October 11, 2006

Page 1

Death Penalty An N.C. court

overturns a death sentence, t re anse PAGE 3

and quest!

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Archivist A, The Chi

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The ironiidespea.iks with the _ man who holds Duke's answers, PAGE 3

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Football Duke led by 4at halftime but lost to Alabama, 30-14, Saturday, PAr£ll \

The Chronicled Grad student could be deported Zoning for new Central hits hiccup

Tang spars with prof “ admins over conduct by

David Graham

THE CHRONICLE

Zihui Tang came to Duke in the hopes of getting her Ph.D. in history. Now she is fighting to stay in the country. Tang, who entered the Ph.D. program in Fall 2003, was dismissed by the Department of History in late June, after having been placed on probation. Tang has accused her former advisor, Associate Professor Sucheta Mazumdar, of creating an abusive and exploitative relationship, and said that her probation from the University is retaliation for lodging a complaint. If she is no longer a full-time student at Duke, Tang will lose her visa and be forced to return to China. “My case is very obvious: the advisor took advantage of my foreign status and my gender,” Tang said. “My case also put a lot of graduate and professional students in a situation where they’re scared. Their confidence in the grievance procedure has been rocked.” Tang’s experience has also put the efficacy* and transparency of that procedure under the microscope. Mazumdar, history department officials and Graduate School officials declined to comment for this article, citing the Family Educational Rights and Privacy Act, which prohibits the release of educationalrecords. The Office of Institutional Equity cited similar requirements for confidentiality. Tang’s grievance process began when she lodged a complaint about Mazumdar with then-Director of Graduate Studies Edward Balleisen in May 2005. Since

by

Holley Horreix THE CHRONICLE

The Durham Planning Commission voted four to seven against the University’s rezoning petition for the new Central Campus Tuesday night. The commission’s recommendation will be taken into account when City Council makes its final decision in November or December,

“This is a victory for common sense,” said John Schelp, president of the Old West Durham Neighborhood Association. The application sought to change Central’s zoning from residential to universitycollege—a classification intended to allow universides flexibility in growth while protecting the interests of neighbors. “The requested zoning district is exactly what we developed ages back to cover these universities,” said Vice Chair Deborah Giles, who supported the proposal. Debate over the rezoning proposal centered on plans for commercial spaces. The University offered to limit total retail space to 50,000 sq. ft., with no single space exceeding 20,000 sq. ft. “The University has engaged the

Graduate studentZihui Tang will find out this week if her appeal is granted and she can stay in America. then, her case has made its way up

through the DGS and the associate chair

of the history department to the associate dean and dean of the Graduate School and the Office of Institutional Equity. , It now sits with Provost Peter Lange, whose decision to reconsider her dismissal

The Chronicle spells out the sequence of events that may lead to the deportation of a Chinese student attempting to get a history PhD.

see pg. 6 _

SEE TANG ON PAGE 6

SEE CENTRAL ON PAGE 5

Apex fire has THES ranks Duke 13th in world little effect on International community Duke Adam Eaglin THE CHRONICLE

by

WOJCIECHOWSKA

BY IZA THE CHRONICLE

The approximately 16,000 residents of Apex, N.C., who were evacuated after an explosion at a chemical plant late Thursday night were allowed to return to their homes this weekend. Duke students from Apex who had returned home for fall break said they were largely unaffected by the accident. The hazardous-waste storage facility owned by Environmental Quality Co. caught fire at about 10 p.m. Thursday. Initial reports stated the explosion spewed potentially toxic chlorine gas into the air. “Apex is roughly 18 miles from Durham, and given the wind conditions Bruce Radford Apex town manager

SEE APEX ON PAGE 8

The Times Higher Education Supplement once again included Duke among the top universities in the world, placing the University 13th in its annual global rankings released last week. “It’s always nice to have these surveys and rankings sort of confirm what we know about the quality of our faculty and students,” said John Burness, senior vice president for public affairs and government relations. Duke fell from its spot in last year’s rankings, when it was placed 11th in the world. The change was less dramatic than last year’s, however, when the University rose 41 spots from 2004 to 2005. Despite its slight drop, Duke garnered attention for ranking first in the world in the “Faculty/Student” category, with a perfect score of 100. “The measure of staff-to-student ratio is intended to determine how much attention a student can hope to get at a specific institution, by seeing how well stocked it is with academic brainpower relative to the size of its student body,” said a statement on the THES website. “This is captured by SEE THES ON PAGE

5

rank: Change from last year: Rank among U.S. colleges: Faculty/student score:

100 Faculty/student rank:

Peer review score:

37

i

(the lowest of the top 35 I ranked schools accord- 1 ing to THES, right)

13 -2 10


2

(WEDNESDAY,

THE CHRONICL ,E

OCTOBER 11,2006

Iraqi ammo depot explodes

Chinese agree to punish N. Korea by

Nick Wadhams

THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

UNITED NATIONS The North Korean nuclear crisis settled into diplomatic debate Tuesday, with China agreeing to punishment but not the severe U.S.-backed sanctions that it said would be too crushing for its impoverished communist ally. Scientists and other governments, meanwhile, suggested that Monday’s underground test was a partial failure, producing a smaller blast than planned. The George W. Bush administration asked the U.N. Security Council to impose a partial trade embargo including strict limits on Korea’s profitable weapons ex-

ports and freezing of related financial assets. All imports would be inspected too, to filter out materials that could be made into nuclear, chemical or biological weapons. The United States reiterated that it would not talk with the North Koreans one-on-one, but Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice assured the North that the U.S. would not attack. She rejected a suggestion that Pyongyang may feel it needs nuclear weapons to stave off an Iraq-style U.S. invasion. President Bush, she told CNN, has told “the North Koreans that there is no intention to invade or attack them.So they have that guarantee.... I don’t know what more they want.”

U.S. Ambassador

John Bolton

sounded

upbeat after Tuesday’s round of talks at the Security Council, but said differences remained in advance of Wednesday’s meeting. “Look, we don’t have complete agree-

ment on this yet, that’s hardly a news flash,

but we’re making progress and we’re, I think, at a point we can try and narrow some of the differences we do have,” Bolton said. China, which reacted to Monday’s blast with a strong condemnation but considers North Korea a useful buffer against U.S. forces stationed in South Korea, said it envisioned only a limited package of sanctions—not what the United States and especially Japan were demanding.

Rep. heard Foley complaint in 2001 by

Andrew

Taylor

THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

WASHINGTON Arizona Rep. Jim Kolbe said Tuesday he told the House official in charge of the page program as early as 2001 about Rep. Mark Foley’s “creepy” email to a former page. Kolbe, the only openly gay Republican in Congress, said a former page he had sponsored contacted his office to complain of emails from Foley and that he “passed along” the complaint to Foley, R-Fla., and thenHouse Clerk Jeff Trandahl. Kolbe said he did not take the matter to other lawmakers. Elsewhere on Tuesday, House Speaker

Dennis Hasten, R-IIL, again said his staff page problem with Congressman Foley, aides acted appropriately last fall in hanwas incorrect,” Paul Weyrich wrote in an email commentary on the issue. Boehner, Rdling information on Foley’s conduct. “I didn’t think anybody at any time in Ohio, is the majority leader. “As to Congressman Thomas M. my office did anything wrong,” Hastert said. But he also issued a stern warning: “If Reynolds, the speaker said, Tf he had menthey did cover something up, then they tioned this problem to me, I surely would should not continue to have their jobs.” have taken notice,’” Weyrich added in an The developments unfolded as a promiaccount of a phone conversation with nent conservative quoted Hastert as casting Hasten. Reynolds, R-N.Y, heads the House doubt on claims by two members of the leadRepublican campaign organization. Kolbe spokesperson Korenna Cline said ershipin connection with the page scandal. Hastert “assured me that the statement the complaints from a former page inby Congressman John A. Boehner... that volved e-mails that were not seen by Kolbe, months ago he had told Hastert about the and occurred in 2001 or 2002.

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A fire broke out at an ammunition depot at a U.S. base in southern Baghdad Tuesday night, setting off a series of explosions from detonating tank and artillery shells that shook buildings miles away.There were no immediate reports ofcasualties.

Gunman gave little warning The Amish schoolhouse gunman in Pennsylvania opened fire on his 10 hostages just moments after ordering authorities off the property, giving state troopers no time to try to save the girls, according to investigators and 911 transcripts released Tuesday.

Torre to stay on withYankees Joe Torre will remain as manager of the New York Yankees, finally getting the word from owner George Steinbrenner during a phone conversation Tuesday.The team was unset and eliminated from the playoffs by the Detroit Tigers last weekend.

Fuel heat prices likely to drop Families using natural gas can expect their heating bills to drop about $ll9 this winter.

