SPORTS A Happy Meal for Duke The Blue Devils feasted on a pair of over­ matched opponents to capture the Ronak THE CHRONICLE McDonald Classic title. SEE SPORTSWRAP Trinity Homes Housing Development Alaskan chill: Bearcats stun Duke This map, which includes the trees lhat will now be preserved, depicts Ihe most recent plans tor developing a vacant lot in Trinity Heights. No. 15 Cincinnati hands the Blue Devils their first loss of the season, 77-75

From staff and wire reports r r.-> "\ ANCHORAGE, Alaska — c ^ V Melvin Levett and the Cincin­ 3 nati Bearcats swung for the fences against the top-ranked •<• men's basketball team. With Levett capping a per­ ••• fectly executed "home run" play with a running dunk, the 15th- ranked Bearcats (4-0) upset the Blue Devils 77-75 on Satur­ Town House day night in the championship Parcel Town House game of the Great Alaska Eight units Parcel Shootout in Sullivan Arena. ^. ) v- six units -^ With three seconds left, Ryan Fletcher threw a three- East Campus quarter court pass to Kenyon SOURCE: OFFICE OF HEAL ESTATE ADMINISTRATIO__nN IB ELLINGER/TK. CHRONICLE Martin, who hit Levett in stride as he raced toward the Residents approve of new basket for the winning slam. The play is called 'home run,™ Levett said. "It just so housing development plan happened that it was a perfect throw by Ryan and a perfect pass by Kenyon." Residents of the Trinity Heights neighborhood adjacent to Duke coach Mike Krzyzews­ East Campus had something extra to be thankful for this year— ki agreed. the University's recently announced revisions to its housing de­ "They ran a great play," he velopment for Duke faculty and staff. said. "Levett just wasn't going Last Tuesday, when local residents and University officials to be denied on that. He was just a flash." TOURNAMENT MVP WILL AVERY applies defensive pressure on Cincinnati's met for the third time, administrators unveiled changes ad­ Melvin Levett. Levett later won Saturday's game on a dunk With one-second left. dressing the residents' three major concerns. Duke (5-1) nearly pulled off "I'm happy with what you guys have done," Wendy Goldstein, a a miracle of its own on the harder than we did for 40 min­ ment's outstanding player, led Berkley Street resident and vocal critic of earlier plans, told Duke final play. utes and were very deserving of Duke with 30 points, 19 in the officials at the meeting. The development will consist of more than tipped a long the win. final 20 minutes. 30 homes and town houses on a Duke-owned lot bordered by baseball pass from Shane Bat­ "In order to beat a Cincin­ "The award is really not im­ Markham Avenue and Green, Sedgefield and Berkley streets. tier to .Will Avery, who hit nati team like that, you're portant to me," Avery said. "I In the most notable change, the development's 14 town houses what would have been a going to have to play 40 min­ came down here to win a cham­ will now be built on the corner of Berkley and Markham streets. game-tying basket. But the of­ utes. They just wanted it a lit­ pionship and that was the most The town houses were originally planned for the corner of ficials correctly ruled that tle more than we did." important thing." Berkley and Green streets, which residents argued would bring Avery didn't get the shot off Levett led the Bearcats with The Blue Devils rallied from too many newcomers into a densely populated residential area. before the buzzer. 25 points, 14 of them in the sec­ a 19-point first-half deficit and Jeffrey Potter, the University's director of real estate ad­ "Congratulations to Cincin­ ond half. added 17 took their first lead since 11-10 ministration, said that because the town houses are still nati," Krzyzewski said. "I and Alvin Mitchell had 14, six on an Avery reverse lay-in with being designed, the number could increase by two or three thought they were the better in the last two minutes. 11:34 left. At that point, Duke See HOUSING on page 14 • team. Certainly they played Avery, selected the tourna­ See DUKE on page 4, SPORTSWRAP • Curriculum 2000: Three seniors test their schedules' compatibility Students matched their courseloads against requirements in the proposed curriculum • Three seniors as Illustration This story is the first in a 5-part series on the proposed Curriculum 2000. Tomorrow's story will examine how the new Trinity College curriculum might affect admissions. By RICHARD RUBIN so dropping classes into designations is an imprecise art. The Chronicle However, to make sure The Chronicle's classifica­ Right now, the Curriculum 2000 matrix is merely a tions fit the curriculum committee's intentions, Trin­ proposal, a conceptual "metaphor for the integrative na­ ity junior and committee member Julian Harris re­ ture of knowledge," as Curriculum Review Committee viewed the designations. Furthermore, future members call it. But what would it look like in practice? students will have an easier time satisfying require­ Seth Katz, John Snyder, For a sense of how the curriculum might affect ments because professors will design new courses to Political Science Biology students, The Chronicle interviewed three Trinity fit Curriculum 2000. Also, the task force on writing College seniors. These students—biology major John will not clarify that requirement until spring. Snyder wanted to try something new in his first se­ Snyder, English major AHie Fass and political science For the purposes of this story, courses which involved mester at the University. So he signed up for German major Seth Katz—placed their four years' worth of a substantial amount of writing, in which the professor 1. By the end ofthe term, however, he was so disen­ courses into the matrix to see where their classes talked about writing and in which pieces were revised chanted with the class and the subject that he elect­ would fit and in which categories they would fall and resubmitted were counted as writing courses. ed not to continue. Foreign language became his short. The three found that the new curriculum would skipped area of knowledge. not seriously alter their course of studies. "It's not that demanding" Had Snyder entered the University under Cur­ There are some limitations to the profiles below. Profes­ riculum 2000, he would have needed two more Ger- sors have not yet reclassified their courses to fit the matrix, Like many students, senior biology major John See CURRICULUM on page 15 »»

- PROFESSOR RECALLS EXPERIENCE WITH NAFTA SEE PAGE 4 > STUDY RECOMMENDS SHORTER HOSPITAL STAYS SEE PAGE . THE CHRONICLE • PAGE 2 WORLD & NATIONAL MONDAY, NOVEMBER 30,1998 NEWSFILE Clinton seeks increased health coverage FROM WIRE REPORTS Part of Clinton's budget will include coverage for working people with disabilities •P Swiss voters reject plan to legalize marijuana Bv ROBERT PEAR Yesterday, Swiss voters decisively defeated a radical surance coverage they receive ability is strict; people qualify for Y Times News Service measure to legalize marijuana as well as heroin and through Medicaid and Medicare. benefits only if they are so disabled cocaine, turning aside arguments that a government- WASHINGTON — As part of Many people with disabilities they cannot engage in any "sub­ managed narcotics network would curb drug-related his budget for the coining year, caused by severe injuries and stantial gainful activity." crime. The proposal would have turned Switzerland into President Bill Clinton will propose chronic illnesses say they could The number of people receiving a virtual free-drugs zone, with any resident over 18 years expanding Medicaid and Medicare work, thanks to advances in medi­ disability benefits has risen old able to buy narcotics at state-approved pharmacies, to allow tens of thousands of people cine and medical technology, but do sharply in recent years—60 per­ after consulting a doctor. Nearly 74 percent of voters with disabilities to retain their not do so because they want to keep cent in the last decade. People are rejected the initiative, which had been expected to fail, health benefits when they return to their medical benefits under the qualifying for benefits at younger but not to such an overwhelming extent. work, administration officials say. two government health programs. ages and staying on the rolls Under current law, many of Eight million disabled people of longer than in the past. Federal -Met Life will pursue stock conversion plan these people must, in effect, choose working age receive more than $50 officials have concluded that they Metropolitan Life Insurance Co., one of the country's between working and keeping their billion a year in cash benefits in the must find ways to get more people biggest insurers, said Sunday that it was taking the first health insurance coverage. If they form of Social Security and Supple­ back to work. steps toward reorganizing in a way that would turn it take jobs and earn any significant mental Security Income payments. The president's proposals would into a stock-based corporation and provide a windfall of amounts of money, they jeopardize Fewer than 1 percent of them re­ help people with HIV, the virus as much as $14 billion for its policy-holders. The their disability benefits and the in­ turn to work. The definition of dis­ SeeBUDGETonpagel3»- money—profits that have accumulated for decades—will be shared, according to a complex formula, by the mutu­ al company's 12 million life insurance policy-holders, Palestinian aid could reach $900 million who are its formal owners. By PHILIP SHENON tion of anonymity, said last week. "But I can tell you N.Y. Times News Service that we do plan to substantially increase the amount , Israelis, Palestinians disagree over prisoners WASHINGTON — The United States will of assistance that we will provide for this next five- A meeting between Israeli and Palestinian negotiators on pledge hundreds of millions of dollars in aid to the year period." carrying out their latest accord ended in a dispute Sunday Palestinians this week and is pressing other The conference will be hosted by Secretary of State over Israel's insistence on freeing common criminals as wealthy nations to dramatically increase economic Madeleine Albright, and will be attended by President part of the prisoner releases required by the agreement. assistance to encourage the Palestinians to stick to Clinton; Yasser Arafat, the Palestinian leader, and the Under the Israeli-Palestinian accord reached last month the peace process with Israel, senior Clinton ad­ foreign ministers of Saudi Arabia, Egypt and other with U.S. mediation at Wye River, Md., Israel agreed to a ministration officials said. Arab nations. phased release of 750 Palestinian prisoners. But out of 250 The new American aid package, to be announced Mon­ prisoners released this month, 150 were common crimi­ "We'd like to see if we can do better" than in 1993, nals and other offenders, including car thieves and labor­ day at a one-day international donors' conference here, the State Department official said. "One way toun ­ ers caught in Israel without permits. could total as much as $900 million over the next five derpin peace and to build a constituency of peace is to years, officials said. In all, they hope the conference will make certain that people are better off." TODAY'S FORECAST raise $2.3 billion for the Palestinians, the amount pledged The Israeli foreign minister, Ariel Sharon, will not at the last major donors' conference in October 1993, attend the conference because of what American offi­ SUNNY "Don't get your knickers in a knot, notli- shortly after the Oslo peace accords. cials described as domestic political turmoil. The Is­ i- ing is solved, and it just makes you walk High: 7 "I'm not going to tell you precisely what we'll pledge raeli team will be led instead by the director general of funny." 4J because we're still in consultations with Congress," a the foreign ministry, Eytan Bentsur. —Kaltiryn Carpenter senior State Department official, speaking on condi­ See AID on page 13 9" Our Holiday Gift To You... Off All Frames With purchase of lenses. Our complete inventory of Find the cure in our frames is now 50% off. big, bold butterflies Hundreds of styles to choose from, including fashion and for the garden! designer lines. • Offer only available with purchase ol lenses. Will not rust or migrate. Offer excludes non-prescription sunglasses. • No other discounts, coupon, or insurance plans apply. Offer good 11 /23/98 thru 12/19/98 EYECARE One Hour Service © SUPER OPTICS Walk-Ins Welcome SI H.____! Duke Eye Center South Square Mall Homestead Market Northgate Mall ^HHtVi 684-4012 493-3668 544-3937 286-7732 626B NINTH ST. • DURHAM • UPPER LEVEL • BRUEGGER'S BAGEL BUILDING M-F 9-5 M-F 9-9, Sat 9-6 M-F 9-6, Sat 9-5 M-Th 9-8, F-Sat 9-6 M-T-W-SAT, 10-6 »TH-F 10-8 • SUN 11-4 • 286-5112 MONDAY, NOVEMBER 30,1998 THE CHRONICLE UNC-Chapel Hill considers expanding enrollment by 6,000 funding has been secured and all in­ frastructure is sufficient for the larg­ "The trustees felt like we had an obligation to help educate As the children of baby-boomers er student body. begin graduating high school, the He mentioned that the crunch at the people of this state." University of North Carolina at the beginning of this year, when Chapel Hill is bracing ftfr the impend­ some freshmen were temporarily RICHARD STEVENS, CHAIR OF THE UNIVERSITY OF NORTH CAROLINA BOARD OF TRUSTEES, ON ing boom in North Carolina's college- housed in commons rooms, was only ITS INTEREST IN INCREASING ENROLLMENT IN UNC SCHOOLS age population. a temporary problem; It is expected Pending approval from the North that many students will not remain Carolina General Assembly and suffi­ through the year, and, like this year, add amenities, such as stores and 2000, said Pedersen, but "if UNC em­ cient funding, UNC-Chapel Hill will en­ sufficient housing space routinely academic facilities. barks on a major expansion, it seems roll nearly 6,000 additional students in becomes available fairly early in the Local community leaders have ex­ that would certainly increase the pro­ the next 10 years, said Richard Stevens, semester. pressed concern about the strains jected enrollment." chair ofthe Board ofTrustees. Most funding for construction will that increased enrollment—and, in He said the district would consid­ Stevens explained that officials ex­ come from the state, said Stevens, but turn, increased UNC infrastructure— er opening additional schools if pect an increase of 45,000 to 48,000 eventually tuition, grants, donations would place on university and munic­ UNC-Chapel Hill expands, and em­ college-age North Carolinians in the and dorm rents will all share the finan­ ipal resources. phasized that the district has not op­ next decade. cial burden of a larger student body. Neil Pedersen, superintendent of posed or supported the expansion The trustees felt like we had an Coincidentally, UNC is in the Carrboro school system, noted that plan but intends to work closely with obligation to help educate the people of process of conducting a land use the increase would bring in addition­ the university. this state," he said, adding that a public study to determine the best plan for al employees, whose families would in "We have done our best to listen to all university is expected to provide a col­ campus growth. Many of the prelimi­ turn place added demands on his ofthe constituents," Stevens said. lege option for students without the nary plans promoted by the study in­ school system, which is already over- Earlier this month, the trustees high costs and credentials demanded by volve renovating South Campus, a populated. unanimously approved the plan pre­ private institutions. primarily residential area with some The local district has opened four sented by the Enrollment Task Stevens emphasized, however, that high rise dormitories and a lot of un­ new high schools in the past five Force—a group of faculty, students, all expansions are dependent on ade­ used space, Stevens said. The changes years because of increasing student and administrators. quate funding. UNC-Chapel Hill will would replace the high rises with low populations. The population growth The task force was formed in May only admit additional students when rise residential buildings and also was projected to level off by the year See ENROLLMENT on page 14 • Continuing Ed teacher sues Durham Tech for discrimination • Susan Johnson says she was fired because the jail, Johnson, who had coped with polio since childhood, was confined to a wheelchair of her polio-induced disabilities. Durham with a broken back. Johnson's lawyer, Stewart Tech claims a different motivation: drug use Fisher, Trinity 12, said the college then re­ fused to renew her teaching contract in June and inappropriate contact with her students. 1995 because of her increased disabilities. "I think it's an important case," Fisher said. "It exemplifies what the Americans with Disabil­ ities Act is all about." In a story with more twists than an Agatha However, Durham Tech's lawyer, George Christie novel, a part-time University teacher Miller III, presents a different story. is suing* Durham Technical Community Col­ Miller said Johnson's conduct in the jail lege. In the case, recently set for a Dec. 7 trial contributed to the school's decision to stop ex­ date, Susan Johnson claims her teaching con­ tending her contract. He claims that indepen­ tract was not renewed because of her polio-re­ dent sources reported in 1995 that Johnson lated disabilities. was using drugs and had actually brought Johnson was hired by Durham Tech to narcotics and contraband into the jail. The teach GED skills to prisoners in the Durham school was also told she was having "inappro- CONNOLLY/THE CHRONICLE County Jail. After a June 1994 fall inside of See JOHNSON on page 14 & THE NEW DURHAM COUNTY JAIL is ADA compliant.

