November 3, 2006

Page 1

New Art The Nasher Museum has received

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Orangutans

A team of Duke researchers visited Borneo to study brain size, PAGE 5

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Officials announce faculty quad plan No selective living groups to be relocated Wenjia Zhang THE CHRONICLE

by

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Many Walltown residents, likeAbura Cain (above), say they are holding off judgmentuntil the trial.

Off East, locals weigh in on Nifong, lax case by

Nate Freeman

THE CHRONICLE

Eight months after the lacrosse scandal first hit the Duke and Durham communities, many students on campus are rallying for the defeat of Durham District Attorney Mike Nifong in the Nov. 7 election. Walltown, a predominandy black neighborhood that lies just out of earshot of chattering freshmen on East Campus,

is steps away when walking but miles away when talking. The community became a focal point of Duke-Durham tensions after three lacrosse players allegedly raped an exotic dancer at a March 13 party. Now, there is still no consensus among Walltown residents about the scandal. “We don’t know the truth,” said Abura Cain, an eight-year resident who operates a

day-care center in Walltown. “The truth is going to come out and that’s what I’m looking for. Some people take it personal. Me, I’m just sitting back and watching things.” Many residents emphasized that community discourse regarding the case has died down since the initial uproar. “Around here nobody really SEE WALLTOWN ON PAGE 6

Officials have confirmed the locations of five new faculty apartments that will be in place by Fall 2007 as part of the West Campus expansion of the faculty-in-residence program. The faculty apartments in Craven, Crowell, Keohane and Kilgo quadrangles and the relocation of the apartment in Few Quadrangle will allow every quad on West to house a faculty in residence, said Eddie Hull, dean of residence life and executive director of housing services. He added that Crowell and Wannamaker are seen administratively as one quad. “This is all really exciting,” he said. A total net loss of approximately 30 to 36 student bed spaces will result from the change, Hull said. Officials said no selective living groups will be relocated. Hull said Residence Life and Housing Services had considered a possible relocation of Alpha Tau Omega fraternity section in Craven Quad in the early planning stages. “We looked... at it again and it didn’t seem to make a whole lot of sense,” Hull explained. ATO president Rob Dehaas, a

junior, said that although the fraternity members did not view the potential move as having any negative consequences, the members are happy to be staying put. “We’ve lived in that secdon for five, six years—I know the underclassmen are really excited to SEE RLHS ON PAGE 9

Currently, two faculty-in-residence

apartments exist on West Campus. Four more will be added by next fall.

Navy midshipmen get Field hockey assistant to kick back at Duke succumbs to cancer by

Rob

Copeland

THE CHRONICLE

Tailgate is always a rowdy party, but if history is any indication, this Saturday

morning will be wilder than ever. That’s because tomorrow’s festivities come before the Duke-Navy football game, when hundreds of

perspectives

straight-laced Naval Academy midshipmen descend on the

University to

cheer

on their team—and also to experience something closer to a traditional college social scene. From a Navy-themed sorority bash to free lodging in a residence hall, students are opening their arms to welcome the boys from Annapolis, Md.—where the rigorous four-year service academy is located. More than 500 midshipmen have volunteered to attend Saturday’s game, said Judy Campbell, a Naval Academy

spokesperson.

Last year, students reported seeing midshipmen enjoying the good life alongside Duke students at on-campus section parties and off-campus clubs. SEE NAVY ON PAGE 7

Greg Beaton THE CHRONICLE

by

Assistant field hockey coach Maria Whitehead lost her battle with brain cancer Wednesday evening. The 25-year old and 2003 graduate of Wake Forest had worked at Duke since February. “She was just an incredible person,” said Jacki Silar, associate athletic director and Duke’s field hockey coach from 1981 to 1995. “Her life was field hockey. She gave so much to whoever touched her. Each of these kids has been touched by her. We’ll never forget her.” Whitehead joined Duke’s field hockey staff last winter after spending three years SPECIAL TO THE CHRONICLE at Louis. She led her 2005 Field hockey assistant coach Maria Whitehead, who as head coach St. SEE WHITEHEAD ON PAGE 14 was 25 years old, passed away Wednesday evening.


2

(FRIDAY,

THE CHRONICLE

NOVEMBER 3, 2006

Charges filed in Calif, wildfire

Bush on a 'save-the-majority' tour by David Espo THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

WASHINGTON President GeorgeW. Bush, campaigner in chief for a party in peril, set out on a rescue mission for embattled candidates in the unlikeliest of places Thursday as Republicans struggled to minimize their losses in next week’s elections. Democrats expressed growing optimism that their long season out of power might soon end. Sen. Chuck Schumer, chairman of the Democratic Senate campaign organization, claimed strong early voting in a long-shot race in Arizona, and said it was “harbinger of a wave” that would benefit his party.

Five days before the election, Democratic strategists said none of their incumbents in either house of Congress were trailing and Republicans did not disagree. The GOP side of the political ledger was far less positive. Strategists already have written off the re-election prospects of incumbent Sens. Rick Santorum in Pennsylvania and Mike DeWine in Ohio, as well as six or more seats in GOP hands in the House. Dozens more Republican lawmakers —powerbrokers and backbenchers, conservatives and moderates —struggled to survive in a campaign shadowed by the war in Iraq and scandal at home. “We’ve been through this before,” Bush —

said in Billings, Mont., projecting confidence as he embarked on his save-the-majority tour. “We will win the Senate and we will win the House.” His itinerary showed it would be a struggle. The pre-election flight plan for Air Force One consisted of areas of the country where Republicans are in trouble— House seats in Colorado, rural Nevada and Kansas, and gubernatorial races in Arkansas, lowa and Nevada, as well as Sen. Conrad Burns’ bid for a fourth Senate term in Montana. Democrats must pick up 15 seats to gain control of the House. Their magic number is six in the Senate.

Authorities on Thursday filed murder and arson charges carrying the death penalty against a man suspected of setting ' :rn California wildfire last week ted five firefighters. The susp> Oyler, 36, was already undt suspicion of setting two otb

Iraqi gunmen kill economic dean BY SAMEER YaCOUB THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

BAGHDAD, Iraq Gunmen killed the Shiite dean of Baghdad University’s school of administration and economics on Thursday—the 155th Iraqi academic murdered in sectarian violence and revenge attacks since the 2003 United States invasion. In another attack against majority Shiites, a motorcycle bomb struck a crowded market in Sadr City, killing seven people and wounding 45, police said, just two days after the United States lifted a military blockade of the

Baghdad district on the orders of Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki. - The rigged motorcycle was left in a section of the Mereidi market that specialized in the sales of secondhand motorbikes and spare parts. The attack raised the total number of people killed or found dead around Iraq on Thursday to 49. Sadr City is a stronghold of the militia, which is loyal to radical anti-U.S. cleric Muqtada al-Sadr. Associated Press Television News footage showed mangled motorbikes and large pools of blood on the ground. Mahdi Army militiamen came to the

scene of the bombing and dispersed a crowd of onlookers for fear of a second blast targeting rescuers and police as has repeatedly been the case in past

bombings.

The U.S. military also confirmed Thursday that a kidnapped soldier was an IraqAmerican man who was married to an Iraqi woman. Maj. Gen. William B. Caldwell identified him as Ahmed Qusai al-Taayie, a 41-year-old reserve soldier. The military spokesman said there was “an ongoing dialogue” in a bid to win the soldier’s release, but he would not say with whom or at what level.

ets anagement I U S T D E Interdisciplinary Program An Certificate at Duke University

***Special Topics Course*** Spring 2007 MMS 195.01 Minority Business Development & Community Reinvestment TTH 10:05-11:20 am. Instructor, Dr. Lucy Reuben Visiting Scholar John Hope Franklin Center -

Course Overview This course focuses upon the development and financing of minority business enterprises (MBEs) as vehicles for wealth creation and community reinvestment. The course will provide historical overviews and contemporary analyses of the unique opportunities and challenges faced by businesses owned and managed by underrepresented minorities (African-Americans, Hispanic-Americans and Native-Americans). The course will include analyses of the roles of minority businesses and community development organizations in community reinvestment, including the impact of the Community Reinvestment Act in promoting the growth of MBEs. The course will include indentification of financing sources for MBE development and community reinvestment. The course will include guest speakers,research papers and team projects.


THE CHRONICLE

FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 3,2006

3

Grad students reach out to New Orleans by

Victoria Ward THE CHRONICLE

Fourteen months after Hurricane Katrina devastated New Orleans, towed cars still remain piled under highways and

abandoned children’s toys populate the Ninth Ward.

Although volunteers rushed down to the Gulf Coast to provide relief shortly after disaster struck, Rob Lalka and Amanda Sheldon said they hope to bring lasting reform to the area. The two first-year masters in public policy students discovered a shared passion for the ravaged city while waiting for Graduate School convocation to begin and decided to work together to effect

policy changes in New Orleans

Their dream came to fruition in the formation of the Duke-New Orleans Post-Katrina Partnership, which sent 11 masters in public policy students to New Orleans for a policy consulting trip in early October. “If there’s anything that history has taught us, long-term changes and reform occur through groups of dedicated individuals over a long period of time, who have the patience and dedication to make it happen, to really put their idealism into action in away that is pragmatic and sustainable, and that’s the model that we’re looking to take on,” Lalka said. After the hurricane struck, Lalka decided to volunteer for the Louisiana AmeriCorps, leaving his investment banking job for the Gulf Coast. “I would be sitting in my cube at Wa-

JIANGHAI

HO/THE CHRONICLE

Petah Coyne, whose installation debuted at Nasher last night, gave a lecture about her piece.

Artist unveils piece Community leaders meet to Nasher audience to maintain 9th St. charm SEE NEW ORLEANS ON PAGE 10

by

Adam Nathan

THE CHRONICLE

by

Yousef AbuGharbieh THE CHRONICLE

KEVIN HWANG/THE CHRONICLE

Asbury Methodist Memorial Church plays host to a meeting Thursday about renovations to 9th street.

Community members, local business owners and city officials discussed the possibilities for rezoning and redeveloping the Ninth Street neighborhood Thursday night at the Asbury Methodist Memorial Church. The meeting, the second in a series of community forums on the topic, focused on concerns about rent, parking and maintaining Ninth Street’s distinctive local character. Steven Gaddis, an architect with Durham Area Designers, opened the meeting by presenting a proposal for the longterm redevelopment of Ninth Street. The plan focuses on restricting building SEE 9TH ST. ON PAGE 6

Members of the Duke and Durham communities gathered at the Nasher Museum of Art Thursday night to celebrate a new installation, marking a milestone in the young history of the museum. The piece, dubbed “Untitled #llll (Little Ed’s Daughter Margaret)” by its creator, Petah Coyne, is the centerpiece of the Nasher’s contemporary art and sculpture collection. The artist, who was in town to debut the installation, spoke to a crowd of roughly 100 about her personal history and Durham’s creative climate. “There’s something incredibly special going on here in Durham—l can feel it as an outsider coming in,” said Coyne, who also served this weekend as the chief juror at the Durham Art Guild’s 52nd Annual Juried Show. “Watch this place, and protect it well.

