durham
campus
Local bars o>ffer insight into town- town relations, PAGE 3 .
Trio of laborers call for an end to injustices against workers, PAGE 3
/Cfc sports
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No. 1 Blue Devils take on Temple in last road game of season, PAGE 9
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The Chronicle tl
FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 24, 2006
THE INDEPENDENT DAILY AT DUKE UNIVERSITY
Users of movie site could face
ONE HUNDRED AND FIRST YEAR, ISSUE 104
CC decries decisions of RLHS
The Rematch
quandary by
Ashley
by
THE CHRONICLE
Dean
THE CHRONICLE
In the wake of a pending investigation of a popular studentrun website, catching the latest episode of Grey’s Anatomy or Lost might not be the only source of concern for students. Users of sophomore Elliott Wolf s server, through which individuals could or download movies, televis i o n shows and stream
LAUREN PRATS/THE CHRONICLE
Senior Monique Currie (left) and juniorIvory Latta (right) lead their teams in scoring at 16.5and 18.2points per game,respectively,
Duke heads down Tobacco Road with ACC title on line
music
videos, may also have been violating copyright laws—opening them up to potential legal ramifications Wolfs website, which he shut down Feb. 17, is currently being scrutinized by the Undergraduate Judicial Board. Stephen Bryan, associate dean for judicial affairs, said sharing and making use ofcopyrighted material are violations of University policy, but he declined to comment specifically on Wolfs situation or that of any other individual student. Intellectual property law expert Ben Sidbury, a Charlottebased lawyer with Alston and Bird LLP, compared the situation at Duke to recent cases involving peer-to-peer networks Napster and Grokster. In 2005, the Supreme Court decided that these, as well as similar online services that act as hosts for illegal downloading, can be held liable for copyright
Sean Moroney THE CHRONICLE
by
With a win against the North Carolina Saturday, the Blue Devils can secure the ACC regular season championship along with the top seed in the ACC tournament.
The Tar Heels, however, have proven to be a beatable opponent in recent contests. “This game will decide who is the ACC champion,” senior guard Monique Currie said. “We know that we gave the game not
away the last time we played here, and we’re looking to redeem ourselves and come out with a win Saturday.” After a 74-70 loss to the Tar Heels Jan. 29, Duke (25-1, 12-1 in the ACC) put its bid for a sixth-straight regular season title in jeopardy. However, when UNC (25-1, 12-1) lost to No. 4 Maryland, 98-95, in overtime Feb. 9, it gave the Blue Devils a second chance to stand alone at the top if they defeat the Tar Heels Saturday at Carmichael
SEE WEBSITE ON PAGE 6
Auditorium. The No. 1 seed would allow Duke to avoid a potential ACC Tournament matchup against Maryland, which will be the No. 2 seed if the Blue Devils win and the third seed if UNC Head coach Gail wins. Goestenkors said it was important to avoid playing a two or three-seed before the ACC championship game. “The players know what’s on SEE W. BBALL ON PAGE 12
Student gets caught selling tix
At a general body meeting Thursday night, members of Campus Council expressed frustration over recently announced plans for a new Living/Leaming Community in Kilgo Quadrangle. Members said Residence Life and Housing Services officials did not consult them about the living group, known as the Leadership and Civic Engagement Community. The council voted unanimously to send a letter expressing its discontent to Eddie Hull, dean of residence life and executive director of housing services. All members of Campus Council learned of the establishment of the LCEC in a Feb. 21 article published in The Chronicle, the letter stated. Council members said in the meeting that they felt cast aside and ignored during the decision process. The letter—which refers to the lack of communication between Campus Council and RLHS as “irresponsible” and a “breach of trust”—put forth the council’s concept of an ideal relationship with RLHS. “The purpose of Campus Council is to serve as an advising role to RLHS,” the letter stated. SEE CC ON PAGE 6
by Ryan Kick THE CHRONICLE
infringement.
“You don’t have to go to law school to know that if a person is downloading copyrighted material without permission to do so, that is an infringement,” Sidbury said. Wolf, who is also a columnist for The Chronicle, said his website was password-protected and that nothing publicly shared was
Katherine Macllwaine
SPECIAL TOTHE CHRONICLE
Freshman Tristan Patterson (second from left) tried to sell his b-ball tickets online.
Freshman tenter Tristan Patterson put a price tag on the invaluable when he attempted Feb. 16 to sell his ticket to the Duke-University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill game for $3,000 over the Internet. He was quickly exposed by a line monitor’s sting. Patterson, an economics major from Raleigh, was offering his wristband, Duke ID and position in the tenting line, according to his advertisement on Craigslist. The package would allow the buyer to enter the Duke-UNC game in Cameron Indoor Stadium alongside the first 200 students admitted. “Duke’s student section is SEE TICKETS ON PAGE 5
Campus Council President Jay Ganatra expresses discontent with the way RLHS added a new selective living group.
2
FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 24,
2006
THE CHRONICLiE
Philippines trying to halt coup
Iraq orders curfews after 114 die by
Robert Reid
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
BAGHDAD, Iraq Gunmen killed dozens of civilians Thursday and dumped their bodies in a ditch, as the government ordered a tough daytime curfew of Baghdad and three provinces to stem the sectarian violence that has left at least 114 dead since the bombing of a Shiite shrine. Seven U.S. soldiers died in a pair of roadside bombings north of the capital, and American military units in the Baghdad area were told to halt all but essential travel to avoid getting caught up in demonstrations or roadblocks. As the country careened to the brink of
civil war, Iraqi state television announced an unusual daytime curfew, ordering people off the streets Friday in Baghdad and the nearby flashpoint provinces of Diyala, Babil and Salaheddin, where the shrine bombing took place. Such a sweeping daytime curfew indicated the depth of fear within the government that the crisis could touch off a Sunni-Shiite civil war. “This is the first time that I have heard politicians say they are worried about the outbreak of civil war,” Kurdish elder statesman Mahmoud Othman told The Associated Press. The biggest Sunni Arab bloc in parlia-
ment announced it was
pulling out of talks on a new government until the national leadership apologizes for damage to Sunni mosques from reprisal attacks. “It is illogical to negotiate with parties that are trying to damage the political process,” said Tariq al-Hashimi, a leader of the Iraqi Accordance Front. Most of the bloodshed has been concentrated in the capital, its surrounding provinces and the province of Basra, 340 miles to the southeast. Among the victims was Atwar Bahjat, a widely known Sunni correspondent for SEE
IRAQ ON PAGE 5
Ports deal to be reviewed, delayed by
Liz Sidoti
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
WASHINGTON —Officials in President George W. Bush’s administration opened the door Thursday to a delay in allowing a state-owned United Arab Emirates company to assume significant operations at six U.S. ports, as lawmakers pushed for a new 45-day investigation of the deal. The company, Dubai Ports World, signaled to Congress that it, too, would be willing to agree to a delay while lawmakers review the business deal, which is supposed to be completed in early March. “People don’t need to worry about secu-
rity,” Bush said shordy before administration officials who approved the transaction told a Senate committee their 90-day review did not turn up a single national security concern to justify blocking it. Elsewhere, New Jersey sued in federal block the UAE company from taking over operations at the Port Newark container terminal until the federal government investigates possible security risks. The owner of the busy shipping center, the Port Authority ofNew Yorkand Newjersey, said it also has security concerns about the takeover and plans to file a lawsuit Friday to terminate the firm’s lease at the port. court to
As the political furor over the port deal persisted, Karl Rove, the president’s chief political adviser, said Bush was willing to accept a slight delay in Dubai Ports World’s purchase of terminal leases and other operations at six U.S. ports from a British company. “There’s no requirement that it close, you know, immediately after” a British government review of the $6.8-billion purchase is completed next week, Rove said on Fox Radio’s “Tony Snow Show.” “What is important is that members of Congress SEE PORTS ON PAGE 7
The Philippine military worked to quash a coup plot Friday, arresting an army general and urging soldiers not to get involved in demonstrations against President Gloria Macapagal Arroyo. Already-tight security was bolstered in the capital.
Russian roof collapse kills 56 A snow-laden roof collapsed on one of Moscow's biggest markets Thursday, killing at least 56 people. Investigators blamed the disaster on a buildup of snow after a harsh winter, design flaws or poor maintenance.
2 arrested in British robbery Police said they arrested a 29-year-old man and a 31-year-old woman Thursday for one of Britain's biggest and most audacious robberies, in which one gang abducted a
cash depot manager's family while another tied up guards and made off with up to $B7 million.
Govt, looks at
disaster plans
Flawed government planning for major disasters led to rampant confusion during the slow federal response to HurricaneKatrina, the White House concluded Thursday in a report focusing more on fixing shortfalls before the next storm season than on assigning blame. News briefs compiled from wire reports "Where there is no jealousy there is no love." German proverb
THE CHRONICLE
FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 24,
20061 3
Workers urge students to defeat labor exploitation Shreya Rao THE CHRONICLE
by
For 18 years, Fredy de los Santos Martinez said, he and other workers in the BS&B factory in the Dominican Republic worked under unjust labor laws. But after achieving a victory for workers’ rights in his factory in 2001, Martinez and his labor union have a new problem. And they are looking to U.S. universities including Duke —to help them. Martinez, along with Josefina Hernandez Pence of the Mex Mode factory in Mexico and Joaquin Alas Salguero of Just Garments in El Salvador, spoke on campus Thursday evening as part of a national tour raising awareness about workers’ exploitation. The event was sponsored by the Duke and national chapters of the Union of Students Against Sweatshops. —
ANTHONY CROSS/THE
CHRONICLE
Laborers from three factories in Latin America speak about workers' rights and unions Thursday evening.