I l)JIII']l)l]l 1 I,,- You are cordially LEARNING invited to a ' Dllkr I'jUMT.s Bv Reception and A TRADE y ' <>in iii u if i'lv" A Craftsman's Notebooks W_\ Book Signing 1955-1997 r.it-n honoring Reynolds Price Instead of personal memoir or a REYNOLDS collection of literary fragments, Learning C7ToLiaau a Trade presents what Price has called the "ongoing minutes" of his effort to PRICE learn his craft. Equally enlightening as an overview of a career of developing at ^J.Z£,Liantinq prominence or as a perspective on the Gothic Bookshop building of individual literary works, this volume not only allows the reader to •~> [>IU Wednesday, hear the author's internal dialogue on Tuesday? December 1 the hundreds of questions that must be December 2 turned and mulled during the planning in fronl of Duke Chapel and writing of a novel but, in an 4:30-6:30 pm unplanned way, creates its own compelling narrative. «-«•• 20 New Arrival Discount 1 (fits even, passible: Duke Chapel, Ihe Presid2f l I Office, Student Rd-poua Activities the liniv 684-3986 • Upper Level Bryan Center Regular Price iHn • Choral* Special Event Services, Technical Scr Reynolds Price is the James B. Duke e-BBil: pit hid_informer.duke.edu ;• and ilinlng Services, s Professor of English ai Duke University. Student Flex Cards, Visa, M.-.i_rC..r,l & .American Express Sale Price 27* THE CHRONICLE MONDAY, NOVEMBER 30.1998 Reviewing^ Fritz Mayer helped push NAFTA throu^h^ngress. Five years later, he tells the agreement's story/

three different ways of looking at such an agreement; international, domestic Almost five years ago today, the leg­ and individual. islation that created the North Ameri­ The U.S., Mexico, and Canada each can Free Trade Agreement was passed, behave as they have objectives, they have ending an arduous three-year battle to negativities that speak for each ofthe push the legislation through the United countries and so there's an international JASON WAGNEH/THE CHRONICLE States Congress. process," he said. But Mayer added that FRITZ MAYER, associate professor of public policy, hopes // This Thursday, Columbia University "What each country asks for at the table JA will see classroom use. Press will publish Interpreting NAFTA: is a reflection of a domestic issue." as Ross Perot, Pat Buchanan, Ralph and write the book that he sees as fill­ The Science and Art of Political Analysis Finally, he said, because ofthe num­ Nader and Jesse Jackson. "NAFTA ing "a gap in the available literature." by Fritz Mayer, an associate professor of ber of interest groups in favor of and in symbolized something they were very Mayer said, "As a teaching book, I public policy at the University and one of opposition to NAFTA, the legislation opposed to," Mayer said. "[It] was an envisioned it as a book to use in my the major behind-the-scenes players in can best be understood by analyzing easily understood symbol people could course.... My hope was not only that I the passage of the legislation. The book each individual participant. rally around and they did." would use it but that others... would traces the history ofthe agreement from "One has to understand the inter­ Mayer wrote that he came to Wash­ find it useful in teaching." He added both a policy analysis perspective and a ests of the Sierra Club, the members of ington favoring NAFTA and that "I that his time as a teacher influenced first-hand historical account of Mayer's the club, to understand why the Sierra thought then and now that it was good the writing of Interpreting NAFTA. involvement: As an aide to former Sen. Club takes a position, which in turn in­ policy, that it would produce economic "The book is a reflection of how I teach. Bill Bradley, D-N.J., Mayer was responsi­ fluences how the U.S. makes a decision benefits for the United States... and It reflects what I came to think of in ble for the ad hoc whip effort to win Sen­ in dealing with Mexico," Mayer said. that it was important for U.S.-Mexican the courses I teach." ate approval for NAFTA. The Sierra Club was one of several relations." He identified two major rea­ Professor of Public Policy William "As a work of history, I really set out environmental groups opposed to the sons for its eventual success. Ascher said, "Very few books do two to give a complete history of NAFTA agreement, part of a larger alliance of First, a powerful lobby supported things—both of which are necessary for and to give an inside view," Mayer said. special interest groups. Trade negotia­ NAFTA, most importantly the business policy analysis—one of which is to do "As a treatise on political analysis it's in­ tions are often unexciting, and most in­ community. He added that "the majori­ the analysis ofthe policy, [but also] to tended as an argument about the virtue siders were surprised by the attention ty of members of Congress favored this look at how policy goes through the of using multiple lenses, frameworks of and protest NAFTA attracted, Mayer agreement in private if there had not process," he said. "It shows us how to do understanding a political event." noted in his book. been political pressures." both types of analysis at the same time. In the introduction to Interpreting The protesters included notables After Mayer's time in Washington, The book really marshals the history to NAFTA, Mayer noted that there are from across the political spectrum such he returned to the University to teach look at how public policy operates."

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The Judicial A total of eight North Carolina State University News & Observer of Raleigh that he will "vehe­ Standards Commission and the State Bar are still look­ athletes have been dismissed from their teams mently fight any attempts to reopen the case. ing into the matter. after fellow student Neil Davis Jr. was shot to [Podger] has been tried and pun­ death last Sunday. ished, and the case should not be Police start union: A group of 10 Durham police Football coach Mike (^Cain announced that three N.C. reopened." officers formed a local chapter of the International players facing criminal charges—Harold Jackson, Willie Brown is currently under investi­ Unions of Police Associations Tuesday. The organiza­ Kinte Wright and David Pascal Stringer—were kicked BRIEFS gation by the Judicial Standards tion—which is affiliated with the 13-million member off the team until January 2000 and will not remain on Commission for the way he handled AFL-CIO—targeted pay, working conditions and officer scholarship. They are accused of assault and related of­ a drunken-driving charge against Podger, a Durham safety as its top priorities. fenses against Davis. Wrestlers Clyde Williams Blunt dentist. Last February, Podger was charged with driving Officer M.D. Gottlieb, president ofthe Durham Police and Michael Modarski were also dismissed from their while impaired after registering nearly twice the legal Officers Association, will hold a membership drive and team. Blunt faces the most serious charge—involuntary limit on an alcohol breath test. His former lawyer Wes­ information session Dec. 8. Gottlieb emphasized that the manslaughter. Modarski is charged with breaking into ley Covington and Brown met before the trial to work organization was created to support the police depart­ Davis' townhouse. out a deal to reduce the charge. ment, not make trouble for it. The three gymnasts who threw the party—Rebec­ The incident was reported to the State Bureau of In­ Durham is the sixth union-affiliated police department ca Ann Geiger, Jennifer Erin Sommer and Maggie vestigation, which conducted an inquiry but decided in the state. Under North Carolina law, government em­ Elaine Haney—were charged with selling malt bever­ not to pursue criminal charges against Brown, Coving­ ployees cannot strike or engage in collective bargaining. ages to minors and selling without a permit. Athletic Director Les Robinson did not say how long they would be off the team. Two others—former wrestler Daniel Scott Campenella and a nonstudent, Christopher Fay Green—are also accused in the case. Davis was shot with his own gun after an altercation with the five male athletes and two of their friends.The y were attending a party at the apartment home of the three gymnasts when Davis fired several rounds of fire Q. IN THESE UNCERTAIN TIMES, toward the party. After a fragment hit a party attendee, the seven male athletes broke into Davis' townhome. Police said the athletes believed that Davis had a BB WHO CAN YOU TURN TO WITH gun, not a semiautomatic handgun. QUESTIONS ABOUT YOUR Judge requests retrial: The judge who threw out a drunken-driving charge in a back hallway of the Durham courthouse filed a motion for a retrial RETIREMENT FUTURE? Wednesday. In an unusual turn of events, Judge Craig B. Brown asked that the reckless driving conviction he entered for Kenneth Podger Jr. be thrown out and the original A. YOUR INDIVIDUAL charge of drunken driving be reinstated. Brown claims in his filingtha t lawyers never told him that Podger had CONSULTANT FROM TIAA-CREF. a drinking-related conviction in 1982, in addition to a known DWI conviction in 1992.

