February 7, 2007

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Professors are hard at work on studies of conservation, PAGE 4

Game time Let's

go Duke, beat Carolina! 9 p.m. tonight, Cameron Indoor

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focus on | Duke grades

Data shows rising trend for grades by

Shu cm Parikh

THE CHRONICLE

When freshman Sharmistha Rudra chose her courses this semester, she aimed for balance. To even out the heavy workload of her biochemistry and physics classes, she looked for a couple of “easy” humanities courses, deciding on a “Water and Conflict” seminar because it carried the lightest workload, ac-

cording to www.ratemyprofessor.com.

Rudra’s instinct that the University’s liberal arts classes give out

higher grades was not unfounded, according to data from the Office of the University Registrar. And some evidence indicates that there has been consistent grade inflation in recent years. Latin honors, awarded to the top 25 percent of each graduating class, have had steadily increasing GPA cutoffs since the Class of 2001, the last year data was publicly available. Summa cum laude, honoring the top five percent of the class, had a GPA cutoff for Trinity College graduates of 3.868 for the Class of 2005, but rose to 3.894 for the Class of 2007. The summa cum laude GPA cutoff for Pratt School of Engineering graduates rose from 3.905 to 3.950 over SEE GRADE TRENDS ON PAGE 6

CHRONICLE FILE PHOTOS

Last season, then-freshman Tyler Hansbrough led theTar Heels to an upset victory over Duke.This year, No. 5 North Carolina is thefavorite in Cameron Indoor.

MORE THAN A RIVALRY GAME Blue Devils search for win to get back on track in by

Tim Britton

THE CHRONICLE

It’s the game they dream about—the game they’ve played out hundreds of times in the driveway, the game they’ve each won with a shot at their own buzzer. But unfortunately, in those games in the driveway, the Blue Devil players did not have to defend Tywon Lawson, Brandan Wright or Tyler Hansbrough. And they were not coming off two straight gut-wrenching conference losses. When No. 16 Duke (18-5, 5-4 in the ACC) takes the floor against fifth-ranked

North Carolina (20-3, 6-2) tonight at 9 p.m. in Cameron Indoor Stadium, the Blue Devils will be looking to do more than just beat their arch-rivals. They’ll be looking to get their season back on track. “The rivalry means a lot,” junior DeMarcus Nelson said. “For our team, it means that much more because of where our team is at as of today—coming off of two losses that we felt like we let slip through our hands. We just have SEE M. BBALL ON PAGE 12

conference play

thebreakdown The Chronicle covers all angles of the game, including an analysis of the likely matchups, a Q&A with ESPN analyst and Duke alum Jay Bilas and much more.

see pg. 8

Permit pending, win may ignite Main West bonfire BY ZAK KAZZAZ THE CHRONICLE

Tonight’s final score in the men’s basketball game against the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill will determine whether students can throw in wood, clothing and benches to feed the fire of victory. Duke requested fire permits again this year, according to an advertisement published in Tuesday’s Chronicle by Executive Vice President Tallman Trask and Duke Student Government President Elliott Wolf, a junior. Fire permits were revoked after the Durham Fire Marshal deemed the 2005 bonfire “out of control.” The Fire Marshal may permit bonfires SEE BONFIRE ON PAGE 5

An "out of control"fire in 2005 caused the Durham Fire Marshal to revoke Duke's permits for bonfires.


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WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 7,

THE CHRONICLE

2007

Iraqi PM urges U.S. to hurry Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki complained Tuesday the long-awaited Baghdad security operation was off to a slow start and warned that insurgents are taking advantage of the delay to kill as many people as possible.

Astronaut arrested for murder try by

Mike Schneider

THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

ORLANDO, Fla. She was the Robochick. He was Billy-0 According to police, her obsession with him led her to drive 900 miles from Houston to Orlando, bringing with her a trenchcoat and wig, armed with a BB gun and pepper spray and wearing a diaper to avoid bathroom breaks on the arduous drive. Once in Florida, Lisa “Robochick” Nowak apparently confronted the woman she believed was her rival for the affections of William “Billy-O” Oefelein. And this tawdry love triangle has one more twist—it involves two astronauts.

Nowak, 43, a married mother of three who flew on a space shuttle in July, was charged with attempted murder, accused of hatching an extraordinary plot to kidnap Colleen Shipman, who she believed was romantically involved with Oefelein, a space shuttle pilot. Specifically, police said, Nowak confronted Shipman, who was in her car at the Orlando airport, and sprayed something at her, possibly pepper spray. At first the astronaut was charged with attemptedkidnappingand other counts. Then prosecutors upped the charge to attempted murder, basing it on the weapons and other items police had found with Nowak or in her

car: pepper spray, a 88-gun, a new steel mallet, knife and rubber tubing. Nowak was released from jail on $25,500 bail and ordered to wear a monitoring device. Her lawyer, Donald Lykkebak, took issue with the most serious charges. “In the imaginations of the police officers, they extend these facts out into areas where the facts can’t be supported,” Lykkebak said. NASA put Nowak on a 30-day leave and removed her from mission duties. Agency spokesman John Ira Petty at Johnson Space SEE ASTRONAUT ON PAGE 8

Dems to contest formally Iraq surge by

David Espo

THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

WASHINGTON Democratic critics of the Iraq war seized the offensive at both ends of the Capitol on Tuesday, disclosing plans for a symbolic rejection by the House of President George W. Bush’s decision to deploy additional troops and filing legislation in the Senate to require withdrawal of United States military personnel. “We’re going to stand by our soldiers, but we’re not going to stand by a failed policy that exposes more of our soldiers to death and suffering,” said Sen. Richard Durbin of Illinois, rebutting charges that

the war’s critics may be undermining the morale or even the safety ofU.S. forces. Democrats pressured Bush to change course as Defense Secretary Robert Gates told lawmakers that U.S. forces might be able to start leaving Iraq before the end of the year—if daunting conditions including subdued violence and political reconciliation are met. He also said that the buildup in troops is “not the last chance” to succeed in Iraq and added, “I would be irresponsible if I weren’t thinking about what the alternatives might be.” The Pentagon is in the midst of imple-

men ting Bush’s order to raise troop levels by 21,500, part of a plan to help quell sectarian violence in Baghdad. New checkpoints were in evidence in Iraq’s capital city, and there were reports of inspections of increased numbers of vehicles. At the same time, more than 50 people were killed or found dead during the day, and Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki said insurgents were responding to the new security measures by killing as many people as possible. The war has claimed the lives of more than 3,000 U.S. troops so far, and officials announced two more deaths.

Duke University

102 FLOWERS BUILDING TELEPHONE (919) 684-3737

VICE PRESIDENT FOR STUDENT AFFAIRS BOX 90937

FAX (919)

681-7873

February 1,2007

I invite you to nominate any Duke undergraduate, graduate, or professional student (graduating September 2006, December 2006 or May 2007) for his or her engagement and participation in off-campus as well as on-campus activities.

To recommend a student for these awards, please visit the Awards website to find the specific criteria and the nomination instructions; http://osaf.student affairs .duke .edu/leadership/awards

All nominations are due by Friday,March 9,2007, and should be

sent to

Student Recognition Awards Box 90834/101 Bryan Center Or to leadershipawards@studentaffairs.duke.edu

Arctic cold pounds Midwest After an unusually warm December and a mostly snow-free January, winter returned with a vengeance Tuesday to the upper Midwest and Northeast, dumping heavy snow on parts of New York and keeping temperatures below zero in many cities.

Aguilera, husband cook nude Christina Aguilera has no problem showing skin—-especially on weekends with her husband, music executive Jordan Bratman. "We claim ourselves to be the coziest couple ever. We have something called 'naked Sundays,'" she said.

submit 215 Allen Building b

Speeches

must be

5:00 p.m., Thursday, Mar

Sincerely,

For other ways to recognize student leadership and service, visit

http://wwwprovost duke £du!Sullivanhtm

"It's like fishing with dynamite.” Wedding Crashers

Amy student (Sept. 'O6, Pec. 'O6, or May'o7 Graduate) receiving a degree at the May 2007 Commencement is eligible.

Please take a moment to consider the students with whom you interact and nominate those who qualify. Your service in recognizing deserving students is sincerely appreciated.

Larry' Moneta, Ed D. Vice President for Student Affairs

News briefs compiled from wire reports

"YOU!

Members of the Duke Community, On April 23, 2007, the University’s most prestigious awards for student leadership and engagement will be presented to a select number of graduating students. The Student Affairs Distinguished Leadership and Service Awards and the William J. Griffith University Service Award will recognize the individuals whose influence and achievements have made a significant and positive impact on University life.

A leaked cockpit video published Tuesday captures a dramatic exchange between two American pilots whose voices choke up when they learn they have killed a British soldier in a 2003 friendly fire incident in Iraq.

