humphrey and Billy Pearce all had strong meets, as well. The men’s “A” 400-yard freesyle relay team, which includes Packer, Humphrey, Pearce and David Peck, was disqualified from the race, taking away valuable points away from the team. “It was a pretty important meet,” Jay Ashtenfelter said. “I guess it was the focus of the first half [of our season]. After this, we pretty much get ready for Christmas training and from thep on out focus on the ACCs.”
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Diversions ampus Beat Aaron Di
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•ilbert Scott Adams TWENTY YEARS OF NOT SETTING EITHER ONE, I fAADE CONVENIENCE lAY NEW DISTRESS. BUT AFTER
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The Chronicle Our favorite memories of tailgates past: Matt’s accolades: .Karen Karen’s arrival: .Liana Intrepid photographers: Puppy Waking up earlier than class Tracy, Eric Being browned out: Jake, MVP, Skwak, Leslie Peter, Patrick, Varun We don’t remember them:.... Ice fights (with Strasser): Brooks, Lucie Laura Shotgunning: They ain’t what they used to be ..Roily
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MONDAY, NOVEMBER
THE CHRONICLE
22,2004
The Chronicle The Independent Daily
at
Duke University
CIEMAS bring new opportunities
This
weekend, after much antici- correctly configured, with the engipation,.the Center for Interdis- neering wing near Teer and Hudson ciplinary Engineering, Medi- and the medical wing closer to the and cine Applied Sciences held its Medical Center. The thoughtful design of the building will further the epening ceremony. CIEMAS is a state-of-the-art inter-
„
.
.
StatT6Clltori3l
disciplinary facility
that brings together aspects of the Medical Center, the Pratt School of Engineering and natural sciences from Arts and Sciences. The building provides Duke with one of the best research facilities and some of the best resources in the country. The high quality of these resources will help the University attract top-notch faculty who will conduct cutting-edge research and bring in the best graduate students. Since university rankings are based largely on graduate programs, having strong graduate students in Pratt will improve Duke’s national reputation in engineering and, in turn, improve the undergraduate engineering programs. Although rankings should not be the goal of the University, they do serve as an indication of greater things that are going on within the school. There are a number of improvements that can be made within Pratt that would result in a higher ranking while also benefiting the school and its students. CIEMAS is one such improvement; it will provide more interdisciplinary opportunities and better research options for engineers and scientists. As a physical structure, CIEMAS is well designed. The building expresses the interdisciplinarity that the University is trying to achieve. CIEMAS is
collaborative effort between the different
disciplines. simply integrating medicine, engineering and the natuIn addition
to
ral sciences, CIEMAS seems to be an indication of a new way of thinking about science and research. Instead of researching for the sake of research, the University is encouraging the application of research and integration of academic research and real-world problems. CIEMAS is designed to foster exactly this type of research and application. CIEMAS also creates a new space for engineers, both in classrooms and study rooms and in providing a social setting that Pratt previously lacked. The new cafe and common space are a welcome addition for Pratt students, who do not have the same access to academic social space as Trinity students. Rather than further segregating Pratt students, however, as the University moves forward, CIEMAS will also play a role in fully integrating the humanities, the sciences and engineering. After current construction on Perkins Library is complete, that will become the main thoroughfare connecting the main academic quadrangle to the Engineering Quadrangle. CIEMAS is another step in improving the quality of research at the University and truly creating an interdisciplinary education.
ontherecord “7 have always said that it’s goodfor an engineer to go to a liberal arts school. [Students] need to know the societal implications of the tech-
nology they re studying.
—Kristina Johnson, dean of the Pratt School of Engineering during the weekend opening of CIEMAS. See story, page one.