DSG starts 20-question ^^1 ow, it will be easier than ever for you to discuss your •*- ^ retirement plans with us. It's our pleasure to inform you student phone survey that Dean Yarbrough, your TIAA-CREF Senior Individual Consultant at Duke University, will be available to meet with Aiming to produce a document encompassing a you on the following dates: broad base of student opinion, Duke Student Govern­ ment has designed a 20-question phone survey, which it will begin administering in the next few weeks. December 15 and 16 The survey questions were compiled by various DSG committees, each of which was asked to submit at least one question. Project coordinator Sean Murphy, vice pres­ Dean can answer your questions about long-term investment ident for student affairs and a Trinity junior, stressed that the survey is not geared toward any particular strategies, tax-deferred savings opportunities, payout options, issue. Questions, which include, "Are you planning on tax and legal issues affecting retirement, and about minimizing camping out?" and "Do you recycle in your dorm room?" address residential life, alcohol and bonfire policies and the effects of inflation. general academic issues. When drafting the survey, Murphy consulted Ross Ulmer, adjunct assistant professor of statistics, for help We hope you'll take advantage of this special service. To make with phrasing the questions. To ensure the validity of your individual appointment, please call Pam McDaris in our the data collected, one of Ulmer's students will work with DSG legislators as they process the survey data. Atlanta regional office at 1 800 842-2003. Legislators will question 125 students from each class for a total of 500 responses. DSG President Jeri Powell, a Trinity senior, noted that the survey is not a first for DSG. Three years ago, Visit us on the Internet at www.tiaa-cref.org it conducted a phone survey that focused on residen­ tial life. Neither Powell nor Murphy expects that the project will become annual. Murphy said he is optimistic that the information gathered will serve to highlight problems and issues from a student perspective in addition to helping DSG determine future policies and procedures. "The only way Ensuring the future that [the survey] would be unsuccessful would be for stu­ dents not to participate," Murphy said, adding that the for those who shape itf survey "will allow DSG to see what problems students have with Duke and not [just] what legislators think." Powell, who contributed a question about bonfires, is

also optimistic about the project. "[The survey] will be the • injiirmatitin. imlitilit: r&irc.) most efficient method to collect student opinion," she said. !: THE CHRONICLE MONDAY, NOVEMBER 30,1998 New 3-dimensional CAT scan facilitates non-invasive treatments • Medical Center feature Doctors at the Medical Center have begun using a very helpful, he said. computerized technique for examining internal organs in CT scans have been explored clinically for the past 13 recent years. Called the three-dimensional CAT scan, the years. Dr. Elliot Fischman of Johns Hopkins University is process has led to drastically reduced hospital stays and one of the founding researchers in the fieldan d has been fewer invasive procedures. influential in the development of this technique. During The 3D CT scan combines multiple slices to create a the past few years, the use ofthe 3D CT scan has become 3D image of a bone or blood vessel. The resulting model increasingly widespread; 10-20 percent of hospitals na­ can be animated to create a movie which takes viewer on tionwide now use the procedure on a regular basis. a tour ofthe target area. Fischman said 3D CT technology has a promising fu­ Associate professors of radiology Drs. Linda Gray and ture due to increasingly improved scanners, faster com­ Page McAdams first brought this technique to the Duke puters, better algorithms and higher-quality data. Hospital. Gray uses the technology for various neurologi­ In addition, the cost of this procedure is not prohibi­ cal purposes and McAdams employs it to detect pul­ tively high. Fischman said, "the cost ofthe 3D CT scan is SPECIM. TO THE CHRONICLE monary embolisms. usually about $200 more expensive than a normal CT THIS 3D CT-GENERATED COMPOSITE shows a diseased trachea "We are significantly shortening the time from the scan, which runs at about $500" from four aspects. The arrows point to its narrowed portions. emergency room to the operating room," Gray said, in a Adverse effects of the procedure can occasionally re­ press release. Those minutes can sometimes mean the sult from allergic reactions to the dye. Sometimes the kid­ duration. The entire chest can be scanned in 10 seconds. difference between life and death." neys are also negatively impacted, but the complication The number of possible applications grow as researchers McAdams said the 3D CT is an important method for rate is extremely low. Fischman said there are no major and clinicians explore the use of this technology. Research exploring blood vessels, pulmonary embolisms, the lungs, drawbacks of the 3D CT scan. "It costs one fourth as is now being conducted to assess the viability of using 3D bone fractures,trachea l narrowing and for various neu­ much and takes five minutes for patients," he added. CT to search for polyps in the colon. Detection could prevent rological uses. "CT is becoming a major modality for look­ The procedure is relatively painless. A needle is in­ colon cancer and avoid the invasive procedure of ing at pulmonary embolisms," McAdams said. Pulmonary serted into a patient's vein and contrast fluidi s injected. colonoscopy, which is the predominant method of detection embolisms—blood clots in the lungs—cause 600,000 The patient lies under a scanner while a dye is injected for colon cancer. Both Fischman and McAdams portend the deaths each year, but other means of detection are inva­ intravenously. This portion ofthe procedure takes about expansion of this beneficial technology into other fieldsan d sive procedures and simple clinical techniques are not 15 seconds and the patient must hold his breath for this greater utilization among hospitals worldwide. Study: Heart attack patients should be released after 3 days searchers calculated that keeping all • Of 22,454 patients studied, only 22,454 patients to save 16 cost the health 16 would have died had they had care system nearly $12 million per day. "It could be good for the patient and a great cost savings been released after three days, the "Those resources might better be for society if hospitals would compress the care they offer used in providing state-of-the-art thera­ study notes. py to more patients," said the study's into fewer, more productive days." chief author, Dr. Kristin Newby, assis­ KRISTIN NEWBY, ASSISTANT PROFESSOR OR CARDIOLOGY AND THE STUDY'S PRIMARY AUTHOR tant professor of cardiology. "It could be good for the patient and a great cost After sorting through the hospital savings for society if hospitals would sonably good sense." released after three days might experi­ records of more than 40,000 heart at­ compress the care they offer into fewer, Some physicians, however, are wor­ ence "problems other than death." tack patients, several cardiologists from more productive days." ried that insurance companies will But those who wrote the study agree, the Medical Center have found that pa­ On average, health policies are con­ begin rushing patients out ofthe hospi­ saying that patients would have to be tients treated for uncomplicated heart sidered cost-effective if they cost less tal to save money. "The devil is in the tested to assess their physical capabili­ attacks should be released after three than $50,000 per year of life saved and details," said Dr. Jonathan Fox, a cardi­ ties prior to release. Newby said the days in the hospital, instead ofthe typi­ considered not to be cost-effective when ologist at the University of Pennsylva­ study assumed that doctors planning to cal six-day stay. they cost more than $100,000 per year nia. "Each patient's case must be eval­ release patients after three days per­ For these "simple" heart attack pa­ of life saved, said Dr. Eric Eisenstein, uated individually. The potential formed all necessary procedures. "The tients, most deaths are prevented with­ assistant research professor of cardiolo­ danger in this kind of finding is when hope is that we don't compromise quali­ in the first two days ofthe hospital stay, gy. In "simple" heart attack patients, the the insurers get a hold of it they as­ ty," Newby said. according to the study, which was re­ cost of an extra hospital day is approxi­ sume that any patient with [a heart at­ The future of the research is uncer­ cently presented at a conference of the mately $141,820 per year of life saved. tack] can go home on day three or four. tain at this point. Newby said she would American Heart Association. The implications of the study's find­ Worse, some no-nothing case manager like to see the Medical Center eventual­ Ofthe 40,000 heart attack patients ings are not new. "It must be five and will make the determination for you ly try a pilot program. And on a larger studied, 55 percent, or 22,454, were probably more years ago that cardiolo­ over the telephone, not having laid eyes scale, she hopes her research will make classified as having uncomplicated gists were touting 48- to 72-hour admis­ or brain on the patient." physicians "critically think about the heart attacks. Doctors surmised that sions for the low-risk, uncomplicated Frank Sloan, J. Alex McMahon profes­ way we deliver care." only 16 of these patients would have [heart attack]," said Dr. Stephen Achuff, sor of health policy and management, said Unlike most studies, this one "looks died if they had been released after a cardiologist at Johns Hopkins Hospi­ he is concerned that the study may not at a hospital day as medical therapy," three days. tal. "Pm not sure exactly why this never sufficiently account for a patient's quality Eisenstein said. "It is one ofthe first at­ Given that the average cost of one day caught on, but it certainly is not com­ of life following treatment. It is important, tempts to quantify what is the real clin­ spent in the hospital is $529, the re­ mon practice even though it makes rea- he said, to study whether those patients ical benefit of a day in the hospital."