The 2007 Commencement Student Speaker

Durham North Carolina 27708 LARRY MONETA, ED D,

Leaked video details Iraq kill

For more information and instructions, please contact Sterly Wilder at 684-2782 or sterly.wilder@duke.edu


THE CHRONICLE

WEDNESDAY,

2 lax Grand

Charity prez weighs in on philanthropy

Jurors speak on charges

by

Both question initial decision on ABC News Two members of the grand jury that indicted the three members of the 20052006 men’s lacrosse team last spring said they had second thoughts about the indictments when they spoke on ABC’s “Good Morning America” Tuesday. “Knowing what I know now and all that’s been broadcast on the news and in media, I think I would have definitely... made a different decision,” one of the jurors said. “I don’t think those charges would have been the proper charges, based on what I know now.” Both jurors asked to remain anonymous and that their faces not be shown. The second juror said he did not regret his original decision, but has begun to doubt the validity of the case as the alleged victim continued to change her story and Durham District Attorney Mike Nifong dropped the rape charges. “What do you mean you’re not sure whetheryou got raped or not?” the second juror said. “That... didn’t add up.” The two also questioned Nifong’s decision to prosecute the remaining charges of kidnapping and sexual offense. “If no rape occurred why, why, go ahead and try t0... prosecute on the other charges?” the first juror said. The jurors stood behind Nifong’s decision to recuse himself from the case Jan. 12, saying it was the right thing for him to do. They also emphasized that a grand jury hears evidence from only the prosecution and its standards for indictment are low. The jurors said their decision is only the first step in the process and it is up to a trial to determine whether a crime occurred. —from Staff Reports

FEBRI ARY 7, 2007 3

Katie Noto

THE CHRONICLE

SPEC ALTO THE

CHRONICLE

A duo ofDuke sophomores speaks with Kenyan children at the future siteof a school for women's research.

Students look to Africa for service, education by

Nate Freeman

THE CHRONICLE

An intensified focus on global health has triggered a rise in the number of students studying abroad in Africa—an environment worlds away from spending a semester in Europe, where most students still choose to go abroad. Sparked by programs introduced as part of the new Global Health Institute, many students said they have chosen to spend their semester abroad in Africa to discover how medicine and research can help prevent devastating diseases that ravage some of the continent’s people. During the Fall 2006 semester, Duke sent 10 students to South Africa, one to Uganda and one to Tanzania, according to statistics posted on the Office of Study Abroad’s website; a year earlier, only five students traveled to South Africa and one traveled to Tanzania. Statistics were not immediately avail-

able for previous years. Courses within programs established by the GHl—such as the global health certificate and Focus program—have exposed students to the problems afflicting parts of Africa and urged them to take action, said sophomore Maggie Savage. “The University has taken a lot of steps to increase students’ knowledge of what is going on in the world,” she said. “They’ve really put an increased focus within the curriculum on global health, and a lot of that deals with the sustainability ofAfrica.” This summer, Savage will volunteer at World Camp in Malawi, where she will travel to primary schools teaching children methods of HIV/AIDS prevention. “I was in the Global Health Focus [in Spring 2006] and I became very interested in global health policy and emerging

Susan Berresford, president of the Ford Foundation and one ofForbes Magazine’s most powerful women in business, spoke at the Fuqua School of Business Tuesday about the changing face of philanthropy. Berresford focused on new and old types of philanthropic organizations, stressing her dislike for labels, and encouraged a more united Susan Berresford attempt at attacking social issues. The Ford Foundation, which was established in 1936, is the secondlargest foundation in the United States. “We should not be using this old-new dichotomy that separates people,” Berresford said. “We can instead try to see what is new and exciting that can help our field to be better.” As part of Fuqua’s Distinguished Speaker Series, Berresford discussed recent critics of older non-profit organizations, and examined her own problems with the general portrayal of philanthropy. She said she disagreed with the idea that these foundations are becoming outdated or irrelevant. “There’s not one size fits all,” she said. “There’s not just one way to do philanthropy well.” Berresford said the partnership between SEE FORD FOUND. ON PAGE 5

CORRECTION In Monday's article about graduate Young Trustee candidates, Ben Kennedy should have been recognized as a second-year MBA student at Fuqua.

SEE AFRICA ON PAGE 7

Duke Center for International Development presents

Jennifer Brinkerhoff, Ph.D,

Associate Professor, Public Administration and International Affairs, George Washington University

“Diasporas and Development” Friday, February 9,2007 4:30 6:00 PM Rubenstein Hall, Lecture Room 153 Terry Sanford Institute of Public Policy -

A Spring Workshop in the Series Rethinking Development Policy Discussion will follow a short presentation Light refreshments will be served For more information call 613-9255 or email Ibabcock@diike.edtt


THE CHRONICLE

4 I WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 7, 2007

THANKS FOR THE 02 More than 20% of the world's oxygen is produced in the Amazon Rainforest

JSL

I'lWWM.'flffl Prof leads forest conservation effort Hackers stall Net traffic servers Hackers briefly WASHINGTON overwhelmed at least three of the 13 computers that help manage global computer traffic Tuesday in one of the most significant attacks against the Internet since 2002. Experts said the unusually powerful attacks lasted as long as 12 hours but passed largely unnoticed by most computer users. Other experts said the hackers appeared to disguise their origin, but vast amounts ofrogue data in the attacks were traced to South Korea. The attacks appeared to target UltraDNS, the company that operates servers managing traffic for Web sites ending in "org" and some other suffixes, experts said.

by

Carolina Astigarraga and Lucie Zhang THE CHRONICLE

Stuart Pimm has always considered himself remarkably adept at getting in trouble—so it is not surprising that the Duke professor’s most recent journey into the Amazon Rainforest was no exception. There was the nagging back pain—thanks to a five- hour trip down a bumpy road on the hard wooden benches of a bus without shock absorbers. Then there was the harrowing task of negotiating with one of the indigenous tour guides a formidable looking Hourani in military garb who reportedly killed 20 people with a spear and held a shotgun to the head of the last trip leader until he was “given” hundreds of dollars. Pimm—one of the world’s foremost experts on conservation and biodiversity and a professor at Duke’s Nicholas School of the Environment and Earth Sciences—faced all of these perils, however, because he was fighting what he believes is one of the greatest dangers of all: the fact that increased oil drilling in areas such as the Amazon could lead to the destruction of the forest and the loss of hundreds of cultures, thousands of languages and half of the world’s biodiversity. Pimm may be one of the few individuals who has toiled in the Amazon, where the effects of the energy crisis are the most evident, but many other Duke scientists are hard at work in Durham and in Washington, D.C., on an issue —

NC schools violate waste laws WINSTON-SALEM, N.C.

Win-

ston-Salem State University and the University of North Carolina at Charlotte have been fined $27,000 and $19,633, respectively, for violating state hazardous-waste laws, officials confirmed this week. Violations included a failure to mark many containers of hazardous waste, but did not result in injuries or environmental damage, officials said. Essential oils cause "boy boobs" BOSTON Lavender and tea tree oils, found in some shampoos, soaps and lotions can temporarily leave boys with enlarged breasts in rare cases, apparently by disrupting their hormonal balance, a preliminary study in the New England Journal of Medicine suggests. The studyreported on thecondition, gynecomastia, in three boys ages 4,7 and 10.They all went back to normal when they stopped using skin lotions, hair gel, shampoo or soap with the natural oils. These plant oils are added to many healthcare products, usually for their scent.

that has gained increased national attention in recent months. Gabriele Hegerl, associate research professor at the Nicholas School, was a lead author for one of the chapters of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change’s report, released Feb. 2. NIEPS’ office in Washington—which opened in November 2006—has been crucial in taking research completed at Duke and translating it into relevant information for policymakers, said Tim Profeta, director of the Nicholas Institute of Environmental Policy Solutions. Oil companies, however, are an even harder group to convince than the policymakers. The billions of barrels of oil underneath the floor of the Amazon are a tempting prize for oil companies, so instead of trying to convince them not to drill there, Pimm said most of his efforts are spent convincing them that they can appease both their own interests and those of the

indigenous people.

ROB

GOODLATTE/THE CHRONICLE

Professor Stuart Pimm is one of the world's leaders on conservationand biodiversity.

‘You can treat the oil reserves as if they are off-shore.... You can helicopter your drilling equipment into the forest, you can build pipelines with no associated roads and if you do that, the footprint is tiny,” Pimm said. Back at home, Duke’s Climate Change Policy Partnership has recently released a comprehensive primer detailing the pros and cons of the most popular energy policies, Project Director Eric Williams said. The first policy discussed was “cap and trade,” a method that al-

lows energy-conservative companies to sell credits of unused energy to businesses that need them. Researchers found that cap and trade, while environmentally certain, was not as simple a policy as carbon tax. Problems also plague carbon tax legislation, however. “Tax is a four-letter word in Washington,” Profeta said. “The current political environment in Washington might be so that they are [unreceptive to carbon tax

CCPP is also working on a project to research the economic effects of policies such as cap and trade and carbon tax, Profeta added. “It’s not just important that we cap carbon dioxide. We have to do it right because greenhouse gas emissions are intertwined with every little aspect of our economy,” he said. “If we do it right, it’ll allow us to shift to a cleaner,

proposals].”

more

sustainable,

SEE NIC SCHOOL ON PAGE 8

Attention PPS Majors! Study Abroad at University of Glasgow

TERRY SANFORD INSTITUTE OF PUBLIC POLICY

DUKE

in Fall 2007 Apply for Study Abroad Program in Glasgow, Scotland

Application Deadline: March 1, 2007 Information Meeting: Thursday, February 8, 2007 4:30 s:3opm, Room 150 Sanford Building Library -

You are strongly encouraged to attend this meeting if you are interested in studying abroad at the University of Glasgow during the Fall 2007 semester. Students who have participated in the Glasgow program in the past will also be present to answer questions and share their experiences. Refreshments will be

served. The Duke-In-Glasgow application can be completed at the Duke Study Abroad website found at: http://www.aas.duke.edu/study_abroad/forms.html. Email anita.wright@duke.edu for additional information.