If you don’t, it will disappear,” she added. The installation itself is designed around a reclaimed statue of St. Francis that Coyne found in an abandoned warehouse. She carefully adorned it with flowers, branches and even taxidermic birds, all covered in a midnight blue wax coating. The statue erratically emits tears, a feature designed to initiate an intensely personal experience with the visitors who happen to see the piece “cry,” she said. Coyne, who disapproves of explanatory wall texts accompanying her art, compared viewing the statue to sight aversion, a technique used by NASA astronomers. “When astronomers study the stars, they don’t look exactly at the star—they look at its edge,” she said. “They follow the edge of the star all the way back to the beginning, and when they start over again, it looks totally different. That’s how sculptures are.” SEE NASHER ON PAGE 7

Cultural AnthropologyPresents....

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.ropology of Violence r Naqvi Course Number WF 11:40-12:55 lines the experience of violence and suffering from a cross-cultural the political and social "creativity" of violence from the perspective counter with the details of everyday life. CA 191R.01 Globalizing Consumer Cultures Instructor: Krisztina Fehervary WF 10:05-11:20

Course Number 7329

This course addresses the global spread of forms of consumer culture and their local appropriations, particularly the phenomenon of a globalizing "middle-class"culture variations of which can be found from Hungary and Argentina to Sweden and Nepal. -

If

CA

2805.01 Cannibalism to Anorexia: Anthropology of Body

Instructor;

Marcia Rego

MW 1:15-2:30

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This is a writing-intensive seminar on the physical body as a locus for social meaning. This course will examine ways in which cross-cultural rituals, procedures and beliefs surrounding the body are shaped by religious and/or political values that prescribe forms of social interaction. CA 280.01 Human Rights Activism Instructor: Robin Kirk

TuTh 4:25-5:40

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This course is an introduction to the foundations and development of the human rights movement. We will explore themes related to mass violence and social conflict, U.S. foreign policy and international humanitarian law, and the challenges of justice and reconciliation around the world. CA 2805.04 STUFF: Consumption/Materiality Instructor: Krizstina Fehervary Tu 6:00-8:30

Course Number

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8055

This course will explore various theoretical and ethnographic approaches to the study of consumption. We will touch on classical understandings of consumption as tied to class and as symbolic of cultural categories.


THE CHRONICLE

4 IFRIDAY. NOVEMBER 3,2006

Profs use Council sees selective living ‘menu’ ultrasound for surgery

CAMPUS COUNCIL

by

Wenjia

Zhang

THE CHRONICLE

Campus Council members learned about the new “menu of options” for selective living group locations during the Council’s general body meeting Thursday night. The menu, presented by Marijean Williams, director of housing assignments and communications, is part of the Group Living Initiative and consists of 72 possible sections for selective living groups. “We looked at all the floor plans and decided which space would best fit these groups,” Williams said. Jen Frank, program coordinator, explained that some options overlap—if one is chosen, others will be unavailable due to conflicts in room allocation. This will allow the space identified to accommodate groups of different sizes, she added. “We made it to allow as much flexibility as possible,” Frank said. Williams explained the prestige of certain quadrangles was not taken into consideration when identifying possible locations. The criteria when constructing the menu was that rooms on Main West would not be considered, the section location would serve its function and no “orphan resident” effect would result. An “orphan resident” effect is when independent residents feel isolated when living in an area mainly composed of selective living groups, Williams said. In addition, all rooms approved by the Americans with DisabilitiesAct will remain offline to selective living groups. Williams said the campus is lacking in ADA rooms and if a disabled student is placed in a selective living group locale, it

Research may allow for robotic operations by

THE

New ultrasound research may allow surgeons to take a step away from the bedside—and perhaps one day, leave the operating room entirely. Researchers at the Pratt School of Engineering demonstrated that threedimensional ultrasound scanners can guide robotic surgical tools, which could allow surgical robots to operate

independendy.

Campus Council discusses possible selective living group locations Thursday at its weekly meeting.

will create an “orphan resident” effect She added that if a disabled student is part of a selective living group, she would work with the Selective Community Assessment committee to accommodate the need. “Nothing is set in stone,” Williams said, adding that after future renovations in Crowell, Craven and Few quadrangles the menu will be revisited. Starting January, selective living groups will be evaluated by the new SCA —which is now being reviewed by Eddie Hull, dean of SEE COUNCIL ON PAGE

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“It’s the first time anyone has used the tool of 3-D ultrasound scanning to guide a robot,” said Stephen Smith, professor of biomedical engineering and associate professor of radiology at Duke University Medical Center.

High-speed ultrasound images developed by the team are already used to explore complex organs by obstetricians and cardiologists, as

well as radiologists. “This is most valuable in its ability to allow surgeons to see body parts in full,” Smith said, adding that the approach could one day allow robots to SEE ULTRASOUND ON PAGE 6


THE CHRONICLE

FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 3,

20061 5

Duke researchers find diet affects brain size by

Joe Clark

THE CHRONICLE

The Duke library system is undergoing several changes while it converts to the Library ofCongress system.

Library adjusts to new coding system by

Meg Bourihllon THE CHRONICLE

Computers, catalog numbers and chemistry resources are on the move in the University’s libraries. Officials recently announced that the

Perkins Library computer lab will close Dec. 20, and staff are continuing the gradual conversion to the Library of Congress catalog system. Other recent changes include the August reopening of the first floor of Perkins and the incorporation of the chemistry library into Perkins, also in August. All of the developments are steps toward achieving the library’s vision of improving its services to users, explained Deborah Jakubs, University librarian and vice provost for library affairs. She added

that the new spaces have greatly increased library visits and circulation. “We’re still talking about a 40 percent increase,” Jakubs said of the rise in circulation. Other measures also reflect the popularity of new and renovated areas in Bostock Library and Perkins. Monthly visits to the reference desk jumped up by 139 percent in 2005-2006, Thomas Wall, associate university librarian, wrote in an e-mail. In September and October of this year, reference librarians averaged 321 sessions per month—a 34 percent increase over last year’s average. “There will be frustrations,” Jakubs said. “I’m grateful that I haven’t heard [complaints] from people. That, to me, SEE LIBRARY ON PAGE 9

In a recent study of orangutans in Indonesia, researchers at Duke have shown that what an animal eats can affect the size of its brain. The study, headed by Andrea Taylor and Card Van Schaik, professors of biological anthropology and anatomy, looked at the nutrition and brain size of orangutans on the islands ofBorneo and Sumatra. The primates living on Borneo, where food is more scarce, were found to have evolved smaller brains than the primates on the more plentiful island of Sumatra, Taylor said. “The orangutans on Borneo were subject to limited resources,” she added. “And our data shows that the limited resources do cause a reduced brain size.” When faced with a small amount of available food, the primates either had to reduce their body size or brain size, Taylor explained. Since the brain takes more energy to build and maintain than the body or skeleton, evolution selects a slight reduction in brain size rather than a larger reduction in body size, she added. Although physical brain size between the two groups of orangutans differed, there was no evidence that this discrepancy led to differences in intelligence. “Nothing in our data suggested that the two groups appear different in terms of intelligence,” Taylor said. “But that doesn’t mean that they don’t.” A smaller-sized brain, however, is not

biologically equivalent to a larger one, said Nancy Barrickman, a Ph.D. candidate studying biological anthropology

and anatomy. “Any animal will benefit from a larger brain and will evolve one if it can afford it,” she said. “But a larger brain is energetically expensive, and an animal must balance between the costs and benefits.” Although this study focuses solely on orangutans, it could have some implications for humans, Taylor said. “If limited resources can lead to a reduced brain size in orangutans, it could lead to a reduced brain size in humans as well,” she said. Taylor added that one of the ways we SEE BRAIN SIZE ON PAGE 10

SPECIAL TO THE CHRONICLE

ProfessorAndrea Taylor found in a study a relationship between orangutan nutrition and brain size.


THE CHRONICLE

6 FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 3, 2006

ULTRASOUND from page 4 “perform certain procedures completely autonomously.”

The discovery is featured on the cover of the November 2006 issue of the journal lEEE Transactions on Ultrasonics, Ferroelectrics and Frequency Control. In their demonstration, Pratt researchers used the ultrasound scanners to guide robots in simulated surgical procedures. Their research was funded by the National Institutes of Health and the National Science Foundation. The robots were able to precisely locate surgical targets in the simulated procedures, the team reported. Current minimally invasive procedures—which often involve “keyhole” incisions—employ two-dimensional tools or optical endoscopes to view complex organs, Smith explained. The 3-D high-speed ultrasound probes, which were first employed by the Pratt team earlier this year, could immediately replace 2-D methods and assist surgeons in the way

9TH ST. from page 3 WALLTOWN

from page 1

talks about it—it’s like the past,” said 17-year-old resident Tasha Campbell. “There’s really no anger anymore. There was a lot—now you don’t hear it unless it’s in the news. It’s brought up again and then they forget it.” Even as they stressed the declining animosity connected to the incident, some residents voiced their approval of Nifong’s aggressive pursuit of the indicted Duke students. “Everybody would be down his throat if he didn’t [prosecute],” Trevell Green said. “They get judged, and if they’re guilty, they’re guilty.” Other residents, however, shared the anti-Nifong sentiment prevalent on campus and criticized the district attorney for his handling of the case. “Nifong, he botched the lineup, so that affects the way I vote,” said Peter Hausmann, who has lived in Walltown for six months. “I can’t speak for why people will vote for him. I will vote against him. I don’t know what his motives are.” Cain criticized the team’s decision to host a party with alcohol and dancers, but she said the alleged victim—a student at North Carolina Central University should not have placed herself in such an environment. “The girl was a student and she didn’t have to take her clothes off,” she said. —

“The young lady made a choice. It’s no different from prostitution. What part of it did she think she wasn’t responsible for? You’ve got to put a price on your identity; you’ve got to put a price on you. You can’t give yourself out to the highest bidder.” Some members of the Walltown community took a critical stance toward the students at the party but praised the University as an asset to the area. “Somebody raped a girl and [the party is] where she was,” said a Walltown resident who declined to offer his name. “Duke is not the problem—it’s some of the damn kids at Duke. They could’ve been anywhere.” Jessica Anduiza, a program coordinator at the Duke Center for International Development, lives in the Walltown neighborhood but said she has yet to discuss the lacrosse scandal with her neighbors. “I think thisis a very diverse community', and I can’t speak for the community,” she said. “I don’t talk about it with them.” Despite their varying opinions regarding the case, Walltown residents and Duke faculty and students have shared in the sadness and regret generated by the incident, said Melvin Henry, a former Walltown resident who still attends services at the neighborhood’s Northside Baptist Church. “It’s a no-win situation for Duke and it’s a no-win situation for the community,” he said. “It’s just a tragedy. Everybody’s hurt. I wish I could have erased the whole thing. The rest of our lives, this is history.”

