tailgate onlin e r» gives tailgate proposal Check us ou this week and all sumit
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sports Women's lacrosse falls to UVa at ACC Championship, PAGE 9
DSG to administration, PAGE 3
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MONDAY, MAY 1, 2006
THE INDEPENDENT DAILY AT DUKE UNIVERSITY
ONE HUNDRED AND FIRST YEAR, ISSUE 143
Dancer New Panthers to protest today Shabazz says group made prior will be unarmed, stay off Duke campus allegation by
by
Jared Mueller and Emily Rotberg THE CHRONICLE
The exotic CREEDMOOR, N.C. dancer who said she was raped by three members of the Duke men’s lacrosse team made similar accusations in 1996, officials confirmed Friday. The resurfaced case—which was never prosecuted —has put the accuser’s credibility and District Attorney Mike Nifong’s judgment under intensified scrutiny as Tuesday’s DA primary election approaches. On Aug. 18, 1996, the dancer-then 18 years old—told a police officer in Creedmoor she had been raped by three men in June 1993, according to a police document. The victim’s father contradicted her account, telling the Raleigh News & Observer Thursday that no sexual assault had occurred. “This is absolutely stunning... insofar as this appears to be a false and fabricated allegation,” said attorney Robert Ekstrand, who is representing a group of JOHN SOMMERS/REUTERS
SEE LACROSSE ON PAGE 5
David Graham
THE CHRONICLE
The New Black Panther Party for SelfDefense will hold a demonstration at 10 a.m. today near the University in support of the exotic dancer who alleged she was raped by members of the Duke men’s lacrosse team at a March 13 party. The event is slated to occur on Durham city property adjacent to West Campus. In addition, there will be a 6 p.m. town hallstyle meeting at St. Joseph’s AME Church on Fayetteville Street. In an e-mail sent to the University’s students, faculty and staff April 28, President Richard Brodhead wrote that despite rumors that the protesters would be armed, law enforcement officials will ensure the demonstration remains peaceful. “[The NBPP] informed Duke Police that they have no intention of entering the campus to be disruptive in any way,” Brodhead wrote. ‘They also assured us they will not have guns.” Larry Moneta, vice president for student affairs, said Duke University Police Department officers had been in contact SEE RALLY ON PAGE 7
MalikZulu Shabazz (center), head of the New Black Panther Party, will lead a rally near Duke's campus Monday.
Calif, firm
joins dining discussion Rob Copeland THE CHRONICLE
by
A new name has entered the discussions over who will replace ARAMARK Corp. as the University’s main food
provider. Bon Appetit Management Company a California-based conglomerate that runs dining at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and a host ofother colleges——
Lax case arouses campus activism by
Matt Sullivan THE CHRONICLE
As the New Black Panther Party for Self-Defense prepares to chant down Duke today, the University again confronts the cavalcade of protest that has besieged campus in the five weeks since rape allegations surfaced against members of the men’s lacrosse team. But today, students are also returning from “Stop Genocide” Darfur rallies in
Washington, D.C., and heading off to immigration rights boycotts, capping off
a semester full of campus activism. The combination of outrage and outreach has left a number of prominent campus activists searching for ways to connect Duke students with humanitarian causes by building on recent grassroots success while harnessing the responses to immediate controversies.
“Certainly events like the lacrosse incident do cause a broader range of people to engage because it’s close to home, but I don’t think that’s a necessary element for good activism,” said Robin Kirk, coordinator for the Duke Human Rights Initiative. “I know a number of students who have spent time on things like Darfur, immigraSEE ACTIVISM ON PAGE 6
is one of the favorites to land the contract, sources close to the negotiations confirmed Sunday. A decision is fast-approaching after the Vendor Review Committee gave its recommendations last week, said Jim Wulforst, director of dining services. The committee was composed of faculty, administrators, undergraduates and graduate students, Wulforst said. He declined further comment. Committee member Andrew Wallace, SEE DINING ON PAGE 8
2
THE CHRONICLE
MONDAY, MAY 1, 2006
Rally for Darfur held in D.C.
Nation braces for immigrant boycott by
Erin Texeira
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Chanting "Not on our watch!" thousands of people joined celebrities and lawmakers at a rally Sunday on the National Mall in Washington urging President George W. Bush's administration and Congress to help end genocide in Sudan's Darfur region.
Powell attacks Iraq war policy
NEW YORK—Now that immigrants have
grabbed the nation’s attention, what next? Monday has been set aside for immigrants to boycott work, school and shop-
ping to show how much they matter to their communities. But with some growing tired of street protests, and others afraid they’ll be deported or fired for walking out, people are planning to support the effort in myriad ways. Some will work but buy nothing Monday. Others will protest at lunch breaks or afterwork rallies.There will be church services, candlelight vigils, picnics and human chains. The range of activities shows both how powerful the immigrants’ rights movement has become in a matter of weeks, but also that organizers don’t yet have a clear focus for their next step. “It’s highly unpredictable what’s going to happen,” said Harley Shaiken, director of the Center for Latin American studies at the University of California at Berkeley. “What unites everyone that’s going to do something on May 1 is they are making visible their strong feelings.” Thanks to the success of previous rallies planning for Monday’s events, collectively called Un Dia Sin Inmigrantes—A Day Without Immigrants—is vast. Officials in Los Angeles braced for huge crowds: Assistant Police Chief George Gascon said as many as 500,000 people could take part.
Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice was forced to respond to criticism of the Iraq war Sunday. But the criticism was not from Democratic bashers—it came from former Secretary of State Colin Powell, who said in an interview that he had argued for higher troop levels than were actually deployed.
Iran doubts U.N.oil sanctions
MATT FELTZ/THE CHRONICLE
The Iranian deputy oil minister said Sunday he did not believe the United Nations would impose sanctions on Iran because that would boost oil prices even higher. "Any action like that will increase oil prices very high,"said M.H. Nejad Hosseinian.
Immigrants will hold a nationwide walk-out today. Protests for workers'rights were held in Durham in March.
Fans flock to Richards' hospital
for work that day,” Nava said, “the men
Keith Richards fans gathered outside a hospital in Wellington, New Zealand Sunday
In smaller cities such as Allentown, Pa.,
Omaha, Neb., and Knoxville, Tenn., immigrants and their allies have been going door to door with fliers, making posters and sharpening speeches. In New Mexico, restaurants cooked
meals this weekend that they’ll donate for Monday picnics. In Pomona, Calif., about 30 miles east of Los Angeles, dozens of men who frequent a day labor center voted unanimously to close Monday, said Mike Nava, the center’s director. “If anyone even comes around looking
want him
suspended.”
Some insist that a boycott is the next key step—beyond marches—to show the nation just how much economic power undocumented workers hold. “The marches are a tool, but they are being overused,” said Mahonrry Hidalgo, head of the immigration committee of New Jersey’s Latino Leadership Alliance. Like civil rights boycotts of decades past, he said, “this could finally be the spark for our people to advance.”
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THE CHRONICLE
MONDAY, MAY 1,
Plaza will be done by Fall ’O6
20061 3
Wolf, DSG offer plan for tailgate
Adam Eaglin THE CHRONICLE
by
After months of construction and rerouted paths to the Bryan Center, students will find a completed West Campus Plaza when they return in the fall, Larry Moneta, vice president for student affairs, confirmed Sunday. The plaza is still within budget and will be completed by Aug. 14, as scheduled, Moneta said. Student leaders are now working with members of the administration in order to plan a month-long series of events to commemorate the plaza’s opening. The primary construction for the 40,000-square-foot student plaza began in August 2005 with the demolition of the former Bryan Center walkway. Since then, crews have concluded structural work and have now begun the final stages of plaza construction. Moneta said construction crews are currently working on the periphery of the space, which will ultimately connect the Bryan Center, the West Union Building and Page Auditorium. “The wooden decking is nearly finished alongside the Great Hall and soon work will begin on laying the finishing materials, [such as] tile, stone and pavers,” Moneta wrote in an e-mail. In mid-May, construction will begin on the removal of the Bryan Center walls facing the plaza. Glass panels are being put in place of the walls in order to modernize the structure, administrators said. “Soon after, doorways will be punched into the Great Hall and at the end of the new decking, into the Flowers Building, to provide access from the Chapel Quad,” Moneta added. Workers have planted trees, and preparations have begun for the shrubs that will border Page. Touted by administrators as a new SEE PLAZA ON PAGE 5
by
Saidi Chen
THE CHRONICLE
ANTHONY CROSS/THE CHRONICLE
Esteemed novelistTomWolfe speaks Saturday as part of the 2006 NorthCarolina Festival of theBook.
Author ruminates on all things southern by
Katherine Macllwaine THE CHRONICLE
Mirroring the Blue Devil tradition of lining up for coveted basketball or concert tickets, eager fans spanned West Campus Saturday afternoon. But the line contained a different breed of enthusiast—the avid reader. Students and community members filled Page Auditorium to hear novelist Tom Wolfe address the question ‘What is Southern today?” The author of such novels as “Bonfire of the Vanities” and “I Am Charlotte Simmons” joined 80 other writers for the weeklong 2006 North Carolina Festival of the Book. The Richmond, Va., native began by describing the South through sound effects. He animatedly imitated the noises of a tube of biscuits cracked open to make grits, the blasting of a car’s air conditioning left on high and the racket made by a leaf blower disturbing an otherwise serene setting.