Those who heat with oil or electricity are likely to see their bills rise. The government issued predictions Tuesday based on its forecast of a mild winter for most ofthe nation. News briefs compiled from wire reports

"When I think over what I have said, I envy dumb people." Seneca


THE CHRONICLE

WEDNESDAY. OCTOBER

N.C. court

CAMPUS COUNCIL

Council to

overturns sentence

host ‘Fridays on the Plaza’

Prof: state increasingly leery of death penalty by

Wenjia Zhang THE CHRONICLE

by

Leslie Griffith THE CHRONICLE

North Carolina critics of the death penalty had reason to celebrate Sept. 30, when a federal court overturned the 13-year-old murder conviction and death sentence ofLevon JuniorJones. Jones was convicted of the 1987 murder of Leamon Grady in 1993, primarily on evidence his ex-girlfriend brought to police three years after the murder. U.S. District Court Judge Terrence Boyle wrote in the decision that Jones’s state-appointed attorneys had represented him so inadequately that the trial could not be deemed fair. Although the judicial system eventually worked in Jones’s favor, certain faculty members and other local figures said the case exposes a process so rife with flaws that a moratorium is the only just solution. “There’s a chance that we may see a moratorium in North Carolina within two years,” Duke Law Professor James Coleman said. “People are concerned about fairness and mistakes, and they’re concerned about race in the death penalty.” Coleman, who chaired the American Bar Association’s Death Penalty Moratorium Implementation Project from 2001 to 2006, noted that although the state Senate approved a moratorium on executions in 2003, the bill failed in the House of Representatives by fewer than 10 votes. He said that although the polls may not reflect it, the public is increasingly leery of the death penalty in North Carolina. “The number of people who in the abstract support the death penalty remains fairly high, but juries are returning fewer SEE DEATH PENALTY ON PAGE 9

11,20061 3

University Archivist Tim Pyatt,Trinity'Bl, spends his days answering questions about Duke trivia.

Archivist digs up dirt on Duke history by

Cameron VanSant THE CHRONICLE

Prospective students wondering if they are distandy related to the Duke family know who to turn to for an answer: University Archivist Tim Pyatt; Trinity ’Bl. Pyatt, who said he gets asked about the genealogy of the University’s founding family more frequendy when admission applications are due, looks into and answers questions about nearly every facet of the school for students, faculty and members of the administration. Pyatt and his staff are responsible for a wide range of historical artifacts, from Duke memorabilia to alumni scrapbooks.

His job goes far beyond research, however. Pyatt’s office contributes to

SEE COUNCIL ON PAGE 8

news releases and presentations, works with documentary filmmakers and responds to media inquiries. Shortly after he started his job in 2002, the February even number-crunching sports network ESPN turned to Pyatt for help about a question pertaining to the history of Duke basketball. “I was like, T’ve finally arrived! SportsCenter wants stats from me,”’ Pyatt said. He explained that his years at Duke have been dynamic both because of the extensive library renovations underway and the changing nature of the archives, much of which is now electronic content. SEE ARCHIVIST ON PAGE 10

LUBI uy

Students will find food, music and alcohol from around the world on the West Campus Plaza this upcoming Friday. Campus Council will kick off its newest program—Fridays on the Plaza—and the International Association will be hosting its annual International Food Fest this week. Performances by student groups—including the Duke Dhamaka Bhangra Team and Dance Black—will be hosted by the International Association. In addition, Campus Council has hired Monopoli, a band from Washington D.C., to perform on the plaza. Food provided by both organizations will be served on the plaza’s elevated grassy dais, organizers said. Fridays on the Plaza is one of Campus Council’s latest projects. The Council will provide food, live music and alcoholic

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Campus Council is starting a program to hold events, including bands, on the West CampusPlaza monthly.


4

[WEDNESDAY,

OCTOBER 11, 2006

THE CHRONICL,E

STRESSIIU' OUT Doctors often use a stress test to determine the severity of blockage in sufferers of coronary heart disease

Nerve device to treat depression TALLAHASSEE, Fla. The electric deviceused to treat epilepsy has won federal approval to treat the estimated 6,000 Americans who suffer from depression so profound that it is resistant to treatment. Now, the device is at the center of a battle for acceptance by doctors, and from insurers and government agencies.

Doughnut maker seeks counsel CHARLOTTE, N.C. Krispy Kreme Doughnuts Inc. faces a host of lawsuits, a criminal investigation and declining sales. Last month, it named Charles A. Blixt,a former executive vice president and general counsel at Reynolds American Inc., as its new general counsel. A week later, the company appointed Andrew J. Schindler, the retired chairman of Reynolds American, to its board of directors. -

Benefits may help canola oil sales BISMARCK, N.D. Canola-producing king North Dakota could see its crop double with the increasing demand for biodiesel fuel and the recent government acknowledgment that canola oil may be good for the heart, growers say. The Food and Drug Administration said canola oil and some foods made with it will be allowed to make the claim that it reduces the risk of coronary heart disease Friday.

Study: Host! ity leads to poor health by

Jasten McGowan

explain the genetic basis for the body’s response to stress. Williams conducts experi-

THE CHRONICLE

Although some have said nice ments among families and indiguys end up in last place, new research suggests they may come viduals in order to better underout on top when it comes to stand what patterns, genetic or behavioral, explain risk of heart their health. Scientists at the University’s disease and other illnesses. Behavioral Medicine Research One major concept that exCenter are now studying genetic plains the role ofbehavior in causbases for stress-induced hostiliing illness is the fight-or-flight, or ty—expressed in the form of acute stress, response, which triganger, aggression or social isolagers chemical reactions that prime tion spurred by distrust. organisms for threats. Williams aims to classify genetic A genetic predisposition for hostility can increase people’s risk bases for enhanced stress responsfor diseases including diabetes, es, which are- expressed as hostility heart disease and obesity, said on the surface level, he said. Redford Williams, professor of beIn recent years, Williams has found not only genetic but also havioral psychiatry at the center. “People with high levels of socioeconomic factors that may hostility are more likely to be deexplain hostile tendencies. pressed, socially isolated and lack People of lower socioeconomsupport in their daily lives,” ic status have increased risk facWilliams said. “Also, levels of betors for stress, including lack of haviors such as smoking, alcohol support, difficult life situations, consumption and even eating and stress at work, Williams said. more are often linked to these “They are people trying hard levels of hostility.” to do a good job but feel like they are not getting rewards,” he said. Although past research findings have supported the theory Williams and Richard Surwit, that stressful environments and professor and vice chairman of lifestyles can damage human the division of medical psycholohealth, Williams hopes to better gy and health sciences, are now

01

WEIYITAN/THE CHRONICLE

A Duke studyhas found thatpeople with hostile tendencies are more likely to be depressed.

studying how the genetic basis for hostility can influence blood glu-

cose levels and contribute to the development of diabetes. “While cardiovascular disease is often used as the major indication of how excessive anger and stress responses can affect us, the full picture is more complex,” Williams said. “We must also remember that stress hormones, for example, lend to your body’s fat storage and blood pressure

responses.”

Their chosen area of study illustrates how psychology has evolved to include the study of genetics, Surwit noted. He said that although current scientists focus on the perils of

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high stress, decades ago scientists connected illnesses to personality types rather than to “detached or broad” explanations such as stress. “[People believed] gastric ulcers were caused by passivity and an inability to express anger, whereas hyperactivity was interpreted as an over-expression of anger,” Surwit said. Williams, who also leads stressmanagement workshops, said techniques for controlling stress can counteract the body’s inclination to hostility. “[Hostility] makes sense when you’re writing that last-minute paper or about to be attacked by a polar bear, but not when you’re in line at the bank,” Williams said.

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CENTRAL from page 1 community, providing top-level administration to meet with stakeholders,” said George Stanziale, principal of HadenStanziale, the landscape architecture and civil engineering firm working on plans for the new Central. Tom Miller, speaking on behalf of neighbors and business owners, said retail

The Durham Planning Commission suggested the City Council deny Duke's plans for Central Campus Tuesday.

oil

space should be restricted to 30,000 sq. ft., with single spaces at 15,000 sq. ft. “We think we’re being pretty liberal,” he said. Jenny Bowman, who is affiliated with Northgate Mall, said because the University is a non-profit organization with different tax laws, on-campus retailers would have an unfair advantage. Another issue was building heights. Neighbors were concerned about one area in the University’s current campus plan that allows structures of up to 120-ft. tall. With the denial of the rezoning proposal, the University is under no obligation to stick to any current compromises. Officials, however, will likely choose not to make any major changes, Stanziale said. “Duke wants to be a good neighbor,” he

explained. University officials will continue to meet with Durham leaders. “We just have to find a place in the middle,” Miller said. “And I think we will.”

eroundu

Freedom of speech debated at Columbia Controversy arose recently on the campus of Columbia University, after a guest speaker was actively stifled by protesters who opposed the anti-immigration message of his presentation. The disruption came in the wake of questions of censorship among the Columbia community, after the president of Iran, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, was invited to speak and then told not to come. Last week, Jim Gilchrist—the head of Minuteman Project, which works to oppose border-crossings by illegal immigrants in Arizona—was invited to speak by a campus Republican group. Protesters stormed the stage during the speech, preventing Gilchrist from continuing.