The three workers explained that while some factories have succeeded in organizing, few other garment factories in the world can claim the same success—an unacceptable reality, they said. As a result of the increased labor costs of factories that have organized for fair labor laws, corporations are outsourcing their business to factories where the exploitation continues. The Duke chapter of USAS recendy celebrated a victory on campus, as Duke became the first university in the United States to sign a code of conduct vowing to move 25 percent of apparel using the Duke logo to factories where the rights of employees can be ensured. The new policy also protects the right of workers producing University merchandise to earn sustainable SEE SWEATSHOPS ON PAGE 8
Local bar scene illustrates Duke-Durham divide by
Dan Englander THE CHRONICLE
The room is packed. Music is pumping. Dozens of beer taps run the length of the wall. Barbara Natalizio, a fifth-year graduate student in molecular genetics and microbiology, bends over the maroon pool table. Eyeing the cue ball, she lines up to send the 11-ball packing into the comer pocket. She misses. But hey, there will be plenty of other shots. She laughs, picks up her beer and saunters back over to her friends,
half-heartedly dancing. This is Saturday night at Tyler’s Speakeasy in the American Tobacco Complex. It’s buzzing with Duke graduate
students who are part of Natalizio’s MGM program. At least on her side of Tyler’s. Just a few feet away from the Speakeasy is the restaurant portion of the establishment, where the crowd is distincdy older and more Durham. The two sections of Tyler’s are different worlds. The establishment is partitioned by a wall, but many other divisions are at work as well. Even at local bars, with their lubricated conversations, most Duke students and Durham residents do not see town-gown tensions that exist in other aspects of their
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lives dissipating. “We don’t really make new friends,” Natalizio admitted. “I think most people keep to themselves. There’s the Duke crew and the non-Duke crew.” For undergraduates, pretty much everything students need can be found on campus. This fact, coupled with the complex road system and sizable tracts of forest in and around the University, keeps the campus insulated. Many students and Durham residents said this insularity is a major contributing factor to the debated but recognized town-gown divide. But there is one thing students have to leave campus to find: bars. Although the Armadillo Grill is known to serve up a tasty margarita, most students seem to prefer to venture off campus to quench their thirst for a bar scene. Unlike the Speakeasy, not every Durham bar has such a mix of Duke students and Durham residents. Many students commented on the marked difference between a weekend night at Shooters II and a weekday “off-night.” During the week, it is a Durham bar packed with local residents. But come Thursday, Friday or Saturday night, student groups often rent out the space, and the weekday clientele is hardly there. SEE BARS ON PAGE 5
CHAD CUSTER/THE CHRONICLE
Durham residents and students converge on the local bar scene.
Get a taste of the
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THE CHRONICLE
2006
Tinkling ivories helps Adams get policy post Gergen calls Adam Eaglin THE CHRONICLE
by
For most people, music might seem an unlikely means of gaining major political connections. But for sophomore Ben Adams, a talent in piano-playing allowed him to schmooze with the residents of the Governor’s Mansion in Raleigh—and ultimately turned into an appointment to a state-level policy-planning committee. A native of Smithfield, N.C., a small town 60 miles east of Durham, Adams said he has been playing music for. as long as he can remember. “When I was little, like three or four, my sisters would come home from piano lessons and practice their songs, and after they finished, I would sit up on the bench behind them and pick out on the keys the song they had just played,” he wrote in an e-mail. His manifest talent in music grew into a cultivated interest, resulting in music lessons and two years’ studying at the Raleigh Conservatory ofMusic. Around Christmas 2000, Adams’ WILLIAM LIEW/THE CHRONICLE
Sophomore and N.C. native Ben Adams is a regular musician at the Governor's Mansion in Raleigh.
4 file to by
in Congressional race
I .f.si .re Griffith THE CHRONICLE
November may be eight months away, but for those eyeing a seat in Congress, election season has already begun. Rep. David Price, the Democratic incumbent for Congressional District 4 the Triangle rehas g i on announced his intention to run for re-election. In addition to Price, two Democrats and one Republican have officially filed their candidacy for the 4th District. Prospective candidates may declare themselves in the running until the filing deadline at noon Feb. 28. Price, who once taught political science and public policy studies at Duke, has held the 4th District spot for nine out of the 10 two-year terms since 1986. His one defeat came in 1994. In the last election, he defeated Republican Todd Batchelor by a comfortable margin. Two major problems Price said he in-
tends to address are the budget and America’s stance in world opinion. “We must correct America’s course fiscally and diplomadcally,” Price said in the statement announcing his filing. Price has frequently returned to Duke for speaking engagements while in office. His last appearance at the University was Feb. 21. After his speech Price addressed the main issues of his campaign. He said he is seeking to establish a special counsel to evaluate the legality of the United States’ wiretapping activities brought to light in recent months. “I don’t feel Congress has been doing its job in policing the president,” Price said of the effort. Price also mentioned his continuing emphasis on education, which he has supported through the Teaching Fellows Act. He also emphasized his involvement with the Democracy Assistance Commission, a program to support parliaments in emerging democracies. Democrats Kent Kanoy and Oscar ■Lewis are seeking to replace Price in the
upcoming term.
Lewis, who 'worked for Xerox but is now retired, served on Durham’s City Council from 1987 to 1991.
Get Ready fo —y
SEE ADAMS ON PAGE 7
He said national and local security and education were among his priorities. Lewis added that he is confident the district will vote Democratic. “It’s a safe spot,” Lewis said. “The district should give me a chance.” Kanoy, a resident of Carrboro, N.C., is a social worker employed in Duke’s Personal Assistance Service, which provides counseling and help to Duke faculty and staff. He was unavailable for comment. The lone Republican in the field so far is Steve Acuff of Raleigh. Acuff spent 30 years in the U.S. Air Force before retiring from the military in 1999. He has worked since then as operations manager for Express Food Group in Raleigh but is now on a leave of absence for his campaign. Acuff said he is running for office in large part because it is “time for a change.” “The Founding Fathers did not mean for us to have professional politicians,” he said. “Some of our problems are because people have been up in office too long.” Neither of North Carolina’s U.S. senators are up for re-election this year. Primary elections for other positions will take place May 2.
govt.-media relations 'unhealthy' by
Kerry Mclntosh THE CHRONICLE
David Gergen, renowned editor, teacher and author, delivered the James D. Ewing Lecture on Ethics in Communication at the Sanford Institute for Public Pol-
icy Thursday evening. Gergen, who is editor-at-large for U.S. News and World Report and the director of the Center for Public Leadership at Harvard’s John F. Kennedy School of Government, gave a speech entitled, “The Press versus Government in a Time of War.” He discussed past and present relations between the media and various presidential administrations. Gergen described his visit to Duke as a tranquil change from Cambridge, which has been in a frenzy since Harvard University President Larry Summers announced his resignation earlier this week. But Gergen’s trip was actually a return to home. He grew up in Durham, served on the Sanford faculty from 1995 to 1998,delivered the commencement address in 1995 SEE GERGEN ON PAGE 8
ANTHONY CROSS/THE CHRONICLE
Renowned editor and writer David Gergen discussed ethics in journalism in timesof war at the Sanford Institute ofPublic Policy Thursday afternoon.
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THE CHRONICLE
FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 24,
With Elliott Wolf's servers shut down, students talk about how they feel.
I
didn t use it, but it sucks that he got shut down. know a lot of people who did use his site for a
I' ot
—Christina Schmelzer, sophomore
great thing for students looking for entertainment."
—Felix Yap, sophomore
1
think they should put it back up. Unless they block our access to the Internet, people are going to find ways to download stuff. They should let us share files with each other." —Cameron Smith, sophomore
I think it was inevitable. But I think that Elliott is handling it really well. But now have to TiVo 24 "It was so convenient, so easy to use. There are id of just watching it on Elliott." other ways that can watch a can just —Matt Levy, junior go borrow it from my friend—but Elliott was the easiest way to do it." of sucks. I was trying to finish the first —Mian Harris, sophomore >f House. I hope ft goes up again soon." —Joe Goo, sophomore "I don't have a TV, and that was just something I had to look forward to. It was such a relaxing part use it as much as my friends, but I'm not of my day." ;hat surprised. But it was definitely was a —Jennifer Whitley, sophomore
I
I
movie—l
_____
TICKETS from page 1
circumstances,” Troyer said. “I thought this was applicable, so I acted.” Troyer has prohibited Patterson from atcourtside and possibly the most amazing tending the UNC game, will not let his tent college basketball experience,” Patterson replace him and plans to alert future line wrote in the ad. monitors of Patterson’s actions. He stressed that the buyer should be Troyer said Patterson disrespected men’s young enough to pass as a student, although basketball head coach Mike Krzyzewski and he guaranteed a suitable ID match regardthe entire Duke basketball program. She less of the buyer’s physical appearance. added that she is obligated to ensure that The following day, a 20 year old named this does not happen in the future. While admitting his guilt, Patterson “Tim” expressed interest and began regular correspondence with Patterson. The stressed that his actions did not undertwo mulled over payment details and idenmine his devotion to Duke basketball. tification logistics, ultimately agreeing to a “I was giving my ticket to someone who $3,000 money order. obviously wanted to be there, and any profEarly Monday morning Patterson reits were going to fund my trip to the Final ceived another e-mail. This one, however, Four,” Patterson said. was addressed to all members of Tent 16 He added that this is not the first time and came from head line monitor Lauren student tickets have been sold for a profit. He was motivated by a website on which Troyer, a senior. “This is the most disgraceful and greedy UNC students scalped tickets for as much act in the history of K-ville,” Troyer wrote as $3OO and by rumors that the same thing to the tenters. “Tenting is a time-honored had happened two years ago at Duke. tradition, not a business.” Donald Wine, Trinity ‘O4, the head line She then notified the 12-person group, monitor two seasons ago, dispelled such which had been tenting since Jan. 9, that rumors. ‘Yes, someone put their spot in the tenting line on eßay when I was line they had forfeited all tenting privileges. monitor, but it was done as a joke with no The punishment was eventually retracted for all except Patterson, who fell intention of selling,” said Wine, adding victim to an investigative sting orchestratthat bids on the wristband reached figures ed by Cameron loyals. “Tim,” the client more than $lO,OOO before the offer was operating under the electronic guise pulled from the website. But incidents of student scalping are bluedevilcrazy@hotmail.com, was actually Jeff Kovacs —a former usher in not limited to Patterson or even to years Krzyzewskiville. Kovacs informed line past. Currently on Craigslist, Duke fans can purchase two graduate student passmonitors of the Craigslist post and continued to probe Patterson to verify that es to the UNC game for $5OO and $1,500, the freshman was serious about the transrespectively. The potential scalpers remain unpunished. action. Once the two agreed on a pay“That doesn’t bother me,” Patterson ment plan, Troyer intervened. “There is a clause in the tenting rules said of the double-standard. “It’s an inthat the head line monitor can enact evitable reality. I guess I was just unlucky emergency policy to deal with extenuating enough to be singled out.”
