BXe .ak Fall The Chroni
a happy, he altKvFaM
s^6^
Fulbrights Duke's
000
Fulbright Scholars talk about their experiences abroad, PAGE 3
-/
—
a Football
»
The Blue Devils travel to Alabama for an out-of<onferencr hnttlr PAfiF fi
JHL
The Chronicled
Pace of lax Law school prepares for facelift case raises by
Victoria Ward
THE CHRONICLE
The Board of Trustees approved
questions by
preliminary plans to give the School of
Andrew Beach
THE CHRONICLE
More than five months have passed since three members of the 2005-2006 men’s lacrosse team were charged with rape, but the case is still in its preliminary stages. The defendants and the University have remained in the national spotlight for months, as the controversy and media frenzy surrounding the news case continue. analysis With the reputations of both players and school on the line, the pace of the trial is a significant concern for the campus and community. “You have an impression that it is taking a long time, and it is said Robert Ekstrand, a lawyer who represented 35 lacrosse players this past spring, none of whom were indicted. Some other people have questioned whether the defendants in the lacrosse case are receiving the speedy trial they deserve. They have also noted that the right to a speedy trial protects a defendant from unnecessary personal damages before a case is tried. Although the alleged crime occurred on the night of March 13, the case will likely not go to trial until Spring 2007 nearly a year after the investigation and accompanying media coverage began. “The discovery phase is taking an inordinate amount of time,” Ekstrand said. He added that the state’s investigative file, which must be provided to the defendants in a speedy manner, has been a long time coming. “There have been sizeable installments of documents month after month,” he said of the thousands of pages of statements, audio transcripts and other components of the file. Neil Vidmar, professor of law, said, however, that the timeline for the trial so ”
r
—
SEE
TRIAL ON PAGE 4
Law another major facelift at its meeting last weekend. Administrators are currently making progress in the design phase of the project, which will include renovations to the library and the addition of an atrium and event space. Thomas Metzloff, head of the Building Committee and professor of law, said the project will cost “upwards of $2O million.” He said officials hope to break ground after graduation in May 2007. “This will be a real jewel for both the University and the law school,” Metzloff said. “I think the University understood that if we wanted to be a top-10 law school, we needed to have a top-10 facility.” The addition, which was conceived in the school’s master plan in 2000, comes after last year’s completion of a $2l-million renovation that added a 40,000-sq. ft. wing to the School of Law. Metzloff said he is particularly excited about the new 4,200-sq. ft. atrium, which will share both the look and architect of the University’s von der Heyden Pavilion and host major speakers and alumni events. “Its main use will be day-to-day for our large community to have a pleasant place to study, relax and get together,” Metzloff said. Officials said they hope the law school’s renovated reading room will become the center of activity in the library, where students and faculty will be able to check out books and ask research questions. “The way people use libraries is
Lawyers in the lacrosse case have expressed concern about the speed of the progression of the case.
SEE
LAW SCHOOL ON PAGE 4
Campus Council sees preliminary Selective Community Assessment Wenjia Zhang THE CHRONICLE
by
A preliminary outline of the new process through which selective living groups will be assessed’was presented to Campus Council at its general body meet-
Initiative.
HO/THE CHRONICLE
changing, and law libraries need to be able to keep up with the way that law students, law faculty and others do research with their materials,” Provost Peter Lange said. The School of Law has raised more than $l7 million so far for the project, said Sarah West, associate dean for alumni and development at the law school. West added that the law school had the best fundraising year in its history in 2005, with an alumni-giving pardcipation rate ofabout 30 percent. ‘When there is a special project, you see an upturn in your giving,” she said. “[Alumni] will make a second gift in many cases.”
Housing assessment proposal set
ing Thursday night. The Selective Community Assessment’s procedures have been finalized within the SCA'committee, announced junior Hasnain Zaidi, a committee member and Campus Council facilities and service chair. The,assessment is part of the University’s new Group Living
JIANGHAI
The law school's expansion, which will cost"upwards of $2O million," will add much-neededstudent meeting space.
Once the criteria are determined, the SCA will be presented to Eddie Hull, dean of residence life and executive director of housing services. Campus Council President Jay Ganato approve tra, a senior, said Hull is likely
the procedure. “I don’t foresee any problems with it,” Ganatra said. “It is well thought out and we worked hard on it.” If the assessment is approved, it will be implemented as soon as January, said Joe Gonzalez, associate dean for residence life. Zaidi said the mechanics of the assessment are all in place except for the manner in which new groups will be assigned housing. “The underlying assumption of the assessment is that housing for selective groups is a privilege,” Zaidi said. He explained that housing reassignment will occur every three years based on how well the groups score in evaluations during each cycle. Group representatives will present to the SCA committee every spring, said junior Chris Hopper, Campus Council vice presi-
dent and a member of the SCA committee. The groups will be evaluated based on the goals they set for the year and the contributions they make to the community and their quad, Zaidi said. Due to the differences between selective groups on campus, they will be divided into three categories according to,size, Zaidi said, adding that group size correlates to the resources available to the groups. “We don’t want to compare apples to oranges,” he said. Zaidi explained that groups will only be compared to those within their category. Top scorers will have the choice to “squat”—stay in the same location—or have first pick for new sections. Smaller groups will also have the opportunity to expand their sections and SEE COUNCIL ON PAGE
5
THE CHRONICLE
2 FRIDAY, OCTOBER 6, 2006
Control shifts in Afghanistan
Apex fire causes thousands to evacuate by
William Holmes
Oil price rises; cuts expected
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Oil prices settled above $6O a barrel Thursday on expectations that OPEC would soon cut its output, even though a representative of Saudi Arabia denied there was a deal to cut production. Concerns also grew about the stability of world oil supplies amid violence in Nigeria and as the United Nations considers sanctions against Iran.
APEX, N.C. Authorities asked about 16,000 residents of this suburban Raleigh town to evacuate early Friday morning as they struggled to deal with a hazardous material fire at an industrial plant. No serious injuries were immediately reported, although a spokeswoman at Raleigh’s Rex Healthcare hospital said six people were in good condition as they received oxygen because of respiratory
Rice tells Iraqis to make peace
problems.
“This is truly awful,” town manager Bruce Radford said. “It is the worst potendal hazardous materials fire that you can expect.” As the fire continued to burn in the early morning hours, a yellow haze lingered over downtown and there was a faint smell of chlorine. Police lined up along the main street that runs through the town’s business district, blocking both ends of the road. Officials said the fire started around 10 p.m. Thursday at EQ Industrial Services,,a hazardous waste business that town manager Bruce Radford said housed a variety of volatile chemicals, including chlorine. He said when he arrived at the scene, a chlorine cloud rose 50 feet in the air. He estimated that 20 to 30 explosions had occurred at the plant. “We’re not even being able to get close to it because of the heat and the contaminate materials,” Radford said. “As of yet, we’ve not touched this fire.”
NATO extended its security mission Thursday to all of Afghanistan nearly five years after the West began its war to defeat the Taliban, taking command of 12,000 U.S. troops in the war-battered country's east.
Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice, visiting Baghdad Thursday, warned Iraqi leaders they have limited time to settle their differences and thatthe escalating waves of violence are intolerable.
Unruly Yale athletes arrested CHRIS SEWARD/NEWS
&
OBSERVER
A plant fire caused the evacuation of more than 16,000 people in Apex, N.C. late Thursday night. The evacuation order generally covered the west side of Apex, located about 10 miles southwest of Raleigh. Authorities opened a shelter at an elementary school on the town’s east side, and the parking lot was full around 1:30 a.m. as residents and their pets milled around, waiting for news about the fire. Radford said it would be also be safe to take shelter at hotels in
nearby Cary. Friday classes in Apex schools were canceled, he said. Radford said some residents who live near the fire, in an industrial area near one of the town’s oldest residential neighborhoods, had not heeded the evacuation order. He begged them to get away from what he called a “black, smoky cloud” that was covering downtown.
Three hockey players and two Yale football players, including the starting quarterback, were arrested after a fight outside a downtown market and charged with breach of peace. Police said a window at Gourmet Heaven on Broadway was broken during the scuffle early Sunday. News briefs compiled from wire reports "We could use a handful of wheel and a Wilco day off."
dCal Set your calendar. Duke Unirer/ily Computer Store
C LO S
£
I>
for Inventory Monday, October 9 and Tuesday, October 10. We will be open regular hours starting Wednesday, October 11.