A number New York leaders have criticized the university for not working harder to prevent censorship on campus. Columbia President Lee Bollinger condemned the Protesters for stifling speech. UNC tuition cap approved by task force A cap on tuition increases was approved Tuesday by a Board of Governors task force for the University of North Carolina system. The full board will review the measure Friday, and if approved, it will allow a tuition increase of 6.5 percent annually for the next four years. The plan was proposed last week by UNC President Erskine Bowles, who said UNC needed to keep a balance between affordability and high-quality education.

THES from page 1 asking universities how many staff and students they have, and dividing one by the other.” Although Burness said he was pleased with Duke’s score, he said he was surprised by its No.-l ranking, citing the existence of other schools with better faculty/student ratios. “I think every ranking I’ve seen has a methodological issue that I don’t think people should take what they see at face value,” Burness said. In addition to using the Faculty/Student score, universities were ranked using a mix of quantitative and qualitative data, including peer review, recruiter review, an international faculty score, an international students score and research quality, THES officials said. Harvard University once again held the top spot in the rankings, but this year two British institutions—Cambridge University and Oxford University—rose to second and third place, respectively. The Massachusetts Institute of Technology—which formerly ranked second—dropped to a fourth-place tie with Yale University. Like many of Duke’s scores in individ-

11,20061 5

ual categories, the University’s peer review score remained relatively consistent, but still markedly lower than that of similar institutions. By comparison, Beijing University—which ranked one place below Duke overall—scored more than 30 points higher in peer review. The University of Chicago (11th), Columbia University (12th) and Cornell University (15th) all scored significandy higher than Duke in peer review. Still, at 39 out of 100, Duke’s score showed an improvement from last year, when it received 36 for its peer review score. Peer review is the largest segment of the rankings—accounting for 40 percent of each school’s total score—and Duke’s low score weakened the impact of other positive scores. Duke remained relatively consistent in other categories as well, including recruiter review, which was added in 2005. The score uses data compiled from several hundred companies worldwide, asking them to rank universities on a basis of their preference of each university’s graduates. The score has proved to be a benefit for Duke in the rankings; with a score of 78, Duke ranked above many other top-15 schools, including Princeton University, Oxford and Columbia.

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THE CHRONICLE

6 WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 11, 2006

TANG from page 1 is anticipated sometime this week. If he refuses to overturn the previous decisions, Tang said she will appeal to President Richard Brodhead, her last recourse. Accusations of abuse In a compendium ofevidence submitted to the provost, Tang outlines the abuses she said Mazumdar committed, citing e-mails in which her former advisor demands a five-page written self-evaluation and selfcriticism and attacks Tang’s alma mater. Tang also alleges Mazumdar forced her to make an appointment with a counseling psychologist and told Tang she was “des-

perate,” “hysterical” and suffering from premenstrual syndrome. In addition, Tang complains of stereotyping against Chinese students. In April 2005, Tang submitted a required annual plan in which she said she would take preliminary examinations the following spring, as is standard.

In the document submitted to Lange, Tang quotes Mazumdar’s response. “Basically, I don’t think any student from China, even one with a far stronger background than yours, and with far fewer writing problems can possibly take their prelims in the third year and pass,” Mazuradar wrote in the e-mail. Tang said she chose not to report prob-

Only 20

lems with Mazumdar until her fourth semester because of legal worries. As an international student, her visa is valid only as long as she is enrolled as a full-time student. Because the University has no other Chinese history professors, she said she worried that dropping Mazumdar as an advisor would mean losing student status. “I had no other options,” Tang said. “[As a foreign student,] I was relatively isolated.” Graduate student response Tang’s case has garnered the attention of the Graduate and Professional Student Council, the Duke Chinese Students and Scholars Association and the History Graduate Students Association, which has sent a letter to Lange calling for a thorough inquiry.

“We’re concerned that she feels her removal might not stem from academic reasons but from retaliation for her complaint,” said Reena Goldthree, a fourth-year graduate student in history and chair of the HGSA. GPSC President Audrey Ellerbee, a fifth-year biomedical engineering student, supports an inquiry, but cautioned against hasty judgment. “It’s always unnerving [when a student is dismissed],” she said. “It always seems like it must have been unfair, like something must have gone wrong in the system, but we’re not close to the details. We’ve only heard what Zihui has presented. At some point, you have to defer to the people in the field.”

more

Jing Huang, a second-year graduate student in civil and environmental engineering, is heading an effort by the DCSSA to support Tang’s appeal. Huang said he is not optimistic about her chances. “People care about Duke basketball, they care about how the lacrosse case reflects on the school,” Huang said. “But people don’t care about international students.” Tang’s situation has exposed the opacity surrounding grievance procedures, graduate student leaders said. “There aren’t clearly defined policies about how to express concerns with advisors, and students often don’t know where to turn when they have problems,” Goldthree said. Tang added that the grievance system is biased toward the protection of faculty.

Tang also disputes critiques of her English abilities, citing her scores on the Test of English as a Foreign Language and the Graduate Record Examination, both of which exceeded departmental requirements. In an e-mail, Rhonda Jones, an instructor at the Center for Documentary Studies who taught Tang, supported Tang’s defense ofher language abilities. “I found her to be a diligent student who was quite competent in expressing herself both orally and in written communication,” she wrote. Tang added that the workload Mazumdar assigned her violated the Federal Immigrant Law’s stipulations regarding the maximum workload for international students. Cultural differences sometimes lead to

“We have some guidelines, but if you really want to do somethingaccording to these procedures, it’s a bad idea [to complain] if you want to continue working here,” she said. “To me, it’s just window dressing.”

misunderstandings, Ellerbee said

-

Tang defends her record A probationary letter datedJune 27,2005 states that Tang’s academic probation is a result of her limited English proficiency, her inability as assessed by Mazumdar to pass preliminary exams, questions about her research skills and the lack of an advisor. Tang said her grades, however, have consistently been between ‘A’ and ‘B’-minus—or the Graduate School equivalents of‘E’ to ‘Gminus. She has a 3.49 grade point average.

“There is a lot of miscommunication,

not intentional misuse of international

students by professors,” Ellerbee said. “There might be stereotypes about how much a student is willing to work outside of class.” Tang said she arrived at Duke eager to learn but she has suffered humiliation and lack ofacademic support and training since her arrival at the University. “To be honest, I do wish I have the opportunity to complete my dissertation project,” she said. “But I don’t think there’s a friendly learning environment for me here.” Holley Hanellcontributed to this story. jrodssea

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THE CHRONICLE

OCTOBER 11,2006

COUNCIL from page 3 beverages on the plaza every second Fri-

day of the month, members said, adding that quadrangle councils will host barbeques in their respective quads every third Friday of the month. Campus Council President Jay Ganatra, a senior, said the majority of the social scene on campus is centered around selective living groups because they have the resources to organize large parties. “There is a void of independent large social events on campus,” he said. “We’re the one group that really has the ability to do programs like this on a consistent basis. We can fill [the void] and we should fill it.” Junior Fiona O’Sullivan, Campus Council communications coordinator, said the event will allow students to socialize with .

A fire at an Apex, N.C., facility caused the evacuation of more than 16,000Apex residents Thursday.

APEX from page 1 and the rain and the distance, the fire never posed a serious threat to students or the Duke community,” said David Jarmul, associate vice president for news and communication. The fire was mostly-contained Friday and was extinguished Saturday. Investigators are still looking into what caused die accident As of Friday, 18 people were hospitalized. Several students from Apex said city authorities did not communicate well with the residents who were asked to evacuate. “If [the burning materials] had been dangerous, then it would have been a bad thing because they didn’t do a good job of evacuating people and making sure everyone was safe,” said freshman Chris Hoersting, whose family was evacuated before he returned home for break Saturday. Residents were allowed to return Saturday morning after the air and water were tested for safety, The Associated Press reported. “The fact that there was rain at the time is likely to have scrubbed the air clean more quickly than if it had

been dry and windy,” said Richard Anderson, assistant professor of environmental sciences and policy. At least three lawsuits have been filed against EQ since the explosion, although company officials told the AP Monday that they committed no wrongdoing. Lawyers are pursuing litigation involving personal injury, property damage and business interruption, according to a website established for chemical fire victims by Parker and Waichman, LLP. Apex residents said the situation now appears to be under control. “It was a little off-putting to see Apex on every major news agency,” said junior Chris Hopper, whose family lives in Apex but did not have to evacuate. “My sister was upset she didn’t have school off on Friday, but things are returning back to normal.” Duke officials said they are not aware ofany intentions the University may have to assist families in Apex. “Although we were watching the situation very closely, it didn’t have a direct impact on Duke,” Jarmul said. “I don’t think we’re doing anything to help.” Saidi Chen contributed to this article.

people they might not normally see around campus. “Students probably won’t start walking up to random people and talking to them,” she said. “But you can hang out with people you want to hang out with but haven’t had time to. Hopefully it can bring people together that way,” O’Sullivan added. Ganatra said if the afternoon programming is successful, he hopes to extend it to Friday nights. “Hopefully at some point we can make the events on Friday nights and rival what goes on off campus,” he said. “It’s something we’ve been meaning to do and people have wanted us to do and we’re delivering now.” At the International Food Fest —which started last year—cultural groups will showcase samples of their traditional cuisines. “It allows the domestic students to see that there is a lot of [cultural] representation at Duke,” said InternationalAssociation President Yubo Gong, a senior.

