December 1, 2004

Page 1

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Duke's most notorious wy et societies revealed

ACC newcomers play for BCS slot Saturday

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WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 1, 2004

Student Health

Captains steer Duke to 1 st big win by

search Kelly

Rohrs

THE CHRONICLE

After stretching on for almost a year, the search for the first executive director of the Student Health Center is back to its first stages. Last month, the University interviewed three people on campus and offered the position to the only suitable candidate, said Jean Hanson, administrative director for Student Health. The woman, whose name was not released, considered coming to Duke, but when her current university expanded her job and increased her salary, she declined Duke’s invitation. After the preferred candidate told Duke she would not come, University officials decided they would re-start the search to find someone equally qualified. Hanson said the initial pool was “thin,” and none of the other candidates fulfilled the needs of the position. ‘There was a fair amount of interest, but we’re looking for a very high caliber person that will be immediately credible,” Hanson said. Tt’s a challenge to find somebody that understands all that’s involved, that has experience with the politics of it.” The executive director position was created last year to refocus the Student Health Center’s role within the Duke University Medical Center, where teaching and research are emphasized, and within the student community, where care and wellness are the primary concerns. As Student Health carves out its niche, the director will have to struggle with two separate administrations on the Medical Center and University sides. Historically, the demands from the two arenas have been varied, but with new leadership in both the Duke University Health System and the University, collaboration has increased. “We’ve got some kind of unified vision—and that’s new,” Hanson said. The qualifications for the executive director have not changed since the search began, and the same outside firm, Diversified Search Inc., will continue to feed candidates to Duke. The firm is known for its success in finding qualified female and minority candidates, which Caroline Nisbet, chair of the search committee, said is a goal. Because the University is hoping for an executive director with academic experience, the hiring cycle opens up at this time of year, when candidates can finish the school year before moving. SEE DIRECTOR ON PAGE 9

Ryan

THE

restarts by

ONE HUNDREDTH YEAR, ISSUE 69

TIAN QINZHENG/THE CHRONICLE

Daniel Ewing drives to the basket during the second half, when Duke staved off a Michigan State surge.

Pertz

CHRONICLE

The captains played like captains as Duke fought off the relentless Spartans to win its first big game of the season. JJ. Redick and Daniel Ewing masked the lOth-ranked MSU |74 Bl ue Devils’ (4-0) 81 weakness in the DUKE frontcourt as each scored 29 points—combining for almost three quarters of the team’s total. “JJ pretty much had it in the First half,” Ewing said. “He had it rolling, and I took a couple of shots playing off him. In the second half, it was almost like we were taking turns.” Duke never surrendered the lead after halftime as the backcourt duo nailed key threes, and No. 11 Michigan State (3-1) missed sof-8 free throws in die last three minutes. Duke topped Michigan State 8174 for the second consecutive year in the ACC/Big Ten Challenge Tuesday in Cameron Indoor Stadium to win its toughest game before conference play begins. The Spartans whittled away the Blue Devils’ lead throughout the second half. With Duke clinging to a two-point advantage and just over a minute remaining, Ewing hit a pull-up three, giving his team a cushion that it would maintain with solid free-throw shoodng. ‘There were a lot of good players out on the court, but he was the most mature player out there,” head coach Mike Krzyzewski said of his converted shooting guard who grew further into his point guard role Tuesday. “He had the look of a champion out on the court.” Ewing put on a one-man show in the crucial middle stretch of the second half, scoring 9 of the team’s 11 points to keep SEE MSU ON PAGE 16

GPSC discusses plans for Central Kelly Rohrs THE CHRONICLE

by

As discussions about how struct Central Campus take

to

recon-

shape, gradu-

and professional students are taking steps to ensure the newly designed space accommodates an expanded graduate student population. Scott Selig, assistant vice president for capital assets, presented the current master plan for Central at Tuesday night’s Graduate and Professional Student Council meeting. While fielding questions about housing capacity and the overarching goals of the construction, he encouraged graduate students to advocate for their community during the ongoing planning process. “Everything you see in one of these, it will change,” he said as he showed off overhead drawings of the Central Campus master plan for the next 50 to 100 years. ate

“We’re generating this plan as we go along so you can really have an impact.” The primary goal of Central, Selig said, is to connect East and West Campuses by creating a transportation corridor that can accommodate both pedestrians and bicyclists. The campus will be constructed for higher population density that will allow more square footage without demolishing any existing green spaces. The general layout of the buildings features a core of apartments as well as a gath- Scott Selig ering area. A grocery store and some offices will be part of the town center, as well as some space for organizations. Committees that will recommend exacdy what should go on Central

will be formed after the Board of Trustees meeting this weekend. Currendy Central houses about 1,000 beds, about 200 of which are reserved for graduate and professional students. As the under-

graduate population expands by

200 students over the next four years, however, more beds will be needed on Central, and graduate students may be denied oncampus housing unless the number of total beds is increased. Selig said that when new apartments are constructed on

Central, graduate housing would likely be distinct from undergraduate housing “because we’ve heard loud and clear that those are two separate SEE GPSC ON PAGE 9


2

THE CHRONICLE

WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 1,2004

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>pa.o ga ig. was ended by California real estate agent Nancy Zerg. Jennings lost In Final Jeopardy by guessing Federal Express instead ofH&R blockfor the answer to this question;"Most of this firm's 70,000 seasonal white-collar employees work only four months a year." Ken

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Ridge quits as head of homeland security by

Katherine Shrader

THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

WASHINGTON Tom Ridge, the nation’s first homeland security secretary, announced Tuesday that he is resigning after three years of reworking American security and presiding over color-coded terror alerts. He is the seventh officer to leave President George W. Bush’s Cabinet Ridge oversaw the most significant government reorganization in 50 years. He will be remembered for his terror alerts and tutorials about how to prepare for possible attacks, including the contro-

versial “disaster kits” that caused last year’s run on duct tape and plastic sheeting. Amid warnings that the country may face increased terror risks around the holidays and the Jan. 20 presidential inauguration, Ridge said he will remain on the job through Feb. 1, unless his replacement is installed sooner. Ridge acknowledged he could not prove the costly and complex security measures that have been put in place have foiled any terrorist attacks inside the United States, but he said the country is safer today than before the suicide hijack-

ings on Sept. 11, 2001, killed nearly 3,000 people in New York, Washington and Pennsylvania.

Indonesia plane crash kills 31

“I am confident that the terrorists are aware that from the curb to the cockpit we’ve got additional security measures that didn’t exist a couple years ago,” Ridge told reporters at the department’s Washington campus, which he helped create. “His efforts have resulted in safer skies, increased border and port security and enhanced measures to safeguard our

A Lion Air passenger plane carrying more than 150 people skidded off a runway in central Indonesia during heavy rain and split into two piecesTuesday, killing at least 31 people.Three of the dead were children, and at least 62 people were injured.

Blaze kills Honduran children Honduran children hunting rabbits who were running from a sugarcane field that was set on fire as part of the harvest were caught in the blaze themselves. Thirteen youngsters were killed, and a man and a 14thchild were severely burned.

SEE RIDGE PAGE 7

Ukrainian opposition rejects compromise BY VIADMIR ISACHENKOV THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Ukraine’s shivering but KIEV, Ukraine determined political opposition dug in its heels in Kiev’s frigid cenU al square Tuesday, rejecting an offer of the prime minister’s job from the declared winner of disputed presidential election and withdrawing from talks aimed at reaching a compromise. The election dispute sparked a struggle at Ukraine’s parliament, with throngs of opposition supporters trying to storm inside after lawmakers tentatively approved a resolution that would cancel Saturday’s nonbinding decision to declare the election results invalid. Protesters—some crawling on each other’s shoulders—got as

far as the lobby before police stopped them. The government, which is supported by powerful neighbor Russia, pushed ahead with offers that sought to placate or isolate Ukraine’s popular opposition leader, Viktor Yushchenko, who favors closer ties with the West. Prime Minister Viktor Yanukovych, whose victory in the Nov. 21 presidential runoff has been challenged as fraudulent, suggested he could agree to outgoing President Leonid Kuchma’s proposal for a new election—but that both he and Yushchenko should bow out if one is held. “If this election brings a split in the country... I’m ready to drop my bid along with him,” Yanukovych said. Yushchenko

ignored the proposal. He also rebuffed the offer of the prime minister’s post under a Yanukovych presidency, saying it fell far short of a solution to Ukraine’s crisis. “The election was rigged,” he said. “People are asking whether this country has a political elite capable of upholding a fair vote.” Yushchenko has led the opposition for years and was long seen as its candidate in the election in a country where millions are yearning for change after Kuchma’s 10-year rule. By contrast, Kuchma anointed Yanukovych as his favored successor just last spring, hoping his prominence and publicity as prime minister would attract votes.

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SEE UKRAINE ON PAGE 9

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THE CHRONICLE

WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 1,2004

3

newsbriefs DUPD arrests woman involved in hit-andrun accident Duke University Police Department officials are investigating a domestic-related hit-and-run accident Tuesday morning at the entrance of Duke University Hospital. Witnesses said the victim, a 41-yearold Hillsborough man, was attempting to stop the vehiclewhen the vehicle accelerated and struck him. He was later brought to DUH to be evaluated for nonlife-threatening injuries. Shortly after the 7:42 a.m. incident, DUPD officers arrested Nell Dean Scott, 56, of Greensboro, at the intersection of Green and Broad streets in Durham. Police said Scott is being processed at the magistrate’s office and has been charged with driving with a revoked license, assault with a deadly weapon (motor vehicle) and leaving the scene of an accident with injuries. Scott also has several outstanding warrants from at least one other county in North Carolina, police said.