W
dCal is a new group scheduling system anyone at Duke can use for free. From keeping track of appointments and task management to scheduling meetings and managing contacts, dCal helps you organize your busy life.
http://dcal.duke.edu
We apologize for any inconvenience.
fill Duke University
J|J Department of Duke University Stores®
I
06a-1227
Office of Information Technology
THE CHRONICLE
FRIDAY, OCTOBER 6,
20061 3
Duke’s Fulbrights settle into global programs Michelle Mangan, Trinity ’O5, chose to study in Senegal on the Fulbright scholarAdam Yoffie, Trinity ’O6, has been inship for the 2005-2006 academic year. terested in HIV/AIDS research since he Mangan said she spent her 10 months doing things like eating daily meals of was eight years old and saw Magic Johnson, his favorite basketball player, cryrice and fish with her hands, interviewing women in rural villages, attending confering on television. ences, teaching English and selling hot Fifteen years later, Yoffie is one of several Fulbright scholars from Duke and is dogs at American embassy softball games. She said she attributed her currendy studying public health in Israel. He began a 10-monthprogram this Aumulti-faceted experience, however, to gust, working with a professor of public her “personal initiative” and not to the health at the Hebrew University of design of the program. “I was told to expect that [the FulJerusalem and with the Jerusalem Open House—a lesbian, gay, bisexual and bright Program] would be rather unstructransgender organization that provides tured and to push myself to complete my free and anonymous HIV/AIDS testing. project because there was very little accountability on the side of the Fulbright Yoffie is one of more than 1,200 students currently studying as Fulbright Association,” Mangan wrote in an e-mail. scholars around the world, according to “In the words of one of my advisers, ‘You the U.S. Department of State’s Bureau of could sit on the beach and still get paid Educational and Cultural Affairs. for it, if you really wanted to.’” The Fulbright Scholar Program proThough many Fulbright scholars acvides grants for graduating college senknowledged the “unstructured” nature of iors and graduate students each year to the program, they said the lack of specifigo abroad and conduct research or teach cations did not hinder their experiences. in elementary and secondary schools for SEE FULBRIGHT ON PAGE 5 one academic year. In the 2005-2006 academic year, 22 of Duke’s seniors and graduate students were awarded Fulbright fellowships. Jessica Ward, Trinity ’O5, said participating in last year’s Fulbright program In the 2005-2006 academic helped her to better understand the 22 Duke students were seyear, world. Ward was part of the Okavango lected to the Fulbright Scholars Lion Research Project in Botswana. Program. “I performed daily behavioral research, which generally involved finding Fulbright Scholars are chosen lions and watching them for long periods their leadership potential. for of time,” Ward wrote in an e-mail. “Of Since its inception, there have the course, the experience of living in been more than 273,500 particibush was perhaps even more important pants in the program. and noteworthy than the research itself.” Ward said life in Africa took some get•The grants fund a variety of edting used to and was an exercise in flexiactivities, including lecucational bility and adaptability. turing, advanced research, gradu“At least twice, I got flat tires right ate study and teaching in next to a big pride of lions and had to elementary and secondary schools. maneuver the high-life jack while also trying not to get eaten,” Ward said. by Lysa Chen THE CHRONICLE
JIANGHAI HO/THE
CHRONICLE
TheAmerican Association ofUniversity Women led a panel discussion about the role of women in politicsThursday.
Panel discusses role of women in politics by
Caroline McGeough THE CHRONICLE
The Graduate and Professional Women’s Network met Thursday night to discuss the role of women in politics as part of a biweekly dinner discussion series held in the Women’s Center. Representatives from the Chapel Hill chapter of the American Association of University Women, which promotes equal opportunity in education through grants and scholarships, led the panel and shared their experiences with the group. The discussion focused on balancing professional and family life and dealing with social bias. “Where a man is assertive, a woman is a bitch,” AAUW representative Mary Paterson said on the discrepancy in behavioral expectations of female and male
politicians. The panel was attended by about 25 staff members, graduate students, admin-
istrators and local women from a variety of backgrounds and disciplines. Graduate students from China and Bangladesh lent the discussion an international perspective, and engineering students voiced concerns about women’s under-representation in the sciences.
The Focus Program presents The Book Spring 2007 m
SEE PANEL ON PAGE 4
•
•
Ad Deadline Reminder
•
■
Many women said they were hesitant to get involved in what they perceived as an unethical, male-dominated political system. “You either have to act masculine, or you have to give in,” Paterson said. Some students said gender socialization teaches women that competing in politics means sacrificing femininity. Attendees said that although women have recently become more of a presence in many professions including business and law, the trend has not translated into the political realm. International students noted that women’s involvement in politics in the United States is lagging in comparison with other modern countries. The discussion then shifted to the question of how women can change the system and become more politically involved. Paterson and AAUW representative Kay White said women need to form solid political opinions about candidates and issues before participating in politics. If women can establish themselves as an informed political presence, social bias against women politicians may decline, some panelists said.
Duke University Parents’ Family Weekend
The Photo-Book with WHliamNoland
&
October 27-October 29 k Art: Form
&
Function
The Chronicle’s Parents’ & Family Weekend Issue Published: Friday, Oct 27 Ad Deadline: Oct 19 RESERVE YOUR SPACE TODAY!
The Chronicle The Independent Daily at Duke University
Advertising Office 101 W Union Bldg 684-3811
f, \
FRIDAY, OCTOBER 6,
THE CHRONICL ,E
2006
TRIAL from page 1
James Coleman, professor oflaw.
Additional circumstances have also
delayed the pace of the trial.
The School ofLaw has raised more than $l7 million toward an expansion project that will include an atrium.
LAW SCHOOL from page 1 To fundraise specifically for this phase of renovations, the school organized a brick campaign, selling more than 700 bricks to alumni at $2,500 each. The bricks, engraved with the name of the donor, will appear in and around the new atrium, West said. Unlike public schools, which receive money from the state for construction and other expenses, private universities must rely primarily on their endowments for funding. Although the School of Law at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill has a $33-million endowment, officials are now planning at $65-million expansion with possible funding from the North Carolina General Assembly. Duke Law’s endowment of more than $l2B million has increased 108 percent since 1999, when Katharine Bartlett be-
came dean of the law school “She is the single greatest reason that the law school’s trajectory is moving forward so strongly,” West said. “She has been quite eloquent in making a very solid case to our stakeholders about the role of private support in moving our school forward,” she added. MetzlofF said students, alumni and officials within the University have been supportive of the law school’s plans for physical improvement. Nicole Guerrero, a second-year law student, said the construction of the new atrium is an example of how law school administrators are working hard to enhance every aspect of student life, including comfort. “There is not enough common space for students to sit together and have lunch, to relax in between classes, or have a study group outside of the library,” she said. “The atrium is really going to help the overcrowding we get.”
far is typical of cases like this. “The wheels of justice grind slowly for a reason,” Vidmar said. The complicated preliminary components of the case are only intensified by disputes between prosecution and the defense that must be settled before the case can continue. ‘You really need to be inside it to see how complex it is,” Vidmar said. He added that it is difficult for people to understand that for the lawyers to do their job properly, they have to spend a lot of time on the investigation. As long as the lawyers on both sides are active in moving the case forward, it is as speedy as it can get, Vidmar said. And even though the case is one of the most high-profile in the state right now, it does not get special permission to move ahead ofother cases. “It has to take its place in line,” said
One reason is that the original to the case were only temporary. “They did not want to set rules for the case that would bind the final judge,” Ekstrand said. He added that the appointment of Judge W. Osmond Smith as the single and final judge of the case is a sign that things will begin to move much more smoothly from now on. Even so, some lawyers said it is hard to predict exactly how this case will turn out in the upcoming months. “We don’t know how long this case is going to take,” Ekstrand said. “We just know how long discovery is taking.” And time is not the only factor affecting the case and the community. “There are so many dimensions to it,” he said. ‘We do not yet know the full reach of the case. But it will be significant.”