design, rather than use. Gaddis said this will allow the community to craft a truly public space, which he ambitiously compared to the ancient Athenian agora. “The fundamental concept is to regulate the form of buildings, so that we can define a '

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mines the going rate.” Duke added that community residents, not the Durham City Council, will dethe end, we want to to cretermine if corporate chains a great public living room displace Ninth Street’s eclectic for the community.”

number of floors, sidewalk width and the availability of parking would all be mandated by city zoning ordinances. Many community members said they were excited about the proposal, but some worried that new multifloor developments would drive local businesses off Ninth Street, destroying the area’s character. “We need to find the balance between making improvements to the shopping district and bringing in so much density that rents rise to the point where local store owners are forced out,” said John Schelp, president of the Old West Durham Neighborhood Association. Frank Duke, city and county planning di-

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they are able to view organs. “All [cardiologists] think of the heart in three dimensions but haven’t been able to image it in three dimensions,” said James Jollis, associate professor of cardiology at DUMC. “An aging population is stepping up the call for non-invasive procedures—creating a need for more complex imaging,” Jollis said. But the use of robots in autonomous procedures will likely remain on the drawing board, as assisted surgical procedures are still in their early stages, robotic experts noted. “This was found to be quite interesting but it is still a very advanced research topic,” said Chris Hasser, director of applied research for Intuitive Surgical, Inc. Hasser’s company developed the da Vinci surgical system —the only operative platform for assisted robotic surgery in the world. “But completely autonomous surgical robots will likely remain the stuff of Hollywood for the foreseeable future,” Hasser added.

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tronize them,” he said. Another topic addressed, was the concern .that more business and residential development would bring more traffic to the area. But both Schelp and Duke agreed that a parking garage would be unnecessary and detrimental to the community. “There is not a critical mass of businesses to support a parking deck,” Duke said. “If you put one in, you’re just going to inflate rents.” It remains unclear, however, where future residents and shoppers would be able to park if the density of development increases. That problem, will be solved by private developers, not by city government, Duke said.


THE CHRONICLE

FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 3,

NASHER from page 3

director of the Nasher, said it is not difficult to attract artists like Coyne to Durham. ‘Yes, the art market is tremendously more expensive Coyne said the statue evokes a type of eternal presertoday,” said Rorschach. “But then again, there are more vation in death and decay. The new artists with exciting work, dark colors and painstaking giving us room to make disarrangement of accouterments coveries.” and “Through pieces imgreat suggest complexity in ambiguity Coyne’s piece is one of and mystery in pain, she added. two major purchases inportant programs, we hope to ‘You think you know what a stalled this year by the Nashset the pace in the [Triangle] piece is, but then you look at it er. The other, “The Unceragain and it looks entirely differarea for contemporary art.” tain Museum” by Olafur ent,” Coyne said Eliasson, is a moving lights The installation of “Untitled Kimerly Rorschach show that incorporates the #1111” marks an artistic landvisitor as an element of the director, Nasher Museum of Art mark for the museum, which acpiece. The museum negotiatquired the piece before the Meted for the piece in 2004. ropolitan Museum of Art and the Whitney Museum of “Our goal is to make an impact on this community,” American Art—both in New York City—bought two of Rorschach said. “Through great pieces and important Coyne’s other sculptures. programs, we hope to set the pace in the [Triangle] area Kimerly Rorschach, Mary D.B.T. and James H. Semans for contemporary art.”

NAVY from page 1 Sophomore Teague Allston said when he hosted a friend from the Naval Academy last year, it was culture shock at first for his guest. “We went to two parties and drank the usual,” Allston said with a laugh. “He said it wasn’t what he was used to.” Allston’s friend is coming back this weekend, but not just for the booze. “He said there were a lot more girls here,” Allston said. The U.S. Naval Academy Class of 2009 is 79.7 percent male. It’s a two-way street, though. Sophomore Sarah Opper said she is happy to be hosting five midshipmen—all juniors—overnight in her Few Quadrangle room. Although she knows one of them from high school, Opper said the others are less familiar. “I hung with some of them last year but I didn’treally know them,” she explained. Still, Opper has her priorities in order. “They seem like really fun guys —plus they have really cute uniforms,” she said. Sororities are poised to salute the incoming midshipmen, as well. Last year, Alpha Phi sorority had a Navy-themed party at Chamas Brazilian Steakhouse, but current President Hali Cooperman-Dix, a senior, declined to comment about the sorority’s social plans for this year, citing national guidelines. The torch has been passed this year to Alpha Omicron Pi sorority, which is hosting “Welcome Sailors!” at Durham nightclub Shooters 11. The tagline is “Sexy Sailors and Mad Hot Midshipmen... Let’s Show the Naval Academy How Duke Gets Down.” Sophomore Grace Reilly, the sorority’s public relations chair and organizer of the event, said she is happy to carry on the tradition. “It’s just kind of to show them a good time since they don’t really have so much freedom at the academy,” Reilly said. “It should be fun.” Midshipmen are expected to conduct themselves properly at,all times whether they are on-campus or away, Campbell said in a statement. “These standards of conduct apply both on and off duty, in personal behavior, and in relations with others in the civilian Slid military communities.” Campbell said. “All midshipmen are held strictly accountable for their behavior,” she added. Katherine Macllwaine contributed to this story.

MICHAEL CHANG/THE

CHRONICLE

Last year, hundreds of Navy midshipmen made the trek to Durham from Annapolis, Md., to watch their team upend the Blue Devils.

20061 7

COUNCIL from page 4 residence life and executive director of housing services. Every three years, groups will be re-shuffled to a new location offered by the menu based on their evaluation results in the past cycle. Williams said the menu had to be adjusted for the addition of faculty-in-residence apartments next fall. Most of the menu options are not near a faculty apartment.

In other business; Hull explained that Residence Life and Housing Services’ decision in the placement of the faculty-in-residence apartments was based on three criteria: architectural plausibility, accessibility for disabled students and attractiveness to incoming program participants. Members approved this year’s budget for Campus Council. The total, collected from residential fees, is projected to be approximately $lOO,OOO, and $20,000 is currently allocated for Last Day of Classes.


THE CHRONICLE

8 I FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 3, 2006

©cycle

franklin Humanities Institute Sem'

Co-Co

The 9th annual Franklin Hu. practices are profitably or problematic, consideration of specific historical salvage life of things and ideas.

,

-

images,

pirical and theoretical seminar will investigate the cultural and economic

texts, pn

The Franklin Humanities Institute Seminar 1999-2006

Since 1999, the Franklin Humanities Institute has organized an annual Seminar comprised of faculty, graduate students, and other fellows. Each year, this group creates a humanities laboratory in which the fellows coilaboratively develop a new intellectual community, transcend departmental and disciplinary boundaries, and think together about a significant theme or problem with an expansive historical, philosophical, or geographical scope. Since the inception of the Seminar, the FHI has supported the following projects, co-conveners, and fellows, all of whom we wish to thank, acknowledge and honor.

2002-2003

2006-2007 Interface

Srinivas Aravamudan, English Charles Riot, Cultural Anthropology

Timothy Lenoir, Kimberly Jenkins Chair for New Technologies and Society Priscilla Wald, English and Women's Studies www.jhfc.duke.edu/fhilinterface

Jennifer Rhee, Literature

Leigh Raiford, African and African-American Studies, Yale

2001-2002 Historidzing Identities: Race, Gender and Sexuality

Faculty Fellows: Tom Brothers, Music Trina Jones, Law Richard Powell, Art and Art History Laurie Shannon, English Priscilla Wald, English Maurice Wallace, English/African and African-American Studies Library Fellow: Melissa Deibridge, Special Collections Graduate Fellows: Erica James, Art and Art History Ada Norris, English Postdoctoral Fellow: Amy Ongiri, English, UC-Riverside Mellon Lecturing Fellows: Maria Susana Castellanos, English Wendy Erisman, Cultural Anthropology Michael Petit, English •

Anthropology

2000-2001 Race, Religion, and Globalization

2004-2005 Knowledge and Its Institutions

Gregson Davis, Classical Studies Bruce Lawrence, Religion

Helen Solterer, Romance Studies Janet Ewald, History

Faculty Fellows: Walter Mignolo, Literature, Romance Studies, & Cultural Anthropology Teresa Berger, Divinity Leo Ching, Asian & African Languages & Literatures Rom Coles, Political Science Katherine Ewing, Cultural Anthropology Jean Jonassaint, Romance Studies Bill Hart, Religion Graduate Fellows: Michael Ennis, Literature L. Kaifa Roland, Cultural Anthropology Nicole Waligora, English Postdoctoral Fellow: Tomeiko Ashford, Franklin Institute •

Faculty Fellows: Roberto Dainotto, Romance Studies Negar Mottahedeh, Literature Diane Nelson Cultural Anthropology Larry R. Todd, Music Gennifer Weisenfeld, Art and Art History Library Fellow: William Sexton, Perkins Library Graduate Fellows: Katherine Castles, History Lila Ellen Gray, Cultural Anthropology Administrative Fellow; Cheri Ross, Franklin Humanities Institute •

1999-2000 Race and Nation-Building in the Americas

Document: From Archive to performance

Alberto Moreiras, Romance Studies Janice Radway, Literature Program

Elizabeth A. Fenn, History Richard J. Powell, Art and Art History Faculty Fellows: Stanley Abe, Art and Art History Valeria Finucci, Romance Studies Richard Jaffe, Religion Anthony Kelly, Music Grant Parker, Classical Studies Library Fellow; Steven Henson, Rare Book, Manuscript, and Special Collections Library Graduate Fellows; Simon Hay, English Gonzalo Lamana, Cultural Anthropology Mellon Lecturing Fellow: Douglas Reichert Powell, English Woodrow Wilson Postdoctoral Fellow: Leigh Raiford, African and African American Studies, Yale •

Faculty Fellows: Bayo Holsey, African & African American Studies Micaela Janan, Classical Studies Ranjana Khanna, English Leela Prasad, Religion Karin Shapiro, History Library Fellow: Christof Galli, Perkins Library Graduate Fellows: Linda Rupert, History Yektan Turkyilmaz, Cultural

2003-2004

Tina Campt, Women's Studies Orin Starn, Cultural Anthropology

Lee D. Baker, Cultural Anthropology Cynthia Herrup, History and Law

2005-2006 Epistemologies of Belonging: Indigeneity and Diaspora

Faculty Fellows: lan Baucom, English J. Kameron Carter, Divinity Sheila Dillon, Art and Art History Grant Farred, Literature Thavolia Glymph, African & African American Studies, History Susan Thorne, History Visiting Faculty Fellow: Evelyn Brooks Higginbotham, African-American Studies, Harvard Library Fellow: Hortensia Calvo, Perkins Library Graduate Fellows: Alessandro Fornazzari, Romance Studies Stephane Robolin, English Woodrow Wilson Postdoctoral Fellow: •

