April 2, 2007

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Carol ina cup j|| Duke in of students head Hundreds Duke

toS.Cfora Southern fest, PAGE 3

The Chronicle looks at Duke alums who choose to stay in the Triangle, PAGE 4

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Duke wins a thrilling 3-OT game \ 19-18 at Virginia, SPORTSWRAP

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The Chronicled

MONDAY, APRIL 2,

2007

Golf coach Myers, 67,

THE INDEPENDENT DAILY AT DUKE UNIVERSITY

ONE HUNDRED AND SECOND YEAR, ISSUE 125

Steps to end hunger

Grad schools get top ranks in U.S. News

passes away Legendary teacher touched lives of many by

by

THE CHRONICLE

For another year in a row, Duke’s graduate and professional schools remained among the top of U.S. News and World Report’s annual Best Graduate Schools

Meredith Shiner THE CHRONICLE

rankings.

Men’s golf head coach Rod Myers passed away Friday evening at the Duke University Medical Center after losing his battle with leukemia. He was 67 years old. A member of the Golf Coaches Association Hall ofFame and a head coach for 41 years—34 of which were at Duke —Myers had a profound impact on the sport, his players and the University. “Rod Myers was a good friend, a great teacher and a role model for all studentathletes,” Director of Athletics Joe Alieva said. “He was also a great father and husband and a person everybody respected and 10ved.... Duke University will dearly miss him.” Although Myers’ professional accolades speak for themselves—he was a former president and treasurer of the Golf Coaches Association of America, a member of the PGA and USGA Rules Committees, former chairman of the NCAA Golf Committee and a Master PGA Professional—the coach took the most pride in the accomplishments of his players, both on and off the course. In his 34 years in Durham, Myers coached 16 All-Americans, nine Academic All-Americans and 24 All-ACC selections. Through the process of raising the Duke

In the ratings, which hit newsstands today, most of Duke’s graduate schools and Ph.D. programs slighdy improved or remained on par with last year, although Duke fell three spots from fifth to eighth in the undergraduate rankings in the fall. Professional schools performed particularly well with the School of Medicine, the School ofLaw and the Fuqua School of Business ranking eighth, tenth and twelfth respectively. Although the law school climbed one spot in the rankings, the medical school fell two and Fuqua fell one. Harvard University’s medical and business schools were both ranked first, and SEE RANKINGS ON PAGE 11

PETER

SEE MYERS ON SW PAGE 6

Yousef AbuGharbeeh

LAW SCHOOL

10

FUQUA (BUSINESS)

12

MEDICAL SCHOOL

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GEBHARD/THE CHRONICLE

Thousands of people showed up for the 32nd annual Durham Crop Walk, which aims to end local hunger. It is the nation's second-largest crop walk, behind Charlotte's.

Hike unveils Duke, Durham lore BY

COSETTE WONG THE CHRONICLE

Rumor

has it, Coach K gets his hair

cut at an

old Wes-

leyan church just off East Campus. “He goes there after hours,” said John Schelp, who pointed out historical markers and facts Saturday morning on the third

annual four-mile Urban Hike he leads around Durham. “I don’t know if that’s true or not, but it’s the local lore.” Schelp, president of the Old West Durham Neighborhood Association, showed Durham residents, Duke employees and members of other neighborhood associations little known locales around the city, including former President Richard Nixon’s old house on Clarendon Street and the house where Elvis Presley is said to have undergone drug rehabilitation. “Each time he adds a little new twist to something,” said SPECIAL TO THE CHRONICLE

Men's golf coach Rod Myers passed away Friday evening after a three-monthbattle with leukemia.

SEE URBAN HIKE ON PAGE 9


THE CHRONICLE

I

2 MONDAY, APRIL 2,2007

Sen. McCain: "It's working"

Iranian TV shows 2 British sailors by

Nasser Karimi

THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

TEHRAN, Iran Iranian state television aired new video Sunday showing two of the 15 captured British sailors pointing to a spot on a map of the Persian Gulf where they were seized and acknowledging it was in Iranian territorial waters. Britain’s Foreign Office immediately denounced the video, saying it was “completely unacceptable for these pictures to be shown on TV.” Adding to tensions between the two countries, about 200 angry Iranian youths chanting “Death to Britain” and “Death to America” threw rocks and firecrackers at

the British Embassy and tried to rush the compound but were held back by police. The 15 Britons were detained by Iranian naval units on March 23 while patrolling for smugglers as part of a U.N.mandated force monitoring the Persian Gulf. They were seized by Iranian naval units near the mouth of the Shatt al-Arab, a waterway that has long been a disputed dividing line between Iraq and Iran. Iran insists the sailors illegally entered its waters, but Britain says the team was in Iraqi waters at the time of their capture. The captives first appeared on the staterun Arabic-language TV channel Al-Alam in separate video clips looking relaxed in

military fatigues and pointing at the same map of the Persian Gulf. The first sailor, who was identified as Royal Marine Capt. Chris Air, pointed with a pen to a location on the map where he said two boats left a warship of the U.S-led coalition in Iraq around 8:30 a.m. on March 23. He said the seven marines and eight navy sailors Were captured around 10 a.m. Pointing to the map, he said “we were seized apparently at this point here on their maps and on the GPS they’ve shown us, which is inside Iranian territorial waters.” SEE IRAN ON PAGE 12

Clinton's ca mpaiqn garners S26M by

not reveal how much of her total was

Jim Kuhnhenn PRESS

WASHINGTON

Two Democratic

presidential candidates broke previous fundraising records during the first three months of the year, with Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton setting a high bar of $26 million in new contributions for the quarter. Former Sen. John Edwards raised more than $l4 million since the beginning of the year. Clinton also transferred $lO million from her Senate campaign account, bringing her total receipts for the quarter to $36 million. Unlike Edwards, Clinton aides would

available only for the primary election and how much could be used just in the general election, if she were the party’s nominee. By not breaking down the amount available for the primaries, the Clinton camp made it impossible to assess how much of an edge she actually has over Edwards. Edwards’ aides said about $1 million of his $l4 million in contributions could only be used in the general election, should he win the nomination. Neither Clinton nor Edwards disclosed how much money they spent in the quarter

or how much cash they had in hand—numbers that also give clues to the relative strengths of the campaigns. Still, the total raised by each candidate outdistanced past presidential election records and set a new bar by which to measure fundraising abilities. Sen. Barack Obama of Illinois—sandwiched in public opinion polls between Clinton and Edwards —had yet to reveal his totals. Obama was expected to be among the top Democratic fundraisers. NewMexico Gov. Bill Richardson’s campaign said he had raised $6 million in primary campaign money.

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After a heavily guarded trip to a Baghdad market, Sen John McCain insisted Sunday that a U.S.-lraqi security crackdown in the capital was working and said Americans lacked a "full picture" of the progress,

John Paul II almost a saint Catholic Church officials reach a key milestone in the drive to make Pope John Paul II a saint Monday, closing an investigation into his life and handing over a dossier detailing the purported miraculous cure of a nun who prayed to him.

FBI gets most wanted woman The lone woman on the FBl’s 10 Most Wanted list was captured and charged with one count of second-degree murder, authorities said. Shauntay L. Henderson, 24, a reputed gang member, is charged with the September 2006 shooting death of DeAndre M. Parker, 20.

Quake strikes South Pacific

A powerful earthquake struck in the South Pacific Monday, triggering a tsunami several yards high that destroyed a village and left at least four people missing. Judith Kennedy, a resident, said water "right up to your head" swept through the town. News briefs compiled from wire reports "The crows seemed to be calling his name, Jack Handy thought Caw."


MONDAY, APRIL 2,2007

THE CHRONICLE

3

Dukies soak up Carolinas tradition More mold by

uncovered in Edens

Kristen Davis

THE CHRONICLE

CAMDEN, S.C. From a distance, the crowd of college students at the Carolina Cup formed a pastel mosaic ofPolo pants, Lilly Pulitzer prints and pearls. “It’s like Tailgate on steroids,” said a Duke freshman who attended the event. Busloads of people from all over the southeastern United States—including hundreds from Duke—poured into the small southern town Saturday for the an-

Wenjia Zhang THE CHRONICLE

by

Mold has been discovered in several rooms in Edens Quadrangle, Residence Life and Housing Services officials confirmed Friday. Eddie Hull, dean of residence life and executive director of housing services, sent an e-mail to Edens 2A residents Friday informing them of the presence of mold in their air ventilation system The mold is limited to four rooms on the fifth floor of the building, Hull said in the e-mail

nual horse-racing event.

In 1930, Cup co-founder Ernest Wood-

ward bought 400 acres, which were later named Springdale Race Course, to host the premier horse race. Woodward and co-founder Harry Kirkover wanted to create a race course where spectators could see the entire race from any place they were observing the event. Today, Springdale is still one of the most admired racetracks in the country and hosts more spectators on Cup day than there are residents in all ofCamden’s Kershaw County. Horses, however, were not the main attraction for the thousands ofyoung people mingling around the tents in College Park, the tailgating area outside the racing arena. “I came here to get drunk and meet people,” said Lance Wactor, a freshman at the College of Charleston, who was at the event for the first time and went with his friends in Sigma Chi fraternity. He said about 13 fraternities from his school traveled to Camden for the occasion. Hundreds of fraternity and college flags waved above the tents. [l came to Carolina Cup] because I’m fratty as hell. It’s a huge tradition for us,” said Will Jones, a junior at the University of South Carolina, who had attended the event twice before. In addition to a couple of hundred Duke undergraduates, students were in attendance from Wake Forest University, Davidson College, Winthrop University, Clemson University and Wofford College. Since its inception 75 years ago, the Cup has made adjustments for the growing crowd of partying college students. U

Preliminary testing

Hundredsof studentsfrom the Carolines turned out for the 75th annual Carolina Cup this past Saturday.

In 1997* officials created College Park in order to separate the older horse connoisseurs and more family-oriented crowd from the young, rambunctious

tailgaters. “College Park sold out quicker than ever before [this year],” Wendy Kingsley, marketing director of the Carolina Cup Racing Association, told The State newspaper of Columbia, S.C. All 462 parking spaces were sold by March 14, she said. Despite the two different locations for visitors, even the younger guests still uphold the event’s traditional dress and celebration of Southern culture.. All men wore slacks, dress shirts and

Landscapes of Flesh: Thoughts TowardAlternative Metaphors for the Body

and_ Its Goods Joel James Shuman, Ph.D. Assoc, Professor and Chair, Dept, of Theology Dir., Center for Ethics and Public Life Kings College, Pennsylvania

Thursday, April 5 Noon 1:30 p.m. -

Medical Center Board Room 11708, Duke South Clinic First Floor, Yellow Zone

A seminar sponsored by Theology and Medicine

at Duke Divinity School in cooperation with the Center for Spirituality, Theology, and Health at Duke University Medical Center.

To reserve lunch (space limited) please call 383-0615, xlO5 or email awallace@div.duke.edu

ties and all women donned sundresses and wide-brimmed hats. “The dress code is similar to what students at Southern universities wea?f to football games,” Duke freshman Emily Robertson said. She said most of her friends who attend universities in the Carolinas travelled with greek-affiliated groups, and those who attend colleges outside the Carolinas came home independently for the event. ,“Because I’m from South Carolina, it was fun to come home and be a part of the culture of South Carolina and Southern culture in general,” Robertson said.

done by the Occupational and Environmental Safety Office reported that it is a common mold, Hull said, adding that he does not believe it is harmful to students. Air samples were taken inside and outside the building on Friday, Hull said. “We will have the results of these tests on Monday and will then make a determination about what action may be needed, if any,” he said in the e-mail. The mold was first discovered March 23 in the fifth-floor room of sophomores Graham Dugoni and Brad Ramsey. Mold was found blowing out of the air vent in the students’ room and covered Ramsey’s bed, which is located right under the vent, the students said. RLHS officials responded to the students’ complaint March 26, Dugoni said. “They were very responsive,” he added. Nets have been set up to cover the air vents in the rooms infected with mold to prevent further mold from entering into the room. Both Dugoni and Ramsey reported that they have experienced allergic reacSEE EDENS ON PAGE 9


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MONDAY,

THE CHRONICLE

APRIL 2, 2007

New group gives advice to enterprising undergrads by

Katie Noto

THE CHRONICLE

HEATHER

Enterprising Duke students with big business aspirations are now one step closer to seeing their ideas in action. The Duke Undergraduate Business Advisory and Resource Committee—dubbed DUBARC by its founders—met for the first time last Friday at the Fuqua School of Business to discuss the future of entrepreneurship at the University. “The main purpose of the committee is to evaluate specific business ideas, provide feedback and then... actually fund these businesses and get them off the ground,” said senior Jason Gross, a founding member of the new committee. Gross, who is president of an undergraduate group focused on business innovations and networking called The Duke Entrepreneur, first created DUBARC as a resource for students interested in entre-

GUO/THE CHRONICLE

Ninth Street is one hot spot for manyDuties who decide to continue to live in theTriangle after graduation.

preneurship. “So far, [Duke students] have a lot of

networking and ideas, but nowhere to take

these ideas,” said sophomore Tim Gu, a Duke Student Government senator who is also on the committee. In total, 15 administrators, faculty and alumni with business backgrounds make up the committee. all thought the “We . Jason Gross meeting was a huge success,” said senior Andrew Longenecker, co-president ofThe Duke Entrepreneur. “Getting all these people together in the room was a huge success in itself.” .