PANEL from page 3
The discussion series is part of a full schedule of GPWN activities designed to provide networking opportunities to female graduate students, administrators, faculty and community members while also encouraging discussion of campus and community issues. Future events include a panel on gender in sports, a workshop on meditation and a workshop on car maintenance and repair, all co-sponsored by graduate student organizations and the Women’s Center.
“Gender
socialization needs
judges appointed
to
change,” Paterson said. Overall, attendees said the panel was successful in highlighting concerns of the graduate and professional women’s community and was a valuable networking tool. “You have to have some belief in your own opinions and your own philosophy and you have to stick with it,” Paterson said.
www.dukechronicle.com EASTDIL
Cfj
c FrTIRFn
The real estate investment banking company
Eastdil Secured, the nation’s preeminent real estate investment bank is looking for dedicated and passionate individuals who seek a challenging and rewarding career in real estate investment banking and finance Our firm provides investors with a full range ofreal estate services: •
VC
rho'p
Equity Sales Financings/Debt Placement Loan Sales Equity Raise •
•
Information Session: Thursday,
••
Oct. 12th 7pm (Old Trinity Room) Resume Drop Deadline: Monday, Oct. 15th (Midnight) -
www.EastdilSecured.com New York | Los Angeles ( San Francisco | Chicago | Atlanta | Washington, D.C Eastdil Secured is a wholly owned subsidiary ofWells Fargo & Company
We will be CLOSED for inventory on Monday, October 9 and Tuesday, October 10. We will reopen on Wednesday, October 11 at B:3oam.
We’re sorry for any inconvenience. Department of Duke University Stores
*
THE CHRONICLE
FRIDAY, OCTOBER 6,
FULBRIGHT from page 3
pendently, she said, adding that she saw
other scholars waste their time inside apartments instead of experiencing Senegalese “I had very little contact with Fulbright culture. administrators other than occasional eYoffie said “it is a bit too early to tell” mails,” Ward said. “The whether the research team that I program has joined provided for all “The experience of living in the fulfilled his exmy practical needs, so I pectations, but bush was perhaps even more remained fairly indehe said he is impendent from the Fuland with important pressed than noteworthy bright itself.” the freedom he the research itself.” Mangan said she also has been given. spent her time abroad Ward hisAlthough working with another informal FulFulbright Scholar, Trinity ’O5 stitution in addition to bright orientathe Fulbright Program. tion in Israel “By completing indewill occur in pendent research and working for an NGO mid-October after the Jewish High Holiat die same time, I had so much more supdays, Yoffie said that he has already had port than I would have had if I had ap- “a challenging time, spiritually and intelproached the research completely inde- lectually.”
—Jessica
COUNCIL from page 1 move into the next category if they score high enough and express a desire to do so, Zaidi said“[The groups] have to be functioning at the optimal level to be bumped up,” he said. The assessment’s criteria are scheduled to be completed by the end of the month, Ganatra said. Council members also decided to continue die pilot program that limited quad access for the upcoming Oct. 14 home football game. Card access was restricted by quad two hours prior and one hour after last Saturday’s game. The program was implemented in response to student concerns regarding damages done, especially in selective liv-
20 Visit; wvw.fearrington.com | Phone; 919.542.2121
Passion. Rigor. Purpose. APPLY NOW for the NEW Ethics Certificate Program Now you can earn a certificate in ethics. Take eight courses in philosophical ethics, practical ethics, religious ethics, and ethics in historical and cultural context. Test yoiir convictions. Deepen your knowledge. Explore your ambitions.
Apply by October 15, register this Fall, and begin classes in Spring 2007. For more information, visit www.dukeethics.org or
call 660-3033.
Application Deadline: October 15
THE KENAN
INSTITUTE FOR ETHICS
riV.WV.VVVV V"V V V
'
z/tfV VVhVVV v
20061
*
5
mg sections Fewer than 100 students completed the online survey used to gauge students’ reactions, and 75 percent responded negatively to the program, Hopper said. The low number of participants did not give a good indication of student reaction and the survey will be extended for another week because of the low response rate, Hopper added. Members will work toward increasing awareness of the program before the next home game. “A lot of the negative responses came from not understanding why we’re doing this,” Hopper said.
In other business: Gonzalez announced that all commons and study rooms on West Campus will have wireless access by the end of this week or early next week.
%
discount w/Duke ID Item"
3644 Chapel Hill Blvd., Durham
•
489-2669
October 6r 2006
SPOT
ATTITUDE
DUKE READY TO TAKE ON MO. 3 VIRGINIA AT HOME TONIGHT PAGE 7
BLUE DEVILS TO DEFEND TITLE... AGAIN The women's golf team will play for its 10th straight Lady Tar Heel Invitational title when it travels to Chapel Hill this weekend.
FOOTBALL
WOMEN'S SOCCER
Difficult stretch Duke returns begins with UNC
to
SEC country
Sean Moroney THE CHRONICLE
by
The last time the Blue Devils
by
Ben Cohen
THE CHRONICLE
North Carolina boasts arguably the best player in the country, the winningest coach in women’s colsoccer history and the No. 2 ranking in the na-
@lege tion1
VS.
Coming off a 3-0 rout over N.C State Sunday, however, No. 24 SUNDAY, 2 p.m. Koskinen Stadium Duke is playing its best soccer of the year. With a looming matchup against the Tar Heels (12-1, 4-0 in the ACC) Sunday at 2 p.m. at
'
SARA
GUERERRO/THE CHRONICLE
Freshman KayAnne Gummersall was named co-ACC Player of the Week after scoring in bothDuke games last weekend.
Koskinen Stadium, the Blue Devils (7-4-1, 3-1) are peaking at just the right time. “I feel really good about where we are right now,” head coach Robbie Church said. “We’re improving—we can get better and we will get better, but I think we’re playing at a pretty good level right now.” The team’s solid play of late comes at a critical point in the season. The Blue Devils are entering one of their toughest stretches of the year—they play UNC, Wake Forest arid Maryland in a six-day span. All of Duke’s focus now, though, is on the traditional powerhouse Tar Heels. After dropping its season opener, North Carolina has won its last 12 games. Senior forward Heather O’Reilly, a member of the U.S. national team, has also been on a tear, notching four points in her last two games. But containing UNC’s potent attack will be just part of Duke’s game plan. ‘You’ve got to compete for 90 minutes,” Church said. ‘You’ve got to finish your chances, because there aren’t a lot of chances out there. And you have to do a great job defending—both individual defending and collective defending.” Despite the Blue Devils’ 228-1 all-time record against head coach Anson Dorrance’s Tar Heels, they have a reason to SEE W. SOCCER ON PAGE 7
played an SEC opponent on the
road, Duke lost to No. 7 Tennessee, 23-6, in 2003. Three years since then, many Blue Devils will encounter the hostile environJbOv ment of a nonvs. conference,
S
big-time college
football profor the SATURDAY, 7 p.m. Sram Tuscaloosa, Ala. first time when they step into Stadium in Bryant-Denny Tuscaloosa, Ala. Saturday. “There will be over 90,000 people, one of the toughest stadiums to play in,” sophomore linebacker Michael Tauiliili said. “We’ve been in those situations before. We’ve been down to play Florida State in their stadium. We recendy played at Virginia Tech. It might be one notch up, but we’re ready for it.” Duke (0-4) has not fared well over the past two seasons outside CHRONICLE FILE PHOTO of Wallace Wade Stadium versus tough competition. On the road The last time the Blue Devils faced an SEC team was in 2003,when they lost to Tennessee. against ranked ACC opponents, the Blue Devils have lost all their ‘You’re playing the best comDuke will also complete its home and home series with Alabama in matchups by a combined score of petition and getting noticed, play171-14, including their 36-0 loss to ing on TV, pretty much a no-brain2010 and plans to continue to Virginia Tech earlier this season. er,” Tauiliili said. “We play some of schedule such high-profile games But road games against non- the top notch teams, and that conin the future, said Chris Kennedy, ACC, premier opponents like Altinues to change year in and year senior associate athletic director. abama (3-2) give Duke exposure out. Next year we play Notre ‘You want to balance having a in a demographic outside of the Dame, and those are the types of manageable non-conference usual ACC venues. The added games you might want to be in.” schedule and also, from time to The Blue Devils will begin a time, being in a big-time game in publicity could benefit the program in recruiting and players try- home and home series with Notre ing to impress NFL scouts. Dame on the road next season. SEE FOOTBALL ON PAGE 7
MEN'S GOLF
Blue Devils shoot for home win by
Meredith Shiner THE CHRONICLE
The men’s golf team will play for the first time since its upset victory at the Fighting Illini Invitational when it hosts the Coca-Cola Duke Classic Sunday at the Washington Duke Golf Club. The No. 9 Blue Devils, who were named by Golfweek as the National Team of the Week for the first time in program history following their decisive team win in Illinois, will headline a 15-team field that features only two other squads in the top-25—No. 19 North Carolina and No. 25 Charlotte. Home course advantage has been in Duke’s favor recendy, as it has won the past two Duke Classics. Yet there is still pressure that comes with playing on your own turf. “The only trouble widi playing on your home course is you’re dealing with expectations,” Myers said. ‘You think you know what you can shoot, and how your shots are going to play, but it doesn’t always work out the way you expect.” The pressure for Duke to play well at home is even greater this year coming off such a strong performance that brought so many accolades and attention to the team,
and in particular freshman Adam Long. Long, who has played in only one collegiate tournament, is currently ranked No. 1 in Golfweek’s individual performance index ranking after losing by one stroke at Olympia Fields. ’ “I think Adam is certainly going to keep that in proper perspective,” Myers said. “Hopefully, he can keep right there with his game. There’s no reason to think he can’t play like he did in Chicago.” Junior Michael Schachner, who is No. 35 in the Golfweek standings, will join Long, Michael Quagliano, Clark Klaasen and Jake Grodzinsky in this weekend’s team lineup. Sophomores Andrew Giuliani and Justin Hare and freshman Jeff Edelman will also compete individually. “I think everything has been really positive,” head coach Rod Meyers said. “We’ve been working hard and trying to emphasize our short game.” In addition to putting and chipping, the team focused its energy this week on conditioning, as the Blue Devils will face their only remaining 36-hole day Sunday, Myers said. Play at the Duke Classic will begin with an 8:30 a.m.