“It will be more of a tasting event, allowing students to experience a wide variety of things,” he added. Gong said between 15 to 20 different cultural groups will participate this year. Unlike last year’s event, where a $5 cover fee was charged, students will be able to enjoy the event for free this year, Gong said. The combination of the two events was finalized last Thursday, O’Sullivan said. “We basically decided last minute to combine the two events,” Gong said. “There’s a purpose to it—we can share the resources and the crowd.” O’Sullivan said the collaboration of the two events will help bring more students to the plaza. “It will bring a more diverse group of people together,” she said. Gong added that Fridays on the Plaza will help attract more students to the International Food Fest. “Beer on the quad will bring a different audience than the International Food Fest,” he said. “This collaboration will give students more of an opportunity to be exposed to us.” The only possible problem Gong said he foresees is being overshadowed by Campus Council, which he said has a higher profile on campus than the International Association. “I don’t think it’s a real problem,” Gong said. “Everyone has something to gain from this very diverse experience.” Leaders from both organizations expressed an interest in continuing the collaboration. “In the future, if this works out, we will work further on a preemptive basis to make [the events] more integrated,” Gong said. O’Sullivan said if the International Association approaches Campus Council next year to collaborate, the Council would be happy to do so.

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THE CHRONICLE

WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 11, 2006 9

DEATH PENALTY f

shirt during the trial but also believed he was receiving signals from Oprah Winfrey and Dan Rather through his television. death sentences,” Coleman said. “The public is conBecause LeGrande represented himself originally, his vinced that we are making mistakes, and that translates current attorneys cannot argue that the case should be into the jury decisions.” dropped because of poor representation. Ken Rose, an attorney with the Center for Death In addition, Coleman explained, they are forbidden Penalty Litigation in Durham, represented Jones in his from bringing up any legal issues LeGrande did not origappeal. Rose said a small majoriinally raise by a rule called ty statewide do support the death procedural default, which penalty, but about 60 percent of forbids raising new issues people would also support a “Christians worship a savior post-conviction. moratorium while the system is Others pursue a moratowho died by examined and any systematic judicial murder.... rium on the death penalty flaws are eliminated from a different direction. It’s pretty clear to us that we’re “There are mistakes made, Stanley Hauerwas, profesmistakes that are fundamental to on the other side of that.” sor of theological ethics at the fairness of the case,” said the Divinity School, is a Stanley Hauerwas member Rose, adding that a nationwide of People of Faith study a few years ago found that Professor, Duke Divinity School Against the Death Penalty, two-thirds of capital convictions an interfaith organization and sentences are overturned. that operates primarily Coleman is now assisting, but not representing, Guy across the South to mobilize faith communities against LeGrande, who was sentenced to death in 1996 for the capital punishment. murder of Ellen Munford in Stanly County, N.C. He has also testified recently on the behalf of stuLeGrande is appealing to Governor Michael Easley for dents arrested for trespassing while protesting the death clemency in a final bid to stay his execution after the U.S. penalty. Supreme Court declined to review the case last week. “Christians worship a savior who died by judicial murLeGrande was persuaded to shoot Munford by her der,” Hauerwas said. “It’s pretty dear to us that we’re on husband Tommy Munford, who provided LeGrande the other side of that.” with a gun, ammunition and a ride to the planned Hauerwas said his opposition to capital punishment murder site. was rooted not only in theology but also in the “sheer Whereas LeGrande, who is black, was sentenced to injustice of how the death penalty is enacted.” He death by an all-white jury, Munford struck a deal to tesnoted that legislators are far more receptive to the tify against LeGrande and received a life sentence. practical issues of bias and error than theological or Coleman saidLeGrande’s case is particularly challengethical concerns. ing because he chose to represent himself in the trial. Stephen Dear, executive director of People of Faith “It became clear as soon as the trial started that he was Against the Death Penalty, said opponents of the death not competent to do this, but at that point the court did penalty have made significant inroads in the state, innot revisit the issue,” Coleman said, noting that cluding the abolition of capital punishment for the LeGrande is mentally ill. mentally ill and improvements to the system’s accuracy “He was offensive to the jury, he didn’t know what he and fairness. was doing—there was no question he was going to be “When I started here in 19971 thought it was going to sentenced to death,” Coleman added. be a very difficult road ahead, and I’m so glad that I was Rose said LeGrande not only wore a Superman T- very wrong,” Dear said. ,o m

pages

Trespasser arrested in hospital Duke University Police Department officers stopped a man who was acting suspiciously in the Emergency Department Oct. 3 around 9:30 p.m. Michael Goldston, 25, of Durham was arrested for 2nd Degree Trespassing. He had previously been banned from Duke property. DUPD officers discovered that he had been out on bond for a charge of Ist Degree Murder that occurred three years ago. Goldston received a $l,OOO secure bond and a court date of Nov. 17. Coin thief banned from campus A Duke security officer found a man stealing coins from the fountain in the main lobby of Duke Hospital Oct. 3 around 1 a.m. Police officers made the man put the money back and banned him from campus. Car reported vandalized by angry ex-girlfriend Around 10:38 p.m. Oct. 3, a student reported that an ex-girlfriend damaged his car by scratching words in the paint near the Yoh Football Building.

Parking permit pilfered An employee reported around 11 a.m. Oct. 3 that he had parked his Duke golf cart at 1:00 p.m. in the Wannamaker fire lane and left it unsecure. When he returned at 1:30 p.m., the parking permit was missing. Electronics reported missing from car An employee reported Oct. 4 that she had parked her car at 8:30 a.m. in the Carolina Avenue parking lot next to the woods. When she returned at 4:30 p.m. she discovered that someone had broken a window and stolen her Pioneer CD player, two amplifiers and two speakers. Camera stolen on East Campus A woman reported Oct. 5 that she left her bike messenger bag containing a Pentax 35mm camera and orange and brown camera strap near the large columns at the East Duke Building around 5:00 p.m. Sept. 30. When she returned for the bag three hours later, it was gone.

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ARCHIVIST from page 3 For example, Pyatt said, his office is working with the Graduate School to en-

courage students to submit their dissertations electronically. “It’s been an interesting time to be working at the library because so much is being transformed,” he said. It is fitting that Pyatt is so deeply involved with Duke’s history. His father and wife are both graduates of the University, and his daughter, Laura, is currently a senior. While earning a degree in history at Duke, Pyatt was drawn to the University’s libraries. He got his start in the music library and then worked for the Rare Book Department his junior year. “I always thought I would want to come back to the library at Duke,” he said. After earning his degree in library sci-

THE CHRONICLE

ence at North Carolina Central University and then working at the University of Oregon, the University of Maryland and the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Pyatt got his chance to return to his alma mater. “It’s been a good fit for me and hopefully a good fit for Duke,” he said ofhis experience as the archivist. Most recendy, Pyatt has been working on a Duke history display in the Gothic Reading Room in Perkins Library, a project that will be completed by the end of the semester. “It’s been one of the most gratifying things I’ve done,” he said. A large portion of the project, which addresses topics from the history of the Blue Devil mascot to the desegregation of the University, is already on display in the Gothic Reading Room. “We see this- room as becoming a real University history destination,” Pyatt said. Tim Pyatt,Trinity 'Bl, hasreturned to Duke after getting a degree in library science at NorthCarolina Central.