THE CHRONICLE

WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 7, 20071 5

Kentucky house fire kills 6 kids, 4 adults by

Brett Bakrouquere THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

BARDSTOWN, Ky.

Lana Meier was

awakened by a woman pounding on her door with Terrifying news.

by officials, though a relative said they were all part of an extended family. Fire officials were still trying to determine the cause of the fire. “It may have been an explosion in the center of the house. The fire flashed very quickly,” said Bardstown of the kids holFire Departm e n t was just flames

The next-door house was engulfed in with flames nearly a dozen people still in“I heard some side. “She was hysterical,” just lering. There Meier said. spokesman everywhere. There was no way, “She said, T Tom Isaac. can't get in the Other no way, I just couldn’t do it.” house. It’s on neighbors fire and my Bennie Stone heard panicked baby’s inside.’” screams from resident, Bardstown, Ky. burning Meier called the then 911, house, but their looked outside rescue efforts and saw smoke billowing from the house were blocked by thick flames and smoke Bennie Stone, 61, who lives near the early Tuesday. “It’s like someone opened a furnace,” house in the middle-class neighborhood, Meier said. about five minutes from downtown and Six minutes later, Bardstown firefightnear two bourbon warehouses, said he ers arrived, but it was too late. saw someone on the front lawn screamNine people, including six children, ing for help. He went around to the rear were dead inside the house, and another of the house and saw a woman trying to adult died later at a hospital. enter the house. Stone said he pulled her It was Kentucky’s deadliest building back outside and away from the house. fire since the Beverly Hills Supper Club Stone said he broke windows to try fire in northern Kentucky in 1977 killed and get to the children inside, but he was 165 people, said Rob Goodwin, senior overcome by smoke and flames. “I heard some of the kids hollering. deputy state fire marshal. One adult survived the fire that broke There was Just flames everywhere. There out shortly before 4 a.m. EST and was was no way, no way, I just couldn’t do it,” hospitalized, authorities said. Another Stone said. Temperatures in Bardstown, family member who had gone out earlier 40 miles southeast of Louisville, dropped may have returned to find the home in to 11 degrees Monday night and hovered flames, officials said. The relationships in the teens early Tuesday, according to and ages of the victims were not released the National Weather Service.

BONFIRE

GPSC

Tuesday's GPSC meeting addressed the manner in which the next graduate student Young Trustee will be chosen.

GPSC to implement new YT selection procedure Casey Dean THE CHRONICLE

by

The Graduate and Professional Student Council will introduce a new process to elect the next graduate student Young Trustee, the council announced at its meeting Tuesday night. The revised format will be introduced when the council convenes Feb. 20 to select the next graduate student to serve on the University’s Board ofTrustees, said GPSC Attorney General Lara Oliver, a fifth-year graduate student in computer engineering. Beginning this year, the process will involve speeches from each candidate, a 15minute moderated question-and-answer

SEE GPSC ON PAGE 8

FORD FOUND

from page 1

outside ofHouse P on the Main Quadrangle after the men’s and women’s home basketball games against UNC and after both NCAA championships. “The permits don’t actually exist yet,” Wolf said. “They’re only issued upon our victory and upon the fire marshal’s assessment that the necessary precautions are in place.” Dean ofStudents Sue Wasiolek wrote in an e-mail that she hopes students understand the seriousness of the regulations. “Having a permit for a bonfire is a privilege that can be revoked by the Durham Fire Marshal if we fail to abide by the guidelines he has established,” she said. Durham Fire Marshal Kenneth Crews said he revoked the permit in 2005 when students failed to adhere to the rules. “The students put too much on the fire and didn’t give it time,” he said. “They were putting unauthorized benches in the fire.” Wolf said students may be able to burn the so-called “Spanish benches,” which were put on West Campus weeks before the 2005 bonfire and removed at the start of this semester. “There has been some discussion of using the Spanish benches following the women’s game on the 25th,” Wolf said. “There wasn’t enough time to get them out [from Central Campus] before the men’s game tomorrow.” Several upperclassmen who enjoyed the 2005 bonfire said they look forward to burning more benches this season. “[The bonfire] was one of my fondest memories,” juniorJay Kelly said. “I’ll definitely go again. I’m planning on being on West Campus, and I’m really psyched.” Though freshmen and sophomores have yet to experience a Duke bonfire,

session with all three candidates present and a 15-minute open-question session. Candidates will also be allowed to give brief closing statements, after which members of the executive board and representatives of GPSC and the Board of Trustees standing committee will have a closed discussion. Council members said the new approach will expedite the selection process. Also during the meeting, GPSC Treasurer David Kahler, a graduate student in civil and environmental engineering, updated die council on health insurance policies for

Two years ago, the bonfire celebrating Duke's victory against UNC was larger than permitted. freshman Sam Farber, a member of Tent Four, said he is excited about a potential victory and post-game festivities. “I would definitely hope to get that [experience], especially because we’re out there tenting for a month,” he said. “A win against UNC followed by a big bonfire celebration would be incredible.” Wasiolek stressed the importance of student safety. “As long as students are careful, safe and respectful, the bonfire shouldn’t be a problem,” she said. “We ask students to

take care of themselves and each other.” Junior Kim Griffith said the bonfire should do exactly that. “It was kind of like Cameron Stadium, but outdoors,” juniorKim Griffith said of the 2005 bonfire. “There was no basketball game going on, but people were still chanting. It didn’t matter who you were, it just mattered that you went to Duke. It was hands down the strongest sense of camaraderie I’ve felt at Duke.” Katherine Macllwaine contributed to this article.

from page 3

Bill and Melinda Gates, Trinity ’B6 and Fuqua ’B7, and Warren Buffett was a good example of the “hugely wealthy mega-donors” emerging in the field. “These people are devoting their resources to work on a truly heroic scale,” she said. Throughout her speech, Berresford pointed out the overarching goals of philanthropy. “Philanthropy is really based on a very simple idea,” she said. “The success of one person can help support the hopes and dreams of other people.” By combining the talents of all in the field and promoting open-mindedness, Berresford said she was optimistic about the ability of philanthropic organizations to continue to grow and succeed in their missions. “The blending of experience and skills is very promising,” she said. “The pizzazz of the new donors can help us to explain to the public some very important things about our field.” Gita Rebbapragada, a first-year student at Fuqua, said she found Berresford’s words insightful and relevant to current issues in business. “She’s really a leader in terms of the foundation world,” Rebbapragada said. “There’s a lot of talk about the younger generations of donors and different types of philanthropy. She brought a really interesting perspective.” As the director of public relations for Fuqua, Chris Privett said he thought Berresford’s speech was a success. “She’s the kind of person that people can learn a lot from, and not just in terms of her business acumen, but also in terms ofher devotion to philanthropic endeavors,” he said. “Her appearance is part of the Fuqua School of Business’ Distinguished Speaker Series, and if there’s a word that describes Ms. Berresford, it’s ‘distinguished.’”


6

(WEDNESDAY,

THE CHRONICLE

FEBRUARY 7, 2007

GRADETRENDS from page 1 deal with its students’ increasing GPAs, Princeton University implemented a policy in 2005 limiting a maximum of 35 percent of each class to receive an A. The policy produced substantial results. The Daily Princetonian reported that the percent of students with As fell from 47.9 percent in 2002-2003 to 40.9 percent in

To

2004-2005. The humanities had the greatest de-

crease, while the percent of As given in natural sciences remained close to the new limit. The program, however, was not popu-

larly accepted by Princeton’s faculty and students, chiefly on the grounds that Adeserving students should receive the grade. According to a survey conducted in March 2006 by The Daily Princetonian, 80 percent of the faculty believed grades had actually been deflated since the program’s debut. Some Duke students predict a harsh reaction from the GPA-centered student body if such a policy were put in place at the University. Freshman Alex Rivera said grades should be put into perspective first. “I don’t see [Princeton’s policy] hurting very much necessarily If you look at a class in terms of what you get out of it rather than a grade,” Rivera said. “Your grade is more like a rough point in comparison to other students. You could’ve learned a whole bunch and stilt done worse in respect to other students, but that doesn’t mean the class was any less beneficial for you, because you changed because of it.” —Shuchi Parikh

the same time period. “Trends in grading are a complex matter for which there is no simple explanation,” Robert Thompson, dean of Trinity College and vice provost for undergraduate education, wrote in an e-mail. Thompson said the word “inflation” is misleading. “One problem with any thoughtful consideration of trends in grading is that the term ‘grade inflation’ implies a rise in grades above some ‘true’ value,” he said. Although the national issue of grade inflation is sometimes considered most prevalent in the humanities, reports have found that grades have become higher in all academic divisions over time. A 2002 study by the American Academy of Arts and Sciences found evidence of grade inflation—defined as “higher average grades unaccompanied by proportionate increases in average levels of achievement” —since 1960. For example, the percentage of students with As at Harvard University more than doubled between 1966 and 1996. Some argue that higher GPAs are a reflection of more competent student bodies, pointing to Duke’s increasingly competitive applicant pool. “Grade inflation is a tricky issue, in part because there is often a tacit discussion in talking about it that the students haven’t gotten stronger over the time period in question,” Tod Laursen, senior associate dean for education in the Pratt School of Engineering, wrote in an e-mail. “In Pratt, we’ve definitely benefited from increasingly strong incoming classes in the past few years,” he added. Princeton University implemented a plan in 2005 to curb grade inflation, limiting 35 percent of each class to an A.