For good measure
“Those are all sounds of the South, and they should be recorded in literature,” Wolfe said. He continued his analysis of Southern sounds by setting the stage of the Bristol 500—a biannual Nascar race in Bristol, Tenn., that he called the biggest sporting event in America. Wolfe contrasted the clamor of the Southern “good old boys” in the bleachers with the cool detachment of the “neckties and the suits” who escape the frenzy in their skyboxes. “It successfully removes you from the event,” Wolfe said of the air-conditioned isolation of the wealthy spectators. “Meantime, the real fans are there in the stands.” Wolfe said the Southern-good-old-boy perspective provides a rich source of literary material. He said the influence of the South on
Duke Student Government submitted a revised tailgating proposal to the Office of Student Affairs Friday. The proposal, which DSG Presidentelect Elliott Wolf, a sophomore, said is “very preliminary,” emphasizes increasing the safety of the event by shifting its focus away from alcohol and toward programming. “Student Affairs had hinted that they didn’t want organized tailgating,” Wolf said. “That’s not what the students wanted.” The plan suggests moving tailgate to the back-right lot of the Blue Zone, across the street from its current location. It also features a permit system that would allow DSG to monitor the number of vehicles entering the zone and serve as away to hold groups accountable for their actions at tailgate. Under the proposal, less enforcement will be needed because the threat of losing permits for future tailgates will incentivize students to behave appropriately, Wolf said. Greek, selective living and other groups would be required to obtain permits a few days before each tailgate. The location of the new lot would make the event less of an eyesore and food and water would be available on a neighboring field, which could also host concerts. DSG’s proposal would also abolish the time constraints placed on this year’s tailgates. Larry Moneta, vice president for student affairs, brought up a number of issues, Wolf said. These included concerns about onsite enforcement and ensuring a balance in the number of permits handed out to independents and selective living groups. “We’re working with Student Affairs to allay some of their concerns,” Wolf said. Sue Wasiolek, dean of students, said
SEE WOLFE ON PAGE 7
SEE TAILGATE ON PAGE 8
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MONDAY,
THE CHRONICLE
MAY 1, 2006
Primate Center gets $8 million, new name by
McGowan Jasten CHRONICLE THE
A number of animals at Duke’s former Primate Center have reason to be jealous these days—the center now excludes them from its new title. In the wake of the University’s $B-million pledge last summer to renovate the center, University administrators officially renamed the facility the Duke University Lemur Center Saturday. During its 40 years of existence, the center has gained a reputation as the premier place to house lemurs—a subset of primate prosimians found only in Madagascar, a small country off the coast of southeast Africa that exclusively hosts all 15 of the lemur’s endangered species. The facility currently boasts the largest collection of the endangered subset of prosimian primates in captivity. “Lemurs are the closest animals from which humans evolved,” said DULC Director Ann Yoder, who assumed her post in January 2006. “We’re using them as a model species through which we can better understand ourselves.” »der, who rned her h.D. in nat o m y the Duke ;sity MedCenter in said Ed edition proj-
ects include buildings for researchers to
study animals in their outside habitats and cabins ,to house international scientists. More scientists from Madagascar have visited the center in recent years than ever before. Yoder said the increase in international visitors can be traced back to the fact that Duke scientists have emphasized first-hand demonstrations of conservation efforts to protect endangered species. Duke currently prefers this method to costly efforts to reintroduce endangered lemurs in Madagascar. Yoder noted that planned natural habitats will more closely resemble lemurs’ native habitats. She added that increasing free-ranging habitats for the animals will allow them to segregate, as they would in the wild. Enhanced shelters and heating systems will also protect animals from the cold and facilitate year-round studies. Currently, the center’s prosimian primates—which also include lorises and galagos —are placed into smaller environments to protect them from the cold climates of the Duke Forest each year. Researchers house primates in the protective environments from Oct. 15 to April 15. Yoder said new shelters will allow animals to range freely during the day and retreat to heated shelters during cold nights. “But most of all, we hope to use the center as a model for research and educational efforts among students and re-
ELIZABETH RENDLEMAN/THE CHRONICLE
Ann Yoder, director of the newlyrenamed Duke University Lemur Center, will oversee $8 million renovations. searchers,” Yoder said, noting that the changes will capitalize on the educational and research value of the center. James Siedow, vice provost for research, said Duke’s efforts to improve the DULC are the results of evaluations that effectively confirmed the center’s educational and research value to the University. “I’m sure that by better utilizing the unique assets of the center, success in the center’s three areas of focus —conservation, research and education —will duly follow course,” he said. Beyond the wild habitats at the DULC,
scientists at Duke are working to better understand lemurs through the Lemur Genomics Initiative. The project—headed by the Institute for Genome Sciences and Policy and other departments at the University —aims to identify genomic sequences through interdisciplinary efforts. Additional research ties exist between the DULC and the Nicholas School of the Environment and Earth Sciences, the National Evolutionary Synthesis Center and the department of Biological Anthropology and Anatomy.
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THE CHRONICLE
MONDAY, MAY 1,
LACROSSE
2006 5
PLAZA from page 3
from page 1
lacrosse players who have not been charged. “This prosecution needs to end soon, and it has lost all credibility.” But Nifong —who will face primary opponents Keith Bishop and Freda Black in the first election of his career—said the case against indicted sophomore players Reade Seligmann and Collin Finnerty is still strong. “All the facts are not yet known, and many of the so-called ‘facts’ that have been reported and commented on are simply wrong,” Nifong wrote in a statement Friday. Some critics have accused Nifong of publicizing the racially charged case in order to curry the favor of Durham County’s 90,000-plus black residents. Of the DA candidates, Black and Nifong are white, and Bishop is black. Relatives of the accuser have told the media she has considered dropping the current case—a move that would echo her decision not to pursue the 1996 accusations. The officer who took the woman’s report 10 years ago asked her to write a detailed timeline of the night’s events and bring the account back to the police. “Apparently she never returned,” Granville County DA Sam Currin said. Creedmoor Police Chief Ted Pollard said that although he was chief at the time
SYLVIA
central gathering place on campus, the plaza will feature programming from different student groups. With two performance platforms and an elaborate lighting system, the space was designed specifically to facilitate student events. Moneta noted that the Duke University Union, in particular, will take charge of the plaza’s first 30 days. “The Union, along with other campus organizations, has put together a calendar of events that starts when the plaza opens in August and ends on the last day of September,” junior Alex Apple, president of the Union, wrote in an e-mail. On the first day of classes, a large event will be held to begin a “kickoff month” celebrating the plaza’s opening, he said. The month-long celebration will also have a closing weekend, coinciding with annual events such as Oktoberfest and Homecoming. “The main goal is to get every event that happens on campus to be incorporated in the plaza kickoff month,” Apple said. “This includes academic departments, cultural groups, orientation, performance groups, University departments and events, and any other student groups out there.”
QU (LEFT),TOM MENDEL (RIGHT)ZTHE CHRONICLE
With Tuesday's election looming, District Attorney Mike Nifong (left) and defense attorneys (right) learned last week that the alleged victim had accused three men of sexual assault in 1996. of the allegations, they were never brought which they need more information Pollard learned about the earlier alto his attention “If the accused elected not to pursue leged rape when an Associated Press rethe case, that’s the end of it,” he added. porter contacted him Thursday evening. The allegations were never referred to Police staff hand-searched through the DA’s office, Pollard said at a press conyears of files before they found the report ference outside Creedmoor City Hall Friday. of the alleged 1996 rape. “We’ve got no record of this,” said AssisNifong said rape shield laws will pretant DA Cindy Bostic, who was with the vent the previous allegations from being DA’s office at the time of the first accusaaired in the courtroom, but defense attortions. “But that’s not atypical. If charges neys asserted their right to use the 1996 weren’t filed, we’re not going to have a case to try to impeach the accuser. record of it.” “This is not evidence of prior sexual acBostic called the police report “vague,” tivity as the rape shield statute contemadding that police often request a chronoplates,” Ekstrand said. “Instead it is evilogical statement of events in cases for dence ofher relationship with the truth.”
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moving.”
ACTIVISM from page
1
tion, Tibet and Nepal and have used the personal stories of the people involved to
make it really come home. “That’s the key to activism: making these seemingly faraway situations come close to home,” she said.
Automatic Activators Duke’s activist volume has increased during the past few years in response to large-scale, controversial events —from the Latino community’s demands following a fraternity theme party in 2003 to an uproar of debate when the University hosted the Palestine Solidarity Movement’s annual conference in October 2004. “I think campuses are, and always have been, centers of activism, and things pop up which create it,” said Rann Bar-on, a third-year graduate student in mathematics who helped bring the PSM to campus. “Until this year—this semester actually—l was kind of unhappy with the way things were going. It was a little on the quiet side.” Earlier this academic year, racially charged comments by former U.S. Education Secretary William Bennett and the controversial cartoons of Muhammad sparked demonstrations at Duke and many other college campuses. But it took Hurricane Katrina to spark a sizeable group of students—some 300 spent their spring breaks volunteering on the Gulf Coast, including one group led by Bar-on. “To see that political awakening coming not from books, from classes, from speeches, but to see itfrom experiential activism from going into the field and talking to people and seeing what this community is actually going through —is to me an extremely beautiful thing,” Bar-on said. The ugliness of rape allegations hit campus after spring break, forcing Duke activists to contextualize different and more vitriolic debates about racism, classism and a city’s internal struggle. Perhaps the most tenuous balance —
Purdue
WEIYITAN/THE
came when Sexual Assault Awareness Week fell on the University at the same time as the national media. Women’s Center Director Donna Lisker said a flood of female students sought counseling during the week but added that her staff worked to prevent the scheduled Take Back the Night march from becoming “another lacrosse rally.” “I don’t think the message has changed at all,” Lisker said. “It may be easier for us to get an audience, but that’s not going to change the way we approach things.” Junior Daniel Bowes, president of the University’s chapter of the American Civil Liberties Union, however, acknowledged that fighting the single issue of an underage drinking sting last fall took attention away from issues like gay marriage and the Supreme Court. “We just haven’t had the kind of interest that you’d hope a thriving academic community would have on these types of issues,” he said. “People are busy here.”
Grassroots Groundbreaking When it comes to everyday —and often international—human rights issues from genocide to worker’s rights, Duke ? s activist groups are often left with few options aside
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UNIVERSITY
CHRONICLE
Incidents like the PSM Conference and the alleged lacrosse rape have struck a chord with student activists. from distributing flyers outside the West Union Building. “Once the story dies down and it isn’t making headlines anymore, that’s when the real work starts,” said Dawn Peebles, a firstyear graduate student in cultural anthropology and leader of the Human Rights Initiative’s spring conference on Nepal. Most people in the University’s activist community agreed that this year’s most effective application of a larger human rights cause to the University was the “sweat-free
campaign”—Students Against Sweatshops’ successful negotiation with administrators to ensure a living wage for manufacturers
of Duke-logo apparel. After obtaining nearly 500 students’ signatures for President Richard Brodhead on both a card and an oversized T-shirt—a visual tool for activism not unlike the Sexual Assault Week clothesline—the group convinced the University in February to continue its leadership in the anti-sweatshop movement. ‘You kind of need the hardcore people who are doing the organizing and people around who are willing to sign something,” said Bar-on, who is also a member of SAS. “It doesn’t require the entire University to demand something to get things
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Indeed, smaller student organizations have effected serious change of late, from the Sudan Coalition and other groups making the University a leader in fundraising and awareness for genocide in Darfur, to Duke Organizing helping, this semester, to save the job of one fired housekeeper but lose a similar fight for another. After all the flyering, signing and protesting, the University’s disparate activist groups still find it difficult to make progress because “we’re not a very activist campus,” said senior Alex Oliveira, president of the Global Health Forum. “One thing that we have not used to our advantage is a philosophy about how to mobilize students, people and communities.” Studies of student activism have shown that healthy activist subcultures extend protests from one issue to multiple causes—a finding supported at Duke by Brodhead’s acknowledgement that the lacrosse case “has brought to glaring visibility underlying issues.” To that end, leaders of several Duke activist organizations have emphasized the importance of establishing unity and institutional knowledge across groups before allowing campus sentiment to focus solely on the rape debate. “Alliances between groups are extremely powerful,” Bar-on said, noting the success of events on sensitive topics that have been sponsored by many groups. “I think there have been some opportunities squandered throughout the lacrosse stuff. I think we’ve certainly squandered the opportunity to integrate the whole community.” Many other behind-the-scenes activists, meanwhile, emphasize looking beyond Duke’s walls. “There’s been a lot of the kinds of speak-outs [against the lacrosse team] and rallies and panels and all that marching on the house—all that I think has been very positive,” Kirk said. “Still, there are students doing other, more global things that are much more powerful and impactful than any one scandal involving Duke students.”