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NOTICE OF A COMBINED PUBLIC HEARING FOR THE WIDENING OF NC 55 (ALSTON AVENUE), FROM NC 147 (I.L. “BUCK” DEAN FREEWAY) TO NC 98 (HOLLOWAY STREET) WBS No. 34915.1.1

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Durham County

The North Carolina Department of Transportation will hold a PreHearing Open House on November 2, 2006 between the hours of 4;30 p.m. and 7:00 p.m. followed by a Public Hearing at 7:00 p.m. in the Hayti Heritage Center, 804 Old Fayetteville Street, Durham, 27701. NC Department of Transportation representatives will be available in an informal setting during the Pre-Hearing Open House to answer questions and receive comments regarding the proposed transportation improvements to Alston Avenue. Interested citizens may attend the Pre-Hearing Open House at any time during the above mentioned hours. A formal Public Hearing will begin at 7:00 p.m. to present an explanation of the proposed location and design, right of way and relocation process, and to receive questions and/or comments about the -

proposed project. The proposed project will widen NC 55 (Alston Avenue) to a mostly four lane median divided roadway with curb and gutter from NC 147 (I.L. “Buck” Dean Freeway) to US 70 Business/NC 98 (Holloway Street). This project will include sidewalks on both sides of the roadway and wide outside lanes to accommodate bicycles. Improvements are needed to reduce congestion and improve safety along Alston Avenue between NC 147 and US 70 Business/NC 98. Additional right of way will be required to accommodate the proposed improvements. A map setting forth the alternatives under consideration for the project and a copy of the environmental documentEnvironmental Assessment /EAI are available for public review at: the City of Durham Transportation Division, 101 City Hall Plaza, 4th Floor, Durham, 27701; the NCDOT Highway Division -

Office. 2612 North Duke Street, Durham, 27704, and the Durham County Main Library, 300 North Roxboro Street Durham, 27701. Anyone desiring additional information may contact Kimberly Hinton, Human Environment Unit at 1583 Mail Service Center, Raleigh, NC 27699, by phone (919) 715-1595, or by email khinton@dot.state.nc.us. Additional material may be submitted for a period of 15 business days from the date of the hearing.

NCDOT will provide auxiliary aids and services under the

Americans with Disabilities Act for disabled persons who wish to participate in this hearing. Anyone requiring special services should contact Ms. Hinton as early as possible so that arrangements can be made.


October 11,2006 SLOW START

DUKE RALLIES UTE BUT FINISHES 3RD IN DUKE CLASSIC PAGE 14

FIELD HOCKEY

FOOTBALL

MEN'S SOCCER

Duke tops

Blue Devils upset No. 3 Virginia

defending

champs

by by

Stephen Allan THE CHRONICLE

Duke entered its fall break road trip trying to establish itself as a serious national title contender. Mission accomplished. Duke (11-3, DUKE 5 2-2 in the ACC) DREXEL 1 won all three of its games over the long week-j DUKE end despite VILLANOVA 2 slow starts, with the highlight of DUKE 2 the trip coming m a 2-0 victory MARYLAND against defendnational ing champions and No. 1 Maryland Saturday in College Park, Md. “We’ve finally hit our stride,” head coach Beth Bozman said. “We’re where we want to be.” In a rematch of last year’s national championship game, which Maryland (12-1, 3-1) won, 1-0, neither team could manage a shot early on—in the first half both teams managed only one shot. Duke, however, took advantage ofits one shot as Marian Dickinson scored her 14th goal of the year off a deflection at the 6:13 mark. The Blue Devils heated up following halftime, starting out with two consecutive penalty corners. But Duke did not convert and it became a defensive duel for the majority of the half. In the game’s 60th minute, Duke earned its third penalty corner of the half, and Amy Stopford took advantage for her ninth goal of the season. -

~

SEE FIELD HOCKEY ON PAGE

MadelinePerez THE CHRONICLE

14

NENA SANDERSON/THE CHRONICLE

Amy Stopford scored her ninth goal of the season in the Blue Devils'victory over Maryland Saturday.

The Blue Devils captured their biggest win of the season, a 2-1 upset victory over then-No. 3 Virginia Friday, and will hope to carry the momentum into tonight’s matchup with Davidson. With the scored tied 1-1 in the second half against the Cavaliers (11-2, 3-2 in the ACC), junior Joe Germanese took a pass from mid-1 VIRGINIA fielder Michael DUKE 2 Videira in the 57th minute and shot past Virginia goalkeeper Ryan Burke. The tie-breaking score held up to give Duke (8-2-1, 3-1-1) the victory. “All I had to do was take a few steps in and just hit it,” Germanese said. “It was a perfect lay off, and it was a good build up and fortunately it went in.” In the first half, Duke battled against the . *v* wind and a strong Virr ginia offense that outVS. shot the Blue Devils, 73 9 Junior Tim Jepson TONIGHT, 7 p.m. scored the first goal on Koskinen Stadium an intended pass to forward Chris Loftus. Courtesy of a misstep by the Virginia defense, the ball bounced past Burke and into the

wm

T.G.PASCHAL7THE CRIMSON

WHITE

Re'quan Boyette and Duke's resurgent rushing attack were not enough to hold off the Crimson TideSaturday.

Tide surges late, pushes past gritty Duke effort Sean Moroney THE CHRONICLE

by

For the second time this season, the Blue Devils entered halftime with high hopes of pulling off an upset on the road. But like Wake Forest in the second week of the season, Alabama marched back for the win in Tuscaloosa, Ala. Despite having 158 yards rushing in the first halfand a 14DUKE 14 10 lead at the Blue ALABAMA 30 break, the could Devils (0-5) not hang on and fell to Alabama (4-2), 3014, Saturday. “I think it was a good locker room at halftime,” head coach Ted Roof said. “We had been through that at Wake Forest. We had learned from it. I thought our kids came out in the second half ready to play.” Duke still had a chance to steal its first win of the season, trailingjust 16-14 late in the third quarter. As the period was coming to a close, kicker Joe Surgan missed wide right on a 31-yard field goal attempt, which could have given the Blue Devils the lead heading into the final quarter.

Although the Duke defense held tight for most of the fourth quarter, Alabama mounted a nine-play drive that ended with a Jimmy Johns two-yard touchdown run to put Alabama ahead, 23-14, with four minutes remaining. On Duke’s first play on the ensuing drive, a 50-yard Crimson Tide interception return for a touchdown sealed the game for Alabama. “We found away to win, but we didn’t execute the way we should have,” Alabama head coach Mike Shula said. “Duke did all the things that could lead to you getting beat. We tell the players that you’ve got to come to play every week. If you don’t come to play, you put yourself in a position to get beat.” Although the Blue Devils were unable to end their 13-game losing streak—the second longest in Division I-A—they were able to point toward a few positives following the loss. For the first time this season, the rushing game came alive. After gaining negative-21 SEE FOOTBALL ON PAGE

16

net.

The Cavaliers answered back with a

penalty kick by forward Yannick Reyering less than 10 minutes later to send the game into halftime tied at one. SEE M. SOCCER ON PAGE

16

SARA GUERERRO/THE CHRONICLE

JuniorJoe Germanese's goal in the second half Fridayprovided the margin for Duke's upset win.


THE CHRONICLE

12 [WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 11, 2006

WOMEN'S SOCCER

Mistakes derail Duke against No. 2 Tar Heels by

Sean Moroney THE CHRONICLE

The Blue Devils needed a nearly flawless game if they wished to upset North Carolina at Koskinen Stadium Sunday. But mistakes and a minimal offensive attack ended Duke’s hope of picking up its second win in two UNC 'ears a [ainst the 2 Tar Heels No. 0 DUKE (14-1, 6-0 in the ACC) in the Blue Devils’ 3-0 loss. “North Carolina is a very good team” head coach Robbie Church said. “If you make mistakes against them, they are going to punish you for that. And they did.” The Blue Devils will have little time to rebound from the loss as they travel to face another top-10 opponent, No. 9 Wake Forest (12-2-0, 4-1), 7 p.m. Wednesday. Although the Blue Devil offense could not generate many scoring opportunities against VS North Carolina, the defense kept Duke (7-5-1, 3Jstrsm 2) in the game by limiting the Tar Heels t0 onl7 one SUNDAY 7pm Koskinen Stadium goal in the first 60 min utes of play. North Carolina, however, ended a comeback bid by the Blue Devils midway through the second half when it caught Duke’s defense off-guard and knotted two goals in less than a minute. After the young Duke defensive backfield had held off the Tar Heels’s front line for most of the game, UNC was able to penetrate deep into the Blue Devils’ zone.

f '

'

«

SARA GUERERRO/THE CHRONICLE

NorthCarolina'sYael Averbuch's shot deflectsoff the Blue Devil defensivewall for the Tar Heels' first goal Sunday.

Working the ball around the box, senior Elizabeth Guess found freshman Whitney Engen on the backside for the score in the 63rd minute.

On a similar play 44 seconds later, the Tar Heels struck again as another freshman, Tobin Heath, put North Carolina ahead, 3-0.

CONNECT*^ Duke Sto^

Junior goalkeeper Allison Lipsher said the Blue Devils got caught “ball-watching,” and the Tar Heels took advantage of the defensive lapse. A Blue Devil mistake in the first half led to UNO’s first goal. Seven minutes into the game, the referee called a questionable foul, giving UNO a free kick that deflected off the Duke wall in front of the net and bounced into the high corner for the first goal. Senior Darby Kroyer said the Blue Devils could not afford to give North Carolina opportunities like that early in the game, even if the players felt that the call was wrong. Unforced errors throughout the game plagued the offense as well. In the first half, the Blue Devils were unable to work the ball deep into the Tar Heel zone because of seven offside calls. “We were caught offside too often, which was because we were a little eager,” Kroyer said. “We did a lot of really good things, though, but we had problems with the final pass. We just need to learn to stay onsides.” Duke had two late scoring chances but was unable to capitalize as the Tar Heels cleared both balls off the goal line in the final 10 minutes. Church said Sunday he planned to give his players some rest in order to reenergize and refocus themselves before their matchup against the Demon Deacons. Last season, the Blue Devils won at home, 3-0, and carry an eight-game series winning streak into Winston Salem. “Wake will be a totally different game [compared to UNC],” Kroyer said. “We have to be competitive. We need to focus, keep our heads up and move on.”