20061 5
IRAQ from page 2
preciated the appeals for calm and called the shrine bombing “an evil act” aimed at
the Arab satellite television station AlArabiya. Gunmen in a pickup truck shouting “We want the correspondent!” killed Bajhat, along with her cameraman and engineer, while they were interviewing Iraqis about Wednesday’s destruction of the famed golden dome, of the Shiite shrine Askariya in her hometown of Samarra. Shiite and Sunni leaders again appealed for calm Thursday following the wave of attacks on Sunni mosques, and the number of violent incidents appeared to decline after the government extended the curfew. Iraqi television said the curfew would extend until 4 p.m. Friday, preventing people from attending the week’s most important Muslim prayer service. Officials feared mosques could be both a target for attacks and a venue for stirring sectarian feelings. President George W. Bush said he ap-
creating strife. A Western official, speaking on condition of anonymity because of the sensitivity of the subject, said discussions were under way to rebuild the shrine as quickly as possible because the shattered structure would serve as a “lasting provocation” until it was reconstructed. Italy announced Thursday it was offering to rebuild the dome to help batde “fanaticism.” Despite strident comments from various Iraqi leaders, U.S. officials said they believed mainstream politicians understood the grave danger facing the country and would try to prevent civil war. “We’re not seeing civil war igniting in Iraq,” Maj. Gen. Rick Lynch, a spokesperson for the U.S. command, told reporters. A Shiite cleric was shot dead Thursday night in Tuz Khormato, a mostly Kurdish city north of Baghdad, and another Sunni preacher was killed in the mostly Shiite city of Hillah.
BARS
from page 3
Some students said they feel more comfortable going to bars where there are a lot of their peers. “If you are a Duke student, you are so much more likely to go to Shooters or Devine’s [Restaurant and Sports Bar], because they cater to Duke students,” said Durham resident Kyle McLaughlin, Trinity ‘O4. But McLaughlin said she prefers Joe and Jo’s, a cramped, friendly dive bar downtown with a relatively even mix of Dukies and Durham residents. Betsy-Shane Rosenblum, a junior, agrees. “It just seems like Duke endorses certain places for us to go,” she said. She placed her observation in the broader context of town-gown relations. “I think Duke has the biggest fault in [messing] up Duke-Durham relations,” she said. “By the way, lam a die-hard Durham fan.” A few blocks away, Durham resident Kristen Hill spends a lot of time hanging out with her friends in the the Down Under Pub, staying at the back where the speakers are not so deafening. She cherishes the atmosphere of the small, loud and smoky room. Hill would rather like the place to stay the way it is, and she does not like it when Dukies crowd the pub. “This is a dive bar,” Hill said. “There are regulars who are here all year. When students fill the bar, the regulars feel like they are being pushed out. There is a lot of resentment. I am not sure it’s a mature reaction, but for some reason there is a certain level of animosi-
20
ty. I’m not sure why, but people clash.” This seems to be a recurring theme of Duke-Durham relations, on the bar scene and perhaps beyond: Dukies and Durham locals see themselves as different, and no one can really agree on why or how to remedy the resulting tensions. Students who stumble into the Durham community searching for a good cocktail may not be finding solutions to the problems of Duke-Durham relations, but they are seeing and hearing them. And they’re always glad they came.
CHAD CUSTER/THE CHRONICLE
Many University students and Durham residents say they do not interact at bars near campus.
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THE CHRONICLE
6 I FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 24, 2006
WEBSITE from page 1 copyrighted. He has previously refused to comment on the nature of the private material. The website was accessible through the University’s Intranet server, thereby making Duke liable for any legal repercussions. “The argument [in similar cases] was that the peer-to-peer network wasn’t doing anything, it was just the host,” Sidbury said. “Duke obviously, rightfully so, found they did not want to be hosting that.” Sidbury added that it is unlikely that students who took advantage of the website will face any legal problems, as it would be extremely time-consuming for the media industry to receive information on all users. “I think it would be logistically difficult for a record company to sue 1,700 faculty and students for copyright infringement,” Sidbury said. He noted, however, that all computers have Internet protocol addresses, which function like fingerprints. Record and movie companies could use these to locate individuals downloading from the server and could subpoena Wolf or the University for the IP addresses. The likelihood of that happening, however, is fairly low, Sidbury said. “I don’t know if a record company would want to go head-to-head with a university,” he explained. “That’s not good from a PR standpoint.” If the recording industry wished to press charges, they would direcdy notify the Office of Information Technology, Bryan said. OIT would then be in charge of addressing the subsequent situation. Sidbury said he has noticed a spike in similar cases on college campuses nationwide. Many schools have taken measures to discourage illegal downloading. “We’ve seen a trend where a lot of colleges and universities have been putting up firewalls to any peer-to-peer sites,” Sidbury said. He noted that this would not have been feasible in Duke’s situation, as the website was accessible through an internal file server. He said if legal measures are taken against users, it would be a potentially cosdy problem for those students, but he added that he hopes the University handles the situation internally. “If the industry found out about it and knew it was now resolved, they would probably be willing to let sleeping dogs lie,” he said. Cases similar to Wolfs normally go through a University-run disciplinary process. “Typically it’s not an offense for which a student is suspended or expelled,” Bryan said. He noted diat when deciding punitive measures, the Judicial Board takes into account a student’s prior disciplinary history, response to the incident and level of cooperation. “For these kinds of violations the student is expected to no longer share that material,” Bryan said. He added that repercussions of the violations would likely include a probation or warning.
visit us online at www.dukechronicle.com
Campus Council discusses the Living/Learning selective group that was recently added and will occupy prime space on Main West Campus.
CC from page 1 “This does not mean that Campus Council should be consulted only when RLHS deems it necessary. What this does mean is that Campus Council should be consulted on every major RLHS decision.” Junior Jay Ganatra, Campus Council president, said he heard preliminary plans for the group months ago in a private meeting with Hull, and despite asking to hear more details as planning progressed, received no updates. No high-level RLHS officials were present at the meeting, and some council members expressed frustration that Hull does not regularly attend meetings. Ganatra said he plans to speak with Hull upon his return from an out-oftown conference. The only response he received from Hull after learning of the LCEC’s establishment was an automated e-mail reply, Ganatra said. Ganatra considered the additional community significant because ofits location in Kilgo. The quad was renovated in 2004 and is adjacent to the new student plaza currently under construction. Furthermore, the LCEC’s section will face Main West Quadrangle. Selective living groups are not allowed housing facing the main quad. There are currently no rules governing communication between RLHS and Campus Council in regard to new living
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Just catch the van-- it’s free! Stops are located at: East Campus (stop by the quad) West Campus (stop by the chapel) Erwin Mill (front of building)
Don’t drive. Don’t walk. Ride.
groups. Campus Council has, however, been re-evaluating all facets of the selective living system, including the process for establishing new housing communities. Ganatra said although Hull has been aware of the council’s work, RLHS has not remained in contact with the group. “It’s a communication issue,” Ganatra said. “We want to make sure we know what [Hull’s] expectations are and he knows what our expectations are.” Ganatraadded that the current problem is the second major communication issue that has arisen between the two organizations this year. In September, Campus Council repealed a previous resolution to shorten the spring move-out period because it reflected miscommunication with RLHS and an inaccurate representation of student opinion, members said. At the meeting, the council also passed a resolution by a 16-to-l vote to include an executive council advisor on each quad council next year. The position would be open to rising juniors and seniors opting to remain in their current quads for the following year. The idea for the position was raised in response to the high turnover rate of quad council members each year. The problem has led to a failure in passing down knowledge from year to year. Council members said the new officer would be able to inform Quad Councils of what has worked and what has historically caused problems for each quad. “We could add some continuity—an extra hand that knows the logistics of the quad,” Ganatra said.