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THE CHRONICLE
WOLFE from page 3
ANTHONY CROSS/THE CHRONICLE
Hundreds of people filled Page Auditorium to listen to novelist Tom Wolfe speak about life in the South Saturday afternoon.
RALLY
American military history was a central theme in his 1979 novel “The Right Stuff,” but he also learned about the importance of stepping beyond familiar boundaries while writing the book. Wolfe praised realist authors like Charles Dickens and John Steinbeckfor exposing themselves to new realms and said a writer’s personal experience provides essential but limited literary material. “Students hear the common maxim ‘write what you know,”’ Wolfe said. “If you want to write what you know, write one book.” He added that a well-rounded novelist explores unfamiliar territory. “Do not underestimate your power to know something else,” Wolfe said. During a question-and-answer session following the speech, several audience members asked Wolfe about his opinions on current events.
20061 7
The subjects of their queries ranged from his attitude on immigration to the perceived similarities between the characters in his novels and individuals involved in recent rape allegations against members of the men’s lacrosse team. Wolfe said he did not want to take a stance on the topic of immigration, which will be the focus of his next novel. “I am just a social secretary,” he said. “I do believe there is such a thing as objectivity.” Wolfe also declined to compare the circumstances in some ofhis works to the current situation at the University. “None of these people in the fiction or in real life lived within 600 miles of Durham, North Carolina,” he said. Community members and students gave Wolfe’s speech mixed reviews. Chapel Hill resident Patsy Davis said she was disappointed that Wolfe did not discuss the common perception that Dupont University—the fictional setting of his novel “I Am Charlotte Simmons”—is modeled after Duke. Freshman Stacy Chudwin said she appreciated Wolfe’s wise words. “He has been a very prolific writer in the past. When Tom Wolfe gives you advice, you take it,” she said.
from page 1
with representatives of the NBPP around 6 p.m. Friday. Malik Zulu Shabazz, national chairman of the black separatist group, told the Raleigh News & Observer that a rally will convene at the intersection of Chapel Drive and Duke University Road and that his group will “conduct an independent investigation” of the alleged rape. Shabazz also told the N&O that his group will “deal directly” with members of the men’s lacrosse team. An AntiDefamation League spokesperson told the N&O that the group has been known to brandish firearms at events. It is illegal for anyone other than law enforcement personnel to carry firearms on college campuses in North Carolina. A poster for the event showed pictures of Collin Finnerty and Reade Seligmann, the two sophomores indicted in the rape case. “Had enough of disrespect and racism from Duke University? Demonstrate your discontent! Stand up!” the poster read. The two players’ images also appear on the NBPP website. Aaron Graves, senior vice president for campus safety and security, said because the location of the demonstration is not on University property, the bulk ofresponsibility for ensuring safety will fall on the Durham Police Department. “I understand why, given the reputation of the group and the noise that’s been made, people would be concerned,” said John Burness, senior vice president for public and government relations. “But I want to assure everyone that the University will take all necessary steps to protect students.” Eddie Hull, executive director of housing services and dean of residence life, sent an e-mail oudining steps Residence Life and Housing Services will take Monday. Hull wrote that residence hall card access will be restricted to residents only. He added that RLHS staff will be running increased rounds and will be monitoring propped doors and “tailgating”—the practice ofindividuals entering dormitories by following students who swipe their cards. Administrators met for approximately one hour Friday afternoon and again briefly Sunday afternoon to discuss preparations for the demonstration. The meetings were chaired by Executive Vice President Tallman Trask and included officers from DUPD and the offices of Student Affairs and News and Communications. “It was a very short meeting,” Moneta said of Sunday afternoon’s discussion. “No one knew anything new and there was nothing in the newspaper. We’re preparing for anything and hoping that nothing happens.” Moneta said the University has a “game plan” in place to handle the situation should marchers be armed or enter campus. “It is absolutely, unequivocally our intent that there be no disruption for students,” Moneta said. A poster for the town hall meeting said representatives of the NBPP, National Association for the Advancement of Colored People and Nation of Islam will join Philip Cousins—senior pastor of St. Joseph’s and a Durham County commissioner—and student leaders from North Carolina Central University. The New Black Panther Party combines anti-white and anti-Semitic creeds with Marxist and black separatist ideology. It has been labeled a hate group by the Southern Poverty Law Center, an anti-hate non-profit group. The NBPP has been condemned by the leaders of the 19605-era Black Panther Party.The two are not affiliated. Sarah Ball and Shreya Rao contributed to this story.
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DINING
Another committee member, outgoing Duke Student Government President Jesse Longoria, a senior, said he was “hesitant to comment on any specifics” but noted that he had a definite favorite. “I was looking more for the demonstration of flexibility instead of hard and fast ‘this is how we do it at other places,”’ Longoria said, referring to the various companies’ proposals. Officials at Bon Appetit are excited at the prospect of managing Duke dining, said Maisie Ganzler, the company’s director of communications and strategic communications. She said that if Bon Appetit is selected, “students should see changes right away,” citing Santa Clara University as an example of what can happen when Bon Appetit takes over for ARAMARK “We blew the doors off of that place in terms of customer count,” she recalled. “It was a kind of a good problem to have.” Bon Appetit has a decentralized decision-making office and a real executive chef on every campus, Ganzler explained. She added the company makes an effort to buy as many ingredients as possible from within a 150-mile radius of campus. But the decision of who will receive the contract has not yet been finalized, said Kernel Dawkins, Duke’s vice president for
from page 1
Co-chair of the Duke University Student Dining Advisory Committee, said he recommended the contract be split between East and West Campuses. Wallace, a senior, proposed that Bon Appetit be awarded West, while Meriwether-Godsey Inc.—a small Virginiabased firm—run East’s dining experience. “There are clear choices of who would be better and who would be worse for each of the two main locations,” Wallace said, referring to the Marketplace on East and the Great Hall on West. He added that although each committee member made his own recommendation, they were not all equally qualified to do so. Some of them were in positions entirely unrelated to dining, although they may still have a stake in the outcome, he said. “There was some disagreement by some people who weren’t necessarily informed—who don’t understand the food industry and how the economics of it work,” Wallace explained. Still, he said he was most disappointed by a lack of student representation, with only four undergraduates and one graduate student serving on the committee. “You’ve got to ask yourself—who eats the food?” he said. “We’re the main customer.”
campus
TAILGATE from page 3
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Top administrators—including Execu-
tive Vice President Tallman Trask and Provost Peter Lange —have yet to give their counsel “We will meet this week and hopefully make a selection,” Dawkins said. He downplayed the imminence of other proposed changes to the dining model, in particular the potential changes to the freshman meal plan. Larry Moneta, vice president for student affairs, told The Chronicle in April about the possibility of dedicating particular nights at off-campus restaurants for residents of specific freshman dormitories to use their dining plan. “Our goal will be to have [the provider] in place immediately,” Dawkins said. “More dramatic changes will take place over time.” Dawkins said there will not be enough time over the summer to accomplish anything substantial regarding possible structural renovations. “There is a very narrow window,” he explained. “The options are limited.” No matter which vendor ends up winning the contract, the dining experience will be much improved, Dawkins said. “Everyone is thinking about Duke dining in a very different way than ARAMARK did,” he said.
Sundayafternoon that she had not seen the document but that her main concerns about tailgate are the amount of alcohol and density of students present. “As far as I understood we would not be having tailgating next year as we’d known it in the past,” Wasiolek said. “I think our sentiment is that we’d tried everything we could with tailgating last year and we still were not able to create a safe enough environment.” For approximately two days, a letter addressed to students outlining “the policy that will govern the Fall 2006 tailgates” was posted on Wolfs website. The document, which Wolf called a preliminary draft, summarized the proposal and had the names and titles of Wolf, junior David Snider, DSG vice president-elect for athletics and campus services, and Executive Vice President Tallman Trask at the bottom. The letter was not signed by any of the three and was removed from the site Sunday night. Wolf said that he did not know who would need to approve a tailgate policy before it was finalized. He said he will be working with various offices over the summer to compromise on a suitable plan.
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VIRGINIA 13
HFL DRAFT PASSES BY BLUE DEVILS No Duke players were drafted in this weekend's NFL Draft. N.C. State defensive end Mario Williams was taken first by the Texans.
8 DUKE
VIRGINIA RUNS PAST DUKE IN ACCs Sean Moroney THE CHRONICLE
by
BALTIMORE In the ACC title game Sunday, the No. 1 Blue Devils trailed going into halftime for only the second time this season. But unlike its 11-10 comeback win over Notre Dame April 9, Duke fell apart in the second period and was unable to mount a charge to capture its second-straight ACC Championship. First-seeded Duke (15-2, 4-2 in the ACC) was down 5-4 at halftime to second-seeded Virginia (15-3, 6-1). After the break, the Cavaliers took advantage of a 6-0 scoring run to topple the Blue Devils, 13-8. “It’s a combination of the things they do really well defensively, meaning they pretty much swarmed ballside,” head coach Kerstin Kimel said. “And it’s a combination of that style of playing defensively and we really didn’t execute our game-plan offensively.” The Cavaliers handed the Blue Devils their only other loss on the season, 11-10, April 1. “We didn’t think we handled [Virginia’s defense] very well the first time we played and our game-plan was to try do something different to combat it but we never really got there in our game,” Kimel said. The beginning of the second half Sunday was a disaster for the Blue Devils. Virginia controlled the ball in Duke’s defensive zone for the majority of the half, which helped generate six straight goals for the Cavaliers in the first 20 minutes after the break. Patiently swinging the ball around the Blue Devils’ defensive arc early in the second half, the Cavaliers’ attackers found senior midfielder Kim Connors. With an open shot, Connors rifled the ball into the back of the net for her team’s first score of the half to put Virginia ahead, 64. Virginia’s offensive pressure did not let up. After SARA GUERRERO/THE CHRONICLE
Second-seeded Virginia, the only opponent to beat Duke thisyear, used a 6-0 second-halfrun to beat the first-seeded Blue Devils in the ACC title game.
SEE W. LAX ON PAGE 12
MEN'S BASKETBALL
Mcßoberts will return for sophomore season by
Gregory Beaton THE CHRONICLE
It was a week of departures and new beginnings for the men’s basketball team. Saturday night in Cameron Indoor Stadium, Blue Devil fans wished J.J. Redick,
Shelden Williams and the rest of Duke’s seniors a final goodbye at the team’s annual awards banquet. The official conclusion to the season—and to the run of one of the best recruiting classes in Duke history—came just three days after head coach Mike Krzyzewski announced some news that might help ease fans’ concerns about the team’s future. Freshman Josh Mcßoberts, who some had thought might leave for the NBA after just one season, will return for his sophomore year, the forward said in a statement released by Duke Wednesday. “I am very excited about my decision to return to Duke to continue my academic and athletic career,” Mcßoberts said. “I love the atmosphere at Duke and the support the University receives from the com-
munity. There is no place better to play col-
lege basketball.”