Faculty Fellows: Anne Allison, Cultural Anthropology Cathy Davidson, English & Franklin Humanities Institute Guven Guzeldere, Philosophy, Psychological and Brain Sciences, Neurobiology Andrew Janiak, Philosophy Robert Mitchell, English Kristine Stiles, Art, Art History & Visual Studies Library Fellow: Paolo Mangiafico, Perkins Library Research Fellows: Rachael Brady, Electrical and Computer Engineering Mark Olson, John Hope Franklin Center Marilyn Lombardi, Office of Information Technology Postdoctoral Fellow: Orit Halpern, Historical Studies, New School for Social Research Graduate Fellows; David Un-Hsien Liu, Religion Mitali Routh, Art, Art History & Visual Studies •

monument

Race, Justice, and the Politics of Memory

Faculty Fellows: Donna Daniels, Cultural Anthropology Greg Grandm, History Mark Healey, Graduate Fellow, History Wahneema Lubiano, Literature Suzanne Shanahan, Sociology Orin Starn, Cultural Anthropology Avery Gordon, Sociology, UC-Santa Barbara John Utz, American Studies, Yale Teaching Fellows: Kristin Bergen, Literature Tracey Brown, Cultural Anthropology Vince Brown, History Marc Brudzinski, Romance Studies Marla Frederick, Cultural Anthropology Lynn Hempel, Sociology Ayse Karayazgan, Cultural Anthropology Mendi Lewis, Literature Ryan Long, Romance Studies Graduate Fellows: Gary Ashwill, English Christina Chia, English Lisa Peloquin, Sociology James Penney, Literature Katie MacLean, Romance Studies* Jorge Marturano, Romance Studies •

The Franklin Humanities Institute is a part of the John Hope Franklin Center for Interdisciplinary & International Studies

For more information on the Franklin Humanities Institute and the FHI Seminar, visit www.jhfc.duke.edu/fhi, or write to jhf-institute@duke.edu

iFMNKLINIiiL.,„

INSTITUTE


THE CHRONICLE

RLHS

from page 1

stay,” he said, adding that as a senior next year he will be living off campus and it will be nice to come back to a familiar place. The faculty apartments —all of which will be located on the ground floor except in Keohane and Kilgo quads—-

will range from 1,800 to 2,400 sq. ft. Hull said as an added feature to the program, the apartments will be larger than those on East Campus. “There was no real space for [the faculty members] to comfortably host students on East Campus,” Hull said. “We’re doing something different this time around.” He explained that in-addition to a living room, faculty members will have an area in their apartments designated to accommodate up to 20 students at a time. Carol Apollonio Hath, associate professor of the practice of Slavic and Eurasian Studies and Wilson Dormitory faculty in residence, hosts “cookie nights” in her apartment every

Monday night.

LIBRARY

FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 3,

“The most important thing is to have a large area to invite people to come in—everything else falls into place after that,” Flath said. There are currently two faculty in residence on West in

Few and Edens quadrangles. Joseph Nadeau, assistant professor of the practice of civil engineering and Few Quad faculty in residence, praised the program, of which he has been a part for five years. “This experience has been wonderful for me and my dog, Zada,” Nadeau wrote in an e-mail. “To live in the dorms with such energetic and involved students is invigorating and refreshing.” Nadeau, however, expressed concerns about the program’s extension. “Expanding the program to other quads on West is a great idea, but I think there will be challenges, particularly if only four new positions are being created,” he said, noting that the size of the quads makes it impossible to “even try to get to know everyone.” Joe Gonzalez, associate dean for residential life, said because of the sizes of the quads, the program’s success

2006 9

should not be measured by how many students with whom the faculty members can interact. “Success of the program will not be in knowing the residents, but bringing in academic stuff,” Gonzalez said. Hull said the sizes and architectural layouts of the quads are two significant challenges to the expansion of the program. “Creative approaches will be needed to tackle these problems,” he added. A task force—consisting of 10 faculty members, current program participants, RLHS and student representatives—has been formed to define the role of the faculty in residence, among other things. Faculty recruitment for the four new positions will begin next semester, Hull said. Current faculty in residence said further interaction with students is one the program’s biggest merits. “There aren’t always the opportunities for [students] to know faculty outside of the classroom, and I think that’s a really crucial part of a college education,” said Stephen Chapman, assistant professor in the Divinity School and Brown Dormitory faculty in residence.

from page 5

says that they understand we’re going through some necessary changes.” The space currently housing the Perkins lab and the Deryl Hart Reading Room, for instance, will eventually provide a new center for the library’s Special Collections Library. Jakubs said the area will be home to temporary offices for library administrators during the next phase of renovations. Closure of the Perkins lab has been under discussion for about a year, said Kevin Davis, senior manager of the Office of Information Technology’s Academic Technology Services. He added that OIT is monitoring computer usage in order to ensure the computers added to Perkins and Bostock libraries are sufficient for students’ technology needs. “There’s certainly plenty of capacity available,” Davis said. He pointed out that recently added ePrint kiosks at other locations on campus can absorb some of the “inand-out traffic” that the Perkins lab has historically served. “Those computers [from Perkins] can go to become new kiosks, new ePrint stations,” he explained. Some students said the change would not affect them, many noting their appreciation for the renovated library’s atmosphere. Others, however, said the lab’s upcoming closure is frustrating. “I think the library’s beautiful. I enjoy working there,” said senior Carla Ranno. “But this is very easy before class,” she added, referring to the Perkins lab’s convenience. Books, as well as computers, are also changing their locations. Moving the chemistry library from the Gross Chemistry Building to Perkins involved putting many science journals into storage. To maintain scholars’ access to the research material, University administrators provided additional funding for the library to purchase more electronic back-files, Jakubs said. The first batch cost $3.5 million in upfront expenses, in addition to annual subscription fees. Still, Jakubs noted the continuing importance and relative security of print. “We’re not by any means headed toward an electroniconly library,” she said. Staff members are also devoting their time to the library’s physical collection, switching more books from the Dewey Decimal to the Library ofCongress system on a daily basis. Jakubs said the change, which should be complete by late 2008, will facilitate some faculty members’ research and bring Duke into line with practices at other research libraries. “The shelving is easier, and things are misplaced less,” Jakubs said of the LC system. “Many people are shocked... when they discover that a library of this size is on Dewey.” Anyone having trouble finding a book should ask a librarian for help, Jakubs said. She encouraged library users to tell her or other library administrators about problems. “With a renovation of this complexity, the easiest thing would have been for us to have closed the library,” Jakubs said. “We’ve chosen a different path.” Davis also welcomed feedback, suggesting that students e-mail perkinslabquestions@duke.edu with any comments.

Check www.dukechronicle.com for in-depth coverage of 2006 local elections

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accepting appointments for the following services: ■ Comprehensive Ophthalmology ■ Cataract Surgery Consultation ■ Glaucoma Consultation and Treatment

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For additional information, including directions, go to our website: dukeeye.org


10IFRIDAY, NOVEMBER 3,

THE CHRONICLE

2006

NEW ORLEANS frompageß chovia, and I realized that the devastation was unimaginable,” Lalka said. “It was something I couldn’t fathom sitting there at my desk, and people weren’t concerned or bothered by the absolute catastrophic event that it was.” “I saw the faces of the people who were evacuated and I realized that I needed to do something more,” he added. Sheldon, a Tulane University graduate, was fulfilling her Peace Corps duties when Katrina hit. She said despite Americans’ generosity, the disaster has been too easily

BRAIN SIZE from page 5 define humans is through their brain size, and throughout human evolution, there has been a trend toward a steady increase in brain size. “A finding like this in humans could run counter to how we think of human evolution,” she said. As further evidence of a possible shift in the current definition ofhuman evolution, Taylor cited a recent fossil finding of a small-brained human on the island of Flores, Indonesia. “The island of Flores is similar to that of Borneo’s in that both islands were constrained by limited resources,” she said. “What we observed with orangutans in

our study could possibly have occurred in humans on this island.” Some scientists have suggested that although there is no proven direct link between brain size and intelligence, a correlation may exist. “Perhaps it is possible that if two individuals with the same body size and educations were compared, the individual with a bigger brain and more neurons would be smarter,” Barrickman said. “This would be impossible to measure, though.” Barrickman also suggested that if these results can be applied to humans, it could potentially affect modern society. “There is a possibility that if you have a group ofhumans starving, there could be an effect on intelligence,” she said. “They could end up with a smaller brain size.”

forgotten. “We knew that it was last year’s issue and that it needed to be brought back up again,” she said. “There is a major election in a few days, and people are not talking about Katrina —they are talking about Mark Foley.” The students traveled to New Orleans to investigate policy failures after Katrina and how to prevent a breakdown in communication between local and state leadership and the federal government from occurring again, Lalka said. “As much as it is a natural disaster, it’s also a man-made disaster, in the fact that the suffering and tragedy could have been averted,” he said. “If all the levels of government worked, then we wouldn’t be looking at the calamity we see.” Lalka and Sheldon both said they hope the partnership will engage undergraduates and other graduate students in its efforts. Whether students are interested in race relations, education, biotechnology or health care, there is opportunity for them to work with the partnership, Lalka added. “We’re looking for intelligent, driven and passionate people who want to be in-

volved,” he said. “No matter what your issue is, no matter what your passion is, no matter what your desire in the world is, New Orleans needs help.” The students are planning a Universitywide panel in late November to facilitate discussion and raise awareness about the partnership.

Ultimately, the students said they would like to attract other universities to work toward revitalizing and improving the policy of the Gulf Coast states. “Why rebuild New Orleans?” Sheldon said. “Because it’s New Orleans, it’s the most fantastic city in the world.”

CHRONICLE FILE PHOTO

2 students have organized a Duke-New Orleans partnership to help rebuild the city decimated by Katrina.