Laursen said he is hesitant to adopt Princeton’s policy. “Faculty autonomy in grading needs to be preserved,” he explained. Diane Nelson, director of undergraduate studies in the Cultural Anthropology Department, said the policy reflects insecurity about whether students are receiving a good education. She described grades as a “fetish,” adding that teachers in the humanities tend to give grades that best reflect how well students reached their potentials. “I don’t think most of us are here to be like ‘you’re good’ or ‘you’re bad’ as a student,” Nelson said. *

Are humanities classes easier? “I feel like I’ve learned just as much in one [type of class] as in the other, and to be honest, I think some of the pop quizzes and some of the tedious things you have to do in the sciences can be distracting from the learning that I’m actually trying to do,” said Krysten Rollins, a senior majoring in biological anthropology and anatomy. Thompson said the mean GPAs of natural science courses are lower than the mean GPAs for courses in other disciplines. Assigning grades based on how well a student reaches his potential is not feasible, said Richard MacPhail, director of undergraduate studies in the chemistry department. “You would have to come up with some sort of assessment rubric,” he said. “We all appreciate effort, but [chemistry courses] are performance-based as opposed to amount of time or effort put in. That’s the way a lot of the world tends to work.” In lower-level math classes, grades are distributed by a bell curve. Over the past 25 years, the percent ofAs in those courses has remained unchanged,

said Mark Stern, chair of the math department.

There is evidence, however, of “grade compression” as the Ds and Fs of 25 years ago have now been absorbed into the B and C range, he said. Final grades in large freshman math classes weigh heavily on relative performance on the block final exam. This grading method—which differs from the way many humanities professors assign grades for their classes—is meant to eliminate any unfairness that could result from different professors teaching the same course, he said. “We just try to make sure that within the subjective realm of what is A-level work there is some uniformity,” Stern said. He noted that grade inflation could be attributed to a professor’s desire to perform highly on student-submitted course evaluations. “There’s certainly pressure on individual instructors in order to maintain the high teacher-course evaluations that are prized by their departments, and so there’s pressure for them to inflate the grades, perhaps,” Stem said. Some students majoring in the hard sciences said it is unreasonable for them to be compared to humanities students. “I think it’s unfair to compete with a student of Spanish, for example. [GPA] determines your ranking, your Greek honor and things like that even though these don’t really measure how good you are as a student,” said Chloe Chien, a senior majoring in biology. Despite possible differences in grading procedure, Chien said humanities classes have as much to offer academically as science courses. “I don’t think having an easier grader makes your education any less worthy,” she said.

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WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 7,20071

THE CHRONICLE

Young Trustee position] as an extension of that—away to stay connected to the University,” Gorman said. “I’m realjust because I’m female, but what can I ly interested in the operation of such do as a whole as a student?”’ an institution.” Like Gorman, Susan Tifft, public poliAs an underclassman, Gorman said she decided to beprofessor cy Young come more enand Trustee-elect gaged with the “The thing that’s very important ’72, said the University. “Everyone Young Trustee is the ability to convey clearly here was inshould reprevolved in high sent the views and diplomatically what the school, and I of the entire concerns of young people are.” realized undergraduate I loved [being Susan Tifft population. involved],” “The thing Trinity 72, former Young Trustee that’s very imshe said. “I loved being a portant is the ability to conpart of something bigger than my academics. It’s one vey clearly and diplomatically what the of the huge things that drew me into getconcerns of the young people are,” Tifft said. ting involved into campus leadership.” Gorman’s thesis advisor, Ken RogerGorman said her roles as a Giles Menson, research director for the DeWitt tor and President of Panhellenic Association shaped her experience at Duke. She Wallace Center for Media and Democrasaid she hopes, however, to represent the cy, said her ability to remain calm under entire undergraduate population withpressure will suit her well if she is elected to the Young Trustee position. out pushing her own agenda. “Things would get tight, and she would [The Young Trustee] is not a position of advocacy,” she said. ‘You’re not a just relax and manage to work them out,” politician going onto the Board, you’re he said. “There was a confidence about her, and it wasn’t cocky and it wasn’t conyour own individual. Obviously as a recent undergrad, I will have a new perdescending—it was just a feeling that this young woman can do anything.” spective in that sense.” Current Panhel President Kate During her freshman year, Gorman developed an interest in the Young Trustee Guthrie, a junior, also said Gorman’s position. “Over the years, I’ve picked up charisma will assist her if she becomes on things,” she said. “I knew about the Young Trustee. “I’ve seen her interact with a combinaYoung Trustee as a freshman, and it’s altion of alumni, faculty and administraways been in the back of my mind.” Gorman said serving as Young Trustee tors—much like the Board of Trustees,” would strengthen her relationship with Guthrie said. “She answered tough questhe University when she leaves Durham. tions about greek life, and I have no “I’ve been really involved over my doubt of her ability to do equally well in three-and-a-half years, and I [view the front of the Board of Trustees.”

GORMAN from page 1

____

AFRICA from page 3 diseases,” she said. “This is away for me to see first-hand what is going on in Africa.” Charles Piot, associate professor in the Cultural Anthropology and African and African-American Studies departments, said students’ moral instincts draw them toward Africa’s problems, regardless of their primary educational focus. “There’s a type of Duke student that is pre-professional and interested in social justice,” Piot said. “They can have their cake and eat it too. They do some good and they build their resume.” Given the limited number of Universityrun study abroad programs that send students to Africa, most interested students have to sign up through outside programs, said junior Stephanie Amoako. “If you look at Duke’s programs, you have a Duke in France and a Duke in Spain, but the optioniare not as prevalent in going to Africa,” said Amoako, who spent Fall 2006 in Cape Town, South Africa through a program offered by the School for International Training. “Maybe what kept people from going before was availability.” Sophomore Jessica Freifeld—who plans to study abroad in Africa in Fall 2007—said students could decide against a visit to Africa because of the risks of contracting a disease and the health precautions they would have to undergo beforehand. “I’ve thought about the dangers of going there,” she said. “I’ve had to get a bunch of shots, and some people don’t want to go through with that".” Margaret Riley, associate dean for study abroad and director of the Office ofStudy Abroad, said she is pleased by the substantial number of students who have opted to study abroad in Africa. “We’re happy that we have the students going to Africa that we do,” Riley

SPECIAL TO THE CHRONICLE

Sophomore Katie Mikush visits New Life Homes, an adoption center for abandoned kids in Nairobi, Kenya. said. “We would encourage students to choose Africa instead of Europe. I lived for two years in South America, so I understand the unique opportunities available to students who choose to take a more adventurous path.” Savage said the programs established by the GHI have made disease prevention such a priority that the number of students studying abroad in Africa will continue to increase. “As long as we keep on having classes like those in the Global Health Focus, we’ll continue to have students interested in these issues,” Savage said.

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(WEDNESDAY,

THE CHRONICLE

FEBRUARY 7, 2007

ASTRONAUT from page 2

Rams awa

Center in Houston said he was concerned about the people involved and their families. But, he added, “We try not to concern ■ ourselves with our “[T]hese

employees’ personal

“Personally, Lisa is an extremely caring and dedicated mother to her three children,” the statement said. “Considering both her personal and professional life, these alleged events are completely out of character and have come as a tremendous shock to our fami-

alleged events are completely out of character and have come as a tremendous shock to our family.”

Accustomed to wearing astronaut diapers during the space shuttle’s launch and

lives.” The dereturn to Earth, tails of the Nowak wore them relationOfficial Statement on the drive to ships of all Orlando so she three were Lisa Nowak’s family would not have to unclear. make bathroom Nowak and Oefelein, who both live in the Houston stops, police said. There, according to police, Nowak area, had trained together as astronauts, donned a wig and trench coat, boarded but never flew into space together. Shipan airport shutde bus with Shipman and man, 30, works at Patrick Air Force Base near Kennedy Space Center. followed her to her car. Then, crying, Earlier, Nowak was quoted by police Nowak sprayed a chemical into the car. as saying she and Oefelein had someShipman drove to a parking lot booth thing “more than a working relationship and sought help. A police affidavit made public Tuesbut less than a romantic relationship.” Neither Oefelein nor Shipman could day said Nowak had “stealthily followed be reached for comment Tuesday, nor the victim while in disguise and possessed multiple deadly weapons.” could Nowak’s husband be found. The affidavit said the circumstances But police found a letter in Nowak’s car that “indicated how much Mrs, of the case “create a well-founded fear” and gave investigators “probable cause to Nowak loved Mr. Oefelein,” the arrest afbelieve that Mrs. Nowak intended to fidavit said. And Nowak had copies of emurder Ms. Shipman.” mails between Shipman and Oefelein. Nowak and her husband separated Lykkebak said that Nowak only wanted to talk to Shipman. Asked about the several weeks ago after 19 years of marriage, according to a statement put out weapons, he said, ‘You can sit and speculate all day.” by her family. Members of the FAC Program hoisted a giant ram's head from a crane and dropped it on East last week.