shotgun start Sunday.
.
CHRONICLE FILE PHOTO
Michael Schachner is ranked 35th in the nation after finishing in third place at the Fighting lllini Invitational two weeks ago.
the chronicle
FRIDAY, OCTOBER 6,
MEN'S SOCCER
Duke looks to take down UVa Austin Weiss CHRONICLE Coming off a tough loss to No. 2 Maryland, the Blue Devils are gearing up for their second matchup in one week against a top-three opponent. Duke (7-2-1, 2-1-1 in the ACC), which dropped to 15th after last Friday’s 1-0 defeat, hosts No. 3 Virginia (10-1-0, 3-1-0) tonight at 7 p.m. at Koskinen Stadium. The team spent the week preparing for the Cavaliers, invs. cluding an intense scrimmage during Wednesday’s practice. JusSm “Anytime you play Virginia, it’s going to be a cracial game,” senior defender Kyle TONIGHT, 7 p.m. Helton sa d The intensity is going to be Koskinen Stadium there. It s a battle every time we play. A Blue Devil victory tonight would provide a critical boost to the team, with ACC soccer experiencing a remarkably competitive year. In addition to Maryland and the Cavaliers, No. 4 Clemson, No. 6 North Carolina and No. 11 Wake Forest could all compete for the national title. “Everything is so tight in the ACC right now, one loss and LAUREN PRATS/THE CHRONICLE you’re pretty much on the lower end of the standings,” junior midfielder Michael Videira said. “We’re focusing on get- Junior Michael Videira is second on the team withfive goals scored so far this season. Duke hasnetted just one goal in its past three games. ting our intensity, getting our game up.” Trying to avoid another ACC loss tonight, the Blue Devils have poured everything they’ve got into preparing for called “two of the league’s best dribblers,” will be feeding Virginia, even with matchups against other league powers the ball to Reyering. Even with all the talent on the opposing team, the slated for later this month. “We’re not even thinking about Clemson or UNC yet,” Blue Devils are focused on improving themselves in order to pull off the upset against the Cavaliers. Helton said. “We’re concentrating on us as a team,” Rennie said. Focusing this week on taking down the Cavaliers, Duke “We’re going do our thing.” first must deal with the focal point of Virginia’s offense, AllIf the Blue Devils wins tonight, Rennie will earn his American forward Yannick Reyering, a sophomore origi389th victory at Duke, surpassing former Clemson head nally from Mettingen, Germany. coach I.M. Ibrahim for the most career wins while coach“We call him ‘The German Pro,”’ head coach John Rennie said. “He’s their leading scorer, and he’s just a big, ing at an ACC school. “We wouldn't be where we are today if it weren’t for his strong guy. They do a lot of things off of him.” and his leadership,” Helton said. “It’s the last experience Colaluca, All-ACC second team junior midfielder Nico and freshman midfielder Jonathan Villanueva, who Rennie year for me, but he’s got a lotof good years in front of him.” by
THE
(
20061 7
FOOTBALL from page 6 the large stadiums like they have in the SEC,” Kennedy said. Although the different atmosphere may motivate the Blue Devils, they must contend with the extraordinary crowd noise and distractions from the Crimson Tide fans. But Duke will not enter the game unprepared for the conditions. Not only are they used to playing in front of distracdons like Seminoles fans’ incessant war cries and tomahawk chops, the Blue Devils changed their method of play-calling this week in practice to accommodate for the excessive crowd noise. “We’ve been sending the plays in with different players, sending them in with running backs so there’s no problems with communication between offensive coordinator and quarterback on what play to call,” junior wideout Jomar Wright said. If Duke wishes to silence the Alabama fans, the Blue Devils will have to improve on their 100 total yard performance in their loss to Virginia, 37-0, last Saturday. “If we don’t come out and execute, we’re going to be embarrassed," Wright said.
W. SOCCER from page 6 be confident. Last year, they upset UNC 2-1 in Chapel Hill, behind then-junior midfielder Rebecca Moros’ two scores. The Duke victory snapped North Carolina’s 41game win streak. A key to the Blue Devils’ recent success has been the emergence of the team’s five freshmen. In the win over N.C. State, freshman KayAnne Gummersall and Elisabeth Redmond accounted for both of Duke’s goals—the Wolfpack also added an own goal for the final margin. Gummersall was named co-ACC player of the week Monday. Duke’s youngest players are especially looking forward to their first game against their biggest rival. “I think we’re all really excited,” freshman defender Sara Murphy said. “I’m not sure what to expect.” The seniors, too, are relishing what could be their last game against their biggest rival. “We don’t downplay it, I think we really embrace it,” Moros said. “It’s just a fun rivalry. We really enjoy it.”
SENIOR ENGINEERS CHOOSING A GRADUATE SCHOOL
SEMINAR OCTOBER 12,2006 7 PM 203 TEER BUILDING
Topics Include: Choosing a Graduate School Finance/Scholarship What do schools want application, reference, etc Why graduate school rather than industry -
Sponsored by Tau Beta Pi
'edki Wanriftf day We are looking for Work Study students who can be responsible for testing endproductonofadvertising for The Chronicle. Duties will include Mac platform. of PDF files, sending to ftp site, printing and proofreading. preferred. QuarkXPress, Adobe Photoshop and Acrobat experience Offering on-the-job training. Hours will be between 2-5 p.m. Mon-Fri.
Focus Program in Spring ‘O7
study ■ The Art of the Book or
■
Muslim Cultures
Open to 1 st year & 2nd year students No writing course No residential requirement .
APPLY ONLINE September 12 October 6 Http: / / focus.aas.duke.edu -
Email starbuck@duke.edu for details or to apply.
CLASSIFIEDS
2006
FRIDAY, OCTOBER 6,
8
ANNOUNCEMENTS EGG DONORS NEEDED $15,000 (plus all expenses.) We are seeking women who are attracctive, under the age of 29, SAT 1300+ (math+verbal), physically fit and maintaining a healthy lifestyle. If you have a desire to help an infertile family and would like more information please contact us. Email:
GRAD/PROF’L SCHOOL DAY 2006 Don ’t Miss It!