Mcßoberts came to Duke as one of the top recruits in the country, but he was inconsistent during his first campaign as a Blue Devil. On the season, Mcßoberts averaged 8.7 points and 5.3 rebounds and led the Blue Devils in field goal percentage. His thunderous dunks and ball-handling ability made him an immediate fan-favorite, but he struggled at times playing as the second big man alongside Williams. Still, many scouts tabbed him as a lottery pick, even after the announcements that other underclassmen such as Tyrus Thomas, Rudy Gay and LaMarcus Aldridge would leave school early. Mcßoberts’ mother, Jennifer, said her son’s decision whether or not to return to Duke was not about the potential to cash in for millions at the June 28 NBA Draft. “I don’t think NBA status has ever been important to Josh,” Jennifer Mcßoberts SEE MCROBERTS ON PAGE 13
TIAN, QINZHENG/THE CHRONICLE
Freshman forward Josh Mcßoberts scored nine points and pulled down 10 rebounds in Duke's Sweet 16 loss.
10IMONDAY,
THE CHRONICLE
MAY 01, 2006
BASEBALL
.
TRACK AND FIELD
UNC holds Duke to 7 runs in sweep Blue Devils fare well at Penn Relays by
Tim Britton
THE CHRONICLE
North Carolina continued its decade-
long dominance of Duke, sweeping a three-game series at Jack Coombs Field
over the weekend. The Blue Devils (14-33, 6-18 in the ACC) dropped the series opener, 8-4, Friday, with No. 1 UNC (39-8, 18-6) putting the game away with three runs in the final three innings. Before giving up the late runs, Duke had put itself in
UNC duke
by
Gregory Beaton THE CHRONICLE
Competing in one of the sport’s signature amateur events, several members of the track and field team qualified for post-
7_ position to win by 1 roughing up Tar
Heel ace Andrew Miller (10-0) for UNC four runs on 12 DUKE 2 hits in just six innings. Miller, a 8 consensus top-five UNC 4 pick in the upDUKE MLB coming Draft, hadn’t allowed more than nine hits in a game this season. “We had a good plan,” manager Sean McNally said. “He’s a good pitcher, but we found some holes. We stayed short and didn’t expand the strike zone.” Duke starting pitcher Jim Perry, subbing for ace Danny Otero—out with elbow tenderness—allowed five runs in six innings. Sunday, the Blue Devils went up against Daniel Bard, another potential first-round draft pick from the Carolinarotation. Bard entered the game with a 16-inning scoreless streak, which he extended to 19 before Jonathan Nicolla’s two-out bloop single to right scored Javier Socorro and tied the game at one. „
LAURA BETH DOUGLAS/THE
CHRONICLE
UNC reliever Jonathan Hovis replaced Tar Heel starter Daniel Bard Sunday and shut down Duke's offense. Duke managed to keep the game close, behind 2-1 heading into the eighth, but again the Tar Heels came on late to put the game away, 7-1. UNC shortstop Josh Horton, hitting .401 to lead the ACC, crushed a home run in the eighth to push the lead to 3-1. “That was an element that they had that we didn’t—they hit a bunch of balls out of the ballpark,” McNally said. “Horton’s was a separator at 2-1. We had a chance to get out of that inning.” Three singles, a balk and a two-run
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error by Murray allowed Carolina to cross the plate four times in the final inning, providing the inflated final score in the series’ final game. Duke lost Saturday, 8-2, with North Carolina’s Chad Flack’s two home runs and 4 RBI putting the game out of reach. “It’s one thing to compete in those games and it’s another one to win those,” McNally said. “The bottom line is we scored seven runs in three games. Getting a timely hit here or there would have helped.”
season play with high finishes this weekend at the Penn Relays in Philadelphia. After winning the distance medley relay last year at Penn, Duke took sixth this year. In the final day of the meet Sunday, the men’s and women’s 4xBoo meter relay teams ran well enough to qualify them for postseason play in the IC4As for the women and ECACs for the men. In addition to the impressive performances on the track, head coach Norm Ogilvie said some of his team’s best performances came in the field events. Junior Jonathan Fay won third in the men’s pole vault while sophomore Lara Jones’ effort on the women’s side was enough to qualify her for IC4A regionals. “We had a good, solid weekend testing ourselves against the best in the country,” Ogilvie said, adding his team was tired after last weekend’s ACCs. “It’s the biggest spectator event all year.” Duke will compete next in the Duke
Twilight meet Sunday beginning at 5 p.m. The Duke Twilight will be the final opportunity for Duke’s competitors to qualify for postseason play.
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“The exciting thing I saw in that is them being really tired and just totally gutting it out,” head coach Robyn Homer said. “I thought they rowed with composure and they rowed well.” Duke’s second varsity eight experienced
Tian, Qinzheng THE CHRONICLE
After placing second in the ACC Championship last weekend, the fatigued Blue Devils finished with “bitter and sweet” results in a meet with Miami and Barry University Saturday on the Krome Avenue Quarry. The Blue Devils’ first varsity eight edged the Hurricanes byjust 0.51 seconds, winning the 2,000 meter race with a time of 6:29.90. Duke’s first varsity eight had a flat start and gave Miami a boat-length lead at the end of the first 1,000 meters. The Blue Devils, however, managed to pull off an impressive chase in the third split and carried the momentum through the last 500 meters to win.
a similar situation but a different result. The Blue Devils could not find their power rhythm in the first 500 meters and fell behind Miami by more than a boat-length. Despite tremendous effort in the last 500 meters, the Blue Devils lost to Miami by 0.47 seconds with a time of 6:48.16. Even though they lost, the time was the best of the season for the Blue Devils. “Our performance can be characterized
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as bitter and sweet,” junior coxswain Katie Tobin said. “It was unfortunate that we had a half of a perfect race and half of lessthan-ideal race.” In the first and second varsity four, Duke raced together with Miami and Barry University. Miami captured the win with a time of 7:38.97 to Duke’s 7:46.04. Barry placed third while Duke’s second varsity four finished fourth with a time of 8:29.06. “We used the race as a training tool, team captain Emma Darling said. Since returning from the ACC Championship, the Blue Devils have trained hard in anticipation of the South/Central Regional Championships, which will be held from May 12 to 14 at Oak Ridge, Tenn. “We are ready to go,” Horner said. “The kids are technically in a good spot. They are mentally in a good spot. We are probably most ready that we have ever been.”
MAY 01, 2006111
”
TIAN, QINZHENG/THE CHRONICLE
Duke edged Miami in the first varsity eight race.
12IM0NDAY, MAY
THE CHRONICLE
01, 2006
goals in the second half, Duke managed just five shots.
W.LAX from page 9 Duke midfielder Carolyn Davis received a yellow card in the her own defensive zone on a check to the head of Virginia midfielder Blair Weymouth, the Cavalier freshman blasted a free possession shot past senior goalie Megan Huether to extend the lead to 7-4. Weymouth and Virginia senior attacker Tyler Leachman, the tournament MVP, combined for the next four goals to cap the run and put Virginia ahead, 11-4. Weymouth tied an ACC title-game record with six goals on the game, and Leachman broke the ACC Championship record with 11 goals in the tournament. The Blue Devils advanced to the tide game after rolling over fourth-seeded Maryland Friday. Duke used a 7-1 scoring run in the second half to pull away and win, 19-9. Senior attacker Katie Chrest netted the 200th goal of her career and Huether recorded her 600th career save in the game. Duke, however, was unable to mount a similar charge Sunday. In the time that the Cavaliers scored six straight
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“We weren’t patient at all,” Kimel said. “I felt like we forced lots of bad shots. We took a lot of high outside shots, which is not the best part of our game.” The Duke attack was not much more prolific in the first half. Even though the offense was able to effectively control the ball in the Virginia end of the field, the Blue Devils only registered four goals—matching their season low from the contest against Notre Dame for goals in a half. Duke still had an opportunity to enter halftime tied. But with ten seconds remaining, the Cavaliers’ Leachman single-handedly outmaneuvered the Duke defense and slipped a shot past Huether to take a one goal lead. Virginia closed the second half by adding two Leachman goals to its earlier run. The Blue Devils managed to cut the lead on a pair of goals from freshman attacker Megan del Monte and scores from Leigh Jester, Davis and Chrest, but the desperate charge was too late. Duke plays its final regular season game in preparation for the NCAA Tournament against Dartmouth Sunday. The NCAAs begin May 14, with Duke likely starting at home.
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MONDAY, MAY 01, 2006113
MCROBERTS from page 9 said. “It was about becoming the best player and the best person and the best place for him to do that is Duke.” Jennifer Mcßoberts said her son consulted with Duke’s coaching staff and his AAU coach, Mike Connelly. Ultimately, though, the decision was left up to the 6foot-10 freshmen. “This has been a 100 percent decision for Josh,” Jennifer Mcßoberts said. “That’s why it’s so good.” After emerging during the final two months of this season, Mcßoberts’ continued improvement will be key to the Blue Devils’ success next . season with Redick and Williams gone. “I am looking forward to working with the coaching staff to further develop my skills as a player,” Mcßoberts said. “The relationships that I have in place here played a major role in my decision.” Duke will not have any recruited seniors for the 2006-07 season, with Mcßoberts, sophomore DeMarcus Nelson and freshman Greg Paulus leading the way. After a red-shirt season, sophomore Dave McClure is also expected to return to the rotation in the fall. Duke also awaits a top recruiting class, which includes Gerald Henderson, Jon Scheyer and Brian Zoubek.
sportsbriefs Chrest and Kimel take ACC lax honors Senior Katie Chrest was named ACC Player of the Year and head coach Kerstin Kimel was tabbed ACC Coach of the Year by the league last week. Chrest, who currently holds school records for career goals and points, won the award for the second consecutive year. She has averaged a hat trick per game this season while amassing 46 total goals, including six against William & Mary April 21. She joined four teammates on the All-ACC team.
After leading her Blue Devils to a No. 1 ranking for only the second time in school history, Kimel earned the top-coach award for the fifth time in her 11 seasons with Duke. Kimel set a school record in starting the season with nine straight wins and has tallied nine wins over ranked opponents, including an upset of then-No.l Northwestern, which was riding a 31-game winning streak, April 7.
TIAN, QINZHENG/THE CHRONICLE
Josh Mcßoberts, who couldhave been a lottery pick in the NBA Draft, will come back for a second year.
Mike Paulus commits to North Carolina Another Paulus is headed to the Triangle area, but Mike opted not to follow older brother Greg to Duke. Instead, the high school junior, who is one of the top quarterbacks in the country, verbally com-
from staff reports
mitted to play football for the rival Tar Heels. Mike Paulus, who at 6-foot-5 and 215 pounds is significantly bigger than his older brother, turned down reported offers from the likes of USC, Michigan, LSU and Syracuse. Mike threw for 2,130 yards and 22 touchdowns last fall. Although the Tar Heels finished 5-6 last season, Paulus noted first-year offensive coordinator Frank Cignetti as his primary motivation in committing. Before agreeing to play point guard at Duke, Greg Paulus was also considered one of the nation’s top quarterbacks. Lance Thomas to announce Thursday McDonald’s All-American Lance Thomas will finally put speculation to rest and announce his college decision this Thursday, his coach Dan Hurley confirmed to the Newark Star-Ledger. The 6foot-9 senior from St. Benedict’s Prep who is ranked 42nd in his class by Rivals.com has been deciding between Duke, Rutgers and Florida all year. Thomas led his team to the state Prep A title with 14.1 points per game. His announcement will come at 4:00 pm from St. Benedict’s board room.
