Foot ball a
Resignation
the program\'s future, PAGE 13
Reeve resigns her post, PAGE 3
Prominent lums meet to discuss
A M basketball ,� f
Director of Parking Cathy
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Duke tries to pick up its Ist ACC W win at Miami Sunday, PAGE 13
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11
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French Sci Lacrosse allegations change again opens its doors, labs by
Adam Nathan
THE CHRONICLE
Four years of construction and $ll5 million later, the French Family Science Center—one of the most significant additions to West Campus in recent years—is now open for classes and research. The 280,000-sq. ft. center—founded with a $3O million gift from the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation and named for Melinda French Gates, Trinity ’B6 and Fuqua ’B7—brings the chemistry, biology and physics departments together under one roof. “I’m excited. The building represents in a really powerful symbolic way our commitment to science research and education,” Provost Peter Lange said. “I’m pleased with it architecturally and prac-
tically.” Stephen Nowicki, dean of natural sciences, said the FSC will play a major role in bringing the sciences at Duke into the physical and academic spotlight. “In a sense, you can see the FSC as
being the next big piece of the big puzzle of the science and engineering complex,” he said. “It brings everybody in the sciences closer together, running from the [Duke University] Medical Center to the Biological Sciences Building.” Nowicki said the FSC was designed by the same faculty members who now occu-
py its labs and offices. The architects, Moore Ruble Yudell and the Hillier Group, worked closely with professors to modify the spaces to SEE FRENCH SCIENCE ON PAGE 8
WOJCIECHOWSKA
BY IZA THE CHRONICLE
The alleged victim in the lacrosse case told investigators Dec. 21 that Reade Seligmann did not assault her, and she changed several other details given in previous interviews about the March 13 incident, according to court papers filed by the defense Thursday. In an April interview with investigators, the alleged victim said she was “100-percent” sure Seligmann had forced her to perform oral sex on him. Last month, however, she claimed Seligmann did not commit any sex act on her and only watched, saying he was getting married the following day, according to the notes of Linwood Wilson, an investigator for the Durham District Attorney’s Office. In previous interviews, the alleged victim had claimed the alleged rape took place shortly before the two dancers left the house close to 1 a.m. In her most recent account of events, however, the alleged victim said the attack occurred between 11:35 p.m. and 12 a.m., which the defense motion states is contradicted by both the woman’s and Seligmann’s cell phone records. The alleged victim conducted four phone conversations between 11:11 p.m. and 11:39 p.m., and Seligmann received a phone call at 11:50 p.m. from his girlfriend. “According to the accuser’s most recent telling, she apparently spoke with someone at her father’s home for seven minutes during the time that she was planning her nude dance routine, during the time that she was dancing and then as she was fleeing to the car,” defense attorneys stated in the court papers, after having reviewed the cell phone records.
Duke looks to avenge
The alleged victim no longer maintains thatReade Seligmann (left) took part in a sexual assault March 13.
Time-stamped photographs show the dancers performing a routine be-
two
tween 12 a.m. and 12:04 a.m.
The alleged victim also now says that defendant David Evans, Trinity ’O6, is the one who “performed a sex act in her face,” instead of Seligmann, the motion stated. SEE INTERVIEW ON PAGE 6
defeat
Lane Towery THE CHRONICLE
by
It was the year that Duke was supposed to win its first national championship. All the pieces were in place. Monique Currie had returned for a fifth year, the Blue Devils finished the regular season ranked No. 1, and with VS. 15 minutes remaining in the National Championship game against Maryland, Duke was in control with a confident lead. Not only could the Blue 13-point r SATURDAY, 12:30 p.m. Devlls have won the game they should Cameron Indoor h ave won. Stadium But over the next 14 minutes the Terrapins crept back into contention before 5-foot-7 freshman Kristi Toliver hit a fade-away three-point shot over 6-foot-7 Alison Bales to tie the game with six seconds remaining. After five minutes of overtime, the Terps defeated Duke,
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_
.
.
.
>
CHRONICLE FILE PHOTO
Maryland's players celebrate, and Duke's MistieWilliams walks off the court, as the clock expires in overtimeoflast spring's tide game in Boston.
SEE W. BBALL ON PAGE 15
The Chronicle looks into how the latest developments will affect the case. P 9"
_
Admins uphold free speech in time of ‘attack’ by
Meg Bourdillon THE CHRONICLE
Provost Peter Lange and President Richard Brodhead took questions from faculty members during a closed meeting of the Arts and Sciences Council Thursday. To begin the discussion, Lange gave an address on dialogue and freedom of speech in an age of“democratized” electronic media. He focused his talk on the criticisms of faculty on blogs and in e-mails in the wake of the lacrosse scandal. Then, after Brodhead spoke briefly about framing SEE A&S COUNCIL ON PAGE
9
2
FRIDAY, JANUARY 12,
2007
THE CHRONICLE
'
Pentagon revises duty limit
Bush's Iraq plan draws opposition By Tom Raum THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
WASHINGTON President George W. Bush’s plan to send more troops to Iraq ran into a wall of criticism on Capitol Hill on Thursday as administration officials drew confrontational, sometimes mocking challenges from both Democrats and Republicans. Defense Secretary Robert Gates said in response that the administration might abandon the increase if the Iraqi government does not do its part, but he provided no timetable. “I think most of us, in our minds, are thinking of it as a matter of months, not 18
months or two years,” he told the House Armed Services Committee. President Bush and top members of his national security team sought to rally support for the troop buildup a day after he unveiled his plan for turning around a conflict that has lasted nearly four years and cost more than 3,000 American military lives. Instead, Gates and Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice found themselves embroiled in the first pitched exchanges in a battle that is likely to dominate Congress for months or longer and is already shaping the 2008 presidential election. “I think this speech given last night by
this president represents the most dangerous foreign policy blunder in this country since Vietnam, if it’s carried out,” Sen. Chuck Hagel, R-Neb., a potential 2008 presidential contender, told Rice. While he is a Republican, administration officials were defending the plan for the first time to the Democratic-controlled
Congress. Bill Nelson, D-Fla., noted his own past support for the administration on the war but said he could not continue. He declared, “I have not been told the truth over and over again by administration witnesses, and the American people have not been told the truth.”
U.S.-led forces detain 6 Iranians by
Kim Gamel
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
BAGHDAD, Iraq United States-led forces detained five Iranians Thursday, after a raid on a government office flying an Iranian flag, Iraqi officials and witnesses said, as President Bush vowed to isolate Iran and Syria as part of a new strategy to quell violence in Iraq. The multinational forces entered the building overnight, detained the Iranians and confiscated computers and documents, two senior local Kurdish officials said, speaking on condition of anonymity because of the sensitivity of the information.
Six people suspected of being involved in attacks against Iraqi civilians and military forces were initially detained, the U.S. military said in a statement. One was later released. The statement did not identify the nationalities of the suspects. ABC News, quoting Iraq’s Foreign Minister Hoshyar Zebari, reported that U.S. forces tried and failed later Thursday to seize more people at Irbil’s airport. That raid resulted in a tense, armed standoff with Kurdish peshmerga militia forces, the television news organization said. “There weren’t any casualties, but it was
a split second really for a disaster to happen,” Zebari told ABC News.
The arrests in Irbil drew condemnation from the regional Kurdish government and concern from Iraqi officials in Baghdad, who are trying to maintain close ties with both Iran and the United States, despite the hostility between the two. It was the second effort by the United States to target Iranians in less than a month. The raids also came as U.S. officials repeated long-standing accusations that Iran is encouraging the violence in Iraq by supplying money and weapons.
For the first time since President George W. Bush mobilized the National Guard and Reserve after the Sept. 11 attacks, the Pentagon is abandoning its limit on the time a citizen-soldier can be required to serve on active duty.
House passes stem cell bill The Democratic-controlled House passed a bill Thursday bolstering embryonic stem cell research, which advocates say shows promise for numerous medical cures. President Bush vetoed identical legislation last year, and the White House promised he would veto it again Thursday.
State Farm owes $2.5 million A jury on Thursday awarded $2.5 million in punitive damages to a couple who sued State Farm Fire & Casualty Co. for denying their claim after Hurricane Katrina, a decision that could benefit hundreds of other homeowners challenging insurers for refusing to cover billions of dollars in storm damage.
Anti-war activists organize Activists angered by President Bush's decision to send 21,500 more troops to Iraq rushed Thursday to organize protests from New York to San Francisco. News briefs compiled from wire reports "I've considered atheism, but there weren't enough holidays" —• Anonymous
Are you interested in the recently discovered Gospel of Judas and the Gospel of Mary Magdalene ?
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Religion 208,01 Special Topics in Writing Now open to all students Instructor: Susanna Drake Monday, Wednesday, Friday 10:20-11:10 am Writing designated course (W)
tHE CHRONICLE
FRIDAY, JANUARY 12, 20071 3
Director of
parking
Experts: DAs case nearing ‘implosion’
to
step down
Reeves departure prompts
evaluation
by
of department
Adam Eaglin THE CHRONICLE
Cathy Reeve, director of parking and transportation services, announced her resignation in late December, officials confirmed this week. Reeve’s resignation will
SEE REEVE ON PAGE 11
Durham District Attorney Mike Nito drop rape charges against three members of the 2005-2006 men’s lacrosse team Dec. 22 has led many legal experts to evaluate the case in a more critinews cal light. Although charges of analysis kidnapping and sexual offense against David Evans, Trinity ’O6, Collin Finnerty and Reade Seligmann remain, some law professors said the frequendy changing testimony of the alleged victim could further dismantle the prosecution’s case. The alleged victim’s recent claim that she was not penetrated by a penis—an action that defines rape under North Carolina law —undermined the testimonial evidence that the prosecution needed to convict the players of rape. Separate witness testimonies have provided conflicting versions of the events that occurred at the March 13 party. According to court documents filed by the defense, the alleged victim told prosecutors Dec. 21 that Seligmann did not commit sex acts on her, as she previously alleged, and instead stood and watched. “The re-working of the claims appears to be inconsistent with the testimony of the victim and would arguably cast doubt on its credibility,” law professor Paul Haagen said. “The witness is no longer
fong’s decision
by
take effect at the end of the month. Reeve said she decided to step down for personal and professional reasons and that she has enjoyed her time at the University. Kernel Dawkins, vice president of campus services, said an overall evaluation of the parking office will also be conducted following Reeve’s departure. “We’ll just be looking at the strengths and weaknesses of the team—looking to strengthen the parking administrative team,” he said. Reeve said she chose to resign shortly after her husband’s retirement last year. She added that her family intends to move to Beaufort, N.C., where they purchased property several years ago. “I love Duke, and it’s been great,” she said. “Every day when I drove up Chapel Drive, it never got old.” Dawkins said that since Reeve’s resignation was unexpected, a decision has not yet been made about who will replace her. He noted, however, that until a permanent director is chosen, he expects Reeve to remain in a “consulting role.” Administrative officials will take the results of the upcoming review into consideration when choosing Reeve’s successor, Dawkins said. Chuck Cattoti, director of events management, will take on an interim leadership role in Reeve’s stead.
Nate Freeman
THE CHRONICLE
JIANGHAI HO/THE CHRONICLE
Many students who studied abroad this fall were not able to get Blue Zone parking permits this spring.
With Blue Zone full, students feel crunch by
Caroline McGeough THE CHRONICLE
Duke students applying too late Monday morning for spring-semester Blue Zone permits were placed on a waitlist
and must now park on either Central or East campuses, Kernel Dawkins, vice president of campus services, confirmed
Wednesday.
“We have enough available parking for undergraduate students. The issue right now is location,” said Cathy Reeve, director of parking and transportation service, who recently announced plans to resign. Reeve said Parking and Transportation Services will perform space counts in coming days to determine which spaces in the Blue Zone are consistently available and distribute permits accordingly. “The last thing you want to do is then have a student call you and say, T’ve got a permit but I can’t find a place to
park,”’ she said. Although Dawkins said this is the first year the Blue Zone has been filled, Reeve said it has happened before. Students returning this semester from study abroad programs said the permit application process routinely puts students who did not obtain full-year permits at a disadvantage. “Every year when study abroad students come back, we can’t always place them in the Blue Zone immediately,” Reeve said. Junior Anne Knox Morton studied in Paris this past semester and is among those now waitlistedfor Blue Zone parking. Morton said she called from Paris to try to reserve a permit, but was told by Parking and Transportation Services representatives that applicants were unable to reserve parking permits until SEE BLUE ZONE ON PAGE 10
SEE LEGAL ANALYSIS ON PAGE 11
CORRECTION In the Jan. 10 article "Students meet CCI with indifference, ignorance," Mike Tikili's quote should not have been attributed to him.