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THE CHRONICLE

WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 11,

2006113

VOLLEYBALL

Blue Devils complete three-match ACC sweep Katie Riera

our strengths are, and we’re building on those, and any weaknesses that we have The Blue Devils enjoyed their fall break which are few—we’re picking those up too.” with three straight wins over Virginia, VirDuke controlled the match against ginia Tech and Wake Forest to keep their Wake Forest by jumping out to early leads top, undefeated spot in the ACC standings. in each of the games. The Demon Deacons Despite the break, a large home crowd were able to battle back in the second still turned out to cheer on the Blue Devils game, bringing the score to 22-21 at one as Duke toppled Virginia (12-5, 5-3 in the point. But the Blue Devils pulled through ACC), 3-1, and with a 30-26 victory before blowing out 3 swept DUKE Virginia Wake in the third game. Tech (10-7, 44) in Duke started the weekend strong Friday WAKE I Cameron Indoor with a 2-0 game lead over Virginia. When Stadium this weekthe Cavaliers forced a fourth game, the VA.TECH end. Traveling to Duke offense went on a late 12-5 run to capWake Forest (9-7, ture the fourth game, 30-22, and the match. DUKE 5-2) Tuesday, the Moss sent home nine ofher match-high Blue Devils bested nineteen kills in the fourth game, adding a VIRGINIA the Demon Dea- career-high 25 digs for a double-double. DUKE 3 cons—who were With 57 assists on the night, Hausfeld imtied for second in proved to second on Duke’s all-time career the ACC going into the match—in three assists list, finishing the weekend with 3,666 in her two-plus collegiate seasons. straight games for the victory. The Blue Devils kept the momentum “We’re all really excited and to be able to go in and take opponents out of their going to win three straight games from Virgame—it’s not easy,” head coach Jolene ginia Tech Saturday night, each by at least Nagel said. “We were really able to execute a 10-pointmargin. Nagel said the team continues to imtonight to have an effect on Wake.” prove by pushing and competing against With the victory over the Demon Deacons, Duke (14-2, 7-0) remains as the only each other at practice. Duke’s growth and its veteran experience has allowed for the team perfect in conference play. Despite high expectations and holding the top spot Blue Devils to control the tempo of games. “We do have some maturity now on our in the ACC, the Blue Devils said they are team,” focused on their Nagel said. “A year ago, I don’t improving remaining know if that would have been the case, and game as a team. “We’re Duke—they’re already gunning we’d be able to always win those games.But this year, we’ve been able to go back-andfor us—and we’re number one, so doubletime gunning for us,” junior libero Jenny forth with teams, even be down on a few Shull said. “We’re really figuring out what teams, and still be able to come back.” by

THE CHRONICLE

SARA GUERERRO/THE

CHRONICLE

Junior Ali Hausfeld movedinto second place on Duke's all-time assists leaders list against Virginia Friday.

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11,2006

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MEN'S GOLF

Golfers finish 3rd at Duke Classic Greg Beaton THE CHRONICLE

by

Coming off an impressive victory two weeks ago at the Illini Invitational, head coach Rod Myers knew he needed to address the question of expectations with his team before this weekend’s home tournament.

“I told our guys before we started we were going to be dealing with expectations,” Myers said. ‘You never know quite what’s going through their minds. I certainly have certain expectations, but you have to guard against them being unrealistic.” Heeding Myers’ advice, the Blue Devils came out firing Sunday morning at the Washington Duke Golf Club but slipped up as the first round progressed and stood in sixth place after the round. Duke bounced back with strong performances in the second round Sunday afternoon and the third Monday, but the effort fell short as Coastal Carolina ran away with the team tide. The Blue Devils finished in third place at 5-over-par 869—18 shots behind Coastal Carolina and five behind North Carolina. “Coastal Carolina played extremely well,” Myers said. “I don’t think we were ready to shoot the scores they shot to win the tournament. I would have liked to pick up a couple more and get past [North] Carolina, but that didn’t happen either.” After Myers’ pre-toumament talk, Jake Grodzinsky led the Blue Devils out of the gate with four birdies over his first eight holes. But the senior was 8-over par on the final 10 holes—including double and triple bogeys—to finish the round at 4-

-

JAMES

RAZICK/THE CHRONICLE

SophomoreClark Klaasen shot 5-underpar in Sunday's second round to lead Duke to a 4-under team round over-par 76. “That was a big turnaround for us,” Myers said. “Nobody got anything going for us [in the morning]. We played very well in the afternoon.” In Sunday’s second round, Clark Klaasen paced Duke’s charge up the leaderboard with a 5-under-par loop. Grodzinsky bounced back with an evenpar 72, and the Blue Devils finished the second round 4-under par. Klaasen led Duke again Monday, as he and freshman Adam Long—who came into

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the tournament ranked as Golfweek’s No.l

player in the nation—each carded 71s. “He can really knock the flagstick down,” Myers said of Klaasen. “He has really struck the ball well in tournaments so

far.” Duke’s even-par final round was enough to move up to a third-place finish at the Duke Classic, which the Blue Devils had won the last two years. “It was an OK weekend,” Myers said. “The golf course set up difficuldy, and we played pretty well.”

FIELD HOCKEY

™pagen

For the entire game, Maryland got off nine shots to Duke’s four, but the Blue Devils’ team defense held strong, shutting out the Terrapins. “It was a complete team effort,” Bozman said. “Everyone gave 100 percent, and it led to a win.” After the win over Maryland, the Blue Devils travelled to Philadelphia to play No. 15 Villanova (IT3) Monday. Duke got off to a slow start, trailing the Wildcats, 2-0, before Hilary Linton’s second goal of the season in the 32nd minute brought the Blue Devils to within one. “The reality is we had a huge game against Maryland,” Bozman said. “We had a letdown, and we got a little tired.” It didn’t take long for Duke to heat up, however, as it scored three goals in the first 15 minutes of the second half and wound up with six in the period. For the game, the Blue Devils outshot the Wildcats, 29-9, leading to the 7-2 victory. Duke closed out its three-game stretch with a 5-1 win against Drexel (6-8) Tuesday, highlighted by a Dickinson hat trick—her third of the season. The Blue Devils again started slow, managing only a score on a penalty corner by Amy Stopford with no time left in the first half. Fortunately for Duke, Drexel came out equally slow, managing only two shots. Once again, the Blue Devils shot out with a scoring flurry in the second, as Dickinson scored her three goals within the first 15 minutes of the half and Laura Suchoski provided the final goal for Duke at the 60-minute mark. The successful road trip bumped the Blue Devils up to No. 4 in the national rankings, behind Maryland, Wake Forest and Old Dominion.

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16[WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 11,2006

FOOTBALL

WOMEN'S GOLF

f,om page 11

yards against Virginia the week before, Duke busted out for a season-high 201 yards rushing Saturday. The ground game included the implementation of the option, led by running back-tumed-quarterback Clifford Harris. “We have guys healthy and made some yardage after contact,” Roof said. “The offensive line is developing and has to continue to get better. We have to have some success running the ball to win games, and this was first time we had sustained success.” On the other side of the ball, the defense stepped up, limiting Alabama to 17 rushing yards in the first half. The second half, however, was not as successful for the defense, which gave up 117 yards and two

long scoring drives that led to touchdowns. “I don’t think the defense let up at all,” nose guard Vince Oghobaase said. “It wasn’t a matter of them wearing us down or getting tired. It was a matter ofbusted assignments, and people not being in the right spot when the play was called.” Although the Blue Devils walked away from Alabama feeling that they could compete against the elite of college football, problems with turnovers and in the passing game continue to plague the team. The Blue Devils will need to build on last week’s success and amend their offensive miscues if they wish to upset Florida State Saturday. “We’re not satisfied,” running back Re’quan Boyette said. “We came out and gave them a hell of a game, but we didn’t win. So we heed to carry that motivation into Florida State on Saturday.”

JAMES RAZICK/THE CHRONICLE

Sophomore JennieLee was theindividual leader after two rounds, but she finished in third place overall.

Blue Devils place 3rd after scoring mishap by

Michael Moore THE CHRONICLE

It was a mistake in the clubhouse rather than on the course that cost Duke its 10th straight Tar Heel Invitational title. The Blue Devils finished, third in the tournament despite tying for the best team round with their final round 292. Following her second round, freshman Alison Whitaker signed for a 77, when she in fact shot a 78. The error disqualified her round, and the Blue Devils were forced to count junior Jennifer Pandolfi’s careerworst round of 86 toward the team score. The mistake put Duke 12 strokes behind eventual winner Vanderbilt when they should have been four strokes back.