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THE CHRONICLE
141MONDAY, MAY 1, 2006
Summer Edit Y'eah,
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The challenges
ontherecord We're preparing for anything and hoping that nothing happens. —Larry Moneta, vice president for student affairs, on the fact that the New Black Panther Party for Self Defense is coming to Durham Monday in response to the lacrosse rape scandal. See story page 1.
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SEYWARD DARBY, 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, Online Editor EMILY ALMAS, Towerview Editor ANDREW GERST, TowerviewManaging Editor BEN PERAHIA University Senior Editor KATIE SOMERS, Recess SeniorEditor AARON LEVINE, Senior Editor MARY WEAVER, OperationsManager NALINI MILNE, UniversityAd Sales Manager DAWN HALL, Chapel Hill Ad Sales Manager
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IMy
own little challenge —shave or not. You may remember me as the guy who takes photos all over campus, who rides a crappy bike that does not even have a brake or the one who has lots of facial hairs, the thing I call “beard.” Now I am thinking about shaving them. I’ve never shaved in my life, thus my beard is still soft with fine tips. I did not plan to shave until I get married. But now, I am no longer that sure To me, my beard means far more than just several grams of protein. It has become part of my identity. I do tian, qinzheng not shave because I do not senior column want to admit I am an adult yet. I think marriage is the only event significant enough to make me declare my adulthood and shave. However, here are the problems: First, as many friends ofmine have commented, I might never get married if I had that on my face. Second, my bride might love me partially because of the beard and would not even recognize me without it. Over time, my beard has become my stubbornness. I don’t want to yield to social norms by sacrificing my personal identities. I am confused if it is an improvement to “understand” the social norms and obey them or if it is a loss of who I am. I may become a “better” person but less worthy as an individual. Is it a good thing to become an adult or insist on being a child? About to graduate, I am puzzled even more.
2. The finals I hope the professors will make the finals just easy enough, or you have studied hard enough so that they will not be challenges. Often times, exams are more of a challenge for your patience than your
intelligence.
TheChronicleis published by the Duke Student Publishing Company, Inc., a non-profit corporation independentof Duke University. The opinions expressed in thisnewspaper 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://www.dukechronide.com.
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For me, some final finals. Jokingly I said to my friends I might want to fail one so I could stay for one more year, because I wanted to write more about our rowing team (Yes, rowing, not basketball. We have a rowing team? Yeah. To learn more about them, please turn to my article on page 11). As the sports photo editor over the past year, I, for
This edit, like tailgate legislation and spats, is a big fat joke. We’re tor summer—so a great one.
Wolfe’s
face
we
the first time in my life, started appreciating sports. It is not only about the excitement sitting courtside photographing J.J.; it is about seeing each individual athlete, with or without public attention, putting in enormous efforts to achieve the greatest excellence. '
3. The first job If you will start working in the New York area, good, and good luck! I probably will see you around. Please say “hi” if we bump into each other, no matter if I do or do not have my beard anymore. If you will start working and will not be in the New York area, goodbye, and good luck! The first job is a always a challenge, if not the greatest one. A good start is halfway done and I hope you will enjoy it. If you are going back to school, good luck, and good lord! After 16 years of education, you want more?! Among you are some who I admire the most, who possess a genuine passion for knowledge—and some who I feel sympathy. If you don’t know what you are doing yet, good luck. Take your time; life is short, but it takes longer to come back from a wrong track. Think carefully before you move and make the first a great one. you will do fine.
4. The rise of China The challenge we face. I am from China, and I think most of you guys are Americans. Here I use “we” because I believe that the States and China will become partners rather than enemies in the future. There will surely be conflicts, but it is “our” challenge to resolve them. China is not the challenge. The challenge is how the Americans should approach China’s rise. After the reformation in China in the past two decades, it has become one of the most important economic entities in the world. But the political reformation has been halted. It is foreseeable that China will have political reformations in the coming 10 to 30 years. How the Americans should interact with a different China, a stronger and also a more open one, will determine China’s, the United States’ and even the world’s future. We may be sitting on opposite sides of a negotiation table, but I hope Duke can be the common bond we share and together we can face the challenges. Tian, Qinzheng is a Trinity senior and sports photography editor of The Chronicle. If you have extra baccalaureate tickets, please contact him at qt3@duke.edu. He desperatdy needs some.
THE CHRONICLE
Remember
Four
more years. Just kidding. For all of you who will still be here next year, here’s-looking on the bright side: at least there’s still women’s basketball. As one who has suffered from senioritis since eighth grade—and proudly so —I’ve pretty much been ready to graduate from college since high school. (And what are my plans for next year? Grad school... Webber t jffany / oh, the irony.) Don t get senior column me wrong, I’ve enjoyed the ride, but keep it real, if there were ever a time to get out of this place, this is it. Class of 2006, feel blessed. Tailgate will never be what it once was, “work hard, play hard” is morphing into “work hard, work hard,” buses are blowing up and fecal matter is raining down on students in Craven Quadrangle bathrooms. Yes, it’s time to move on. After spending hours upon hours—yet happily so—in 301 Flowers (the Chronicle office) learning everything there is to know about Duke for the past two and a half years, it’s time to move on. After writing coundess papers and studying for numerous tests and pulling I don’tknow how many all-nighters, it’s time to move on. After fighting through swarms of people to board the East-West, walking for what seemed like miles to get my car from the Blue Zone and getting deboed out of parking spots in the Bryan Center lot too many times to count over the past four years, it’s time to move on. After all the nights spent partying at Shooters or the Alpha house or George’s or the Great Hall or someone’s Central Campus apartment or Parizade (huzzah for the return), it’s time to move on. I’ve paid my dues, fought the good fight and left it all on the field. It’s time to move on, but am I ready? I don’t know. There have been too many jokes shared, moments touched and good times had for me to ever feel happy about leaving it all behind. For the media sluts. I will miss... Arguments during editboard. Skwak’s hilarious outbursts. Completely candid conversations. Trask, Lange and Brodhead. Weboggle. Margarita Fridays. Sports always beating News at Beirut. Gossip. Receiving drunk emails. The way Seyward had a story for everything imaginable. Sclafani. Never wanting to copy-edit Awkward moments and skwakward moments. Striped shirts, big hair and comments too explicit and scandalous to actually put in print. To The Chron, the deadline came too fast. For the homies. Do you remember... How Rick’s at three o’clock in the morning was the afterparty? Basketball players dancing on the balcony Midnight Breakfast freshman year? Your first taste of Jungle Juice or Nupe Juice or Blue Brew? AAMP bowling and doing the Cha-Cha Slide down the alleys? Chilling outside on the East Campus benches (usually Brown’s or Giles’) when the weather was nice? Our first Myrtle experience staying at Casa de Homeless and dancing in cages at the Spanish Galleon? Watching our friends cross? Sleeping four to a twin bed and the gas station during that trip to D.C.? Tenting? Pregaming because we weren’t old enough to do everything we wanted in public? Visiting each other over the summers? Back to school barbeques and end-ofyear study breaks? Getting dressed up and looking proper for balls and then having no shame at the afterparty? Finding our keeparounds? Trying to make summers in Durham crunk? Getting to tailgates all late because you know we were on CP time? Planning elaborate surprise birthday parties for each other and nobody ever being surprised because it was always expected? BSAI weekend scandals? Ludacris? Step show stuntin’? Sneaking into Cameron for basketball games? Road tripping to Howard’s or Morehouse/Spelman’s homecoming? Thinking graduation was SO far away? It’s coming to a close and I’ve truly had the best four years ofmy life. This summer, I’ll be doing what I do best because retirement needs practice. Feel free to join me and let’s keep the good times rolling.
Tiffany Webber is a Trinity senior and University editor of The Chronicle. She believes that pretty girls wear 20 pearls and that the rest really were too late. Respect your roots: Phirst Pham.
commentaries
MONDAY,
MAY 1 200611 5
Rain on the Duke parade The
first time I visited Duke, it was one those soggyquad evenings—all mopey math majors and muddy flip-flops. I slumped on the corner of a Residence Life-supplied prison mattress. I listened to an ROTC and a depressed transfer-to-be argue about curriculum requirements. This was college alright, but not anything identifiable, nothing with attitude. I matt sullivan played video games to essenior column cape the dead air. Turned out everyone else was at Cameron. Who would want to spend four years at a place like this? Duke sucks in the rain. Returning in the spring, I had dinner with seven gorgeous girls on a gorgeous night outside at Parizade until the Delta Sig formal kicked us out, headed to the Edens quad for a Kappa Sig rager full of kegs, tunes and hugs, passed out in section, woke up and wrote my last high school English paper, got on a plane and couldn’t help but think of who wouldn’t want to grow up at a place like this, where you work hard and you play hard and then you work harder and then you play harder and that’s what you’re supposed to be doing if you want to. Duke rocked when it rocked. In the four years since, I have witnessed nothing short of an administrative ransacking of this school’s social life. Deans, cops, neighbors, nerds and the shadow of the Ivy League have gradually and systematically pulled the rug out from underneath the backbone of this school’s identity: fun. My senior class enjoyed the end of Natural Duke, Durham’s Best, Olde Gothic, what have you. Then we went abroad, came back and have been rolling our eyes at Dukie Light all the way through to this—the worst spring in Durham anyone can remember, the bittersweet end to the bitterest degradation of what was once a social scene to die for. This is not about a privileged group of white, Northeastern Tri Delts and Pi Phis and SAEs. This is not about Dick Brodhead’s master plan to ruin your life. This is about a change in priorities for a university stuck between a rock and a hard place without a clue as to what made my class and I want to come down South instead of go to goddamn Harvard. Duke’s administration has turned up the heat on the pressure cooker of academics and pre-profession-
alism while simultaneously putting a stranglehold on its students’ release valve. Sure, it’s not their fault that Parizade didn’t want to put up with Thursday night dance parties or that Bully’s management was too incompetent to handle a big crowd or that Charlie’s cards too Jiard. But it’s their fault for upping admissions standards while cutting off anywhere to cut loose on the campus where we pay them to live (When’s the last time you saw a physics major—or anyone, for that matter—chug a beer on the quad?). It’s their fault for curing a headache by forcing two mainstay fraternities off campus and doing everything in their power to stop them from organizing themselves (When’s the last time you heard Duke not promote its students’ entrepreneurship?). It’s their fault for appeasing nutso neighbors by having Dean Bryan and the Duke Police chase kids down Watts Street, only to call in the ALE ringers and secretly buy up students’ homes when that didn’t calm them down (When’s the last time you saw any place of higher learning try to screw over a kid’s law school application for having a drink with his girlfriend after a final?). And it’s certainly their fault for backing down to the Athletic Department by taking the last school-wide social event remaining—tailgates (R.I.P.) —and backhandedly forcing kids to binge drink at 8 a.m. so they can (not) go watch kickoff (When’s the last time you saw Duke wipe a social scene led by lacrosse players off the face of the earth as a hypocritical face-saving move to make up for past wrongs and public lies? Oh, wait...). So the last time I visited Duke, it was that pouringrain-quad Last Day of Classes —all rebels remaining and muddy memories. I stood holding a case of beer, breaking the rules to have fun, as usual. I watched a laxer doing that hilarious, robed secret society routine and felt sorry for him and his compadres who’ll get all the blame for the administration’s backward handling of student life. This was college alright, but not anything identifiable anymore, nothing but lingering attitude. I looked for an underclassman to wish him luck and tell him I didn’t have a solution. Turned out everyone else was still in class. Who would’ve wanted to spend four years at a place like this? Duke rained on our parade. Matt Sullivan is a Trinity senior, editor of Towerview and former managing editor of The Chronicle. He would like to thank Lenny, Lizzie, Jake and everyone who kept it real.