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Times News Service ciary Committee, one who has im­ HUNTSVILLE — Prison officials search was stepped up Sunday as state WASHINGTON — The chief Re­ plored the White House for a way to Sunday appeared to be digging in for a troopers began stopping and searching publican vote counter in the House avoid impeachment, also voiced anger longer-than-anticipated search for a cars entering and exiting settlements accused President Bill Clinton, Sun­ over Clinton's answers. death row inmate who escaped from the and subdivisions in the area. day, of trying to evade perjury "He's still dancing on the head of a Ellis I Unit late Thanksgiving night. "A If Gurule is still in the area, he may charges "on a technicality," and be­ pin," Rep. Lindsey Graham of South lot of times, escapees are caught within try to hide under a vehicle, officers said. came the first member of the Repub­ Carolina said. "Right now, to me, he is a couple of hours," said Gary Johnson, "At some point, he's going to get lican leadership to predict that the an unrepentant perjurer who should director of Institutions Division of the tired," Johnson said. "He's going to get House would impeach the president. lose his job unless he changes his tone Texas Department of Criminal Justice. cool at night and hot during the day Rep. Tom DeLay of Texas, the Re­ with the American people and recon­ "If they are not caught within a few and he couldn't have had much sleep publican whip, criticized Clinton's ciles himself with the law." hours, it can become extended." since Thursday." formal responses, Friday, to 81 ques­ Clinton's tersely worded replies, re­ As he spoke, convicted killer Martin There have been no reliable sightings tions submitted by the House Judicia­ peating earlier denials that he had lied E. Gurule, 29, had been outside the of the escapee, Johnson said, but that ry Committee. under oath or had urged others to do so, prison walls for more than 60 hours, could change as residents ofthe area re­ "Once again, the president is try­ seem to have hardened the partisan eluding bloodhounds and avoiding de­ turn home from holiday trips. ing to redefine what sexual relations views of Republican and Democratic tection by the sparsely inhabited woods "Some of them could discover their are, he's trying to use legalese and committee members, and given no new south and east ofthe prison. house(s) have been broken into or cars lawyerese to do two-steps around the information to other lawmakers who "We still believe he is inside the were stolen—things we don't know questions and try to get off on a tech­ are anxious to hear the president's side perimeter," said Johnson, referring to about now," Johnson said. nicality," DeLay said on the CNN pro­ of the story before making up their the six-square-mile area that was cor­ Since the escape, officers have been gram "Late Edition." minds on how to vote on impeachment. doned off within an hour ofthe escape. called to three residences in the area, DeLay, whose ability to keep tabs "For those Americans who expect­ Martin went over two razor-wire but none produced a lead, they said. on Republican votes in the House is ed this to end up like Perry Mason, topped fences and fled into the woods A house was broken into but the only widely respected by both parties, where you have someone confessing, I shortly after midnight Friday, authori­ missing items were a pillow case and cautioned that he had not taken a think they're going to be disappoint­ ties said. Six other death row inmates some silverware, authorities said. In an­ formal head count on impeachment. ed," Rep. Ed Bryant, R-Tenn., a mem­ also attempted to flee but surrendered other, a mobile home was believed to But he indicated that his experience ber of the Judiciary Committee who when guards fired at them. have been burglarized but nothing was told him that the House would fol­ favors impeachment, said on the NBC The inmates have been interviewed taken, they added. low the recommendations of the Ju­ program "Meet the Press." extensively by investigators, Johnson Saturday night, a resident of River­ diciary Committee, which is expect­ Clinton's responses, which his said, and they have not indicated that side reported that he had found an in­ ed to approve, along party lines, at lawyer, David Kendall, said, Friday, the escape included plans beyond get­ truder—matching Gurule's descrip­ least one charge of perjury. would be augmented soon by "a fur­ ting outside the walls—one factor that tion—under his house and fired several "The majority ofthe House will up­ ther memorandum on behalf of the leads authorities to believe that Gurule shots at him with a semiautomatic pis­ hold the rule of law and impeach the president," may complicate efforts by has not gone far. tol, authorities said. president and send the case to the the White House and congressional Senate," said DeLay, who is the third- Democrats to resolve the matter by ranking Republican in the House. censuring the president, rather than DeLay's unusual forecast came as impeaching him. 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• ' :. ! ". : • • a rFF'.h •') DECEMBER 6 Charles Schwab This is where you can do the best work of your life. •nrrrrrrrrrrrrtrrr'tt.: MONDAY, NOVEMBER 30, 1998 THECHRONICLE ESTABLISHED 1905, INCORPORATED 1993 Stretching the limits The Mary Lou Williams Center may never realize its enormous potential unless the administration delivers on its promise to install a director by the start of the next academic year "Insanity," goes the saying, "is repeating a mistake over and over again without learning from it." This month, the search for a permanent director for the Mary Lou Williams Center for Black Culture stumbled a little further in that direction. With the failure of administrators and search com­ mittee members to settle on a final choice, the process is closing in on its fifth year. Throw into this mix a well-qualified former candidate who expressed interest in the position, but ultimately took another offer, and may once again be under consideration. Add an undisclosed "offi­ cial" final candidate and a series of postponed deadlines, and the wayward search grows more embarrassing by the day. LETTERS TO THE EDITOR The ongoing failure to land a director despite years of work is par­ ticularly frustrating in light ofthe University's intent focus on improving campus race relations. Administrators have taken great Provost clarifies engineering dean's situation strides by appointing minority faculty and recruiting minority stu­ In my four plus years as arrived at the University, we generic one, and I stated sev­ dents. But the public proclamations and missteps accompanying the provost, I have spoken with believed it appropriate to fol­ eral reasons. My comments Mary Lou Williams saga suggest that on some issues, the adminis­ The Chronicle many times, low the spirit of the Faculty were not intended to reflect tration cannot back bold words with decisive action. but until now, have not felt Handbook and not propose negatively or even at all on It does a great disservice to a campus in the midst of this often compelled to write a letter to that Dowell serve a fourth Dowell's 16 years, but it's painful debate about breaking down barriers that a potentially valu­ correct the record. I feel I five-year term as dean of apparent that The Chronicle able tool such as the center is often locked and empty. The Mary Lou must do so with the case of engineering. Dowell had been took them to be specific to Williams Center is little more than glorified programming space. the article "Engineering elected to chair the National Dowell, which is most unfor­ school searches for new dean" Council of Engineering tunate given his strengthen­ Perhaps because only a few current students remember a func­ in the Oct. 28 edition of The Deans, however, which is a ing of our engineering school tioning center or perhaps because the facility's purpose is the subject Chronicle regarding Dean of significant honor recognizing and value to the University. of ongoing discussion, there has been little public outcry over this Engineering Earl Dowell and not only his contributions to With respect to Dowell's case, fruitless quest. the search committee for his engineering education at the our decision was primarily on At its present state, the stalled search offers an image not of con­ successor. In that article, I am University but also his contri­ the policy as stated in the cern or infighting, but of confusion. From the outset few have been quoted having said, "Adminis­ butions nationally and in Faculty Handbook, which sure ofwhat makes a qualified candidate for the directorship. This trators rarely serve a second Washington. Only a sitting acknowledges the importance summer, that uncertainty spilled into the candidate pool and washed term, let alone a third." In dean can hold this position. of brining in new perspectives fact, what I did say is, "The after a period of time. away a possible solution to the center's woes. Today, the process still Given Dowell's record of appears adrift in ambiguity. Faculty Handbook explicitly states that deans will normal­ accomplishments during an I realize that it is difficult But confusions need not be permanent and can usually be disen­ unprecedented three terms as to follow the nuances of the tangled. This summer's promise to land a director by the spring ly serve two terms." lb quote the Faculty Handbook direct­ dean of engineering, we want­ discussion when taking notes, semester may always have been unrealistic due to the difficulties of ly: "It is recommended that ed him to have the opportuni­ but I think it is important for hiring a faculty member midway through an academic year. deans of schools be appointed ty to serve as Chair of the your readers to know the spe­ Despite having set a clearly unreachable goal, administrators for a five-year period, general­ National Council and thus cific reasons and rationale for still must decide whether filling this position is a genuine priority. ly renewableonce. " extended his term by one the decision to seek a new They must decide if they want a director by the beginning of the additional year. fineering. 1999-2000 academic year and if this date will be a deadline or Because Dowell was The Chronicle asked why merely a guideline. already in his third term the University has a two- JOHN STROHBEHN The current process, although tortuous, may still obtain the best when the president and I term rule. My answer was a Provost possible director. But the students who should be served by the Mary Lou Williams Center will never know if the process continues to be wracked by miscommunication. Crazy Towel Guy thanks Class of 2002 I want to take this op­ the Durham area at the the competition and showing portunity to thank all of the holiday time when the its support of this most wor­ THE CHRONICLE students, faculty and ad­ North Carolina Food Bank thy project. Now bring those desperately needs the con­ JESSICA MOULTON, Editor ministrators who supported towels to Cameron in sup­ TIM MILLINGTON, Managing Editor the 1999 Reject Hunger tributions to reach those in port ofthe team. Go Devils! RICHARD RUBIN, University Editor Campaign. The money dire need. KATHERINE STROUP, University Editor JON HUNTLEY, Editorial Page Editor raised will help feed those I want to congratulate the HERB NEUBAUER JONATHAN ANGIER, General Manager persons less fortunate in Class of 2002 for winning Trinity '63 VICTOR CHANG, Photography Editor KELLY WOO, City & State Editor JASON WAGNER, Features Editor LIANA ROSE, Medical Center Editor KELLISHERAN, Sports Photography Editor BOB ELLINGER, Layout and Design Editor AMBREEN DELAWALLA, Wire Editor ON THE RECORD CHRISTINE PARKINS, Wirt Editor ALI KOREIN, Sr. Editorial Page Assoc. JENNIFER UV.Sr. Features Assoc. CHRISTIE FONTECCHIO, Sr. University Assoc. / thought they were the better team. Certainly they played harder than we did for 40 JESSICA KOZLOV, Sr. Universiry Assoc. ANDY K A PP, Online Editor minutes and were very deserving ofthe win. ALEX BRODIE, Lead Programmer ROB STARLING, Systems Manager TYLER CURTIS, Creative Services Manager SUE NEWSOME, Advertising Director CATHERINE MARTIN, Production Manager ADRIENNE GRANT, Creative Director Men's coach on Cincinnati's 77-75 upset over the top-ranked Blue Devils MARY TABOR, Operations Manager NALDJI MILNE, Office Manager (see story, p. 1) ERIKA JOHANSON, Advertising Manager LISA KALIK, Advertising Manager The Chronicle is published by ihe Duke Studenl Publishing Company, Inc., a non-profii corporation indepen­ ANNOUNCEMENT dent ofDuke University. The opinions expressed in this newspaper me not necessarily those of Duke University its students, workers, administration or trustees. Unsigned editorials represent the majority view of the editorial Columnist and Monday, Monday applications are now available outside ofThe Chronicle board Columns, letters and cartoons represent the views of ihe authors. Phone numbers: Editorial/News: phone: 684-2663, En: 684-4696, Sports: 684-6115; Business Office: 684- offices at 301 Flowers building. 3811; Advertising Office: phone: G84-3811. fax: 684-8295. Editorial Office (Newsroom]: 301 Flowers Building; If you have any interest in writing a regular column or applying for The Chronicle's Business Office: 103 West Union Building: Business and Advertising Office: 101 West Union Building, Duke anonymous weekly humor columnist position, Monday, Monday, please pick up an applica­ University. Visit The Chronicle Online at http://www.chrtiriicle.duke.edii/. © 1998 The Chronicle, Bon 90858. Durham. N.C. 27708. All rights reserved. No part of this publication may tion on the table outside ofthe office. i form without ihe prior, written permission of the Business Office. Each individual isenri- Any questions, please call Jon Huntley at 684-2663. MONDAY, NOVEMBER 30, I COMMENTARY Tinkering with democracy Trivial modifications to the democracies of the United States and the United Kingdom bear unseen dangers Over the past two weeks, different . " " i ' prevent its accumulation. the structure of the government that events in the capitals of the world's two AsheS and Temples But constitutional democracy requires they have sworn to uphold. , greatest democracies have shown us that n-ii r n|u.„|j that its executors adhere faithfully to their American government will survive their modern politicians may scarcely demarcated duties. Structural bulwarks Clinton. Likewise, the demise ofthe House understand the institutions that they will be for naught if the men and women of Lords as even a slight counterweight to have inherited. objections the constitutionally weak House responsible for enforcing them foil to do so, the House of Commons is certainly not the In Washington, D.C, the conventional of Lords may offer to the Labour-dominat­ or worse, try todismantl e them. Under our death knell of democracy on the Thames. wisdom now convincingly says that ed House of Commons. Constitution, the proper remedy for the Both, however, offer us signs that, per­ President Bill Clinton will remain in office, Why should these happenings cause national affliction of a president who com­ haps, modern politicians keep their eyes despite uncontested evidence that he us concern? By themselves, neither of mits perjury while in office, thus subvert­ too squarely focused on the present, and broke federal law by, at the very least, com­ them is particularly earth shattering or ing the laws he has sworn to execute, is his not enough on the past or future. mitting perjury. Why will he stay? Because even surprising. After all, Clinton's poll removal from office. Anglo-American democracy has perse­ polls show that the numbers have re­ Nonetheless, Clinton's defenders vered through so many centuries, and majority of the mained high, even as argue that, so long as their man remains endured against so many tyrannies, that it it has become clear popular, the Congress should not is tempting to think of its survival as pre­ £S£5&£L Modem potititians keeptha t the Lewinsky impeach him. This, of course, begs the ordained. It follows, ominously, that it is Thus, the Lewinsky scandal is about question of whether or not, in their also tempting to think that we are now matter will likely end their eyes too squarely more than "just sex" minds, an unpopular president, one who smart enough to tamper with the very with a Congressional and involved his ef­ committed the exact same acts, should be institutions that got us where we are today. whimper ofa censure. focused on the present, forts to extricate impeached on the basis of his low poll Meanwhile, in himself from a feder­ numbers. Either answer, "yes" or "no," Bill Colwell is a third-year student in the London, during last and not enough on the al civil rights lawsuit shows how fragilethei r commitment is to law school and Department of History. week's ceremonies pastor future. by tampering with opening the British the nation's justice Parliament, Queen — — system. And, truth Elizabeth II an­ be told, the notion of nounced Prime Minister Tony Blair's ob­ even a minimally potent House of Lords jectives for the year to come. Among them: does seem a tad anachronistic at the a "reform" of the House of Lords, the dawn ofthe third millennium. upper chamber of the British legislature, At the same time, silently accepting which would strip most of its members of these developments means silently their right to vote in it. assenting to an ever-so-slight chiseling Blair wants to deny hereditary peers, way at the structures ofthe governments those Lords who inherit their titles, gener­ of the United States and the United ation after generation, their suffrage in the Kingdom, and strong governmental chamber. The only voting members in the structures are the necessary foundations House of Lords would then be the life of constitutional democracy. peers, distinguished Britons who are given Constitutional democracy is a different titles by the ruling government, but who animal. than plebiscitary democracy. do not pass them along to their heirs. Constitutional democracy recognizes that Because most hereditary peers are the popular will can be just as tyrannical inclined against Blair's Labour party, and as one person's. Thus, trust is placed not in since Blair can create life peers as he needs men, but in institutions: Governmental them, the practical effect of this change authority is divided and checks and bal­ would be to sweep away what minimal ances put in place to diffuse power and to A treatise on sleep, by RED SONJA 'll tell you what the world needs now: It's sleep, group?" Don't worry, only sleeping. Ever wonder sweet slumber. I've never seen so many crotchety why all those people are running back and forth Monday, Monday I people around in my life. You'd think speed lim­ from East to West? Don't be ridiculous, it's not exer­ its were instituted for no other reason than to break cise, they're fighting to stay awake. I sleep so much RED SONJA them. Some people are playing Christmas carols on that I can't remember if I were dreaming something their horns, but it's not out of an overflow ofYuletide or if something actually happened. stay home. cheer. The holiday spirit certainly hasn't quite kicked Narcolepsy, African Sleeping Sickness, Mono. All Regardless of how tired I am, I will never become in throughout North Carolina. I gave the most thanks a public sleeper. That is the ultimate low, the bottom this holiday for not having to be subjected to the after of the barrel. You will find public sleepers in the Thanksgiving mall frenzy. Regardless of how tired I am, I libraries, the cafe, the alumni lounge and especially Breaktime should be a relaxing experience, a time in computer clusters. They are the homeless of the to eat, drink and be sleepy. It is a time reserved for will never become a public sleep­ University. You try to ignore them, pretend they don't sleep, because the rest ofyour University life is spent exist, but their wretched state of unnecessary, acade­ in search of it. At the end of this jet-propelled break, er. That is the ultimate low, the mic induced squalor is hard to miss. I pity them, and however, I am feeling less inclined to sit behind a despise them, but mostly despise them. They occupy desk and more inclined to recline, in my bed, that is. bottom of the barrel. space that someone else needs and during finals, it More and more I come to realize that kindergarten can get ugly. was where it was at. You were encouraged to take a Only three more weeks until freedom. And so, I nap. You could hang with your pint-sized homies and the tests keep coming back negative; yet, heads are sleep, perchance to dream of life after finals, when all watch the strange kids eating paste and the stupid dropping onto pillows, desks and backpacks cam- the papers and tests are through and the only dilem­ ones struggling in the bluebird reading group. You puswide at an epidemic rate. It all seems to stem mas are stairclimber or elliptical trainer, paper or had show and tell, not truth or dare. Mickey Mouse, from the contagious yawn. plastic, Coke or Pepsi. not Monica Lewinsky. The most dangerous place to fall asleep is a semi­ I sleep, therefore I am able to make it through one I heard awhile ago that scientists have shown nar. There's nowhere to hide and unless you've per­ more idiotic section meeting where cliches are that you need more sleep when you are younger, and fected the art of sleeping with your eyes open, there bandied about like newly formed pearls of-wisdom. as you age, the amount of sleep you need to feel rest­ isn't much hope for you or your grade in the clutches The siesta, now what a great idea that is. The ed and healthy decreases. Well, data is all good and of a merciless professor. smartest person in the world would find a way to everything, but they must not have interviewed any Don't be fooled! It is not better to go to class ifyou write a dissertation on sleep patterns, with himself college students. University students sleep an aver­ are going to fall asleep during it. If this soporific state as a subject. age of 14 hours a day, mostly between the hours of 3 is a symptom of the class, a combination of students, a.m. and 5 p.m. That boy who sits next to you in professors or both, sucks for you, you registered for it RED SONJA encourages you to support local chem lecture isn't there today. He's home sleeping. A and have to go anyway. If you've just pulled an all- entrepreneurs, like the chef at the Biscuit King. worried teaching assistant at 9:15 a.m. on Science nighter and the Jolt is finally wearing off, however, Ask him what kind of flour he uses to make those Drive wonders, "Where the 'H' is my recitation allowing you to sense pain, do everyone a favor and biscuits rise so high. THE CHRONICLE • PAGE 10 COMICS MONDAY, NOVEMBER 30.1998