The Blue Devils’ strong third round allowed them to gain six strokes on the Commodores, but the deficit was too much for Duke to overcome. “Obviously, we are not playing the kind of golf that we will eventually be playing,” head coach Dan Brooks said. “The nature ofany sport is you cannot play the best all the time. The important thing is to recognize when you are doing things right, and I believe we are.” Sophomore Jennie Lee led the Blue Devils with three consecutive even-par rounds, good enough for third place individually. Sophomore Amanda Blumenherst finished fourth overall after firing a tournament-low 69 Sunday.

T.G. PASCHAL/THE CRIMSON WHITE

Senior cornerback Deonto McCormick breaks up a pass in theBlue Devils' 30-14 loss to Alabama Saturday.

M. SOCCER from page 11 The victory gave Duke head coach John Rennie his 389th win, pushing him past Clemson’s I.M. Ibrahim as the ACC leader in all-time wins. “I’ve had a lot of great players and great assistant coaches,” Rennie said. “Over the years, that adds up to winning a lot of games.” The victory moved the Blue Devils up two spots to No. 4

in the national rankings and into a tie with Maryland atop the ACC standings. Germanese was named ACC Player of the Week following his game-winning shot. The win over the Cavaliers also continued Duke’s im-

proved defensive effort. The Blue Devils have given up just 11 goals in their first 11 games of year, as opposed to 15 in the same stretch last season. They also held Virginia to just two shots in the second half Friday. “Virginia is a great team and very well coached, so shutting them down with their plethora of stars was a great accomplishment for us,” Papadakis said. With the win behind them, the Blue Devils must now focus on defeating Davidson (5-9-0) tonight at 7 p.m. at Koskinen Stadium. Although the Wildcats has lost five of its last six contests, Rennie said the team’s losing record does not reflect the Wildcats’ ability on the field. “They play probably one of the toughest schedules in the country,” Rennie said. “They’re very hard to score on.” Davidson has experienced a number ofclose losses, including three overtime defeats. The Wildcats are also familiar with ACC competition, losing a 1-0 heartbreaker to Virginia earlier in the season by a penalty kick and tying North Carolina, 1-1, in a preseason exhibition. “They’ve lost five games by one goal or less and play a very difficult schedule,” Papadakis said. “We’re going to need our best effort to beat them.” The Blue Devils hope part of that effort will be an improved offensive performance. Duke managed just four shots on goal against Virginia, but the team thinks the improved defense will open up more attacking opportunities. “I think we’re going to start getting a lot more chances, especially down the stretch when the field opens up a little bit,” Germanese said. “I think the more we move the ball, the better we play the possession.”


the chronicle

WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 11, 2006 117

THE Daily Crossword

Edited by Wayne Robert Williams

ACROSS 1 Witticism 5 Lacks 10 Brainstorm 14 Citrus hybrid 15 Really detest 16 Skye caps 17 Hired thug 18 Use a loom 19 The like 20 Hit by the Left Banke 23 First gear 25 Philosophical

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Our Fall Breaks, 5 words or fewer: No tickey, no laundry!: The Library was closed: Wasn’t this parents’ weekend?: Bed, Central, salmon, boxers, couch You got the breakfast burrito?: Rain ain’t gonna stop boozin’: Brandeis is a dump: The sky... was orange, dude: Roily stalked Common Ground:

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18|WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 11, 2006

THE CHRONICL.E

Protesting violence

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and its student organizations dents and faculty were vocal for not backing down when it in their opposition to him, comes to bringing controver- but the political discord captured on tape. That was the scene at Co- sial speakers to campus and never escalated to violence. lumbia for acknowledging, as many The year before, President University members of the Richard Brodhead and other Wednesday night ©QltONfll when protesters Columbia corn- members of the administrarushed the stage munity did, that tion were not afraid to host to speak out against the they are essential to teaching the Palestinian Solidarity students both acceptance of Movement conference. founder of the Minutemen an anti-immigration group. and ways to deal with differLess than two years ago, at ing ideas. But it was hardly the environPresident Richard Brodment that promotes conThe sight at Columbia, for head’s address to the understructive dialogue and open a number of reasons, was vastgraduate community, activists ly different than the one at for a living wage for Duke Andebate. In recent years, Duke has Duke last fall when David gelica employees unfurled a Horowitz, a controversial conseen its fair share of protestbanner of protest on stage. servative author, spoke in But the action did not erupt ers and heated exchange. Through it all, the University Page Auditorium. The Oct. 4 into chaos. Instead, President events at Columbia shed light has demonstrated a comBrodhead was able to continmendable history of supporton Duke’s exemplary track ue with his address. Another contentious caming freedom of speech of record in promoting healthy pus visit came after the speakers brought in by the campus debate. school and by student groups. When Horowitz came to lacrosse scandal broke and the We should praise Duke speak last year, some stu- New Black Panther Party for kick. Ripped signs, Yelling and chaos. All

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ontl erecord To be honest, I do wish I have the opportunity to complete my dissertation project.... But I don’t think there’s a friendly learning environment for me here.

LETTERS POLICY The Chronicle welcomes submissions in the form of letcolumns. Submissions must include the author’s name, signamre, department or class, and for purposes ofidentificadon, phone number and local address. not exceeds2s words. 1 he 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. lers to the editor or guest

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TheChronicle is published by the Duke Student Publishing Company, Inc., a non-profitcorporation independentof 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 httpJ/www.dukechronide.com.

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demonstrations of the sort that occured on Columbia’s campus. The fact of the matter remains, however, that non-violent protest is desirable on the college campus, and that this sort of demonstration entails both respect and restraint. Universities and their students are in a unique position to engage each other in a true marketplace of ideas. Duke and other colleges can create the scene for such discussion, but it is ultimately up to students and administrators to respect and utilize this environment to further their own educations. Duke students and Duke administrators, especially in recent years, have done a commendable job in doing so. No kicks and ripped signs...

Rediscovering the Earth Dear

Earth, You might remember me. I went away for a little while but stopped by for a.summer before dropping off your face again sometime in late August. You’ll be glad to hear I left campus for Fall Break this past weekend, so I was inadvertently exposed to your brothers and sisthe eleters, m ments: wind chill, news, world urban life—all those things I usujane chong ally don’t have to the short shot make much -of an to effort avoid. I was stuck in line at the airport when I first realized you’ve gone through substantial changes while I was away. My curling iron set off a bomb alert, so I had plenty of time to think about your new look, as I stood off to the side with a pack of girls getting frisked for smuggling mascara past security. For starters, you’re not as green as you once were. I ordered a slice of spinach pizza on the way to my gate, but it came out as naked as a minority at a security checkpoint. Turns out unlike most of the Great Hall’s food failures, the disappearance of spinach from the make-your-own salad bar was not strictly a Duke Dining disaster. As is to be expected with most other kinds of calamities, we can stick it to the state ofCalifornia. Speaking of the miserable state of celebrity-status politicians, conditions seem particularly bleak for the latest of disgraced Republicans. I found a newspaper stand that offered only two things: kid-sized candy bars and front-page Foley coverage, a combination that might have cracked a smile out of Foley himself. He may be in deep for his dirty chats with teenage pages, but it’s not like the former co-chairman of the Congressional Missing and Exploited Children’s Caucus can’t appreciate a little irony. Sitting in a bucket seat, filling in a crossword on the recent compassionate conservative crises, I made an earth-shattering discovery. I don’t mean to use your name in vain. But it would be easy for the Republicans to win back the religious right and moral middle, if they agreed to weed out everyone whose last name ends in “y”—as in Foley, Ney, DeLay. The pattern of corruption is no coincidence; we must acknowledge here the workings of something greater than ourselves. A higher power is perhaps what Bush meant to invoke when he likened Iraq to a “comma” in that ■

—Zihui Tang, a Ph.D. candidate in the history department, on her quest to stay in the States and continue studying at Duke. See story page ,1.

Self Defense rallied outside the West Campus gates. Although these visits raised more than a few eyebrows at the time, the University stood firm in its commitment to provide members of the Duke community with adequate security, both protecting students and enabling free speech. And it was this type of security that seemed to be lacking—and very much needed—at Columbia last week. Granted, Columbia’s situation was somewhat different from Duke’s prior to the PSM conference, the Horowitz talk or the New Black Panther Party visit. The University has had a good record in recent years, but it also hasn’t encountered demonstrators and

run-on sentence we call history. There’s speculation that the heartless simile was actually an attempt to echo the mantra of the United Church of Christ/ wacky Gracie Allen: “Never place a period where God has placed a comma.” The connection is really not too much of a stretch—though I’m personally more inclined to believe the comma quote was designed to quash rumors that his thoughts mostly consist of question marks. But in any case, his critics need to give the guy a break. Ifhistory tells us anything, our president can’t be held accountable for his grammar or his wild metaphors. A Bushism is kind oflike an overbooked flight; it’s nobody’s fault, just everybody’s problem. I felt a little queasy at this point in heavy contemplation, but there’s no jumping off the plane when it starts rolling down the runway. By the time I finally thought to try perspective and look outside my window, the plane was well above the clouds and hitting turbulence. I imagine this is what it’s like for those Republicans who have only just noticed how well the White House handles national security. Jealous of Iraq’s updated status as a breathy punctuation mark, North Korea has called it quits as unnamed middle child on Bush’s axis ofevil. Apparently, it’s got missiles and west coast range, which means at best an effective solution for our infected spinach greens.