4
THE CHRONICLE
FRIDAY, JANUARY 12, 2007
Researchers find way to detect HIV earlier by
Joe Clark
THE CHRONICLE
A
team
of Duke researchers has devel-
oped a new technique that could detect drug-resistant strains of the HIV virus
CHRONICLE FILE
PHOTO
AKaplan study has found law schools will accept multiple LSAT scores, though experts dispute the claim.
much earlier than current tests allow. In trials, the revolutionary test identified drug-resistant virus molecules at levels of 0.01 percent, improving upon presently available techniques, which can only determine drug-resistant viruses at levels of 20 percent, said Feng Gao, an associate professor at the Human Vaccine Institute and one of the lead scientists in the study. “Our test looks at individual virus molecules instead of whole populations,” he said. “That makes it about 1,000 times more accurate than currently available tests.” Individual strains of HIV that become resistant to drugs may not initially seem to
be dangerous, but they are quickly able to proliferate and make the limited number of drugs available to combat AIDS ineffective at fighting the disease, Gao said “Once a resistant strain [of HIV] evolves in the body, it has the ability to spread very quickly,” he added; “Once infected, the body makes about 10 billion new virus particles a day, and even if only 0.01 percent of those are immune, that still adds up to 1 million resistant virus molecules.” Although the new approach to identifying drug resistance in HIV is still in the research stages, it has the potential.to SEE AIDS TEST ON PAGE 10
Kaplan claims schools Compass to manage to count highest LSAT off-campus Starbucks Adam Eaglin THE CHRONICLE
by
Many law schools may soon alter their policies for reviewing LSAT scores, according to a recent study conducted by Kaplan Test Prep and Admissions. The survey found that many law schools reported that they would begin to review an applicant’s highest LSAT score, rather than his or her average scores—a change that could encourage students to take the test multiple times. But several law school admissions officers, as well as a representative from the Law School Admissions Council—which administers the LSAT—have recently questioned the veracity of Kaplan’s results. “That’s not the info that we’re getting,” said Wendy Margolis, a spokesperson for the LSAC, in regards
to
Kaplan’s study.
Zak Kazzaz
Bill Hoye, associate dean for admissions and financial aid at Duke School of Law, said he would not be surprised if prospective law students would succumb to the pressure of taking the LSAT a number of times. “I just hope they don’t,” he said. In June, the American Bar Association announced that it would no longer require law schools to submit students’ averageLSAT scores for data purposes, and that the highest score would instead be used. In response, Kaplan surveyed 170 law schools’ admissions officers and found that a majority of respondents were already shifting their policies. Prior to the ABA’s announcement, 87 percent oflaw schools reported that they
The Starbucks at the American Tobacco Complex will re-open Tuesday under the management ofCompass Group, with extended hours and an expanded menu. Resuming business after a temporary closure, the Starbucks will no longer accept FLEX but will be open Monday through Friday from 7 a.m. to 8 p.m., said Marcia Austero, vice president of operations for Compass Group at Duke. ARAMARK Corp., Duke’s previous dining service, managed the Starbucks until it closed Dec. 15. “[The Starbucks] was under ARAMARK management,” Director of Dining Services Jim Wulforst said. “Starbucks decertified
SEE LSATS ON PAGE 11
SEE STARBUCKS ON PAGE 7
by
THE CHRONICLE
JIANGHAI HO/THE
CHRONICLE
The Starbucks located at the American Tobacco Complex will no longer accept Flex as payment.
the
chronicle
FRIDAY, JANUARY 12,
20071 5
Duke docs develop removable tattoo ink by
Rebecca Wu
THE CHRONICLE
People with former girlfriends’ names or random Chinese characters mistakenly tattooed on their bodies will soon have ac-
cess to a new, much more easily removable tattoo ink.
The new tattoo ink is called Freedom-2 and will be produced by the company Freedom-2 LLC. It is made up of Food and Drug Administration-approved biodegradable and bioabsorbable pigments. Whereas removals currendy take about eight to 10 laser treatments, the new tattoo ink can be removed in a single session. Invented by Kim Koger, a plastic and reconstructive surgeon and co-founder of Freedom-2, and Bruce Klitzman, senior director of Duke’s Kenan Plastic Surgery Research Laboratories and associate research professor of surgery, will enable people to get tattoos without worrying about long and expensive removal procedures. “As tattoos got more sophisticated, we had to use multiple lasers to take care ofall the different pigments,” Koger said. “Even then, after 10 treatments costing about $lO,OOO, we would only be able to turn the artwork into a smudge.” Koger and Klitzman looked instead to create a more sophisticated ink that would be susceptible to a single lower-energy laser. “Black tattoo ink, for example, is made up of little pieces of coal and requires lots of energy to pulverize the entire pigment particle,” Klitzman said. The new ink, however, uses microencapsulation technology, which puts a shell around pigment particles that would normally be eliminated by the body. Remov-
PETER
GEBHARD/THE CHRONICLE
Dr. Bruce Klitzman is part of a team that has invented a new tattoo ink that isremovable in a single session.
ing the ink only requires breaking the shell, which can be done with a single laser, Klitzman added. The body then breaks down the pigments.
The new Freedom-2 ink is not only more easily removed but it is safer as well, the inventors said “Traditionally, what is concerning
about the
tattoo
industry is that they’re
heavily FDA-regulated,” said Sandy
not
Tsao, associate program director for procedural dermatology at the Massachusetts General Hospital. “Many times the inks contain carcinogenic and toxic ingredients, such as lead and zinc, which are very difficult to remove.” Roger, who is also assistant consulting
professor of plastic surgery at the University, said that while tattoo inks are now made of a variety of pigments, from heavy metals to automobile paint, the new ink uses polymers and pigments safe for the body and approved by the FDA for many other applications. According to the Journal of the American Academy of Dermatology, one in four American adults has at least one tattoo, and within that group, 17 percent have considered removal. “An interesting feature is that, on one hand, people ask how many people have tattoos and want them removed, but the real question is how many people who don’t have tattoos will consider it if it’s much more easily removed,” Klitzman said. From casual surveys he conducted, Klitzman estimated 80 percent of today’s youth would get a tattoo if it was a safe process and the tattoo could be easily removed. “I think a backlash of [the ink] would be that people will become careless in their decisions about getting tattoos,” said Aaron Gingey, a tattoo artist for Tattoo Company, located on Ninth Street in Durham. Gingey added that the new ink made the work of tattoo professionals seem temporary, which is the complete opposite of what he believes tattoos represent. Tattoo artists are also concerned about the quality of the ink, Gingey added. “I don’t want to invest in something that will not come out well,” he said. “It’s hard to tell how a tattoo pigment will age. With tattoos, it’s a matter of time.” Freedom-2 aims to release the new tattoo ink by the end of 2007.
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6 FRIDAY, JANUARY 12, 2007
THE CHRONICLE
INTERVIEW from page 1
Purse stolen in Medical Center An employee reported that she left her purse unattended in the Radiology Department at approximately 3:05 a.m. Jan. 5. When she returned, the purse and its contents, including a wallet, IDs, keys, credit cards and mp 3 player, were gone.
Fight breaks out in West Union During an altercation reported Jan. 8 in the West Union Building, an employee struck another employee. The victim took out a warrant for simple assault on the offender. Purse reported missing in LSRC An employee left a purse on a coat rack in an unsecured office at 10 a.m. Jan. 8 in the Levine Science Research Center. She discovered at 11:45 a.m. that the purse and its contents, including a camera phone, driver's license and credit cards, were missing.
Belongings stolen in Gray Building An employee left her wallet containing credit cards and currency on the floor beside her desk in an unsecured office in the Gray Building at 10:30 a.m. Jan. 8. She discovered it missing at 3:15 p.m. Money missing from West dorm room A student reported Jan. 8 that currency was missing from her dormitory room on West Campus that she had left secured on Dec. 17. Credit card stolen and used for fraud A Duke Hospital employee stated Jan. 4 that a credit card she kept in a lab coat was stolen and used to make fraudulent pur-
chases. The employee had last used the card Nov. 7, and fraudulent purchases had been made from Nov. 10 until this date. Lead apron lifted from locker An employee reported that he placed a lead apron in his assigned locker in the Duke Hospital North operating room area Jan. 4. When he returned Jan. 5, the apron was no longer inside. There was no evidence offorced entry to the locker or tampering with its combination lock. iPod and purse taken in Duke North An employee stated Jan. 6 she left her purse unattended underneath a computer station Jan. 4 at Duke Hospital North. The purse was found by another employee at 3 a.m. Jan. 6. An iPod Mini was missing. All other contents were still within the purse. Students’ items stolen over break Two students left their dormitory room Dec. 16 for Winter Break, and when they returned Jan. 9, they reported that a web camera, iPod, and currency were missing. Wallet taken in Brodie Gym A student left his wallet and its contents, including currency, ID, and various credit cards, unsecured on the floor at Brodie Gym Jan. 9 while he played basketball. When he went to retrieve the wallet, it was no longer there.
Employee’s money reported missing An employee reported that currency was missing from her wallet, which she left in an unsecured area in the Duke Hospital Jan. 9.
ous statements,” defense attorneys stated in the document. In the Dec. 21 interview, the alleged Defense attorneys said that because victim said she could no longer be sure the alleged victim claimed only one pershe was penetrated by a penis, which son performed an oral sex act, either prompted Durham District Attorney the identification of Evans or the April Mike Nifong to drop the rape charges identification of Seligmann is “demonagainst the three defendants Dec. 22. Even though she also said Seligmann strably false and necessarily unreliable.” In addition, the alleged victim did not participate in the alleged attack, changed her description of Evans. Nifong kept in place charges of sexual In April, she said her attacker looked offense and kidnapping against both like a picture of Evans but with a mushim and the other two defendants. tache. In December, she said her attackShe also used the defendants’ real er did not have a mustache but a “five names in retelling her story in Decemo’clock shadow,” according to Wilson’s ber, instead of identifying her attackers Dec. 21 notes. as the original Adam, Matt or Brett, acIn the picture of Evans the alleged cording to Wilson’s notes. victim was shown in the line-up, he clear“The fact that the accuser now knows ly had a “five o’clock shadow,” defense their real name indicates that she has learned their names from the extensive lawyers stated. They also concluded that the changpublicity that this case has received,” ing description of the alleged assailant lawyers said in the document. “The acmakes the alleged victim’s April statecuser’s present recollection of who alment “no longer reliable.” legedly attacked her and how, has been The alleged victim also changed her irreparably tainted by this publicity and story about the alleged attackers’ names. weighs strongly against any in-couH In the original statement, she said identification by her of the defendants.” she had been attacked by three men Following the interview, defense atnamed “Adam,” “Matt” and “Brett.” She torneys have called into question “the is now stating that both Evans and Seligability of the witness to see, recall and mann were using these three names, describe her attacker.” along with “Dan,” to identify themselves, “The accuser’s most recent recollecand she cannot recall whether the third tion of events demonstrates clearly that defendant, Collin Finnerty, had even she cannot accurately recall and deused a name. scribe her attackers and that any identi“Since at this point in time, Dave fication made by her is not necessarily Evans can be one, two, three or even reliable,” defense attorneys stated. four different attackers, Reade SeligNeither Nifong nor defense attorneys mann can be one or two differentattackfor the defendants could be reached for ers—and Collin Finnerty is an unidenticomment. fied attacker—the accuser is now free to At the next hearing, slated for the say that any of the defendants did any week of Feb. 5, defense lawyers will disact or all of the acts that she claimed cuss a motion to suppress the alleged happened without regard to her previ- victim’s photo identification.
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page 4
the location —they weren’t operating to to close.” that ARAMARK’s added poor manHe agement of the Starbucks provided Compass an opportunity to run the location. Though Compass took over all of Duke’s food services this academic year, the Starbucks at the American Tobacco Complex did not change hands until recendy. “We had been looking at other alternatives [for the management],” Wulforst said. “We had a Starbucks operator in Florida, and we were looking at Starbucks taking it back. It wasn’t a top priority.” Duke, however, remained committed to keeping a Starbucks at the location, said Kernel Dawkins, vice president of campus services. “The developer of the site was very interested in having a Starbucks,” he said. “We’re a major tenant ofAmerican Tobacco and we have a major interest in downtown Durham. We were playing a major role in making it better.” Dawkins said Compass’ management of this Starbucks, however, does not guarantee its management of an on-campus Starbucks, which is expected to open in the fall. “It’s conceivable they would operate a Starbucks on campus, but it’s almost as
Starbucks standards, so we had
likely that we would use a different operator,” he said. “Starbucks certainly could be on campus through Compass Group, but [the American Tobacco Complex] Starbucks has nothing to do with it.” Although the Starbucks will not accept FLEX, customers can use rechargeable Starbucks cards, which Compass may sell on FLEX on campus, Austero said. Wulforst said, however, that the Starbucks may change its policy. “I think what’ll happen is there will be people at Duke who have FLEX accounts that will want to purchase products from them,” Wulforst said. “The amount ofFLEX business that previously occurred there was not significant, but if there’s a demand, we may change the
system.” Compass is also using the Starbucks to expand into the community, Austero said.