NIC SCHOOL from page 4 smarter way of

[supporting] our econo-

my. But if we do it wrong, it could have terrible effects.” One way the Nicholas School is trying to combat those effects is through a partnership with the law school to research ways environmentally sound legislation can be compliant with World Trade Organization regulations, Profeta said. This would ensure that countries that do not abide by carbon limits—such as India and China—do not gain an unfair advantage in the global market, he added. Duke researchers are also looking toward the future. Brian Murray, director of economic analysis at the Nicholas Institute, said that because of its übiquity, long-run coal use will continue. A process called “carbon capture and

storage” may prevent CO2 emissions from

entering the atmosphere while still allowing use of the fuel source, he said, adding that the technique is still at least a decade down the road. Whether they are making their way through the Amazon Rainforest or through piles of research papers, Duke scientists agree—global warming and the energy crisis are issues that cannot wait that long. “Global temperatures have increased by about one degree Celsius, sea level has risen, mountain glaciers and the Greenland ice cap are receding very rapidly, the ocean has increased in acidity,” Paul Baker, professor of geochemistry at the Nicholas School wrote in an e-mail. And if serious changes do not occur, some models forecast the Amazon basin turning into a desert, U.S. temperatures surpassing the global average and hurricanes increasing in severity and frequency, Baker said.

GPSC from page 5 graduate students, which he and a commitresearching since August

tee have been

2006. In November, the committee hired an independent consultant and adopted vision and mission statements, he said. Kahler added that the committee is currently exploring options for establishing student health insurance through Duke University Heath Systems, along with other organizations. GPSC members also heard presentations from officers of the Duke Bar Association, the Committee on Facilities and Environment and the Student Center for Integrated Education Research and Development, in an ongoing effort to familiarize GPSC members with University committees, associations and departments. DBA President Brettny Hardy, a graduate student in both law and environmental management, said DBA is the umbrella group for Duke Law organizations and has a mission this year of making itself more visible in the Duke community.

EARLY ADVERTISING DEADLINE

Chris Oishi, a fifth-year Ph.D. student in ecology, provided an overview of the Committee on Facilities and Environment, which approves any construction on campus from a student perspective. Alexei Valiaev, a research assistant in mechanical engineering and materials science, introduced CIERD and asked council members how its newest project could help and be helped by GPSC. “Our long-term vision is actually to create a model that would assess the impact of collaborations on a student level,” Valiaev said. Julie Roy, GPSC community service coordinator and a graduate student in molecular cancer biology, was presented a GPSC Distinguished Service Award to recognize her efforts in bolstering the community service activities of graduate and professional students.

In other business: GPSC modified its charter, merging it with the council’s bylaws. The council also approved changes to the attendance policy.

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MORE ON THE GAME THE CHRONICLE TAKES A DEEPER LOOK AT TONIGHT'S MATCHUPS PAGE 10

DUKE vs.

INTERVIEW WITH JAY BILAS Former Duke player and assistant coach and now-ESPN analyst Jay Bilas gives his thoughts on tonight's Duke-North Carolina game. <| q

&

K

NORTH CAROLINA

Wednesday, February 7 Cameron Indoor Stadium •

9 p.m.

CBS/ESPN

NEW FACES MEET IN OLD RIVALRY by

Michael Moore THE CHRONICLE

Last year, as the Tar Heels rode back

to

Chapel Hill from their monumental upset of the top-ranked Blue Devils in Cameron Indoor Stadium, UNC’s talented freshmen basked in the feeling. But it was David Noel, a senior and a Durham native who had never won on Duke’s home floor in his three previous years, who was the giddiest of all. Noel told the freshmen that they did not even realize what they had just done. A good rivalry deepens with age, both for the programs and the individual players. A Duke senior taking on the arch-rival Tar Heels for the seventh or eighth time in his career brings a whole new level of emotion to the matchup than a freshman to his first. With the two teams collectively younger than any year in recent memory, the Duke-North Carolina matchup may take on a different feel this season. When the most storied rivalry in college basketball tips off tonight, the starting lineups will feature a combined one senior, one junior, three sophomores and five freshmen. And while it is the onus of the few veterans to set the tone for the rivalry’s intensity, the rookies will dictate the outcome of the game perhaps more direcdy than ever before. Several players said freshmen—nine of whom will likely see action tonight—bring a large amount of the emotion with them to campus. “Everybody on this team has grown up watching this game,” UNC senior Wes Miller said. “Whether they grew up in the state ofNorth Carolina, whether they were Duke or Carolina fans, whether they were ACC basketball fans, it doesn’t matter. If you play basketball, you watched SEE RIVALRY YOUTH ON PAGE 12

Don’t count Duke out I can still hear the shrieks of the Cameron Crazies in my head. Never had I heard such a noise, and I haven’t heard it since. I can replay the final sequence in my mind as if it happened yesterday. The Tar Heels inbound the ball to Raymond Felton with UNC trailing by one and 18 ticks left. JJ. Redick jumps out in front of Rashad McCants, forcing Felton to reverse the ball to David Noel. Noel dribbles the ball out of bounds in front of the Carolina bench as time expires. Duke wins, 71-70. Bedlam ensues. But the shriek, the shriek is what made

van pelt -

that moment special. You might think you’ve heard Cameron at its loudest, but when Duke beat UNC two years ago, it was louder than you can imagine. Not only was it louder, but the noise lasted longer than anything I’ve ever heard at a sporting venue. When Noel lost the ball out of bounds, no one heard the final buzzer. No one heard the final score announced over the PA system. No one could hear the band. No one could hear themselves think. And 10 minutes later, after all the players had left the court, it was just as loud. That shriek could still be heard. North Carolina entered that game as the second-ranked team in the country and the prohibitive favorite—not only to win the game but the national championship that year as well. Sure, Duke was

PHOTO ILLUSTRATIONS BY PETER GEBHARD, JIANGHAI HO AND HOLLY CORNELL/THE CHRONICLE

of this one

ranked seventh and had won 14 of the past 16 meetings against its arch rival. But most people, myself included, thought the Tar Heels were too quick, too strong and too talented for Duke to stop. I was just hoping that the Blue Devils could keep it close. But when the clock hit zero, the noise told the whole story. North Carolina may have been the better team that year, but Duke played better that night. Tonight’s game has a similar feel to it, UNC enters the game at No. 5 in the polls and many believe the youthful, high-flying Tar Heels are the most talented team in the country. On the other hand, Duke, down to 16th in the rankings, is coming off two straight heartSEE VAN PELT ON PAGE 12

PETER GEBHARD/THE CHRONICLE

David Noel loses the ball out of bounds at theend of theFeb. 9,2005 game in Cameron Indoor Stadium


THE CHRONICLE

7, 2007

10IWEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY

BREAKING DOWN THE GAME

41

i

Greg

/M

Paulus 9.3 ppg, 3.7 apg

SF

SG

PG Ty Lawson

Henderson

10.1 ppg, 5.2 apg

5.9 ppg, 2.9 rpg

This matchup could decide the game. Paulus has the edge in experience, but Lawson is lightning-quick. Both lead guards have streaky shots, and this matchup could go to whoever gets off to the better start.

Wayne

IDemarcus

Ellington

Nelson 14.4 ppg, 5.5 rpg

12.4 ppg, 2.0 apg

BENCH *1 Brandan

4.8 ppg, 2.9 rpg

Wright

Mcßoberts

14.8 ppg, 6.4 rpg

13.2 ppg, 7.7- rpg

STAT COMPARISON UNC

PPG:

69.4

88.1

PPG DEF:

57.1

66.1

FG%:

All

.506

3PT%:

.376

.374

FT%:

.704

.696

RPG:

36.1

42.7

APG:

13.7

19.4

BPG:

5.1

4.8

SPG:

7.5

9.0

TO/G:

15.4

14.6

Scheyer has struggled lately, but both he, Dave McClure and Brian Zoubek will likely see plenty of time the Blue Devils try to stay fn against the Tar Heels' rotate Even so, the Heels have a major advantage here.

Hansbrough 18.7 ppg, 8.2 rpg

Hansbrough proved he can play in Cameron last year, and he will once again get his fair share of shots down low. Look for Mcßoberts to use his range to score against the less-mobile UNC forward.

Foul trouble has plagued Thomas all season, and the Duke freshman often gets whistled away from the ball. Thomas must keep his composure if he is going to stay in the game against one of UNC's most explosive players.

DUKE

UNC might be the deepes' team in the nation, with 1 players averaging more th 12 minutes per game. Jon

MJosh

llL_—

Thomas

Terry 9.0 ppg, 5.6 rpg

Nelson has emerged as Duke's top offensive threat this season. But the 6-foot-8, 232-pound Terry is just as lethal and sports a serious inside-outside game. The senior hits 42. percent of his shots from beyond the arc.