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After Duke, alums opt to call Bull City home Former Duke chancellor details shift in health care Kim by

Gabby McGlynn THE CHRONICLE

Hanauer is still surprised when she hears of a Duke classmate moving back to Durham. Although Hanauer, Trinity ’O2, moved back herself after spending several years in Boston and serves as the Director of the Young Alumni and Student Program, she said she still instinctively wonders, “Why go back?” Regardless, Dukies migrate back every year to make Durham their home after graduation. Roughly 20 percent of Duke alumni live in North Carolina nearly half of whom reside in the Raleigh-Durham area. Due in part to alumni who return for graduate school, making up one-fifth of the University’s graduate population, the area comprises the largest percentage of young Duke alumni, topping even New York City. —

So what exactly is the allure of Durham and what keeps Dukies coming back after their four undergraduate years? The hassles of big city living, affordable housing and congested transportation and parking frustrations generally draw alumni back, Hanauer said. After spending a few years in a big city, she said people want something different. “When you walk into the JamesJoyce [lrish Pub and Restaurant] on a Monday night and you know the Monday night crowd and the bartenders and the wait staff and everyone is connected in some way, I think that’s pretty neat,” Hanauer said. For some, Durham presents the best of both worlds, Hanauer said—a modera city with a small town charm. “Like everyone else, I interviewed

by

Matt Johnson

THE CHRONICLE

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SEE DURHAM ON PAGE

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Students, faculty and physicians filled the French Family Science Center Friday to hear Ralph Snyderman’s keynote address for the annual Prospective Health Care Club conference about the need for a change in perspective among the nation’s health care providers. Snyderman, chancellor emeritus of health affairs for the Duke University Health System, said health care providers must shift from a “reactive, symptom-oriented approach” to one that focuses on patient involvement and the prevention of chronic disease. “We are at the leading edge of a transformation in medicine,” said Snyderman,

7

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Ralph Snyderman called Duke's health care plan for employees "enlightened" during his speech Friday.


MONDAY, APRIL 2,

THE CHRONICLE

20071 5

475 hit CIEMAS for Pratt's E-Ball fiesta by

Adam Nathan

.

THE CHRONICLE

Defying their oft-maligned stereotype, Duke’s engineers put down their textbooks and partied it up Friday night at

the annual E-Ball, hosted this year in the

Fitzpatrick Center for Interdisciplinary Engineering, Medicine and Applied Sciences by the Engineering Student Government.

Four-hundred seventy-five students in the Pratt School of Engineering and guests from the Trinity College of Arts and Sciences attended the event to dine, dance and celebrate the end of another year, Kelly Fitzgerald, a senior and ESC publicity chair, wrote in an e-mail. “Overall, I think the event was a huge success,” she said. “We managed to minimize or eliminate most of the issues we’ve had in the past with transportation and dealing with such a large crowd.” Most Pratt students said they enjoyed seeing their peers in a new setting outside of the classroom. “It’s a time for engineers to stop doing homework and chill and show everybody that we can have fun too,” ESG sophomore class president Tim Gu said. “It’s a great way to build community support —when we are stuck in a classroom or lab doing homework, working collaboratively is the only way to get stuff done.” The event started with a three-course dinner, coordinated by three managers, seven chefs and 40 waiters from Three Seasons Catering, the operator of Blue Express in the Levine Science Research Center, said Kamel Tallaa, a manager at Blue Express.

“I love catering E-Ball,” he said. “Most of the people here are my regular customers—I can tell you what they eat every day—so it’s really friendly.” After eating, students moved to the Schiano Auditorium lobby for a dance party. The room was packed, with a spontaneous breakdancing competition starting in one corner. “E-Ball is the best thing that happened to engineers,” sophomore Elana Bobo said. “Only at Duke would engineers get so excited about a semiformal.” Each Pratt student was allowed to buy an additional ticket for $5 and a third for $lO, resulting in slightly more Trinity students attending the event than engineers, Fitzgerald said. She added that there was a black market for E-Ball tickets in the weeks leading up to the event due to the limited seating available in CIEMAS. “A lot of people put themselves down along with a date, only to find out that one or the other may have had a conflict at the time of the event,” she said. “This resulted in people selling their tickets to each other on the black market—hopefully, almost everyone who wanted to go to E-Ball managed to get a ticket.” Despite the large number of guests attending, some students thought the table arrangements over the three floors of CIEMAS’ study tower restricted conversation. “I would rather have [E-Ball] in the style ofDuke Royale or DukePlays,” senior Advait Kotecha said. “It should be more of a social thing than a social dinner. I could-

SYLVIA

QU/THE CHRONICLE

Dozens of Pratt students boogied on down in CIEMAS early Friday evening at the annual E-Ball party. n’t talk to everyone because we were sitting different tables.” Most students, however, said the location and atmosphere were fitting for a year-ending, Pratt-wide gala. “I’ve had a good time—this E-Ball is at

.

substantially better than the last one,” senior Gideon Weinerth said. “This is my last E-Ball, so it’s fairly bittersweet, but I’ve had good times in this building, this beautiful edifice. It’s good to see how sometimes we can dress up and enjoy ourselves.”

Convention brings nanotech insiders to University by

Bolin Niu

THE CHRONICLE

As made evident by the shrinking sizes of iPods, laptops and digital cameras, small is clearly in. But the emergence of such gadgets tends to pose problems of efficiency and cooling within their tiny confines. A two-day workshop at Duke’s Erwin Mills last Thursday and Friday, “Nanotechnology and the Emerging Global Knowledge Economy. Challenges and Opportunities,” focused on the advent of nanotechnology in a global and regional context. Technologies explored at Friday’s workshop on product development, which targeted members of the Duke community and technology insiders, included machinery for the automotive and biomedical

fields, among others. gineering,” von Windheim said. The company’s major product, a von Windheim—CEO of NexJesko treme Ther“paper-thin heat mal Solutions, pump,” can lower temperatures by up Inc., located “We work on semiconductor to 40 degrees Celin Research sius across its two Triangle electronic packagsides. He described Park disthermoelecing and cussed his the device, which can be used in company’s somaterial engineering.” tric lasers and other lutions to the small electronics, as limited size of von Windheim nanotech“a solid-state refrigCEO, Nextreme Thermal Solutions erator the size of a nologies piece of confetti.” “We work The multifuncon semiconductor processing, electronic packaging tional paper-thin heat pump performs the and especially thermoelectric material en- function of a power generator when

processing, especially

—Jesko

next to a heat source, von Windheim added. In order to meet the demands of customers, new technologies must be developed to offset the disadvantages of small products, he said. “Because the market trend is making things smaller and more packed together, the dense power dissipation creates very high temperatures,” von Windheim said, adding that such problems have been addressed on a larger scale. In computers, for example, the dualcore chip was employed not to improve performance but rather to combat the problem of overheating, he said, noting

placed

SEE NANOTECH ON PAGE 8


THE CHRONICLE

6 MONDAY, APRIL 2, 2007

Thompson announces bid for presidency

LUKE

FRAZZA/AGENi

IE FRANCE PREI

Former health and humanservices secretary Tommy Thompson will run for the Republican presidential nomination.

WASHINGTON (AP) Former Wisconsin Gov. Tommy Thompson joined the crowded field of Republicans running for the White House in 2008 Sunday and proclaimed himself the “reliable conservative” in the race. Thompson, who was health and human services secretary during President George W. Bush’s first term, also said he is the only GOP candidate who has helped assemble both a state and federal budget. Since announcing last year he was forming a presidential exploratory committee to raise money and gauge support, Thompson has lagged behind betterknown rivals. Thompson, 65, has focused his strategy on lowa, which holds the nation’s first caucuses for presidential nominees. He has made weekly visits to the state and sought to make the case that it will take a candidate who can carry the Midwest to win the nomination. “Things are starting to coalesce, and I feel very, very optimistic about my future,” Thompson said Sunday, despite his single-digit polling. “I am the reliable conservative. My record shows that. All that people have to do is look at my record, and I am one individual that they can count on.” He discussed campaign issues such as the Iraq war, the war spending bills in Congress and the handling of the fired federal prosecutors. Thompson said he would have “a completely different Iraq strategy” from the president’s. He said he would “demand” that the Iraqi government vote as to whether it wanted the U.S. to remain in the country. If the answer were yes, Thompson said '

New Course taught by 2007-08 Nannerl O. Keohane Distinguished Visiting Professor J. Lawrence Aber

Fall 2007 Courses in Children in Contemporary Society CCS 150 Children in Contemporary Instructor: Clara Muschkin Wednesday, Friday, 10:05 11:20 am

“it immediately gives a degree of legitimacy.” If the answer were no, “We would get out, absolutely. It’s a duly elected government,” he added. Thompson also commented that he would veto the war spending bills in Congress that have timelines for a U.S. exit from Iraq. “This is an invitation to continue the kind of civil war that’s going on right now. I think it’s the worst mistake,” he said. Attorney General Alberto Gonzales has made “terrible mistakes” in the handling of the fired federal prosecutors, Thompson said. “I would not have appointed Mr. Gonzales..! would have appointed somebody that was loyal to me,” he added. At a recent news conference in Wisconsin, Thompson called himself “the dark horse candidate.” “I was a dark horse candidate for governor. I was a dark horse candidate when I ran for the Assembly. I am the underdog, and I don’t mind that,” he said. The son of a grocer, Thompson spent 14 years as governor of Wisconsin, pushing for an overhaul of the state’s welfare laws. He also championed a school choice program for Milwaukee. His time in Bush’s cabinet included anthrax attacks, a flu vaccine shortage and passage of the Medicare prescription drug benefit law. In 2006, he briefly flirted with the idea of running for governor but in theend decided not to seek his old job. He had considered running for president in 2000 but scrapped that, too, deciding he lacked support. The leading GOP candidates in the race include former New York City mayor Rudy Giuliani, Arizona Sen. John McCain and former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney.

Society

CCS 195.02ChildDevelopment and Social Poucy in a Global Society Tuesday, Thursday 4:25-5:40 pm

-

Explores major developmental stages of childhood, and the intersection between the child ana the major influences in a child's life: parents/family life, schools, and neighborhoods and communities. (Crosslisted PUBPOL 124.01)

CCS 264 S School Dropout and Education Policy Instructor: Ann Brewster Wednesday, Friday, 11:40 am 12:55 pm, Sanford Institute, Room 150 -

Professor Aber is an internationally-recognized expert in child development and social policy. His basic research examines the influence of poverty and violence, at the family and community levels, on the social, emotional, behavioral, cognitive and academic development of children and youth. In 2006, Dr. Aber was appointed by New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg to the Commission for Ecbnomic Opportunity, a new initiative to help reduce poverty and increase economic opportunity in New York City. ContactBarbara Pollock at bpollock@duke.edu to request a course permission number.

This course addresses the history of dropouts in US schools, current trends, theories and research, practice and policy implications, and effective dropout prevention strategies. (Crosslisted PUBPOL 2645) PUBPOL 1 83AS Social Science asjd Policy Research I Instructor: MaryTerzian Monday, Wednesday, 1:15- 2:30 pm, Sanford Institute, Room 150

Sign up today for the Children in Contemporary Society Certificate Program For details, go to www.childandfamilypolicy.duke.edu/certificate

Explores why and how social science matters to society and examines the role of social science knowledge and research in the framing of policy alternatives. Domains include the scientific bases of education reform, domestic violence, child maltreatment, mental health and substance abuse, delinquency and crime. (Crosslisted PSY

CENTER

These courses are also electives for the Children in Contemporary Society Certificate Program.