2 men charged with murder at Southpoint

PETER

GEBHARD/THE CHRONICLE

Senior Vanessa Sendros fills up on coffee at a distribution point in the Bryan Center, since Campus Services changed its Student Appreciation Week offerings.

Campus Services restricts free drinks by

Kelly

Rohrs and

Skyward Darby

THE CHRONICLE

Amid the stress of pre-finals and dip in energy that hit mid-afternoon Tuesday, senior Paul Baldensperger needed a cup of coffee. In previous years, his drink would have been free, but this year he had to fork over his DukeCard and pay $1.39 for a small cup of coffee at Alpine Bagels and Brew. “I feel robbed,” he said. “Coffee is good for you. It helps me work.” For the past two years, most on-campus eateries have given students free coffee and fountain soda during the week pre-

ceding finals each

semester. The giveaway was part of Student Appreciation Week, a promotional program from the Division of Campus Services. But students looking for a caffeine fix this year will have to trek to the Bryan Center in order to receive their free coffee and soda that are being served with fresh fruit and snacks. Prior to 2002, drinks were not offered at eateries. Jim Wulforst, director of dining services, said the expense of free drinks caused Campus Services to revert to the single-location system. Last year the total cost of the free coffee

Hi

and soda campus vendors gave away exceeded $20,000, Wulforst said. The true price tag of the program was much higher because many eateries lost the sales revenue they normally earn on drinks. “Places like Alpine is where it had the most impact,” Wulforst said. “When they give away free coffee, their revenue goes down from $3,000 a day to $l,OOO a day.” Many students, who depended on free drinks during finals study sessions, were frustrated with the change in access. Grant Woodley, a third-year student at

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SEE BRIEFS ON PAGE 7

Correction An article about changes to the federal Pell Grant program that appeared Nov. 30 on page 1 of The Chronicle should have stated that Rep. Walter Jones, R-N.C, supported the changes to the bill.

SEE DRINKS ON PAGE 8

s

'

Dec.

Durham police charged two men with murder Tuesday for the shooting death of Harvey Denard Wiggins, 23, at Southpoint Cinemas Monday night. According to news releases, Julius Earl Gray, 24, of Loft Road in Raleigh, was taken into “investigative detention” following the shooting. He remains in police custody. The other man charged, Barry Ford Evans, 22, of Durham, is currently not in custody. Police searched his home at 202 East Club Boulevard, but no one was home at the time. Investigators warned that Evans is

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THE CHRONICLE

41 WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 1, 2004

health&science LWMI.I'jUi ical trialsof an experimental vaccine against the deadly toxin ricin, a biological agent that can be tested only in select labs. The Food and Drug Administration gave approval to the University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center Tuesday for the safety trial in humans. According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, as little as 500 micrograms of ridn, roughly the amount that fits on the headof a pin, is enough tokill an adult. Possible prescription ingredient prompts recall of impotence pill An over-the-counter pill used to treat erectile dysfunction is being recalled because it may contain an unlabeled prescription drug ingredient, the product's maker said Tuesday. Beverly Hills-based Spectrum Group urged consumers to stop taking the tablets, called Male Power Plus and marketed as a dietary supplement.

Human Rights Watch says curbs on condoms undermine global rights Criticism of condoms and restrictions onaccess to them are undercutting the fight against AIDS in countries ranging from Nigeria to Peru to the United States, Human Rights Watch said in a report Tuesday. Marking World AIDS Day, the New York-based human rights organization described condoms as the single most effective weapon against sexually transmitted HIV, but said they are subjected to government-backed constraints in numerous countries. In some places, Human Rights Watch said, police confiscate condoms from AIDS outreach workers and use them as evidence of illegal prostitution or sodomy.

All 13 essential nutrients for humans can be found in alcoholic beveraaes.

Sleepless nights fail to help students

Texas researchers to begin testing vaccine against ricin in humans Texas researchers will begin clin-

GDDD FOB YOU

by

Stew. Veres

THE CHRONICLE

With a smile on her name tag and a certain bounce to her step, Tenal Alston is known as a “spiritual advisor” to some. To others, she is known as the location manager at the Perk who has been providing late-night mochas, lattes and other heavily caffeinated drinks to sleep-deprived students for the past three years. “I try to keep students awake for as long as I can,” Alston said. “That’s what Tm here for.” Most nights she witnesses tired students cramming for classes well into the night. Every so often, she said, students who were at the Perk the night before have still not left when she returned in the morning. However effective these latenight cramming sessions seem to be for earning belter grades, students may be harming their health in the process. Experts warn that the heavily caffeinated, sleep-deprived college culture could be causing students more harm than good. Experts say teenagers should get about nine hours of sleep PETER GEBHARD/THECHRONICLE each night as it both recharges die body and consolidates memo Sophomore John Kang gears up for another all-nighter as he works on ECE 61 homework in the House C commons room Tuesday. ties. Lacking the requisite hours of sleep each night, doctors say tigue, lack of focus, decreased vices, said students that used to was studying organic chemistry take his class would only receive at 5 a.m. Tuesday morning at many students at Duke are falling motivation and increased irrivictim to sleep deprivation. all areas of on average five to six hours of the Perk, admitted to being tability, affecting Dr. Sherry Huang, a physician life—including relationships sleep each night. “It doesn’t take sleep deprived. Resting only and classwork. Sleep deprivation long for someone to get sleep four or five hours a night, she at the Duke Student Health Censaid she has trouble paying atter, said she sees an average of signs begin to show quickly after deprived,” he said. four or five students per week an individual does not get And as finals arrive, students tention during class. Her main are admitting that their lack of problem is not excess school complaining of sleep depriva- enough sleep. tion symptoms. Jim Clack, director of Coun- sleep will become worse. These symptoms include fa- seling and Psychological SerSEE SLEEP ON PAGE 10 Sophomore Ripal Shah, who


THE CHRONICLE

WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 1,200415

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The nine U.S. Supreme Court Justices pose in an unofficial picture Dec.5,2003 at theSupreme Court building.

Supreme Court hears Title IX retaliation case

tarily, Ginsburg interrupted.

“To say ‘trust me’ is not an answer,” she said. Ginsburg contended that discrimination victims often “call and call SEE TITLE IX ON PAGE 9

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WASHINGTON The Supreme Court considered Tuesday whether a landmark gender equity law shields people who report discrimination, hearing the case of an Alabama girls basketball coach who was fired after complaining that the boys received better treatment. In a case testing the scope of the Title IX law, Roderick Jackson used the statute as the basis for a lawsuit against the Birmingham Board of Education, claiming wrongful termination by the high school. Jackson lost his coaching job in 2001 after repeatedly asking the Birmingham school officials to provide his team a regulation-size gym with basketball rims that weren’t bent—Just like (lie boys’ team had. He remained on the payroll as a teacher. Lawyers for the board contend that if the justices side with Jackson it would open the door to a flood of litigation. Title IX prohibits gender discrimination inpublic and private schools thatreceive feder-

al funding, which almost all do. It covers admissions, recruitment, course offerings, counseling, financial aid, student health and housing, as well as athletics. At issue is whether Congress intended to allow lawsuits by people —regardless of their sex—who say they were punished for pointing out gender bias. The court appeared split along ideological lines. Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg who was joined at times by liberal colleagues David Sou ter. John Paul Stevens and Stephen Breyer—pressed Birmingham School Board lawyer Kenneth L. Thomas on whether bias complaints would be fully aired if coaches and teachers could be fired without recourse. When Thomas replied that plenty of complaints are reported and resolved volun-

Duke University Surplus Eagle Summit Christian Fellowship Church First Southern Cash Advance Food Lion 40 Below Barber Shop Golden Pizza & Subs High Style Hair Salon Kerr Drugs Nationwide Communications

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THE CHRONICLE

61 WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 1.2004

Abbas stops biased media by

Josef Federman

THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Interim Palestinian leader MahJERUSALEM moud Abbas ordered a halt to anti-Israel incitement in government-controlled media, officials said Tuesday, meeting a key Israeli demand and adding to the new signs of goodwill that have emerged since the death of Yasser Arafat. Israel has long complained of incitement in the Palestinian media, citing fiery anti-Israel broadcasts by Muslim preachers and programs praising the killing of Jews. It blamed Arafat, who died Nov. 11, for promoting CEERWAN AZIZ/AGENCE

FRANCE PRESSE

Iraqi Prime Minister Ayad Allawi meet with members of the National Assembly in Baghdad Nov. 30.