November 3r 2006 DUKE VS. NAVY

I N li

mfm wmsm

THE FOOTBALL TEAM PREPARES FOR NAVY'S ONIOUE OFFENSIVE STYLE PAGE 13

Sm

JSMm

MEN'S BASKETBALL

RIVALRY MATCHUP AT HOME Coming off a weekend in which they lost their first ACC match of the season, the Blue Devils take on the Tar Heels at home tonight.

ru in

FIELD HOCKEY

Deep team

impresses in Ist game by

Tim Britton and Lane

Towery

THE CHRONICLE

Even without Greg Paulus Thursday night, the Blue Devils were in good hands against Shaw. Led by Jon Scheyer’s 19-point effort, five players scored SHAW 45 in double figures 95 in Duke’s 96-45 DUKE exhibition win over the Division II Bears “We played as hard as them and unselfishly,” head coach Mike Krzyzewski said. “It was good. It was the first college game even if it’s a non-record game—for our freshmen. They handled it pretty well.” Three of those freshmen—Scheyer, Gerald Henderson and Lance Thomas—were in the starting lineup and a fourth, Brian Zoubek, played considerably. But it was Scheyer that stole the show in the first half. Playing point guard in the absence of Paulus, Scheyer hit six of eight from the field—including three from behind the arc—for 17 first-half points. “I just shot the ball with confidence tonight,” Scheyer said. “It’s great to play together and play against other people. It was a great feeling having the crowd behind us, too.” Scheyer was far from alone, however, in leading Duke’s offense. Sophomore Josh Mcßoberts was everywhere on the court even bringing the ball up at times—dribbling through the Shaw defense and setting up his teammates with no-look passes. “He put it on the floor a few times and —

SEE M. BASKETBALL ON PAGE 16

MATT NEWCOMB/THE CHRONICLE

Playing with heavy heartsafter the loss of an assistant coach Wednesday evening, the Blue Devils took the field for the first round of the ACC tournament Thursday.

Despite tragic loss, Duke plays on Stephen Allan THE CHRONICLE

by

CHAPEL HILL —Just playing in itself tonight was a victory. The Blue Devils came out and poured forth as much energy as they could muster in memory of asDUKE coach sistant Whitehead, Maria 2 UNC who passed away at the age of 25 from cancer Wednesday. In the end, though, No. 4 Duke (14-5) could not overcome bad luck, as it fell to No. 8 North Carolina (13-7) 2-0 Thursday in the first round of the ACC Championships at Francis E. Henry Stadium. Whitehead, who joined Duke’s program in February and starred at Wake

Forest before graduating in 2003, had an impact on more than just the Blue Devils. “The entire field hockey community across the country feels this loss,” North Carolina head coach Karen Shelton said. “We’re feeling for both teams —Wake Forest and their families and Duke and their families.” Despite Whitehead’s death, which the team was informed of early Wednesday evening, Duke chose to go on with the game. Blue Devil head coach Beth Bozman said if Whitehead were still around, she would have wanted her team to play. “She would’ve wanted us to be here today,” said Bozman, teary-eyed during the post-game press conference. “As hard as it was, it was never about us. It was al-

ways about her.” To remember Whitehead and all she had contributed to Duke, the team came out displaying wristbands honoring her, a decision Bozman said the team made Tuesday, before Whitehead’s death. The team had hoped to bring news of victory back to Whitehead. Unfortunately, the Blue Devils lost both the game and a good coach, Bozman said. With Whitehead’s father watching from the sidelines, the game went on. “I just wanted to go out and play,” senior captain Hilary Linton said. ‘You never know when we’re not going to be able to play.” Whitehead’s death, announced early SEE FIELD HOCKEY ON PAGE 14

MEN'S SOCCER

Blue Devils and Terrapins meet in ACCs by

Architii Ramkumar THE CHRONICLE

Duke hopes that the second time is the charm when it takes on

vs.

SARA

GUERERRO/THE CHRONICLE

Josh Mcßoberts, Lance Thomas and Duke's defense held Division II Shaw's offense to just 45 points.

Maryland tonight.

The No. 9 Blue Devils (14-3-1), seeded first in the ACC tournament, clash with the No. 5 and fourthseeded Terrapins (15-3-1) for the TONIGHT, 8 p.m. second time this season in the semiGermantown, Md. finals of the ACC tournament at 8 pm. in Germantown, Md.

MICHAEL CHANG/THE CHRONICLE

SEE M. SOCCER ON PAGE 12

Michael Videiraand top-seeded Duke lost to Maryland during the team'sregular-season game.


THE CHRONICLE

12 (FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 3, 2006

VOLLEYBALL

Duke preps for rivalry game by

Lauren Kobylarz THE CHRONICLE

When Duke won in Chapel Hill Sept. 30, it was the Blue Devils’ first road victory at North Carolina since 1997. In front of a raucous crowd, Duke never trailed for even a single point in the

«

match, handily

beating their rivals 3-0. VS. Tonight, the Blue Devils (203, 13-1 in the ACC) hope to TONIGHT, 7 p.m. top the Tar Heels Cameron Indoor (6-1.7, 4-10) for the second time this season at 7 p.m. at Cameron Indoor Stadium. “We’re very excited to have the opportunity to play Carolina at home in Cameron,” head coach Jolene Nagel said. “We’ve got to make sure we come out strong on them in the match. Both teams always play really well in these matches, so we’re going to get their best.” In the teams’ first meeting this year, an auditorium full of energized Carolina fans only added to the already-exciting rivalry matchup. The atmosphere will not be any less intense tonight when the Tar Heels travel up Tobacco Road to Cameron. “The crowd was great over in Chapel Hill,” Nagel said. “What was really great was that we had a lot of Duke fans come out, too. I expect tomorrow that we’re going to have a lot of UNC people there as well.” Before Duke’s 3-0 win over N.C. State Wednesday, the Blue Devils split road games in a loss to Georgia Tech and a win over Clemson Oct. 27 and 28, respectively. The

JU

SARA

GUERERRO/THE CHRONICLE

Freshman Rachael Moss had 15 kills and 16 digs in Duke's Sept. 30 win at UNC.

pair of games was Duke’s second consecutive road trip. “We’ve been away for two weekends in a row, so it’s great to be back in Cameron,” Nagel said. “In order for us to be successful we need to focus.” Duke enters the match at the top of the ACC and has suffered only one conference loss this season. North Carolina, which also lost to Georgia Tech recently, is in 11th place in the ACC. Well into the second half of their conference schedule—ACC

teams play each opponent twice in a round-robin format—the Blue Devils have seven more matches to play after tonight’s game against the Tar Heels. But for now, Nagel said Duke is concentrating on winning tonight’s match as it tries to hold onto its

top spot. “We have a long way to go yet,” Nagel said. “We’ve got to make sure we’re focused on what we need to be focused on and not on what’s gotten us where we are.”

M. SOCCER from page

11

consistent to give its offense a better chance to execute. The Terrapins’ goalkeeper, Chris Seitz, was named 2006 ACC Defensive Player of the Year after recording nine shutouts in his team’s first 19 games of the season. Seitz has already blanked the Blue Devils once this year. Not only is Duke playing in front of a rowdy crowd against an outstanding goalkeeper, but they are doing so as the ACC’s top seed, giving Maryland even more desire to pull out with a win. “It is tough being the No. 1 seed,” Videira said. “It brings a lot of pressure on us. But along with that, it also gives us more motivation.” The Blue Devils are looking to pull off a repeat performance of last year’s ACC tournament, in which they also faced the Terrapins in the semifinals.Duke upset Maryland 4-2 in that game, en route to winning the ACC Championship. Pulling off a second straight tournament semifinal win against the Terrapins, however, will not be easy. The defending national champions will be ready to play, buoyed by the crowd. “They beat us at their place already,” Videira said. “There will be a lot offans tonight, so we definitely want to return the favor.”

In the earlier meeting between the two teams, Maryland won a closely-contested game, 1-0. With the stakes even higher this time around, Duke would like nothing more than to even the series. “We didn’t really play up to our potential earlier,” junior midfielder Joe Germanese said. “It’s great that we have the same opportunity again, here in Maryland. We’d love to serve revenge.” In the Blue Devils’ earlier loss to the Terrapins, 6,489 raucous fans came out to cheer on Maryland. The turnout set a record for the largest crowd at a Terrapins’ home soccer game. Duke expects the same kind of reception in tonight’s game, but, having already played in the hostile environment, the team is not daunted. “It will make for a great atmosphere,” head coach John Rennie said. “We’ve already played there, and it makes for an exciting game.” Heading into tonight’s game, Duke’s roster is finally nearing full health again. Both Germanese and junior midfielder Michael Videira sat out games with injuries over the past two weeks. Germanese came back from a broken wrist to play against N.C. State Wednesday. Videira, who was named earlier this week to the All-ACC team for the third year in a row, overcame an injured ankle to score one of Duke’s two goals against the Wolfpack. With the squad healthy again, the Blue Devils look to continue executing what has become the staple of the team—defense. The last time Duke gave up more than one goal in a game was Sept. 8 in a 4-3 win against Wake Forest. Even in the Sept. 29 loss to Maryland, the Blue Devils yielded just the one goal. “It is a team defense,” Rennie MICHAEL CHANG/THE CHRONICLE said, “It is not just the goalkeeper or the defenders. Everyone is playJunior midfielder Joe Germanese has reing hard defense for 90 minutes.” turned to the field after suffering an inDuke’s defense must remain jury to his right wrist


THE CHRONICLE

FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 3,

200611 3

FOOTBALL

Blue Devils ready for Navy's option offense by

Sean

Moroney

THE CHRONICLE

The last time the Blue Devils scored first at home was in last season’s wire, 28-21 loss to Navy.

down-to-the-

This time around, Duke (0-8) hopes to get off to a similar start but end up with a different result—winning an( * sna Ppi ng the nation’s longest losing streak of 16 games against Navy (5-3) VS. at P m Saturday. H Falling behind early has plagued the Blue SATURDAY, 1 p.m. D evhs at home all season. In most of Duke’s Wallace Wade matchups, the team has relied on scoring surges in the fourth quarter just to stay close. Jumping out to an early lead will not be any easier when Duke goes up against Navy’s triple option—which has helped the Midshipmen get on the scoreboard first in more than half their games this season. “We spent a lot of time in practice working on that,” head coach Ted Roof said about going against the triple option. “Everybody they play in the first quarter gets chopped, and you see guys on defense on the ground in the first quarter. It usually takes a quarter to adjust—you like to think that we’ll stay on our feet early.” In the triple option, the quarterback bears the majority of the responsibility for every play. Jarod Bryant will guide the Navy offense against Duke. Based on how the Blue Devil defense reacts, Bryant makes one of three choices in the triple option every play. One, give the ball to one of the running backs for a dive up the middle. Two, pitch it to another running back trailing behind him. -

WEIYITAN/THE CHRONICLE

Freshman quarterback Thaddeus Lewis and theBlue Devils are still playing for theirfirst win of 2006.

Or three, keep the ball and make something happen on his own.