“The location of the store is very attractive,” she said. “We’re always looking at ways to expand our business. Certainly, for us, it’s away to get our name into the Durham marketplace.” With Duke’s support, Austero said she looks with hope toward the success of the Starbucks and Compass’ debut in Durham. “We have a franchise with Starbucks, and it advantaged both them and us for us to take it over,” Austero said. “It will be open on the 16th, and we expect it’ll do well.”
DUKE
May 17 to
Compass, which controls Duke's on-campus dining, recently took over the Starbucks at American Tobacco.
p
Lißt June 1 7, 200
Information Meeting Tues., Jan. 16,12:30 p. Allen 229
http://studyabroad.duke.edu for additional program information and application
First year? Need to know? Ask someone who’s been there.
http://advising.aas.duke.edu/peers
THE CHRONICLE
8 FRIDAY, JANUARY 12,2007
FRENCH SCIENCE fompage, suit their preferences “The architecture of French is intimately linked with the way we use the building to perform science,” Nowicki said. “In the FSC, the introductory labs on the ground floor look up into the more complex labs in through the atrium; it’s almost poetic.” University Architect John Pearce said the FSC was designed to physically and logistically fit in with the two existing science buildings it straddles: the Biological Sciences Building and the Physics Building. “Its close proximity to the Bryan Center is excellent—it’s very close to the main traffic of West Campus,” said David Beratan, chair of the chemistry department. “I think the students will love the interaction and public spaces, even if they aren’t using the classrooms here.” Philip Benfey, chair of the biology department, said administrators wanted the FSC to enhance and encourage interactions at all levels between faculty, graduates and undergraduates. “Architecturally, they’ve managed to pull it off,” Benfey said. “I expect it to be a hub of activity. It certainly has that possibility. It will be a magnet for people to discuss things, sciences and otherwise.” The FSC contains cutting-edge research facilities that bring together the chemistry, physics and biology departments. “The FSC enhances Duke’s research capacity enormously, and it brings the biology department together for the first time in 20 years,” Benfey said. The FSC also includes new undergraduate teaching labs that are smaller and have more hood space, two design specifications that are well suited for undergraduThe $ll5-million French Family Science Center now houses the physics, chemistry and biology departments.
ate
experimentation.
“Our current space in Gross Chemistry
[Building] was not acceptable for doing modern research,” said Eric Toone, professor of chemistry. Nowicki described the space as a
21st-century facility that could have im-
plications for the way the sciences are taught at Duke. He added that the ESC will help Duke recruit postdoctoral.researchers, graduate
students, doctoral candidates and undergraduate science majors. “You can have great ideas, but if you don’t have people to implement them, you don’t get far very fast,” he said. The move to the ESC by all three departments will be complete by the end of the semester, Nowicki said. He added that every natural science course this semester will be taught in the ESC, except for introductory chemistry and organic chemistry classes. Toone said there have been some concerns among faculty that the new building does not have enough teaching classrooms. The largest lecture hall in the ESC holds up
100 people. “It’s a problem that is endemic to West Campus,” Toone added. He said that unless the Department of Chemistry decides to split up the big undergraduate teaching classes, they will have to be taught in some other building. “Is the building perfect? No. No building ever is,” Toone said. “Is it a huge step up from Gross? Absolutely.” Senior Jeff Ackermann, a chemistry major, said he was very excited about the new building. “I think that there will be a lot less people skipping chemistry classes when they don’t have to make the long walk to the Gross Chemistry Building,” he said. “What remains to be seen is whether its chairs are as comfortable as those in Gross Chem.” to
ROMANCE STUDIES COURSES STILL AVAILABLE FOR SPRING 2007 FRENCH
Venice: Urban Culture and
Cannibals, Witches, Monsters,
Others Professor Marc Schachter French 1435.01 TTH 2:50-4:05 Allen 103 A young woman extrudes a penis as she leaps over a stream in hot pursuit of a pig and lives thereafter as a man. Satirists lament that Catherine de Medici’s blood has infected the royal Valois line with buggery. And a light skinned woman whose eyes happen to glance at a portrait of a Moor at a crucial moment gives birth to a black child. These are a few of the anxious representations of difference we will consider in this course as we explore early modern sex/gender systems, incipient nation formation, and the unstable intersection of religious identity, proto-racialized discourse and colonialism. C-L:Medren
ROMANCE STUDIES
Introduction to
Boccaccio/ Marguerite de Navarre
PTG
RS 2005.01 Professors Marc Schachter & Martin Eisner W: 4:25-6:55 Soc Psych 128
Professor Leslie Damascene TTH 11:40-12:55
Artistic Legacy
160
S
ITALIAN Introduction to Italian Literature Professor Martin Eisner
Italian 111.01 ALP, CCI, FL MW 11:40-12:55 07 Languages An introduction to techniques of literary analysis through close readings of Medieval and Renaissance texts from a variety of genres (lyric, narrative, drama; political and scientific treatises;
autobiographical, and mystical writings) by major authors (Dante, Petrarch,
historical,
Boccaccio, Catherine of Siena, Poliziano, Leonardo da Vinci, Machiavelli, Ariosto, Galileo) C-L: MEDREN 111A.01
Professor ValeriaFirmed Italian 142 S ALP CCICZ FL TTH 1:15-2:30 Old Chem 123 Venice was “the Queene of Christendome,” wrote Thomas Coryat, one of the most vocal early modern English tourists. But for Venetians the city was “La Serenissima,” a most serene urban environment combining unique beauty, an open minded government, and a sumptuous lifestyle. How was the self-glorifying myth of Venice constructed? What made of Venice an empire and how was this empire put together? Why were the patricians’ nonchalant ways and solid business mentality so valued? IN ITALIAN
r
Cinema and Literature in Italy
Professor Roberto Dainotto Italian 170 S MW 2:50-4:05 N. Lang 211 Alfred Hitchcock liked to tell the story: Two goats were once eating the reel of a movie taken from a famous novel. UI liked the book better," says one to the other. While, like the goat, we will at times chew on movies taken from books, our main intention will be, rather than comparing, to conjecture a more complex relation between literature and film. We will discuss how cinema conditions literary
m
„
imagination, and how literature leaves its imprint
on cinema. C-L: ICS 182E5.01
Boccaccio’s Decameron and Marguerite de Navarre’s Heptamiron, The Arabian Nights, Apuleius’ The Golden Ass, Maria de Zayas’
Novelas amorosas y ejemplares and Desenganos amorosos). In the Decameron and the Heptameron,: issues of dialogism in these texts which ostentatiously present multiple, conflicting voices, and the problem of women’s desire as a topic in the critical tradition on them, but also the way the texts foreground questions of masculinity and gender. Taught in English
Racism, Capitalism, and the Decolonial Option Professor Walter Mignolo 1:4:25-6:55 028 Franklin Ctr. Course is organized on the assumption that
racism, modernity, coloniality, and capitalism are different aspects of the same “reality;”a reality in which we are still living at this very moment. The seminar will simultaneously examine the rhetoric of modernity in conjunction with the logic of coloniality (e.g., Iraq, traffic of human organs, criminalization of immigrants and promotion of free trade agreements, etc.) at work and different forms of de-colonial options to which different actors responded, at different times and under
different colonial regimes. AAAS 2995.03
LIT 2555.04,
113 S ALP, CGI,
ZViiSVv
An introduction to major aspects of Brazilian culture, history, politics, race, religion, popular culture and social movements, through short texts and films. Course materials begin with the two major modernist movements of the 1920 and 30s and move to very contemporary concerns of representation of Brazilianess. C-L: ICS
s
BOG
The Afro-Luso-Brazilian Triangle: Portugal, Portuguese Speaking Africa and Brazil C-L: AAAS 1045.03 PTGI39S CCI,CZ Professor Leslie Damascene TTH2:SO-4:05 Oil Languages Focusing on post-World War II period, this course examines the last stages of Portuguese colonialism in Lusophone Africa, the African
Liberation movements and the efforts to forge new transnational relations amongPortugal, Lusophone Africa and Brazil. Taught in English. Readings for the course have been chosen from historical, political, and literary sources, to provide students with multiple perspectives on the Afro-Luso-Brazilian
triangle.
tttf,
FRIDAY, JANUARY 12,
CHRONICLE
2007 9
A&S COUNCIL from page 1
an open campus dialogue on the findings of the Campus Culture Initiative convinced him to argue publicly in favor of the communithe respectful and candid exchange of University letter to 8 his Jan. the floor for ideas on campus. dialogue. opened they ty, “It is the provost’s job to defend the “I thought it was very productive,” said Lee Baker, chair of the council andassociate fundamental value and values of the faculty, and at professor of culsome point retural anthropolorom raining gy, who noted that defense, “We share... a sense of commuthat attendance because it was high. “It sort teachers of undergraduas nity tone for might produce the of set more [attacks], a new semester.” ates... and, then, to each said becomes itself Baker other.” imprudent,” that about half said. Lange the professors’ Lee Baker He concludquestions relatchair, Arts and Sciences Council ed by saying that ed to the media ie process o and about half evaluating camregarded other pus culture has provided Duke with an opissues. “I think it was a fine discussion,” portunity for leadership, encouraging collective debate about the issues under Lange said. Lange described the critiques of faculty discussion. “We are here to teach, to study and to members on blogs and in e-mails as “personal attacks... some viciously personal, learn, and to do so at our best we need both the best climate possible on our camstill others openly threatening or racist.” He said fear of such attacks could inhibpus and a degree of tranquility,” Lange said. “May the new semester bring us much it some from speaking freely. Lange noted, however, that there are more of both.” Baker explained that he invited the adbenefits to increased democratization of ministrators to address the council bethe media. “There is no solution to this conuncause of the particular relevance of curdrum other than self- and other-awarerent campus concerns for the faculty of ness and apposite self-restraint, not of Trinity College. “A lot of these issues that the president ideas but ofrhetoric,” he said. Lange said he had not spoken out was grappling with over the break really against these attacks earlier because of his did impact the undergraduate teaching concern that a public statement might faculty,” Baker said. “We share... a sense of generate more vitriol. Additionally, he said community as teachers of undergraduhe did not wish to be seen as monitoring ates... and, then, to each other.” The full text of Lange’s speech is availthe faculty’s freedom of speech. He explained that the recent reducable at <http://dukenews.duke.edu/ tion in media attention and the need for 2007/01/lange.html>.
John Hope Franklin Center For interdisciplinary & International Studies Duke University
12:00 noon -1:00 pm Room 240
Wednesdays at The Center is a topical weekly noontime series in
January Events
which distinguished scholars,
editors,
journalists, artists, and leaders speak informally about their work in conversation with those who attend. Hosted by
Jan 24
Jan 31
Symbols, Models, and Facts: Biographical Clues to Wittgenstein's Talk about Picturing Susan G. Sterrett, Assistant Professor of Philosophy, Duke University Presented by the John Hope Franklin Humanities Institute
Biodiversity, Peoples, Deforestation, and Oil Stuart L. Pimm, Doris Duke Professor of Conservation Ecology, Nicholas School of the Environment and Earth Sciences, Duke University; Extraordinary Professor, Conservation Ecology Research Unit, University of Pretoria, South Africa Presented by the Duke University Center for International Studies
Duke University's John Hope Franklin Center and coordinated by the John Hope
Franklin Humanities Institute, all events in the series are free and open to the
n9 ht lunch is served - No reservations are necessary, and vouchers to
pub,ic A
cover parking costs In the Duke Medical Center parking decks are provided.
JOHN HOPE
FRANKLIN
CENTER
for Interdisciplinary
&
InternationalStudies
inSilrTmiiE 2204 Erwin Road (Cornar of Trant Driva ft Erwin Road)
Durham, NC 27708 Phona: (919)668-1901 For directions to tha Cantar, piaasa is availabla in tha Duka Madical Cantar parking dacks on Erwin Road and Trant Driva.
visit www.Jhfc.duka.adu. Parking
Harvard unveils plan for huge expansion Officials at Harvard University announced plans Thursday for a multibillion-dollar expansion that will transform the university into one of the world’s top centers for stem-cell research. The expansion includes plans for a science complex, a museum, new student housing, parks and a public square covering more than 250 acres. The plan is the largest expansion in the school’s history and will take place over the next 50 years. During the first 20 years of the expansion, Harvard aims to build between 4 and 5 billion square feet of buildings and create at least s,ooojobs. Construction is slated to begin this summer, on a 500,000-square-foot science complex to house stem-cell research and other institutes. The university presented the plan to Boston officials Thursda, but has not revealed the final cost of the project or who will fund it.
Michigan resumes admissions The University of Michigan is resuming its rolling admissions process, which was put on hold when a federal appeals court ordered it to stop considering applicants’ race and ethnicity, in line with the state’s Proposal 2, voted upon in November.