Johnny, The Mediocre Human/ Porter Mason THE Daily CrOSSWOrd Edited by Wayne Robert Williams

ACROSS _£LL,O?FIO «u ypsre AU. 5 Beethoven's "Fur ___" -JILL6. HOT TOTC- 10 Practical jokes 14 United _ Emirates 15 Pis nut 16 of Cleves 17 THE BEST. 20 Lamprey 21 Nonsensical 22 Consecrate 23 Picnic pest 24 Penultimate Greek letter 25 THE BEST 33 Manicurist's 34 Writer/singer Leonard 35 Ajaccio assent 36 By mouth Dilbert/ Scott Adams 37 Spread here and there 38 Highland honey 'THERE'S NO ^ 39 Lawyer: abbr. MICE, YOU'RE THE FIRST IT COST *, THOUSA.ND 40 Odists WEAPON, BUT I 41 Bloody RECIPIENT OF THE DOLLARS TO HAVE passage KOTIVCTIONM. "STONE FOUNO THIS COOL 42 THE BEST 9 Letter carrier: IT ENGRAVEO. IT'S 45 Knack __.••• uaejuu nana OF QUM._TV. Ki COAV OF SAVING MOTIVATIONAL j 46 Lend a hand 10 Onionlike bulb •ODD •nuuta ______47 Out In the open 11 Poker stake THANK.S." IROCI^I n 50 Scour 12 Wildebeests •G__I_IE______oaannHE l©\ a 53 Health retreat 13 Understands 56 THE BEST „„„ EDBD daoian 59 Pain In the nOIIHH _3__H3m_3 3* 19 "A Doirs EHaBHB DQD BOHB 60 Nonresonant EHHHSanHBHBHQBE metallic sound playwright HQaa ______QUCHi! 61 Painful 23 Plummeted BHHHE __._n__.Q__. 62 City In Spain 24 I'm glad that's •snsra ______! 63 Secret messages 25 _ blanche FIMT HEP IMF if 64 Flock females 26 Rodeo rope EIL I V J_ DBS 27 Group of eight S__|L|O|A|P|8ME DOWN 28 Out into view 29 "We bold __ 2 Wrath of the truths to be .. ." Romans 30 Lion's plaints 3 British peer 31 Forces out 41 Mystery story? 51 Landlocked 7_U SOtKKIPearA 4 Mom-&-pop 32 City on the 3 Cloud over African nation store grp. 44 Makes 52 Clair or Coty _y_, fif/MMffjH. He 5 Word derived 33 Genesis watertight 53 Pack cargo %ums susPTGOM&e character 47 Translucent 54 Mere's mate 6 Singer Home 37 Gentle 55 God of war 7 Religious 38 Demand lor 48 Evil behavior 57 Broadcast Image 49 Cal back watchdog agcy. S Vault 40 _ Mcwo, Benin Q Normandy town SB Half a fly? THE CHRONICLE:

Bigger upsets than the Cincinnati/Duke game Football beats ECU: jcm Odfe pounds Garfield: mary Rebels destroy tbe Death Star (twice!): jonJbianca Staff box funnier than Dilbert: Jots/rich Soccer wins one, |ust one; NCAA game: victor The Fusco Brothers/ J.C. Duffy WHey Coyote skins, eats the Roadrunner:. Tibet slams China:...... Christine OL, IF vou WERE \ «j BV SPIDERS OR 1 M . S ^^^_ Sales Representative: Frank Bruneffi, Saundra Edwards, SNAKES, X COULD 4SJ • . M ______r^m_\ Bryan Frank, Jasmin French, Nicole Hess, HELP vou... BUT WHEN ^pp -fll ^ ~] Dana Williams, Tommy Sternberg Creative Services: Dallas Baker, Bill Gerba, Annie Lewis, 'VOU TELL ME VOU WEKE EflK _BI Dan Librot, Rachel Medlock, Matt Rosen, Jeremy Zaretsky eRI..HT£..46I> Hi HN AW ______f Business Assistants: Jean Chang, Jennifer Edwards, fltsul.T BV Tt)HN -reSH.^^B Ida Grochowska, Bryce Winkle THERE'S NOT MVCH X CAN £•

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fJSV^ MMJ If TO . U__ MONDAY, NOVEMBER 30, 1998 THE CHRONICLE T?\jh& f3i//(e-+m ^Lboard