Prime Minister Ayad AUawi, who arrived in Amman late Tuesday, sought to play down expectations that his meetings would mark a breakthrough in curbing the violence, saying Jordan was simply the first stop on a tour that would take him to Germany and Russia. Before leaving Baghdad, Allawi said his government would pursue contacts with “uibal figures” and other influential Iraqis to encourage broad participation in the elections, which some Sunni clerics have threatened to boycott. But Allawi branded reports that he would meet with former Baath party figures as “an invention by the media,” although word of such contacts came last week from tire Iraqi Foreign Ministry. Former Baath party leaders are believed to form the core of the insurgency. Ministry officials had said that Arab governments urged the Iraqi authorities to make contacts with Iraqi exiles and

sive material on the air. “Abu Mazen asked us to be sure that die material we broadcast does not contain any material that could be considered incitement,” he said, referring to Abbas by his nickname. Officials said the new instructions were given last week. Israeli officials welcomed the development but said that they were waiting to see actual changes in the Palestinian media. “If we see a reduction in incitement, this will indeed be a positive signal,” Israeli Foreign Ministry spokesperson Mark Regev said. Late Tuesday, gunmen in a taxi shot and killed Nasser Badawi, 37, a Fatah political leader in the Balata refugee camp next to the West Bank city of Nablus, Palestinian security officials said. It was not known who the gunmen were. Israel said it had no troops in the area of Nablus. Fatah is Abbas’ party. Announcements over camp loudspeakers blamed collaborators with Israel, but

IRAQ ON PAGE 10

SEE MEDIA ON PAGE 10

Iraq’s interim PM visits Sunnis by

Robert Reid

THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

BAGHDAD

Iraq’s interim prime minister went to for meetings with tribal figures and other Tuesday Jordan influential Iraqis in a bid to encourage Sunni Muslims to participate in die Jan. 30 elections, but he ruled out contacts with insurgent leaders and former members of Sad-

dam Hussein’s deposed regime. Insurgents targeted U.S. troops Tuesday in Baghdad and in and around Beiji, a city north of the capital, killing four Ir aqi civilians and wounding at least 20 other people, including three U.S. soldiers. Three Iraqi children aged 3, '1 and 5 were killed when two mortar rounds struck their neighborhood in Baqouba, the U.S. military said. The attacks came as the U.S. military announced dial its November death toll reached at least 135. That figure equaled the highest number of U.S. deaths in a single month since die Iraq war began in March 2003.

Thursday, December 2 Richard White Auditorium

SEE

7:00 p.m.

East Campus

Kay Redfield Jamison The author of An Unquiet Mind and Touched withFire will discuss her new book

Exuberance: The Passion

for

Life

(Knopf)

Kay Redfield Jamison is professor of psychiatry at the Johns Hopkins School of Medicine. THE

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objectionable content. Radwan Abu Ayyash, head of Palestinian radio and television, said he instructed all of his department heads, at the request of Abbas, not to broadcast offen-


WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 1, 200417

THE CHRONICLE

BRIEFS

RIDGE

from page 3

considered “armed and dangerous.” He is also believed to frequent the Lynn Road area in eastern Durham, specifically the Greystone subdivision. Police said Wiggins, a Raleigh resident, was inside his gray Mercury in a parking lot behind the movie theater when he was shot in the face. Police responded to an 8:52 p.m. call reporting the shooting. After officers arrived at the scene, Wiggins was rushed to Duke University Medical Center. Doctors pronounced him dead of a single gunshot wound to the head about two hours later. Wiggins’ death marks the 31st homicide in Durham County this year. DUH to proceed with blood substitute study A clinical trial designed to test an oxygen-carrying blood substitute in trauma victims being transported to Duke University Hospital has received approval from Duke’s Institutional Review Board. DUH has one of the approximately 20 trauma centers in the United States that are conducting the trial, which will begin in January. The current standard of care calls for the use of saline solutions in emergencies because most ambulances do not carry blood on board due to storage and compatibility concerns. PolyHeme eliminates this problem because it lacks antigens, so it is universally compatible. Due to the extent and nature of their injuries, people who are eligible for this study will be unable to provide informed consent Tor participation in the trial. Therefore, the study will be conducted under federal regulations that allow for clinical research in emergency settings using an exception from the requirement for informed consent. The Durham County Board of Commissioners approved the agreement between Duke University Hospital and Durham County Emergency Medical Services and the North Carolina Medical Board has also approved the study.

place Ridge are Bernard Kerik, the former New York

from page 2

critical infrastructure and the American public,” Bush said in a prepared statement Tuesday evening. Ridge sent his letter of resignation to President Bush at midday Tuesday, after attending a morning White House threat briefing with CLV and FBI officials. The former Pennsylvania governor thanked Bush for giving him die opportunity to fight back against terrorists. He recalled that the passengers on Flight 93 who forced their hijacked plane down in a Pennsylvania field had also fought back. There will always be more to do, but today, America is significantly stronger and safer dian ever before,” Ridge wrote to Bush. Ridge is the seventh of Bush’s 15-member Cabinet to announce they won’t be part of the second term. More are expected, and administration officials say Health and Human Services Secretary Tommy Thompson appears to be next. Among those mentioned as possible candidates to re-

City police commissioner who helped rebuild Iraq’s police force; former Federal Emergency Management Agency Director Joe Allbaugh; Environmental Protection Agency Administrator Mike Leavitt; and White House homeland security adviser Fran Townsend. Others are also believed to be interested in the Job, including Asa Hutchinson, undersecretary for border and transportation security in the Homeland Security Department. Ridge leaves behind a department that’s still learning to work together. Culled from 22 often disparate federal agencies, the 180,000-employee organization still faces criticism over aspects of its massive government merger, including the coordination offinances to computers systems. Ridge, consistently a defender of the department, stood by its efforts to wain the public of possible terror threats, saying it preferred to disclose more information than some officials believed was wise.‘That’s something we take piide in,” Ridge said. “America is prepared to deal with the reality of die post-9/11 world.”

Duke Eye

appointment oj

is pleased to annou

Suzan To the

faculty

er

.

Pesce, MD

Department of Ophthalmology

Undergrad teams finish first, eight in regional computer science competition

Three Duke undergraduates—freshman Matt Edwards, junior Ben Mickle and senior Garrett Castro, coached by Owen Astrachan of the computer science department —earned first place in the Mid-Atlantic Regional International Collegiate Programming Contest: Battle of the Brains, sponsored by IBM. The team, MAGABE, beat out 149 other teams in the region, including another Duke team, MAJAFA—-which placed eighth and is being highly considered to compete in the world championships to be held next year from Apr. 3 to 7 in Shanghai, China. The team completed about a semesters worth of computer programming problems in five hours, with the fewest amount of errors. Other teams competing in the contest were from Virginia Tech, James Madison University, John’s Hopkins University, University of Virginia and University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Once all of the contests from each of the 32 regions worldwide are complete, contest organizers will invite the top 75 teams to Shanghai to compete in the international competition. —

the Duke University Eye Center and serves as an assistant clinical professor and a comprehensive ophthalmologist. She specializes in the management of common ocular diseases through medical and surgical intervention, and she has a special interest in the management and treatment of low vision patients. Dr. Pesce provides general and urgent eye care, as well as screening for such conditions as cataracts, glaucoma, diabetic retinopathy, and macular degeneration. She is a board certified member of the erican Academy of Ophthalmology, and she is a member the American iety of Cataract and Refractive Surgeons. She is highly skilled in act and intraocular lens implant surgery. Dr. Pesce will see patients South Point office, and at the Main Eye Center on Erwin Road. Dr. Suzanne Pesce is a

www.chronicle.duke.edu

For

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information or to schedule an appointment, please call .6611 or toll free 1.800.422.1575. e

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81 WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER

DRINKS

THE CHRONICLE

1, 2004

from page 3

the Divinity School, said he looked forward to the week-long gift of caffeine. “I wouldn’t buy coffee anywhere else on campus because it’s so much cheaper to make it at home,” he said. As he pores over a semester’s worth of notes, he is taking at least one study break a day at the coffee kiosk set up in the Bryan Center. Senior Joshua Nelson said he gulped down about four drinks a day last year, and he’s upset that they are not available this year. “It’s the end of the semester, food points are running low and drinks are expensive,” he said. Campus vendors are still helping pay for the services of Student Appreciation Week, and most of the services are unchanged from last year. A handful of photocopy machines in the Bryan Center are available for student use free of charge, the Duke University Police Department is offering a free engraving service and a temporary store is giving away a variety of items. “The purpose of the week is just to show a little appreciation for the students. They spend a tremendous amount of their time doing business with Campus Services,” said Richard Lee, human resources development manager for campus services.

Graduate student Sean Burt takes advantage offree photocopies in the Bryan Center as part of Campus Services' biannualStudent Appreciation Week.

Weathering

the Storm

Inside Winslow Homer’s

GulfStream Peter H. Wood

By examining the “present” that shaped The Gulf Stream by resurrecting half-forgotten elements of the “past” that sustain the painting’s abiding mystery and power, Wood suggests a promising way to use history to comprehend art and art to fathom history. more than a century ago, and

Peter H. Wood is a professor of history at Duke University.

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THE CHRONICLE

WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 1,2004 9

GPSC from page 1 communities.” He also noted that die University was still considering how much graduate student housing to build. It is also evaluating housing widi different price ranges and different levels of amenities, such as laundry facilities and tennis courts. GPSC held a meeting last week for graduate students who currently live on Central to voice their desires for the new develop ment. Jenny Woodruff, a graduate student in music, said the primary concerns were the needs for public meeting space and parking. Students have also discussed building a graduate social center on Central Campus, as the University now educates more graduate students than undergraduates. Duke still has not established how it will pay to develop Central, which will likely cost

UKRAINE

from page 2

Tuesday, Yanukovych pleaded for an end to round-the-clock-protests, which he said would ruin the economy, but the opposition promised to tighten its blockade of official buildings. The political crisis has led to fear s that Ukraine, which has the fastest growing economy in Europe but where millions live in poverty, could plunge into economic turmoil. Many Ukrainians have waited in long lines to exchange the national currency, hryvna, for U.S. dollars. Ukraine’s Central Bank moved Tuesday to counter a run on bank deposits by imposing tough limits on the amount of money citizens can exchange and withdraw from their accounts. Analysts said fears of economic collapse were stoked

more than $lOO million for the first phase, but Selig said leasing apartment buildings for outside companies to rent to graduate students was one option for future growth.