During the legal considerations, the university placed its admissions process on hiatus. It will now not use affirmative action in admitting its students. It will not consider race or ethnicity but will aim to admit top students. The state had argued it would be unfair to have a class in which some students had been admitted through affir-
mative action and some had not, but Provost Teresa Sullivan said the university could not delay admissions any longer. Carter to speak at Brandeis amid conflict After weeks of controversy, officials at Brandeis University have decided that former President Jimmy Carter will speak on campus about his new book, “Palestine: Peace Not Apartheid.” According to many Middle East experts, the book is unreasonably critical of Israel. Many students and faculty said the university—which was founded by Jewish leaders and has attracted many Jewish students —was not willing to accept Carter’s ideas criticizing Israel. French professor of champagne named Early this week, a leading French business school, Reims Management School, appointed a head of champagne to lead research in the champagne industry. The professor of champagne, Stephan Charters, an international wine expert, will teach specialized courses, develop research initiatives and work closely with all of the major champagne houses. Yale concert ends in bloody brawl After an a cappella concert this week in San Francisco, several singers in Yale University’s group the Baker’s Dozen were attacked by a group of locals. At least one student had a concussion, and another had to undergo reconstructive surgery on his jaw. According to local ABC news reports, several kids from the area began harassing the singers, insulting them for their formal dress and telling them they were not welcome in the city.
THE CHRONICLE
101 FRIDAY, JANUARY 12, 2007
AIDS TEST from page 4
rid.
,
improve the health outcomes of those infected with the disease, said Charles Hicks, an associate professor of medicine in the division of infectious diseases. “I don’t think there has ever been an infection that has had a bigger impact on human civilization in recent history as AIDS has,” Hicks said. “This test might make it possible to allow us to detect when viruses are becoming immune to our treatments earlier and, as a result, alter treatments to improve health outcomes.” Though the Duke scientists specifically applied their research to AIDS, the technique can also be used to combat other infectious diseases, Gao said. Patients with other pathogens that develop immunity to pharmaceuticals such as hepatitis and tuberculosis will also be able to benefit, once the test becomes commercially available, he added. The next step in the research is to use the treatment to develop a kit that can be put into widespread use at a low price, Gao said. “I have to acknowledge that we are at the very early stages of learning how this test could work,” Hicks said. “Our real challenge is to go out into the clinic and figure out what kind of capabilities this test has.” Although the scientists said the test may be years away from everyday use, they are hopeful that it could revolutionize the way we treat infectious diseases. “I think it’s incredibly promising, and I think it will ultimately become a tool that people will be using at a regular basis in the clinic,” Hicks said.
JIANGHAI HO/THE CHRONICLE
Students who decide to walk or bike to campus will get 12 single-day Blue Zone passes for free, thanks to a plan implemented by Duke Student Government.
BLUE ZONE
from page 3
Monday morning. “They said they would put me on the
waitlist and let me know,” Morton said about her experience Monday morning. “But no one has called.” David Snider, Duke Student Government vice president for athletics and campus services, said the DSG Executive Board met Wednesday night and discussed the issue but has not yet spoken with administrators. “The conclusion that we all came to is it’s an avoidable problem based on a solution that we had worked with Transportation on nine months ago,” Snider said. Snider said the DSG Executive Board agreed the solution was not to free up additional parking spaces but to reduce demand for Blue Zone spaces by increasing
the incentive for off-campus students to bike or walk to school. The program gives off-campus residents who bike or walk 12 fr£e day permits per semester. Although it is already in effect, the program was poorly advertised and has not garnered much interest, Snider said. Dawkins said the second semester parking permit application process is designed to be “first come, first served.” “We do not give preference to residential versus commuter [students],” Reeve said, echoing Dawkins’ statement. Students like Morton, however, said the administration should take permit applicant residency into consideration. “I think it would be more fair to give the students who are coming back to West priority over off-campus students,” she said. “It’s clearly frustrating for anyone,” Snider said. “The assumption is thatthere
Duke Students, Faculty,
is a [parking] space available if you’re living on West Campus.” Dawkins said the administration is considering other available lots, in addition to the open spaces in the Red Zone and on East. Reeve said Parking and Transportation Services is working on a comprehensive plan that will be finalized within the next few months. “But that does not answer the issue of now,” she said. Snider said DSG mentioned opening otherWest Campus lots such as the Green Zone and the Card parking lot to students as another remedy to the situation. He said the issue is reducing demand for permits, because more parking space is not likely to be obtained. Reeve said she hopes students will start getting permits off of the waitlist within the next week.
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THECHRONICLE
FRIDAY, JANUARY 12,
legal analysis from page 3
LSATS
to testify, so [Nifong] stated in his papers that can’t prove his case.” Nifong’s move to drop the rape charges may be a tactical one, law professor Thomas Metzloff said.
used applicants’ average LSAT scores in the admissions process, and after the ABA policy change, 74 percent reported to Kaplan that they had already begun to review the highest test score instead. “We took this survey just a couple months after the decision was made, and these were the results that we found,” said Russell Schaffer, senior communicadons manager at Kaplan. Despite the results, a number of top law schools—including those at Harvard University, Yale University and Columbia University—have stated that they have no intention of changing their previous policies. Hoye said Duke would continue its policy of reviewing all the LSAT scores ofits applicants. Hoye added that throughout fall recruitment events with colleagues from peer institutions—including the law schools of Stanford University, New York University and Cornell University—admissions officers generally
prepared the state
The clearing of the rape charges could free the prosecution from having to defend aspects of the case that lack support—such as the issue of missing DNA evidence and strengthen its chances of convicting the accused of the other charges, he said. “[Dropping the rape charges] protects Nifong if the DNA problem blows up in his face,” Metzloff said. “If you drop the rape it provides some insulation. Did something really change two weeks ago, or was he feeling the heat from the DNA hearing? He did it to protect himself.” Although Nifong’s Dec. 22 actions relieved the accused students of the most serious charge placed upon them, the remaining charges of sexual assault and kidnapping could hand them lengthy prison sentences if they are convicted, Metzloff added. “[Dropping the rape charges] doesn’t simplify the case as much as you may think,” he said. “These are still felonies that result in many years in potential incarceration. Sexual assault can be very serious.” Under North Carolina law, a man can only be convicted of rape if there is sufficient evidence that his penis penetrated the victim’s vagina, law professor James Coleman said. In her most recent testimony, the alleged victim in the lacrosse case could not confirm that the object that entered her was a penis, forcing the prosecution to drop therape charges. Coleman said the increasingly contradictory testimonies given by the alleged victim provides the defense with a valuable asset in getting the remaining charges —
IFRANKLIN
iiw@duke.edu
k fl T«
15111 AT DUKE UNIVERSITY
JAN 17 Hayao Miyazaki's Spirited Away Free screening in conjunction with Faculty Bookwatch featuring Anne Allison (Jan 23) Co-presented with Duke University Libraries, Asian/ Pacific Studies Institute, Film/Video/Digital Program
Bpm, Griffith Theater, Bryan Center
JAN 18 Scholarly Publishing in the Digital Age
from page 3
Got a news tip? A story idea? E-mail News Editor Iza at
turn
JANUARY PROGRAMS
“The more significant effect is that it undermines the witness’s credibility on all the charges she has made,” Coleman said. “It’s extraordinary that a witness testimony changed so drastically nine months after the incident. A jury would find it hard to believe her. That’s just not credible. It’s like the end of a bad mystery novel where all the ends are tied up.” The ever-shifting testimony of the prosecution’s primary witness and the mounting disapproval of Nifong’s handling of the case could lead to the case’s eventual end, Haagen said. “Does this case look like it’s moving toward an implosion? Yes, it is moving toward that,” he said.
“The people who have been reporting to me will begin reporting to Chuck,” Reeve said. In the coming weeks, officials will begin to initiate a national search to look for an appropriate replacement for the position, Dawkins said. The duties of parking management include permit distribution, controlling lot occupancy, ticketing and handling the University’s bus system, among other responsibilities. “Obviously, there’s a transition, and there are lots of things to be caught up on,” Dawkins said. Reeve has been at Duke since 2001, when she left her post as parking and transportation director at North Carolina State University. Prior to her position at N.C. State, Reeve also served in transit roles in a number of North Carolina cities.
disagreed with Kaplan’s assessment that law school admissions would shift to focusing on an applicant’s highest test score. “We had this question come up over and over again, and we each had the very same answer,” he said. Hoye said the aggregate LSAT score remains the most accurate statistical figure in predicting which applicants will perform the best in the first year oflaw school. He added that he looks for an explanation—such as illness on test day or other extenuating circumstances—in the instance an applicant takes the LSAT multiple times. “I’d like to see that there’s a reason [for an applicant to retake the test],” he said. Hoye also emphasized that the LSAT remains only one piece in the admissions process. Despite some criticism of the study, Schaffer said Kaplan stood by the results. “It wasn’t as if we handpicked 170 law schools. We actually surveyed all the law schools that were accredited, and these were the answers that we got,” he said.
HUMANITIES INSTITUTE
dismissed.
REEVE
from page 4
2007111
A roundtable discussion with Steve Cohn (Duke University Press), Jennifer Jenkins (Duke Law School), and Paolo Mangiafico (Duke Libraries) Co-presentedwith Duke University Press
4:3opm, Room 240, John Hope Franklin Center 'v 1
2204 Erwin Road (Cornar of front Drive & Erwin Road) Durham, NC 27708 Phone: (919) 668-1901
The Franklin Humanities Institute is part of the John Hope Franklin Center for Interdisciplinary and International Studies For directions to the Franklin Center
and parking information, please visit www.jhfc.duke.edu. Parking is available in the Duke Medical Center parking decks on Erwin Road and Trent Drive. For directions and parking information for other program venues, please visit map.duke.edu. For more information on the Franklin
Humanities Institute and these events, please visit and contact us at:
www.jhfc.duke.edu/fhi jhf-institute@duke.edu 919-668-1901
JAN 23 Faculty Bookwatch: Anne Allison, Millennial Monsters: Japanese Toys and the Global Imagination A panel discussion with Lawrence Grossberg (UNC), Henry Jenkins (MIT), Tomiko Yoda (Duke) Co-presented with Duke University Libraries
3:3opm, Perkins Library Rare Book Room
JAN 30
Michael Chorost The Future ofBodies and Communities in a Hypertechnoiogical Age
Chorost is author of Rebuilt: My Journey Back to the Hearing World, winner of the 2006 PEN/USA Award for Best Creative Nonfiction Co-presented with Statistical Signal Processing Applied to Cochlear Implants andSubsurface Sensing Lab (SSPACISS)
4:3opm, Room 240, John Hope Franklin Center
12 FRIDAY, JANUARY 12, 2007
THE CHRONICLE
FILL IN THE BLANKS.
January 12,2007 SCHEDULE SET
THE MEN'S LACROSSE TEAM RELEASES ITS 2007 SCHEDULE PAGE 18
FOOTBALL
MEN'S BASKETBALL
Dates set
200 alums to visit for
for jersey retirements
summit
JJ. Redick and Shelden Williams will have their jerseys retired at two separate ceremonies this winter, Duke announced
Greg Beaton THE CHRONICLE
by
Thursday.
Following an 0-12 season and a second straight year without a win over a Division I-A opponent, nearly 200 Duke Football alumni will gather in Durham this week-
end to discuss the future of the program. As the team struggled on the field last fall, a growing number offormer football players began communicating through a website to voice their displeasure over the Blue Devils’ results. The group, informally known as “Concerned Duke Footballers,” or CDF for short, lobbied the athletic department for a meeting. Once the season concluded, Director of Athletics Joe Alieva invited all Duke Football alumni to this weekend’s event, which was scheduled around the Blue Devils’ annual team banquet Saturday evening. The “Duke Football Summit” will begin with a social gathering at the Yoh Football Center Friday night, and it will continue with a series of meetings and SEE FOOTBALL ON PAGE 20
SARA
Blue Devils take aim on first ACC victory by
Michael moore THE CHRONICLE
With the two teams combining for 45 turnovers, most would consider Duke’s 74-63 loss to Georgia Tech Wednesday to be an overall ugly game. Duke’s matchup against Miami (9-8, 2-1 in the ACC), however, has the potential to show that every-
B ”*■
JIANGHAI HO/THE CHRONICLE
Head coach Ted Roof has a 3-31 record in his three full seasons as theBlue Devils' head football coach.
Time for Pack up your tents And while you’re at it, you can cancel those plans to drive down to Atlanta in April. Also, make sure that you show up before the weekend at the ACC Tournament, because the Blue Devils just might not make it past Fri(PP day’s quarterfinal. Make no mistake Pfck about it: This Duke team is in trouble, a j ex r mm The last time a Blue Tel 11 3 Devil squad lost its first two ACC games it was 1996. That year, Duke finished 18-13 overall and lost in the first round of the NCAA Tournament to Western Michigan. The most troubling thing might be the way they’ve lost the past two games. Against Virginia Tech, Duke trailed until just about 10 minutes remained. A 7-0 Duke run gave the Blue Devils their first
rOff
GUERRERO/THECHRONICLE
Greg Paulus came off the bench to score six points in 29 minutes of play Wednesday at GeorgiaTech.
thing is relative. The game—Sunday at 5 p.m. at the BankU-
nited Center—features the two lowest scoring teams in the ACC as the No. 11 Blue Devils (13SUNDAY, 5:30 p.m. 3 0-2) attempt to avoid Coral Gables, Fla. getdng 0 3 stan
offto^n
some
.
in conference play. “We’re not used to [losing], and we don’t want to become used to it,” sophomore GregPaulus said after Wednesday’s loss. “We don’t like this feeling.” While Duke is looking to bounce back from its recent struggles, the Hurricanes are coming off perhaps their best win of the season, a 63-58 victory at No. 25 Maryland Wednesday. Miami beat the Terrapins despite its own offensive struggles by holding Maryland to 22 percent shooting. The Hurricanes are off to a 2-1 start in conference play after earning the unwanted mande as the only ACC team not to have a winning record in its non-league SEE M.