FOR

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160AS)

HJH Learn more at

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MONDAY, APRIL 2,

THE CHRONICLE

20071 7

DURHAM from page 4 Junior named Truman Scholar Junior Andy Cunningham

has been awarded the prestigious Truman Scholarship, the award’s scholarship foundation announced last week. Cunningham, a double major in international comparative studies and Chinese, helped to start a boarding school in Muhuru Bay, Kenya, known as the Women’s Institute for Secondary Education and Research. He is currently in China with Duke’s study abroad program. Truman Scholars are selected for a number of criteria, including academic scholarship, leadership abilities and a commitment to a career in public service. Recipients of a Truman Scholarship receive $30,000 for graduate study, as well as priority admission and supplemental financial aid to top graduate programs. Scholars are also given access to leadership training and career counseling. This year 65 students from 56 U.S. institutions were selected to be Truman Scholars. In addition to the Truman Scholarship, Cunningham is also the recipient of the GoldmanSachs Global Leadership Award, which he was awarded in 2006, and the Robertson Scholarship, which fully funds his Duke tuition. While at Duke, Cunningham has been devoted to children’s rights and education and has been active in global public service, including trips to Jamaica and India.

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and looked around for things up in D.C. and Boston and some other areas,” said Jordan Capps, Trinity ’O2. “I never intended to stay in Durham, but this has become home.” Other Duke grads accredit their return to Durham to the weather, the comfortable lifestyle and the increased job opportunities created by Research Triangle Park and the Duke University Medical Center. “There wasn’t really another place that said ‘move here’ to me,” said Kathy World, Trinity ’72, operations manager of the Gothic Bookshop. “Most of the people I see regularly are the people I’ve known since college. In my group of friends and at that period of time, we were primarily transplants who have stayed.” Although the changing city dynamic attracts young alumni, some older local graduates said they feel the city’s growth JIANGHAI HO/THE CHRONICLE has altered the relationship between reDuke make the decision to work at Durham and surrounding areas. in graduates organizations and the live Each dozensof in. city they year, Dukies turning Tom Campbell, Trinity ’7O and co-' Still, Durham continues to foster went to school,” he said owner of the Regulator Bookshop, said With graduates moving in and out of Duke bonds after graduation, Hanauer Durham has expanded from the quiet town after medical school, law school and said. She and three friends who lived tosleepy town he remembers and the relaDurham gether in the Wannamaker Dormitory tionship between the city and students job searches, the alumni circuit in has worsened. is in a state of continuous flux with a “nice during their sophomore and junioryears “Duke students have somehow abflow of friends in and out and a good core still get together on Thursdays to hang Durham danout. The only difference is that instead of sorbed the message that is offolks who never left,” Sterly Wilder, TrinAffairs, and interact with the comand director of Alumni they watching episodes of “Friends,” they now ’B3 gerous ity watch “Grey’s Anatomy.” wrote in an e-mail. munity far less than students did when I

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James B. Duke Professor of English Reynolds Price will read his translation of the Gospel of iMark from his book, Three Gospels. In a 30 June 1996 review of the book in theLos Angeles Times Book Review Christopher Tilghman described Three Gospels as a “...splendid and exhilarating new exploration of the life and ministry of Jesus

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Wednesday, 4 April, 7pm Perkins Library Gothic Reading Room Sponsored by the Duke University Libraries

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THE CHRONICLE

8 MONDAY, .APRIL 2, 2007

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NANOTECH from page 5

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that these challenges promise large rewards in the end. “Some companies tell us, ‘lf you solve the thermal problem, our markets will expand 10 times,’” von Windheim said. In the future, the company plans to explore the medical application of its thermal devices. To reduce epileptic seizures, implants are sometimes introduced into the human cortex, but conventional probes are often oversized or too hot for appropriate use, von Windheim said. Small cooling devices can be used to decrease temperatures by 5 to 10 degrees Celsius by attachment to the im-

planted probe.

HEATHER GUO/THE CHRONICLE

All-male a capelia group Speak of the Devil had its biggest performance of theyear in Page Auditorium Sunday evening, led by music directorChris DeStasio.

DUB ARC from page 4

viewing student business ideas next Sep-

Non-student committee members include Larry Moneta, vice president for student affairs, Barry Myers, senior associate dean for industrial partnerships and research commercialization in the Pratt School of Engineering and director of the Duke Center of Entrepreneurship and Research Commercialization, and Jon Fjeld, executive director of the Center for Entrepreneurship and Innovation at Fuqua. “[The focus] is more on making the committee an effective one for connecting you to the kinds of resources that you want,” Myers said Friday to the students on the committee. “You’d be connected to folks who do get it, who know people, who are committed.”

tember or October. The committee emerges at a time when Duke is planning to hire a faculty member to aid in student business planning as well as to allot new building space for student entrepreneurs. “As far as this kind of venture being in line with the priorities of President [Richard] Brodhead and Vice President Moneta, I think it is,” Gross said. “In the Campus Culture Initiative, it says there should be a ‘thriving and energetic’ campus environment, and this really contributes.” The committee looked at similar initiatives at other schools for guidance in its discussion about DUBARC’s role at the University in the future. “We’re behind a lot of our peers in en-

DUB ARC members aim

to

begin re-

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trepreneurship,” Longenecker said. “It’s a shame because the Research Triangle is such a great, vibrant community for that. The resources are there, but they’re so scattered, and there’s not one place that students know they want to go to if they have ideas.” DUBARC plans to raise a venture fund separate from existing University funds. Members of the organization will use this money to award grants to student businesses approved by the committee. “It’s become a very explosive trend throughout the country to stimulate entrepreneurial thought,” Gross said. “While it’s somewhat difficult to teach entrepreneurship, if you promote some sort of mindset among the students, then business problems and social problems can be addressed.”

Several speakers discussed the potential role of North Carolina’s workforce and technological sectors. Lance Kress, senior vice president of High Performance Coadngs—based in Whitsett, N.C. —discussed nanotechnology at his firm. The company manufactures nanocoating, which provides heat and corrosion resistance for materials used in aerospace, automotive and medical engineering. One of the company’s tools provides wing protection for aerospace vehicles from rain by delaying the onset of buildup on the wing, for instance, Kress said. HPC recendy moved to North Carolina in response to a growing customer base on the eastern United States and in Europe. The available workforce—including many laid-off workers from the texdle industry—also attracted HPC, he said.


MONDAY, APRIL 2,

THE CHRONICLE

URBAN HIKE from page 1

“Colonel Sanders liked to go stand [his life-size fiberglass statue] and take the same pose,” he said. “Customers would come into the shop and he would move, and the customers would jump.” Schelp also took the hikers past a house from the days of Prohibition which he said still smells like liquor when it rains—and the house on Knox Street where an assistant professor at Duke once kept 65 exotic snakes. Other historical places discussed on the tour included a cemetery where poor black and white Durham residents were buried side by side, the Italian-built wall that surrounds East Campus and a corner close to campus where Schelp said drug deals were being made daily seven years ago. Schelp added that the rich history of west Durham was a result of the open relationship between the city and the Uninext to

a member of the Sierra Club in Durham. “He’s Durham’s national

Janet Hitti, treasure.”

When the tour reached East Campus, Schelp led the group past the Ark, Duke’s dance studio and the site of the first Trinity College basketball game. The Ark is made out of wood salvaged from the grandstand of a horse race track that once encircled East Campus, Schelp said. “Only two can walk in at a time goihg up the gangplank into the Ark, like Noah’s Ark,” he said, adding that Madonna—an American Dance Festival student in the ’7Os—lived in Gilbert-AddomsResidence Hall for a summer and took early dance lessons at the Ark. Schelp said Duke and Durham were very different in the past, when the neighborhood smelled like a laundromat because of smoke puffing from the cotton mills and when Campus Drive once led to the Ann Roney Fountain behind what is now the East Duke Building. Among other things, Schelp added that Whole Foods on Broad Street used to be part of the field where mill workers played baseball and that the gap in the East Campus wall—now planted with cypress trees—was once a ticket counter that kept people from watching football games without paying. “They built Duke Hospital on top of [a] boneyard,” he said, adding that this change is an example of how different the University used to be. On Ninth Street, Schelp spoke about former local businesses like Durham’s first Kentucky Fried Chicken, now an art studio.

WWW.

20071 9

versity.

“Everything has connections,” he said. “The more Duke students learn about these connections, the more they appreciate Durham.” Even though some of the hikers have spent their whole lives in Durham, many said they have still not gotten to learn about all of the area’s history. “I learned more today than I have in the last six to four years,” said Freddie Cable, who grew up in Durham and currendy lives in the city. Susan Wilkins, whose grandparents opened Bullocks Bar-B-Que in Durham, and Peggy Schaeffer, who has lived in Durham 27 years, said they enjoyed the informative nature of the hike. “These little details make everyday life more interesting,” Schaeffer said. “It opens your eyes.”

ukechronicle.com

i

Education Courses Eall 2007

Mold was found in several rooms in Edens 2A, but students were not required to move out of the dormitory.

EDENS from page 3 the mold but noted that they severe. Sophomore Jay Otto, who lives two doors down from Dugoni and Ramsey, said he is worried that the mold has been there for a period of time without being noticed. “I assume the mold doesn’t grow over night, so it’s probably been there for a while,” Otto said. He added that RLHS said the appearance of the mold is due to some work they were doing on the system over Spring Break. Residents said they were pleased with how RLHS responded to the incident, but tions

to

were not

some said there is concern over the possibility of shutting down air conditioning in the building —a measure RLHS took last August when mold was found in Edens 3A and 38. Ramsey said RLHS should not shut down the air conditioning system since there are only a few weeks left of school. “It’s not too bad,” he said. “We can probably last until summer, I don’t want them to shut down A/C.” Dugoni said he agreed, adding that RLHS should examine the system fully in the summer when all the residents have moved out. Residents in other halls said they were unaware of the presence of mold in their building until they received Hull’s e-mail

Friday.

m

Educ 100: Foundations of Education Educ 112; Children, Schools C7 Society

John Hope Franklin Center For interdisciplinary international Studies Duke University

Educ 118: Educational Psychology

&

Educ 133: Legal Issues in Education Educ 137: Contemporary Issues in Education Educ 149: Women and'the Professions Educ 170S.01: Mentoring Service, Leadership

12:00 noon-1:00 pm Room 240

is a topical weekly noontime series in which

April Events

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scholars, editors.

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Wednesdays at The Center

Apr 11

Street Level and JetStream:The Local, the Global, and the ContemporaryCurator Trevor Schoonmaker, Curator of Contemporary Art, Nasher Museum of Art at Duke University Presented by the John Hope Franklin Center and the John Hope Franklin Humanities Institute Global Warming: Some Science and Solutions Robert Jackson, Professor of Biology and Director of the Center on Global Change, Duke University Presented by the Center on Global Change

Franklin Humanities Institute, all events in the series are free and public.

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%


THE CHRONICLE

10IMONDAY. APRIL 2, 2007

The Chronicle Distribution Survey ONE SURVEY PER PERSON SUBMIT COMPLETED SURVEY TO: THE CHRONICLE, BOX 90858, DURHAM, NC 27708 OR FAX TO 919-668-1247.

Name: Phone Number:

Email address: Duke campus / NC address: Please choose one from below: Sophomore Freshman Faculty/Staff

Senior Junior Off Campus Reader

Grad Student Other: please specify

How many days a week do you usually read the print version of The Chronicle? Daily 1-2 3-4 I don’t read the print version How many times per week do you access The Chronicle online? 3-4 more than 5 5 1 -2

I don’t read it online

4) When do you usually pick up the paper? Morning Evening Afternoon

Whenever I get the chance

Varies depending on the time of class/work I don’t pick it up / read online only Depends on time of delivery of the paper

If you do read the print version of The Chronicle please specify where you usually pick it up. ,

How easily accessible do you think the print version of The Chronicle is to you on a scale of 1-5 (1 being least accessible, 5 being most accessible)? Not sure Read it online only 1 2 3 How satisfied are you with the design/quality and accessibility of the racks/bins where you pick up the paper, on a scale of 1-5 (1 being least accessible, 5 being most accessible)? 3 5 Not sure Read it online only 1 2 4 Do you read The Chronicle online more than in print? Yes No About the same

If the print version of The Chronicle were more accessible to you, would you read it more? Yes No About the same 10) Where would you like to see more of The Chronicle in print, on or off campus (including sites where it is not currently distributed)?

11) Do you have any further comments/suggestions about the distribution of the paper (e.g. concerning rack design, pick-up sites, The Chronicle online, etc)?


the chronicle

MONDAY, APRIL 2,

Thou shalt not steal An employee reported the theft of a video projector left in an unsecured room March 23 at 2:03 p.m. in the Divinity School, WaDuke too classy for fake IDs A student attempted to use a false ID card to obtain alcoholic beverages at the bar area of the Washington Duke Inn around 10 p.m. March 24

Tommy’s rubs, suds and... grabs? A student was arrested for drunk and disruptive behavior March 25 at Tommy’s Restaurant. He had grabbed another student’s private parts, which led to a fight. TAYLOR JACOBSON/THE CHRONICLE

Duke's School ofLaw was ranked lOth-best in the country in U.S. News and World Report's annual graduate school rankings.

ful, should not be the primary

RANKINGS from page 1 ..