In other business; The former graduate student Young Trustee, Tomalei Vass, explained the role of the position. She noted that the GPSC Trustee must be aware of the needs of all the various graduate and professional schools but act in the best interest of the whole University. GPSC is accepting applications starting now until Jan. 13. The council voted to support a policy outlining institutional commitment to environmental sustainability in academics, operations and the community. The Duke University Greening Initiative will present the guidelines to senior administrators for adoption. in part by Kuchma, who earlier likened the divided nation’s finances to a precarious “house of cards.” But Yanukovych’s backers in eastern Ukraine blamed the hundreds of thousands of Yushchenko supporters who have kept up massive street protests since the election. Opposition demonstrators jammed Kiev’s central square Tuesday, filled a giant tent camp on the main avenue and laid siege to official buildings. For a second day, the Supreme Court heard an opposition appeal focusing on results from eight eastern and southern regions—more than 15 million votes, almost half of the total cast in die runoff. Yushchenko’s lawyers cited turnout of above 100 percent in hundreds of precincts in Donetsk and Luhansk, as well as alleged problems wT ith voting lists.

DIRECTOR from page 1 reasons you use a search firm is you’re trying to recruit people who aren’t really looking,” said Nisbet, assistant vice president for student affairs. Administrators hope to have an executive director namedsometime in the spring and in place before the fall semester. Although Student Health has been without an official leader since it was restructured last summer, outreach efforts to promote wellness have not halted. Megan Burns, a public policy graduate student who works with graduate student

health issues, said attention to graduate student health has increased markedly over the past year, following a several year trend. She mentioned an increase in communication and programming. Eventually the University hopes to conduct research on community wellness dirough die Student Health Center, but until a new director is hired, most of the growdi will continue to focus on community outreach. “The long-term goal is to bring educators, researchers from the Medical Center and the University—the academic component —in on this,” Hanson said. “The advantage will be that [a director] can spend the majority of the time building those relationships.”

TITLE IX from page 5

ment, which backs Jackson in die case, said

“This is more the time frame when

people are looking, though one of the

Irving Gomstein of the

and get no response.” “If we say to a school, you can’t retaliate, dial’s a powerful tool to prevent retaliation and to force them to do something about discrimination,” Ginsburg said. But Justice Antonin Scalia said expanding Title IX protections when the statute is silent on issues like Jackson’s would be unfair. “In other statutes, when Congress does create a cause of action, it goes out ofits way to create a cause of action for retaliation,” he said. “It’s fair to say when states signed on for funding, they should have known they would be subject to lawsuits.” Lower courts in the case ruled against Jackson, noting that the Title IX statute doesn’t address the matter. But other federal courts have reached an opposite conclusion in similar cases, reasoning that coaches and teachers are better positioned to report discrimination titan students.

Justice Depart-

allowing lawsuits like Jackson’s “is vital to promoting the purposes of the act.” But Thomas argued that the statute never mentions the word “retaliation.” Allowing whisdeblowers to sue—regardless of their sex—would open school districts to a wave of lawsuits that lawmakers never intended. “Don’t we have to consider congressional intent?” he asked. Jackson’s case has drawn wide interest, with support from a coalition of 180 civil rights groups including die NAACP, die American Civil Liberties Union and the American Federation of Teachers, as well as dozens of women’s advocacy groups. Opposing Jackson are the National School Boards Association as well as nine states—Alabama, Delaware, Hawaii, Nevada, Oregon, South Dakota, Tennessee, Utah and Virginia. They argue in part that Jackson could have sued under the First Amendment or other civil rights laws, but not Title IX.

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THE CHRONICL,E

101WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 1,2004

SLEEP from page 4 work, but AOL Instant Messenger. “I usually spend four hours a night on Instant Messenger,” Shah said. “Last year during

finals I deleted that program—I’ve never done better on tests in my life.” Sophomore Stephanie Vance, also a latenight studier, said her habits were probably not healthy, but she tries to sleep later and get at least sue hours of sleep each night. Huang noted that lack of sleep could lead to more serious problems. ‘The immune system doesn’t work as

IRAQ from page 6 opposition figures during a conference last week at the Egyptian resort of Sharm ElSheik. Arab officials fear that without some overture by the Iraqi government toward Sunni Arab insurgents, many Sunnis may boycott the Jan. 30 elections, calling into question the legitimacy of the new government administration. Most Arab countries are majority Sunni, while an estimated GO percent of Iraq’s 26 million people are Shiites. Bahrain offered to host an Iraqi reconciliation conference. Allawi, however, told the Iraqi National Council, a government advisory and oversight group, that there would be “no conference in Amman” but that his government wanted contacts with “important tribes,” many of which maintained links to Saddam’s regime. He mentioned by name two tribal figures —both sons of a prominent sheik from the insurgent-plagued Ramadi area west of Baghdad. However, Ramadi residents said the family is known for its ties

well when an individual is sleep deprived. We see a lot of colds and upper respiratory problems because of that,” she said. “When you are not sleeping, you are putting a lot of stress on your body.” Clack warned students against the latenight cramming and all-nighters, saying these are actually inefficient ways to study. “Every piece ofevidence we have is that on the learning curve, there’s a point after around two hours and 45 minutes that you are losing knowledge rather than gaining it,” he said. “\bu are much better off going to bed instead of trying to study.” Clack also advised that students who to the Americans and that some members moved to Jordan after suicide attacks on their family compound. Allawi’s staff declined to discuss planned meetings in Amman or to explain the apparent inconsistencies. However, it appeared the government may have been reluctant to pursue reconciliation with Saddam loyalists—at least publicly—because of pressure from Shiites. Another meeting is scheduled in Amman after Allawi returns from Moscow on Dec. 7. He is to see 120 Iraqis from different segments of the political spectrum, most of whom live in Jordan and abroad, organizers said. An Iraqi Embassy diplomat confirmed the meeting. Key Shiite leaders are wary of moves by Allawi, a secular Shiite, to bring former Baath members into the government’s security services because of bitter memories of Saddam’s bloody 1991 crackdown on Shiites. “Unfortunately, there has been some leniency during the past three months, which allowed Baathists to enter government departments, tile military and security agencies,” said Abdul-Aziz al-Hakim, a Shiite

politician.

have trouble falling asleep get up and do something boring. “Avoid doing anything that rouses your brain,” he said. “But read your dullest textbook.” He added that arguments and spicy foods before bedtime prolong the time it takes to fall asleep. Clack also suggested turning the clock away as it takes pressure off falling asleep quickly. Sleep typically cycles through 90minute intervals, of which 25 percent is rapid eye movement sleep. This is the period when a majority of the intense dreams occur and where experts believe memories are consolidated. During non-REM sleep,

MEDIA from page 6 some residents said the shooting could have resulted from an internal Palestinian conflict. Last week, a top adviser to Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon signaled peace talks could resume if the Palestinians showed goodwill on the incitement issue. Previously, Sharon demanded a crackdown on militant groups—a much harder step for Abbas—before resuming talks. A Palestinian broadcasting official said on condition of anonymity that efforts already were under way to revamp

programming. He said officials were reviewing material and planning changes after the 40day mourning period for Arafat ends. In the meantime, he said, programming was limited to subdued material aboutt Arafat’s life and death. The official said talk shows would now be recorded and edited rather than being broadcast live. Mosque preachers whose sermons were broadcast live on Palestinian TV and radio would be informed in advance and asked to avoid any incitement. ‘

the body temperature and breathing rate slows and the body recharges itself. Huang suggested that students refrain from napping during the day. “If you are napping, you aren’t going to feel as tired at night,” she said. “When you get into a cycle of interrupted sleep, you get into a bad cycle.” But if the late-night cramming is necessary, Alston recommends the mocha latte or, her specialty, the Red Eye—a mix of Red Bull and espresso shots. “When it comes to caffeine, I’m the person you can come to,” she said. “Coffee is our specialty.” “We have to record these kinds of shows and to take out the offensive material,” the official said, adding that old PLO fight songs praising revolution and sacrifice also would be taken off the air. The new programming rules are largely symbolic. Most Palestinians do not watch state television, preferring to tune in to livelier content on Arab satellite television stations such as Al-Jazeera, al-Arabiya or Lebanon’s Middle East Broadcasting Corporation. Still, the move was significant for Abbas, who is wary of appearing too close to Israel in the run-up to Palestinian presidential elections. Abbas is widely considered the front-runner in the Jan. 9 vote, but he is nowhere near as popular as Arafat was. Israel also has signaled it is ready to work with Abbas, who favors negotiations over armed confrontation, but has avoided overt support of him in fear of hurting his election chances. Sharon has mentioned a number of gestures to Abbas, saying he was ready to meet with the Palestinian leader and coordinate a planned pullout from the Gaza Strip next year.