BBALL ON PAGE 17
tough questions
lead, but after that, the rest of regulation was back and forth. The Duke that opponents used to fear never seemed to stop with a 7-0 run and a two-point lead. The run would extend longer, dragging out into something like a 17-3 run that all but ended the game. Those late 19905, early 2000 Blue Devil squads might’ve started slow sometimes, but they sure knew how to finish. (See: Duke vs. Maryland, Cole Field House, 2001; Duke vs. Maryland, Minneapolis, Final Four 2001.) Despite that very mortal 7-0 run, DeMarcus Nelson still stepped up to nail a huge game-tying three-pointer. It was a classic Dukejust-finds-ways-to-win moment—especially after a stop on the otherend sent the game into overtime. But then the Blue Devils lost in overtime, which hadn’t happened with Coach K on the sidelines in Cameron since January 1985. Seriously.
s
The Georgia Tech game was more of the same. Duke was just about dead in the water, trailing 55-45 with 8:29 left. But its 8-0 run over three minutes looked like vintage Blue Devil Basketball. The Yellow Jacket fans were silent, Georgia Tech looked confused and Duke seemed poised to win the game But then neither team scored for almost two minutes, and when someone finally did it was Georgia Tech’s freshman guard Javaris Crittenton, who threw down a dunk (after just abusing Lance Thomas and stealing the ball from him) that sparked a 10-0 Yellow Jacket run. Duke didn’t score from the 5:29 mark until 1:40 remained. Game over. Look, I know it’s not fair to compare every Duke team to the 37-2 squad from 1999 or the national championship SEE FANAROFF ON PAGE 18
The retirements, which The Chronicle first reported last July, will take place during the Jan. 28 Boston College game for Williams and the Feb. 4 Florida State game for Redick. “Both of these players are deserving of this honor,” head coach Mike Krzyzewski said in a statement. “They handled their responsibilities in the classroom as well, which makes us as proud as any basketball honors bestowed upon them. They’re wonderful young men and both nights will be very special for Duke.” The retirements will be the 12th and 13th such honors bestowed upon former Duke players. Williams was drafted fifth overall last June by the Adanta Hawks. At Duke, he was twice named National Defensive Player of the Year and was a first-team All-American as a senior. He left Duke as the school’s alldme leader in blocked shots and rebounds. “It is truly an honor to have my number hanging in the rafters with so many great players,” Williams said. “It’s a moment I will cherish forever and an honor that wouldn’t be possible without the players and coaches I was fortunate enough to work with.” Redick left Duke last spring as one of the most decorated players in NCAA history. He holds Duke’s all-time records in points and three-pointers made, and he was named National Player of the Year by at least one organization in his junior and senior years. He is the ACC’s all-time leading scorer, and he holds the NCAA’s record for three-pointers made in a career. “I am honored to be recognized by Duke in this way,” Redick said. “It is humbling to have my name mentioned with some of the greatest players in Duke history. All of the individual accomplishments I achieved were the result of being on great teams, including the players, coaches, support personnel and the best fans in college basketball.”
—from staff reports
CHRONICLE FILE PHOTO
JJ. Redick's '4' and Shelden Williams' '23' will rise to Cameron's rafters within the next month.
141FRIDAY, JANUARY 12, 2007
THE CHRONICL,E
WOMEN'S BASKETBALL
Duke hosts recruits for Maryland game Sean Moroney THE CHRONICLE
by
While Duke fans are expected to come in full force for its matchup against Maryland Saturday, five spectators are of particular interest to the Blue Devils. Four potential recruits and one commit are planning to be in attendance for the top-three showdown. The high school stars could be valuable replacements for some of the current Blue Devils who will graduate in the coming years. The five include sisters Nneka and Chiney Ogwumike, junior standout Kellie Watson, sophomore Kelly Paris and senior Jasmine Thomas, who committed to the class of 2011. Cy-Fair High School junior and freshman sisters Nneka and Chiney Ogwumike will make their first trip to Duke this weekend. Nneka is a highly-touted recruit out of Cypress, Texas, who is ranked fourth-best forward in the nation by scout.com. Although Nneka is slightly undersized for the position at 6-foot-l, her athleticism and jumping ability make up for it as she has averaged 22 points and 14 rebounds per game while shooting 62 percent from the floor. “What strikes me most about Nneka is her athleticism,” said Rick Risinger, her AAU coach. “She plays a lot bigger than her frame because of her ability to jump.” Her younger sister, Chiney, will accompany Nneka and their family on the trip. Chiney is already receiving notice as a freshman and is particularly close to her out
sister, Risinger said. Nneka has the potential to add even more versatility to Duke’s current freshman class, if she signs. And if Chiney would choose to follow her sister to Duke, she would be part of an entirely different Blue Devil team that will likely not feature any of the current players. Out of lonia High School in Michigan, Watson is just beginning her college search and has narrowed her list to about 10 schools, including Duke, Notre Dame and Michigan State. Like Nneka, she is a versatile player that could play a number of positions for the Blue Devils as a dynamic three or four. One concern about Watson is her troubles with injuries in the past. Midway through last season —the Michigan women’s high school basketball season occurred during the fall of 2006 —Watson underwent surgery to repair a torn right labrum in October and subsequently had her left labrum repaired in December. Before the injury, however, she was averaging 23.9 points, 8.1 rebounds and 3.5 blocks through 14 games. In the short span, Watson broke lonia’s single-season scoring record with 1,160 points. “She is kind of eager to get back, but I think the rest is kind of a good break for her,” Andy Barr, her high school coach said. “Up to that point, she had been playing on four teams throughout the summer, SPECIAL TO THE CHRONICLE
SEE RECRUITS ON PAGE 18
Forward Nneka Ogwumike is one ofDuke's top targets from the current class of high school juniors.
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FRIDAY, JANUARY 12,
CHRONICLE
2007115
Maryland 78, Duke 75 (OT) April 4, 2004 ID BankNorth Garden Boston, Mass •
•
Jggsaifj
JM.Qiron^t ...
SHELL SHOCKED
lICLE FILE
W.BBALL from page 1 78-75, and left the court with their first
NCAA tide. The game that Duke was supposed to win went instead to the young and fearless Terrapins. “I just feel utter disappointment right now for my players,” head coach Gail Goestenkors said after the game that night in Boston. “It’s killing me right now. Not for myself, but for my players.” But that was then, and this is now. Now is a new season, and the Blue Devils’ first chance since last April to avenge the devastating loss. Now is a match that features two undefeated teams battling for the top spot in the national rankings: the third-ranked Blue Devils (17-0, 3-0 in the ACC) against No. 1 Maryland (18-0, 2-0) 12:30 p.m. Saturday at Cameron Indoor Stadium. “Now we can finally say we’re excited to play Maryland,” Abby Waner said. “Because before it was like ‘we can’t look ahead and
we can’t think about it too much.’” Waner leads a new-look Duke squad that lost three seniors after last season. Team leader Currie, power forward Mistie Williams and sharp-shooting guard Jessica Foley —a trio that accounted for an average 33.2 points per game—all were drafted to the WNBA. Waner and her teammates Lindsey Harding and Alison Bales have all increased their output, but the team’s scoring is eight points below its average last season as it has taken on a new, defensive
idendty. Maryland returns all but one player from its championship team and appears to have picked up right where it left off. After posting 111 points against Miami Jan. 10, the Terps are averaging 88.8 points per game and outscoring their opponents by an average of 33 points. “I don’t know that they have a weakness,” Goestenkors said. “They have such a good inside-outside attack.”
Four of Maryland’s starters —Crystal Langhome, Shay Doron, Marissa Coleman and Toliver—were named to the preseason “Wade Watch” list for the State Farm Wade Trophy, awarded to the nation’s top women’s player. It is the first time in the history of the award that four teammates have made the list. Although the Blue Devils have not produced as much offense as Maryland this year, they are holding their opponents to a paltry 45.9 points per game and have a scoring margin nearly equal to Maryland’s. “We’re preparing like it’s a normal game,” Harding said. “But, on the court, I know I want to set the tone offensively and
defensively.”
Also in Duke’s favor, it has played a harder schedule to date than its ACC foe. The Blue Devils have faced five ranked teams prior to conference play while Maryland has played just two, with then-No. 18 Michigan State being the highest ranked opponent it has seen.
lAI HO
m
“We’ve seen a lot of great teams and done extremely well against them,” Goestenkors said. “I think we have a lot of confidence against very good teams, and Maryland is one of the best.” Duke will be helped by a sellout crowd in Cameron Saturday—a sign of the increasing rivalry between the two schools. Similarly, Maryland has already sold out its match up with Duke Feb. 18 in College Park. “We’re going to come out and approach the game the same we always do,” Waner said. “But there’ll be a little bit more adrenaline and intensity.” While a lack of parity in women’s basketball relative to the men’s game magnifies the importance of Saturday’s game for rankings and for preparing for a tough ACC schedule, the Blue Devils have more on their minds than just a win. They want revenge. “You don’t ever forget it,” Goestenkors said. “I don’t think that shot or the image of that shot will ever leave our minds completely.” •
16IFRIDAY, JANUARY 12, 2007
THE
sportsbriefs
CHRONICL],E
DUKE vs. MARYLAND
from staff reports
Cameron Indoor Stadium 12:30 p.m. FSN
Saturday, January 13
•
•
No. 3 Duke (17-0, 3-0 ACC)
No. 1 Maryland (18-0, 2-0 ACC)
ALISON BALES 10 8 ppg, 7.1 rpg GABREM GAY 10 3 d sc, 6,6 n MtfANISHA SMITH 31 ppg, 4.2 apg ABBY WANER 14.8 ppg, 2.6 spg UNDSEY HARDING 13 5 iq. 3.8 a
CHRONICLE FILE PHOTO
Senior attacker Matt Danowski will lead the Blue Devils as they return to the fieldfor the 2007 season. Men’s lax schedule announced First-year head coach John Danowski released his team’s spring schedule Thursday, unveiling what will be the lacrosse team’s first full season since losing 9-8 to Johns Hopkins in the 2005 National Championship game. Duke will get a rematch with the Blue Jays April 7 before taking on defending national champions Virginia at home the following week in what should be the toughest stretch of its season. The Blue Devils open against Dartmouth in Koskinen Stadium Feb. 24 and then take on Denver the following day. They open their ACC schedule March 2 versus Maryland in College Park. Duke will also play away at North Carolina March 17 and Georgetown March 24. They will travel to San Diego March 10 for the ‘First 4’ event against Loyola, as well.
FRONTCU
Although Toliver heaved the game-winner in the last match up between these teams, Abby Waner and Harding have emerged as the leaders of Duke's attack. Smith and Emily Waner will also help the Blue Devils win the perimeter game.
BACKOURT
Bales and Gay have a clear height advantage over the Terps, but Harper, Langhorne and Coleman have proven to be an unstoppable force down low, combining for an average 39.6 points per game and 20.3 rebounds per game.
* The Skinny
BENCH
While Duke lacks a sub who scores more than six points per game, Sa'de Wiley-Gatewood and Ashleigh Newman provide 24 and 22 minutes per game, respectively, for a bench that averages 33.4 points per game for the Terps.
•
Finally, Duke will host the ACC tourna27-29 before taking on
ment this year April
Air Force May 6 in a potential warmup for the NCAA tournament.
Duke rises to 3rd in Directors’ Cup Duke finished an all-time high third place in the fall standings of the 2006-2007 U.S. Sports Academy Directors’ Cup, released yesterday, after coming in fourth place the past two years. The Directors’ Cup measures a school’s athletic success across all programs, awarding points for each team’s post-season performance. The fall standings include men’s and women’s cross country, field hockey, football, men’s and women’s soccer, women’s volleyball and men’s water polo. Duke competes in all but water polo and earned points in five of those sports.