While a mess of action is going on in the

backfield, the Navy offensive lineman will

try to dive down and block the Duke defenders at their legs—as opposed to the more traditional style of blocking the defender above his waist. The Navy offensive style poses problems for the Blue Devils because it is unlike anything they have seen all year. “When you play the triple option, number one, they make you defend the entire width of the field,” Roof said. “They make you have to be extremely disciplined and assignment conscience, make sure to take care of the dive, take care of the quarterback phase and take care of the pitch phase of the option.” If the Blue Devils hope to go ahead early against the Midshipmen, they will have to adjust quickly to the different style. In order to get his team ready, Roof has spent the week preaching to his team about the importance of technique and assignments, he said. “Sometimes when you make a mistake on the play on defense you don’t get exposed, but against the triple option, they read it and take advantage of it,” Roof said. Even though Navy is the number two Division I rushing offense with 310.9 yards per game, the Midshipmen suffered a devastating loss when starting quarterback Brian Hampton sustained a season-ending knee injury against Rutgers two games ago. At the time, Navy led the nation in rushing with 350.5 yards per game. After the Midshipmen lost Hampton, that average dropped significantly when Rutgers held Navy to 113 yards. Then a week later, the Midshipmen posted 271 yards rushing in a 38-14 loss to Notre Dame. Not only did the Fighting Irish take advantage of Navy’s weakened running game, but they also showed that Navy’s defense is susceptible to giving up points early. Notre Dame scored on its first five possessions to take a 31-14 lead. If the Blue Devils can find away to limit the run and get up on Navy early, then they could avenge their loss from a season ago, and more importantly, end the longest losing streak in the NCAA. “Our day is coming soon,” offensive lineman Cameron Goldberg said. “As you can see, we are really close, and we are working as hard as as we can. It’s going to come. It’s not going to be like this forever”

MICHAEL CHANG/THE CHRONICLE

Navy rushed for 326 yards in their 28-21 victory over Duke Oct. 1,2005 in WallaceWade Stadium.


14IFRIDAY, NOVEMBER

THE CHRONICLE

3, 2006

FIELD HOCKEY from page

WHITEHEAD from page 1 team to a school-record leaving to join Duke head

for wins before coach Beth Boz-

man’s staff. “It is a really devastating loss for everyone,” Bozman said. “Some people have a profound impact on everyone they meet, and Maria was that kind of person. Everyone in the field hockey community suffered a great loss.” At Wake Forest, Whitehead made the All-ACC team twice. Over her four years, the Demon Deacons reached three final fours. Whitehead was a member of Wake Forest’s first national-championship field hockey squad in 2002. With the ACC tournament being played in Chapel Hill this week, the news of Whitehead’s death reverberated throughout the tight-knit field hockey community. “Maria was a great competitor,” North Carolina head coach Karen Shelton said. “Maria had a lot of fire. She was so instrumental in Wake Forest’s emergence into the field hockey elite.” In her short time at Duke, Whitehead’s influence was felt throughout the Duke community.A moment of silence was observed before the men’s basketball game against Shaw. “We certainly pass on our condolences and sympathy to women’s field hockey and the family of Maria,” football head coach Ted Roof said. A memorial service will be held Sunday at 5 p.m. in the Duke Chapel in honor of Whitehead. Those close to Whitehead have requested that in lieu of flowers, donations be made to the Preston Robert Tisch Brain Tumor Center at Duke. The address is: P.O Box 3624, Durham, N.C. 27710, in care of Dr. Henry Friedman. “She was a champion,” Director of Athletics Joe Alieva said. “We will miss her.”

MATT NEWCOMB/THE CHRONICLE

Thefield hockey team lost to North Carolina Thursday hours after learning of the death of theirassistant coach.

11

Thursday, left Duke’s emotional state up in the air. “The Duke team could either rally with this or it would just be very difficult for them-to focus,” Shelton said. For nearly all the first half, the Blue Devils could not break through North Carolina’s defense. The Tar Heels pressed Duke l as soon as the Blue Devils touched the ball, consistendy forcing them to the sideline with two and sometimes three defenders. The Blue Devils came out much more aggressive and cohesive in the second half, as they made crisper passes and poked away Tar Heel possessions. “We just corrected some things we had hoped to do in the first half but didn’t [do],” Bozman said. It all unraveled, however, around the 64th minute. The Tar Heels converted a penalty corner into what appeared to be the go-ahead goal, but the officials declared it null. Moments later, however, UNC’s Alii Tanner, deflected Brooke Miller’s shot off another penalty corner into the net for the game-winning goal. Miller would add another goal on a penalty stroke three minutes later to set the final score. Still, Duke’s biggest loss this week was not the one Thursday to its rival. “It’s not been a great week,” Bozman said. ‘We went into this game not to play for [Whitehead] but to play for everything she’s meant for us.” While Duke will likely play again this season in the NCAA tournament, games do not hold much significance right now for anyone on the team. “I don’t think anyone walked off that field saying they had left anything there today,” Bozman said. “It’s a game—only a game.”

Is it possible to believe in anything, or anyone?

What is the significance of the Inevitability of one's own death? Why should one live at all? I

HE EXISTENTIALIST IMAGINATION (AL, CZ, 61, lAA)

German 183 (also Lit 132A: Phil 195) (taught in English) Professor Michael Morton TTh 2:50 4:05 -

Readings from Kierkegaard, Dostoevsky, Nietzsche, Tolstoy, Rilke, Kafka, Hesse, Heidegger, Sartre, Mairaux, Camus, Beckett


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THE CHRONICLE

It FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 3,2006

M. BASKETBALL from page 11

KEVIN HWANG (LEFT) AND SARA GUERERRO/THE CHRONICLE

Sophomore forward Josh Mcßoberts (right) scored 11 points, pulled down eight rebounds and dished out sixassists Thursday night against Shaw.

Ales on he rm This Friday on the Plaza 5-7 PM

made something happen off the dribble,” Shaw head coach Robert Brickey said. “And that’s pretty impressive when you’re 6-foot-ll.” The sophomore, who played in the shadow of Shelden Williams last season, broke out with 11 points, eight rebounds, six assists and four steals—all in 25 minutes. Thomas, DeMarcus Nelson and Marty Pocius also scored in double figures for the Blue Devils, who need to replace the 45.6 points per game JJ. Redick and Williams averaged last season. Pocius, in particular, came out hot in the second half with eight points and a-spectacular block in a span of three minutes. “Marty played very well tonight,” Krzyzewski said. “It’s the best he’s tried to play defense. He was 3-for-B in the 2nd half. He had six assists and no- turnovers. He’s a kid that can be in there and light a fire.” Duke’s offensive onslaught was triggered by its pressure defense, which converted 29 Shaw turnovers into 40 points. Thomas led the way with five of the team’s 18 steals in the game. In addition, the Blue Devils took three charges in the first half. “We have big wings that are athletic,” Krzyzewski said. “They’re trying to play our defense very well.” The infusion of athleticism is a welcome change from last season’s team, which often struggled against more agile teams like Georgetown and Louisiana State. Henderson, Thomas and Dave McClure—who returned after redshirting last season while recovering from a knee injury—lend Duke more versatility on both ends of the floor. “Because [McClure’s] strong, he can cover a number of different positions,” Krzyzewski said. “We’re even trying to use he and [Henderson] on the ball so it doesn’t wear DeMarcus out.” The Blue Devils’ versatility extends to the offensive end, where an improved transition game should take pressure off their three-point shooting. Without Paulus, Scheyer served as Duke’s main ball handler. Mcßoberts, Nelson and Jordan Davidson also ran the offense for stretches of the game. “This experience with the ball is a good one [for Scheyer], because—he can start with Greg obviously—but he can also back him up,” Krzyzewski said. “It gives us a good rotation.” Duke’s transition game will only be helped when Paulus returns, which could be as soon as the regular-season opener Nov. 12, Krzyzewski said. The Blue Devils will complete their exhibition season Saturday night when they host North Carolina Central at 7 p.m. “It’s a really good time,” Krzyzewski said. “We did it before, but this year, it’s even better that we’re doing it. I hope that both teams play well but also that it’s a nice celebration of Durham because we have two such classy universities.”

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Visit The Chronicle online @

www.dukechronicle.com


THE CHRONICLE

FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 3,

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The Chronicle What we loved about watching the game: Yaffe I got to see at least one basket: Ryan, Saidi And the commentary was great: Tim, Holley How do you know?: I can read lips: Longles, Dingles Greg, Katie The silence was soothing: Not as good as the post-game slip up: Keah, MChang Kevin, Sara The minute-by-minute was fantastic:... Lindsay But the game seemed to last for-eh-vur: Roily was once a Roily TV sports broadcaster:

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181FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 3, 2006

Compass points East, not West Duke an- Campus community. Much of that criticism is nounced the awarding of its dining now muted, if not largely contract to Compass Group absent. Freshmen continue to ne UP out this past June, side the East Kernel Dawkins, editorial Union building vice president of campus services, prom- to take advantage of the ised that “the proof will be new and improved Marketin the pudding.” Two place. In addition to quantimonths into the school year, ty, which was never an issue, Dawkins and Director of students now speak of qualiDining Services Jim Wulforst ty and variety, From fresh fish to home deserve praise for delivering grown organic vegetables, on that promise. of the friendly personnel to longer one In past years, truisms of the freshmen ex- operating hours, the Marketperience at Duke was the dis- place management has added appointing freshman board several touches that legitplan. The Marketplace and imize their venue not just as a its operator, ARAMARK burdensome obligation for Corp., were almost universal- first-year students, but as a ly criticized for providing destination worthy of those poor food and an even poor- students’ dining dollars, Conversely, the verdict at er level of service to the East A Then

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the Great Hall on West Campus has been decidedly mixed. Earlier in the year students complained about changes to self-service at the saladbar and spoke out about the absence of the much-beloved Sitar India Palace station. Those specific grievances have since been addressed. Wulforst deserves much credit for his swift responsiveness, as does Compass for its willingness to listen, evidenced by the visible presence of managers in the Great Hall frequentiy soliciting students for their concerns and reactions. The Great Hall, however, remains a work in progress. Whereas the Marketplace has offered variety, the menus at the Great Hall remain largely if not entirely fixed.

—Walltown resident Peter Hausmann on the race for district attorney and Nov. 7 election. See story page 1.