Est. 1905
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theDuke Student Publishing Company, Inc, a non-profit corporation independent ofDuke University.Theopinions 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 theauthors. To reach theEditorial Office at 301 Flowers Building, call 684-2663 or fax684-4696.T0reach the Business Office at 103 West Union Building, call 684-3811 .To reach the Advertising Office at 101 West Union Building call 684-3811 or fax 684-8295. Visit The Chronicle Online at http://www.chronicle.duke.edu. 2004 The Chronicle,Box 90858, Durham, N.C.27708. All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced in any formwithout the prior, written permission of the Business Office. Each individual is entitled to one free copy. ©
lettertotheeditor
Duke PTS concerns being addressed As Director of Duke Parking and Trans-
portation Services, I appreciate Aaron
Kirschenfeld’s concern for Duke PTS employees and encourage all Duke students to be attentive to the outstanding work being done by our staff. At the same time, I think it is necessary to clarify some misunderstandings contained in Kirschenfeld’s Nov. 18 column. For various reasons we experience attridon in our staff, most recently due to retirement. Because of the need to hire experienced and professional bus operators and provide them with the additional training to ensure they are fully competent to transport our students, replacing staff can take several weeks. At this time we are in the process of filling two vacant positions. These drivers will work full schedules during the nine-month academic year. Nine-month employees can be offered additional work over the summer to help fill vacation vacancies. All bus operators, both 12month and nine-month operators, are eligible to join Local 1328 of the Amalgamated Transit Union. There is no distinction in eligibility for union membership. Local 1328 represents the interests ofall bus operators to the management. During the last two years, the number of bus operators has increased, therefore giving more opportunity to expand the Union’s membership. In addition, hours of service on routes on campus and at the medical center have increased rather than decreased in response to the need to expand the bus system.
Our policies and procedures must include Duke personnel policies and those negotiated and agreed to between Duke and Local 1328. In addition, policies such as drivers not being allowed to eat or drink while operating transit vehicles (they are asked to move out of the driver’s seat if they choose to eat or drink on a parked bus) is an industry safety rule. Employees who have exhausted their sick leave may choose to take vacation days rather than unpaid leave. Situations with illness of employees or employee’s children are taken very seriously. Every attempt is made to schedule drivers off for medical appointments when their supervisors have advanced notice. When emergencies occur and no other drivers are available, supervisors have driven buses so that drivers can attend to their problems without causing disruption of services. Disagreements about disciplinary action or interpretations of attendance policies are all open to grievances by employees. If concerns are not addressed by the supervisor to the employee’s satisfaction, all such claims would go the grievance hearing process. Union representation has a role at each step of the grievance process. The managers of DPTS are always striving to improve both working conditions for employees and service to the Duke community. I would welcome the opportunity to talk with Kirschenfeld, or with others, who have specific situations they would like to discuss. Catherine Reeve Director, Parking and Transportation Services
think you can do better?
Columnist and Monday, Monday applications for Spring 2005 are now available outside the Chronicle office, 301 Flowers. Applications are due Tuesday, Nov. 30. E-mail Tracy Reinker at tmr4@duke.edu with any questions. 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.
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commentaries
THE CHRONICLE
A new inequity on Central dollars; let the Board determine whether students as a whole should pay more. Should the Board decline to allocate the Vice President for Student Affairs Larry Moneta is paying money, Moneta could raise all housing rates proportionally, go back to the fundraising drawing board or perhaps slow down for a long-term Central renovation in part by dramatically raising rental rates for existing Central apartments. This means development plans a bit. No renovation is worth this inequity. that lower-income and minority students will bear a disproporMoneta cites increasing diversity on West Campus as a tionate burden for Duke’s ambitions—and that is plain wrong. possible benefit for raising the Central rental rates. My reLower-income students have traditionally chosen Central sponse is, at what price? Sure, lower-income and minority because of its cheaper rates: a one-bedroom double costs students will no longer have a compelling financial reason to $3,800 per student this year. Minority students, a cohort that head to Central, and more may well choose West for their junior and senior years. But they will be paysubstantially overlaps with lower-income stuing $1,724 more! Are we really asking the dents at Duke, have had the added attraction less advantaged among us to pay this sum of a racially diverse Central community. Monfor our diversity efforts? eta now wants to make Central rates comparaThe planned rate hike also sets up a genble to those of West Campus, where a double erally inequitable situation for juniors of all room currendy goes for $5,524. In many races and socioeconomic backgrounds. With cases, families simply cannot afford to pay an additional $1,724 in housing costs. 