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BLOWOUT GEORGIA TECH'S VICTORY OVER MICHIGAN GIVES ACC 3-1 ADVANTAGE OVER BIG TEN PAGE 13

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THE CHRONICLE

The Blue Devils’ 81-74 victory over Michigan State perfectly depicted the cast of characters on the Duke squad. Specifically, the role each upperclassman performed in this early-season test should indicate the role he will take on as the season progresses and the games get tougher. Daniel Ewing established himself as “The Man,” setting the tempo of the Duke offense from start to finish. The co-captain led the team with 29 points and 6 assists, but gillie more importantly, Ewing ste d u p w hen ," analysis tered most. In the first half, Ewing began the game by nailing a three. Then, with the Spartans out to an sizable lead, Ewing turned the momentum around by hitdng an 18-foot jump shot while being fouled. Ewing then provided a celebratory fist pump, which encouraged to crowd to erupt and the Blue Devils to get hot. In the second half, with Michigan State focused on containing J.J. Redick, Ewing climbed another flight of stairs. He scored seven consecutive points from the 8:00 mark to the 5:00 mark, and the guard hit the nailin-the-coffin shot—a three-pointer with one minute remaining that put Duke up by five. Ewing put the team on his back during the game’s most intense moments, and you can count on encore performances as the season rolls along. “Daniel had the look of a champion on the court,” head coach Mike Krzyzewski said. JJ. Redick, the “Hot Hand,” is the other half of Duke’s dynamic duo, and tonight Redick frustrated the Spartans with his incomparable shooting touch. The junior co-captain tied Ewing’s teamleading 29 points, and Redick was the goto guy in the first half as Duke built an eight-point lead. J.J. could always hit es from several feet behind the arc—which he did twice—but tonight JJ. showed his improvement in other areas from a season ago. He is no longer just a catch-and-shoot guy, as Redick penetrated the Michigan State defense with his

Izzons can’t natch

Crazies For at le? t^ie P ast ive Y ears the memstudent section at Michigan bers of tb the “Izzone,” have State wh :1 s nown 38 d that and not Duke s mnair the best basketball Crazies, are Gamer' fans die nation. ihiink the nation now knows that the is the best student section in the _ion. We clearly beat the Cameron r razies,” former Izzone member Rob Myers told the Detroit Free Press in 1999 after a Blue Devil victory over head coach Tom Izzo’s team in the Final Four. “My voice is almost gone. I was tense and yelling a lot.” Their efforts have had some success, and the Izzone has often been mentioned in the same breath as the Cameron Crazies. “Duke has its ‘Cameron Crazies’ and Michigan State its ‘lzzone,’” a 2003 lowa State Daily article announced. I’ve been to Michigan State and seen this “Izzone” in person, and I can say in good conscience that it is a mediocre cheering section at best. The fans in East Lansing do not hold a candle to Duke’s, and in fact, I’ve been more impressed with the luster at non-basketball schools like Virginia and Florida State when the Blue Devils play at their respective arenas. First of all, the Breslin Center’s architectural design does not create the conditions for a formidable home court. The gymnasium seats 14,659, but it feels much bigger. Its dome-likeroof creates lot offree space, space that drowns out some of the fans’ efforts. The arena also features a distracting Jumbotron. Many of the fans in the upper levels simply watch the game on this oversized television, and the student section is often lulled watching replays instead of focusing on cheering for its team. Michigan State fans like to brag how their student section “surrounds” the court. This is only partially true. The students, who normally all dress in white Tshirts, only wrap around a fraction of the hardwood; fat-cats who wouldn’t give a standing ovation for a buzzer-beating shot in the National Championship game are spread around the rest of the floor. The Izzone does not have as much cohesion as the Cameron Crazies in regards to collective cheers, and the most astonishing thing about the student section is that it will go quiet from time to time. During every timeout, the Breslin Center goes quiet as the fans relax with the players. This almost never happens in Durham, as most opposing teams have to >

Pf

*

SEE IZZONE ON PAGE 16

JJ.Redick lays up theball for two of 21 first-half points. The juniorhelped Duke climb out of an early deficit.

,

SEE CHARACTERS ON PAGE 14

ACC bowl plans come into focus by

Jake Poses

THE CHRONICLE

When the ACC decided it needed to bulk up for football, it commandeered Miami and Virginia Tech. Although the conference will not earn a lucrative second BCS berth for the first time in the series’ seven-year history, the ACC announced Tuesday that regardless of the outcome of Saturday’s game between the Hurricanes and the Hokies, the newcomers would receive two of the conference’s top three bowl berths and the winner would play in a BCS game. Perennial ACC power Florida State will play in the New 'fear’s Day Gator Bowl and

Virginia, Georgia Tech and North Carolina have also accepted bowl invitations. If Virginia Tech wins what has become a de facto conference championship game Saturday, it will win the league outright. If the higher-ranked Hurricanes prevail on their home field, however, Miami, Virginia Tech and Florida State will finish with identical 6-2 league records. The tie would leave the BCS standings to determine which team gets the bid, and Miami, which is currently 10th, would almost certainly play in either the Sugar or Fiesta Bowl. SEE BOWLS ON PAGE 16

Virginia Tech will need to beat Miami in order to clinch sole possession of theACC regular-season title.


12 I WEDNESDAY. DECEMBER 1, 2004

THE CHRQNICL,E

ACCBiqTenChallenqe

Badgers extend home win streak 'Noles come back in Minnesota

THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Alando Tucker MADISON, Wis. scored a career-high 27 points and No. 25 Wisconsin beat No. 12 Maryland 6964 in the ACC/ Big Ten Challenge

Tuesday night.

Sharif Chambliss added 15 points and

THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

MINNEAPOLIS

Zach Morley had 12 for the Badgers (3-1), who won their MARYLAND S4 3i s t straight WISCONSIN 69 home game. That ties Stephen F. Austin for the longest current Division I

j, mt

.

I

\

Challenge.

Our young sH grew up a little bit,” Florida State coa\v Leonard Hamilton said. “They came tog* hei- stuck to the game plan, anti made so. e shots d had not been making all year. Sophomore Von W\ r j C( j t^e Seminoles (3-3) with 19 as Florida State stormed back from 14-D( - f deficit with seven minutes rekj n -^ 2 • the contest. Todd Galloway’s d er from the corner with 2:05 to the Seminoles ahead 65-63, die'. lead since they scored die first basiK the game. “We knew we had out backs agah the wall and just had to come ou scratching. We love those situations,’ Wafer said. “What made that [run] happen was tough defense. There’s no doubt that the key to the win was stopping their shots from falling and not worrying about our shots. .

home winning streak. All of Morley’s points came over the final 7:40 and included three free throws in the final 16 seconds. Ekene Ibekwe scored 21 points to lead Maryland (3-1). The Terrapins, who trailed 64-57 with a minute to play, pulled within 66-64 on a three-pointer by Nik Caner-Medley with 21 seconds remaining, Morley made one free throw with 16 seconds left to give Wisconsin a threepoint lead. Maryland had a chance to tie the game, but Chambliss stripped CanerMedley on his way up for a three-point attempt. Morley grabbed the ball and made two free throws with 3.2 seconds left. Wisconsin led 48-41 with 11:17 left, but Ibekwe scored five points in a 7-0 run that tied the game with 8:12 remaining. But Morley answered with his first points of the game on a putback to give Wisconsin a 50-48 lead. Chambliss then hit a three-pointer for the Badgers, who were

Florida State picked in the game to play its best basketball t he night. Ihe Seiino ies used a 16-0 run late in the secondiia if anc j jle }f] on to defeat Minnesota 70-69 FSU Tuesday in the MINN. Ten 69 ACC/Big the key

Junior point guard John Gilchrist went 2-for-14 from the field and scored only six points Tuesday night. 2-of-15 from behind the arc to that point. Tucker scored 20 points in the first half as Wisconsin took a 38-32 lead. He scored 16 of Wisconsin’s first 20 points, including nine straight at one point. Tucker’s free throw gave the Badgers a 20-19 lead with 8:44 left in the first half. But the Badgers went on a 12-2 run

20 GIG IPOD

without Tucker scoring a point to take a 32-23 lead with 6:05 left in the half. Chambliss scored seven points during the run, which ended with three-pointers by Ray Nixon and Chambliss. Wisconsin’s last loss at the Kohl Center came on Dec. 4, 2002, when Wake Forest beat tire Badgers 90-80 in an ACC/Big Ten Challenge game.

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WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 1,2004

THE CHRONICLE

113

ACCBiqTenChallenqe

Yellow Jacket offense rolls over Wolverines by Paul Newberry THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

ATLANTA GeorgiaTech waited until its third home game to unveil a banner commemorating last season’s trip to the Final Four. Good timing. The fourth-ranked Yellow Jackets finally played like a team IVHCHIGAN that could win it Ga.TECH 99 all, blowing out Michigan 99-68 Tuesday night in the ACC/Big Ten

Challenge.

Georgia Tech (4-0) took control early with a 20-0 run, led by 27 points at halftime and was able to finish the game with a couple of walk-ons on the court. B.J. Elder scored 27 points, the bulk of them coming on seven three-pointers. Will Bynum had 19 points, knocking down three shots from outside the arc. Jarrett Jack had 16points and was even more efficient setting up his teammates, finishing with 11 assists. “All this year, we’ve been waiting to come out and make a statement,” Elder said. “Tonight, we came out and established ourselves.” Before the game, the school put up a banner at Alexander Memorial Coliseum honoring last season’s Final Four team. The Yellow Jackets lost to Connecticut in the national championship game.