LAURA HARPER 12.2 ppg, 5.9 rpg CRYSTAL LAN6HOBNE 15,3 ppg, 7 4 rpg MARISSA COLEMAN 12.1 ppa,7.or KBISTITOUIIER 11.1 png. 5.7 apg SHAY DOROH 12.7 ppg, 4,5 rpg
78.2
UM 88.8
45.9 .462 .336 .755
55.6 .538 .411 .778
44.3 18.1 7.7 13.5 16.5
46.1 20.8 4.4 8.0 18.0
DUKE
H
PPG: PPG DEF:
FG%: 3PT%: FT% RPG APG BPG SPG
TO/G;
Although both teams have been dom- jHL inant so far, neither has faced com- ipplb m petition like they will see Saturday. Maryland, which returns almost the a IS same team that won the championship last year, will be better pre1 pared for the intensity. Duke's defense will slow them, but the Terps offense
■Hr
Our call: Maryland wins, 78-73 Compiled by Lane Towery —
Field hockey’s trip to the Final Four and eventual third-place finish earned 83 points while the men’s soccer team’s fifth place finish in the College Cup was worth 73 points. Second-round appearances by both women’s soccer and volleyball earned 50 points each and women’s cross country, which placed 10th, was awarded 60 points. Duke’s 316 points is its second highest
all-time tally, behind only a 327 point mark in fall 2004. California currendy leads the Directors’ Cup with Stanford in second place. Duke is trailed in the ACC by Virginia, which is seventh and No. 8 Wake Forrest. Final overall standings for the Director’s Cup will be released June 28, after the College World Series.
Studies What does it mean to be an "American"? And what are the United States anyway? Consider this an invitation to an argument...
Wednesday, January 17 5:30 p.m. Fleishman Commons
Terry Sanford Institute of Public Policy This event is free and open to the public.
A meption and book signing mil follow.
Co-sponsored by the RegulatorBookshop.
Join Professor Joel L. Fleishman, director of the Duke Foundation Research Program and the Samuel and Ronnie Heyman Center for Ethics, for a discussion about American foundations. Fleishman knows foundations like few other people do. After running them, sitting on their boards and seeking grants from them for almost half a century, he has written a groundbreaking book that explains their history, their successes and why they matter to the American-and the world’s-economy. Fleishman, professor of public policy and law, joined the Duke faculty in
Introduction to
Critical U.S. Studies (AAASIO4/HISIO4/L1T132) Professors Wahneema Lubiano & Jocelyn Olcott for more information, please visit: http://www.jhfc.duke.edu/icuss/curriculum.php
THF.
CHRONICLE
FRIDAY, JANUARY 12, 2007117
DUKE vs. MIAMI Sunday, January 14 BankUnited Center 5:30 p.m. FSN •
•
No. 11 Duke (13-3, 0-2 ACC)
Miami (9-8
JOSH MCROBERTS 12.8 ppg 7,9 rpg LANCE THOMAS 5.4 ppg, 2 4 rpg DEMARCOS NELSON 14 8 ppg, 5 4 rpg lON SCHEYER 11.0 ppg GERALD HENDERSON 8 i. i rpc
SARA GUERRERO/THE CHRONICLE
Josh Mcßoberts' presence down low was not enough to prevent Duke from losing to the Yellow Jackets.
M. BBALL from page 13 slate . Miami suffered bad losses against low-
major squads like Binghamton, Buffalo and Cleveland State. Yet, the Hurricanes’ two ACC wins have come against ranked teams —then-No. 21 Georgia Tech Dec. 3 and at Maryland Wednesday. Miami has been hampered by the loss of Anthony King, who has missed the last nine games with an injured wrist and will likely be out for the season. King, a senior, was expected to be one of the top big men in the league and had been averaging 7.9 points and 9.3 rebounds per game before the injury. “It’s been tough for us all year,” Miami head coach Frank Haith said. “[King] is a senior leader, and he was going to be our go-to guy in the post from an offensive standpoint and anchor our defense. And since losing Anthony King we have not been consistent on either end of the floor.”
With King out, the Hurricanes have had to redefine their identity as a team. After losing high-scoring guards Robert Hite and Guillermo Diaz to the NBA, Miami expected to display an inside-out offensive attack with King at the core. But since the big man’s injury, the Hurricanes have again had to rely heavily on their guards—the team’s top four scorers are all perimeter players, including sophomore Jack McClinton, the ACC’s fifth-leading scorer. Duke is also attempting to find its offensive identity as the Blue Devils have not scored more than 80 points in a game since their opener and have racked up 70 points or fewer in four of their last five games. “We have a real young team,” head coach Mike Krzyzewski said. “We’ve got eight scholarship guys that are healthy right now and four of them are freshmen. We’ve got to find away to win with that combination, and that’s what my job is supposed to be, so that’s what I’m going to do.”
FRONTCU
Miami lacks size, but the 6-foot-8,230-pound Collins is fresh off a 14-point, 12-board performance against Maryland and could pose a problem to Duke's interior defense. Mcßoberts and Thomas will have room to score against smaller defenders.
BACKOURT
With Paulus' continuing struggles, Duke must turn to Henderson and Scheyer to bring the ball up the court and distribute it. McClinton is the fifth leading scorer in the ACC and can light it up, shooting 47% from beyond the arc on the year.
Paulus will provide a boost when he enters the game and the 7foot-1 Zoubek adds good size X U that Miami cannot match. X Clemente provides 8.1 ppg and LU QQ is second on the team in assists, but the Hurricanes have little help beyond that off the bench.
f 2-1 ACC)
KEATON COPELAND 2.3 ppg, 1.8rpg DWAYNE COLUNS 7.5 ppg, 5 6 rpq BRIAN ASBURY 11.7 ppq, 5.0 rpq ANTHONY HARRIS 9.5 ppg, 3.9 apg JACK MCCUtfTOH 17.7 ppg, 2.8 rpg
DUKE
LJ
PPG PPG DEF
68.4 55,7
MIAMI 72.2 67.4
FG%
,465
,450
3PT%
388
FT% RPG
,685
,690
36.4 13.8
36.9 13.6
16.2
13.5
APG BPG SPG TO/G
The Skinny AfterWednesday's loss to Georgia Tech, Duke dropped to 0-2 in the ACC for the first time since the 1995-1996 season. Expect the team to come out ready and fired up against the Hurricanes behind Mcßoberts and Nelson and get back on track with something the team has lacked lately—passion. Our call: Duke wins, 71-63 Compiled by Andrew Davis
r
The Chronicle
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18 FRIDAY, JANUARY 12,2007
RECRUITS
from page 14
two softball teams, and hopefully, this break will give her the kind of rest she needs.” Similar to Chiney, 5-foot-10 sophomore Paris will not play with many of the current Blue Devils, except the freshmen,.if she signs with Duke. Through nine games this season for Heritage Christian in Indiana, Paris was averaging 15.9 points, 9.0 rebounds and 4.9 assists per game. The only one of the five visitors this weekend who will certainly be a part of Duke’s future squad is Thomas. Thomas is a 5-foot-9 point guard from Oakton High School in Vienna, Va. and was named a pre-season AllAmerican by scout.com. She chose Duke over Virginia, Connecticut, Louisiana State and Maryland —the team that will be opposite Duke Saturday. “She’s incredibly quick,” said Fred Priester, her high school coach, “A lot of people can be quick without the ball. She’s quick with it. And she has incredible court awareness—that’s what Coach [Goestenkors] loves.”
including
SPECIAL TO THE CHRONICLE
Guard JasmineThomas committed to Duke early this fall and will visit this weekend along with a handful of potential future Blue Devils.
MICHAEL CHANG/THE
CHRONICLE
A Mike Krzyzewski-led Duke team had not lost an overtime game at Cameron Indoor Stadium in 22 years before the Virginia Tech defeat.
FANAROFF
from page 13
group in 2001. It may not even be fair to compare this
year’s team to 2004’s Final Four team. But hey, that’s life. So far, except maybe for the first half of the Air Force
:
fr
game and the second half against Georgetown, this group of Blue Devils has been absolutely average. At 0-2, Duke is second to last in the ACC. And there’s really no reason for it. Maybe the Blue Devils are young, but six of them were McDonald’s All-Americans. This weekend’s game in Coral Gables against a Miami team that has already knocked off both Georgia Tech and Maryland is a huge one for Duke. Should the Blue Devils lose and fall to 0-3, it might be time to start assigning blame. And if the players are talented, but the results just aren’t there, then it might be time to start asking the guy running this show what exacdy is going on. Of course, we don’t do that around here. So let’s just say that if I’m not eating these words on Sunday, it’s going to be a long season.
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Tuesdays from 2:30 to 6:00 p.m. Looking for someone to pick up and stay with our bright and fun 8 year old. School and home in Durham. Car required, bdevill992@aol.com
Research Assistant. Part-time $lOHistorical Fiction Novel Email resume to
lzbthoakley@yahoo.com 919.563.2226 Entry Level Marketing. Part-time $9/Hour. No experienced required. Email resume to lzbthoakley@yahoo.com 919.563.2226 PEAK FITNESS is seeking candidates for the following positions: V. P. of Operations District Managers Regional Managers Managers/ Asst. Managers Pro-Shop/ Retail Manager Administrative Positions Customer Service All candidates must possess a “team" attitude and be willing to give 110% in order to make Peak Fitness a success. Benefits include health, dental, and 401 K. Earning potential ranges from 30K-100K per year. Please send resume and salary requirements to: Fitness Management, PO Box 2220, Davidson, NC 28036; Email: aflinchum@peakfitnessclubs.com; Fax: (704) 892-2710
FOR SALE MATTRESS:
A
Brand
Name
Queen/ King Plushtop Orthopedic Set, NEW in package, w/ wty $l5O.
Delivery, twin and full set available $125, 919-771-8155.
MEETINGS
■
DUKE IN MEXICO INFO MEETING Duke in Mexico summer program May 19 to June 30, 2007 Experience diverse Mexican culture, architecture & cuisine. Learn elementary or intermediate Spanish during the 6-week Intensive Spanish Summer Program in Cholula, Mexico. 2 double-course options: Spanish 13 (1 & 2) or Spanish 16 (63 & 76) are available. Meet Prof. Joan Clifford & learn more at an information meeting Tues., Jan. 16, at 6:00 p.m., in Languages 207. Merit-based Mac Anderson Scholarships are available. For on-line applications, visit
www.aas.duke.edu/study_abroad. Questions? Call 684-2174, Office of
Study Abroad, 2016 Campus Dr.
DUKE IN LONDON DRAMA INFO MTG SUMMER PROGRAM 2007 Duke in London information meeting will be held on Wednesday, Jan. 17 at 5:30 p.m. in 128 Theater Studies Studios. Designed for both drama majors & others who have an interest in theater, the program provides 2-cc while you see & study over twenty productions during the 6-week term. Obtain on-line, applications http:// www.aas.duke.edu/
study_abroad/,
Questions?
Contact the Office of Study Abroad, 684-2174 or visit the Study Abroad office on 2016 Campus Drive. Application dead-
line: Rolling admissions through Friday, February 9, 2007, with applications considered on a space available basis thereafter.
APARTMENTS FOR RENT NEWLY RENOVATED ON AMERICAN DR Near Morreene Road. 2 bed/2 1/2 bath, washer/ dryer, fenced yard, deck, pets OK. $9OO/ mo. 561-734-6871 or ioyce@whharvey.com.
-
-
Science Education Materials Center is looking to fill several work study positions in a relaxed, friendly environment. Start @ $lO.OO / hour. Self-scheduling. 10-minute drive from Duke. Call 919.483.4036 919.483.4036
PT CHILDCARE NEEDED 1 afternoon a week
+
DUKE MEDICAL RESEARCH LAB seeks STUDENT ASSISTANT for spring semester and possibly summer 2007 to help with transgenic mouse care, general lab maintenance, molecular biology assays, and possible future independent project. $7.25/hr, 5-10 hr/week. Contact mhfoster@duke.edu.
WORK STUDY POSITIONS
2BR/2BATH APT. FOR RENT!!! 1200sq.ft apt. available immed., gated comm, pool, VB court, tennis, pkng.Smin. from Duke Med. $BB5/ mo incl cable W/ D&DiningSet avail, for sale *Will pay 1/2 Ist mo. rent* 315.317.0177
FREE RENT in exchange for light housekeeping duties, etc. 8248960. Leave message. HUGE 1 BED/1 BA -1 Ml. CAMPUS 1300 sqft Apt within Historic House, 12 ft ceilings, hardwoods, private balcony off bedroom, large columned front porch, private W/ D, security system. $B9O/ mo includes cable/ water 919.730.5317
HOMES FOR RENT LOVELY 3 BR
SFH NEAR
CAMPUS 2 full baths, garage, Ranch, Suburban but rustic, appliances. Utils, extra Prefer grad/fac/iaw/med tenants Lease term flex. Sec. dep. Sorry no pets. $llOO/mo. email: jerry22o3l@hotmail.com 919.403.3474
ROOM FOR RENT Private room in home. Separate entry and bath. Fully furnished. All utilites paid. Close to East Campus. High-speed internet. 286-2285 or 383-6703. CHAPEL HILL ROOM FOR RENT Two rooms for rent in Kirkwood townhouse (near Borders). Around 375/month. If interested, contact 518-8562 or e-mail (202)
Eruina@yahoo.com
DUKE IN GREECE INFO MEETING DUKE IN GREECE SUMMER 2006 “Birth of Reason in Ancient Greece" hosts an information meeting Tuesday, Jan. 16, at 12:30 p.m., in Allen 229. Learn more about this popular 4-week, 1-cc philosophy program offering
in-depth study tours throughout Greece. Directed by Prof. Michael Ferejohn, Philosophy Dept. Summer scholarships are able. For on-lineapplications, visit http://www.aas.duke.edu/study_a broad/forms.html. Questions? Call 919-684-2174, Office of Study Abroad, 2016 Campus Dr,
abroad@aas.duke.edu.