16IM0NDAY, MAY 1,2006
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Finding your passion Dear
freshmen, sophomores,juniors and seniors; “We can’t be potential forever,” a friend said to me a few weeks ago—and he was right. The hardest part about college, for many precocious 17year-olds home away from home, is finding passion. Most Duke students have come off four high-school years of doing everything—service clubs, the varsity sports, student newspaper, government —and doing it all brilliantly. But you can’t keep it up for the rest of your life. Eventually, Andrew gerst we all have to choose: senior column a major, a fraternity, a career, a life. With thousands of students chasing a million different dreams, it’s hard for anyone to search through it all and find a single inspiration. So here’s my advice for anyone who, like me, has ever struggled to find a life-defining passion: Don’t give up. Our society, to my regret, seems to idolize a lifestyle of postmodern ennui and nihilism. (To name a few culprits: Garden State, On the Road, Radiohead.) One of the factors contributing to that apathy, I think, is overspecialization —the tendency to jump off the boat too soon. We know we’re supposed to pursue
one burning passion, and the easiest way to find it is to force it. When that would-be touchstone doesn’t work out, as usually happens, the apathy sets in. Academia, and especially Duke, have unwittingly caused students to close themselves off to new opportunities. Theses, FOCUS and the whole concept of “undergraduate research” often end up pigeonholing students into a single field before they’re really ready to pick. I think I limited myself, in many ways, by jumping past survey courses and taking up demanding research projects without really knowing why. Duke has tried to remedy the situation with a focus on double majors and all things interdisciplinary —but it’s a false god. When you end up chasing the course requirements for not one but two departments, you end up with even less time for electives. Students tend to blame curriculum requirements for
this crunch. But in my experience, I’ve gained far more to take an STS class than by taking yet another course for my major. If you treat these requirements as opportunities to explore, rather than another box to check off, you’re bound to reap greatly. If you take away one thing from this column, this is it: Take yourself seriously. Not too seriously—but with enough gravity that you’ll be able to recognize your passion when you stumble upon it. Have faith. Don’t do one thing just because you think you’re good at it. Do many things because you think you’d love all of them. Start thinking of yourself as a leader. Today. It’s important to remember, as President Brodhead pointed
by being forced
SEE GERST ON PAGE 11
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May 1,2006
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The Chronicle
EXAM IEEAK
May 1,2006
The keys to happiness at Duke
I
don’t profess to know exactly what it takes to have the perfect college experience. I don’t have any step-by-step directions
you make your time here worthwhile, and honestly, I don’t think anyissa hanna one who senior column claims that he does really knows what he’s talking about. However, what I do have is four years of experiences. And I know I wouldn’t give them up for the world. I’m not saying my time here at Duke has been perfect—we’ll all have our ups and downs but the total package I will be leaving with is something that I will cherish for the rest of my life. Below you will find things that I did during my four years at Duke University that have made my college experience worthwhile. This is not intended to be a checklist of any sort. Everyone does things their own way. These are just some suggestions that I like to think might be worth your time. First and foremost, never, ever, ever do homework on a Friday night. No excuses. —
should indeed be of great importance to you, because after all, why are you here
Period. Your friends will hate you, and least, you won’t feel like a bum, because you will be miserable. My junior year of you won’t be spending all of your free high school, Mrs. Janoff, who taught me time in front of a TV screen. You’ll also AP Language, explained the virtues of make more friends. (To all the wonderful “mental health days” to me. It’s imporpeople I’ve met at The Chronicle, thank you so much for making my time at 301 tant to get away sometimes. I don’t care if you’re a triple major in Flowers such a pleasure.) This may sound silly, but play an intraBME, ECE and God knows what else, mural sport. you’ve got to find Even if it’s away to fit a sekickball in the abroad mester recreational If you think I’m saying that the into your years at league, it’ll be Duke. I cannot key to happiness here is being a something think of a reason that will help not to go abroad, horrible student, that’s not what you and your and the reasons I mean. What I’m saying is that friends grow in favor of it are It’ll closer. endless. During obsessive-comyou shouldn’t be also help you my time in Spain, manage your pulsive about school. It should gallivanted I stress—I can’t around Europe be of great importance to you, tell you how on my parents’ much satisfacdime, took an Art because after all, why are you tion I derived course History you here anyway? from hitting that met in the the hell out of Prado Museum a softball on once a week, and Sunday nights improved my due the next day when had a I and bounds. To it 20-pager top Spanish by leaps off, I earned the easiest 4.0 GPA of all and hadn’t even started. Good times. If you think I’m saying that the key to time. ‘Nuff said. Next, join a club or group that accomhappiness here is being a horrible stuplishes meaningful, tangible things. For dent, that’s not what I mean. What I’m saying is that you shouldn’t me, that organization was The Chronicle. at the be obsessive compulsive about school. It that kind of In joining group, very
anyway? If you’re a Trinity Arts and Crafts stu-
dent like me, it is worthwhile to do as much of your reading as you can. I say this for a few reasons: First, so you have a come-back when those bitter Enginerds badger you about not ever doing any work; second, because your professors will actually like you when you have something meaningful to say during class discussions; and third, because you’ll actually learn something. Once in seventh grade, my math teacher, Mrs. DeVeau, gave me a pencil for being her student of the month. On this pencil were engraved the words, “Learning is not a spectator sport.” Words to live by. Don’t be that guy who sits in the back of the classroom, falls asleep and says absolutely nothing all semester. Nobody likes that guy. Like I said above, what I’m offering here are just some suggestions. I’ve lived by them, and they’ve helped to make my time at Duke the best four years of my life. Thanks to all of the people who have been so important to me since the day I stepped onto East Campus. I will miss you all terribly. Best of luck to all of you. Issa Hanna is a Trinity senior and editorial page associate editor of The Chronicle.
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THE Daily Crossword
THE Daily Crossword
Edited by Wayne Robert Williams
Perry
Tuscany
20 Common cents 23 Travel on tarmac cocktail 24 Mai 25 Sound of disapproval
26 Nuke 29 Ceremonial act 31 Station from Tenn. 33 Writer Bagnold 35 Lairs 37 Place for les eleves 41 Common scents 44 Productive hen 45 Legal procedure 46 Aussie rockers 47 Spasm 49 Once, once 51 Opposite of WNW 52 Parabolic path 55 Dig in! 57 Mideast sultanate 59 Common sense 64 Bay of Pigs island 65 Follow the leader 66 Keep clear of 68 Elevator pioneer 69 Wolfish look 70 Flood barrier 71 Part of M.I.T. 72 Witty Bombeck 73 Rub out
_
Jacques
73 Dregs DOWN 1 Like dunce caps 2 BP merger partner 3 More docile 4 Bambi's aunt 5 Laurie of “Roseanne" 6 To shelter 7 Magna
Edited by Wayne Robert Williams
ACROSS 1 Family car 6 Sign of sadness 10 Catch a wave 14 Greek letter 15 Walk in water 16 Organic compound 17 Margarita garnishes 18 Raw minerals 19 Island off
ACROSS 1 Blanchett of "Elizabeth" 5 Medieval club 9 Lava before exposure 14 Muscat's place 15 Israeli port 16 Havelock or
17 Start of Abe Lincoln quip 20 Sort of cream? 21 Type of acid 22 Don't go 23 Eye membrane 25 Recorded proceedings 27 Misfortunes 29 Snare 34 Part 2 of quip 37 Part 3 of quip 40 Novel writing? quo 42 Quid 43 Calyx part 44 Part 4 of quip 47 Part 5 of quip 48 Poetic form 49 Lady of Spain 51 Worf of "Star Trek: TNG” 54 Winter apple 58 Lhasa 62 Cooks in the oven 64 Refrain syllable 65 End of quip 68 Seasonal worker 69 Funnyman Laurel 70 Bruhn of ballet 71 Provide with a source of income 72 French actor
The Chronicle
EXAM IEEAK
1,2006
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Huntington Beach, CA
8 System of moral values 9 West Coast seagull 10 Supplicant's request 11 Oversupply 12 Isinglass 13 Soot-covered 18 Old Chinese money 19 Two quartets combined 24 Maxima maker 26 Emmets 28 Mini drinks 30 Greek letters Man," 31 Stanton film 32 Part of U.A.E 33 Soccer great 34 Audit pros 35 Singer Guthrie 36 Commercial district 38 Coll, seniors' test 39 Busted clods 41 Watched closely “
45 46 50 52 53
Tale Cocktail choice
Requisite
Perch Tariff-
eliminating pact 55 Cubic meter 56 Banks of baseball 57 Jobs to do 58 Church part
59 60 61 63
A, e.g. Broadcast
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Three-handed card game 66 Shooter marble 67 AT&T part
By Barry Silk McLean, VA
DOWN 1 Scale note 2 Actor Jannings 3 Actress Moore
4 Talent broker 5 Daytona 500 org. 6 Bottle capacity, frequently
7 Merit 8 Skillful 9 Usher after the interval 10 Spotted 11 Dark 12 Judges' garb 13 Small bottle 21 Nitrous (laughing gas) 22 Frisco athlete 26 Fervor 27 "The King and I” role 28 Compassion 30 Follow as a result 32 Final Four letters 34 South Beach, for one 36 Freshwater green algae 38 First word of "The Raven"
op&
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42 Snooped 43 "Who's there?" reply
48 Sweet-talk 50 Mexican menu choice 52 Fancy necktie 53 Course taken
58 Less than once 60 Rambler maker 61 Consider 62 PBS series 63 Even scores 67 Actress Sandra
Congratulations Graduates &
Families
Catholic Baccalaureate Mass Saturday, May 13 4pm Baldwin Auditorium East Campus
All are welcome This will he the last scheduled Mass on campus until August. Have a great summer.