Jack said he’s not concerned with what GeorgiaTech did last season. “We’re trying to focus on the future, not the past,” he said. Still, “going so deep in the tournament last year, that gave us a cohesiveness you can’t coach.” It sure showed in this one. Georgia Tech took control about three minutes in. Elder got the big run started widi a layup, and the Yellow Jackets fed off their stifling defense to blow out the Wolverines (3-3). After shooting just 43 percent in its first three games—failing to make half the shots in any of them—Georgia Tech shot 54 percent (39-of-72) from the field, including 13-of-23 beyond the arc. “The thing that Tm more proud of thus far is our defensive effort,” coach Paul Hewitt said. “And now we’re starting to hit shots, and it just raises your defense up to another level. I’m very optimistic about what this team can do.” Jack and Theodis Tarver also had layups during the spurt, before Isma’il Muhammad and Elder finished it off with dunks. Michigan called two timeouts in a futile attempt to prevent things from getting out of hand. “Every defense we tried, they seemed to have an answer for,” Michigan coach Tommy Amaker said. “They shot it from 3, and then they got layups, and it became a track meet. It was no match for us.”

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THE CHRONICLE

WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 1,2004

CHARACTERS

from page 11

refined head-fake, which Krzyzewski said is the most improved part of Redick’s game. The Roanoke, Va., native also used to be a defensive liability, but tonight he held his opponents in check thanks to superior off-season conditioning. Shelden Williams is cast as “The Landlord” for the second year in a row, and the Spartans learned this the hard way. Williams flashed his dominant defensive abilities on multiple occasions, blocking five shots and forcing many awkward attempts from an offense that relies on its inside game. The junior also posted his third double-double of the season, reinforcing his position as the ACC’s reigning king of double-doubles. The Forest Park, Okla,, native also made the Cameron Crazies sigh, moan and scratch their heads, however, with his five turnovers and four fouls. Over the course of (he season, fans can count on Williams to be a stalwart whose game lapses on occasion. Scan Dockery showed tonight why he is the “Little Things Guy,” because his contributions often go unnoticed. Dockery committed only one turnover, notched three steals, stuck to his opponent like glue on defense and provided a spark when he tussled with the Spartans’ Alan Anderson in the middle of a loosehall dog pile. The junior had only one field-goal on one attempt, but it was arguably the most crucial bucket of the game—a floater to put Duke up 75-72 with two minutes to go. It was a rare spotlight moment for Dockery, who will continue to do the little things. Shavlik Randolph exhibited tonight

that he is the “X-Factor,” because you never know how he will affect the game’s outcome. Early foul trouble landed Randolph on the bench midway through the first half, but the Junior provided a steady defensive presence in the second period and drained three free-throws to help seal the victor)'. It will be tough to predict in any game whether Randolph will post double-digit points or spend most of the game in foul trouble. Reggie Love played the “Resident Football Player,” fouling out of the game in only four minutes of work, but Love showed aggressiveness on the offensive glass. You can expect that Love will commit a lot of fouls and grab a lot of boards, and he should last longer than four minutes on most occasions. Lee Melchionni is well-suited to his role as “The Energy Lifter,” which he certainly was against Michigan State by cheering loudly from the bench and providing a spark in his 11 minutes. In addition to hitting a three during Duke’s firsthalf run, Melchionni helped increase the decibel level to deafening heights when he instructed the Cameron Crazies to “raise the roof.” There are also ‘The Freshmen,” David McClure and DeMarcus Nelson, who played little tonight but will play more as they wet their feet in college basketball. McClure provided one spectacular moment in his cameo appearance, making a tough layup in traffic from directly under the basket. Coach K’s squad has a unique cast of characters, each of whom brings something different to the table. After putting on an impressive opening performance, the Blue Devils must continue to fulfill their respective roles in order to succeed as the season rolls along.

ITS A FICHTTO KEEP NEW YEAR'S RESOLUTIONS

JDUKE^

PETER GEBH ARD/THE CHRONICLE

David McClure reaches under the basket before converting a reverse layup with six minutes left in thefirst half.

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GRADUATING IN DECEMBER? Research position for a graduating Duke senior in chemistry, biology, or the biochemistry concentration to work as a research technician on an independent project in a nucleic acids and molecular biology laboratory. Great training for the future. Send resume to steege@biochem.duke.edu. Please include major, science courses, and GPA.

NEW NSEP SCHOLARSHIPS Summer or fall 2005, and spring 2006 undergraduate scholarships for study abroad are available through the National Security Education Program. Preference will be given to applicants pursuing fields of study related to national security interests. Scholarships may be applied to programs anywhere except Australia, Canada, New Zealand or Webern Europe. Integrated study of a foreign language is required. Need more info? Ask Nathan Hodson, former NSEP recipient, Thurs., Dec. 2,5:30 p.m., in the Office of Study Abroad, 2016 Campus Dr. Obtain applications from www.iie.org/nsep. File completedapplications on-line; submit all supporting documents to OSA by Feb. 4.

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161 WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 1,2004

MSU from page 1 Duke in the lead. As the rest of the Blue Devils struggled offensively, Ewing created his own shots, weaving around defenders under the basket and driving in the lane for

pull-up jumpers. When Ewing wasn’t hot, Redick was. The junior rescued Duke from its early 10-point deficit by hitting three consecutive three-pointers. It didn’t stop there for Redick,

who shot 70 percent from the field in die first 20 minutes. “They’re a hard team to defend when Redick is hitting three’s from the parking lot,” Michigan State head coach Tom Izzo said. Redick never left the court and Ewing played all but two minutes as Krzyzewski relied heavily on his starters. Shelden Williams and Shavlik Randolph both had three fouls with 16 minutes to go in the game, but with Duke’s lone big-man sub Reggie Love already in foul trouble, Krzyzewski left Williams on the court. The physical game featured 51 fouls, and Williams let Michigan State center Paul Davis score two key buckets in the finals minutes as he tentatively avoided a fifth foul. Izzo targeted Duke’s big men early, hoping to force them to the bench. Even though Williams and Randolph were not in foul trouble in die first half, frontcourt depth was problem for Krzyzewski, but Tuesday night, Duke shot around it. Often double-teamed and pushed around by the bigget Davis. Williams took uncharacteristic shots from outside the paint. His only scoring in the first half was on a 12-foot fadeaway jumper from the baseline. With two Spartans eyeing the center at all dines, he had difficulty corralling rebounds and catching entry passes from teammates. “Shelden really had a terrific game last year,” Krzyzewski said of Duke’s 72-50 rout in East Lansing, Mich., last season. “So they tried to take him out of the game this year, and they did.” With all the attention focused on Williams in the first

THE CHRONIC:le

half, Redick was left open for shots behind the arc. After the break, however, the Spartans keyed in on die Redick, allowing Williams to score eight second-half points and leaving Ewing to do the real damage. “In the second half we thought they were really going after JJ. because he had 21 at halftime,” Krzyzewski said. “We called more things, especially in the last 10 minutes for Daniel. Both teams were in foul trouble so we tried to get something off the dribble where we might go to the line or get a lockout.” But after Ewing’s mid-half scoring spurt, the Spartans made a comeback of their own. Following a free throw by Davis and a missed three-point attempt by Redick, Michigan State’s Shannon Brown finished a three-onone fast break with a high-flying alleyoop dunk. Redick turned the ball over while driving through traffic on the baseline, and Davis finished on the other end with a strong move under die basket, cutting the Duke lead to two. Mistakes and poor free throw 7 shooting after that cost the Spartans a shot at the victory. “If they had hit their free throws, I think w e still would have won,” Krzyzewski said, “because we didn’t mess up.” Michigan State came out of the gate in a sprint, playing a run-and-gun style of offense and seemingly energized by the Cameron crowd. But after die Spartans jumped out to a 19-9 lead, they were hampered by offensive miscues, and the Blue Devils seemed to snatch every loose ball. With 7:26 remaining in the first half, Michigan State’s Kelvin Torbert was called for traveling twice and Davis was called for an offensive foul and traveling. Duke took advantage of this series of turnovers. David McClure made an athletic shot from under the basket among three defenders, and Sean Dockery hit a pair of free throws to close the gap to two. Ewing dien hit a three-pointer to give the Blue Devils the lead with 4:42 left in the first half. On the following play, Ewing laid down a huge one-handed dunk off a steal from Dockery, who started for die second consecutive game and played 36 minutes.

r

www.chronicle.duke.edu

IZZONE

from page 11

move their huddle to the middle of the court so coaches can shout instructions to players. And I didn’t see the Michigan State fans in person against some low-level team that the Spartans easily blew out. I was in East Lansing when they played DUKE! This was the top-10 matchup for which fans were salivating—they wanted their basketball team to beat the Blue Devils, and they wanted to show a national audience that their fans were better than Duke’s. I’m sure a Michigan State supporter would blame tire fans’ performance on the Spartans’ horrible showing, as they lost 72-50 to the visitors from Durham. But from the get-go I was shocked at how mediocre the Izzone was, both in the pregaijje festivities and die early moments of die game. Any objective person who watched both the Dec. 3, 2003, Duke-Michigan State game in East Lansing and'the Nov. 30, 2004, Blue Devils-Spartans contest at Cameron would come the same conclusion: The fans in the Izzone are inferior to the Cameron Crazies,

BOWLS

from page 11

“It is a big matchup this Saturday and a big game for both teams,” Miami quarterback Brock Berlin said. “You couldn’t really ask for more with the two Big East teams battling for the ACC dtle.” The loser of Saturday’s final ACC regular-season game will play in the New Year’s Eve Peach Bowl in Atlanta against a yet-to-be-named SEC team. Virginia (8-3) accepted an invitation to play in the MPC Computers Bowl Dec. 27 in Boise, Idaho. The Cavaliers’ opponent has not been determined. Georgia Tech (6-5) will play in the Champs Sports Bowl, formerly called the Citrus Bowl, Dec. 21 in Orlando, Fla. North Carolina will meet Boston College in the Continental Tire Bowl in Charlotte. Even before expansion, die league experienced bowl success, 'file ACC is the only conference in Division 1-A to post a winning record in postseason play each of the past duee seasons, and its teams went 5-1 in bowls last season.