50 percent higher rental rates, Central would become far less desirable than West—Students who choose Central for financial collins reasons already have to suffer the assorted as opposed to marginally less desirable, or even sometimes preferred—for juniors problems of living in dilapidated buildings hazzards of duke stuck with the three-year live-in requirement. that Moneta himself says should have been So, every junior goes into the housing lottery tom down five years ago. In addition to the grungy, unattractive facilities, these students must contend with the specter of an unduly expensive, low-quality apartwith added daily travel time, lack of basic amenities and a ment lurking behind a high number. Such a disparity is not desirable, as it sets up a rift between the haves and the havesense of isolation from the on-campus community. Now, we nots and leaves far too much to chance. If we are forcing stuare increasing the rental rates on these apartments by nearly 50 percent and depriving students of a lower-cost housing dents to live on campus their junior year, we should be working to make their housing options more equitable, not less. option? Something about that doesn’t make sense. Moneta, Executive Vice President Tallman Trask and President Richard Brodhead has indicated that shoring other administrators involved in the Central Campus project up financial aid is one of his most prized initiatives. It would have grand ideas that will cost the University an obscene be a mistake to undermine such a noble goal out of the box amount of money. From all indications, their fledgling plans with this inequitable and truly unfathomable rate hike. Furprovide a solid basis for improving the quality of student life thermore, the argument that a new, improved financial aid and facilities and should be carried out soon. system will offset this new burden for lower-class students But in paying for these ideas, Duke is neglecting a crucial does not hold water. Even if such new measures were implequestion of equity. We should not shift the brunt of the costs mented and made Duke a generally more attractive place for onto the undergraduates who are least able to afford it. Othsuch students in the long-term, the short-term is when lowerincome students will be suffering the effects of this rate inerwise, we unjustly burden those members of our communicrease. Some students will receive an adjustment in their fity, risk Duke losing its luster for lower-income prospective nancial aid package, but many of the middle cases will not, students and commit a grave error of unfairness. Central Campus must remain an affordable housing opand the rate increase will be quite palpable for them. tion for as long as the campus exists in its current form. If Putting the squeeze on Central residents is unwarranted, money is so sorely needed, Moneta can petition the Board of unfair and unnecessary. It is time for Dr. Moneta to reconsider. Trustees for another hike in the rate of the annual tuition inAndrew Collins is a Trinity senior and former University editor of crease so that all undergraduates can share the costs. I think the Central project is a worthwhile destination for my tuition The Chronicle.
up your pocketbooks, Central Campus residents Open Those crappy apartments won’t come so cheap anymore
Andrew
MONDAY, NOVEMBER 22, 2004
111
Another Saturday?
SIR
ELTON wants to thank the organizers of the Sudanese refugee camp movement for having such compassion and consideration. Sometimes you people really know how to make an international student feel right at home. With the tents, and the general atmosphere of hopelessness, they could not have captured SIR ELTON’s homeland better. Add a neglecting father and an inspiring, crippled mother with an adept tongue for aphorisms, and you’ve got SIR ELTON going to Main West Quad for Thanksgiving in a few days. Speaking of movements, SIR ELTON had to drop like five deuces yesterday. Oh! There goes SIR ELTON’s chances at a stand up career. It doesn’t matter—he thinks he has a pretty good chance at a career in protest. Apparendy, that’s all the rage now, ever since the ’6os told us that sitting on your behind can actually be extremely misconstrued for political protest. For every excessively funded, real movement, there are a bunch ofkids sitting idly at a bus stop in the most important role of their lives. The most impressive one SIR ELTON has seen has been the movement against long lines at Alpine, in which students protest by waiting in line, then not ordering anything, then getting back in . line, every day from 9 1 to 5. It’s a full time job, but hey, change costs more than dimes and cents. SIR ELTON was amazed at all the excitement that was sir elton brand, packed into this past prince of tennis Saturday. Who were the organizing wiztnonday, monday ards who came up with that one? If people weren’t drinking in line for the basketball game, then they were drinking at the tailgate, or passed out by noon. If SIR ELTON were to draw a graph of drunk people passed out as a function of time on Saturday, it would probably look like this:
Where the Dems went wrong
In