..

measure of a school’s success, because rankings and graduate student accomplishment don’t always correlate with one anoth-

policy and management, Like Sanford, Duke’s professional schools also performed well in specialty rankings. The

Yale University was first in law. School ofLaw was ranked fourth In all three categories, Duke in intellectual property, was the highest ranked school in the South.— Fuqua’s MBA program Several of the UmversiT m very1 pleased with where and the School of Medity s Ph.D. programs also cine was ranked third in notched marks. WC are right DOW, because high geriatricsthe humanities and Among nn the pHap 01 hrpaldna Cage nf DreaKing Provost Peter Lange social sciences, Duke’s politsaid he was pleased with ical science and English deOUt.” Duke’s strong performpartments were eighth and Knstina Jonnson ance, but emphasized twelfth, respectively. For that rankings cannot endean, Pratt School of Enginnering programs in the natural sciences, Duke was ranked capsulate all that Duke’s twelfth overall with ecology, graduate and professional schools offer, evolutionary biology and biomed- er, she added. “It’s more important to destudents] ical engineering all ranking fifth. “[Prospective Kristina Johnson, dean of the fine your internal measures should look at many more variPratt School of Engineering, said than look to external metrics,” ables before choosing a graduate she was satisfied with the rank- Johnson said. or professional program,” Lange The Sanford Institute ofPublic said in a statement, ings but added that there is room The rankings are calculated for improvement. Policy was ranked tenth in Public “I’m very pleased with where Affairs for its master’s of public based on the weighted average of we are right now, because we’re policy program. Sanford was also factors that include peer assesson the edge of breaking out,” second in environmental policy ment, standardized test scores, and management, fifth in public acceptance rates and job placeJohnson said. Such rankings, though use- policy analysis and ninth in health ment success.

wa^

*

»

.

.

_

.

Cadillachits and runs with air gun A student reported three males in a dark colored vehicle—possibly a Cadillac—drove up to the West Campus bus stop at about 8:00 p.m. March 25.

2007111

She and her friends heard a popping sound and she was struck on the shoulder. She sustained a small circular wound consistent with that made by an air rifle. The victim treated the small wound herself, Books stolen from textbook store

An employee reported March 27 that a subject came in to the Duke Textbook Store March 24 and stole two hardcover books. She had seen the subject in the store acting nervously. About an hour after the subject left the store, she received a call from the Book Exchange that a subject matching the description of the one in the store had attempted to sell two hardcover books, which was refused. The suspect is described as a male about STI” in his 30s with brown hair.


12IM0NDAY, .APRIL 2,2007

THE CHRONIGL .E

IRAN from page 2

Chinese folk dance

HEATHER GUO/THE CHRONICLE

Students take part in the Duke Chinese Folk Dance Showcase, during which dances from various regions, eras and disciplines were performed.

2 North Carolina policemen shot CHARLOTTE, N.C. (AP) A suspect was charged with murder Sunday, less than 24 hours after two CharlotteMecklenburg police officers were fatally shot during a domestic disturbance call at an apartment complex. Demetrius Antonio Montgomery, 25, was charged with two counts of first-degree murder, said police spokesperson Officer Bob Fey. “This is alt ongoing investigation,” the spokesperson said when asked if there were other suspects. The two officer were shot late Saturday during a struggle outside an apartment complex and died early Sunday. Sean Clark, 34, and Jeffrey Shelton, 35, were the first officers from the CharlotteMecklenburg department fatally shot in the line of duty in more than a decade.

“It’s a real tragedy for us, the officers, for the families, for the communities, that we’ve lost two in one incident,” said Charlotte-Mecklenburg Police Department Chief Darrel Stephens. Stephens said the two officers were responding to a disturbance call around 10:30 p.m. Saturday night at the apartment complex in east Charlotte. They were shot around 11:15 p.m. in the parking lot during a struggle. Neither fired their weapon, Stephens said. Clark and Shelton were taken to Carolinas Medical Center, where they later died. Clark had been with the police department for a year, and Shelton had worked there since 2001. Police blocked a road near the apartment complex for several hours overnight. Police used patrols, a helicopter, K-9 units

and a SWAT team during the search “We have an enormous number of questions in our minds about what happened, and how it happened, that we don’t have the answers to right now,” said Stephens, adding later, “We don’t have suspects at this point.” Both officers were married. Clark, a 1991 graduate of West Mecklenburg High School who had worked for the department for a little more than a year, and his wife were expecting a child. Shelton was a six year veteran of the force. A Charlotte officer was last shot and killed on duty in 1993, when officers John Burnette and Andy Nobles died chasing Alden Harden through Charlotte, The Charlotte Observer reported on its website. Harden was convicted a year later and is on North Carolina’s death row.

Duke Center for International Development

presents

Duncan Thomas Professor, Economics Department, UCLA Director, Center for Health and Development, UCLA

“Household Responses to the Financial Crisis in Indonesia” Monday, April 9, 2007 4:00-5:30 PM Rubenstein Hall, Room 200 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 lbabcock#duke.edu

“And so far we have been treated very well by all the people here. They have looked after us and made sure there’s been enough food and we've been treated very well by them so we thank them for that.” The second sailor, identified as Lt. Felix Carman, pointed to an area on the map and said that location was where he and the 14 others were arrested. “I’d like to say to the Iranian people, I can understand why you are so angry about our intrusion intoyour waters,” he said. The newscaster said the two had confessed to “illegally” trespassing in Iranian waters. Al-Alam broadcast longer videos of the Britons- earlier this week, including footage on Friday of captured marine Nathan Thomas Summers apologizing for entering Iranian waters “without permission” and admitting to trespassing in Iranian waters. He was shown sitting with another serviceman and the female British sailor Faye Turney against a floral curtain. Both servicemen wore camouflage fatigues with a Royal Navy label on their chests and a litde British flag stitched to their left sleeves. Al-Alam also aired video on Wednesday showing Turney wearing a headscarf and saying: “Obviously we trespassed.” Iran has also made public three letters purportedly written by Turney. The last letter contained an apology. Britain has denounced the videos, calling them “propaganda” and “outrageous.” Iran’s decision to air three videos on its Arabic-language TV channel, rather than on its main Farsi channels has not been explained. But it appears to be an attempt to seek support from Arabs in Iraq and the Gulf states, where many resent Britain’s military deployment in Iraq and its historical role as a colonial power in the region. Earlier on Sunday, British Defense Secretary Des Browne said his government was in “direct, bilateral communication with the Iranians.” A Ministry of Defense spokeswoman said Browne was referring to letters and other contacts between diplomats, rather than any new face-toface talks.


THE CHRONICLE

MONDAY, APRIL 2,

Grandfather Mountain changes but legacy stays

HEALTHCARE from page 4

conference aimed to bring students, doctors and professors together to discuss new modes of health care. Sophomore Joel Burrill, vice presiwho also served as dean ofDuke Medical School and CEO of DUHS from 1989 to dent of the PHCC forums committee, 2004. “One of the most important things described prospective health care as “motivating wellness as opposed to treatin health care will be the increasing emof individuals to understand ing sickness.” powerment Burrill, along with sophomore Varun and take control of the road map for their Gokarn, reown health.” cently Snyderman submitted a prosaid the deploy“I couldn’t be more proud of our ment of prevenposal to the oftative, personalregistrar’s undergraduates taking [prospecfice outlining ized health care house has tive healthcare] on as a cause and a already course successproven bringing it to the community.” ful with the improspective health care plementation Ralph Snyderman Duke they hope to of former CEO, DUHS Prospective teach in Fall Health, 2007. health The concare ference also marked the release of the plan available to Duke employees. first issue of the Journal of Prospective Calling Duke an “enlightened employer” for adopting the program, he Health Care, a publication produced by the club to educate readers about the pointed to early data which suggests participants enjoy lower health care costs field and to discuss new approaches to health care. and fewer hospital admissions. The plan offers patients customized Topics covered in the inaugural issue care and goal-oriented health strategies range from the ethics of personalizing based on the results of a risk assessment treatment through genomic testing to dental health in indigenous Costa Rican performed by a physician. “Most people only go to the doctor communities. Steven Ko, a prospective freshman when they are sick,” he said. “The majority of people requiring health care and current senior at the North Carolihave chronic diseases, and the system is na School of Science and Mathematics, set up to treat those diseases, not to presaid the conference was an eye-opening vent them.” experience that helped him learn Snyderman worked with several Duke more about undergraduate involveundergraduates to form the Prospective ment at Duke. “I couldn’t be more proud of our unHealth Care Club, which organized Friday’s conference, in 2005. dergraduates taking [prospective healthAngela Munasque, president and care] on as a cause and bringing it to the founding member of the PHCC, said the community,” Snyderman said.

by

Monte Mitchell

newsreel cameraman wounded in the Pacific theater, Morton was back home when he inherited Grandfather Mountain from his grandfather. That year, 1952, he built the road to the top and the Mile-High Swinging Bridge. He went on to build a reputation as a promoter of state tourism, from helping save the battleship USS North Carolina, to fighting air polluters, to leading an effort to adopt a Ridge Law to protect mountain peaks. Along the way, he was constantly snapping images of events and characters and became a celebrity himself. “He was such a tough person a lot of people couldn’t fathom that he wouldn’t be around,” said Crae Morton. “As his grandson, I was somewhat in that category.” While many family businesses are ruined by disagreements after the death of a strong central figure, the Mortons say they are united in a vision for the future of GrandfatherMountain. “Ultimately we all have the same opinions for what really matters for the mountain, which is preserving it as a nature park and keeping it open to the public,” Crae Morton said. Every vote has been unanimous so far among the six family members on the board of directors, he and others said. Among the changes, Morton plans a research center at the base of the mountain. It would be independently operated by at least two well-known scientific organizations.

THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

GRANDFATHER MOUNTAIN, N.C. Crae Morton is walking toward the MileHigh Swinging Bridge when a visitor introduces himself. “Are you Hugh’s grandson?” says Jimmy Allen of Wake Forest. “We miss him.... Thank you for what you’re doing here.” “Thank you, I haven’t been here long enough to mess things up,” jokes Morton, 34, who is the grandson of Hugh Morton, the name most associated with Grandfather Mountainfor more than 50 years. They share a name—Crae is Hugh McCrae Morton III—and they worked together starting in 2003. His grandfather appointed Crae president in 2005. “It was a difficult day for him, less to do with me than with the passing of the baton,” Morton said. “Although, let me tell you, my title was president, but while Hugh Morton was alive this was his mountain and he ran things.” When Hugh Morton died of cancer last June at 85, he left behind a legacy in more than 4,000 acres of conservation easements that will forever protect Grandfather Mountain from development. Still, with spring marking the start of the 55th season at GrandfatherMountain as a tourist attraction, his family is making its mark with changes to advance the park’s reputation as a science and research center. Hugh Morton was a North Carolina legend, on the order ofAndy Griffith or Dean Smith. A decorated World War II combat

graduate student Appreciation weete Featured events

Monday, April For more events go to

2

-

>

Tuesday, April 3 2:30-4:00 pm Blackboard for Graduate Student Instructors, Registration required at http://cit.duke.edu/events/eventsreg.do 023 Bostock Library (http://map.duke.edu/?bid=77o4)

Movuiay. April 2 5:00 6:30 pm Social Transformation in Durham: Women & the Black Freedom Movement Christina Greene, Graduate School Alumna and University of Wisconsin Professor Room 0012 Westbrook -

8:00 9:00 pm -

Caffeine, Energy Drinks, and Soda: How do these affect your sleep and well-being? McClendon 5 (http://map.duke.edu/?bid=779s)

Tuesday. April 3 9:00 am-12:00 pm Intercultural Competency Workshop, Please register at http://tinyurl.com/25thsj International House (http://map.duke.edu/?bid=7l2s)

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U weete! Gofh/'c Bookstore, 20% off books, Show your ID Duke Stores, 20% off (some exclusions apply), Show your ID and ask for the discount before items are rung up

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Friday, April

All Day Chinese Cultural Exhibit by DCSSA 2nd Level, Bryan Center 12:00-1:00 pm Teaching Careers Panel Discussion and Lunch, Registration required at http://tinyuri.com/38nfe5 Von Canon A, Bryan Center

7:00-8:00 pm The Art of Massage; Get and Learn to

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3:30 5:30 pm Careers in Technology Transfer: Panel Discussion, Registration required at http://tinyurl.com/3c2b62 Room 201 Flowers -

7:00 pm PhD Comedian & Author of Piled Higher and Deeper (www.phdcomics.com), Dr. Jorge Cham, Ticket required, FREE at Graduate Student Affairs (120 Allen). Appreciation Week events, at the door Page Auditorium

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12:00-1:15 pm

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Managing a Research Lab- Discussion and Lunch, RSVP to tong.ren@duke.edu Sponsored by Women in Science and Engineering (WiSE) Room 203 Teer

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11:30 am-1:00 pm Using Audio to Improve Student Writing, Registration required at http://cit.duke.edu/events/eventsreg.do Breedlove Room, Perkins Library Contact towMLeLv&s,s.@iiuk£.eciu Lf you. have

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12:00-2:00 pm Language Lunch; Spanish and French, Registration required at http://tinyurl.com/2qpds6 Faculty Commons, 2nd floor West Union

Give!!

c~u>ns..