These close friends and former teammates will face off as opponents for the first time in college. Henderson will need utilize his every ounce of his impressive athleticism to contain one of the best freshmen shooters in the ACC,

PF Lance

a

Reyshawn

KEYS TO VICTORY FOUL TROUBLE: Mcßoberts, Thomas and Zoubek must avoid the foul trouble that doomed Duke against FSU or Hansbrough, Wright and UNC's frontcourt will have a field day down low. PACE OF PLAY: Duke must control the clock and keep UNC's powerful run-and-gun offense from fast-break opportunities. If the Blue Devils keep the game in the 70s, they have a shot to pull out the win

DEPTH: To win, the Tar Heels must exploit Duke's lack of it. They should force the ball down low and get the Blue Devil forwards in foul trouble, and they should run to tire Duke's guards. MATURITY: Three of UNC's starters will step onto Coach K court for the first time. How they perform in front of the Cameron Crazies will play a huge role in determining the outcome of this game.

OUR CALL: Even in Cameron, the Tar Heels' depth and firepower prove too much for the overmatched Blue Devils. UNC 78 Duke 70 Compiled by John Taddei #

Q&A

thj

Bit

over the country that are just as Intense but they don’t seem to resonate with people in the same way.

What or who has impressed you most on this Duke team? Just that they’re really resilient. It’s a younger team and if you look across the country, most young teams are really struggling. And this is a team that doesn’t have any junior or senior leadership—really, just DeMarcus Nelson everybody else are sophomores that are playing big minutes. For them to come together and played as good of defense as they’ve played and to be as competitive as they’ve been, I think it’s really a credit to those Idds and to the coaching staff. A lot of teams are struggling to score around the country. Duke certainly has been more efficient than some of the others. To be as young as they are and to play as well as they play, I think dial’s a credit to their entire organization. —

MEREDITH SHINER: How do you think the dynamics of the rivalry have evolved in the past 20 years, especially with so many players leaving early? JAY BILAS: I don’t think it’s changed that much. The player aspect ofit is probably not all that much different. You may not have as long of a history with the rivalry, but it’s just as intense. What makes the rivalry is, one, how good the teams are. Usually when Duke and Carolina play, they’re national contenders and not just cross-town rivals. The other thing that makes it is the intense scrutiny on the rivalry—that so many people are so interested in it. There are blood feuds all

more of a half-court game on the offensive end, I think they’ll have a much better chance of winning. The other thing they’ve got to do, is they’ve got to rebound. They’ve got to limit Carolina taone shot. That’s a very good offensive rebounding team and a very effi-

cient team. Your first-shot defense and making sure you limit the opponent to one shot is really, really important. And the last thing is the free-throw line. Duke has to win the free-throw battie in order to have a really good chance to win because North Carolina is deeper and they can afford to waste a few fouls here and there being aggressive. I don’t think Duke has that same luxury.

A lot has been made out of the fact that there is not really a strong precedent for teams staring three freshmen winning a National Championship. How big of a factor is this is UNC’s potential for winning it all? I definitely think it’s a factor. Is it something that’s What will Duke have to do to beat UNC? going to be a difference? I don’tknow. Syracuse started at I think to beat North Carolina, they’re going to have least two freshmen in ‘03—Gerry McNamara and Carmeto slow their transition game down because Carolina can lo Anthony, and they brought Billy Edelin off the really push the ball up the floor. So I think they’re going bench.... They had a younger team and were able to put to have to really do a good job of taking care of the ball it together in the end and make a great run through the and the Duke offense has to help the Duke defense. If Tournament. Is it likely that that’s going to happen? No. Duke turns the ball over or takes a quick shot, that proI think it’s unusual for that to happen. I would still rather vides a run-out for Carolina—that’s going to put a lot of have experience talent than super, young talent. But the pressure on Duke defense and they’re going to give up a game is younger now and it’s subject to more inconsistenlot of easy baskets that way. If they can make Carolina play cy because of that youth.


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THE CHRONICLE

121WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 7, 2007

M.BBALL from page 1 come out here and just play with an exchip on our shoulders, play with each other and play 40 minutes hard.” Duke has lost its last two games by a total of three points—each time missing looks at the buzzer that would have won the game. The Blue Devils’ second twogame losing streak in the ACC this season has dropped them into a tie for fifth place in the conference, two games behind coleaders Virginia and Boston College. The Tar Heels are also looking to rebound after being stunned at N.C. State Saturday. Despite the loss, UNC remains just a half-game out of first in the conference. “Obviously whenever you lose two in a row or one in a row, you just want to get back on track and find away to win,” Greg to

treme

Paulus said. ‘You don’t want to head down the other road. It’s just going to be the urgency on both teams to get back in the win column.” That can be a challenging task, however, when the next game is one of the biggest rivalries in all of sports. The Blue Devils must avoid getting caught up in the pomp of the rivalry and focus on the circumstance of a potential third straight loss. “If you look into it too much, you can [lose focus],” Paulus said. “Butjust the fact that we’re coming off two losses, we can channel the anger or the urgency that we need to have and just let it go and play with a lot ofemotion. Knowing from the experience last year, it doesn’t matter wins and losses, records—it’s going to be a hardfought game.” Duke, like North Carolina, will be relying heavily on its freshmen—all of whom will be experiencing the intensity of the ri-

valry for the first time Freshman Gerald Henderson witnessed the atmosphere first-hand last season, when he was in the crowd for the Tar Heels’ 83-76 upset at Cameron on Senior

Night.

“Coach K asked me if I thought I could play in a game like that,” Henderson said. “He thought I could, and I had to sit there and actually think about it because it was something that I had never seen before. I wasn’t scared, but it was something I had never experienced before.” Henderson and his fellow Blue Devils, however, are ready to seize the moment and to cherish one of college basketball’s

grandest stages.

“These games are players’ games,” Nelson said. “As a player, you’ve got to love playing in front of that type of environment and playing against that type of

competition.”

MICHAEL CHANG/THE CHRONICLE

Gerald Henderson is one of four Duke scholarship freshmen playing in theirfirst UNC game tonight.

RIVALRY YOUTH

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Duke-North Carolina growing up. And I think that’s enough for people to understand how big the rivalry is.” The largest challenge for the younger players may not be bringing enthusiasm to the game but rather knowing how to play through it. “I really believe you’ll see two groups ofkids who will be playing their tails off, and they’ll be pulling the nails out of the floor,” Tar Heel head coach Roy Williams said. “At the same time, my guess is it won’t be a very pretty game because it will be two teams trying to compete like crazy.” The rivalry can even have physical effects on younger players. North Carolina sophomore Bobby Frasor remembered the draining effect all the pregame excitement had on him in his first Duke game last year. ‘You get so tired so much quicker than usual,” Frasor said. “I noticed that first. I thought, ‘Wow, I am really tired,’ and there are like 18 minutes left on the clock. Just the pace of the game and the intensity on every possession, you’ll notice it within the first couple trips up and down the court.” Frasor said he expects early fatigue to be a factor in the game, but he added that it will be balanced between the two young squads. And those players who have gone through the game, even once, will try to impart some wisdom on the rookies. “[l] just tell [the freshmen] to let it all on the floor, let the emotion roll,” Duke sophomore Greg Paulus said. “One thing I learned from last year was in the first couple possessions, I was going so fast, just because I was trying to make so many plays that I ended up having a couple of turnovers. Just settle down, slow yourself down, just do what you’ve been doing all season.” Controlling emotions could be a key to the game, because for all the preparation and media hoopla, the true indicator of the rivalry’s intensity comes between the baselines. “Once the ball gets tipped, it becomes pretty clear, even if you never played in the game before, how big of a game it is,” Miller said.

VAN PELT from page 9 breaking defeats and many believe the Blue Devils won’t be able to hold their own. But in this rivalry, none of that matters. Throw out all the pregame commentary. It’s almost a guarantee that tonight’s game will go down to the wire regardless of where these teams stand entering the matchup. Since Roy Williams arrived at North Carolina, the six meetings between these two teams have been decided by an average of just 3.5 points per game. Two years ago when UNC was heavily favored, the teams split the season series. Last year when the situation was reversed, the teams, once again, split their two games. So if you’re expecting to see a Carolina blowout tonight, don’t get your hopes up. Duke hasn’t lost a game to any team by more than 15 points since UNC beat them by 24 on Feb. 5, 1998—a remarkable span of more than nine years and 323 games. And don’t expect that streak to be snapped tonight. So as the game winds to an end, the play intensifies and the score tightens, expect to hear Cameron get louder. And maybe, just maybe, everyone will get to hear that shriek. It’s a sound befitting this storied rivalry.