THE CHRONICLE
ADAMS from page 4 name was given to the director of tours and event planning at the Governor’s Mansion. During the holiday season, he
was invited to play for social events at the governor’s estate. The following year, Adams received a call inviting him back to the mansion for another event. This time, he caught the attention of First Lady Mary Easley, who asked him to become one of the family’s private performers. In this role, Adams has played for receptions, pre-dinner cocktails and private dinners. “Ben Adams is a talented young musician,” Executive Mansion Tour Coordinator Pat Brock said. “Whether he’s playing classical, jazz or popular music, Ben has added a lot to any event we’ve had.” Adams said he enjoys all the events for which he plays, but he especially likes those where the guests get involved. He described one event during which a crowd of mosdy 60to 70-year-old guests began a sing-along to his piano playing. “I normally don’t sing when I play, but there’s been a few occasions when I’ve been tipped in drinks, and after a few glasses of courage I’ve been known to sing a song or two,” Adams said. Adams’ interests, however, do not end with music. A double major in public policy studies and political science, Adams became involved in juvenile justice when his high school principal approached him for a discussion about violence in his high school. In 2004, the same principal fol-
PORTS
FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 24,
20061 7
lowed up their conversation by proposing that Adams apply for the youth spot on the Juvenile Justice Planning Committee. The state-level board distributes funding—totalling between $1 and $2 million—to different organiza-
tions targeting the needs of at-risk youth, Adams said. “I accepted the nomination and went through a screening process with several of the staffmembers at the Governor’s Crime Commission,” Adams said. “The application and screening process went well, and the committee approved my nomination.” When it came time for Governor Mike Easley to review the nominations, Adams’ previous musical relationship with the governor proved a benefit. “Since the governor recognized the name from the piano work, Governor Easley appointed me to the threeyear appointment in June of 2004,” Adams explained. Adams said his work on the committee has been very re-
warding.
“Each meeting we have members from one of the programs that we fund come in and give a report on their program,” he said. “The people that I’ve met in these experiences are some of the most inspiring people I’ve ever met.” Currently, Adams is in the process of applying for the National Coalition for Juvenile Justice, an organization similar to JJPC but on a federal level. Although Adams is unsure about his future career, he WILLIAM LIEW/THE CHRONICLE said there is one thing of which he is certain. “I have no doubt that my music will be part of my life when I grow up,” Sophomore Ben Adams began playing piano at the Governor's Mansion, he said. “The problem is the whole ‘growing up’ part.? which helped him land a jobon the Juvenile JusticePlanning Committee.
from page 2
have the time to get fully briefed on this.” Lobbyists for Dubai Ports World indicated that while the company is eager to close the deal, itis willing to agree to a delay to satisfy demands by members of Congress, according to a person familiar with the conversations. Nonetheless, Senate Democratic leader Harry Reid of Nevada sought quick action on legislation relating to the deal when Congress returns to Washington next week. In a letter to Majority Leader Bill Frist, R-Tenn., Reid said the administration’s handling of the deal “could not be more flawed.” Reid said he was alarmed at the failure of the administration to “exercise the full statutory authority to conduct a complete investigation into the potential national security implications of this deal.” Also Thursday, administration officials said that weeks before Dubai Ports World sought U.S. approval for the deal, the UAE contributed $lOO million to help victims of Hurricane Katrina. The administration said there was no connection between the request for U.S. approval of the ports deal and the UAE’s contribution. The White House, which so far has gotten a total of $126 million in international donations, said the UAE’s contribution shows the close relationship between the two governments. The deal allowing Dubai Ports World to take over significant operations at ports from New York to Miami has created an embarrassing standoff between the president and a Congress controlled by his own party. Raising concerns about national security in an era of terrorism, Republicans and Democrats alike are crafting legislation blocking or delaying the deal with an Arab country tied to some of the hijackers from Sept. 11, 2001. Bush had pledged earlier to veto such a measure. Officials from the Homeland Security, Treasury, Defense and State departments appeared before Chairman John Warner, R-Va., and four Democratic members of the Senate Armed Services Committee for a briefing arranged while Congress was officially away from Washington. The officials tried to assure the panel that the deal has been subject to a careful, three-month review and that all security questions were satisfied. They said no one raised an issue that would have prompted the need for a further,
45-day investigation.
“We’re not aware of a single national security concern raised recently that was not part of’ the three-month review, Deputy Treasury Secretary Robert Kimmitt told the lawmakers. Democratic committee members accused officials of failing to take into account issues raised about the Arab country in the Sept. 11 Commission’s report. Sen. Carl Levin of Michigan, the top Democrat on the committee, derided the administration’s “casual approach” in approving a deal involving a country with an uneven record of battling terrorism.” Levin at one point noted that the special commission that investigated the Sept. 11 attacks found “a persistent counterterrorism problem represented t>y the United Arab Emirates.”
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8 FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 24, 2006
SWEATSHOPS from page 3
ANTHONY CROSS/THE
CHRONICLE
Students Against Sweatshops sponsored three speakers Thursday. The trio encouraged students to support an end to exploitation in factories.
wages and organize in unions. The group is advocating on campuses to influence the opinions of future leaders and to encourage other universities to follow Duke’s lead. Jessica Rutter, national USAS organizer for programs and Trinity ’O4, and Allie Robbins, national organizer for development, explained that although the recent victory is a major step for the organization, its effects will be minimal unless other universities follow in Duke’s footsteps by enacting similar initiatives on their own campuses. All three speakers were secretary generals of theirrespective labor unions and used Thursday’s presentation to recount their unique stories of the fight for basic labor rights. Each shared equally chilling tales of abuse and exploitation. Martinez recalled numerous occasions when the working conditions of his factory overwhelmed its employees. “We frequently took workers, especially women, to the clinic because of fatigue and exhaustion,” he explained. With the help of organizations like USAS, the unions of
Martinez, Pence and Salguero were able to realize their goals and ensure the rights of their workers. For Martinez, however, the victory was not in the wages. “The most important benefit we have received is our respect for our dignity as humans,” he said. To avoid losses in their profits, many contractors have abandoned their support of union-sponsored factories in favor of cheaper available labor in countries like China and Vietnam. Today, many union-supported factories are being forced to face the reality of going bankrupt due to a lack of investment from companies, Pence said. Salguero’s factory, Just Garments, has made significant progress —it is now managed by the workers—but it has suffered from the lack of corporate support. “We have now been operating for two years but we have had no direct orders and no profit so we cannot improve the conditions in which we work,” Salguero said. Nonetheless, the trio’s message was one of hope that students in the United States can help workers put an end to exploitation. “[Our message is] to maintain the fight. Wherever there is a just fight, support it,” Martinez said.
GERGEN from page 4
9
*
r
Karamu Drama Group Presents
February 24th and 25th Reynolds Theatre 7 P.M
See Duke Box Office For Tickets (919) 684-4444
and received an honorary degree from Duke in 2001. His speech was a candid one, drawing on his experiences and critically assessing what he feels has been the deterioration in media and government relations since the 19705. “We are in an unhealthyrelationship today with the press, the government and the public,” Gergen said. “The national press corps doesn’t trust the government very much and doesn’t care for its policies or its politics, and the [George W.] Bush administration has a clear disdain for the press.” He said the mutual respect that characterized the pressgovernment relations in the mid-20th century is a fundamental quality lacking today. Gergen stressed that the real loser of an antagonistic relationship between these two institutions is the public. “The public believes that the press and the government each put their own welfare first and the country second,” Gergen explained. “It hasn’t always been this way. It need not be this way much longer, but change we must because we are hovering on the edge of a cliff. We know neither whom to believe, nor what to believe.” Gergen said he believes that more than half the culpability for poor media-government relations today rests with the latter, but he made sure to emphasize thatboth parties are at fault to a certain degree. His effort to remain balanced and impartial throughout the lecture—unlike the way he believes news organizations behave today —was part of his charisma and appeal to the audience, Junior Bryan Gordon said. “His lack ofbias or slant to either side... made his discussion of the importance of the problem that much more insightful and credible,” said Gordon, who is reading Gergen’s book, Eyewitness to Power: The Essence of Leadership, Nixon to Clinton, in a history seminar. The book, published in 2000, draws from Gergen’s experiences with the White House. He served as a White House advisor to Presidents Richard Nixon, Gerald Ford, Ronald Reagan and Bill Clinton. From 1984 to 1993 he worked at U.S. News and World Report In his speech, Gergen pointed out several societal consequences he believes will occur if media-government relations continue on the same path. He cited the recent incident involving New York Times reporter Judith Miller as an example of something that has the potential to spin out of control. “If journalists are going to be fair game for hauling people in front of grand juries and demanding they disclose their sources on any story of classified information, it will have a chilling effect upon the investigatory efforts of journalism to find out what is going on behind the veil of secrecy,” Gergen said. “That kind of world will dramatically change what we know about reality.” A very disconcerting implication, Gergen said, is that people are beginning to want the administration to fail in its Iraq mission. He said it was disturbing for him to think that many people in the press would probably rejoice at the thought of the United States suffering a black eye, even though it is bad for the public interest. He ended with a look to the future, saying that citizens will be called upon shordy to make very important decisions concerning the end of the Iraq conflict and the looming threat of Iran. He cautioned that the public must begin to make changes for the sake of the country’s reputation. “A citizenry that can’t trust public information is a citizenry that is blind in one eye,” he said. “Nowhere is it foreordained that America will always be a great nation. We can be sure that if as a citizenry we go forward in this war with one eye blind, we will stumble ever closer to the edge.”
february 24, 2004 "
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Blue Devils remain in ninth place after two days at the ACC Championships, despite season-best performances. <JQ
BASEBALL HOSTS RADFORD IN THREE GAMESERIES PAGE 10
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MEN'S LACROSSE
MEN'S BASKETBALL
Fab 5 leads Duke against Wildcats by
Rachel Bauman THE CHRONICLE
Five. A relatively meaningless digit, but for No. 2 Duke (1-0) it is
junior Dan Oppedisano winning 9 of 11 draws. After winning less than half of its face-offs last season, Duke made it a priority to improve in that department this year. “I thought we came out with good levels of intensity and aggressiveness,” Pressler said after the game. “For a first game, we played pretty well, but we have a lot of areas to improve. We’ll take this one and move on to next week against a very good Villanova team.”
a mark of distinction. Five Blue Devils have been named to the preseason watchlist for the Tewaaraton trophy, an award presented annualto the best player in the nation. Duke’s five poVS. tentials are attackMatt Danowsand Zack ki Greer, midfielders SATURDAY, 3 p.m. Nick O’Hara and Koskinen Stadium Matt Zash and deSEE M. LAX ON PAGE 12 fenseman Tony McDevitt. The five join the rest of a talented and self-titled “veteran team” to take on Villanova (1-0) Saturday at 3 p.m. in Koskinen Stadium. “One of the secrets to last year is that we never got ahead of ourselves,” head coach Mike Pressler said. “We just took it one play at a time, one day at a time, one game at a time. And that’s the plan again this year.” That strategy certainly worked in the Blue Devils’ last game, the team’s season opener at home against Butler. Zash scored Duke’s first goal of the season, and the Blue Devils followed with six more before the Bulldogs could retaliate. Senior Kyle Dowd scored a caTIAN, QINZHENG/THE CHRONICLE reer-high four goals as Duke won, Midfielder Steve Schoeffei registered an 20-3, Feb. 18. The Blue Devils also secured 18 assist against Butler in hisfirst career colof 26 face-offs against Buder, with legiate game.