2007113

4:00 6:00 pm Family Fun Festival for graduate and professional students with children Gross Chemistry portico and lawn -


14IM0NDAY, APRIL

THE CHRONIGLI

2. 2007

Fall 2007 Undergraduate Genome Courses for consideration

biology 280S:

Genetic Engineering/Biotechnology Tu 2:50 PM

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bme 258L/CBB 222: Tian

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bme 265.04: Model You

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and Eng Gene Circuit '

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CLASSIFIEDS

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in Educational Research Application deadline is April 16. Open to juniors and seniors. A cash prize of $250 will be awarded for outstanding innovative or investigative research dealing

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April 13-15, 2007. Don’t miss your chance to reach alumni returning to Durham this weekend. Advertise in The Chronicle’s Alumni Weekend Issue. Call 919-684-3811 for more information or to place your display ad.

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SOPHOMORES AND JUNIORS! Make a difference in the lives of children. TEACH. Earn State Licensure during your undergraduate studies. For information about teaching: Grades K-6 contact Jan Riggsbee, jrigg@duke.edu 660-3077. Grades, 9-12 contact Susan Wynn, swynn@duke.edu 660-2403. Teaching is more than telling. Learning is more than

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GRADUATION ISSUE The Chronicles Graduation Issue will be published on Friday. May 11. This issue allows friends and family to congratulate graduating seniors. Go to dukechronicle.com/ babypics to place your congratulatory message or call 919-684-3811 for more information.

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The Duke Football team needs several people to film football practices in the spring and fall. NO EXPERIENCE NESESSARY. Good pay! Free meals, clothes, and possible travel to away games. Call Mitch at 668-5717

WORK IN THE ROCKIES Jobs on Wyoming guest ranch; cooks, housekeepers, children’s counselors and wait staff. June through September. Pays $5,000-$7,000 plus room, board and ranch activities. www.coolworks.com/ abara for information or 303-526-1508. 307.327.5454

POOL MANAGEMENT STAFF The Exchange Swimming Pool in Chapel Hill is looking for experienced staff to manage pool operations from mid-May through Labor Day. Current Certified Pool Operator and Red Cross Lifeguard and CPR certifications are required. Competitive salary. To apply for this position contact Kathy Agusta at 919-423-4214.

SUMMER HELP WANTED Neurobiology Lab Seeks Summer Session Student (Work Study Preferred) to perform lab tasks. Approx. 6-8 hrs/ week. Option exists for continued employment in the fall semester and beyond. For more information contact Evette at ellison@neuro.duke.edu or call; 919.681.6165

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SUMMER HELP Summer Child Care Help wanted for 3 active and outgoing girls 3,6, and 9. May to August. 40hrs / week $lO/ hr. Email Jim at jmewkill@nc.rr.com CAMP COUNSELORS Private Day Camp located on 100 acres of scenic countryside in northern Durham Co. is looking for counselors to teach Arts & Crafts, Swimming, Archery, Athletics, Canoeing and Music. Must be available Jun 4-Aug 3, 2007. Learn more at campriverlea.com. Call 919.732.2274 or email info@campriverlea.com

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SALES REP: AbD Serotec, one of the largest antibody manufacturers, seeks a candidate for our call center sales representative position in our Raleigh office. Biology and/or Immunology education required. Sales experience a plus. Strong, persuasive, verbal and written communicative skills. Must be able to work independently following established protocols to meet sales revenue quotas on a monthly basis. Solid computer skills with ms word, excel, etc.. Minimal travel required. Send resumes faxing #: 919-8783751. E-mail to parzillo@ab-direct. Com. LIFEGUARDS NEEDED Lifeguard(s) needed for up to 10-15 hours per week at the Lenox Baker Children’s Hospital therapeutic pool to guard for children and adults with, special needs. Person must be 16 years old and hold current lifeguard certification. Hours available immediately. Pay rate $lO.OO per hour. If interested, contact Jean Bridges at 684-4543. P/T SUMMER RESEARCH ASSISTANT opening with the Behavioral Medicine Program at DUMC to work on research study examining causes of hypertension. Duties include assisting with patient recruitment, data entry and blood screenings. pressure Summer session and work study students are encouraged to apply. Send cover letter" and resume to: INSlGHT@mc.duke.edu or fax to (919) 668-3018. 919.668.7872

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HOMES FOR SALE BEAUTIFUL HOME NEAR CAMPUS Beautiful home in Duke's recently built Trinity Heights Homesites. Less than 100 feet from Campus; Walk to shops and restaurants;Epworth Model Floor Plan located at 809/811 Berkeley Street. 2100 sq ft 3 BR / 2.5 BA; 9 foot ceilings; Bonus room; Large windows w/ sturdy 2-inch wooden blinds: Hardwood floors throughout main level; Huge front porch; Gas fireplace; Built-in, custom bookshelves in family room; Cat 5 cabling throughout; Full security.system; Fenced in back yard; Large, detached two car garage with IBR / IBA apartment above which rents for $7OO per month. Open to Duke employees $439,000; 656-9919 or email

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16IMONDAY, APRIL 2,

THE CHRONICLE

2007

More than 600 suspected of Katrina fraud by

Sharon Cohen

THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

An Illinois woman mourns her two young daughters, swept to their deaths in Hurricane Katrina’s floodwaters. It’s a tragic and terrifying story. It’s also a lie. An Alabama woman applies for disaster aid for hurricane damage. She files 28 claims for addresses in four states. It’s all a sham. Two California men help stage Internet auctions designed to help Katrina relief organizations. Those, too, are bogus. More than 18 months after Hurricane Katrina decimated the Gulf Coast, authorities are chipping away at a mountain of fraud cases that, by some estimates, involve thousands of people who bilked the federal government and charities out of hundreds of millions of dollars intended to aid storm victims. The full scope of Katrina fraud may never be known, but this much is clear: It stretches far beyond the Gulf Coast, like the hurricane evacuees themselves. So far, more than 600 people have been charged in federal cases in 22 states—from Florida to Oregon—and the District of Columbia. The frauds range in value from a few thousand dollars to more than $700,000. Complaints are still pouring in and several thousand possible cases are in the pipeline—enough work to keep authorities busy for five to eight years, maybe more. “The reason we’re seeing such widespread fraud is individuals were evacuated to all 50 states. Katrina was a national phenomenon,” says David Dugas, U.S. attorney in Baton Rouge, La., and directorof a command center that’s part of a special Hurricane Katrina FraudTaskForce. “Everybody

CHAD CUSTER/THE CHRONICLE

Thousands of people have allegedly made fraudlent claims regarding damage inflicted by Hurricane Katrina. knew what was going on. Therefore, criminals knew what was going on.” Major disasters and fraud frequendy go hand in hand. It happened after the Sept, -11 terrorist attacks and Hurricane Andrew's devastating sweep through Florida in 1992. People tried to cash in, falsely claiming to be victims. After Katrina, the same thing happened; Disaster aid was sent to inmates

who applied from prison and to people who claimed property damage and provided addresses of vacant lots or cemeteries, among many abuses documented in Goveminent Accountability Office reports. “We found several dozen schemes, There are probably a lot more out there,” says Gregory Kutz, a GAO investigator who has testified about Katrina fraud six times on Capitol Hill. “The real clever ones

cover their trail and disappear and they’ll never be caught.” GAO undercover investigators demonstrated how easy it was to cheat the system: Using phony names, Social Security numbers and addresses of damaged residences—such as the 13th floor of a two-story, building—they still received several checks. While many people filed bogus claims, the growing roster of the accused goes beyond the usual con artists. It includes employees of the Federal Emergency Management Agency and the Army Corps of Engineers, other public officials, business owners, even temporary workers for the Red Cross. “You can find criminals in every walk of life and that’s what we're seeing here,” Dugas says. The GAO has referred more than 22,000 potential cases of fraud to the Katrina task force, though Dugas says the majority probably will not pan out. In a recent audit, the GAO also concluded FEMA had recovered less than 1 percent of some $1 billion investigators claim was fraudulent aid. FEMA believes the fraud total may be inflated but says it won’t have an estimate until later this year. Kutz’s response: “I don’t think they know the magnitude of the problem.” FEMA also says the relative scope ofKatrina fraud isn’t that unusual. “I don’t think the numbers are proportionally too far away from what we normally experience in a disaster,” says David Garratt, FEMA’s acting recovery director. “It’s extraordinary only in terms of the size of the population that was affected.”

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MONDAY, APRIL 2, 2007 |l7

THE CHRONICLE

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18IM0NDAY, APRIL 2,

THE CHRONICLE

2007

Giordano for DSG executive vice president executive vice presi- of community interaction, he dent runs Duke Student led the Young Trustee NomiGovernment general nating Committee and the Inbody meetings and casts the terCommunity Council. Both deciding vote in case of a tie. candidates have been a part of DSG’s Executive The EVP is conBoard. Both have cerned mostly editorial internal run meetings in with DSG matters, like maintaining their respective positions. Giordano’s experience, bylaws, aiding the legislative however, is better suited to the and new senprocess orienting EVP position. Heading a fiators to their positions. This year’s candidates for nance committee is very the position, sophomores straightforward, whereas guiding the entire DSG Senate reAlex Crable and Jordan Giordano, both have experience quires a more open style that students to bring encourages DSG, which is vital working in ideas forward to be discussed. to the position. Crable has been a DSG senAlthough Crable has the more ator as well as a member and polished personality, Giordano is more approachable. the chair of the Student OrgaGiordano’s ideas are far sunization Finance Committee. Giordano was president of perior to Crable’s often cliched Randolph Dormitory last year, and unrealistic platform. Crable and this year, as vice president calls for all lectures and past

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LETTERS POLICY The Chronicle welcomes submissions in the form oflet-

Letters should not exceed 325 words. The Chronicle will not publish anonymous or form letters or letters that are promotional in nature. The Chronicle reserves the right to edit letters and guest columns for length, clarity and style and the right to withhold letters based on the discretion of the editorial page editor.

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RYAN MCCARTNEY,Editor ANDREW YAFFE, ManagingEditor IZA WOJCIECHOWSKA, News Editor ADAM EAGLIN, University Editor KATHERINE MACILWAINE, University Editor SEYWARDDARBY, Editorial Page Editor GREG BEATON, Sports Editor JIANGHAI HO, Photography Editor JONATHAN ANGiER, General Manager Online Editor SHREYA RAO, City & State Editor CAROLINA ASTIGARRAGA, Health & Science Editor VICTORIA WARD, City & State Editor MfCHAEL MOORE, Sports Managing Editor JASTEN MCGOWAN, Health & Science Editor LEXI RICHARDS, Recess Editor WEIYI TAN, Sports Photography Editor BAISHIWU, Recess Design Editor ALEX WARR, Recess Managing Editor SARAH KWAK, TowerviewEditor ALEX FANAROFF, Towerview Editor MICHAEL CHANG, Towerview Photography Editor EMILY ROTBERG, Towerview Managing Editor MIKE VAN PELT, Supplements Editor ALEX BROWN, TowerviewManaging Photo Editor DAVID GRAHAM, Wire Editor WENJIA ZHANG, Wire Editor IREM MERTOL, Recess Photography Editor JARED MUELLER, Editorial Page Managing Editor VARUN LELLA, Recess Online Editor MEG BOURDILLON, Senior Editor MINGYANG LIU, Senior fd/Yor HOLLEY HORRELL, SeniorEditor PATRICK BYRNES, Sports SeniorEditor ASHLEY DEAN, SeniorEditor BARBARA STARBUCK, Production Manager LAUREN KOBYLARZ, Sports Senior Editor MARY WEAVER, Operations Manager YU-HSIEN HUANG, Supplements Coordinator STEPHANIE RISBON, Administrative Coordinator NALINI AKOLEKAR, University Ad Sales Manager DAWN HALL, Chapel Hill Ad Sales Manager MONICA FRANKLIN, Durham Ad Sales Manager STEVE VERES,

TheChronicleis published by the Duke Student Publishing Company, Inc., a non-profit corporation independent of Duke University. The opinions expfessed in this newspaper are not necessarily those of Duke University, its students, faculty, staff, administration or trustees. Unsigned editorials represent the majority view of the editorialboard. Columns, letters and cartoons represent the views of the authors. To regch 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

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collection of student opinions and to lobby on behalf of students in the wake of the CC3 report. His idea to split the VP of Q and the ICC president into two positions is also a good one, although it needs to be fleshed out more. Giordano knows better than anyone the responsibilities of the two positions, so he should be able to figure out the correct way to implement the change. Giordano’s ideas for improving the DSG Senate, although clearly a reaction to DSG’s operations this year, are insightful and useful. Giordano wants to help DSG senators grow into candidates for Executive Board positions, and his plans to mentor them, provide direction and keep them involved all further this goal. He calls for a. retreat to

Hillel endorses DSG candidates The Duke Hillel wishes to endorse the following candidates for the positions of president, executive vice president and community interaction. Based on a strong record with Duke Student-Governmentand an active role in multiple cultural groups, we endorse junior Kristin Pfeiffer for president Sophomore Jordan Giordano’s success as VP of community interaction, along with his knowledge of the workings ofDSG and ideas about improving the overall makeup of the body, make him the best candidate for executive vice president Freshman Lee Strasburger’s unique ideas for strengthening the Intercommunity Council and improving its functions make him our choice for VP of community interaction. After meeting with all of the qualified candidates, we believe thatthese individuals will invigorate DSG with new ideas and strong leadership. The decisions were difficult, and we thank all of the candidates for their time. Good luck!