Cambridge Christian Fe llowship:" Re Iigion Wi th Power," December Dances. 8pm. Reynolds Theatre. Call 660- Club Boulevard Elementary School need a tutor to help weekly meeting, 8:45pm, East Campus Marketplace. 3356 for ticket information. new student from China who speaks Mandarin and lit­ Quadrangle Pictures: "Saving Private Ryan." 4.7,10pm. tle lo no English leam basic vocabulary. Call Sarah The chronicle publishes several public service calen­ Griffith Film Theatre. Johnson, 560-3918. dars through the week as detailed below: Catholic Mass in Catholic Studenl Center, Room 037. Statewide Hanukkah Dance,"Hillel54,"9pm-lam. NC The Community Service Center needs individuals will­ Duke Bulletin Board Monday 12:30PM, Duke Chapel Basement. Community Calendar Tuesday-Friday Hillel house, featuring DJ PEZ, put on your butterfly- ing to send dona tion s or adopt a fami ly for" Proj ect Share," Sports Events Monday Ruth Little w i 11 disc uss her new book, "S ticks and Stones: collar shirts, bring out the zoot boots and bell-bottom a program helping to create holiday memories for peo­ ple in need. These are a few of the family profiles: a Arts Events Tuesday & Friday Three Centuries of Gravemarkers," 7:C0pm. Regulator polyester and dance with friends from all over North young mother who lost her job due to downsizing needs Entertainment Thursday Bookshop-720 Ninth Street. Carolina. Contact Talia Miller at talia«Xtags error: help providing gifts for her daughter: a grandmother who To submit a notice for our Duke Bulletin Board and Unexpected end of line» Freewater Films: "Celestial Clockwork," Free to stu­ IOOkinher7 grandchildren inordertopreventthem from Community Calendars, send it to the attention of dents, Griffith Film Theatre, 7,9:30pm. being separated into foster care needs assistance: a fam­ "Calendar Coordinator" at the address below, fax or 51.IW. ily of 6 that has been residing with relatives and various e-mail. Submissions for these calendars are published Hanukkah Swing Fundraiser Party ,G - A do wn under, 8:30 Falun Dafa voluntary teaching and practice ofthe five hotels needs help providing 4 children with warm clothes on a space-available basis wilh priority given to Duke PM - 9:30. A one hour lesson taught by our very own sets of physical exercises, "Zhuan Falun" study and dis­ and educational toys/games: a single income family of events. Notices must be for events which are free and Matthew Lebauer. Cost $3. Email helana«Xtags error: cussion at South Lawn of Sarah P. Duke Gardens, 8:30- 6 who cannot financially provide holiday gifts for 4young open to tlie public or for which proceeds benefit a pub­ Unexpected end of line* 11:30 AM. For more information check out web page children while maintaining a tight budget. For more infor­ lic/not-for-profit cause. Deadline for the Bulletin Board mation contacl Maranda or Michael al 684-4377. w w w .du ke .edu/web/falun. is noon Thursday. THVKSPAT To submit a noticefor the Sports, Arts orEntertainment Cambridge Christian Fellowship offers rides to King's Individual needed lo drive a handicapped Duke profes­ calendars, send it to tlie attention of the Sports Editor, Pari. International Church, from East, West, North, Yearby, sor to day time appointments. Prefer someone with phys­ Arts Editor, orR&R Entertainment Editor, respectively, and Alexander Bus stops, 10:30 am. ical therapy experience and strength. Paid position on an as needed basis. Call Claire, 403-8252. at tlte address below: Catholic Mass in Catholic Student Center, Room 037, Worship Service, Duke Chapel, 11 am. 12:30PM, Duke Chapel Basement. Tlie Chronicle, Box 90858, Durham, NC 27708. Fax: Duke employee with some physical limitations seeks Catholic Mass, York Chapel, 11 am. (919) 684-4696. Phone: (919) 684-2663 (Notices may Westminster Presbyterian/UCC Fellowship Drop-in volunteer to help with miscellaneous tasks around her not be taken over the phone). Lunch, Chapel Basement Kitchen, !2-lPM.Costis$l.50. Duke Chapel Choir: Handel's Messiah.TlcketsS 12, Duke house. Currently needs someone to help replace wall E-mail: [email protected] for community Chapel, 3pm, Call 684-4444 for more information. mounied air flow vents by standing on ladder and replac­ Duke Wind Symphony: Kraig Williams, conductor, 3pm, calendar and bulletin board notices only. ing screws. Willing toprovide transportation. Call Denise Baldwin Auditorium. Call 660-3300 for more informa- Duke Meditation Group, 200 Gray Building, 6:00PM. Brandon, 684-6327 or 933-2747 after 6:30 pm. For more info email srh8 or check out MONPAf http: //ww w .duke, edu/ wetVmedttation. Part-Time Female Personal Care Assistants Needed for Choral Vespers is ce lebrated by candlelight eachThuisday Catholic Mass in Catholic Student Center, Room 037, Duke Freshman who exclusively uses a motorized at 5:15PM in the Memorial Chapel. Quadrangle Pictures: "Saving Private Ryan," 8pm, wheelchair and needs help transferring and assistance 12:30PM, Duke Chape! Basement. Griffith Film Theatre. Weekly Community Dinner for Catholic Student Center, with personal care needs. 7am to 9am Monday through Torah Lishman: Come discuss the Torah portion ofthe 5:30PM, Chapel Kitchen. Westminster Presbyterian/UCC Fellowship meets9:00- Saturday (may select days depending on availability) week with Rabbi Joe and enjoy a free lunch. 12-1PM, 10:00 pm in the Chapel Basement Lounge. "Haphour," and 1 Ipm to midnight Friday (or later). Would like to Chapel kitchen. Room 030, opposite the Hillel Office. After Hours, Duke Museum of Art, 5:30pm, refresh­ an informal time of refreshments and fellowship, begins divide the schedule among several female care assis­ Email helena«Xtags error: Unexpected end of line ments and cash bar. $2 students. Call 684-5135 for more at 8:30 pm. All are welcome. tants. Please contact cither Natalie at 613- 2825 or Katherine information at 933-1537. Duke Contact Improvisation Club meets 2-4pm, at the Catholic Mass, Duke Chapel, 9 pm. Duke School For Children gymnasium. Short class fol­ SpanishDorm: "Spanish Table," meetsevery Thursday, Habitat for Humanity Construction: Opportunities to work lowed by dancing. Call 598-9619 formore information. 7:00PM, Great Hall. Anyone who wants to speak in on a Habitat for Humanity house in Central Durham are Spanish is welcome. Call 688-2317 for more informa- available in two shifts from 8:30-12:00 and 1:00-5:00. Hanukkah Cookies: Come and bake and eat Hanukkah Vblwfe-e-K Work is available for all skills levels. Call 599-2582 or Sugar Cookies in Wannamaker, 8:00pm. Email hele­ Volunteer with children at Duke Hospital: Pediatric e-mail rcp3 Baptist Student Union Bible Study meets at 8:00 pm in na «Xtags error: Unexpected end of line Inpatient Unitsand Playroom, Pediatric Specialty Clinic, room 032 of the Chapel Basement. All are welcome. Rape Crisis of Durham offers a free monthly drop-in Westminster Presbyterian/UCC Fellowship meets 9- Outreach in Schools, and Reach Out and Read. Call Edith discussion/support group for survivors of adult rape or 10pm in the Chapel Basement Lounge. "Haphour," an "Jewish mysticism and philosophy," at the Belmont Rosenblatt at 684-2612 formore information. sexual assault and their families/friends. Held second informal time of refreshments and fellowship, begins Apartments-#3102, 9:00pm. Led by Rabbi Pinny Lew The Center for Child and Family Health is seeking ded­ Wednesday of every month. Confidential 8-week sup­ at 8:30 PM. of Chabadat Chapel Hill & Durham. Email chabad«Xtags icated volunteers to work with potentially neglected or port groups also held for survivors of adult incest/child error: Unexpected end of lines abused children while the families are visiting the Cenier sexual abuse and for parents of children who have been for services. For more information call 419-3474 ext. sexually assaulted. Call Elaine at 419-7055 for group DukeGardens Classes: Theo Roddy, floral designer, "A fRip/vr 236. location or more information. Free individual counsel­ Catholic Mass in Catholic Student Center, Room 037, ing is also available. Boxwood Wreath forthe Holidays," 9:30am, Grey Stone Unique opportunity as Touchable Art Gallery attendant Baptist Church. Tickets $18 plus $ 10 material fee. Call 12:30PM, Duke Chapel Basement. in DUMC Eye Center. Call 286-3361 for more infor- Interested internationals are welcome to participate in 684-3698 for more information. Shabbat Services, 6:00 PM, Both Reform and Conservadve an English Con versation Club at International House( 2022 minyans will be held. Oneg Shabbat Kosher meat/veg­ Campus Drive) from 5-6PM. Contact Thomas Lavenir The Reality Behind the Statistics: Occupationally- Duke Tumor Registry is looking for compassionate vol­ etarian meal will follow. Cost $l0/person - check or at 684-2512 or tiavenir«Xtags error: Unexpected end of aquired HIV...A Personal Account, Lynda Amold-RN, unteers who love to talk on the phone. Call 419-7911 cash. Location - Hillel House, 311 Alexander Ave. 10am-12noon, Room 2002 DN. for more information. Duke Chapel Choir: Handel's Messiah, Tickets $12, Duke Town of Cary: Recreation and Cultural Resources. Biblestudy with the Wesley Fellowship and the Lutheran Become one of Duke Hospital's Public Relations vol­ Chapel, 7:30pm, Call 684-4444 for more information. "Bow Making-December 3, Country Christmas Campus Ministry, Chapel Basement kitchen at 12:00 to unteers. Call 684-3835 for more information. 1:15PM. Ornaments-December I, Home Decor Stamping- Chabad invites you to participate ina traditional Shabbat More than 35,000 volunteers are needed to support the December, Reverse Collage Vase-December 8, Fabric service and dinner, 18 minutes before sunset, 106 Park Catholic Mass in Catholic Student Center, Room 037, '99 Special Olympics World Summer Games in Raleigh, Stamping-December 15, Rubber Stamp Art Class- Place- Chapel Hi 11-off Franklin St. For more informa­ 12:30PM, Duke Chapel Basement. Durham, Cary, and Chapel Hill for June 26-July4. For December 3, Christmas No-Bake Cookies-December 10." tion emailcbabad«Xtagserror: Unexpectedendof line Westminster Presbyterian/UCC Fellowship Bible Study more information call (888)-767-1999 or visit their web For more information call 460-4963. December Dances, 8pm, Reynolds Theatre. Call 660- meets at 12:45 in Room 036 of the Chapel Basement. TenStarAllBaskeballCamp: registration is open. Players Bring your Bible and your lunch. 3356 for ticket information. are selected by invitation only. For an evaluation form Taize Evening Prayer, at5:15 PM in the Memorial Chapel. Duke Fall Jazz Series '98: Jimmy Greene-alto/tenor sax­ Notice*; call 704-372-8610. ophonist and the Duke Jazz Ensemble, 8pm, Baldwin Gathering 30pm at the Durham Baha'i CenterS 103 Revere Work Options for F and J Students: Are you an F-l or Auditorium. Call 660-3309 for ticket information. J-l student planning to work after December gradua- Duke Pediatrics Literacy Program seeks volunteers to Rd in Durham (Revere Rd. is off of Ri. 54,1 traffic light tion?lfso,haveyoufiledforOPTorAcademicTraining? read toatrisk, low-income children at the Roxboro Road west of intersection of 54 + 55). For more information Information Session, Perkins Room 226,5:30-6:30PM, SATVRPAr Clinic. Monday - Friday, between 10 am - 3 pm. 2 hour call 403-2455. or pick up the forms at the International Office. DukeChapelChoir:Handel'sMessiah,Tickets$12,Duke . Call Edith Rosenblatt, 684-2612. Chapel, 2pm, Call 684-4444 for more information. Clayworks will hold its third annual holiday pottery sale Rape Crisisof Durham and the Family Counseling Service Camp Arcadia-Camp for Girls in Casco, Maine has sev­ December 4, 4-8pm and December 5, I0am-6pm at a are sponsoring a free support group for parents of chil­ Foundations of the Faith Series. Cambridge Christian eral openings on its councelor staff for the summer of new location: Durham Arts Magnet School-400 N. If dren or teens who ha ve been se xually assau Ited or molest­ Fellowship offers rides to King's Park International Church 1999. Counselors arrive June I7andstay through August you have an opinion or suggestions for the Engineering ed, 6-7:30PM, Call Terri for more information 419- every Saturday at6:00pm from East, West, North, Yearby, 14. For more information call Anne H.Fritts at 973-538- Student 7055. and Alexander Bus stops. 5409.

Holiday Tree Lighting: join students and faculty for this annual event, complete wilh cider and cookies, 5pm, Main Quad. Call 684-2909 for more information.

Poetry Readings: JimClark and Shelby Stephenson, 7pm, Regulator Bookshop-720 Ninth St. Call 286-2700 for more information. GPSCAnnouncements Baptist Student Union, Bible Study, at 8:00 PM-9:15 PM in the Chapel Basement-Religious Offices. Formore Watch this space for announcements of upcoming GPSC social events! information call Jasmin at613-3087. Contacting GPSC: voicemail 681-1841; email gpsc/.w ww.duke.edu/gpsc/ THE CHRONICLE • PAGE 12 CLASSIFIEDS MONDAY, NOVEMBER 30, 1998