I was stuck in line at the airport when I first realized you’ve gone

through substantial changes while I was away. The good news is I’m back on campus now; in a few weeks, I’ll have forgotten all about linguistic decline, moral decay, nuclear destruction, the Republican Party, etc. College is about getting away from the world as a means for preparing for it. Before I voluntarily begin another chapter in protective captivity, I wanted to make sure you intend to stick it out, at least until graduation forces me back down to earth. It seems safe to say it looks like hell over there, but you won’t find me complaining too loudly for a few more years. Just see what you can do about the spinach thing, please; it’s sort of cramping my style. Thanks, Standard Sophomore

Jane Chong is a Trinity sophomore. Her column runs every Wednesday.


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life after Duke

Overland

Park, KANSAS The last time I saw my new home, a modest two-bedroom garden apartment in suburban Washington, D.C., was about a month ago, when the air still rang with the sound of crickets. The closest thing to that out here in the Kansas City hotels is the whir of icemakers and air conditioning, though once in a while you might really hear the tumbleweed roll. 70-hour weeks The haven’t been so rough, I say with hang-dog eyes. It’s not even getting to the office at 4:30 in the morning, every day, sometimes six days a week. It’s the loneliness that sucks the most. That and the gerst awful feeling that’s strange, couraae plagued me every day since leaving Duke: What on earth am I doing with my life? Pardon the narcissism—l hate writing in the first-person. But while I can’t decide completely how I feel, just shy of six months past the Gothic Wonderland, I write in this more personal way out of hope: Life after Duke, I swear to you, is great. It’s what I tell myself a lot, at least, and I do think it’s basically true. But, well, it is hard, too. Very hard. Right now, for reasons unclear to me, I’m a “consultant,” whatever that means, though it seems to entail getting paid more in “glamour” and “experience” than money to sit at a computer and grow fat and blind. Technically, I’m a “junior associate ofprogram management.” And yes, I did major in English. But although the work—which I can’t really talk about in particulars—is rather dull, the people here are all friendly, hard-working and often inspiring. I come to work most days with a smile on my face, and even if it’s sagging somewhat by late afternoon, I still feel lucky to be here. The travel has been equal parts exhilaration and exhaustion. Aside from Kansas, I’ve been in the past three weeks to Arlington, Va.; Columbus, Ohio; Milwaukee,Wis.; and New York City. I really do live out of a suitcase, or, rather, two of them, both falling apart, and a laptop bag. I would have been at Homecoming ifI didn’tfind out a day before it that I had to work. The upcoming itinerary, I hope, will include Berkeley, Calif.; Eugene, Ore.; Boston and maybe Chicago. Two of the directors onsitq here have had heart attacks since we started work. The job for our client involves 24 hours a day of computer programming, farmed out from Kansas to Reston, Va.; Dallas and India, where three-quarters of our 4,000-odd employees work (most of the American 1,000 were also born there). Most days, when I’m not on a conference call or a meeting with the directors or the client, I make reports in Excel and PowerPoint. For some crazy reason, I get to tell the programmers, who are about 10 to 20 years older than me, what I want them to do. Most evenings, when I’m not at work, I choose between dinner and sleep. The former I do not pay for, thanks to a corporate AmEx, but the latter pays for itself. I haven’t really seen much of the sun, since I get to work before dawn and leave after dusk. The rest of the time I sit in a cubicle. (They didn’t show me those on the sell day, seniors.) A good night here is getting a free shot of tequila from the American Bandstand waitress while dining on the company steak. A bad night is the rest of them. Well, not quite: I’ve had a few fun times exploring the town—and I usually fly gratis to visit friends around the country on weekends. But most of the higher-ups here apologize a lot when they see us young folk, and I’ve heard about a dozen times that “this really isn’t the typical project, things really just got out of control this time.” I could go on. Life here is really tough, but the reason I’m writing all this to you is this: I think it’s OK. In fact, most of my friends from Duke are having a tough time too. It’s just a hard thing to do, leaving college —and it’s OK if the door hits you on your way out. Unless you’re a once-in-a-generation superstar, you’re probably going to stumble, at least a little bit. So be ready for it. I have an escape plan: It’s called a dream. I’m sure going to follow mine no matter where I might be at the moment. My biggest piece of advice would be to make sure you don’t ever lose sight ofyours. If you bring the right attitude, too, you can get through just about anything. And let me know if you want a postcard from Kansas City.

andrew

Making Duke perfect: Part I

The

popular trend at Duke is to solve our real and imagined problems with elaborate and esoteric plans and initiatives. These programs are invariably more concerned with being politically correct than being constructive and obscure the real issues,

In an effort to get us on the right track, I am proposing a plan of my own. As our problems are actually much more

uncomplicated

and basic

then

stephen miller r

miller time pretend, this plan will be of unusually broad scope. Its goal will be to make Duke perfect. With a little common sense and a lot of boldness we could truly make our school into a dream institution. I’ve divided the plan into two portions. Part I deals with University policy—which I’ll address in this column—and Part II with student life—which I’ll tackle next time. And now, Part I of my plan: 1. If someone accuses our peers of committing a heinous crime our administration and President must work aggressively to see that their students are given fair, just and ethical treatment and are guaranteed the presumption of innocence, which is (or maybe I should say ought to be) their unassailable right—and never to sacrifice their support for justice in an effort to appease pernicious political agendas. 2. Do not suspend students for sending their friends e-mails referencing American Psycho (For the reason why, see item 1). 3. Enact a students’ bill ofrights that would guarantee every student learning on this campus an education free of political discrimination, partisan indoctrination and politically motivated grading. There is no excuse for a professor using his or her class to engage 'in activism instead of instruction. This is the bedrock of education, yet you can talk to student after student who’s paid S4OK a year only to be inundated by a professor’s political prejudices and not his or her professional expertise. 4. Stop hiring and tenuring radicals whose first cause is politics and not education, who humiliate our school and call into question how seriously we take our academic mission. Last year, three professors organized an effort to have students strip their clothing off at David Horowitz’s speech and continuously disrupt his remarks in violation of explicit University policy. No one in their departments or the administration seemed to care about this disgraceful behavior. 5. Require departments in the course of each

many

year to make a sincere and good faith effort to disburse their funds on panels and events with a mind not just to bring people on one side of the political spectrum but rather to reflect the scholarly debate and diversity on the issues they are addressing. Intellectual pluralism is vital to the University and academic departments and programs cannot be run like political parties, as are, for instance, women’s studies, African and AfricanAmerican studies and cultural anthropology. 6. Reform the Program in Women’s Studies that now seems to be an effort to indoctrinate students in radical feminism (imagine the reaction to a degree-granting Duke program to indoctrinate students in conservatism or monarchism). A proper women’s studies program would study women from all angles, not one. 7. End all racial discrimination in University admissions. So-called affirmative action—which is a system of racial preferences—is not simply misguided. It is a devastating, paternalistic policy endorsed by white liberals more concerned with how they look to their elitist friends than to the well-being of the minorities they claim they want to help. They are not concerned, for instance, that it causes drastically increased dropout rates for black students at elite universities. Affirmative action places a false and pernicious label on every black person in our country as being part of a special class of people needing special assistance. It advances students beyond their levels of academic preparation and, in condescendingly lowering the bar for millions of people, so too lowers motivation and achievement. 8. Use extensive University funding to commemorate Veterans Day every year. Give students the day off and work with student leaders to create programming to honor and pay tribute to the brave warriors who have liberated countless millions and who keep us safe, secure and free. 9. Create an annual University fund of at least $lOO,OOO overseen by a rigorously non-partisan commission for the exclusive purpose of providing student groups with merit-based budgeting for high-profile speakers. The funds’ explicit purpose is to both increase student access to funding (thus bringing more speakers of note to our University) and to help eliminate the partisan bias that handicaps student fundraising efforts. 10. Create a center for the study of free institutions and free societies. For all of the time and energy our University puts into the discredited doctrines of Marxism whose false utopias claimed 100 million lives in the last century—it is shameful that we make no concerted effort to openly study and understand the philosophies that have created history’s most just and prosperous nation and hope for a suffering

world. Stephen Milleris a Trinity senior. His column normalevery other Monday. runs ly

Andrew Gerst, a former managing editor of Towerview, graduated from Trinity in 2006. He now lives and works in Washington, D.C. His column runs every other Wednesday.


20IWEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 11,2006

THE CHRONICLE

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