THE CHRONICLE

WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 7,

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THE CHRONICLE

141WEONES DAY, FEBRUARY 7, 2007

Groups put on stellar show in K-ville >■ U)

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to put on tent a show the in city. And for quite that, they are to be commended. As a lead-up to the much-anticipated men’s basketball game against the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, the Union showed classic Duke-UNC games on a big screen (as well as the feel-good athletic favorite Hoosiers). WXDU radio, a subsidiary of the Union, set up shop in K-ville and broadcasted live. The Union, as well as Duke Stores, also staged several giveaways, offering mugs and T-shirts. Free food. A dunking contest. Hot chocolate. The list goes on an on. The festivities were planned around personal checks, which the Line Monitors scheduled for the weekend, rather than the weekdays before the game. This was a smart move on the part of Kville’s governing body. Rather than force grumpy kids to stay up until the wee hours on nights preceding classes,

of like being a sissy,

but

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the man and the team for which the allplayed, somehow incomplete. It is a rarity that a player is exceptional /enough to warrant a jersey retirement. So rare is it that in the several decades that Duke has played basketball only 13 numbers have made it to the rafters. As such, retiring jersies should be treated with more pomp and circumstance. Retirements should be scheduled before games, when there is less of a time constraint—and when the current team can be on the court. And no matter the timing, Krzyzewski should be there. Having his wife in place as his proxy, while a kind gesture, did not do the ceremony justice. So next time, whenever that might be, we call on the coach and the sports department to reconsider the manner in which jersey retirements pan out. Give honor (and a little more pomp) where it is due. Make sure the pivotal “players," so to speak, are all present. Such treatment is only fitting. stars

letterstotheeditor

—Tyler Hansbrough on his penchant for pedicures, as reported by the St. Louis Post-Dispatch in its Dec. 17 article “Tyler Hansbrough: Spreading his wings.” For more UNC news, see Daily Tar Hole.

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

Over

the past two weeks, the theLine Monitors moved the checks to rafters in Cameron Indoor Stadays on which other responsibilities dium became a little more were at a minimum. crowded. And for good reason. Joining In short, K-ville this weekend the ranks of Duke’s finest basketball rocked. This is not, however, necessaristuall Shelden Williams and JJ. among players, consensus opinion ly Redick, both Trinity ’O6, saw their numdents. Some tenters grumbled about bers lifted to the ceiling. having to give up their weekend. Other late-comThere is no question editorials that based on their skills ers have bemoaned that and accomplishments at Duke, fact that K-ville could be less social for Williams and Redick deserve the those in the walk-up line (although, if this is in fact the case, it could be attribhonor. There is question, however, as uted to the cold). to why the two half-time ceremonies in which the jersies were retired hapNonetheless, for the only tenting pened as they did. Crammed into the game of the year, K-ville’s final weekend was impressive. Not only did it draw a short time between halves, the events allowed Williams and Redick little crowd, it was also chock full of plenty of time to speak. Moreover, Coach Mike fun and appreciation, thanks largely to the Union and theLine Monitors. Krzyzewski was not present, nor was the current Blue Devil team, as they This board has recendy criticized were in the locker room propping for both of these groups for certain actions and judgments. But it is clear that both the remainders of two difficult games. Indeed, the ceremonies did not befit their best feet forward this weekput the honor. They seemed rushed, poorly end—and in the end, they benefited conceived and, due to the absence of numerous Blue Devil fans.

ontherecord A lot of people look at it kind it really takes care ofyourfeet.

Giving the greatest their much-earned due

DSO situation should spur further discussion Allie Vergotz’s column, “DSG off-key,” (Feb. 5) oversimplifies a nuanced matter. The denial of Duke Symphony Orchestra’s request for “Chartered” status marked the denouement of a long process that unearthed important issues and attitudes existing in the Student Organization Finance Committee’s chartering system. On DSO’s behalf, we express gratitude for changes SOFC made to meet our needs. However, we would like to continue this pertinent discussion of the philosophy under which Duke Student Government operates. The debate instigated by DSO’s appeal cannot be reduced merely to the senators’ lack of understanding of the by-laws; it was a reflection of the ambiguity of the situation. By nature of our organization, i<t is necessary to hold auditions. However, all concerts and events are open to anyone and everyone who will come. We will gladly find a role for anyone who wishes to be a part of our organization; we not only strive to be as inclusive as possible, but it is in our best interest to do so. As Vergotz noted, the only exceptional difference between “Recognized” and “Chartered” groups is, “the latter may submit an application for an annual budget,” allowing them to request money for both programming and material funds. From DSG’s perspective, “selective” groups are not eligible for such funds because the public would not have access to any material goods the group may purchase. But what group, selective or not, does provide easy access of its property to the public? The question, regarding the spirit of the selectivity by-law, remains; Should a student organization that embraces and upholds Duke’s values and endeavors to provide a public good be restricted from applying for an annual budget? This by-law was put in place to prevent groups that are selective in their membership from taking advantage of DSG to fund activities closed to their group. This is clearly not the case with DSO. It is in Duke’s best interest to probe the reasoning behind these by-laws and to reexamine the groups DSG chooses to fiscally endorse.

Talya Lumberman Trinity ’O7 Duke Symphony Orchestra Committee President Riva Das Trinity ’OB Duke Symphony Orchestra Committee Treasurer

Gerst misses mark in evaluation of science courses I would like to comment on Andrew Gerst’s column “How to save science” (Feb. 5). Even though I do agree that today science faces many issues, some of which Gerst presented, I would like to criticize Gerst’s misleading generalization. I am a physics major at Duke. The largest physics class that I have ever taken was my introductory course, which had at most 30 students. All higher-level classes that I have taken have usually had between 10 and 20 students and very often even fewer. In the physics department there are more professors than undergraduates and, as far as I can tell, the greatest issue for undergraduate physics at Duke is the struggle to retain majors. Given these circumstances, it is very easy and common for physics majors to do research within the department and to get to know the faculty. Most of my friends, physics majors, of course, have personal relationships with many professors and I have yet to hear a complaint from anyone about their inability to join a research group in the Department. So, the picture that Gerst paints, this “brutal weed-out,” seems totally alien to me as both a science major and a student that is closely involved with Duke physics. As a student that has taken many laboratory classes throughout my career and as a former lab teaching assistant, I would like to state that, when it comes to the experience of a physics major at Duke, a “premium” has never been placed on obtaining correct lab results. Of course, it often it is desired for students to attempt their best in producing consistent and comprehensible data, even if that implies doing some creative work. Inconsistent results due to careless operation of the apparatus and weak reasoning of the data are not acceptable. Finally, I would like to warn Gerst of the dangers ofhis proposal to make the teaching of science be more like that of the humanities. I am sure that both teaching philosophies can learn much from each other, but one ought not to forget the fundamental differences between both—mainly, the fact that in science we try to teach how to differentiate truth from falsity. Alvaro Chavarria Trinity ’O7 President, Duke Chapter of the Society of Physics Students


WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 7,

commentaries

THE CHRONICLE

200711 5

Don’t hate. Relate.

A

few nights ago, I was in the car with my friend Sarah on the way to a party in Raleigh. As on most long car trips, we were yammering about guys, work, mentors, the usual, when somehow we ended up talking about teenage drug abuse “I really like the rule mother made,” your Sarah said. “No drugs in high school. That’s smart because it seems like people who start using drugs when they’re young are the ones who have the most

problems.”

jacqui detwiler ‘Yeah. And your preplease hire, desperate frontal cortex doesn’t even fully mature until about 25, so there’s a theory that there’s less inhibition on reward seeking.” “I know,” she replied, “And the animal literature suggests....” SCREEEEEEEEEEEEECH. 8000-ring. What the hell has happened to me? Since when have I started having entirely data-driven conversations? It was just an ordinary Saturday night, but it led to a startling conclusion—l am no longer able to expound on subjects I know nothing about. I remember that in high school one of my favorite things to do was to go to independent coffee shops with my friends and debate various things on which we had absolutely no authority. Because we were underage, we would order lattes instead of wine and lounge on couches to discuss the nature of the universe without

would hole up in his bar during their layovers and ask any scholarly inhibitions whatsoever. “I think the universe is made of Swiss cheese and him what he did other than work there for a living. Telling the truth often earned him a half-hour lecthat’s how all those wormholes everyone’s always talking about came around. They’re actually cheese holes.” ture on the nature of God and the afterlife according “Oh yeah? Well here’s my completely unfounded to Joe Blow from Connecticut (I hypothesize that this has something to do with the high rate of flying phoopinion on God, who is a spaghetti monster who created the universe with his noodley appendage.” bias). After a year of reading Wittgenstein and Barth But the more deon weekdays and listening to uneducated earn, the more nonsense on weekgrees I ends, he finally told people that that kind of conjecturhe planned to sling drinks for ing loses its appeal. Now that I think about how the the rest of his life. Now that I think brain works for a living, I do not An unfortunate side effect of about how the brain works for a living, I do living in data is that I spend want to spend my evenings not want to spend my more time examining the averdebating the possibility of a soul, age mind than my own, and then evenings debating the 'bil dasoul , esespecially not with someone who get frustrated with those who o. possibility tend to do the opposite. Suddennot with pecially doesn’t have some educational ly I have expertise, PubMed someone who doesn’t perspective on it from theology, and—good God—responsibility. have some educationBut while it’s no longer apal perspective on it philosophy or psychology. from theology, philospropriate for me to stand on a soapbox and harangue the massophy or psychology. fact, find that es without any evidence, it’s not In I necessarily appropriate for me to my tolerance for not get angry at others for doing it themselves. In fact, having said perspective is sorely lacking. admit to of the best new ideas have come from people wanting I’d never to some outwardly Although punch someone in the face for not knowing the dif- spouting what appeared to be lunacy at the time. So I decided to spend all day yesterday using the ference between mental dualism and monism, I spend head “knob schlobbery” whenever humanly possible. conversations banging phrase many mentally my It’s all about balance, people. against a wall. The same thing happened to one of my exes while he was getting his M.Div. at Emory and working as a barJacqui Detxoiler is a graduate student in psychology and neutender in the Atlanta airport. A number of people roscience. Her column runs every Wednesday.