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The

Lacrosse scandal. Everyone attributes it to that event that may or may not have occurred last spring. That’s why all these new student organizations for this or that cultural group are cropping up, some DSG senators speculated. Don’t get me wrong, I’m sure that has ensome couraged groups to come forward, but by no means is this inallie vergotz flux of culture-redown and dirty with dsg lated grou »s an new. thing In the last two weeks of DSG fun, much time has been spent discussing the recognition of new student groups that focus on some particular country or culture. Several senators have questioned the necessity for such groups—and rightly so. If every specific cultural group tried to create its own student organization, well, that would be a great way to keep the campus as separate and segregated as possible as well as put a nice strain on funding, right? The last two meetings saw the recognition of four specific groups that I would put into this category: the Duke University Lithuanian Club, the Cuban Student Association, the Haitian Student Association and the Society for Hispanic Professional Engineers. Each of these groups welcomes most anyone, although their names may suggest otherwise. DSG senators went through the usual process of listening to Student Organization Finance Committee Chair Alex Crable, a sophomore, explain the groups’ purposes and the concerns SOFC may have had regarding each group. After proper discussion and deliberation, all were recognized. Many questioned whether or not approval of such groups would put a strain on SOFC funding. Crable assured DSG that SOFC is far from reaching the maximum number of groups it can handle. He also noted that a precedent has been set for such specific groups; many have stepped forward in previous years, prior to all the recent talk about campus divides. At the Oct. 25 DSG meeting, Robert Thompson, dean of Trinity College and vice provost for undergraduate education, gave a special presentation. He just so happens to be the Campus Culture Initiative chair as well. His presentation addressed many of 1

The Chronicle welcomes submissions in the form oflet-

tcrs to the editor or guest columns. Submissions must include the author’s name, signature, department or class, and for

ings offered continue to be small. A tiny spoonful of vegetables or mashed potatoes seems rather pithy for the price students pay to dine at the Great Hall. Those criticisms aside, changes in dining on both campuses represent a tremendous, if not belated, leap forward from the dismal ARAMARK era here at Duke. As Compass settles in, the tendency to become complacent may seep in as well. One hopes that Compass will allay these fears by addressing the shortcomings in dining at the Great Hall and by continuing to strive for the same level of service and responsiveness that has characterized its performance during its first few months on campus.

Campus culture alive and well

ontherecord I can’t speak for why people will vote for [Durham District Attorney Mike Nifong]. I will vote against him. I don ’t know what his motives are.

If anything, meal options the Great Hall may have actually been reduced from offerings a year ago. A station offering smoothies has taken the place of a station previously home to customizable sandwiches and wraps. There is certainly no shortage of locations on West where one may procure a smoothie, Quenchers and Alpine Atrium being among the most popular. There are few locations, however, where one could make his own sandwich. The sandwich station should be brought back with all deliberate speed. Further, it seems as if the Great Hall not only offers fewer viable options compared to its counterpart on East, but also that its servat

CGl’s findings, but what was most striking to me in his entire presentation was that he referred to Duke as “a campus of divides... polarized, fractionated.” So what does this have to do with anything? As Executive Vice President Joe Fore pointed out, Duke needs to find the appropriate balance between these small groups DSC has recognized and finding ways to collaborate as one larger community. According to a letter posted on the CCI website (which I highly encourage everyone to take a look at... back off ofFacebook.com for one afternoon), two main CCI goals are to “seek to find specific and constructive ways to promote respect and responsibility and to lessen campus divides.” Overall, it says that CGl's “shared goal is a stronger and more inclusive community.” With the support of DSC, Duke is well on its way to this goal, and as evidenced by the activity of such small groups in the past, it has been. Although these small groups give the appearance of dividing the community, they have a much greater purpose. Within these groups, members learn about and celebrate their respective cultures, and if the members happen to have no immediate ties to the culture (which is more common than you might think), they gain a much deeper understanding of other cultures. This deeper understanding, regardless of who is acquiring it, helps to eliminate the ignorance that is so often the cause of clashing cultures. Whether they realize it or not, the members of these small groups may have a dynamic and beneficial effect on the Duke community as a whole: They may lay the foundations for understanding the profound differences between cultures and the ways people can overcome these differences. DSG and CGI together have done a fine job of addressing these issues, although there is always more work to be done. They need to not only recognize and encourage these cultural groups, but they must also challenge these groups to take a greater stand in addressing campus culture. In such a mammoth task of identifying the problems with Duke’s culture, why not work from the bottom up and get to the root of cultural disparities? Best of luck to the new groups DSG recognized and to all the other cultural groups out there; it is time your seemingly small groups make a big impact on campus. Allie Vergotz is a Trinity freshman'. Her column runs every other Friday.


THE CHRONICLE

commentaries

FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 3, 2006 (1!.9

Who is stuck in Iraq?

Oct.

30, Pasadena City College; John Kerry speaking: ‘You know, educa-

that they’re taking a noble stand. Their leaders are drawn from kids our tion—if you make the most of it, age at the military academies, universities you study hard and you do your homework that regularly rack up more Rhodes scholand you make an effort to be smart, you ars than anywhere else. And of course, can do well. If you don’t, they’re most noticeably you get stuck in Iraq.” drawn from our ROTC Cheney responds: classmates, who don’t need “John Kerry needs to to convince anyone that * learn that the men and they study. These people women serving in Iraq are a model group, perfect aren’t there because they for brochures and “Be all didn’t study hard or do the you can be” slogans. their homework. They’re But family men, patriots james zou smart, patriotic, exceptionand sparkle-uniformed kids hello, world ally well trained and dediaren’t enough to fill the cated to their mission. military’s rank and file. They are heroes, and they are the pride So we ask, again, “who are the of the United States of America.” troops?” They are kids barely or not Forget about Kerry’s bumbling. Forget even out of high school, hoping to fight about the hollow praises of a draft-dodging now so that they’ll be given the money vice president. Forget, if you can, the solto study later. In 2003 the Pentagon diers in the military recruitment commerspent almost $4 billion targeting low-incials. Who is “stuck in Iraq?” Who, if anycome youth with commercials, video one, screwed up to land himself in the games and enlistment bonuses. The remilitary? Let’s start simple: who are “the sult: low to median income households of $20,000 to $54,999 are significantly troops,” really? This much we know: Many are drawn overrepresented in military recruiting. from the National Guard, men and women Puerto Rico, with a 40 percent unempulled away from productive civilian em- ployment rate, is the Army’s number ployment and a cherished family to fight in one recruiting territory. It yields four the sand. They’re drawn from a group of times the number of recruits that U.S. principle-minded ordinary citizens who offices do. Most of these recruits are not could be doing other jobs and truly bestuck in Iraq because they goofed off lieve—impugn their beliefs if you will— and didn’t study; they are there because

a

they can’t afford

to goof off or study. But the military is big enough for another sort of soldier. If you went to a public high school, you may have some inkling of who this is. There’s a contingent of human explosions who couldn’t conceivably exist anywhere but in a place where you follow orders or are jailed, kill or are killed. This future soldier may have even come from a “good family,” may have even had all the right chances in life. But for reasons complex, he’d rather raise hell. Before he was paid to do it, he was raving, brawling, rampaging—warring. He was always a warrior. He was always fighting. He’s

This is the last type of soldier: the wild firebrand who neither Bush nor Kerry will fully acknowledge. He does the dangerous jobs that aren’t covered in the news, but he—or she, as we’ve seen—still sometimes makes his presence know at the center of the most sadistic cruelties that accompany war. Neither Kerry nor Cheney showed much of an eye for nuance in their recent comments. But neither was totally wrong, either. Kerry’s “joke” demeaned the qualities of most soldiers, but it’s also lined with the uncomfortable wisdom of someone who spent time in the definitely military and not interSo we ask, again, “who are the troops?” knows its worst ested in elements. ChThey are kids barely or not even out of studying. eney’s annoyIf you ingly high school, hoping to fight now so that hagiodoubt graphic reply they’ll be given the money to study later. this, then only lumps the ust do a bad in with simple anthe good, and thropological experiment. Go hang out encourages future wars by glossing for a few evenings around a military over the complex mixture of individubase, in this country or overseas, and try als who are required to fight this one. not to lose your head. If you consider Most troops in Iraq get by because yourself a confident, commanding perthey’re brave. A few are just crazy. son—maybe even tough and strong you’d be wise not to show it, because James Zou is a Trinity senior. His column you’ll probably be crushed—physically runs every other Friday. He would like to and egotistically—by some of the fullthank Philip Sugg for discussions relating to time maniacs who fight our wars for us. this column. —

Nifong? Not fine by me.

In

239 days, Mike Nifong has sullied his 27-year career with the Durham District Attorney’s office. During that time, Nifong has been roundly criticized for procedural and ethical violations. So will Durham County voters consider his misconduct at the polls? According to a Raleigh News & Observer poll, the answer is no That Oct. 16-19 survey of 600 “likely voters” indicates Nifong is strongly favored to win, attracting 46 percent of kristin butler those surveyed. By contrast, 28 with ail deliberate speed percent pledged support for Lewis Cheek, 24 percent remained undecided, and 2 percent preferred write-in candidate Steve Monks. Now for once, I’m speechless: What could 46 percent of Durham’s likely voters possibly be thinking? If the past seven months have taught us anything at all, it’s this: Mike Nifong is not fit to be our district attorney. His highly unethical and unprofessional conduct is as serious as it is systematic; prominent among Nifong’s most egregious acts is his refusal to consider exculpatory evidence, even as he misrepresented the facts of the case to media oudets. Of course, Reade Seligmann, Collin Finnerty and Dave Evans may not have ever been indicted if Nifong had not orchestrated a tainted photo lineup, whose conditions violated not only Durham police standards, but also those of the Actual Innocence Commission, an organization that advocates for the rights of the accused. And as we all found out last week, Nifong has never spoken—not once! —to the alleged victim about the events of that night; still, he had no reservations about

telling Bill O’Reilly that “there is not a doubt in my mind that [the alleged victim] was raped and assaulted at this lo-

whether or not the person the governor would appoint [if

Nifong loses] would do any better than Nifong?” Well, the answer is that we certainly couldn’t do much

cation” and announcing to Dan Abrams that “I am convinced that there was a rape, yes sir.” worse. As we’ve seen, Nifong has violated every ethical rule This brings us to an important point: It was Mike Nifong’s in the book, all the while attempting to leverage his role mouth —at least as much as Durham’s racial or socioecoas prosecutor for his reelection campaign. nomic tensions —that blew this case out of proportion. And never forget that we’re talking about a profoundWhile giving more than 50 interviews in the first days of ly stubborn, unstable man here, one who colleagues say the investigation, Nifong called the players “hooligans,” will “curse you, scream at you, call you names over nothwondered aloud “why one would need an attorney if one ing.” Others report seeing Nifong “lose his temper and had not done anything and was not charged,” and deberate attorneys in an unprofessional manner.” nounced their “blue wall of silence” to the press. In his defense, some Nifong supporters have rationalDespite the fact that such grandstanding is clearly in vi- ized that “we don’t have a school to tell you how to handle olation of prosecutors’ ethical crisis situations” and “he was very code, Nifong continued to claim new to the situation at the time.” that the students’ “daddies could Yet given the district attorney’s Nifong did, indeed, have a responmercurial personality, these debuy them expensive lawyers” and that they knew the right people, fenses seem irrelevant. sibility to carefully and dispassionwhile even questioning their Nifong has no one to blame “manhood ately investigate the alleged rape but his own antagonism for his This arrogant, self-serving electoral woes. when it was reported. In that reAnd woes they are—especially commentary is chief among the reasons why I will be voting on the Duke campus. gard, he has done more than just Whether or not it was true that against Mike Nifong on Tuesday. fail; he has use this investigation as “there’s been a feeling in the past Nifong did, indeed, have a that Duke students are treated difresponsibility to carefully and a bully pulpit to inflame racial and dispassionately investigate the ferentlyby the court system,” Nifong socioeconomic tensions in our has made sure that we are today. alleged rape when it was rethat he has Does the man who vowed to ported. In regard, community. done more than just fail; he “not allow Durham’s view in the has use this investigation as a minds of the world to be a bunch oflacrosse players at Duke raping a bully pulpit to inflame racial and socioeconomic tensions in black girl from Durham” really our community. think his behavior has done anything to “address the underlying divisions that have been revealed?” Now, some among his supporters —notably the IndeOf course not; he is the one who has “revealed” them pendent Weekly, which is widely distributed on campus have noted that although Nifong “may have mishandled the case,” we should ask, “How could anyone know Kristin Butler is a Trinity junior. Her column runs every Friday. ”

The Chronicle is accepting remembrances for Maria Whitehead, Melissa Hagberg and Maja Kolb. Send your memories and stories to Dan at dbe@duke.edu.