NEWMAN
Catholic
Student
Explore the Opportunities www. duke. e du/web/catholic catholic@duke.edu
CENTER
AT
DUKE UNIVERSITY
Room 037, Duke Chapel Basement
684-8959
May 1,2006
EXAM BREAK
The Chronicle
Lunch period poll sci
GERST from page 5
College is still probably a good idea, but everything you need to know about America you can learn in high school. For example, if you want to understand American class structure you'd be misled if you read Marx, but you'd understand it perfecdy if you look around a high school cafeteria. The jocks sit here; the nerds sit there; the techies, drama types, skaters, kickers and gangstas sit there, there and there. What you see is not class in the 19th-century sense, but a wide array of lifestyle cliques, some richer, some poorer, but each regarding the others as vaguely pathetic and convinced ofits moral superiority. Similarly, when it comes to politics, high school explains most everything you need to know. In 1976, Tom Wolfe wrote an essay for Commentary in which he noted that our political affiliations are shaped subrationally. He went on to observe that especially when we are young and forming our identities, we make sense of our lives by running little morality plays in our heads in which the main characters are Myself, the hero, and My Adolescent Opposite, the enemy. "Forever after," Wolfe writes, "the most momentous national and international events are stuffed into the same turf. The most colossal antagonists and movements become merely stand-ins for My Adolescent Self and My Adolescent Opposite. "IfMy Opposite, my natural enemy in adolescence, was the sort of person who seemed overly aggressive, brutish and in love with power, I identify him with the 'conservative' position. If My Opposite, my natural enemy in adolescence, seemed overly sensitive, soft, cerebral and incapable of action, I identify him with the 'liberal' position." And so it goes. In every high school there are students who are culturally and intellectually superior but socially aggrieved. These high school culturati have wit and sophisticated musical tastes but find that all prestige goes to jocks, cheerleaders and preps who possess the emotional depth of a cocker spaniel. The nerds continue to believe that the self-reflective life is the only life worth living (despite all evidence to the contrary) while the cool, goodlooking, vapid people look down upon them with easy disdain on those rare occasions they are compelled to acknowledge their existence. These sarcastic cultural types may grow up to be rich movie producers, but they will remember their adolescent opposites and become liberals. They may grow up to be rich lawyers but will decorate their homes with interesting fabrics from the oppressed Peruvian peasantry to differentiate themselves from their jock opposites In adulthood, the former high school nerds will savor the sort of scandals that befall their formerly athletic and the Duke currently corporate adolescent enemies lacrosse scandal, the Enron scandal, the various problems that have plagued the frat boy Bush. In the lifelong struggle for moral superiority, problems that bedevil your adolescent opposites send pleasure-inducing dopamine surging through your brain. Similarly, in every high school there are jocks, cheerleaders and regular kids who vaguely sense that their natural enemies are the brooding poets who go off to become English majors. These prom kings and queens may leave their adolescent godhood and go off to work as underpaid sales reps despite their coldly gracious spouses and effortlessly slender kids, but they will still remember their adolescent opposites and become conservatives. They will experience surges of orgiastic triumphalism when Sean Hannity eviscerates the scuffedshoed intellectuals who have as much personal courage as a French chipmunk in retreat. Because these personal traits are so pervasive and constant, Republican administrations tend to be staffed by people who are well-balanced but dull, while Democratic administrations tend to be staffed by people who are interesting but neurotic. Because these rivalries are so permanent, nobody has ever voted for a presidential candidate they wouldn't have had lunch with in high school. The only real shift between school and adult politics is that the jocks realize they need conservative intellectuals, who are geeks who have decided their fellow intellectuals should never be allowed to run anything and have learned to speak slowly so the jocks will understand them. Meanwhile, the geeks have learned they need to find popular kids like FDR to head their tickets because the American people will never send a former geek to the White House. (Bill Clinton was unique in that he was a member of every clique at once.) The central message, though, is that we never escape our high school selves. Vote for Pedro.
out in his Martin Luther King, Jr. Day speech, that abstract forces don’t define history—individuals do. (My apologies to the literature department.) There are a thousand things to be concerned about
today: Islamic fundamentalism, immigration issues, the national debt, global warming.
But you and I are the ones who will inherit these
problems. It is your responsibility, and mine, to take
care of them. Try to be an idealist, not a cynic. As another friend pointed out, it’s easier to be critical than correct. Remember that we are all incredibly lucky to be here—to be alive and with food and clothing and shelter, let alone to be at one of the world’s best universities.
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Love each other. When the choice comes between mercy and justice, choose mercy. Finally, surround yourself with inspiring people. Holing up in a room all day can’t be healthy. So much of learning comes from psychological and emotional factors—things that are hard to get from a textbook. But for God’s sake, don’t forget to have fun. I’ve been fortunate enough to spend many nights at Cosmic, parties, movies, restaurants, beaches and semi-formals instead of doing work. I say these things out of my own faith and experience. There are many paths to happiness and success. But I really believe that if you approach all these opportunities with joy in your heart, you will love Duke, s Andrew Gerst is a Trinity senior and managing editor of Towerview magazine.
please recycle this newspaper
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David Brooks is a regular columnistfor The New York Times. He will be teaching at Duke in thefall.
Where are you going? Before you leave this summer, check out
CityScapes for city profiles, housing tips, and more! CityScapes are on the Career Center undergraduate website under Find a Job or Find an Internship.
The Career Center http://career.studentaffairs.duke.edu
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needed FT in babysitter Durham/Chapel Hill for 19 month old girl. 8-5:30 weekdays starting in May. $lO-$l2/hr. Email watkiol7@mc.duke.edu or call 919-681-4087
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2006 GRADUATE SCHOOL & Professional School Candidates
Baccalaureate Tickets must be picked up on April 24, 25 at 9:00 am-12:00 noon or April 26, 27 at 1:00-4:00 pm in room 215 Allen Building.
HELP WANTED SSSBARTENDINGSSS Bartenders Needed!!! Earn $2O $35 per hour. Job placement assistance is our top priority. RALEIGH’S BARTENDING SCHOOL. Have Fun! Make Money! Meet People! Call now about our SPRING TUITION SPECIAL! Ask how to receive FREE Shooters Book. (919) 676-0774 www.cocktailmixer.com -
LIFEGUARDS The Exchange Swimming Pool in Chapel Hill is seeking experienced lifeguards for the summer 2006 season. Current Lifeguard and CPR for the Professional Rescuer certification required. Season runs mid-May through Labor Day. If interested, contact Kathy Agusta 932-4724.
BEAT THE HEAT in the mountains of North Carolina. Work outside with kids. Good role models wanted. 1-800-551-9136 www.campcarolina.com NEEDED LIFEGUARDS Lifeguards, swim lesson instructors, and assistant manager needed for Durham/RTP area pool. Please send resume to
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SUMMER HELP WANTED Duke Student to work for The Chronicle Business Office, MayAug, approx 10-12 hrs per week. Call Mary 684-0384 or email mweaver@duke.edu 919.684.3811
AUTOS FOR SALE 1995 HONDA EX ACCORD SEDAN Fully loaded 5-speed manual transmission, Bose 5 CD changer, power windows/doors, $3lOO. sunroof, 80K miles. 919.683.5257
WORK STUDY Ecotoxicology lab in the Nicholas School seeks motivated student for assistance with research and care of aquarium systems. Studies focus on effects of pollutants in fish and estuaries. Contact Gabe Mixon, gtm@duke.edu or 613-8046.
Research Assistant needed for clinical research study at Duke. Duties include physiological monitoring, data processing and entry. Bachelor’s degree required. Call 684-6823 or email watkiOl 7@mc.duke.edu PERSONAL ASSITANT EASY MONEY, FLEXIBLE HOURS good for students, assist visually impaired individual 3 blocks East Campus. Office, computer. Must have car. 599-3503 COFFEE BAR Gourmet coffee bar inside DUMC seeking enthusiastic Baristas. $B/hr free coffee. Apply in person at EspressOasis inside Duke North cafeteria or call 6813245. +
Craige Motor Company 493*2342 490-5527
PT PROGRAM COORDINATOR Indian Cultural Arts organization needs a part-time program coordinator to organize programs and perform general operational duties. Successful candidate will bring creativity and excellent organizational skills and be meticulous about details and deadlines. An interest in learning about Indian cultural arts is required, www.nuvyug.org for more information
nalinilol@gmail.com
EARN CASH DURING SUMMER BREAK Are you interested in fitness, marketing or want to assist with a new product launch. Work part time, anywhere in U. S. No direct selling involved. Help market a new fitness product developed in the RTP. See www.workoutman.com. Submit inquiries to rns@devici.com
RESEARCH ASSOCIATE Research Associate Fuqua School
of
Business
Duke
University Management professor seeks individual to work on project funded by the National Science Foundation (NSF). Responsibilities include maintaining a project database: conducting web searches for biographical information: interfacing with NSF for annual reports; and creating statistical reports. include BA Requirements degree, preferably in computer science, 2 years of programming experience in php and/ or mysql (SAS optional). Position is fulltime (12 months) with limited benefits. Salary is $32,000, June 1, 2006 to May 31, 2007, renewable pending future funding. To apply, send letter of application with resume to Research Associate Search, Fuqua School of Business, Box 90120, Duke University, Durham, NC 27708 or email Emily Kavari, Personnel at Coordinator, Duke ehkavari@duke.edu University is an equal opportunity/ affirmative action employer. 919.660.7924