IS CINDY FOR REAL? Accounting Periodical Publishing Summer Camp Positions. Rent home near Duke- 1800 SF, 3 Announcements Michael Levine has left our cam­ Company in Durham seeks bright, Herbert C. Bonner Boy Scout BR, 2.5 BA, study. DR, Kitchen, Travel/Vacation pus, but the issues still remain energetic graduate to assume Reservation is looking for coun­ LR, Laundry. Available mid Dec. for Come discuss what should be house accounting responsibilities selors for it's 1999 Summer $1200/mo. 919-730-1291 Feeling A Little TIPsy? done, Thursday. 12/3 at 8pm at the Great working environment, vaca­ Resident Camp Staff. Most all Are you curious to know who at Healthy Devil Healtb Education tion, medical, 401K, and other ben­ positions available including: SPRING BREAK '99 Duke besides you attended the Center, 101 House 0 (Kilgo Arch). efits Exc. pay. Send Resume, Aquatics Director, First Year Scout Student Travel Services is Talent Identification Program's For more information, call the Letter, Accounting Course work, Director, Campcraft Director, America's #1 Student Tour (TIP's) Summer Residential Healthy Devil at 684-5610. and GPA to Shooting Sports Director, Ecology- Operator. Don't book with anyone Conservation Director, Handicraft Honda Civic 1990 DX 4 door else until you talk to us!!! Cancun Program (SRP)? Tip is curious too Accounting Journalistic, Inc. 4905 Pine Cone Drive Director, Physical Fitness/Sports Sedan, 93,000 mi, manual trans­ from S399, Jamaica from $399, and would like to invite all Duke Apts. For Rent Suite #2 Director, Dining Hall Steward, mission A/C, $3,000 or best offer. Panama City from $119, Daytona students who attended any term ot Durham, NC 27707 Trading Post Director, Maintenance Mac Classic 2 computer $75. GE Beach trom $139, Student Travel SRP to a reception on Thursday, OR EMAIL to who well @jayi.com Staff and Camp Chaplain Boy large capacity 5 cycle washer $75. Services 1 -800-648-4849 December 3, from 5-7 PM at the 2BR/2BA apartments for rent. Scout experience cetened but not 2 vivitar remote control slide projec- www.ststravel.com, On Campus TIP office: 1121 W. Mam Street (in Conveniently located for Duke Work-Study student to help in can­ required. Preference given to tors$100each. 15 cubic ft fridge, 3 Contacl: Jason @ 919-613-3463, trie Coca-Cola Building near East Students and employees Ideal for cer research lab Must be willing to Eagle Scouts. Call Billy @ yrs old, $200. 3 cycle clothes dryer, Anthony @ 919-613-1696, Heather Campus Domino's). The dress is roommates. Please call Gina at work with human blood and be (919)831-9458 for application 2 yrs old $25. RCA His video cam­ @ 919-384-1071. 383-8504. casual, and tbe food will bear no available afternoons. Please call era includes all accessories $200. 3 yr Hitachi 27" TV $175. Murray 3 resemblance to campus dining Kathy at 684-6765 Interested in Rad-;> ano en|oy talk­ by 75 Hp lawn mower $80. Call offerings. A call to 683-1400 to ing on the phone'' Leam about 309-9116. confirm your attendance would be BIOLOGISTS marketing research tor radio from A#1 SPRING BREAK- appreciated but not required. December Graduates: Enter a the ground up. Starling salary DIGITAL PIANO HOURS AND HOURS OF 91 Geo-Storm Black Tinted challenging field where job $6.50/hr with bonus and incentive FREE DRINKS! Earn 2 FREE Kawai CA440, weighted wooden Windows, AC, AM/FM Cassette. opportunity is always superb! programs, part time with flexible trips & $$$$$! Cancun, action, 3 pianos, church organ, CHANGE@DUKE Save Money on GAS!!! 62K, NEED IMS Inc. of Silver Spring, Maryland hour, weeknights and weekends, Jamaica, Florida, Barbados, strings, harpsichord, MIDI, almost TO SELL BEFORE CHRISTMAS. is training science majors in located near Triangle Factory Bahamas. Lowest Prices/ Best E-mail [email protected] and visi unplayed, exc. cond., (new $3200) $3500 OBO, call 613-0874 Biomedical Information Technology. Shops in RTP. Call 468-9393 and Meal Plan 1-800-426-7710/ http://devilnelduke.edu. This i: $2200, call (919)419-9822. No experience required. Start your ask for Lynda after 1 p.m www. sunsplashtours.com your chance to change social lifel career at S27K Most people eam 1998 Dodge Van Seats 15. $33K in one year. Free, 4 week NEED CASH? You Cant Work All the Excellent Condition Panoramic intensive programming course. Work-Study student needed to Time!!! Windows. Good church, sports, or Starting 11/1/98. Jobs start 2/10/99. work Student Check Cashing ser­ In our last 4 classes, 18 out of 22 DEVILNET is the study-break activities van. Seats snap out easi­ vice in Bryan Center. Pay: $6.00/hr. Spring Break Specialsl Book early students received and accepted Room for rent 1 block from Duke choice for Duke students! Spout off ly for camping and travel. Good Interested? E-mail & Receive a Free Meal Plan!!! offers to work for our firm. MUST East Campus (Off of Main & in our Forum, or just kill some time Hippiee Van $4,000. 682-4680. [email protected] for Cancun _ Jamaica $399, Bahamas have BS with 2.9+ GPA Call Buchannan), no security-no down, playing games in our gaming details. $459, Panama City $99. 1-800- (888]680-9778 if interested. $300 a month and % of utilities, for lounge. See our ad in today's information call Thomas at (919) 234-7007 w w w. end le sss u m m er- Sportswrap. STEALTH NEEDX-TRAS ? 682-2848. '95 Dodge STEALTH, 34K miles, Enjoy the arts for FREE! if you're HTTP://DEVILNET.DUKE.EDU Come see us at A-1 Stop Mail bright red. LIKE NEW. Automatic, FREE Dec 4, 5, or 6, come usher a "•ACT NOW1 Call for best Spring World AIDS Day pwr. windows/door locks, A/C, tilt, Messiah performance in exchange Shoppe! Santa's elves will be busy Services Offered Break prices to South Padre (tren cruise, siren alarm, stereo/tape with for FREE admission. Feel FREE to shipping presents for the holidays Pick up a red ribbon on Tuesday, meals), Cancun, Jamaica, graphic equalizer. New tires and call 684-3898 or sign up outside 03 and need some help! Earn extra December 1 at any of the Student Keywest, Panama City. Reps battery; $16,000. 919-967-1089, Wesl Union. P.S. Its FREE Considering abortion? Explore Health Service sites (Clinic, money in a fun environment needed... Travel free, earn cash. 9:30am-9;30pm. Visit Alex at 762 Ninth Street your options Free pregnancy test. Healthy Devil, Infirmary, East Daily hours. Convenient location. Campus Wellness Clinic). Please Student worker needed to assist (across from George's) or call 416- with general office tasks including Pregnancy Support Services. 490- 8203. wear a ribbon to show your com­ 1355. 0203. mitment to the fight against AIDS. filing, answering, telephone, dataentry, preparation of mailings, Also be sure to visit the AIDS Work your own hours. Pre-paid Early Specials! Panama City! etc. in the Ofiice of Enrollment Memohal Quilt Display November legal services. Several positions Room With Kitchen $129! Includes Afterschool care needed beginning Services, Nicholas School of the 30-December 4, 10am-l0pm on open. 598-1146 7 Free Parties! Daytona $149! New tbe upper level of the Bryan Center Jan 1999. M-F, 2:30-6:30pm for 2 Environment. Flexible work sched­ Hotspot - South Beach $129! girls. Must be reliable, have own ule can begin now or at beginning Cocoa Beach $149! springbreak- For more information, call the BARTENDERS NEEDED!!! Helpl Need two tickets for any Healthy Devi! Health Education transportation with excellent driving of spring semester. Work-Sludy stu­ travel.com 1-800-6 Earn $15-30/hr. Job placement home basketball game. Please call Center at 684-5610. record and like animals. 419-0353. dents preferred but not required. 806-797-1719, or e-mail assistance. Raleigh's Call Cheryl Wallace at 613-8070 for [email protected] Early Specials! Cancun & Jamaica! interview. Bartending School. Call now for 7 Nights Air & Hotel From $399! BRING A CENTERFOLD Help Wanted info about our half price fall Need Tix-12/5 NC State game for Includes Free Food, Drinks, HOME TO MOM! MCAT instructors wanted! tuition special. (919)676-0774 mom's b-day. Will pay $$$$. Parties! springbreaktravel.com 1- www.cocktai Im ixer. com 800-678-6386 HAYES HOFLER & ASSOC, a Looking for Medical, Grad or Please call Christie at 613-2452. The new Sarah P. Duke Gardens Post-Grad students in the sci­ calendar is now in stock!! This small civil litigation firm in Durham, seeks an experienced paralegal ences. Must be an energetic Coming into town for special Early Spring Break Specials! calendar lets you capture the who has excellent organizational presenter, have good academic Houses For Rent events. Need 4 Tickets to Men's Bahamas Party Cruise! 6 Days beauty of the gardens in every and document retrieval skills. record and excellent test scores. basketball game 12/20/98. (410)- $279! Includes Most Meals! season. Available at The Salary and benefits commensurate Great pay and flexible hours. 877-3180 Awesome Beaches, Nightlife! University Store, East Campus with experience. Send resume lo; Call David at 493-5000. Contemporary Pool House, lots of Departs from Florida! springbreak- Store and The Terrace Shop tor 1007 Vicker Avenue, Durham, NC glass. Quiet wood neighborhood, NEEDED: 2-3 Tickets for 12/5 lravel.com 1- ' oniy S9.95. 27707 or fax to (919) 682-2016 access to pool; one bedroom, W/D. NCSU game. Dec. grad taking par­ Off farrington Rd, 10 min drive to ents to first game. Call Rob 613- Spring Break Travel was 1 of 6 Duke. 3600/mo. 419-0713. 2078. small businesses in the US recog­ nized by the Council of Better Wanted: Tickets for any Duke Business Bureaus for outstanding CawCUn «*_iq Houses For Sale Men's basketball game. (919)380- ethics in the marketplace! spring- Jamaica ill 7719 leave message breaktravel.com 1-800-678-6386 THECHRONICLE House in Watts Hospital, Pahatnas vs? Walking Distance to Duke. Charming, 3BDR, 2 Bath. classified advertising Hardwoods on Main level, spa­ florMa 11 cious master-bedroom. Retreat rates with private bath added in 1994. business rate - $6.00 for first 15 words Screened porch, Large deck private party/N.P. - $4.50 for first 15 words overlooks fenced, landscaped backyard. $164,900. 2018 all ads 10© (per day) additional per word Wilson Street. 286-3367 3 or 4 consecutive insertions -10 % off 5 or more consecutive insertions - 20 % off special features (Combinations accepted.) m_mm PUB & GRILLE $1.00 extra per day for all Bold Words Before you shell out biE butls for _ $1.50 extra per day for a Bold Heading review course - find o I about Ihe SERIOUS FUN entf course (night an organized (maximum 15 spaces) locally by Duke med siud $2.50 for 2 • line heading 687-5173 Bailey's Pub & Grille is an upscale, high $2.00 extra per day for Boxed Ad 18002347007 hilp://w»w.webcom.c energy gathering place for modern America. deadline 1 business day prior to publication by 12:00 noon BUILD FREE We feature championship billiards, 8 payment satellites, 30 TVs, full bar with over 100 Prepayment is required WEBPAGES different beers, and a pub-style menu. Cash, Check, Duke IR, MC/VISA or Rex accepted (We cannot make change for cash payments.) We are currently taking applications 24 - hour drop off locations for all positions: line cooks, dish prep, • Bryan Center Intermediate level •101 W. Union Building servers, bartenders, hosts/hostesses, •Hospital/South (near Wachovia) and events coordinator. or mail to: • 3MB off FREE storage Chronicle Classifieds Ifyou enjoy working in a fast-paced, fun Box 90858, Durham, NC 27708 - 0858 • Over 600 Images fax to: 684-8295 in the image gallery environment, come join our team! phone orders: • No HTML experience Applications accepted daily 9am - 7pm. call (919) 684-3811 to place your ad. needed Visit the Classifieds Online! Ram's Plaza • 1722 N. Fordham Blvd. • Chapel Hill http://www.chronicle.duke.edu/classifieds/today.ritml studentadvantage.com Call 684-3811 if you have any questions about classifieds. Your one-stop online resource 919-918-1005-FAX 919-9184189 MONDAY, NOVEMBER 30, 1998 THE CHRONICLE United States hopes aid will Under plan, employed disabled stymie radical organizations could purchase Medicaid coverage W BUDGET from page 2 ance, or they do not qualify for employ­ 9 AID from page 2 which has built public support by that causes AIDS, as well as people with er-sponsored health benefits because Arafat arrived in Washington on sponsoring medical clinics, schools kidney disease, spinal cord injuries, they work part-time. Saturday and had lunch Sunday and sport clubs. multiple sclerosis, various types of men­ — People with disabilities could pur­ with Secretary of Commerce State Department officials said tal illness, and impairments caused by chase Medicaid coverage even if they William Daley and a group of 15 that only two Arab nations—Syria strokes and heart attacks. Medicaid, in took jobs and earned income that dis­ American business leaders. He also and Lebanon—turned down invita­ particular, covers two items of great qualified them from the Supplemental met groups of Arab Americans. tions to Monday's meeting, just as value to many people with disabilities: Security Income program. States could In past years, much of the Ameri­ they did when invited to the 1993 con­ prescription drugs and the services of set the eligibility criteria and charge can aid money for the Palestinians ference. Syria and the Syrian-con­ personal assistants or attendants, who premiums for such Medicaid coverage. has been used for infrastructure, in­ trolled government of Lebanon have help the disabled perform everyday ac­ — States could allow "working indi­ cluding the paving of more than 400 been harsh critics ofthe Israeli-Pales­ tivities at home or at work. viduals with disabilities" to buy Medic- . miles of roads that knit together scat­ tinian peace process. Sandra Thurman, director of the Of­ aid coverage even if they lost eligibility tered towns and villages in the West Even as they spoke optimistically fice of National AIDS Policy, said the for cash benefits because of medical im­ Bank and Gaza. about the chances of increasing aid to president's proposal would help many provements in their conditions. American aid to the Palestinians is the Palestinians, State Department people with HIV keep their Medicaid Under current law, for example, a expected to increase, in part because officials acknowledged that they had benefits while they work. person with severe arthritis may receive of promises that President Bill Clin­ effectively suspended plans to open a "Without prescription drugs and cash disability benefits and Medicaid. ton made to Arafat's Palestinian Au­ Middle Eastern development bank, Medicaid coverage," she said, "they The Medicaid pays for therapy and a thority and to Israel that Washington an institution that they had once might not be able to work or continue to new drug that allows the person to go would pick up much ofthe bill for the billed as a symbol of economic cooper­ be healthy. We're always encouraging back to work. Although this temporary land-for-security plan that was ham­ ation among Israel, the Palestinians people to move from welfare to work. remission is mostly attributable to mered out in negotiations last month and their neighbors. But to keep people in the workplace, health care coverage, the person may in Wye, Md. Plans for the Middle East and paying taxes and living healthy produc­ lose both disability benefits and Medic­ The Israelis are expected to seek North Africa Development Bank were tive lives, we need to provide a mini­ aid under existing law. up to $1.2 billion in additional aid as announced in 1994. The bank, with mum amount of support to make sure "Many of us are unable to go to a result of the Wye agreement, while the United States as its largest share­ that happens." work because if we do, we will lose our Palestinian officials have suggested holder, was supposed to encourage Is­ Administration officials said the Medicaid and Medicare," said Paul that they will solicit as much as $400 raelis and Arabs to work together president's proposal would create sever­ Spooner of Framingham, Mass., vice million in new aid. with private investors on regional de­ al new options: president of the National Council on The United States also hopes that velopment projects. — People who lose eligibility for So­ Independent Living, a nonprofit an expanded aid package to the But the United States was un­ cial Security disability benefits because group that assists people with disabil­ Palestinians will allow Arafat to able to get the primary Middle they return to work would be allowed to ities. "That is a risk we cannot take. blunt the influence of the radicalTs- Eastern partners in the project to continue their Medicare coverage. Peo­ Our very lives depend on the pre­ lamic militant organization Hamas, agree on a charter for the bank. ple with disabilities often take low-pay­ scriptions, personal assistance, tech­ ing jobs that do not offer health insur­ nology, and therapy."