Rolling
admissions through Friday, February 9, 2007, with applications considered on a space available basis thereafter.
DUKE IN RUSSIA INFO MEETING DUKE IN RUSSIA SUMMER 2007 Meet Program Director Prof. Edna Andrews at a summer information meeting Tuesday, Jan. 16, at 3:30 p.m. in 320 Languages. Learn more about this exciting 2-cc program in St. Petersburg, focusing on Russian language & culture. Merit-based Mac Anderson Scholarships are available! For on-line applications, visit http://
www.aas.duke.edu/ study_abroad/
forms.html.
Questions? Call 684-2174, Office
of Study Abroad, 2016 Campus email Dr. or
abroad@aas.duke.edu.
Application deadline: Rolling admissions through Friday, February 9, 2007, with applications considered on a space available basis thereafter.
CLASSIFIEDS
21 10IFRIDAY, JANUARY 12, 2007
THE CHRONICLE
Places of Worship WEIYITAN/THE CHRONICLE
Thaddeus Lewis was hit hardand often this past season playing behind an inexperienced offensive line.
FOOTBALL
want to alleviate those misperceptions out there,” Alieva said. “I want them to get to
from page 13
presentations throughout the day Saturday the Washington Duke Inn. Alieva and head coach Ted Roof will address the gathering, as will other athletic administrators in charge of the football program’s financial and academic vision. Duke President Richard Brodhead will also speak to the group. The roster of former players scheduled to attend includes alumni from as far back as 1953 and as recent as last year. “There were a growing number of former football players throughout the fall, as the team mounted loss after loss, who said, ‘What’s going on?’” said Mark Militello, an All-ACC wideout as a senior in 1983. “We wanted to know how we can help the program and the University and at the same time ask questions,” Since Roof took over the program on a permanent basis, Duke is 3-31, including a 2-1 record against Division I-AA opponents. Roof has brought in several solid recruiting classes, but the results have yet to show on the field. “You’ve got recruiting classes ranked higher than Wake Forest, close to Boston College, higher than Boise State, yet it translates into nothing on the field as it relates to wins and losses,” said Militello, who is one of about 20 Duke Football alums helping to coordinate CDF. Alieva said the weekend would be a great opportunity to unite the wide base of Duke Football alumni and help inform them about the current policies governing the program, the financial status of the program and the future opportunities for growth. “There’s certain things we can do and there’s certain things we can’t do, and I at
SOCIAL EVENTS
SERVICES OFFERED IST PILATES CLASS FREE MetaformMovement.com Private Pilates & GYROTONIC®/$6O. classes/$25. Ist session free Schedule now! 919.682.725 close to campus 1010 Lamond Avenue. BIOLOGY TUTOR Duke PhD graduate available for indiv/ group tutoring. $5O/ hr. Call 919.423.5311 AIRPORT SHUTTLE $15.00 SERVICE Pickup or dropoff. Duke students Crown only. Transportation. 919-593-3609
know coach Roof.” Militello said although opinions vary, many alumni would like to see Roof given the opportunity to succeed. Former football players are concerned, however, over some coaching decisions and will ask some “pointed questions,” especially as they relate to areas like special teams, Militello said. In addition, the CDF will also look for a strong commitment to achieving success in football from the University administration. “In every endeavor it undertakes, Duke demands excellence,” Militello said. ‘Yet as you break it down, as many Duke athletic teams that are having a great run, there’s this anomaly called the football program that has not had a winning year in 12 years and has the longest losing streak in the
country.” In an interview last month, Brodhead re-affirmed the University’s commitment to having a strong, Division I-A football program. “I don’t underestimate the challenges of it,” Brodhead said. “We play in a very tough, a very, very competitive league. And there are many schools in America that establish the balance between athletics and academics at a different place than Duke does. “We have to be out there,” Brodhead continued. “We have to show special genius in recruiting because the part of the very talented football population that will be appropriate for Duke is a pretty small part of the overall population. We’re just going to have to make the case that Duke is the place they want to go, that Duke is the place they’ll have the most valuable ex-
perience.”
HEY LADIES! GIRLS NIGHT IN FUN Host a fun, sexy & tasteful “Slumber Party” and get a free shopping spree! Educational and empowering presentation of sensual lotions, lingerie, toys and more in the privacy of your own home! Confidential Women 18+ ordering. only. Valentine's Day Specials. Call today, dates are going fast! Nicole at:
nicole.rowan@slumberparties.com 919.641.5474
TICKETS BASKETBALL TICKETS DUKE BASKETBALL TICKETS wanted! Will buy single and season DUKE basketball tickets. Top dollar paid!! Call 919.341.4697
AVID DUKE FAN LOOKING FOR TIX Duke Alum (’O6) in the area looking to purchase any available Duke Bball tickets, either season or individual games. Please call me at or email (919)-451-1803
jph2l@duke.edu
DUKE BASKETBALL TICKETS WANTED cash paid for all season and individual game tickets local pickup (919)218-2165
DUKE BASKETBALL TICKETS WANTED DUKE/GA TECH on Feb 18. Will buy 2, 3 or 4 tickets for son’s birthday. TOP DOLLAR PAID. Call famgourmet@aol.com 610.554.8817
TRAVEL/VACATION CARNIVAL IN BOLIVIA Parades and festivities 2-4 day trips. Groups rates $95 PPI Day double room. 919.929.7739
SAVE UP TO $7OO OFF CRUISES! WWW. DAYTRIPPING. NET Everything you need for the perfect trip!
4/ Grace Lutheran Church 824 N. Buchanan Blvd. Durham, NC 27701 682-6030 ...one block from East Campus •
Worship with Holy Communion 8:30 & 11:00 am each Sunday lifting high, the cross, to proclaim the love
of Christ!
Beth El Synagogue 1004 Watts St., Durham
919-682-1238
Durham's First Synagogue One block from Duke East Campus
Traditional Conservative Egalitarian congregation offering an Orthodox Kehilla Rabbi Steven C. Sager Shabbat services: Friday evenings 6:00 p.m. Conservative: 9:45 a.m. Orthodox: 9:00 Saturdays http://www.betheldurham.or Website:
Please join us for services next Shabbat
a.m.
THE CHRONICLE
FRIDAY, JANUARY 12, 2007 121
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Sudoku 3 5
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5
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WHAT DO YOU SEE? A. a profile B. liar C. the perfect spot to place your ad To sponsor the Sudoku puzzle, call the advertising office at 684-3811.
nswer to yesterday’s puzzle
Account Assistants: Desmund Collins, Erin Richardson Cordelia Biddle Advertising Representatives: Evelyn Chang, Margaret Stoner Kevin O’Leary Marketing Assistant: National Advertising Coordinator: Charlie Wain Creative Services Coordinator: Alexandra Beilis Creative Services: Marcus Andrew, Nayantara Atal Sarah Jung, Akara Lee, Elena Liotta, Susan Zhu Roily Miller Online Archivist: Business Assistants: ...Danielle Roberts, Chelsea Rudisill
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THE CHRONICLE
22 FRIDAY, JANUARY 12, 2(M)7
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fraternity and rushing hard, that 8:30 or 8:45 sorority rush upon class is not a realistic option. For the girls: us, it’s time for flocks If you go into the rush of freshman girls to scurry process thinking it around the winis the be-all and editorial try Gothic Wonend-all, that’s placderland in tiny skirts and freshman guys to ing too high a premium on a push their blood-alcohol lev- process that is rapid-fire —unels to new highs. For all those like guys, women don’t get first-years ready to expose weeks to get to know certain themselves to die merciless organizations or parties at process of rush, here are a which to socialize. Don’t wear too-high few tips. heels. You have to walk a fair For the guys: Don’t join a fraternity amount, and tripping is never because you like their section. cool. Nor are blisters. Don’t hope for a “name” You’re going to end up living with the guys for a long time sorority. Hope for, and put your best foot forward for, the There are much more imporones that have the people you tant factors to consider. like, the people who make you Work on your handfeel comfortable, the people shake. You will be judged. Change your schedule who are real. For everyone: while you still can. Ifyou plan on
With
—
Does this case look like it’s moving toward an implosion ? Yes, it is moving toward that. —Law professor Paul Haagen on the future of the lacrosse case. See story page 3.
LETTERS POLICY The Chroniclewelcomes submissions in the form of let-
Est. 1905
Direct submissions to; Editorial Page Department The Chronicle Box 90858, Durham, NC 27708 Phone; (919) 684-2663 Fax: (919) 684-4696 E-mail: letters@chronicle.duke.edu
The Chronicle
Inc. 1993
RYAN MCCARTNEY, Editor ANDREW YAFFE, Managing Editor IZA WOJCIECHOWSKA, News Editor ADAM EAGLIN, University Editor KATHERINE MACILWAINE, University Editor SEYWARD DARBY, Editorial Page Editor GREG BEATON, Sports Editor JIANGHAI HO, Photography Editor JONATHAN ANGIER, GeneralManager SHREYA RAO, City & State Editor ROB COPELAND, Features Editor VICTORIA WARD, City & State Editor JASTEN MCGOWAN, Health Science Editor MICHAEL MOORE, Sports Managing Editor CAROLINA ASTIGARRAGA, Health & ScienceEditor STEVE VERES, Online Editor WEIYI TAN, Sports Photography Editor LEXI RICHARDS, Recess Editor ALEX WARR, Recess Managing Editor BAISHI WU, Recess Design Editor ALEX FANAROFF, Towerview Editor SARAH KWAK, TowerviewEditor EMILY ROTBERG, Towerview Managing Editor MICHAEL CHANG, TowerviewPhotography Editor ALEX BROWN, TowerviewManaging Photo Editor DAVID GRAHAM, Wire Editor MIKE VAN PELT, Supplements Editor WENJIA ZHANG, Wire Editor JARED MUELLER, Editorial Page Managing Editor VARUN LELLA, Recess Online Editor IREM MERTOL, Recess Photography Editor MEG BOURDILLON, SeniorEditor HOLLEY HORRELL, Senior Editor MINGYANG LIU, SeniorEditor ASHLEY DEAN, SeniorEditor LAUREN KOBYLARZ, Sports Senior Editor PATRICK BYRNES, Sports Senior Editor JOHN TADDEI, Sports SeniorEditor BARBARA STARBUCK, Production Manager YU-HSIEN HUANG, Supplements Coordinator MARY WEAVER, OperationsManager NALINI AKOLEKAR, University Ad Sales Manager STEPHANIE RISBON, AdministrativeCoordinator MONICA FRANKLIN, Durham Ad Sales Manager DAWN HALL, Chapel Hill Ad Sales Manager TheChronicleis published by the Duke Student Publishing Company. Inc., a non-profitcorporation independent of Duke University. The opinions expressed in thisnewspaper are not necessarily thoseof Duke University, its students, faculty, staff, administration or trustees. Unsigned editorials represent the majority view of the editorialboard. Columns, letters and cartoons represent the views of theauthors. To reach the Editorial Office at 301 Flowers Building, call 684-2663 or fax 684-4696. To reach the Business Office at 103 West Union Building, call 684-3811. To reach the Advertising Office at 101 West Union Building call 684-3811 or fax 684-8295. Visit The Chronicle Online at &
http-y/www.dukechronicle.com. C 2006 The Chronicle, Box 90858, Durham, N.C. 27708. Allrights reserved. No part of this publication maybe reproduced in any form without the prior, written permission of the Business Office. Each individ-
ual is entitled to one free copy.
ent people along the way.— You don’t have to go to
own personality. Look for the fraternity or sorority where you could see yourself being friends with the most people. Be yourself. Don’t try too hard to impress anyone or say what you think they want to hear—it is much too easy to see through. If at the close of rush you end up in the sorority or fraternity that you did not expect, give it a few weeks before dropping out. There are many people who are initially disappointed but wouldn’t change a thing in retrospect. Rush is a great opportu-
every
nity
to meet
upperclassmen
and new freshmen. No matter where you end up, use the process to meet a lot of differ-
event,
It’s OK not to remember names. Just ask. Don’t be upset if someone forgets your name. Try to meet people when they aren’t drinking or partying to get a better idea of who they are. Don’t let rush come between you and your friends. You don’t have to join the same group as your friends. Sometimes different places appeal to different types of people. The key is to make an effort to stay close during and after pledging (for guys) or the end of rush (for girls). Don’t join a fraternity or sorority because you think it will help you get a
job in the future Don’t listen to rumors Make your own decisions. If someone reminds you of a friend from high school, it’s probably a good sign. Don’t let your sorority or fraternity “define” you. Let it be something you do on the side—it is an extracurricular after all. Blocking and going independent is not, contrary to popular belief and the frat _
boy/sorority girl party line, social suicide at Duke. Even if you don’t get a bid into the organization you want or get rejected a lot, you should understand that it’s not a reflection on your adequacy as a human being (however much the rush process may make you think so).