Wly
Bers
JESSICA SCHREIBER/THE CHRONICLE
Josh Mcßoberts has averaged 10.8points and 5.4 rebounds per contest during the Blue Devils' nine-game winning streak.
Temple
zone to test
byAlexFanaroff
the chronicle
It’s hard to forget what happened the last time the Blue Devils took a break from ACC competition to play on the road. Duke’s only souvenir from that non-conroad SATURDAY 230 p m f erence Wachovia Center trip was an 8784 loss to Georgetown Jan. 21 —still the only blemish on the team’s record.
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The No. 1 Blue Devils (26-1) escape the conference grind once again Saturday at 2:30 p.m. against Temple (15-10) —a game JJ. Redick will begin just nine points shy of breaking Dickie Hemric’s ACC record for career points. But the trip to Philadelphia will hardly be a reprieve from the rigors of the ACC. The Owls are 11-1 at home on the season with wins over Maryland, Miami and Alabama. For Duke, the game is the beginning of a transition. All season, Blue Devil players and head coach Mike Krzyzewski have said
offense
their goal was
to
win the ACC
regular season championship. But a 73-66 win over Georgia Tech took care of that objective—Duke clinched the outright conference title with two ACC games to play. There is always a new goal, however, for a team that has been among the favorites to win the National Championship since the beginning of the season. “Shelden [Williams] and J.J. [Redick] have now won 110 games in their ACC careers, and SEE M. BBALL ON PAGE 12
WOMEN'S LACROSSE
Blue Devils face first test of season in Terps by
Rachel Bahman THE CHRONICLE
It has already been has been quite a record-breaking year for Duke athletics, and the No. 2 women’s lacrosse team is poised to break another as early as its next game. Attacker Katie Chrest will set the program’s record for career goals with her next tally. The senior will get a chance Saturday at noon when Duke (2-0) faces VS. No. 9 Maryland (2-1) at Koskinen Stadium in the team’s first match-up against a ranked oppoSATURDAY, 12 p.m. nent this season. Koskinen Stadium “Maryland is a great program,” head coach Kerstin Kimel said. “We expect it to be a battle. Their offense is as good as anyones in the country so we’ve done a lot prepapring for them. We just expect a higher
intensity game than anything we’ve seen this season.” Duke began this season with two big victories, outscoring Longwood, 19-3, Feb. 14 and Richmond, 18-8, Feb. 19. With her six goals against Richmond, Chrest—last year’s National Player of the Year—tied Duke’s career goal records with 161. “Having played Richmond, who is a top-20 team, really showed us some things we need to improve,” Kimel said. Duke hopes to display those improvements against the Terapins. “We will probably have similar strategies,” said Kimel, a Maryland graduate. “Both of us feel that the offense is the strongest part of our game, so, like us, they are going to concentrate on getting posession and mantaining possession of the ball. This is something we’re LAURA BETH DOUGLAS/THE CHRONICLE
SEE W. LAX ON PAGE 10
Attacker Katie Chrest needs one more goal to break Duke's program record of 161 career goals.
THE CHRONICLE
101FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 24, 2006
SWIMMING
BASEBALL
&
DIVING
*
Blue Devils still in 9th after day 2 of ACCs From staff reports
Junior Jacob McCafferty and the freestyle relay team highlighted the Duke men’s swimming and diving efforts in the second day of preliminaries at the ACC Championships.
JESSICA SCHREIBER/THE CHRONICLE
Duke is batting .291 this season but has given up 11.1 runs per game during its four-game losing streak.
Duke focuses on defense to stop 4-game slide by
Tim Britton
THE CHRONICLE
Despite four straight losses and a 2-5 start to his Duke career, first-year head coach Sean McNally isn’t panicking. “It’s a 56-game schedule and we’re seven games in,” McNally said. “With four or five games every week, we can get right back in it.” That process starts Of 1 this weekend when the Blue Devils host Radford VS* (0-3) in a three-game se•'■gvm ries at Jack Coombs Field. The teams play Friday at 3 p.m., then play 1 FRIDAY, 3 p.m. p.m. games on Saturday SATURDAY, 1 p.m. and Sunday. SUNDAY, 1 p.m. The biggest problems Jack Coombs Field f or £) uk e during its current slide have been surrendering big innings and fielding poorly. Blue Devil pitchers have allowed four or more runs in an inning five times in the last two games alone. The inability to stop their opponents’ offensive momentum has been due in part to six Blue Devil errors in those two losses. “More than anything else, we need to do a good job of catching die ball and throwing the ball over the plate and making them earn it,” McNally said. “It’s consistency.” To that end, Duke will send junior
Danny Otero (1-0) and freshman Andrew
Wolcott (0-0) to the mound for the first two games of the series. Both will be making their first starts of the year, although each has been productive in relief. The duo has not given up an earned run in a combined eight and two-thirds innings this season. The Blue Devils’ offense, meanwhile, has started to produce behind the surprising contributions of freshmen Tim Sherlock and Matt Williams. Sherlock has homered in two consecutive games while Williams went 4-for-4 in Wednesday’s loss to Elon. “It’s nice to see them be productive in their first few games,” McNally said. “I can’t overstate how difficult it is to make the adjustment from high school to college. They’re off to a good start.” Shortstop Brett Bartles has also provided an offensive spark, with four hits Tuesday and his second home run Wednesday. The Blue Devils have batted .291 as a team, a significant improvement over last year’s .264 mark. “I’d like to see us put the ball in play with two strikes, situational hitting—moving the runners over and getting them in—and just making the routine plays on defense,” McNally said. Radford visits Durham after opening its season with three straight losses at No. 13 South Carolina. “I feel like we’re in control,” McNally said. “This is a process. We just need to play.”
The second day of the ACCs, hosted by the University of Maryland, featured the 200 IM, the 50 and 500 freestyle events and the 200 freestyle relay. As a team, Duke sits in ninth place out of 11 teams with 54 points. The Blue Devils, who went 1-4 in ACC regular season competition, lead Boston College and Miami, neither of which Duke faced this year. Florida State currently leads the fourday event, while regular-season champion Virginia sits in second. McCafferty qualified for the bonus finals in the 200 IM with a career best time of 1:53.43, good enough for 23rd in the preliminaries. In the bonus finals, the junior posted a 1:54.36 time to maintain
his 23rd position. The 200 freestyle relay team swam a season-best 1:24.15 to finish ninth. The team was anchored by sophomore Ryan Packer, who swam a 20.67 split to bring the relay into ninth place. Packer enjoyed individual success as well, tying his career-best in the 50 freestyle at 20.95—the best time by a Duke swimmer this season—but he just missed the finals cut. Senior Andy Storm also set a careerbest in the 500 freestyle, shaving .07 seconds off his previous best, but it was not enough to qualify for the finals. Following McCaffertyV lead, eight other swimmers improved their times in the 200 IM. Junior Kevin Arthofer finished less than a second away from qualifying for the bonus finals with a time of 1:53.92. The ACCs continue Friday with the 400 IM and 100 events in butterfly, backstroke and breaststroke.
W.LAX from page 9 prepared to do both offensively and defensively. We want to make sure we have the ball more than they do.” In last season’s meeting, Duke defeated Maryland on the road, 10-7. Chrest scored three goals and goalie Megan Huether sloped seven shots. Duke raced out to a 7-1 lead before the Terrapins came back with five straight goals, but the Blue Devils were able to put them away. This season, the Blue Devils’ seven returning starters and four preseason AllAmericans are further distinguished with three players on the Tewaaraton National Player of the Year Watchlist—Chrest, Huether and midfielder Rachel Sanford. Huether, the reigning National Goalie of the Year, is also on pace to break Duke’s career saves record of 568. The Blue Devils, however, are not focused on breaking records. “Both Katie and Meg are concentrated on the team,” said Kimel. “Their focus is getting the team ready to play Maryland, to fulfill their role and play their best, and this is usually when they are most successful.” Despite the personal pressures that come with approaching a program record, Heuther said winning remains her top priority.
TOM MENDEUTHE CHRONICLE
Goalkeeper Megan Huether is on the Tewaaraton Trophy's preseason watchlist.
“I try not to really think about that kind of stuff because it can really play with your head,” Heuther said. “Personally I just go out every single day and try to give it my best. You can’t worry about expectations, you just have to do what you know how to do.”