LIKE HISTORY AND ADS? 2 great jobs available in the Hartman Center, Special Collections Library: assist in organizing the papers of advertising companies and individuals; assist reference archivist working with researchers. Learn about the collections hands-on and computer work. $7.50 $8.50/ hr. M-F. Contact Lynn: lynn.eaton@notes.duke.edu, 919.660.5833 -
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CHILD CARE NANNY NEEDED Experienced, energetic full time nanny needed starting in August for two children ages 4 and 1. Must FULL TIME
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2642 UNIVERSITY DR. FSBO Beautifully restored 1925 home in Durham’s Rockwood neighborhood 2 miles from Duke. 2150 sq ft, 3 BR, 2.5 BA. Refinished hardwood lO-ft ceilings, fireplace, guest suite/study, screened porch, security system, major renovations to kitchen & all bathrooms. Gorgeous .47 acre lot. $249,500. www.angelfire.com/planet/ccoan/fs bo 919.451.1166 BY OWNER $157,900, Durham/ Forest Hills, NO HOA Dues, min2BR/2BA, utes to campus, 1600sqft, motivated, www.o6events.com/house or call 919.672.1997
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PARTNERS PLACE 3BR/3 available for June & July. Less 1 mile from West Campus. Call $425 per room. 305.323.1405
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GARAGE SALES
44TH ANNUAL ATTIC-BASEMENT-CLOSET SALE Saturday, April 29, 9am-2pm., Chapel of the Cross, 304 E. Franklin St. (next to the Morehead Planetarium free parking). Antiques, clothing, electronic equipment, tools, toys, books, and furniture. Garden and bake shops; lunch served. 929-2193. -
WANTED TO SELL AWESOME LOFTBEDS/DESKS to assemble gunmetal loft/desk combo with mattress. Must see. 2 available, $350 (paid 203. C, Rm 500)Craven thj2@duke.edu 919.699.7787
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EXAM IBEEAK
The Chronicle
THE Daily Crossword ACROSS 1 Swipes 7 Communist propaganda 15 Imitate without comprehension 16 City southeast of Los Angeles 17 Captivate 18 Values 19 Quantity of gum 20 Cantankerous quality 22 Light on one's feet 25 Squid's defense 26 Swaying from side to side 29 Chest bone 32 Teheran resident 33 Small change 34 Deadly poison 35 Brightened 36 Barroom spigot 37 Birch tree 38 Nights before
Edited by Wayne Robert Williams
ACROSS 1 Industrial arts class 5 Winter Palace ruler 9 Ruffian cadres 14 Red hot flower? 15 Imprint clearly 16 Met production -Ude, Russia 17 18 Roster listing 19 Porkers' pads 20 Happy retirement 23 Boastful talk 24 Pseudonym 25 Four score 27 Sharp turn 30 Ballpark fig. 31 Family man 32 Soulful Hayes 34 Throw 36 Irritate 40 Eve, often 43 Court proceeding 44 Writer Kingsley 45 Nonclerics 46 French cleric 48 Healthful getaway 50 Told ya! 51 Photographer's workshop 54 Bout site 56 Triumphed over 57 Fond memories
By Tom Pruce Chicago, IL
holidays
39 Golly! 40 Gullible 41 Visibly embarrassed 42 Tsushima Island location 44 Bath place 45 Police symbol 46 Winter cleanup device 51 Drink for two? 53 Gas or petroleum conduit 54 Increasing 57 Charm 58 "The Devil's Dictionary" writer 59 Loathed 60 Binges DOWN
1 Spit out 2 Old name of Madagascar's capital 3 Destroyed completely 4 Upper limb
5 Londoner's restroom 6 Promenade 7 Country singer Jackson 8 Open-mouthed stare 9 Mark produced by pressure 10 Growing
subject
62 Slightly inclined 64 London lockup 65 Neck of the woods 66 Barbecue site 67 Soil sweetener 68 Medicinal tablet 69 Alarm's
wearier
11 Groom with excess vanity 12 Level to the ground 13 Poems of exaltation 14 Permission slip Fission site 21 23 Less 24 Radar signal 26 More despicable 27 Back-comb 28 Synchronized 29 Goodyear purchase 30 Noticeable 31 Tours topper 34 Trumpet blast
THE Daily Crossword
disruption
37 Body or knock lead-in 39 Mischievous creatures 42 Khan's first name 43 Bushes 44 Nonentity 46 Went fast 47 Number of a
48 49 50 52 55 56
cloud? Elects Back then Uninvited plant Years and years Apple seed For each
70 Once, once 71 Magnetic recording DOWN 1 Haul off and belt 2 Sign of saintliness 3 Nearly round 4 Bamboo-eating mammal
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Edited by Wayne Robert Williams
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5 Wimbledon game 6 Kind of mom 7 High spots 8 Flightless bird 9 Dish the dirt 10 Suited for 11 Pony's comment 12 Eminent 13 Impudent 21 Chosen ones 22 King's domain 26 Third Greek letter 27 Vitamin pill mineral 28 Laos locale 29 Prevents from speaking
31 Reporters' hangouts
33 In the lead 35 Mentalist Geller 37 Bird in hieroglyphics 38 Gala event 39 Soleil Moon of "Punky Brewster" _
41 No-no 42 African antelope
47 49 51 52
Circus tent 88, e.g. Trades Receipt
number 53 Band together 54 Red of oil well
fire-fighting 55 58 59 60 61 63
fame Fit to suit Lecherous look "Norma” song High cry Mall enticement Tell it like it isn't
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May 1,2006
THE Daily Crossword ACROSS 1 Motion measure 6 Necklace fastener 10 Ostentatious display 14 Fashionably nostalgic 15 Actor Morales 16 Sixth Hebrew month 17 Street talk 18 Occupy completely 19 Mezzo-soprano Stevens 20 High daydreams? 23 Shoebox letters 24 Geek's pal 25 Quarterback Marino 28 Signaled the butler 31 Corporate shark 35 News org. 36 Tinkers to Chance 38 Ward of "The Fugitive" 39 High homes? 43 Relative diagram 44 Nixon's Agnew 45 Half a fly? 46 Wading birds 49 Paris summers 50 That girl 51 Agatha's contemporary 53 Appropriate 55 High hopes 62 Colorful fish 63 Clamorous 64 Ensnares 66 Alto, CA 67 Bologna eight 68 Bandleader Shaw 69 Verve 70 "Subway Series" team 71 Sierra _
DOWN 1 Yrbk. section 2 111-gotten gains 3 List ender
ACROSS 1 Pound to pulp 5 Felony 10 Length times width 14 Sacramento's arena 15 Aden's country 16 Tear to pieces 17 Canyon comeback 18 Product name 19 Church section 20 Start of Evan Esar quip 23 Is able to 25 Sea eagles 26 Map dot 27 Doing sums 29 Poetic contraction 31 Farm outbuildings 32 Part 2 of quip 38 New driver, usually 39 Cloud nine 40 Norway's patron saint 41 Part 3 of quip 43 Nigerian currency unit 44 Hole maker 45 Rang a big bell? 46 Closet material Look 50 over 52 Opp. of SSW 53 End of quip 57 Spoils 58 Taken (surprised) 59 Finest 62 Aware of 63 Cranny 64 Enthralled with 65 Mt. Holyoke's founder 66 Interrogated 67 Bedazzle DOWN 1 Actress West 2 Circle part 3 Subject of a Spielberg film 4 Flicka's foot 5 Bionic Woman, e.g. 6 Second showing
By Philip J. Anderson Portland, OR
4 "Cheers" bartender 5 Amateurish verse 6 Try out for weight 7 With defects and all 8 Beauty spot? 9 Swipe 10 Utopia 11 Host of Valhalla 12 Fem.'s opp. 13 Quarry ho! 21 22 Monk's title 25 Enclosed channels 26 Not together 27 First generation JapaneseAmerican 29 Scottish headland 30 Complain 32 ", in Venice" 33 Beethoven dedicatee 34 More scarce 37 Brief bad mood
-Han
40 Fundraising broadcast 41 Pick up the tab 42 Medical facility 47 Test out 48 Ski race 52 Overact 54 Braves catcher of the '6os 55 Gentle pace
56 57 58 59 60 61 65
Iridescent gem FDR's pooch Ram Marriage vows W. def. grp. Create yam What'd I tell
ya?
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7 Mosque prayer leaders 8 Bill of fare 9 Breaks off 10 Saudis and Omanis 11 Drive back 12 Follow logically 13 Skillful 21 Cravings 22 Wee 23 Throws 24 Farewell in Rouen 28 Actress Skye 29 Scottish Gaelic 30 '94 and '97 U.S. Open winner
32 Hebrew month 33 Missing from a vacuum 34 Mournful sound 35 Proper relative position
36 Actress Black 37 Keep clear of 39 Show obeisance 42 Unit of length
43 Childhood prohibition
45 Stared stupidly 46 Channing or Burnett 47 Jet black 48 Same again 49 Fiery felony 50 Pancake order 51 Secret storage
place 54 Wendy's dog 55 Sapporo sashes 56 Bagwell stats 60 R-V hookup 61 Very great weight
2005 WILLIAM ). GRIFFITH UNIVERSITY SERVICE AWARD RECIPIENTS
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May 1,2006
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THE Daily Crossword
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Edited by Wayne Robert Williams
ACROSS
1 7 11 14
Boondocks Aaron McGruder
Naval engineer Angel's prop CPR specialist Imbue with
spiritual
>APLY. PUT WE SHOULD' THE ,r NEIGHPORHOOP LANWATCH If' JUST TO PE SURE.
IFy /
THE "NEIGHBORHOOD IdANWATOT.' THIS NEIGHBORHOOD DOES HAVE A IdANWATCH, DOESN'T |T? 1 MEAN. THIS IS A RECENTLY DESEGREGATED COMMUNITY. SOMEONE HAS TO MONITOR {^r THE SCOURGE OF HATE GROUPS.
(SIGH)
awareness Banned spray Old card game
YOU'RE going to MAKE ME PAY FOR THIS MOVE FOR THE REST OF MY LIFE. AREN'T Y00? ...
Aiming high Fla. neighbor Compere
Ecuador's capital
23 Pesky insect 24 Group of Gls 25 Very rare event 33 English Channel port Asian sea Antonio, TX Cries of discovery
>
More immoral Await action Go bad Shankar of the sitar
42 43 47 48
ilbert Scott Adams I WORKED ALL YEAR ON A PROJECT THAT GOT CANCELED TODAY BECAUSE WE GOT A NEW VICE PRESIDENT DIDN'T LIKE IT.
RWHO
I tAADE A BILLION DOLLARS BY CONVINCING SUCKERS THAT A GARBAGE BARGE WAS OCEANFRONT REAL ESTATE.
WOULD YOU LEND fAE SOfAE lAONEY SO I CAN OPEN fAY OWN BUSINESS?
Si
McLean, VA
Eagle's pad Zwieback, e.g Keats offering Spoonful of
9 Fan noise 10 Hit film followup, perhaps 11 “The Time Machine" race Drop feathers
medicine
49 Extrapolate 52 Toshiba rival 54 Actor Mineo 57 Hot sports
NO, BUT
Uproar
18 80-year-old
ticket
I KNOW SOKE PEOPLE ON A BARGE WHO WOULD
Wolfed down Thick piece Smoothed General Mills
prefix
19 23 24 25
brand
To be, in Toulon Sister of Ven
Eyeballbending pictures
26 Never ever Raccoon cousin Corrective eye surgery Hot temper Grenoble's
DOWN 1 Nintendo rival 2 Hydroxyl
pH
Wind blast Salon goops In the distance
compound
3 Europe's neighbor
42 Pardon 44 Vassar, since 1969 45 Millay of poetry 46 Arthur Conan and others 49 Author Dinesen 50 Don't look at me!
department
4 Nice good? 5 Wife of Napoleon 111 6 Actress Jenna Fabled dawdler 7 8 Der
32 37 38 39
(Adenauer)
Passion Wound up Yankee Ruth Ms. Gardner Bardot's dad Lancaster's emblem
51 Bend 52 Certain twinkler 53 French priest 54 Reasonable 55 Revival shout 56 Swan lady 58 Most remote, briefly
59 Aus. neighbor
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Eric Berkowitz, Jenny Wang Evelyn Chang Desmund Collins, Erin Richardson Sim Stafford, Tiffany Swift, Charlie Wain Kevin O’Leary Marketing Assistant: National Advertising Coordinator: Heather Murray Creative Services: Rachel Bahman, Alexandra Beilis Meagan Bridges, Robert Fenequito, Andrea Galambos Alicia Rondon, Erika Woolsey, Willy Wu, Susan Zhu Online Archivist: Roily Miller Brian Williams Production Assistant: Business Assistants: Shereen Arthur, Danielle Roberts Chelsea Rudisill Advertising Representatives:
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May 1,2006
EXAM HBEEAK.
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