—Will Jones, a junior at the University of South Carolina, on this past Saturday’s raucous Carolina Cup, which took place in Camden, S.C., and was attended by approximately 100. See story page 3.

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.

to facilitate Provost Peter Lange’s

teach senators how to do their jobs by telling them who the top administrators are in their

areas, explaining parliamentary procedure and instructing them abouthow to write legislation. He also wants to throw a barbecue at which senators can meet and chat with administrators. In addition, Giordano suggests assigning returning senators to mentor new members. Giordano also recognizes that DSG has had an adversarial relationship with other student groups, and he makes a point of saying that he would reach out to the Union and Campus Council, among other organizations. He has the ideas, the background and the motivation to excel as EVP. The Chronicle formally endorses Jordan Giordano for executive vice president.

letterstotheeditor

ontlerecord I came to a tradition

exams to be posted online, but professors will not do that simply because DSG asks them to. A University calendar, off-campus bus routes and supporting tailgate are promises made every election season, and it’s difficult to see Crable, who has experience almost solely in finance, fulfilling them. Crable’s platform also shows a lack of initiative. Many of his planks would be implemented solely online; an online database of lectures and exams, an online list of academic resources and an online University calendar, just to name a few. A more proactive platform would better serve Crable. Giordano recognizes the importance of focusing on the Campus Culture Initiative to bring about practical changes. He correctly identifies the need

letics and campus services. For the position of vice president of student affairs the BSA hereby endorses sophomore Madison Li for her innovative ideas on improving the interaction of students and faculty and utilizing the spaces currendy on campus to enhance social life. We have also chosen to support sophomore Jordan Giordano in his bid for the office of executive vice president We felt both EVP candidates were extremely qualified and could offer great insight in the role; however, we determined that Giordano was more focused on engaging Duke students in the business of the DSG, ultimately creating more transparency in the organization. Lastly, the BSA formally endorses junior Paul Slattery for DSG president because ofhis proven track record in advocating on behalfof students, his expansive knowledge of current University policy and his specific ideas for implementing change. Simone Randolph

Trinity’oB

EUssaLemer Trinity ’OB President, Duke Hillel Pinwheel offenders despicable To the students who destroyed the pinwheel project the other night: I am disgusted to call you my peers. Your behavior represents the disrespect, sense of entidement and arrogance that characterizes far too many people on this campus. I watched from my window a few days ago as the students from the Women’s Center and other organizations set up the pinwheels over the course of several hours. And I screamed at you from my window as you destroyed their work in a matter of seconds. I can’t remember the last time I’ve been so angry... I was shaking. Don’t you know what these pinwheels mean to hundreds of Duke women? To me? If you DO know what the pinwheels mean (and I feel sure that you do), than you must feel ashamed. If you do not know, then let me tell you. Think of four women in your life: your mom, your girlfriend, you sister and your friend. One of these four women will/ has been sexually assaulted in their lifetime. Is that not clear enough?

Jennifer Sitter Trinity ’O7

BSA endorses DSG candidates The Black Student Alliance has chosen not to endorse any candidates running for the respective positions of vice president of community interaction and of vice president of academic affairs due to significant attachment to candidates running for these offices, and the inherent conflict of interest that would ensue. Moreover, the organization endorses no candidate for the office of vice president ofath-

President, Black Student Alliance

DSG elections need rethinking Every year I see the same thing. People run for Duke Student Government, they create these “platforms” and make many promises to the student body. Facebook groups are created, fliers made and signs hung. You see juniorElliott Wolf walk around in a suit. Why? The promises are rarely fulfilled, the fliers litter the campus, making some poor employee spend hours cleaning them up, and although Wolf looks dapper, does he really do anything? What we need is a grassroots campaign that eases up on the promises and the wasteful abuse of fliers, basing its success purely on charisma. A perfect example of this occurred two years ago at N.C. State. The Pirate Captain, as the student referred to himself, walked around campus everyday dressed as a pirate, complete with eye patch and parrot He simply let the wacldness of his idea be the campaign, and he took the election by storm. Most people in the studentgovernment community criticized his actions as making too much of a joke out of the organization. The voters disagreed because they, like many of us at Duke, are sick of the futility of student government. Now I am not saying everyone running for DSG should dress up as a pirate, ninja, wench or other recycled Halloween costume, hut ultimately, we need something new. No more promises you don’t intend to keep, and somebody please clean up those fliers. If you post 2,000 fliers, you and no one else should have to clean them up. Didn’t your mothers teach you to clean up after yourselves? .

Daniel Freedman Trinity ’OB


THE

commentaries

CHRONICLE

The best man?

MONDAY, APRIL 2,

Tailgate meets the real world WASHINGTON

loween. People—get this—did things other than drink. There were basketball hoops set up, while some local prep school kids tossed around a lacrosse ball. “Don’t go to law school,” a 50-something lawyer told us while sipping on Yuengling. Like much of the older crowd there, he was wearing a “Disbar Nifong” sweatshirt. The Duke Club of Washington had originally anticiWould there be alcohol at all? The bad news, sort of, pated a mere 50 faithful showing up. Instead, they sold is that there were no giant out of tickets three times, and about 200 came. There would have probably been more, too, if it hadn’t been panda suits, no superhero outfits, no Dean Sue walkfreezing out. The Georgetown team walked right through the tailing around with bottles'of water. No one dumped gate, and we booed them. beer on their buddy’s At halftime, when Duke was down two goals, most of head, and it didn’t look us were still at the tailgate, chugging down six-packs and like anyone had to puke. avoiding the mud. By the time we ambled over, you could gerst andrew just about feel the energy for, the rest of the game. We I, roommate and ridMy courage tied, then we went up a goal, then two—and the game ing the subway in a Budfinished, with a handful of sad, soggy Georgetown fans weiser T-shirt and a wifebeater, were the only ones with giant aviator glasses, which muttering about strippers. Tailgate in D.C. was a beautiful throwback: a pre-game we soon discarded. The good news: It was a whole lot better than all that. that truly was pre-game. Everyone eventually came out and And maybe some Saturday at Duke, they’ll bring back cheered the Duke men on—even if there were only two minutes left. No one good clean fun again. Imagine a place stumbled back home to where old Mends pass out for the rest of could relax and share the day, as football tailDuke students would do well to heed the beer and barbecue gaters at Duke are wont Georgetown tailgate’s most important lesson: to do. On the contrary, without having to binge. Duke’s myriad You don’t have to kill yourself to have a good most of the young alums went back for walls of social segregatime. It would be amazing to see current Duke more, laughing in the tion came tumbling down. For once, we lot for another students treat moderate drinking, rather than parking hour. Then everyone weren’t in X ffat or Y the extreme kind, as a rite of passage. made a day of it down sorority—we were just “Duke.” And alums at the Hawk and Dove, Old Glory and the rest had come from as far of the local attractions. as away Richmond, We’ve all grown up a lot in the past year, and maybe we Raleigh, even Durham, just to be there Having missed the on-campus football tailgates this realized something most of us never thought we’d have to year, I can’t say if the scene has changed or not from years say; Life is too much fun to spend incapacitated. If Duke past. But if it’s the same”demolition derby as before, Duke ever comes back to town, the D.C. crowd will be there, just students would do well to heed the Georgetown tailgate’s like last weekend. most important lesson: You don’t have to kill yourself to The only thing missing was Bojangles. have a good time. It wouldbe amazing to see current Duke Andrew Gerst, former managing editor of Toweruiew, graduatstudents treat moderate drinking, rather than the extreme edfrom Duke in 2006 and now lives and works in Washington, kind, as a rite of passage. For once, the spirit \ps more Fourth of July than Hal- D.C. His column runs every other Monday. No one quite knew what to ex-

I’ve

been to a lot of Duke Student Government meetings this year, and let me tell you, they are not exacdy the highlight ofmy week. Don’t get me wrong, I find DSG very intriguing. But the meetings themselves are, well, boring. I will note, however, that the meetings could be a lot worse. Luckily, Executive Vice President Joe Fore, a senior, knows what’s up. He runs the meetings smoothly and efficiently. And I honesdy think he sleeps with a copy of Robert’s Rules of Order under his pillow. He’s just plain good at what he does. That being said, Tuesday marks this year’s DSG elections, and I’m optimistic for next year. Sophomores Alex Crable and Jordan Giordano are vying for EVP, and in light ofFore’s example of allie vergotz down and dirty with dsg «re leadership, I think this is the one match-up of all the races that every student should look at most seriously. Crable and Giordanohave both been assets to DSG this year, and I find it a shame that one will have to lose this race. Both are experienced in DSG. Giordano currently holds the position of vice president of community interaction, while Crable serves as the chair of the Student Organization Finance Committee. Both are well-spoken. I’ve had the opportunity to speak with each of them one-on-one and to listen to them address the entire Senate; they handle both situations with poise and power. Both are driven. Crable and Giordano have both accomplished a lot this year in DSG. Crable can boast of the University keg fund, while Giordano successfully chaired the Young Trustee Nominating Committee. I honesdy believe either candidate could hold this position next year and do great things for DSG. The student body just needs to consider what those great things will be. Giordano is focused on improving DSG as a whole by shifting some responsibilities from the president, updating the bylaws and holding a constitutional convention to revise DSG’s governing document. He also hopes to be a great help to the other vice presidents, a goal he has because he has served on two offour DSG committees and held a vice presidential position himself. Lasdy, he hopes to tackle the Campus Culture Initiative report by gathering opinions from anyone and everyone and sharing them in open conversations with Provost Peter Lange. Crable plans to take a different approach to the position. First, he hopes to improve the DSG structure through greater distribution and collection of information, including polling data on how students feel about DSG actions. He also aims to improve student life both through supporting the performing arts and creating a “functional University calendar” complete with opt-in RSS feeds. Finally, he wants students to “have a voice in issues that will affect us in years to come,” highlighting the CGI and Central Campus. Considering my respect for Fore, I asked each candidate individually that single aspect of the way Fore served they would change. Surprisingly, they both responded in the same way; both desire to push more personal projects and legislation. Crable and Giordano each added that he had respect for his opponent, and they both enjoy joking with each other as they go through the campaigning process. Crable even noted that he and Giordano texted back-and-forth last Wednesday morning about whose Chronicle photo was more embarrassing. These candidates both bring strong leadership to the table and a sense ofhumor to boot. I can honestly say as I write this column that yesterday I had every intention of voting for Crable, today, for Giordano, and I couldn’t tell you whose side I’ll be on come tomorrow. I strongly encourage the student body to do its research for this position. I feel that for most of the other positions, there is at least one candidate who stands out above the rest, but for this one, it’s a crapshoot. I have no doubt either of these men will get done what he aims to or at the very least, give it his all. Take the time to decide which platform is more reflective of what you want to see on campus. Each candidate has a very informative website and a Facebook group. Before you vote, use all that time you already spend on Facebook to actually accomplish something. Give each candidate the time and consideration he deserves. May the best man win.

f

Allie Vergotz is a Trinity freshman. Her column runs every other Monday.