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Applications are available at 101 West Union Building. Call 684-3811 or email dawn.hall@duke.edu for more information.
THE CHRONICLE
12 FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 24, 2006
W. BBALL from page 1
M.LAX from page 9
the line,” Goestenkors said. “And it is Carolina. So, I don’t have to say a whole lot to get the team motivated.” After holding a 12-game winning streak against the Tar Heels that dated back to the 1999-2000 season, the Blue Devils dropped all three matchups last year by an average of 11.7 points, including an 88-67 loss in the 2005 ACC Tournament championship game. When the two teams squared off at Cameron Indoor Stadium earlier this season, Duke held a 13-point lead at halftime and looked like it would end the losing skid. But UNC used its fast-paced style of play to score on 14 ofits last 16 possessions and extend the streak to four. Senior forward Mistie Williams said in past years, the Blue Devils were the aggressors, but in their losses to the Tar Heels lately, they have not used that same assertive style of play. “We were too passive,” Goestenkors said of the Jan. 29 matchup. “We passed the ball from side to side too much instead of having the attack mindset thatyou need against pressure teams. It was a very physical game, and I think we understood afterwards that we needed to be a little bit tougher.” The Blue Devils stayed on top of the Tar Heels in the early part of the second half while Tar Heel forward Erlana Larkins was on the bench due to foul trouble. Duke even led by 12 with 10:11 remaining, but when Larkins reentered the game in the second half, she torched the Blue Devils for 17 of her 23 points en route to the UNC victory. Larkins has given Duke’s larger post players trouble during North Carolina’s recent dominance. As a freshman last year, Larkins scored 19 in the Tar Heels’ win in Cameron and recorded a double-double in the ACC finals blowout.
The Wildcats did not advance to the NCAA tournament last year and will face Duke for the first time since 2003. In that match-up, the Blue Devils won, 6-5. Villanova began its season with an 116 win over the Air Force. Nova held a 146 faceoff advantage and went on two 3-0 runs and a 'TO run to dominate the Falcons “Villanova is a team that’s definitely got their eye on us, but we’re going to take every game like it’s our last game,” midfielder John Walsh said. “Villanova has proven to be a good Division I team and we’re going to bring our best out no matter who we’re playing.”
Senior Mistie Williams scored a team-high 16 points on 6-for-9 shooting against North Carolina Jan. 29.
Along with Larkins, the Blue Devils defense will have to shut down UNC guard Ivory Latta, who ranks second in the ACC in scoring at 18.2 points per game. In order to instill more mental and physical toughness in her team, Goestenkors said she has increased the amount of rough play in practice. “We’ve had guys in practice most every day since then and I just stopped calling
M. BBALL from page 9
DUKE vs. TEMPLE Saturday, February 25 Wachovia Center 2:30 p.m. ESPN •
•
No. I Duke (26-1)
Temple (15-10) ANTYWANE ROBINSON 12 3 ppg, 4 3 rpg WAYNE MARSHALL 7.1 ppg, 4.0 rpg DUSTIN SAUSBEBY 10.5 ppg, 4.8 rp MARK TYNDAU 10.5 ppg, 4.6 rpg MABDY COLLINS 16.6 ppg. 3.8 apg
JOSH MGROBERTS 8.1 ppg, 4,6 rpg SHELDEN WILLIAMS 18.4 ppg, 9.8 rpg l.i. REDICK 28.9 ppg, 2.6 apg SEAN DOCKERY 9.0 ppg, 2.8 apg GREG PAULUS 6.5 pi so, 5.3 ai
FRONTCU
BACKOURT
Shelden Williams, fresh off a great performance at Georgia Tech, is again showing why he is one of the nation's best players. He should have no trouble dominating a Temple team that does not have one player averaging more than 5 rebounds. Temple turns the ball over just 7.5 times per game. However, guard Dustin Salisbery is dayto-day and may not play. Even with him, the Owls, averaging only 62.0 ppg, do not have enough firepower to keep up with Redick and Co. While the Duke bench is not strong, Temple's is worse. No one on the Owls' bench is averaging more than four points per game. DeMarcos Nelson has shown the ability to take over a game in short spurts, something Temple lacks.
m
PPG PPG DEF FG% 3PT% FT% RPG APG BPG SPG TO/G
1(
DUKE 83.9
TEMPLE 62.0
67.7 508
57.8
,407
.335 597 31.0
,777
32.5 15.8
fouls on the guys,” Goestenkors said. “I told them to be aggressive and be real physical with us so that we would have to be tougher than we were.” Even if the Blue Devils defeat the Tar Heels Saturday and secure the No. 1 spot, history suggests that it will not be the last matchup of the two rival squads this season. Duke and UNC have met in the last four ACC finals.
,404
10.2 13.6
The Skinny Redick will bounce back f his worst shooting perfor ance of the season and should set the all-time AC mark early in the first hal' needs just nine points to Temple is simply overmatr and lacks the scoring pum keep up with the Blue De Blue Devils win, 73-58 —Compiled by Andrew Davis
they are 110-20 or something like that, and that’s a great record in itself,” Krzyzewski said after the win over the Yellow Jackets. “But, if you can be a regular season champ, a tournament champ, both maybe, this is a great league, and it’s an accomplishment. Then you look at Josh Mcßoberts, and this is his first, and it makes it nice.” The emergence offreshman Mcßoberts has been integral in helping the Blue Devils reach their first milestone. Since the Georgetown game, in which Mcßoberts played just 13 minutes, the freshman has averaged 24.6 minutes, 10.8 points and 5.4 rebounds in the Blue Devils’ nine contests. More importandy, Duke has won each one of those games. Mcßoberts scored a career-high 17 points against North Carolina Feb. 7 and poured in 16 in a win over Wake Forest Feb. 14. He has displayed the dunking ability and three-point range expected from him at the beginning of the season. Even when his shot has not fallen, the freshman has put his stamp on games. A career-high 12 rebounds against Maryland Feb. 11 helped ease the sting of an 0-for-6 shooting night. And his 9-of-ll performance from the free throw line against Miami Feb. 19 gave him 14 points on just three shots. “He’s getting the ball inside some now,” Krzyzewski said after the Miami game. “He’s comfortable now. He looks like a veteran. His demeanor is so good, he’s making plays. “The last month, he has a feel for what it takes. He likes being out there, he’s comfortable. It’s reflected right away in ffee-throw shooting. He’s our second-best ffee-throw shooter. For a month and a half [earlier] this season, he was about 40 percent. When kids
TIAN, QINZHENG/THE CHRONICLE
Attackman Matt Danowski was a first team AllAmerican last season. all of a sudden grow up like that, it’s kind of neat, and he’s done that.” Mcßoberts will need to be his new-andimproved self against a Temple squad that has been very tough at home this year. The Owls, under Hall-of-Fame coach John Chaney, have built a reputation for stifling zone defense, and this year is no exception. They have allowed just 57.8 points per game, which places them among the top 15 teams in the nation, and they average 9.9 steals per contest. Temple’s zone also slows the game down. The Owls average the sixth fewest number of possessions per game in the nation. In Temple’s last game, the Owls limited Richmond to just 30 points in a 69-30 win, holding the Spiders scoreless for the first 6:42 of the game and the opening 12:08 of the second half. For the game, Richmond shot just 26.7 percent. The Blue Devils have struggled against zone defenses at times this season, most recently against Miami. And Temple’s match-up zone is renowned for its toughness.' “We work on that everyday in practice,” Redick said of the team’s zone offense after the game against the Hurricanes. “The thing about a zone is that when a team goes to it, generally you’re not necessarily prepared for it at that moment.... It can stand you up a little bit, and you make weaker passes.” The game will be played in the 19,500seat Wachovia Center—home of the NBA’s Philadelphia 76ers—instead of Temple’s usual home gym, the Liacouras Center. The Blue Devils have had mixed results in four games played in NBA arenas this season. They lost to Georgetown in the MCI Center, beat Drexel and Memphis to win the NIT Season Tip-Off at Madison Square Garden and defeated Texas at Continental Airlines Arena.
THE CHRONICLE
FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 24,
THE Daily Crossword
Edited by Wayne
2006 113
Robert Williams
ACROSS
1 Eager 5 Small globule
9 Haste outcome,
Stick It Seth Sheldon
perhaps
14 Bardot's dad 15 Words to Brutus 16 Patriot Allen
Hey. Come here and
17 Elated? 19 Wary 20 Relatives
look at this. It's crazy. I use the
other side.
21 23 -24 25
by
marriage
Fewer Pollution patrol grpWeasellike mammal Fruit of a fragrant flower
27 "La Mer"
*
composer 29 Fitzgerald's forte 32 Addams Family relative 35 Sharp turns 36 Landed estates 38 Stands idly 40 Billings state
scls'o(a
ilbert Scott Adams WELCOME TO DOGBERT'S SEfAINAR ON WORK-LIFE BALANCE.
North Woodmere, NY
41 Halogen
Ford or
compound
FIRST,
REVIEW THIS LIST OF YOUR PRIORITIES.
FAfAILY JOB EXERCISE VACATION lAUST-DOS fAEDICAL EATING HYGIENE SLEEP ROMANCE HOLIDAYS
YOU HAVE TIfAE FOR THREE THINGS. WORK AND HOLIDAYS ARE TWO. YOU GET TO PICK THE THIRD.