Undergraduate work study students wanted to work on the journal Political Communication edited by Professor David Paletz. Salary
Thursday, October 19. This is your chance to meet representatives from over 90 Graduate, Business, Law and Medical schools, 10am4pm, Bryan Center upper and lower
polcom@duke.edu
levels.
ADVERTISERS: Please check
darlene@aperfectmatch.com www.aperfectmatch.com 1-800264-8828
your advertisement for errors on the first day of publication. If you find an error, please call 919-6843811. The Chronicle only accepts responsibility for the first incorrect day for ads entered by our office staff. We cannot offer make-good runs for errors in ads placed online by the customer.
OXFORD DIRECT STUDY ABROAD
Info Meeting Today at 4:00 pm. Office of Study Abroad, 2016 Campus Drive. For details see http://www.aas.duke.edu/study_ abroad/oxford/index, php
HELP WANTED HOSTESS/ BARTENDER/ WAITSTAFF Minimum 3 years fine dining experience. Postitive attitude required. Also hiring for barista. Papa’s Grille Restaurant, apply in 919-383-8502
ATTN: SOPHOMORES AND JUNIORS! Make a difference in the lives of children TEACH! Earn State Licensure during your undergraduate studies. For information about teaching: Grades K-6 contact Jan Riggsbee jrigg@duke.edu, 6603077. Grades 9-12 contact Susan Wynn swynn@duke.edu, 6602403. Teaching is more than telling. Learning is more than remember-
LABORATORY ASSISTANT NEEDED Laboratory engaged in hypertension and genetics research looking for a student worker. Responsibilities include DNA extraction, experimental materials preparing and other miscellaneous tasks. No previous research experience needed. Very flexible schedule and friendly environment. Start immedi-
ing.
FREE VEGETARIAN DINNER Multicultural Mondays 5:30p. Lounge, Bryan C. Just show up! www.supersoulyoga.com
ately. Work-study encouraged to
apply, but not required. Please send brief resume to caoqion@duke.edu
Free 8x 10 no sitting fees with
®?studio
$499
family portraits at Target
The Studio Target Offer Expires December 17, 2006.
Portrait Sheets
Present at sitting. No sitting lees. Not valid on reorders. Distinctions®, or studio events. One free Bxlo per family. Valid at participating studio locations. Void where prohibited by law. No cash value. PC23292
Choose all
your favorite poses. Show Duke ID.
The Chronicle
$9.00 per hour. Flexible hours. Great experience. To apply, email
STATISTIC TUTOR NEEDED Are you fluent in statistics? Would you like helping someone else to understand the concepts? I am an adult student seeking help with Statistics 101. Will pay $ 10/hr. Please call if interested. 919.668.4345
BARTENDERS ARE IN DEMAND!!! Earn $2O $35 per hour. Job placement assistance is our top priority. RALEIGH’S BARTENDING SCHOOL. Have Fun! Make Money! Meet People! Call now for info about our FALL TUITION SPECIAL! www.cocktailmixer.com CALL NOW!! (919)676-0774 -
WORK STUDY STUDENTS 2 Postions for data entry, office/clerical assistance with the Duke Police Department. Contact Major James Schwab at james.schwab@duke.edu
GOLF. FUN, BENEFITS, GREAT FOOD, FRIENDLY STAFF, WEEKLY PAY! Treyburn Country Club is seeking enthusiastic and devoted staff to join our team. PT/FT Available. Call for more information. Visit our website for application forms. 919.620.0184 WORKSTUDY POSITION Duke Continuing Studies Department. Need work study student for general office assistance. 8-10 hours a week, times are flexible but should be consistent. Prefer someone with prior office experience. Pay is $lO an hour. Interested students should call Malissa at: 919-681-1025.
HELP WANTED IN SCIENCE LAB Part time position wanted possibly leading into full time. Primary component of job is reviewing cognitive data for various clinical trials. We train testers and review data quality for various pharmaceutical companies. Full time will involve traveling to meetings. Good experience and good training with interesting travel. Must have or be working on a BS in psychology or related science area. Please Caren contact at with caren.k@mindspring.com cover letter and CV. Earn $BOO-$3200 a month to drive brand new cars with ads placed on them. www.AdDriveTeam.com.
THE CHRONICL,E
Magnolia Grill is hiring for FT and PT Evening Backwait / Host positions. Professional environment with emphasis on great food and service. Apply Tuesday-Saturday 10am-4pm at 1002 Ninth Street.
HELP WANTED Help my garden grow, 2-3 hours a week, close to East Campus, $lO.OO an hour. 919.286,5141
ASSOCIATE IN RESEARCH in functional neuroimaging. F/ T position in Center for Cognitive Neuroscience. Responsibilities: tracing regions of interest on MRI images, data analysis. B, A./ B. S., attention to detail essential; statistics and neuroanatomy desirable. 2-year commitment. Salary commensurate with experience. Apply
to cabezalab@duke.edu 919.668.5262 HELPI Duke Textbook Store needs student employees 4-7 Monday through Friday, 8:30-5 Saturdays, 6-15 hours per week. Contact us at 684-6793. Leave name, number, email, availability. West Durham Veterinary Hospital seeking kennel attendant. Approx. week. Some per 20 hrs weekends/holidays. Apply in person at 3301 Old Chapel Hill Rd./Durham
PAID MARKETING INTERNSHIP Get great experience at marketing/ design firm located within walking distance of East Campus. Flexible 15+ hours/ week. Gall 682-3136 or email mwilkins@heardinc.com. STUDENT AIDE POSITION AT FUQUA Center at the Fuqua
FUN AFTER SCHOOL JOB per week, 3-5;30 pm, M-F, Oct-Dec. Duties include: picking up from nearby school, getting homework started, snacking, having fun. (Really!) Email jtompkins@coastalfcu.org or call 683-2587. 919.683.2587
SENIOR ENGINEERS Seminar “Choosing Graduate School? Wednesday, October 12 at 7PM, 203 leer Library Bldg.
APARTMENTS FOR RENT FOR RENT Beautiful,l bedroom small but cute apartment, second floor in Chapel Hill Rd. 15 minutes to Duke. New paint. New carpet. $450/ month. $5O discount to Duke Students and staff. 919.403.6255 HUGE BEDROOM 1-2 APARTMENTS Walk to East. W/D, hardwood floors, spacious kitchens, beautiful yards. $5OO-550 www.bob-
schmitzproperties.com 919.416.0393
SERVICES OFFERED IST PILATES CLASS FREE MetaformMovement.com Private GYROTONIC®/$6O. Pilates & classes/$25. Ist session free Schedule now! 919.682.725 close to campus 1010 Lamond Avenue.
HOMES FOR RENT Beautiful, contemporary 4BR 2.5 bath home in Woodcraft, near Southpoint-Mall, pool, tennis, bike trails. 15 minutes to Duke. $1550/ month. New paint, new carpet. 2 car 919-490-5373 (days). 225-
*0773 (evening/ weekends).
3 BEDROOM HOUSE Wrightwood Avenue: kitchen, dining, living room and study, hardwood floors, 1 and 1/2 baths, screened porch and garage. 919.942.4199
ENTERTAINMENT
School of Business seeks undergrad student for work study position. Duties to include: update website content, provide communications support, assemble course packets, assist with events logistics, maintain contacts database and alumni records, copy and deliver documents as needed, undertake special projects. 4-8 hours a week. $9.25/ hour. Please contact Beth at eiserloh@duke.edu. 919.660.7823
EXPERIENCING HAIR LOSS??? If you are suffering from Alopecia, Chemotherapy, or any other type of hair loss problems, or just want to look fabulous, we will design a custom made Hair Unit according to your needs. Call today for a free Consultation. 919-544-9504
PRIVATE CAREGIVER Certified Nurse Aide available for hire immediately. Will give care/ companionship to elderly/ sick or persons with physical challenges. Will help with activities of daily living, doctors appts. and run errands. Experience with good references. Call 919-4033390.