How was your break?
ontherecord
ters to the editor or guest columns. Submissions must include the author's name, signature, department or class, and for purposes of identification, phone number and local address. Letters should not exceed 325 words. The Chronicle will not publish anonymous or form letters or letters that are promotional in nature. The Chronicle reserves the right to edit letters and guest columns for length, clarity and style and the right to withhold letters based on the discredon of the editorial page editor.
Don’t join a group that will pressure you to hide your
It’s
you don’t tell them that your friends back home seem to have become potheads, sluts or both. You don’t tell them that you spent more hours in your pajamas than out of them, and that the days of your break went by too quickly to grasp. You don’t tell them that every time you come home for break, you feel a little less comfortable in your old bed, and a little more disconnected from the people who raised you. You don’t tell them that spending time with your old best friends is as painful as it is wonderfulbecause there is always a taste of something that is 105t.... You don’t tell them any of these things because the real answer to “How was your break?” could take all day. Winter Break is a time for us to step out of our world and reflect upon it from the vantage point of our youth. The lives of college students are strange; we yo-yo back and forth between the life we have al“(Squeal oPexcitement) Did you get a haircut? It looks so cute! (Inward ways known and the life we are trying to build. One circle of friends is exchanged for another every five gagging) How was your break?” So, in order to learn more about this widespread months and then back again. We live a schizophenomenon, I decided to do a little experiment and phrenic lifestyle. We struggle all semester to swim against the current of actually count how many homework, exams and partimes I was asked this questies, immersed in a stream tion The lives of college students of both intense academia Since I have stepped off and intense hedonism, and are strange; we yo-yo back and the plane at RDU, the Winter Break is the one total comes to 26. grand forth between the life we have time when we can stop And a couple of those were treading water to come up always known and the life we repeats from the same peofor air. And in this eye of ple. are trying to build. the storm that is college Why does this phony life, we have the chance to question automatically burreflect on who we are and ble up into our throats the how far we have come. time see even a remote on we acquaintance every But enough of this! We are busy people here at quad? Do we actually care if That-Kid-DownstairsDuke. We hardly have time to wax philosophical on Whose-Name-You-Can’t-Remember had a fun break? the self-discovery we engaged in over break or the The answer is a resounding no. As soon as the question escapes our lips, a glazed, resolutions we made for the new year. So instead, a unfocused expression comes over our faces, and we simple exchange of “How was your break?” “It was nod along blankly as we listen to the person’s answer. good!” must do. However, I do have a glimmer of hope that some of We don’t intend to hear an interesting response, and to to you might decide to shake things up a bit. Come on, they don’t intend give one. In fact, the responses “How was your break?” can be broken down into three people, you have started your own businesses, published novels and devised plans to help starving chilcategories: dren in Africa; can’t you be a little more creative? walk1. “It was good, how about yours?” (continues the Try it. The next time someone asks you how your on quad) ing hurriedly past you 2. “It was good, way too short though!” (hearty break was, tell them that you became a part-time stripper to pick up some extra holiday cash, or that Grandchuckle) ma burned the house down trying to make her famous 3. “It was good, did you get a haircut?” Because it is implicidy understood that the asker apple pie. Because you might just find something doesn’t really care how your break was, you usually change in their glazed over, dull expression... you don’t bother to give a genuine response. You don’t tell might actually find a spark of interest, of care. them thatyou got so drunk on New Year’s thatyou vomStacy Chudwin is a Trinity sophomore. Her column runs ited on your cat, you don’t tell them that your parents at and other Friday. every Christmas Eve the dinner table fighting spent that time ofyear again. The Christmas trees have withered and browned, the New Year’s hangovers have subsided and the Thompsons next door finally took down those heinous Santa lawn ornaments. It’s time to go back to school. Inevitably, like a of chorus fp bird high-pitched 6S chirps comes that familiar old question: “How was your break?” stacy chudwin “Hey, So-And-So, how shenanigans was omg, your
THE CHRONICLE
commentaries
Of our own making
I
have to admit, I’m slightly intimidated by my new toaster. It’s a bizarre hybrid toaster that also cooks eggs and any number of meats, with these mutant arms coming out the sides for hot plates and miniature pans. It’s got microchips and “features.” It can probably “hack” into “cyberspace” when I’m not looking. It’s luxurious; decadent, even. It’s also largely nonfunctional. To date, the toaster hasn’t successfully toasted anything. It poaches an egg and warms a slice of ham with gusto, but when it comes to its main purpose, I think my toaster may be broken already. kindle brian It’s unfortunate, but ad astra T hardly surprising. In my experience, a certain degree of non-functionality is the natural consequence of fancying up essentially simple things. The further you move away from simplicity and utility, first into convenience and then into luxury, the less likely it is that a thing will actually work. Attempting to repair my toaster (full name: “Backto-Basics Egg and Muffin Toaster”) made me think, oddly enough, of the game room in McClendon Tower. During my freshman and sophomore years, I spent a lot of time there, playing talent-free games of pool and wondering why the place was always empty. Since then it’s become an almost offensively fancy space, dripping with neon and entertainment options. There’s a jukebox, plasma screens, pool tables, sliders—you name it. But even with all the high-tech, glitzy accoutrements in* the place, mostly people use it as a study room. The lack of fun being had in the game room used to puzzle me, especially when compared with the relative popularity of my freshman dorm’s commons room, the featured amusements of which included old-people furniture and a ping-pong table the dorm had won by collecting Snapple caps. Now that I’m older and marginally wiser, however, it makes perfect sense. The commons room was far from luxurious, but we had contributed in some way to its existence as the community space. We owned that room, especially since we’d earned that ping-pong table, and so we used it to death. Nobody owns the McClendon game room, except of course the administrators who designed it in the first place. Nobody rallied a dorm to win one of those pool tables, and I seriously doubt many people feel the same sneaking attachment to the dandified sofas of the game room as I did to the raggedy couches in the dorm commons. Consequently, nobody really hangs out in the game room, just like nobody hangs out on the BC Plaza. And, when the University finishes turning Central Campus into its own version of Disneyland, no one will hang out there either. All of these places are nice ideas. They look good, they’re luxurious; decadent, even. But they don’t work. Whatever the administration hoped they would do—foster student interaction, build a sense of identity, bring the “social scene” back to campus, etc.—hasn’t happened (and won't, in the case of Central), largely because even the most desperate person wants some say in the community he or she inhabits. Engineered luxury handed down from on high is nobody’s idea of a good time. But hey, that’s the style nowadays. Heaven help us if we don’t keep up with our peer institutions up north, right? What’s the point of all this, you ask? I try to use my first column of the semester as an introduction. If you’re going to read (or not read) me for the next few weeks, you might as well know where my sympathies lie. I tend to side with the unofficial, the independent, the entrepreneurial; I tend to write about the disappointments of luxury and convenience and what their alternatives might be. If that sounds like your kind of thing, then tune in next week. Also, if anyone happens to be handy with toaster repair, then let me know. I’m dying for an egg and muffin sandwich. ,
.
,
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Brian Kindle is a Trinity senior. His column runs every Friday.
FRIDAY, JANUARY 12,
200712'13
letterstotheeditor Interpretation of letter misses mark In a letter published in The Chronicle Jan. 10 (“Professors call for investigation, welcoming ofall students”), I joined 18 of my colleagues to say that (1) we regret an impression has been formed in some circles that Duke faculty are prejudiced against some of our students, that (2) we support our president in his call for an investigation of a botched legal process and (3) that we welcome all students to our classes. That our simple three points would be interpreted as subtly insinuating more is a surprise to most of us. In particular, one of our colleagues from another department (quoted in the Jan. 11 article “Reinstatement sparks fiery faculty response”)suggests that our letter feeds “a wheel of hatred that’s bound up with the blogs” and does not support “a healthy and constructive dialogue.” He went on to contrast this to the spring 2006 advertisement taken out by several departments and endorsed by 88 faculty members, many of whom are good friends of those of us who signed the Jan. 10 letter. The distinction was made that the spring ad raises “larger questions,” while our letter did not. We can disagree about whether the spring ad and its insinuation that Duke is a place of rampant and widespread racism and sexism was “healthy and constructive,” particularly in the charged atmosphere in
Flight
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Jordan axt
come to a satisfactory pa-indron^s conclusion on whether to possess the gift of flight or invisibility. The segment eventually ends in the wishy-washy, feelgood, introspective way a segment on NPR is supposed to end. Hodgman remains undecided as to which power he would like more. But that is not why I am here. I am here to tell you that there actually is a correct answer in this debate. Invisibility is the way to go. Any self-respecting, honest, reasonable person must choose invisibility. Unless, of course, you are a fool. Then you can choose flight. Before I persuade you to choose invisibility, let me lay down the parameters. No matter what you choose, you are the only person in the world with this power. Invisibility is the ability to become transparent at will, including your clothes. However, anything you pick up remains visible and any noise you make is still audible. Choosing flight allows you to soar at any altitude within Earth’s atmosphere at speeds up to 1,000 miles per hour. Now that we have got that cleared up, let me break this down for you more scientifically by addressing some of the important categories in life. The Opposite Sex: I start here because this is the only area that I will concede to flight. Let me make this perfecdy clear: if you don't think people will sleep with someone simply because you can fly, you’re damn crazy. Just look at Carson Daly. The only superpower he possesses is the ability to be incredibly dull (hey-o!). Now, some of you who have watched a lot of roman,
Thomas Nechyba Fuchsberg-Levine Family Professor ofEconomics and Public Policy
Lineup policy for Jan. 13 women’s game The women’s basketball team plays Maryland this Saturday, Jan. 13, at 12:30 p.m. The undergraduates and graduate students will form one line for admittance into the game. Students will be let in 70 minutes before tipoff. Mara Schultz Trinity ’O7 Head Line Monitor
invisibility?
or guilty? Academics or athledcs? George’s or Shooters? These are all hotly debated topics on campus, but as I listen to people discuss these questions, only one thought runs through my mind: Blah. Blah. Blah. There is only one important question in life: flight or invisibility? I first heard this question posed by John Hodgman—the PC in the Mac commercials—on NPR’s This American Life In the piece, Hodgman records different
people
which it was published. But our letter was not an attempt to raise “larger issues” or to engage our friends who used the events in the spring to do so from their perspective. All it did was make three very simple points. While I do not believe that racism and sexism define our community, I join all those who condemn the pockets of racism and sexism that exist at Duke as they do in other parts of our society. I also join Dean George McLendon’s and President Richard Brodhead’s call for a civil atmosphere in which disagreements among friends are possible, at least within the faculty of our Duke community.
tic comedies (me), may think “Hey, by choosing invisibility, you could just spy on the girls you like, find out the things they enjoy and then slowly woo her through bringing up these activities in everyday conversation.” You would be wrong because that supposes that women are rational beings, which we all know is completely untrue. There you go, flight, you win this round. However, those of you who know me understand why this is not a problem. My game is so air tight, I pull more dimes than a tollbooth. Friends: You might think that flight is the life of the party while invisibility is the creepy guy who sits in the corner. And to an extent, this may be true. But think about what life would be like if you actually chose flight. You would, undoubtedly, be a really big deal. Everyone would know who you were, but this isn't necessarily a good thing. It is sort oflike James Bond. They say “men want to be him,” but they don't say “men want to be friends with him.” In other words, James Bond is simply too cool to have any friends. I believe this problem would extend to flight. Think about the friends you have. Are any of them significantly cooler than you are? Of course not. We don't want to be friends with people who are a lot cooler than we are. We hate people who are a lot cooler than we are. Because your friends don’t necessarily have to know that you are capable of becoming invisible, invisibility wins this round by default. Basketball Tickets: Choosing flight would mean that you could probably be hooked up with nice seats after shooting an American Express commercial with Coach K (“my life isn’t all about literal flight, it's also about the flight we call life”). Still, invisibility has got to win this argument. Imagine showing up as soon as they begin to let students in, turning invisible, and then smugly walking past the “super-psyched” freshman that has been waiting in line since 5:00 a.m. Priceless. Plus, you could actually play in the game if you wanted to! Stealing passes, blocking shots, tripping opponents. The possibilities are endless. Invisibility easily takes this one. So there you have it. By a score of 2-1, invisibility wins. I just changed your life, but there is no need to thank me.
Jordan Axt is a Trinity sophomore. His column runs every other Friday.
24IFRIDAY,
JANUARY 12, 2007
THE CHRONICLE