20IFRIDAY, NOVEMBER 3,

THE CHRONICLE

2006

Summer Session 2007 Please find below the projected schedule for Summer Session 2007. Early registration begins on February 26.

TERM 1 (May 17-June 28) AAAS 132 Black Popular Culture AALLI37 Contemporary Culture in South Asia ARTHIST 69 Intro to the History of Art ARTHIST 70 Intro to the History of Art BAA 93 Intro to Biological Anthropology

BAAI33L The Human Body BAA 134 L Anthropology of the Skeleton BAA 144 L Primate Field Biology A ■ 1 BAA 289 Comparative Mammalian Anatomy BIOCHEM 227 Intro to Biochemistry I BIOLOGY 174 Philosophy of Biology CHEM 21L General Chemistry (pt, 1) CHEM 151L Organic Chemistry (pt.l) CHEM

152 L

Organic Chemistry (pt. 2)

CHINESE 1 Elementary Chinese (pt, 1) CHINESE 63 Intermediate Chinese (pt. 1) CHINESE 125 Advanced Chinese (pt. 1) CHINESE 135 Readings in Modern Chinese COMPSCI 1 Principles of Computer Science COMPSCII3O Intro to Design/Analy of Algorithms CULANTH 94 Intro to Cultural Anthropology CULANTH 108 Fantasy /Masjs Media/Pop Culture CULANTH 138 Religious Movements ECON 51D Economic Principles ECON 550 Intermediate Economics I ECON 1050 Intermediate Economics II ECON HOD Intermediate Economics 111 ECON 1391) Introduction to Econometrics ECON 182 Financial Accounting EDUC 118 Educational Psychology EDUC 137 Contemporary Issues in Education EDUC 140 The Psychology ofWork EDUC 153 S Research in Service Learning EDUC 209 Global Education ENGLISH 63S Intro to Creative Writing ENGLISH 13IS Writing Jane Austen

Shelley ENGLISH 139CS Blake, Wordsworth ENGLISH 1628 Amer Drama/Film: 1945-1960 ENGLISH I69CS Contemporary Amer Fiction &

EOS 11 The Dynamic Earth FRENCH 2 Elementary French 2 FRENCH 63 Intermediate French Lang & Cult FRENCH 76 Adv Intermediate French Lang & Cult FVD 101 Introduction to Documentary GERMAN 1 First-Year German 1 GERMAN 65 Intermediate German I GREEK I Elementary Greek (pt. 1) HINDI 63 Intermediate Hindi (pt. 1) HISTORY 101 C Terrorism: 1848-1968 HISTORY 103 T he Crusades 1050-1291 HISTORY 111 C New Nation: The US, 1800-1860 HISTORY 123 Madness & Society

ICS 103E Fantasy/Mass Media/Pop Culture ITALIAN 2 Elementary Italian 2 JPN 64 Intermediate Japanese (pt. 2) JPN 125 Advanced Japanese (pt. I) LATIN 1 Elementary Latin (pt. 1) LATIN 63 Intermediate Latin LIT 145 S Robots as Embodied Machines LIT 145 S Bodies of Evidence LIT 151BS The Politics of Science Fiction LIT I62AS Animals & Human(e) Politics MATH 31L Laboratory Calculus I M ATH 32 Introductory Calculus 11 MATH 103 Intermediate Calculus MATH 107 Linear Algebra & Diff Equations MAT H 108 Ordinary & Partial Diff Equations MMS 120 Managerial Effectiveness MMS 161 Marketing Management MUSIC 79C Class Guitar MUSIC 80A Classical Piano (half-hour lessons) MUSIC 88A Guitar (half-hour lessons) MUSIC 90A Classical Piano (hour lessons)

ENGLISH 26S Literature at Sea ENGLISH 26S Experimental Fictions ENGLISH 63S Intro to Creative Writing

PHIL 43S Intro to Philosophy PHIL 44S Intro to Philosophy PHIL 481 ogic PHIL 112 Philosophy ofMind PHIL 114Philosophy of Biology PHIL 117 Ancient & Modern Ethical Theory PHIL 130 Philosophy of Religion PHIL 195 Issues in Philosophical Psychology PHYSEDU 15A/B Weight Training PHYSEDU 18 Fly Fishing PHYSEDU 33 Physical Fitness for Women PHYSEDU 34 Pilates Mat & Ball PHYSEDU 40 Beginning Tennis PHYSEDU 45 Indoor Cycling PHYSEDU 174 Sports Marketing PHYSICS 53L Genera! Physics I POLSCI 106 International Security POLSCI 109 Left, Right & Center POLSCI 123 Intro to Political Philosophy PSY 11 Introductory Psychology PSY 92 Cognitive Psychology PSY 97 Developmental Psychology PSY 99 Personality- & Social Behavior PSY 101 Research Methods in Psych Science PSY 114 Personality PSY 117 Statistical Methods PSY 119A Abnormal Psychology PSY 1198 Child Clinical Psychology PS Y 151 S Clinical Interven w/Chiidren & Families PSY Development In Literature S PSY 170LS Psychology ofStereotypes & Prejudice PSY 170PS Mass Media & Mental Illness RELIGION lit The Historical Jesus RELIGION 124 Religion in American Life RELIGION 173 Religious Movements RELIGION 185 African-American in World Rel SOCIOL 120 Causes of Crime SOCIOL 138 Theory & Society SOCIOL 145 Nations/Regions/Global Economy SPANISH I Elementary Spanish 1 SPANISH 2 Elementary Spanish 2 SPANISH 63 Intermediate Spanish SPANISH 76 Advanced Intermediate Spanish SPANISH 105 Spanish for Oral Communication STAIO Basic Statistics & Quantitative Literacy STA 101 Data Analysis & Statistical Inference THEATRST 89 Intro to Acting THEATRSTIO2 Amer Drama/Film: 1945-1960 ;

ENGLISH 90AS Readings In Genre

EOS 11 The Dynamic Earth *VD 106 American Film Comedy *

&

\

llf

110D Intermediate Economics 111

Practice

&

&

ECON

&

JEN 126 Advanced Japanese (pt.2)

THEATRST 137 S Screenwriting THEATRST 139 S TV Writing: Hour-long Drama WOMENST 150 S Genre/Gender/Autobiography WOMENST 150 S Sickness/Health: Gender/Medicine Sexuality WOMENST 150 S Language WOMENST ISOS Feminist Utopia/Science Fiction ( I„|v 1 TFP\I cr „cf 11 1 (duly A ii I LJViVI L Z. r\ UJL,Hat

ECON 139 D Introduction to Econometrics EDUC 100 Foundations of Education EDUC 118 Educational Psychology

138 S Documentary Theory

LATIN 2 Elementary Latin (pt. 2) LIT 120BS Digital Third Worlds LIT 150 S The Beat Generation MATH 31L Laboratory Calculus I M ATH 32 Introductory Calculus U MATH 103 Intermediate Calculus MATH 107 Linear Algebra Diff Equations MATH 108 Ordinary Partial Diff Equations MMS 161 Marketing Management MUSIC 80A Classical Piano (half-hour lessons) MUSIC 88A Guitar (half-hour lessons) MUSIC 90A Classical Piano (hour lessons) PHIL 43S Intro to Philosophy

1701 Human

AALL 137 Contemporary Culture in South Asia ARTHIST 69 Intro to the History of Art ARTHIST 70 Intro to the History of Art BAA 40 Next of Kin: Underst the Great Apes BAA 93 Intro to Biological Anthropology BAA 147 Bodies of Evidence: Forensic Anthrop BAA 172 L Primate Anatomy CHEM 221. General Chemistry (pt. 2) CHEM 152L Organic Chemistry (pt. 2) CULANTH 180 Sex & Advertising ECON 51D Economic Principles ECON 55D Intermediate Economics I ECON 1050 IntermediateEconomics II

VT)

GERM AN 2 First-Year German II GERMAN 66 Intermediate German II GREEK 2 Elementary Greek (pt. 2) HINDI 64 Intermediate Hindi (pt. 2) HISTORY 104 Diseases & Disparities in Amer Hist

,

PHIL 44S Intro to Philosophy PHIL 48 Logic PHIL 112Philosophy of Mind PHIL 117 Ancient & Modern Ethical Theory PHIL 118 Philosophical Issues in Medical Ethics PHIL 130 Philosophy of Religion PHYSEDU 15A/B Weight Training PHYSEDU 16 Enduarance Swimming PHYSEDU 20 Beginning Swimming PHYSEDU 21 Intermediate Swimming PHYSEDU 172 Admin In Sports Management PHYSICS 54L General Physics 11 PHYSICS 55 Intro to Astronomy POLSCI 93 International Relations POLSCI 114 Public Opinion POLSCI 131 Intro American Political Thought POLSCI 155 Political Economy of Development PSY i I Introductory Psychology PSY 92 Cognitive Psychology PSY 97 Developmental Psychology PSY 99 Personality' & Social Behavior PSY 101 Research Methods in Psych Science PSY 117 Statistical Methods PSY IJ9A Abnormal Psychology PSY 170GS Social Psychology & Education PSY 170RS Dating & Interpersonal Relationships RELIGION 102 The New Testement RELIGION 185 S Animals/ Angels/Artificial Intel SOCIOL 1«D Intro to Sociology SOCIOL 119 Juvenile Delinquency SOCIOL 153 Sport & Society SOCIOL 155 Organixations & Management SPANISH 1 Elementary Spanish 1 SPANISH 2 Elementary Spanish 2 SPANISH 63 Intermediate Spanish SPANISH 76 Advanced Intermediate Spanish SPANISH 105 Spanish for Oral Communication STA 10 Basic Statistics & Quantitative Literacy STA 101 Data Analysis & Statistical Inference THEATRST 89 Intro to Acting THEATRST S Communication/Iraprov & Business WOMENST ISOS Feminist Memoirs WOMENST 150 S Real Women: Doc Fllm/TV WRITING2O Academic Writing

100

summersession.duke.edu


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