Mcßaney
42 Track tipster 43 Rocky pinnacle others 44 45 Math
Actress
Armstrong
proposition
48 Dais stand 50 Lethal slipknot 54 Taxi 56 Lukas of “Witness" 57 Noisy napper 58 Short ad 60 Refused advance? 62 Diarist Nin 63 “Time Machine" 64 65 66 67
race
LtTUe upturn small ARMS F/P5. TOTAL CHAOS. anpthbn rroonoeißP. BVSRYTHING 555M8P TO
12 Infield
coverage 13 “Orinoco Flow" singer
Plucked
Principal
Skinner on "The Simpsons”
25 Bad hair pieces 26 Ain't right? 28 Clerical cap 30 River of Pisa Russian emperor Nastase of tennis
Con Suit material Colorer Fuel-line element
DOWN 1 Plant pest 2 Davis of “Hero” 3 Toothbrush brand
oonesbury Garry Trudeau
6 Ike's command 7 Dumbfounded 8 Force 9 Cardiff folk 10 Took lunch 11 Wool?
&
39 Do a roof.
53 Golfer Els 54 Some IRS
perhaps
40 42 46 47
Natural satellite In a short way Cured Bread or dough Picked 49 51 Maine town 52 Ushers
Beep Wet pig? TV adjunct
employees
55 Composer
Thomas 57 Use a swizzle stick
59 USSR jet 61 Enemy
itey
The Chronicle
sum vow. rr
Who should have won skating gold: Hockey figure skating, any day: Alex Fanaroff: Michelle Kwan... oh wait: Yaffe’s girlfriend: Whoever took the hardest fall: Rick, for never walking away: Figure Skating Pelt: Little Indian; Roily was the champ in ’88:
skwak seyward ....meg, beaton ballz mike, alex alex tian iza
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oxTrot Bill Amend
Eric Berkowitz, Jenny Wang Evelyn Chang Desmund Collins, Erin Richardson Sim Stafford, Tiffany Swift, Charlie Wain Kevin O’Leary Marketing Assistant: Heather Murray National Advertising Coordinator: Rachel Bahman, Alexandra Beilis Creative Services: Meagan Bridges, Robert Fenequito, Andrea Galambos Alicia Rondon, Erika Woolsey, Willy Wu, Susan Zhu Roily Miller Online Archivist: Brian Williams Production Assistant: Business Assistants Shereen Arthur, Danielle Roberts Chelsea Rudisill Account Assistants:
Advertising Representatives:
Fill in the grid so that every row, every column and every 3x3 box contains the digits 1 through 9. (No number is repeated in any column, row or box.)
9 8 6 2 1 4 6 3 7 6 2 3 9 7 4 1 5 2 6 9 7 6 3 8 4 4 1 7 3 1 5 6 8 3 9 2 6 8 7 4 1
8 7 3 6 5 8 6 1
Roily
5 1 4 2 9 8 1 4 3 9 7 2
9 2 8 5 6 7 3 4 2 9 4 5 7 8 1 2 9 3 6 5
Answer to yesterday’s puzzle
3 7
7 5
9
1
1 2 ONE TEAM. ONE COMMON GOAL.
PI JKE A Division
of Campus Services
3
5 4
To provide quality service to the Duke University community. Remember... We are the Stores that work for you
3
8 6 9
2 5 9 6
1 6 1
5 2 www.sudoku.com
THE CHRONICLE
14 FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 24, 2006
Showing some respect ICC or their colleagues in the DSG Senate. They were letting down the students, the people they are bound to represent. Further, failmake good staffeditorial on to a promise to oughly inappropriate when describing the the students to help select Young Trustee Nominating the next Young Trustee is disrespectful to the candidates. Committee’s manner of conAs a voting member of the duct this year. YTNC, should not matter That word is “respectful.” The Intercommunity whether or not your “favorite” candidate or best Council is supposed to reprefriend was knocked out in the voice of the entire sent community by tapping for its the last round of cuts—the outcome should not be determembership every major stumined by allegiances. dent leader on campus. ICC members are student And when those leaders failed to show up for Young leaders because members of Trustee selection, they were not their organizations believe just letting down their peers in them to have the moral fab-
There
are six different letters of the alphabet, when combined in a unique way, that form one seven-letter adjective that is thor-
Sh
CJ <v
E— l
I was giving my ticket to someone who obviously wanted to be there, and any profits were going to fund my trip to the Final Four. Freshman Tristan Patterson on his reasoning for trying to sell his Duke-UNC basketball tickets online. See story page 1.
LETTERS POLICY The Chronicle welcomes submissions in the form of let-
ters to theeditor 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. The Chronicle will not publish anonymous or form letters or letters that are promotional in nature. The Chronicle reserves the right to editletters and guest columns for length, clarity and style and the right to withhold letters based on the discretion of the editorial page editor.
Direct submissions to: Editorial Page Department The Chronicle Box 90858, Durham, NC 27708 Phone: (919) 684-2663 Fax: (919) 684-4696 E-mail: letters@chronicle.duke.edu
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Inc. 1993
SEYWARDDARBY, Editor SARAH KWAK, Managing Editor STEVE VERES, News Editor SAIDI CHEN, University Editor TIFFANY WEBBER, University Editor SARAH BALL, Editorial Page Editor MIKE VAN PELT, Sports Editor JONATHAN ANGIER, GeneralManager TOM MENDEL, Photography Editor ADAM EAGLIN, City & State Editor ALEX FANAROFF, Sports Managing Editor CORINNE LOW, Recess Editor VARUN LELLA, Recess Photography Editor MINGYANG LIU, Wire Editor KAREN HAUPTMAN, OnlineEditor EMILY ALMAS, Towerview Editor ANDREW GERST, TowerviewManaging Editor BEN PERAHIA University SeniorEditor KATIE SOMERS, Recess SeniorEditor AARON LEVINE, SeniorEditor MARY WEAVER, Operations Manager NALINI MILNE, University Ad Sales Manager DAWN HALL, Chapel Hill Ad Sales Manager
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TheChronicle is published by theDuke Student Publishing Company, Inc., a non-profitcorporation independent of Duke University. The opinions expressed in this newspaper are not necessarily those of Duke University, its students, faculty, staff, administration or trustees. Unsigned editorials represent the majority view of the editorialboard. Columns, letters and cartoons represent the views of theauthors. To reach the Editorial Office at 301 Flowers Building, call 684-2663 or fax 684-4696. To reach 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-J/www.chronicle.duke.edu. 2006 The Chronicle, Box 90858, Durham,N.C. 27708. All rights reserved. No part ofthis publication may be reproduced in any form without the prior, written permission of theBusiness Office. Each individ©
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movers and shakers (thus, why ICC is a breeding ground for YT candidates). Former DSC Vice President of Community Interaction Joel Kliksberg tried to be tough in enforcing the rule that if an ICC member was in the running for Young Trustee, he or she would delegate his or her second-in-command to fill the vacancy created in the voting body. Logan Leinster, Kliksberg’s successor, similarly tried to be tough with that and other rules. These two individuals should be commended for their efforts. Yet no one seems to listen to them, only half of the group takes the job seriously
and there are few (if any) sanctions for breaking those rules. Leinster’s leadership should mean that she and her policies deserve respect, yet that concept rings hollow on her committee. It is an honor that we as students have the indirect authority to elevate an undergraduate to the highest and most powerful position on this campus. As the voice of the students, the Young Trustee should always be chosen by us —not by the administration, not by the community, not by the faculty. But if we can’t respect the rules enough to follow them, maybe we don’t deserve such a privilege.
Mountains or molehills
on terecord
Est. 1905
ric and integrity necessary to make independent, ethically sound decisions. If we accord them that degree of respect, aren’t they bound to return it? The lack of transparency, the conflicts ofinterest and the difference of opinion among members over whether the selection was fair are all clearly indicative of a flawed process. But it’s mostly an issue of enforcement and ethics, because no matter what body of students you designate as voters, pockets of “conflict ofinterest” will always exist. Such is life on a campus where the people running for the most coveted undergraduate position also happen to be the high-octane
hasn’t the engineering school at large taken up arms? It was much more offensive to the rest of them—the “emotionally unavailable” and “boring” ones. The difference is, the engineers took the colthan umn in the sense it was written: a comedy of the problems ridiculous. don’t So I unI couldn’t hope for a better contrast than Studerstand why dents Against Sweatshops. This group has taken on some students the daunting task of changing University policy to here at Duke ensure factories manufacturing products with the have taken it Duke logo are paying their workers a living wage. upon themselves Now, as an economic conservative I have some to create probOliver sherOUSe reservations about whether SAS’ plan is actually the lems where none you teli me best policy in the long run, but for this argument exist. I am, of that’s really beside the point. The SAS looked at the course referring to the Asian Students Association’s reaction to world and found a real problem. They worked Monday, Monday’s joke about Asians. For those of hard, formed a plan and undertook the gargantuan you with better things to do than follow petty task of effecting change at an institution as large and complex as Duke. squabbles, here’s the rundown: Sincerity of purpose and hard work are values Monday, Monday, an anonymous humor colthat wrote unfit roeven Adam Smith, F. A. Hayek, myself and any umn, a piece about engineers being mantic matches for Trinity girls. At one point, the other free market capitalist you care to name can column claimed that all engineers are “emotionally appreciate. If the ASA’s cause had any sort of similar merit, unavailable, boring, taken or Asian.” The ChroniI would be singing its praises just as loudly, but the cle soon printed three letters to the editor expressing outrage at the “casual racism” of the remark, fact is that it does not. The group doesn’t even win and the Center for Race Relations organized a on the old argument “if you replaced Asian with [list of ethnic/religious groups], then everyone meeting to discuss the comment. would be outraged.” Now, I had laughed at the original column This is, of course, nonsense. I’m white, but I can doubly so because I was a Trinity student in a room full of engineers—but I felt I had better get a seclaugh at Dave Chapelle. I’m a Lutheran, but I don’t write angry letters to Garrison Keillor. ond opinion. In true scientific fashion, I took a surI could list pages and pages of comedians who vey ofall the maleAsian engineers who I happened to run into. have made racially tinged jokes the center of their Absolutely none of them expressed any offense routines and gone on to great popularity. Why at the column, and one student even said, “That aren’t the subjects of these humorists in constant states of outrage? made my day!” Because they don’t choose to be. Because they For further evidence I turned to that encyclopehaven’t made the decision to treat a joke as a seridia for all things college: facebook.com. I went to the “groups” directory and typed in ous statement and set up a straw man to knock down in a fit of self-righteousness. “Asian.” Surely there are enough problems in the world The first group listed was the ASA—that is, the without making anymore to deal with. “Asian Segregation Association.” Surely there are issues facing Asia and Asians in Apparendy some students can take and make America that the ASA could take a real stand on. jokes themselves. I’m afraid empty claims of racism just don’t imSo where did all of this outrage come from? It’s the child of the political correctness movement of press me in a town where crosses were burned only the 19905. It’s a manufactured offense, and it’s last year. The ASA should put off complaining until it has nonsense. real to complain about. something believe that students admitted to refuse to I Duke University could read that column and beOliver Sherouse is a Trinity freshman. His column lieve the author was really saying Asians aren’tfit to date. After all, if that comment were serious, why runs every other Friday.