2004 the typical John Kerry supporter was motivated algroup of individuals dressed in all-black hooded sweatshirts entirely by a burning desire to bring down President marching to D.C. in protest of Bush. According to the Project George W. Bush, and the result was a Democratic party that Mosh website, “If you haven’t seen the new Eminem video, seemed far more angry, negative and extremist than its just-as‘Mosh,’ you should check it out... we have decided to ‘mosh’ unified opponent. Most troubling to swing (march) on college campuses and possibly the D.C. Mall on the day ofBush’s second inauguvoters, many Democrats associated themration (Jan. 20, 2005). We want everyone in a selves with bomb-throwing entertainers and celebrities who fairly or unfairly became the black hoodie making their protest for change.” First, do these people honestly think politivoice of the party. cians and mainstream Americans will respond Take the Democrats’ relationship with Michael Moore, the celebrity filmmaker who positively to a mob of people marching with black hoods over their faces? It certainly directed Fahrenheit 9/11. Moore, who says there is “no terrorist threat in this country” seems that such a group is more likely to scare Nathan carleton and equates the Iraqi insurgency to the than inspire. poker Further, isn’t associating with Eminem and American Revolution, is the prime example “Mosh” the last thing already extremized Deof an individual who a major party should not associate itself with, %t when Fahrenheit 9/11 premiered in mocrats need to do right now? The video includes images like Washington this June, Moore was joined by everyone from a knife going through a picture of the president’s head, newsSen. Tom Daschle to DNC Chair Terry McAuliffe to Sen. Bob paper headlines saying “Bush Knew,” references to the draft Graham.As Graham put it: ‘There might be halfof the Democonspiracy and an animated Vice President Dick Cheney cratic Senate here.” dying on the Senate floor. It even attacks the 87 Senators who Throughout the summer, high profile Democrats enthusi- voted to fund U.S. troops in 2003. As far as the song’s lyrics go, Eminem calls the president a astically supported Moore and Fahrenheit 9/11, which accuses Bush of aiding Osama bin Laden’s family following Sept. 11. liar, a “monster,” a “coward,” a “weapon of mass destruction” McAuliffe identified the film as “essentially fair and factually and accuses him of removing Saddam Hussein from power to based,” while Louisiana Sen. Mary Landrieu said, “It’s a movie “impress Daddy.” The “blood for oil” attack is also leveled. that’s been out there for three weeks, and there’s' not been I am as big an Eminem fan as anyone. I have all his CDs, one criticism that has not been refuted by the facts.” In July, drove to Detroit to see him in concert, and think he is the Moore watched the Democratic Convention with Jimmy greatest rapper alive. Yet I found it insane when Kerry went on MTV, talked about “Mosh” and said he “liked” it—just as I Carter in the former president’s private box. This for an indiwould have found it insane had Bush in 2000 praised one of vidual who opposed military action in Afghanistan and comEm’s anti-Clinton rants. Like any American, I look to millionpares the president to Adolf Hider. aire entertainers for entertainment, not political analysis. One would think that Bush’s Nov. 2 victory showed DemocThe lesson of 2004 should have been that one should steer rats how foolish it is to align themselves with hate-filled extremists and conspiracy theorists. This is apparendy not the clear of bomb-throwers, even when they are throwing bombs case, as some are already readying and-Bush demonstrations at a candidate one wants to lose an election. Fortunately for for Inauguration Day, one of which is called “Project Mosh.” Republicans, it doesn’t look like everyone got that message. Mosh is an students at Duke and other Project event Nathan Carleton is a Trinity seniorand president oftheDuke Conschools are currently planning for January. It is inspired by the video for the Eminem song “Mosh,” which shows a large servative Union. most
Suffice it to say, the energy supplied in the basketball game was probably more from desperate attempts to not pass out by shouting than actual enthusiasm. The game was, how do you say it, ah yes, a shutout. Tennessee-Martin might as well have been a caged squirrel at the hands of anti-PETA activists (hunters/killing enthusiasts) armed with aluminum bats and hypodermic needles. But hey, that’s tons better than UNC (ifyou hadn’t heard, they lost in basketball to one of the boats that Christopher Columbus crossed the Adandc on). SIR ELTON has seen pathetic losses (excessive blood loss mosdy), but losing to a maritime vessel is the worst. Nodce SIR ELTON didn’t mention Duke’s loss in football and the subsequent loss of the bell, because, as has been said before, it’s a @*#sing bell, and also, nobody cares about football. As one can see from the angst building in SIR ELTON’s written voice, he could use a vacation, and that is why this Thanksgiving is much anticipated. He was walking through the BC and saw where his handprint was on the “These hands won’t harm a woman” banner and the first thing that popped into his head was “Good thing I use my other hand for wielding bats.” He has gotten to the point where going home Tuesday and returning in January has become a reasonable option because what with the plane, boat and camel riding time, it takes about 30 days to get home. And what’s with all the pre-break tests? SIR ELTON is tiring of all this character building and this recurring overcoming-hurdles-before-relaxation motif. After watching an episode of Friends at home, SIR ELTON immediately decided to come to America to form a coed group of friends, each with their own quirks, who sleep around with each other and then laugh at the absurdity of their situation. That’s the American Dream, not taking tests right before break. You can click, but you can’t hide. Doivnloading movies is bad.
THE CHRONICLE
121MONDAY, NOVEMBER 22,2001
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