EMMA’S MAID SERVICE Home or Office, Daily Weekly BiMonthly. Cleaning homes immaculately for 10 years. (919) 699 2510
TRIANGLE CLEANING SERVICE
CHILD CARE BABYSITTING/TRANSPORT for 9 year old girl from school to home, piano lessons, soccer, 4:30-6:30 pm, 3-5 days/week. Must have car, non-smoker, love dogs. References 919.419.7263
PERSONALS
Trinity Park family seeks after school sitter for 9 & 11 year old. 12-15hours
CATS 25th Anniversary National Tour of CATS! October 17, 7;3opm, Page Auditorium Tickets from $l5; Bryan Center Box Office 919-6844444 or tickets.duke.edu
Leave the cleaning to us. Daily, Weekly, or Bi-Monthly. (919) 4031029
classified advertising www.dukechronicle.com/ciassifieds rates
All advertising $6.00 for first 15 words 100 (per day) additional per word 3 or 4 consecutive insertions -10 % off 5 or more consecutive insertions 20 % off special features -
-
online and print
all bold wording $1.0() extra per day bold heading $1.50 extra per day bold and sub headline $2.50 extra per day -
-
-
online only
attention getting icon $l.OO extra per ad spotlight/feature ad $2.00 per day website link $l.OO per ad map $l.OO per ad hit counter $l.OO per ad picture or graphic $2.50 per ad deadline 12:00 noon 1 business day prior to publication -
-
-
-
-
The Chronicle is looking for creative, enthusiastic Advertising Representatives to work in the Advertising Office.
-
payment
Prepayment is required Master Card, VISA, Discover, American Express, cash or check ad submission
online: www.chronicle.duke.edu/classifieds email: classifieds@chronicle.duke.edu fax to: 919-684-8295 phone orders: (919)-684-3811 No refunds or cancellations after first insertion deadline. AD VERTISERS: Please check youradvertisement for errors on the first day of publication. If you find an error, please call 919-684-3811. The Chronicle only accepts responsibility for the firstincorrect day lor ads entered by our office staff. We cannot offer make-good runs for errors in ads placed online by the customer.
Please apply in person.
101 West Union Building
*
the chronicle
FRIDAY, OCTOBER 6,2006
THE Daily Crossword
Edited by Wayne
Robert
Williams
ACROSS 1 Chasten 10 Burning 15 Suction device 16 Flat breads 17 Declarative
Boondocks Aaron McGruder
courtroom statement
THIS ASSIGNMENT toS EXPRESS YOUR FRUSTRATION. YOUR OUTRAGE. YOUR
rUSE
V
ALIENATION,'
19 Actress Lamarr
20 Arbuckle of Hollywood
J
21 Hook’s
underling
22 Missive from a CEO 23 Comes In 25 Gas name 29 On the Indian 30 Hood's arms 34 Nabokov novel 37 Interrogatory sound-check
statement
39 Ave. prossers 40 Raise some eyebrows 41 Lambaste
42 Wee 43 Of cordage 46 Cut with acid 49 Liplnskl jump 50 Spud 52 Untidy diner 56 Exclamatory
ilbert Scott Adams 6
E
c
o o o
THIS T-SHIRT GOES TO TED FOR HIS WORK ON THE
E
YOUR UJORK UJAS TERRIBLE. YOU'RE FIRED.
®
CO
i
(0
ALPHA PROJECT.
>.
-Q
i 6 c
8
1
ri
kx—
<
1
1 _L
/L
V T
1
-Q
%
—
g
9
WERE YOU SCARED SHIRTLESS?
9^3/
■D
r
£7
for
ft?r\
'
w
o o
L A
Ly /
IT UJAS FRIGHTENING.
E
E
JL
ballpark
j
Us?
rs^\
P
(idiotL-)
t
Gj
3 Risked getting a ticket 4 In apple-pie
order
04
.JM
bS=R.;,k
9
5
r
5 Anger 6 Social blunder 7 Peppard's TV group 8 Scout's rider 9 Formerly, 10
cv
£*-
TALK-
m?
THTMOP OH/KTT
IN6TO
14 Curvy letters 18 Blot on the
landscape
22 Eyepiece 24 Set theory class
25 Basics 26 Castle’s defense 27 Holds title to 28 Coral islet 29 Oft smelt rodent 31 Jimmy of "Red, Hot and Blue"
32 Uh...excuse me 33 Stephen of "Michael
Collins" 34 Poker payment 35 Murder 36 Cockeyed WNW's Dovetail Must
formerly
Mar. follower
6BBATMICBOB6-
Ms a cusmjop,
ISN'T ITT ITKICKS/ 3KGO, I'M ASSUMING YOU \ jofok r ROCK!
MY
ajhatt
LM,.,ySS.
NO,
46 Wharton book, ■
Frame"
47 Third canonical hour
opposite
48 Dairy product
Newsboy's
shout Type of
scholarship
13 Evaluator
YBAH, LUHBBB'P YOU OPT THAT
YOU
North Woodmere, NY
11 Spanish holiday 12 Knocker's reply
oonesbury Garry Trudeau AMP THAT'S BU/LPTNG 10, AMP THATt? BU/LP/N6 8, ANP MY FAVORITE, W/IP-
Instant Australian nut Like Cheerios Hold on a sec
tennis player
v
g
statement
DOWN 1 Lge. church 2 Late, great
(
O
a
59 60 61 62
51 Start of
a
sphere? 52 Ponzl scheme,
for one
53 Variety of duck? 54 Ken or Lena 55 Utter without thinking
57 Howard or Follett 58 Old name of Tokyo
WUJ!3
The Chronicle
J
j£
People we’d like to see with nothin but a T-shirt on: Not the stupid US Airways rep... what?: Andrew Ryan, Saidi Derek Jeter, mmmmm: Moore, Carolina Editboard goes shirtless, a la 1972: Dingles, Lisa JSimp, obvi: Greg, Lane Greg prefers wifebeaters: Jianghai in the mirror: Jianghai John, Keah...and Weiyi with the Aussie chick: Keah, Jphn Leslie Never felt so beautiful, baby as I do now: with is with Roily C. Miller always you, yooooooou:. Roily
oxTrot Bill Amend LIKE A
YOU LooK
I AM DON IGUAN,
THE REPTIUAN ROMEO.
JASoN, GO AWAY.
YOUNG MAN IN NEED OF TUTELAGE IN THE AMOROUS ARTS.
i
O
WANT TO LEARN HOW TO ATTRACT
WOMEN AND FUES?
SHOULDN'T THAT BE
WHAT'S A DATE
"ATTRACT
WITHOUT
WOMEN
SOME FooD?
LIKE fues"?
I SAID
60 AWAY/
' fO
"
Account Assistants: Desmund Collins, Erin Richardson Advertising Representatives:.. Evelyn Chang, Tiffany Swift Kevin O’Leary Marketing Assistant: Coordinator: Charlie Wain National Advertising Alexandra Beilis, Elena Liotta Creative Services: Susan Zhu Roily Miller Online Archivist: Production Assistant: Brian Williams Roberts, ...Danielle Chelsea Rudisill Business Assistants:
m
Sudoku
Fill in the grid so that every row, every column and every 3x3 box contains the digits 1 through 9. (No number is repeated in any column, row or box.)
WHAT DO YOU SEE?
5 8 3 1 4
1 7 2 8
3 7 2 6
B. liar
C. the perfect spot to place your ad To sponsor the Sudoku puzzle, call the advertising office at 684-3811.
Answer to yesterday’s puzzle
8 9
A.a profile
5
3 4 9 8 6
I9
2 4 1 7 www.sudoku.com
10IFRIDAY, OCTOBER 6.
THE CHRONICLE
2006
Whatcha gonna do with all that cash?
‘3
E—i
The
Black Eyed Peas, a ourselves what we could have genre-bending pop done with all that cash, Oh, the possibilities, music group, hasn’t Would we buy a wider done a lot for the improveversion of a ment of AmeriGOltOricll walkway? can culture, but Maybe. Maybe they have done not. It’s certainly not the one thing with great sucfirst thing that came to cess: Ask thought-provoking rhetorical questions mind; that’s for sure. So, what would we do about topics of little-to-no with it? Gosh, what wouldn't importance. Keeping this in mind, we we do? Not much. But serinotice that the West Campus ously, here are few of the Plaza has brought a lot of things we’d do with 10 milthings to Duke: A year of in- lion bucks: —Buy all (Jie fun houses conveniences, a smattering of student complaints, Keva off East. Wait. Oh, yeah. The juice samples, Of Montreal University already did that. and, of course, a $lO-million The administration is seriously always thinking. price tag. —Cut undergrad tuition And it is because of these by about $1,600 per year. facts and BEP’s Monkey Busi—Pay for all our parking ness album that, in our spare time, we can’t help but ask tickets. .