Whether
you’re Democrat or Republican, liberal or informed, I think we can all agree on one thing; the world has more enough
—
THE CHRONICLE
FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 24,
commentaries
lettertotheeditor Senior speaks out in response to Oprah appearance Some of you may have seen me on The Oprah Winfrey Show Thursday. The show was titled “Women Who Use Sex to Find Love,” but this doesn’t tell the whole story of the deeper issues associated with this particular topic. Given Duke’s campus culture—one where women are expected to be perfect in every way and where hook-ups are the norm—it’s easy to feel lonely and isolated at times. These kinds of feelings can lead a person into doing things that help him/her feel more comfortable, more accepted, more able to fit in. Some people have asked me why I would choose to go on national television to talk about this. “Why didn’t you just keep it private and go to CAPS so no one else wouldknow?” It’s true; I could have gone that route. Instead, I chose to write to Oprah, someone I really connect with on many levels, to talk about an issue often too “controversial” to discuss. She was kind, compassionate and supportive throughout the entire experience. I have no regrets at all. I hoped that by talking openly about something that’s challenging to me, this might also help other young women out there who are struggling with the same issues. These are young women who feel like they are the only ones dealing with this—women who might not have the resources or courage (yet) to come forward. By going on national television and speaking out publicly, I have become a voice for other young women who have yet to be heard. Unfortunately, there will always be some opposition towards people who choose to speak the truth. I’ve encountered that here at Duke even among people I have considered friends. Some don’t want to acknowledge that this problem exists. They would rather ignore it or consider it something other than what it is. But choosing not to talk about a problem won’t make it go away. For those who still can’t understand, that is okay. My intent was to inform and inspire healing in others. I have already been contacted by a number of people with friends who are dealing with these same issues. I hope that watching the show or reading this editorial might help those people realize that they are not alone. Of course, there are resources here on campus that can help you too—staff at the Women’s Center or CAPS, for instance, help lots of people on campus wresding with all sorts ofaddictions. The past couple of months have been a healing process for me. I thank those of you have been supportive. Your compassion has not gone unnoticed or unappreciated. Tracy Egharevba Trinity ’O6
2006115
Behind closed doors
The
argument can be made that Duke dating scene—or oft-lamented lack thereof is a contributing cause of the social isolation on this campus, one that can drive young men and women into unmeaningful V-. and destructive relationships If Duke students really aren’t getting the intimacy that they (secretly) are inclined to want or need, then boston cote on some level, it althe naked truth most makes sense that they’d go “looking for love in all the wrong places.” But perhaps it’s not that simple. Through a frank discourse of a subject that she obviously finds so personally painful, a Duke senior put a familiar face to an unfamiliar problem—and on national television no less. A social problem, moreover, that isn’t publicly discussed with the forthrightness it deserves. Tracy Egharevba’s appearance on Thursday’s Oprah Winfrey Show titled “Women Who Use Sex to Find Love” was brave and illuminating, although the focus of the show was not. Sex addiction and sexual promiscuity are such taboo subjects for women that they are rarely discussed with any seriousness—especially without turning the conversation into one of “Madonnas and Whores.” Oprah began by introducing her show topic as one that concerns women wrongly perceived as being “a bunch of hoes. Just sluts.” Later, Oprah directed disdain and disgust at her guests by again and again repeating that “strange penises would bother me”—all to the merciful laughter of her overly indulgent studio audience. Oprah played to the audience’s fascination of —
her guests’ lascivious sex lives by focusing on the number of partners the women had been with instead of really getting to the root of the physical, emotional and psychological pains that these women are obviously suffering. Egharevba herself told recess that if Duke students were looking for a show about “sex addicts” that we were going to be disappointed. And although it was clear that Egharevba’smeant what she said, the Oprah show that aired really pushed the term that Egharevba had tried so hard to steer clear of in her interview. Sexual addiction is something that is easily kept behind closed doors. And unlike many other addictions that have outward, ostensible signs of suffering (think alcoholism, drug addiction, food addiction) “sex addiction” is something that can be more secretive and shameful. The psychological issue of the addiction is something that can be covered up and hidden, even from the closest of family and friends. Their “sex addictions,” much like “food addictions” weren’t actually about the means of satisfaction. It wasn’t about the sex they were getting. It was about what they were missing. The lack of something more meaningful than sex was the underlying motive of their addictive habits. And that’s precisely why “Women Who Use Sex to Find Love” is a misnomer for the show. In no way did the stories that the women shared indicate that they were using sex to find love. They were, rather, using sex to fill some other hole in their lives. Love never was the real issue at all. It’s not about the sex. It’s about the greater motives. And unfortunately for Oprah’s guests, it was about the ratings. Boston Cote is every Friday.
a
Trinity senior. Her column runs
want to submit a guest editorial? contact sarah ball (slbi?) or kelly rohrs (kar2l)
Look at me! I'm hot! ology double major who is going to cua museum or open a studio—the kind of person who would have gone on a walk through the gardens last Wedneschine, creating a black vortex from which day instead of running inside on some no light escaped. Or maybe it was the vamachine. Calories be damned. the faces of the on people cant yet stern think we are immune to the beauty I machines, either readthat doesn’t come with sacrifice. The ing Cosmo or calculat'MUm of Cosmo is obviously on the cover girl most public place possible, m the dreaded caloing but we love her more as a goal beautiful, “Look at me! exerI saying, ries that they were to reach than as something honestly HOT!” ' ■ i & SSk cise! I’m ridding themselves of beautiful. Too many of us can’t walk It’s like the library soand the shots of BacarBostock and around the Duke Gardens reveling in cialites infesting di they would be able what we already have. limiting Lilly, quiet studying to take that night, We are left pining for what we can’t to a few hidden corners of thanks to their valiant the libraries. They are the achieve in Wilson, immune to that easy, efforts. of people who do a thing pure form of beauty outside. one fine morning type Regardless, when I It must infuriate our professors, watchnot to do it but to be just walked into Quenchers us read Shakespeare and study the ing it. doing to buy a drink after a run around the golf seen Wilson mechanics of the world, not to underin standing moment, At that course, I saw the stampeding hordes on to Gatorade, stand but watching get an A. That’s why there’s Rush the machines without a single empty gap with my Riptide around campus from Teach machines, rea posted I herd on the elliptical sign in their ranks. This was last Wednesday, the America, Duke is. for which declares that “Morsuperficial horribly how alized which was a glorious day for April and an and Bains all agree” you about the Goldman gan, And I’m not really talking unbelievable day for February. should work for Teach for America as a that would be an scene, social though But all these people chose to get their tool to get a soul-devouring job. We can’t easy target. exercise inside away from the Carolina do anything without an obvious reward. I’m talking about the i-banking, docBlue sky. To me they are exercising for menWe love the carrot, fear the stick and igsucceeding-at-all-cost tor-becoming, the wrong reasons. They aren’t getting a here. It seems nore the flowers on the roads we travel. is so prevalent that tality runner’s high or enjoying nature; they There’s this facebook group full ofPratt our souls to become are all selling are hardening their bodies to conform to like we art kids history/biTrinity kids. It declares to meet an mocking want wealthy. I social norms, and they’re trying to do it
I’m
pretty sure elliptical machines steal souls. Maybe it was the dark, swirling appendages of the great ma-
L
'
with as little pain and work as possible. They all just seemed so mechanical and dead, simple extensions of the machines they ride. It is unbelievable to me that this repetitive, unmoving motion could be preferable to being outside doing anything. And they are doing it in the .*•
Jordan everson
rate
“have fun traveling the world... while I’m making the cheddar!” I mean, traveling the world sounds like fun. Getdng a job doesn’t. You shouldn’t need other people to see you drinking $l4 martinis in a fashionable Manhattan club to know you are a success. Listen: We are all mice in a maze, and the goal is to find the cheese at the end of it. You, being the smart mouse, manage to make it straight to that cheese. Me? I go to every dead end, taking an amazingly long time making sure there wasn’t some extra little present at the end of the other tunnels. I arrive with a button, a dropped pipet tip and a grape. You’ve eaten half the cheese and are full. I begin my meal I’d echo Bernstein from Citizen Kane when he said, “Well, its no trick to make a lot ofmoney... if what you want to do is make a lot of money.” The trick is to find something to do with yourself so that, at the end of the maze and the end of your days, you have some stories to tell your out
grandkids.
Jordan Everson is a Trinity sophomore. His column runs every other Friday.
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