200711 9

pect in a cold parking lot outside the McDonough Gymnasium at Georgetown last Saturday morning. The Duke men’s lacrosse team was coming to town, and anticipation seeped through the air. Would it be like the Blue Zone again? Would it be all old people?

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SPORTSWRAP

MONDAY, APRIL 2,2007

WOMEN'S BASKETBALL

Coach G heads for Cleveland without decision by

Ben Cohen

Since interviewing last week for the vaposition at Texas, Goestenkors has not given any public indication whether she wall remain in Durham or move to Austin. The Dallas Morning News reported Thursday that Texas of» fered Goestenkors $BOO,OOO to become the Longhorns’ next coach. Goestenkors’ salary is not public information, but she makes less than $530,000 based on Duke’s most recent tax filings. In Austin, she toured the basketball facilities and spoke with several administrators, including Texas women’s athletics director Chris Plonsky. Goestenkors and Plonsky have worked together for 10 years on Team USA business. While in Texas, Goestenkors did not meet with any current Longhorn players. Since leaving for the interview, she has not met with the current Duke team, several Blue Devils said Thursday at the rally. She has exchanged text messages with some players—including Lindsey Harding, who was alsq in Cleveland this weekend to accept national awards—but she has not given the players any indication of which way she is leaning. Duke’s coach of 15 years returned to North Carolina Thursday but did not attend a support rally held that evening outside her office in the Schwartz-Butters cant head coaching

THE CHRONICLE"

After meeting Friday morning with Director of Athletics Joe Alieva, Duke head coach Gail Goestenkors flew to Cleveland without deciding where she will coach next season. A source familiar with the discussions said Goestenkors’ meeting with Alieva was productive, but there is still no firm timetable for a decision. “I would like to make the decision as soon as possible just for peace ofmind and peace of heart,” Goestenkors said Saturday in Cleveland. “Texas is a job that I always thought was one of the best jobs in the country, and so that was very appealing.” Goestenkors traveled to Cleveland for the festivities surrounding the 2007 Final Four. On Saturday, she accepted the Associated Press Coach of the Year award, and on Monday she will receive the same recognition from the Women’s Basketball Coaches Association. She will be met Monday by a series of supportive measures taken by the Duke community to convince her to remain at the helm of the Blue Devils. Alieva and a contingent of boosters will be in attendance as Goestenkors accepts the WBCA award. Goestenkors will also be greeted in the Cleveland Plain-Dealer with a fullpage advertisement urging her to stay at Duke. The ad was furnished by the “Friends of Duke Women’s Basketball,” the same group that paid for a two-page ad in The Chronicle last Thursday and a one-page ad Friday.

'

SARA

GUERRERO/THECHRONICLE

building. After finishing her business in Cleveland,

Duke is still awaiting a decision from Gail Goestenkors on where she will coach next season—Duke or Texas.

Goestenkors’ timetableis still constricted, as she leaves for Italy Friday to resume her assistant coaching duties for Team USA. “[Goestenkors has] met with our athletic director before she went into regionals,”

Jackie Silar, associate athletics director and Duke’s senior women’s administrator, told the Durham Herald-Sun. “They talked extensively on the vision they have for

women’s athletics and especially for women’s basketball at Duke. They’ve impressed upon her how much they want her to remain at Duke and coach at Duke.”

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All Events Located in Room 240, John Hope Franklin Center Thursday, April 5 10:00am-12:00pm: LEGACIES IN CONTEXT Speakers; Kevin Reinhart, Dartmouth University

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Friday, April 6th 9:ooam-12:30pm: TOWARDS NEW NORMATIVES Speakers: Mohammad Fadel, University of Toronto Hina Azam, University of Texas, Austin Laury Silvers, Skidmore College For a complete listing ofindividual speaker titles or for further information contact kelli.anderson@duke.edu or kimberly.soliman@duke.edu


MONDAY, APRIL 2,20071

SPORTSWRAP

MEN'S TENNIS

Blue Devils pull out 2 wins by

over

Gabe Starosta

THE CHRONICLE

Duke extended its unbeaten home record to 7-0 over the weekend, recording hard-earned victories against conference rivals Florida State and Miami Friday and Sunday, respectively. The No. 21 Blue Devils (11-6, 4-1 in the ACC) jumped out MIAMI to an early lead DUKE 4 against the'No. 27 Seminoles (11-7, 3-4) Friday at AmFSU bier Tennis Stadi-, DUKE 5 um by winning \ _

hotly-contested

PETER

GEBHARD/THE CHRONICLE

Freshman Dylan Arnould won the decisive singles match for theBlue Devils Sunday against Miami.

doubles point. After the teams split the matches at the first and second seeds, Duke’s third seed of Peter Rodrigues and Kiril Dimitrov overcame FSU’s Jean-Yves Aubone and Bradley Mixson 8-6 to earn the point. In singles, Duke led throughout most of the afternoon after Joey Atas easily won his match in two quick sets, and Dimitrov fought his way to a 7-5, 7-6 win as the top seed to clinch the 5-2 victory for the Blue Devils. “I thought our guys were really competitive against a tough Florida State team,” head coach Jay Lapidus said. “We played every point with intensity and fire, and we were very happy to come away with the win.” Sunday’s match against the Hurricanes (9-9, 4-3) was a rematch of the two teams’ meeting in January’s Miami Invitational, in which the Hurricanes got the best of Duke in Coral Gables. On that occasion, Miami’s doubles performed stronger than the Blue Devils, but the Duke coaching staff was able to make some adjustments.

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“We had a lot of notes on them, but when we saw them down there in January, it was a chance to size up their strengths and weaknesses and put together a game plan,” Lapidus said. The match began at Ambler Tennis Stadium as well but was moved into the Sheffield Indoor Tennis Center early in singles play because of inclimate weather. At that point, the Blue Devils held a 1-0 lead thanks to a doubles victory by Dylan Arnould and Alex Stone. Once inside, Duke found itself in an extremely competitive match, and Miami’s Luigi D’Agord set the tone with an emphatic two-set win over the Blue Devils’ Atas. The dual match advanced to 3-3, and the only match still in progress involved fifth seed Amould and Miami’s Barnabas Carrega. Amould lost the first set 7-5, but came back to dominate the second, 6-1. In the deciding third set, Amould fought off two game points at 3-3, broke his opponent’s serve and did not lose another game on his way to a 63 clincher. The win earned the Blue Devils a 4-3 overall victory over the Hurricanes. “Dylan has come through three or four times now with the last match in the third set,” Lapidus said. “He is just a very good pressure player, and he’s able to raise the level when the time comes. But I think Dylan was certainly glad to go indoors, because the Miami guys aren’t as comfortable playing inside, and we were very used to it.” Duke will look to extend its four-game winning streak when it takes on Wake Forest Wednesday afternoon at Ambler. The match against the Demon Deacons will mark the fourth game of the team’s sixgame homestand.

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MONDAY, APRIL

SPORTSWRAP

2,2007

MEN'S LACROSSE

healthy transition offense that cleared 42 of 54 chances in the two games. Throughout their two weekend victories atKoskinen Stadium, theBlue Devils handled their opponents with ease, using strong defense to spark a

Offense dominates in 2 weekend victories by

John Taddei

THE CHRONICLE,

Leading up to this weekend, things had not been 20-of-23 against Bellarmine Co-captain Matt Danowski said the team has finaleasy for the Blue Devils ly started to show signs of adjusting to the style of Duke (8-2) had played four straight games decidplay head coach John Danowski has been pushing ed by two goals or less, pulling out a pair of hardand for all season. Georgefought victories over North Carolina “It’s taken a while for guys to get used to the new two losses to Cornell while tough suffering town system,” Matt Danowski said. “We’re starting to flow a and Loyola. The Blue Devils had a little more room to breathe little bit better now, feed off each other more, and this weekend and coasted to 12-6 and 18-9 victories you can see it just looks a little better.” Danowski became the 21st player in ACC history to over No. 12 Delaware (6-B) and Bellarmine (1-7) at reach 200 points Saturday, \yhen he fed Greer in front Koskinen Stadium. BELLARIVUNE | 9 Duke jumped out to a big of the net early in the first quarter for his second asDUKE 18 lead Friday against the Blue sist of the game have Hens, netting the first seven John Danowski said that as more teams sendson’s take on his scoring ability—sometimes of the contest to a keyed-in goals DELAWARE g. 8-1 lead into halftime. ing double teams and sliding excessively to slow the 12 DUKE It was more of the same senior’s prolific offensive output—he has seen Matt Saturday against the Knights, mold his game to fit what is best for the team. “Matt is becoming a more complete attackman,” as Zach Greer scored five first-half goals to give Duke Danowski said. “His vision is better, and guys are a 14t5 lead heading into the break. “We have a saying ‘early and often,’ and that’s what learning to play with him better. We’re asking [him] to play a different role than he played two years ago we did against Bellarmine and against Delaware,” defenseman Tony McDevitt said. “We jumped on them, and even last year, and the guys are learning how to and teams feel like they need to create then, and they play off of him also.” Matt Danowski’s adjustments were on display get out of their sync.” The Blue Devils dominated their two opponents’ this weekend, as the senior-scored just three goals defenses, registering a combined 99 shots in the two but tallied nine assists, four of which were to Greer, who leads the Blue Devils with 28 goals on' contests. At one point in Saturday’s game, Duke netthe season. ted three goals in a 37-second span, baffling a bewil‘You can see the passes were faster, and guys were dered Bellarmine defense. Duke’s defense also continued its solid play, holding the opponents to half of more confident with themselves and in what they were doing,” Danowski said. “We believe in each the Blue Devils’ offensive output in both games. has all other’s ability to help the team out.” looked as fluid as it Duke’s transition game •

®

SARA GUERRERO/THE

CHRONICLE

Matt Danowski's assist early in Saturday's game was the 200th point of his career, making him the 21st player in ACC history to reach that plateau.

season, as the Blue Devils successfully cleared every one of their 22 opportunities against Delaware and


MONDAY,

SPORTSWRAP

APRIL 2, 2007L 5

WOMEN'S LACROSSE

Sanford's sudden-death goal caps comeback by

David Ungvary THE CHRONICLE

Looking at the scoreboard at halftime, the Blue Devils probably would not have believed that their senior captain Leigh Jester would eventually call Saturday’s contest at Virginia the “most unbelievable lacrosse game” that she has ever been a part of. Down 10-5 to the No. 4 Cavaliers (9-2, 2-2 in the ACC) at the end of the first period, fifth-ranked Duke (-9-1, 2-1) found itself facing what seemed like an insurmountable DUKE deficit. NevertheVIRGINIA lis less, the Blue Devils rallied back from an emotionless start to secure an exhilarating 19-18 comeback win in triple overtime. With 13 seconds left in the third overtime, a sudden death period, a wide-open Rachel Sanford received a pass from Kristin Waagbo in front of the net and tucked away the game-winning goal. “The way we came back from such a deficit, and the way we finished off the game is something to really be proud of and really showed the kind of character that we have,” Waagbo said. “It was definitely one of the best and well-fought games I’ve ever played in.” The game went back and forth late in the second half, with each team answering the other’s offensive attack by dismanding the opposing defense. But with less than a minute left in regulation, Duke was down 18-17 and had all the pressure to score. With only 20 seconds remaining, junior Caroline Cryer found senior attacker Waagbo. for a game-tying goal—her sixth score bn the day—that would send the game into overtime. With the comeback completed, the Blue Devils took the game into their hands and controlled the contest through overtime. Over all three extra periods,

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Duke allowed the Cavaliers just one shot on net, compared to the Blue Devils’ nine. “At the end of the game [we were] running off of the emotion of us coming back,” Jester said. “It was sudden-death overtime, and we had the upper hand because we’d come back [when] we were down 10-5. We just had the mental edge.” The Blue Devils did not have that edge through the entire game, however. Duke has been plagued by slow starts recendy, and when Virginia jumped out to a 5-1 lead in the first 13 minutes of play,, it seemed as if the team’s seasonlong issue was again keeping it from getting into the game. “When things aren’t going your way, you have to show a lot of emotion and compete, and I don’t think we were doing that,” head coach Kerstin Kimel said. “The whole idea of playing with emotion and passion for lacrosse has been kind of a theme for us in the last week or so, and to come out and not do it in the first half was

really disappointing.” In the locker room following the dismal opening half, Duke captain Michelle Menser spoke to her team about its disappointing lackluster performance, hoping light a fire under her teammates. “Michelle really spoke with emotion and tried to get the team out of the firsthalf slump we were in,” said Sanford, a senior midfielder. “I think everyone realized that we weren’t out of the game yet.” In addition to Menser’s strong words, Kimel was proactive in deciding to replace starting goalkeeper Kim Imbesi with junior Reagan Bosch earlyin the second half. Jester credited Bosch’s back-to-back saves right after she was subbed-in for giving Duke’s offense time to gain some momentum. It was clear the Blue Devils responded to their captain’s speech as well as Kimel’s confidence in Bosch, tying the game 12-12 just more than 11 minutes into the second perito

WEIYITAN/THE CHRONICLE

Rachel Sanford's goal in thethird overtime period Saturday gave Duke the win over fourth-ranked Virginia. od. Six minutes later, Cryer pushed an unassisted goal into the net, giving the Bluje Devils their first lead of the contest. From that point on, Duke was able to stay with Virginia, but unable to put the game out of reach. The Blue Devils, however, had a physical advantage over the Cavaliers, who could not capitalize as Duke did on substitutions off the bench. “We were still playing with the mindset that Virginia only played 13 players, so we

had considerably more depth,” Sanford said. “We knew we weren’t as tired as they were, so I think that gave us a little bit of a mental edge.” Whatever the edge was, it was enough. After capping off the comeback on the road against a formidable ACC opponent, the Blue Devils will return home before preparing for their next trip—which includes a rematch against No. 1 Northwestern, which beat Duke in last year’s Final Four.