I think the University understood that if we wanted to he a top-10 law school, we needed to have a top-10 facility. —Thomas Metzloff, head of the law school Building Committee and professor of law, about the school’s expansion efforts. See story page 1.
LETTERS POLICY The Chronicle welcomes submissions in the form of letpurposes of identification, phone numberand local address. Letters should not exceed 325 words. The Chronicle will not publish anonymous or form letters or letters that are promotional in nature. The Chronicle reserves the right to edit letters and guest columns for length, clarity and style and the right to withhold letters based on the discretion of the editorial page editor.
Est. 1905
Direct submissions
tO-
Editorial Page Department 'The Chronicle Box 90858 i Durham, NC 27708 Phone! (919) 684-2663 Fax; (919) 684-4696 E-mail: letters@chronicle.duke.edu
The Chronicle
Inc. 1993
RYAN MCCARTNEY, Editor ANDREW YAFFE, Managing Editor SAIDI CHEN, News Editor ADAM EAGLIN, University Editor IZA WOJCIECHOWSKA, University Editor DAN ENGLANDER, Editorial Page Editor GREG BEATON, Sports Editor JONATHAN ANGIER, GeneralManager JIANGHAI HO, Photography Editor SARAH BALL, featuresEditor SHREYA RAO, City & State Editor JARED MUELLER, City & State Editor JASTEN MCGOWAN, Health & ScienceEditor CAROLINA ASTIGARRAGA, Health & Science Editor WEIYI TAN, Sports Photography Editor MICHAEL MOORE, Sports Managing Editor STEVE VERES, Online Editor LEXI RICHARDS, Recess Editor BAISHIWU, Recess Design Editor ALEX WARR, Recess Managing Editor SARAH KWAK, TowerviewEditor ALEX FANAROFF, TowerviewEditor MICHAEL CHANG, TowerviewPhotography Editor EMILY ROTBERG, Towerview Managing Editor ALEX BROWN, TowerviewManaging Photo Editor MIKE VAN PELT, Supplements Editor LESLIE GRIFFITH, Wire Editor DAVID GRAHAM, WireEditor SEYWARD DARBY, Editorial Page Managing Editor IREM MERTOL, Recess Photography Editor VARUN LELLA, Recess OnlineEditor MEG BOURDILLON, SeniorEditor HOLLEY HORRELL, Senior Editor MINGYANG LIU, SeniorEditor PATRICK BYRNES, Sports SeniorEditor JULIE STOLBERG, Senior Editor LAUREN KOBYLAR2, Sports Senior Editor BARBARA STARBUCK, Production Manager YU-HSIEN HUANG, Supplements Coordinator MARY WEAVER, OperationsManager STEPHANIE RISBON, AdministrativeCoordinator NALINI MILNE, UniversityAd Sales Manager MONICA FRANKLIN, Durham Ad Sales Manager DAWN HALL, Chapel Hill Ad Sales Manager TheChronicleis published by theDuke Student Publishing Company, Inc., a non-profitcorporation independent of Duke University. The opinions expressed in this newspaper are not necessarily those of Duke University, its students, faculty, staff, administration or trustees. Unsigned editorials represent the majority view of the editorialboard. Columns, letters and cartoons represent the views of theauthors. To reach the Editorial Office at 301 Flowers Building, call 684-2663 or fax 684-4696. To reach the Business Office at 103 West Union Building, call 684-3811. To reach the Advertising Office at 101 West Union Building call 684-3811 or fax 684-8295. Visit The Chronicle Online at http-J/www.dukechronide.com. C 2006 The Chronicle, Box 90858, Durham, N.C. 27708. All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced in any form without theprior, written permission of theBusiness Office. Each individ-
ual is entitled to one free copy.
around campus. In every classroom when somebody makes a good point, in the Marketplace when somebody spills his tray, in Perkins when somebody finds his book, in the intramural building when somebody pulls off the trick where you throw one dodgeball up high in the air and the person looks at that ball and then somebody else pegs the guy looking at the arching ball in the nuts, in the Chapel when the preacher is getting particularly righteous, in the frats when somebody shotguns a warm beer, in Larry Moneta’s office whenever he writes the phrase “crimes of opportunity” and in the roundabout in front of the Chapel whenever somebody drives it the wrong way, Crazy
Towel Guy would be there, going nuts in khaki pants and a wife-beater—just keepin’ things classy. —Have the best LDOC EH-VER. —Curb Craven’s explod-
ing-toilet epidemic.
—Take a small nation out lunch. —Bribe an opposing football team to let us win. Or at least score. —Level the playing field. Give free liposuction to anyone that wants it. —Liquid sweetness distribution at Shootah’s. —And last but definitely not least: Buy 10 million Jr. Bacon Cheeseburgers. to
In case you didn’t realize, this is a joke. Have an excellentfall break, and we'll see you Wednesday!
A tear in our fabric
ontherecord
ters to the editor or guest columns. Submissions must include the author’s name, signature, department or class, and for
—More booze. Because there can never be too much booze. —Recruit some more undergraduate language professors. —Buy 666,667 tickets to the “oral bliss” seminar at Frisky Business. Investment in oral sex tutorials has really fallen in recent years. —Paying off the Bostocks to change the way they pronounce their name. Just to save everyone the time and confusion ofBaah-stock. —Commission gold-plated statues for every member of the basketball team... and editorial board. —Provide gatts for everyone living off campus—you know, for protection. —Clone Crazy Towel Guy 600 times and put him all
This
is a tale of two predators. The first is a congressman who befriended teenage pages. He sent them cajoling instant messages asking them to describe their sexual habits, so he could get his jollies. The second is a secretary, who invited a 13-yearold girl from her neighborhood into her car and kissed her. Then she invited the girl up to her apartment, gave her some vodka, took off her underwear and gave her a satin teddy to wear. Then she had sex with the girl, which was interrupted when the girl’s mother called. Then she made the girl masturbate in front of her and taught her some new techniques. The first predator, of course, is Havid DrOOKS hmokc aaVICI Mark Foley, the the new york times Florida congressman. The second predator is a character in Eve Ensler’s play, “The Vagina Monologues.” Foley is now universally reviled. But the Ensler play, which depicts the secretary’s affair with the 13-year-old as a glorious awakening, is revered. In the original version of the play, the under-age girl declares, “I say, if it was a rape, it was a good rape, then, a rape that turned my [vagina] into a kind ofheaven.” When I saw Ensler perform the play several years ago in New York, everyone roared in approval. Ensler has since changed the girl’s age to 16—the age of Foley’s pages—and audiences still embrace the play and that scene at colleges and in theaters around the world. But why is one sexual predator despised and the other celebrated? The first and obvious reason is that male predators are more disturbing than female predators. But the second and more important reason is that they exist in different moral universes. Ensler’s audiences are reacting to the exuberant voice of the young girl, who narrates the scene. They’re embracing—at least in the fantasy world of the theater—a moral code that’s been called expressive individualism. Under this code, the core mission of life is to throw off the shackles of social convention and to embark on a journey of self-discovery. Behavior is not wrong if it feels good and doesn’t hurt anybody else. Sex is not wrong so long as it is done by mutual consent. By the rules of expressive individualism, Ensler’s characters did nothing wrong. They performed an act that was mutually pleasurable and fulfilling. This code dominated cosmopolitan culture during the 1970s and 1980s. When Rep. Gerry Studds ofMassachusetts was censured in 1983 for his relationship with a 17-year-old page, he argued that the sex was
consensual, and he was re-elected several more times But there’s another and older code, and people seem to be returning to this older code to judge Mark Foley. Under this older code, we are defined not by our individual choices but by our social roles. Under this code, when an adult seduces a child, it tears the social fabric that joins all adults and all children. When a congressman flirts with a page, it tears the social trust that undergirds the entire page program. When an adult seduces a teenager, it ruptures the teenager’s bond with his or her family and harms the bonds joining all families. This older code emphasizes not so much individual exploration as social ecology. It’s based on the idea that people are primarily shaped by the moral order around them, which is engraved upon their minds via a million events and habits. Individuals are not defined by their lifestyle preferences but by their social functions as parents, job-holders and citizens, and the way they contribute to the shared moral order. In this view, the social fabric is a precious thing, always in danger. And what Foley, and the character in the Ensler play, did was wrong, consent or no consent, because of the effects op the wider ecology. In discussing the Foley case, the political class, with its unerring instinct for the aspect of any story that will be the least important to average Americans, has shifted attention from Foley’s act to House Speaker Dennis Hastert’s oversight of it. It has fled morality to talk about management. But the real import of the Foley story is Foley’s act itself. In a country filled with parents looking for a
When an adult seduces a child, it tears the social fabric that joins all adults and all children.When a congressman flirts with a page, it tears the social trust that undergirds the entire page program.