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THE CHRONICLE

WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 1,2004 117

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18 I

THE CHRONICL,E

WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 1,2004

The Chronicle The Independent Daily

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Duke University

Downloading laws needed

The

Downloading has been on the legality of downloading television shows currently falls into radar screen for several years now, a gray area that has yet to be ac- however, and it is finally time for laws curately defined, 'but it’s time for the to be established. Until a court rules legal system to establish clear guide- on whether downloading television shows and movies, lines concerning St3tf GultOfiSi the MPAAwill contindownloading and file ue to accuse individusharing. Although the downloading battle als of violating copyright law, even if originally focused on music, recently no laws have actually been broken. Duke students are not unaffected the Motion Picture Association of America has issued warnings to indiby this debate. Every year, the Office of Information Technology receives viduals sharing downloaded televi300 to 400 warnings about commusion shows and movies. Since the television shows were nity members downloading music, originally broadcast for free, some television shows and movies. The activists say downloading may be University does not police downlegal. The argument is that downloading or file sharing, and it will not disclose names of students withloading shows is analogous to recordout a subpoena. VCR, shows on a which was found ing to be legal in the 1980s. The legality Phis policy is beneficial for students and keeps the University from of downloading is a still questionable, however, because copyright over-stepping its bounds. It is one laws depend largely on what constiarea in which the University treats tutes “fair use.” students as adults, allowing them to make their own decisions and also Even if television shows were initially broadcast free of charge, this make their own mistakes. Duke, docs not necessarily imply that they however, is one of an increasingly smaller number of universities with are public domain and may be downloaded. Another layer of questions is such a policy; the majority of schools added when the downloaded media now self-regulate downloading and is sold. If the law is not clear, then file sharing. these issues need to be sorted out in a Generally, the question of how courtroom. copyright law relates to digital To date, there have been no niedia is easily answered —play it court cases concerning the legality safe and stop file sharing, even if it is of television and movie downloads, legal. Laws and legal precedents, so there is no legal precedent. This however, are still necessary in order is due, in part, because copyright for all involved parties, both the law has been unable to keep pace downloaders and the television and with rapid advancements in digital movie industries, know where exacttechnology. ly the line is drawn. --

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KAREN HAUPTMAN,Editor MATT SULLIVAN, News Managing Editor LIANA WYLER, Production Managing Editor PAUL CROWLEY, University Editor KELLY ROHRS, University Editor TRACY REINKER, Editorial Page Editor JAKE POSES, Sports Editor JONATHAN ANGIER, General Manager PETER GEBHARD, Photography Editor DAVIS WARD, City & State Editor MARGAUX KANIS, Health & ScienceEditor MIKE VAN PELT, SportsManaging Editor SOOJIN PARK, Recess Photography Editor MOLLY NICHOLSON, TowerView Managing Editor EMILY ROTBERG, WireEditor ANDREW COLLINS, Senior Editor CINDY YEE, Senior Editor YOAV LURIE, Recess Senior Editor KATIE XIAO, Sr. Assoc. Features Editor BARBARA STARBUCK, Production Manager YU-HSIEN HUANG, Supplements Coordinator NALINI MILNE, Advertising Office Manager

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

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

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World AIDS Day

can raise awareness

A

few days before Dec. 1, World AIDS Just a few months ago, sitting in Alabama, I Day, I received an e-mail sent to my naively thought of HIV/AIDS as “a foreign problem”: one really only felt by those in non-government organization’s employee list describing our proposed activities third-world countries. I forgot about how the for the event. This memo was the first time I fear ofAIDS ravaged the United States in the had ever even heard of World .AIDS Day. ’Bos and ’9os, and how its prevalence rates When I looked at a few news websites, many are currendy on the rise in certain U.S. popof which are based in the United States, I ulations. I can easily ratde off all the correct found references to this global celebration of ways to prevent the spread of HIV7 but I am awareness spattered throughout their webunable to tell anyone the most important pages. Only a few days before, I had openly piece ofinformation: my status. wondered about the danger of the news Extensive knowledge of lIIV prevention media’s concentration on HIV in those areas does not translate into being HIV negative. most affected, like Sub-Saharan Africa. AlMost Zambians report knowing what HTV is though clearly this focus makes sense, could and many can even name the ways to prevent it perhaps lull Americans into a false sense of its transmission. I have yet to meet a single person here drat does not know that HIV is security about the virus? I am currently volunteering in one of spread through unprotected sexual interthose hotbeds of HIV/AIDS course as well as other means activity getting so much attenObviously the message is out tion from Western media: shelton wright there, but, just as obvious, it Zambia. With a national infechas not .stunted the growing guest commentary tion rate of around 20 perinfection rate . In the United States, we cent, Zambia stands as one of the countries hardest hit by what locals refer have been inundated with information about to sun ply as “kadoyo,” or “the virus.” My work HIV since its first appearance in the early ’Bos. But stigma grew over its supposed selecconcerns assisting with the set up and management of HIV clinics for pregnant women tive impact on both the gay male and drugabusing populations. Only when several highin a small town outside of die capital, Lusaka. Before coming to Zambia, I read up on profile figures, such as Magic Johnson, countless journal articles concerning general contracted the virus did many Americans HIV information as well as those focusing on start taking the threat seriously. Now, my work, the prevention of mother-to-child HIV/AIDS affects less than 1 percent of the transmission of HIV. I assumed I would learn U.S. population and our collective head has Zambian culture quickly and my scientific turned to the horrific numbers coming out of background would help deter the spread of such areas as Southern Africa and India. But this epidemic. are we gazing past the HIV problem in, say, Recently, I attended a mandatory HIV sen- New York, by focusing on the rest of world? sitization workshop for all employees of my Almost 1 million people in the United NGO, from doctors to the gardener. My States are estimated to have HIV, and at least symptomatic and epidemiological knowledge half of those are not aware of their infection. of HIV was confirmed as the lecturer went The United States ranks 67th in the world for over the standard modes of transmission. HIV prevalence among adults, in a world with Heck, I thought, not only do I know the far more than 67 countries. Clearly work is left to be done not only across oceans but also specifics of CD4 counts, but I have also memorized the typical reasons locals give for not in our own backyard. getting tested. My ignorance about World AIDS Day, The lecturer abruptly displayed my ignowhile primarily due to my own myopia on the rance about die virus when he asked the audisubject, also represents a general lack of disence, all of whom are dedicated in one way or seminating information in die United States. another to fighting HIV, how many had gotI would not be surprised if many Americans ten tested. In a room of more than 60 people, assume it could be called “Rest-of-the-World five raised their hands. I was not one of them. AIDS Day.” I certainly would have only a few I have implored coundess people to get months ago. Perhaps in the wake of diis tested for HIV, and I am constandy working year’s awareness event, Americans should to set up more tesdng and counseling proturn the magnifying glass onto our own HIV grams in my town. Like many Americans, I problem. Only then can we, without support my government’s decision to donate hypocrisy, attempt to aid the rest of the world billions of dollars to fight HIV/AIDS worldwith theirs. Of course, our first step toward wide. But—also like so many .Americans—l doing that is our first step towards our local have never gotten tested for HIV. testing clinic. I used to find a certain modicum of faith Shelton Wright is a Trinity 'O4 graduate. in my nationality’s low' HIV prevalence rate. ,