Happily ever after. Part II Cinderella: Why, it’s like a dream. A wonderful dream come true. Fairy Godmother: Yes, my child, but like all dreams, well, I’m afraid this can’t last forever.

At

an early age, Disney movies made their impressions, and as gullible little girls, we were impressed. I’m talking, of course, about the allure of the Fairy Tale and the false dream that, when it comes to men, women can have it all. Duke is a social culture that pulls both ways. To quote Katie Roiphe in her book The Morning After, as women, we haven’t lost the dream of the casual sexual enshadee counter or forgotten the va-va~voom notion of free love. But we also rememher—in vivid, unrelenting detail—the Fairy Tale. We remember that Cinderella ends up with Prince Charming, that Ariel gets legs (and her voice back) to be with Prince Eric and that it takes all of two days to ' fall in love. Reasonably, little girls hooked on Disney become grown women who believe in Prince Charming. All they have to do is wait for him. It just so happens that while in limbo (read: purgatory), some women wait for Prince Charming at elite universities, with the hope that he will be a man with deep pockets and a promising career. But Duke, like most undergraduate campuses with a party-hard reputation, is not a school that fosters this Fairy Tale. In terms of relationships—even purely sexual ones—there seems to be a binary: The needy woman vs. the needed man; the girl who ditches her friends to be with the guy vs. the guy who ditches the girl to be with his friends; and the woman who wants intimacy vs. the man who just wants to wham, bam, thank-you-ma’am her. Somewhere between our first college hookup and the regular naked friend, the old Fairy Tale is expected

malaklou

to

change.

“Happily ever after” is supposed to turn into “happily single,” Prince Charming is supposed to turn into a

ended pleasantly—there have been at least a dozen relationships that ended in dreadful heartbreak. The pattern is recognizable: We give our bodies, our But for most women, this never happens. The Fairy Tale never changes. To return to Louise hearts and ourselves completely, and we believe the flatStory’s article for The tery and false promises, as though we’ve New York Times, “Many never heard them beWomen at Elite Colleges fore. In the end, we Set Career Path to Although reality tells us differently, we are disappointed, we Motherhood,” which I desperately want the dream to be real. mentioned in my last give up and then, we give ourselves a few column, Duke women We still have faith in Prince Charming, weeks (or months) to still dream of babies, his white horse (or limo) and the Disney mend the battle (and while men’s dreams myth that true love (not a Ph.D.) bedroom) wounds. evolve —from making But once that time thousands to making conquers all. frame passes, we go millions, without the inback like moths (and terference or distraction like idiots) to the flame. the of love, marriage, white picket fence and 2.5 kids. Why do women keep going back to the Fairy Tale, The fact that many women still avidly look for husbands despite the fact that it consistently comes back to bite and love signals that they obviously believe in—want—the women in the ass? The answer is simple Fairy Tale. Many of us want to be loved, married and pregAlthough reality tells us differently, we desperately nant, even at the cost of our careers, and even though past want has otherwise. For one relationthe dream to be real. every taught us experience We still have faith in Prince Charming, his white ship that worked —or horse (or limo) and the Disney myth that true love (not a Ph.D.) conquers all. jl For one reason or another, we still haven’t ditched the wide-eyed notion that men have pure intentions, or the hope that our next hookup—no matter how drunk or dissatisfying—might just be with the Prince we’ve been waiting for. We’re smart Duke women, not naive schoolgirls, and at least cognitively, we know better. Those people who know me will often hear me say that I don’t believe in love. The truth is, although I believe that love exists, I don’t believe that it’s a Fairy Tale. I say the following not as a romantic atheist, but as a romantic realist: As women, we must give up —or rewrite—the myth of a Fairy Tale romance. On at least one count, Cinderella’s Fairy Godmother was right. At some point, the dream has to end.

pumpkin and the real Fairy Tale is supposed to become our financial independence and occupational success.

-

Shades Malaklou is a Trinity senior. Her column runs every other Wednesday.


16IWEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 7,

THE CHRONICLE

2007

\

3SSI MBBi

USDA Choice

Spaghettis or Chef Totino's Party Pizza select varieties Boyardee Microwave Cups ■ Banquet Meals & Michelma 7.5.1502 Entrees ■ Puffs Plus »

-

Fruit Snacks

Cube 64 ct

Seled Varieties

Kroger 5 4oz

■ Nabisco Barnums oz

■ PowerAde and PowerAde

■ Ocean Spray Diet Juice 1 Mur Wyler's Light

■ Hormel Chili

Option

Nabisco Go-Packs

«

Nesquik Milk & Shakes

«

Popsicle Novelties

Faultless Spray Starch

«

Airwick Aerosols

Select Varieties

24 cl

sea

m Huggies Baby Wipes

Chicken of the Sea Solid White Tuna

Assorted

Chef Boyardee Canned Pasta

«

Kroger Tomatoes 28

Sierra Mist, Mountain Dew, Caffeine Free Diet Pepsi,

Diet Pepsi

or Pepsi Cola

m 12 Pk 12 oz cans

■ Kroger Salad

■ Gerber Graduates

or Chunk Ham 5 oz

■ Totino's Pizza Rolls

oz

,

■ Kroger Applesauce

Chicken Breast

*

18- 19

ChewableAsprin

Kroger Saltinr

»

Kroger Children's Cherry

2 C|B

6oz

■ Hormel Chunk

Select Varieties

Scotch Brile Easy Erasing Pad

_. ,

15.6 o;

12*

22 m

Single Serve 13.5-16 w

Assorted"' .*rd

u ■ Kroger Ibuprofen -rTabs

■ Manwich

*

Kroger Mushrooms sozSn pieces sst™, ■ Kroger Chunky Soups Varieties,

.......

Kroger 8 d

2.125

Red Seedless

Beef Round Boneless Top Round London

«

oz

■ Toaster Treats •

f| ■>

a3

■ Frito Lay Stax

Assorted Varieties 5 5-6

;

Limit 3 With Card

oz

14,76-16 0;

&

AdditionalPurchase

Ben & Jerry's Ice Cream Breyers

lee Cream

Assorted Varieties56

oz

Klondike Novelties

Hio Assorted Varieties 4-12 ct

Texas

Rio Star Grapefruit 18 lb Bag

Tony’s Pizza 137-17.6

Kellogg’s Rice Krispies Treats

Assorted Varieties, 10 ct

Crisco Cooking Oil

Pillsbury Full Line Breakfast

or

Bush's Best Chili

48 or

Items

with Beans or No Beans 15 or

Dawn Dish Detergent

10-16or

Kellogg’s Cereals

25(U

Betty Crocker Muffins

Ziploc EZ Zipper Storage or Freezer Bags

15.2-19.6 or

Quaker Cereals

Big K Stow 'n Go 12 Pack

Select Vaitetm 11.78-16 or

Coffee Creamer

Dannon Yogurt

Kroger 100% Juice Select Varieties 64 Purexor Arm & Hammer

Kellogg’s All Bran Bars

Liquid

59-847 07

24-32 load

nppr Park Wstpr

Pepperidge Farm Cookies

Thomas English Muffins

12 pack 5 liter

Cleaning 22-40wumndoi 35-40 ctwipes

asanas SCOtt TOWeIS

si'niPMta

8

VaneteeSSJSw Nestle Cookie Dough

jnmipack

Cottonelle forKids

ok

Dixie Cups, Plates & Bowls selected

sum 28-60 ct

Paper

Selecl

4

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Glade Candles

Soft Scrub Cleanser

Mt. Olive Pickles

Kellogg’s Nutri-Grain Bars or Crunchy Nut Bars

select vaneties i6-?4

6 7-io4 oi

oi

Hefty Trash or Tall Kitchen Bags

Crystal Light

Heady to Ora* 4 Packs or 64 «

Fruit 2 0

6 Pack

Reynold’s Foil

50 ft Heavy Duty or 35 ft Release

Glade Plug-ins Refills

Windex, Fantastik, Shout -mg Bubbles or Scrubbing

24 w

Ben & Jerry’s Ice Cream

■ Breyers Ice Cream

Klondike Novelties Assorted Varieties. 4-12 d

GE Reveal Light Bulbs

Assorted 4 Packs

M*mii»nattes,s6M

12-25 ctWipes. 25 w Aerosols or 22-32 w Spray

Welch’s 100% Juice

Select Vwiebes.

64

o*

Scented OH 1 ct

Clorox Disinfecting Wipes

Spot Shot Carpet Cleaner

Items & Prices Good in Durham Through February 10, 2007.

|

nr

Assorted 8-18 w Vanetles

Select Varieties 10-37 ct

&

Bagels

selectvaivebesio ia

Nabisco Oreos, Nutter &

Blt6S OT Smart Start Bars

tu

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Select Varieties 32oz. 4-8 Packs

Kroger 35.3 w

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12-24 a

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or

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,ant

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10 or

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Homestyle

Crystal Clear Stow ‘n Go

Keebler Fudge Shoppe Cookies

Chunk Chicken Breast 24

Betty Crocker Pouch Cookies

Sunshine Cheez-its

8.5*10 w

9-10.8 oi Kroger

Clorox Bleach

«

Hot Pockets

IN-STORE PHARMACY

up to

Wc reserve the

njjht tojimit quantities. None

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