way to raise their children in a morally disordered environment, Foley’s act is just one more symptom of a contagious disease. In the long run, the party that benefits from events like the Foley scandal will be the party that defines the core threats to the social fabric, and emerges as the most ardent champion of moral authority. David Brooks is a syndicated columnist for The New York Times. Heis a visiting professor at Duke this semester.
THE CHRONICLE
commentaries
FRIDAY, OCTOBER 6,
2006111
0)J>"
KL\p,
U3e\\ Ws
c 9 Vdcsu^ViK^' na
+Vi& Vo£S>+
P\cc
oe£Ac€v^cV
"HoS X~\ ovO CCtvy\pQM
d^v^oos-tTcs+ed...
letterstotheeditor Roles of athletics and academics should intertwine In their recent guest column, Richard Hain and Fred Nijhout call for a thoughtful debate about the role of athletics on campus. They conclude, “Let the debate begin.” Very well, let’s debate. First, let’s set one rule that would seem to be a given for any honest, open and vigorous debate. Every idea and suggestion shall be taken seriously and discussed. Ideas and suggestions will not be fodder for public humor bordering on ridicule. I refer to the treatment given to Paul Haagen’s Faculty Athletics Associates Program by Hain and Nijhout. Their “humorous” response was shameful. Although they are correct that issues surrounding athletics are much larger than a lack of communication, understanding and communication between all parties is a good, reasonable first step towards addressing the larger issues. Hain and Nijhout state that the Athletics budget has grown at twice the rate of the Arts and Sciences budget. They offer no reasons as to why this might be. Could some donations and gifts be directed specifically to athletics and skew these numbers? Further talk of budget concerns the construction of new athletic buildings and whether or not this money could have been used for academic purposes. They fail to mention the amazing construction that has transformed the Duke campus in the past decade. Among these projects are the Nicholas School of the Environment, CIEMAS, Bostock Library, the Divinity School addition, new dorms and Smart House. Academics would seem to be well represented in new construction projects. Hain and Nijhout state that athletics serve an auxiliary role to academics. This is where I disagree. The role ofacademics and athletics should be intertwined. They ask if the demands we put on student athletes are fair. Life itself is not fair and it is far from ideal. We would all like more time and to have our schedules line up perfectly. They don’t. Student athletes know this. They have volunteered for their way of life and embrace it. I could go on about the teachings of athletics but I will end with one teaching that Duke may need in a greater quantity: Oneness. We work together in order to reach goals we cannot achieve alone. We give of ourselves to achieve a common good. We support our comrades when they fall. I believe this is one of the reasons that the U.S. military academies require athletic participation for their students. For them, working as a group effectively can mean life and death. For us, we become better people through the support we give and receive.
It is time for debate. I would like to see Haagen’s program instituted as well and its reciprocal proposed by Hain and Nijhout. Professors should go to practice and games to understand the student athlete. Coaches should go to class to understand the academics. It’s not a fix. It’s a start.
*cough,* you’d think Duke would build a large enough parking deck to alleviate most or all of its
persistent parking problems.
It’s sad to say, but my ticket is probably nothing compared to what some of you have received here at our school. The irony here is that not only do I get charged for something out of my control, but I Travis Nesbit don’t even get back the fifty cents I wasted on their Engineering ’96 f—ed up meter.
My fifty cents
“Appeal Note Code: Knowingly parking at an inoperable meter or pay station is a violation. Judgment
Decision: Call [Parking and Transportation Services] at 684-PARK at time of meter/pay station malfunction. This citation has been upheld by the Appeals Committee. Payment is due upon receipt.” Knowingly parking at an inoperable meter is a violation? Whose responsibility is it to provide working parking meters? And what if that was the only lot one could park in during an emergency, as I had that day? When, not just one, but ALL the meters are broken, is it my personal responsibility to make a judgment call and choose to wait around for Duke Parking rather than attend to a pressing personal matter? This is the most ridiculous citation I have received in my years at Duke. Until the administration fixes or at least attempts to fix the plague that is Duke Parking, this will remain but one small fault in a parking system that is failing, and failing MISERABLY. The shortcoming lies solely on the administration’s end of the stick and we, the community, have to suffer for it. There’s something to be said for bureaucracy, but bureaucracy only serves to piss people off like those polite little perfunctory reminders they send telling you that you’ve just been sacked by the University again. And at the same time they send you the e-mail, they’re already preparing to charge the ticket to your Bursar because they sure as hell know no one is going to pay willingly. So they certainly are a clever bunch. And it’s almost scary how, as I write this letter, I can’t help but feel the all-knowing eye of the administration on my back (just received an email from Duke Parking Services listing the lots open to undergraduates during off hours not to mention where to report equipment malfunctions... ha). As if that would placate me and all the other students wrongfully cited. I wholeheartedly agree with the Sept. 22 letter to the editor written by a Pratt parent whose son had to choose between either missing class or parking in a lot closed for graduate tenting. If not for a lack offunds *cough* BC plaza
Tong Hao Trinity ’O7 Ethics plays critical role in scientific discovery Don’t be fooled by those who formed the group Scientists and Engineers for America about their motivations. They want you to think that they are defending science against those who want to manipulate it for political purposes. Not so. The job of scientists is to make discoveries about our physical world, to investigate what makes it work and how we can use that knowledge to our advantage. Merely having the knowledge, however, does not mean that we should use it however we want. For instance, many scientists claim that by blocking federal dollars for additional stem-cell research, President George W. Bush is rejecting science in favor of ideology. That bit of spin may sound compelling on the surface, but what is lacking in this debate is the glaring role that ethics plays. The decisions we face are not between science and ideology. They are instead all rooted in ethics, with science providing the landscape of possibilities that we can choose from. Those that support stem-cell research believe that the benefits we can derive by potentially finding cures for cancer, alzheimer's and other afflictions makes the research practically irresistible. Opponents, including those who agree with supporters of stem-cell research on its potential benefits, believe that the ethical cost of destroying human embryos outweighs the gains to any cures that are found. In short, science has no values, or at least it shouldn’t. Those who advocate specific scientific policies do so because their ethics dictate that increasing sciendfic knowledge outweighs all or at least many other ethical considerations. Only when scientists admit their hidden ethical assumptions can we correctly place science back in the domain of agnostic discovery, and scientific policy back in the domain of ethical debate. Aaron Hedlund Trinity ’O6
THE CHRONICLE
12 FRIDAY, OCTOBER 6, 2006
Duke Students, Faculty, Staff and Family Members
SAVE 20*
on a complete pair of Eyeglasses.
MARCHON* collection
Payroll Deduction Available for Duke Faculty and Staff Duke Eye Center Location Only
iPod JO gig s229°° M Dvk* Hilmdly Ocmpvlvi Hoit
684-8956 Lower Level, Bryan Center
Department of Duke University Stores®
EYE CARE
SuperOptics 14 Consultant Place 493-3668
684-4012
Main Lobby M-Th 8:30-4:30 F 8:30-4 •
M-Th 9-7, F 9-6, Sat 9-3
06-1235
Duke Eye Center
Northgate Mall 286-7732 M-Th 8-7, F 8-6, Sat 9-6
What do uou craOe7
Let us help. Visit The Chronicle’s menu online for all your dininy options.
www.dukechronicle.com/dgaide
the menu
onZvne/