commentaries

THE CHRONICLE

WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 1,2004

119

Hillbilly beavers and frat boys Holding onto dreams Ever The time a Navy recruiter calls you and asks, “If your life was a book, would anyone read it?” refer him to the third spot on the New York Times bestseller list. As you may know, Tom Wolfe —a realist fictioneer and former Duke parent-just produced a novel about a university with lush gardens, quarantined freshmen, abutting slums, Gothic spires and basketball monomania. Judging from the hack reviews it inspired, Dr. Wolfe appears to have pinched the nipple of truth way too hard and got the liberals squealing. But by having done years of field research, he has more credibility than his socalled “factual” critics. After reading I Am Charlotte Simmons, many ofyou will agree that he has produced an honest—and riveting rendition of undergraduate life. He attacks the practice of “hooking up” with particular vehemence. In the novel and in his Duke commencement address a few years ago he laments the way in which the sexmatt ual revolution has transformed traditional undergraduate courtship into a sexual “carnival.” Moreover, his fiction insinuates that women carry the psychological burden of hooking-up disproportionately, and his commencement address suggests that advances in neuroscience have contributed to this moral decline by making us think that we are mammals and ought to be held to no higher moral standards. He has a point. Mainstream American culture encourages female promiscuity like seldom before. Last year, a female Chronicle columnist urged girls to go out and aggressively lay men, provoking an entertaining response from the usual God-fearing fearmongers. This behavior is of course possible, but is not a good way of furthering the noble project of women’s equality because some of the sexual limits that have been “imposed” on women by “society” are actually biological. Evidence for this has been found in a sexually liberated country —England —in a 1990-1991 survey of 18,876 men and women that showed that women are twice as likely as men to have had only one sexual partner, and that 24.4 percent of all men had enjoyed 10 or more sexual partners while only 6.8 percent of women had done the same, and this general trend is conserved cross-culturally (Badcock 2000). Moreover—for those ofyou inclined to cite social renext

pression—women are more disposed to have “contextual, emotive, intimate and passive” fantasies as opposed to males who have “specifically sexual, promiscuous, and active fantasies,” and female homosexuals are generally less promiscuous than male homosexuals (BJ. Ellis and Symons 1997 reported in Badcock 2000). Because nature built women to place mate quality before quantity, it is reasonable to suggest that women who adhere to an unnaturally promiscuous sexual strategy may be gambling with their psychological health. This is not sexist; it’s honest. Disregarding our biological design constraints is a bad idea, which is why one of the recommendations of the Women’s Initiative was to encourage a “dating culture” at Duke. This, after all, seems to be the equilibrium arrangement for humans. Wolfe’s protagonist, Charlotte, is tormented by her conscience after having the “dust knocked offher hillbilly beaver” casugillum ally by a notorious Dupont frat boy. When veritas conscience speaks, we should listen. Ernest Hemingway sums it up: “What is moral is what you feel good after.” Offhandedly, he captures the essence of sexual ethics. You don’t need the 100,000 counterfactual religious systems that have appeared over the span of human history to tell you what is moral and what isn’t: nature has given you highly bioengineered brain that spits out certain chemicals to reward or penalize you for different behaviors, and the vast majority ofyou will know from how you feel if you have done the right thing or not. Faith exists because it gives its members an existential kick in the ass and an amorphous “purpose” (which all too often includes slaughter and territorial expansion), and is always bad because it compels conviction without evidence. This is one of the few things Wolfe misses—that neuroscience and evolutionary biology are not responsible for destroying morality and making us rut like beasts of the field. Quite the opposite; their advancement will help us complete the picture of human nature and discover the moral principles that will assist people—including sexually confused undergraduates—make the choices most conducive to their happiness and the good of society. !

Matt Gillum is a Trinity senior.

My outlet Dress Barn

As

I drove back to Duke after Thanksgiving on 1-95, passing by the lush, bountiful and exciting scenery

moo-moo

itself in more subtle, discrete forms, such as the previous exmost part don’t even nothat constitutes the southeastern seaboard, I came to tice it. And all the methods we have used to target and place several glaring conclusions, pieced together partially from a self-imposed limits on this excess are not able to find it Miss Bovine Sue is just an example of a growing number sea of billboards—one being that I can’t really give a convincing lie when I attempt to describe a cesspool. And that of more visible victims. I don’tbelieve that people yield to the marketing director for the “Repent for the End ofTimes this excess as a means to reach happiness and a flourishing is Here,” ‘Thank the Lord for Jeb and George Bush” and life. This excess is similar to all those times you just ate a bag the “Stay at Plantation Inn” with a Confederate flag flying of chips just for the sake of doing a mind-less action. That’s overhead billboards must be commended all I did for 15 hours of driving. As I inhaled the very last carb-free Doritos chips, I looked at with a tall latte and okra. my reflection in the rear of the Bovine’s SUV. I But my revelation came when an enorwas no more the monster than she was. mous specimen of a bovine woman and I suppose we all have a tiny Bovine-Outlether Tar Heel son almost ran us off the Dress-Bam-Moo-Moo in all of us. We just need road in her “God Bless the USA” and “Go to remember to put her brakes on every so Carolina” SUV. For lack of a better name often. As she sped off, I noticed one last thing: for it, we will call her Peggy Ann Sue. her Carolina A&F boy-toy had not one, not Shaken but unscathed, I asked myself Charles gomez two, but three pastel popped-collared shirts since when did Peggy Ann Sue need that ministry of sound on. Don’t you think one popped-coUared shirt SUV that engulfs three whole lanes, consumes as much petrol as a developing nawas enough to get the point across? Put on antion in the span of a mile and has its own zip code, one that other and another and another and yet another and don’t is probably shared with her ass? stop until his 15 layered popped collared shirt impresses the I mean, I know the poor thing needed a place to put her fine “Best-in-the-World Carolina Girls,” the only ones that NASCAR and W ’O4 sticker. I just always figured she couldn’t can give any southern gentleman the vapors. Scream all you can, Carolina sorority row, but the sheer fit them onto her parachute of a “moo-moo” that she wears everyday when she treks between her revival tent meetings pressure of such a gross concentration of prep and subde and the Dress Bam Oudet. Thankfully, however, she did A&F homoerodcism are too much for the laws of physics to somehow find a perfect sanctuary for her excessive gaudy handle. He collapses into a black hole of sheer prep, pulling in, like a massive vacuum, any decent morsel of Carolina gas-station-esque American flag trinkets that adorned the inside of her tank. Doesn’t using the flag in such excess, in all girl. As their Southpoint French-manicured hands hold on the ways the flag’s been contorted and mass-produced, have for dear life, a howling chorus of “Best in the World!” echoes across sorority row, as the same effect as foreign protestors on television burning it dddddd they are tossed about, flung through the air and sucked into their doom. and thus negating your “God Bless the USA” pin sticker? What might lie at the other end of this cosmic void? Can’t Excess, much like the Dress Bam for Ms. Bovine, has become our new idol. Maybe not the greatest epiphany ever really say for sure, but my guess is probably two words; Dress Or moo-moos, either one really. stumbled upon in recent years, but is this excess necessarily Barn bad wouldn’t be here at Duke weren’t a thing? Most of us if it Charles Gomez is a Pratt senior. the result of some degree of excess. \fet, excess now manifests

ample. So much so, that we for the

...

since we were little, most of us wanted to be something important. Some of us wanted to be firefighters, others wanted to ballerinas. We longed to be something that captured the essence of beauty and heroics. But as we have grown up, our dreams have changed as we experienced new diings. Now, some of my friends want to be surgeons or pediatricians; they want to help the world by saving lives. Others are engineers and want to alter the future of humanity and computers —seeing just how far they can mesh the two in the name of science. And while I may still be living in my childish dreams, I would love more than anything to work in a developing country, helping a community out of poverty. We all came to Duke chasing our dreams and passions, knowing that these were the things that gave us a sense of purpose in life. We chose Duke over other schools because we wanted to be challenged and to prove that we could leave our mark on the world. But while we all share this same drive to accomplish and be successful, we are each engaged in a different dream. At Duke, we’re on a face-paced track, taking 200-level classes, getting internships with big-name companies and making connections with the people who are shaping the world in ways we admire. Our dreams are becoming a reality. This is what we’ve aniie katharine wales always wanted. getting high on life But during college, we’re also meeting people who open our eyes to new ideas, who show us the world in an amazing way. Over coffee, during discussion sections or in the Bryan Center we’ve spent hours talking to someone who we can’t take our eyes off of. This person makes us laugh at night and smile when we wake up in the morning; even if we’re not in a relationship with them, they’re someone we know we were supposed to become best friends with. Somewhere along the line most of us have gotten really close to someone, maybe even fallen in love. And so, we spend our four years of college finding friends like this and holding on to them. We share our summer adventure stories, learn from each other’s mistakes and successes and admire each other’s passions and dreams, sharing encouraging words along the way. These people mean the world to us. But for some reason this scares us beyond belief. Somehow this doesn’t fit with our plan of achieving our dreams. We want to be independent; we want to go offand change the world in our own way. But we never planned on falling for someone else. When we graduate as seniors, most people who are dating are faced with the question of either marrying or breaking up because one person is going to graduate school in California while the other is working in New York. In a rational world everything makes sense: get your job, follow your dream and you’ll be successful. But throw in emotions and everything seems to get messed up a bit You find yourself in a foreign country, working an amazing job,realizing you aren’t enjoying your dream fully because you miss being with a person who is halfway across the world. How can you choose between your dream of saving humanity and being with that person you care about? Society tells us to follow our dreams, our University tells us that success is working our that job we’ve always wanted, and our parents tell us to do whatever our heart desires (although they secretly hope their $40,000 a year in tuition doesn’t go to waste). We have career counselors telling us how to get that internship, get accepted to med school and get that high paying job. But no one is telling us how to work our feelings into this equation for success. Sometimes I wish I were five again, when I was afraid of monsters living in my closet, my only job was to run outside and play and the only decisions I had to make involved what kind of ice cream I wanted for dessert. I guess it’s all part of growing up. Anne Katharine Wales is a Trinity junior.


201 WEDNESDAY,

THE CHRONICL-E

DECEMBER 1, 2004

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