BASEBALL

Duke earns win over No. 1 FSU by

Stephen Allan THE CHRONICLE

After Friday’s blowout loss to No. 1 Florida State, it

appeared Duke could be headed for another long ACC

LEAH

BUESO/THE CHRONICLE

Coming off a week in which he won ACC Pitcher of the Week, Tony Bajoczkypitched theBlue Devils to an upset victory over top-ranked FSU.

weekend. It took only two pitches Friday for the Seminoles (292, 8-1 ACC) to smack a home run over the left field wall. Just one FSU later, Florida State scored inning DUKE five unearned runs on their way to a 15-3 beating of the Blue Devils (20-11, 2-10). FSU Head coach Sean McNally, DUKE however, knew that his players had the potential to upset the FSU Seminoles even though they had given up 18 hits and committed DUKE five errors in the series opener. “I told them that’s not Duke baseball,” McNally said. “[We] are a good team. It’d say a lot if we came back Saturday—win or lose—and just be sharp and concentrate and focus and be much better mentally and physically and fundamentally.” McNally looked to senior and Tallahassee, Fla. native Tony Bajoczky to turn in the upset victory. Bajoczky, who had just won ACC Pitcher of the Week and knew many of Florida State’s players, did not disappoint Saturday. Over six and two thirds innings, he held the Seminoles to just six hits and four runs, as Duke used a six-run second inning to pull off the 8-5 victory Saturday and handed Florida State its first loss of the ACC season. “[The win] gives a tangible belief that we’re improving every single day,” McNally said. “It gives our kids something to really grab onto. They can say, ‘We beat Florida State.’”

Over the course of the game, Bajoczky kept the Seminoles off balance, never letting them get comfortable. Bajoczky's pitching did not allow Florida State to score more than one run in any inning, a feat unmatched in Friday’s loss or Sunday’s 8-5 defeat. Bajoczky’s efforts, though, would have meant little if the Blue Devils could not swing their bats well. Duke had averaged just 2.9 runs per game in 10 ACC games up to that point. But in die second inning Saturday the Duke offense began to click and pile on runs. Junior Brett Bardes led off with a stand-up triple off the wall in center field to jumpstart the inning. After sophomore Tim Sherlock walked with one out, freshman Gabriel Saade lined the ball to (Tenter field to bring Bardes home. The Seminoles got another out, but the inning had just begun for the Blue Devils. Freshman Alexander Hassan swung on the first pitch he saw, driving the ball to the left field for two more runs. Senior Jonathan Anderson smacked another hit up the middle for a double, scoring Hassan. Junior Jimmy Gallagher and sophomore Nate Freiman recorded RBI hits, giving Duke a safe 6-1 lead and chasing Seminoles pitcher Michael Hyde, who entered the game with an 8-0 record. “I really expected it from the guys,” McNally said. “It gives us momentum going forward.” In the other two contests, the Blue Devils could not contain Seminoles lead-off hitter Tony Thomas Jr. Over the three games, Thomas sent five balls over the fence for home runs and drove in eight runs. Nevertheless, the win gives Dfcke confidence that it is going down the right path. “I wish we could have finished the job [Sunday], but it was pretty special to beat them,” McNally said.


SPORTSWRAP

6 I MONDAY, APRIL 2,2007

TRACK

&

FIELD

Four Blue Devils qualify for NCAAs by

David McMullen THE CHRONICLE

With three distance runners

qualifying for the NCAAs for the

SPECIAL TO THE CHRONICLE

In his 34 years at

Duke, Rod Myers served as a mentorto many Duke golfers, including All-American Ryan Blaum (above).

MYERS from page 9 program to national prominence, he also made it into a family. “Losing Rod is like losing a brother. Even more, it’s like losing a favorite brother,” women’s golf head coach Dan Brooks said. “His humor, his caring way, his ‘touch’ with all who knew him; he was the favorite brother in a huge and wonderful family that he created, simply .by being himself. Rod Myers has coached us all, on how to live our lives.” Myers helped to shape the games and lives of young golfers, and the success of his life’s work is evident in their accomplishments. Current PGA Tour member and former Duke golfer Joe Ogilvie attributed his ability to achieve both personally and professionally to the time he spent at Duke under the guid-

ance of Myers “I think the best coaches have the ability to mold their players into better men first and then make them better players second. Coach Myers had this ability,” Ogilvie said. “I matured and became a more complete person my four years under Coach and that translated into success both on and off the golf course.” The passing of Myers has not only deeply affected the Duke golf community but the national one as well—with everyone from coaches at other universities to officials in the nation’s most important golf associations mourning the loss of one of their own. Most agree that Myers set the standard when it came to how to run a college program. “If someone’s looking for a model of how academics, athletics and ethics can be melded together to integrate college sport into the overall college experi-

ence, one need only look at the manner in which Coach Myers

conducted himself and led the Duke men’s golf team,” USGA Executive Director David Fay said. “My life is richer for having known Rod Myers.” Myers is survived by his wife, Nancy, their three daughters— Kelly Elliott, Kathy McKinney and Kristen —and their five grandchildren. He also has left an indelible mark on the Duke golf program and all those who he taught and cared for. “This is a difficult time for everyone who loved Rod, but we have all been blessed by having known him,” interim head golf coach and close friend Brad Sparling said. “He made us all better people. The family that is Duke golf that Coach Myers created will move forward, we will continue to build on his legacy of greatness.”

won the 800-meter race with a time of 2:10.95 to qualify for the ECACs. Senior Kelly Reynolds came in first in the hammer throw, and her distance of 169’03” also qualified her for the ECACs. Junior Daina Pucurs won the javelin with a throw of 166 feet and six inches and senior Debra Vento won the high jump with a 5foot-lOjump. Both athletes qualified for the NCAAs East Regional for the second week in a row. Freshman Kate Van Burskirk won the 1,500-meter race widi a time of 4:27.15, which Ogilvie said was the fastest Duke freshman time ever to be clocked to qualify for the NCAA East Regional. For the men, senior Pat Parrish battled with Michigan’s Mike Dobmeier to come away with the 5,000-meter race win in a time of 15:07.33. The mens pole vaulters finished with the top five spots at the meet with senior Jonathan Fay leading the way.

first time at the Stanford Invitational and one at the UNC Invitational this weekend, Duke has recorded one of its most successful starts in program history. “Within the first two weeks of the outdoor season, we have already qualified for our most events ever,” head coach Norm Ogilvie said. At Stanford, senior Sally Meyerhoff and sophomore Maddie McKeever finished ninth and 14th, respectively, in the 10,000meter race in a meet that Ogilvie said attracted the best runners in the country trying to qualify for the NCAAs. The runners responded to the high level of competition with the third- and fifthfastest times in Duke’s history. MeyerhofTs time of 33:30.12 and McKeever’s time of 33:52.95 should qualify them for the NCAA Championships, Ogilvie said. Runners in the 10,000meter race qualify direcdy to the championships, bypassing the regional competition due to the grueling nature of the event. Also at Stanford, senior Elle Pishny placed 16th in the 5,000meter race with a time of 16:47.62 to qualify for the NCAA East Regional while lowering her personal best by 20 seconds. The Blue Devils’ field team found success closer to home in Chapel Hill. Freshman Alexa Revord bested her own Duke record she set last week in the discuss with a throw of 154’-06”. Her throw earned her second place at the meet and an ECAC qualifier. It was almost two feet longer than her Duke record throw at the Wake Forest Open last weekend, and she is only 20 centimeters shy LEAH BUESO/THE CHRONICLE of the NCAA East Regional qualiSophomore Maddie McKeever finished fying standard. Sophomore Michelle Seibert ninth in the 10,000-meterrace at Stanford.


MONDAY, APRIL 2,

SPORTSWRAP

sportsbriefs

20071 7

from staff reports

Women’s tennis drops two ACC matches Duke suffered a pair ofclose 4-3 road losses this weekend at No. 8 Clemson and No. 7 Georgia Tech. Duke was edged out by Clemson 4-3 at the Hoke Sloan Tennis Center Saturday. The Blue Devils could not find their doubles game and handed the three matches to the Tigers. In their first loss this season, senior Daniela Bercek and sophomore Melissa Mang were stopped by Ani Mijacika and Federica van Adrichem, 8-6. In singles play, Duke and Clemson split the matches 33, as Bercek, senior Tory Zawacki and freshman Amanda Granson clinched victories. In Sunday’s match, Duke had trouble in singles play against Georgia Tech at the Bill Moore Tennis Center. The Blue Devils were 2-4 in singles action, as Granson and senior Clelia Deltour were the only Duke players to record wins. Bercek and Mang rebounded from Saturday’s loss to defeat Whitney McCray and Kristi Miller, 9-8 (7-3).

Senior Kristin Cargill and freshman Elizabeth Plotkin fought back against Kirsten Flower and Tanyn Rudman 8-6 to give Duke the doubles point. But the deficitcreated by singles losses was too great and cost the Blue Devils’ the match.

Rowing team faces off in ACC-Big Ten Challenge The women’s rowing team competed in the ACC-Big Ten Challenge regatta Saturday at Lake Mondcello in Charlottesville, Va. The Blue Devils batded No. 2 Virginia, No. 4 Ohio State and No. 19 Michigan in a series of eight different faces in the morning and afternoon. In the closest race of the meet for the Duke squads, the second varsity right was edged-out by Michigan, which finished the race in 7:oB.7—just more than seven seconds faster than the Blue Devils. Duke will return to Charlottesville April 7 to compete against Central Florida and No. 17 Michigan State.

Parking & Transportation Services

Duke

University

CHRIS PIERCE/THE CHRONICLE

Even though the Blue Devils were unable to come away with a victory, freshman Amanda Granson won her singles match against Clemson.

For all breaking news, please visit

www.dukechronicle.com for updates

NOTICE OF A CITIZENS INFORMATIONAL WORKSHOP FOR THE PROPOSED CLOSURE OF SR 1980 (CHURCH STREET) AT-GRADE HIGHWAY/RAIL CROSSING ON THE NORFOLK SOUTHERN RAILROAD Durham County TIP Project No. Y-48058 The North Carolina Department of Transportation (NCDOT) will hold the above Citizens Informational Workshop on Tuesday, April 3, 2007 between the hours of 5:00 p.m. and 7:00 p.m. at the Morrisville Town Hall located at 100 Town Hall Drive, Morrisville. NCDOT representatives will be available in an informal setting to answer questions and receive comments about the proposed project. The opportunity to submit written comments or questions also will be provided. Interested citizens may attend at any time during the above mentioned hours. No formal presentation will be made.

This project proposes to close the SR 1980 (Church Street) at-grade highway/rail crossing, Crossing No. 734 748M, on the Norfolk Southern Railroad in Durham. The project also proposes to realign SR 1980 (Church Street) north of the railroad to connect with Hopson Road. The proposed closing of this crossing is part of an effort to reduce the number of redundant and/or unsafe rail-highway at-grade crossings nationwide.

Anyone desiring additional information may contact Nancy Horne, Engineering & Safety Branch, NCDOT Rail Division at 1556 Mail Service Center, Raleigh, NC 27699-1556, phone (919) 715-3686,- or email

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nhorne@dot.state.nc.us

NCDOT will provide auxiliary aids and services under the Americans with Disabilities Act for disabled persons who wish to participate in this workshop. Anyone requiring special services should contact Ms. Horne as early as possible so that arrangements can be made.

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