Duke Dance Prog.•; December IIHI-ltH

Ballet Modern African

'" . • Pick up a red ribbon at any Student Health Service site: f-'oAiuring Duke Kacult Siutlents. and Alumni

Student Health Clinic • The Healthy Devil Two Nif;hi» East Campus Wellness Clinic • Infirmary Friday. rk-vwnbei A ... Xi'JO pm Visit the AIDS Memorial Quilt Display OIA-U WriA. CaJitpu*

Nov 10-Dec 4 between lOam-lOpm \:Z.%-. .•Sl:2^eBe-fJ:.seaimg..^ 9 9 8 ••S^stitttents Upper Level Bryan Center In advance: 6&<-4l*M : At die door of Reynolds Theater beginning one hour Fcr more information call 684-5610 before curtain. Sponsored by: Alpha Delta Pi. Funded by: Alpha Delta Pi, Above: ThulaaiDance G'ueombe, December Dancej 1997 s Campus Council, East Campus Council, Edens Quad, Kilgo Quad, Crowell Quad, Sociology Dept. THE CHRONICLE MONDAY, NOVEMBER 30,1998 New plans shift location of town houses, save several trees M HOUSING from page 1 employees can purchase homes and depending on the final draft. forces residents to move out if they leave "I'm thrilled with the idea of developing this empty block. Additionally, the University as­ the University's employ for any reason. suaged residents' concerns about inade­ Friedman said the covenant means the And [rm] thrilled with the idea of being surrounded by quate on-street parking by agreeing to development will attract "people who want people who own their own homes." provide three parking spaces for each to live near Duke because they're involved new home constructed either in garages with Duke, not people who are thinking LESLIE TOBIN, ONSLOW STREET RESIDENT or in nearby alleys. about their house as an investment." Administrators also committed to University officials noted, however, being surrounded by people who own Charlotte architect Milton Grenfell preserving two of the three trees— that because the University's covenant their own homes." said the town houses and 21 single each more than 100 years old—which requires that home buyers actually live Now that neighbors' main concerns family homes will take their "architec­ may have been threatened by previous in their houses—not simply rent out the have been addressed, John Burness, se­ tural cue from the Georgian architec­ construction plans. The third tree, properties—the new residents will prob­ nior vice president for public affairs, ture ofDuke." they said, is already dying and will not ably be invested in the neighborhood. said he plans to present this updated The plan is part of the Duke- be saved. Many residents say the neighbor­ plan to the Building and Grounds Com­ Durham Partnership, which focuses Although the changes met unani­ hood, bordered by East Campus and the mittee during the Board of Trustees' the University's attention on seven mous approval, some residents re­ Walltown area, is currently plagued by Dec. 4 meeting. Construction would surrounding neighborhoods—includ­ mained concerned about the project's the high number of rental properties— probably begin next year. ing Trinity Heights. The Trinity overall goals. which landlords often neglect. Potter said the University has al­ Heights development is designed to Onslow Street resident Riki Fried­ "I'm thrilled with the idea of devel­ ready received about 100 inquiries on help the neighborhood while simulta­ man, for example, took issue with the oping this empty block," said Leslie the houses and town houses—which will neously creating a University commu­ premise of the development's Tobin, a resident of Onslow Street. cost an estimated $100 per square foot. nity that extends beyond the stone covenant—which states that only Duke "And [I'm] thrilled with the idea of Homes will cost an average of $120,000. walls of East Campus. Durham Tech: Johnson was offered a comparable job N.C. Central H JOHNSON from page 3 priate relations" with the inmates. "Throughout her association with the program, Susan readies to open "Allegations had arisen that she was involved in conduct inappropriate in the Johnson consistently has earned the highest levels on jail," Miller explained. "Anonymous calls student evaluations" new dormitories came in saying to watch out for Susan fi ENROLLMENT from page 3 Johnson." LAUREL FEREJOHN, DIRECTOR OF THE SHORT COURSE PROGRAM AT DUKE CONTINUING after UNC System President Durham Tech notified the jail of EDUCATION, WHERE JOHNSON HAS TAUGHT FOR 10 YEARS Molly Broad urged each of the 16 the allegations against Johnson, UNC campuses to calculate how Miller said, and the jail undertook an many additional students- they investigation. He said the jail then Education for 10 years, where she devel­ "(Larry Haverland, who was deputy could accommodate. decided that Johnson was no longer a oped "Word Power," a six-week course in director of the Durham county jail at North Carolina Central Univer­ welcome teacher. which students build knowledge of Eng­ that time,] said that she is persona non sity is currently working on plans Miller added that Durham Tech of­ lish vocabulary by studying Latin-based grata at the jail," said Miller. "He will in­ to increase on-campus housing, re­ fered Johnson the chance to respond to roots and prefixes. dicate this at the trial. He will also indi­ sponding to the same demographic the charges, but she declined. Miller did not dispute Johnson's cate that he never saw any discrimina­ projections. Fisher claims the allegations are un­ teaching ability, but said other factors tion against her—people in the jail were Two new residential buildings true. "They are hogwash," he said. "I contributed to the school's decision. helping her." are scheduled to open in January, have my doubts of whether the allega­ He said Johnson's increasing disabil­ Miller added that Johnson was not but the university will still only tions even occurred." ities created too much work for the jail. interested in the college's offer of an al­ offer bed space to less than half Laurel Ferejohn, director ofthe short The jail—built before ADA standards ternate position. of the student body. NCCU offi­ course program at Duke Continuing Ed­ required accessibility in government Fisher claims the position—an on- cials could not be reached for ucation, which employs Johnson, buildings—was not handicapped acces­ campus job teaching multiply handi­ comment. praised Johnson's classroom accom­ sible. As a result, jailers had to leave capped students—was inappropriate. University Director of Under­ plishments. their normal duties and assist her from "She's a high school Latin teacher, graduate Admissions Christoph "Throughout her association with the her car into the facility. Furthermore, not a special education teacher," he said. Guttentag said University admis­ program, Susan Johnson consistently Miller said, Johnson said that ari at- "This farther illustrates their prejudice sions do not follow fluctuations in has earned the highest levels on student home aid accompanied her into the jail because they just assumed that because numbers of high school seniors. evaluations," she said. Ferejohn added when she went to teach. she is in a wheelchair she can teach "I think probably the most signif­ that students often comment on John­ "So that is more unauthorized people handicapped students." icant impact [of the probable UNC- son's expertise, warmth, and "contagious in the jail," he said. "She was creating Miller countered that Durham Tech Chapel Hill enrollment increase is] enthusiasm.". extra work for the jailers." was not discriminatory. "[Durham it will keep us focused on recruiting "As director of the program," she Once the jail decided that Johnson Tech]... attempted to accommodate her the best students in North Caroli­ said, "I couldn't be happier to have her was a liability, Miller said Durham and she refused," he said. na," he said. on board." Tech—which was a "guest" in the jail— Durham County has since built a Johnson has taught in Continuing had to abide by its decision. new jail, which is ADA compliant.

Duke Chapel £arth & Spirit "Student Preacher Sunday " March 7,1999

NURTURING & MEANINGFUL GIFTS Q Any Duke undergraduate TO ENHANCE THE QUALITY. 5J& student is welcome to apply. OF YOUR LIFE. : j CoLOR mmm ARCH Ht ^^ Application guidelines are CANDLE HOLDER $24 Y. \ available in the Chapel FREE INCENSE SAMPLES - 1 Basement Office. Sermons FREE ASTROLOGICAL GEMSTONE LISTS. /-^ must be submitted by \l /• February 1,1999. 754 NINTH STREET - DURHAM - OPEN MONDAY-SATURDAY 10-6 SUNDAY 11-4-286-4250 \ / For further information, \ contact the Chapel Office, £ tf * 684-2909. MONDAY, NOVEMBER 30,1998 THE CHRONICLE Students voice concern about foreign language requirement m CURRICULUM from page 1 The Matrix Applied man classes to graduate. "lf I had started off [under This extra requirement, which Below is how senior John many students have objected to, cer­ Curriculum 2000], I would Snyder's courses would fit in tainly would not have kept him away have been easily able to the Curriculum 2000 matrix. from the University. The biology major lacks two modify it to fit. It's not that foreign language courses "If foreign language is your reason and one writing class. His for not coming to Duke, you probably demanding." third social science course need to reevaluate your priorities," he does not fit into any column said. But ifthe area were required, he TRINITY JUNIOR JOHN SNYDER, ON added, "I'd want a different kind of CURRICULUM 2000'S REQUIREMENTS Areas of course than they have here," one that Knowledge (min) focused more on culture, not rote play between science and society. "As a Natural Sciences and grammar. person who's interested in science and Besides foreign language, Snyder humanities, I would have found myself Mathematics (3) would also fall one exposure short of in courses like that," she said. But none Arts & Literature (3) meeting the writing standard. He took of her classes would satisfy the science, Civilizations (3) the Undergraduate Writing Course technology and society requirement, Social Sciences (3) his freshman year and is currently en­ probably because not enough of these rolled in an independent study on sci­ classes exist. Other . . - entific writing, but none of his other This is the only matrix requirement Minimum Exposures classes quite fit the criteria, in part she would not have completed.. Required because of the biology department's Like Snyder, Fass said she was limited offerings. dissatisfied with the style of instruc­ SOURCE: CURRICULUM REVIEW COMM TTEE WV LINSKY AND HICHARD RUB WTHE CHRONiCL "I think if biology knew that writing tion she received in her foreign lan­ was a requirement, they may force a guage classes. He had taken a foreign language for stuck to a pre-law path. He filled most few classes to focus on that," he said. "I felt like I was thrown into a five years before matriculation, and de­ of the current distribution require­ Already, the biology department of­ class of a bunch of people who had cided that he was not interested in fur­ ments in his first several years. fers enough 200-level classes in which taken Spanish from 7th grade to se­ ther language study. "If I'm not inter­ Since then, he has taken courses in students can fill their science, technol­ nior year in.high school, and I had ested in something, it's a waste of time his major that fit many matrix cate­ ogy and society and ethical inquiry re­ taken two semesters," she said. for me," he said. gories, including writing and research. quirements. Faculty advisors just need Under Curriculum 2000, many more When Katz applied his courseload One of the other crucial changes to encourage undergraduates to take students will likely be starting for­ to the matrix, he came up short both in that will need to occur if Curriculum these classes, Snyder said. eign languages. Fass said she hopes foreign language and science, technol­ 2000 is passed, Katz said, is an im­ Despite his heavy load of 17 sci­ the University would create different ogy and society. The STS requirement provement to the advising system. ence courses, Snyder satisfied almost tracks of classes for those with more "could be interesting if they make an "With this matrix, you're going to have all the other requirements of Curricu­ or less experience. effort to make more courses," he said. to have advisors who know what's lum 2000. Fass, a chemistry and history double Katz, an economics minor, has going on," he said. One factor that helped him was his minor, said the current curriculum cer­ classical studies minor, through which tainly needs some changes. Of Curricu­ he was exposed to cross cultural in­ lum 2000, she said, "I like this idea of quiry, ethical inquiry, interpretive and every student graduating from Duke aesthetic approaches and science, tech­ with three competencies." nology and society. Her attempt to place all her > In general, Snyder said, filling the courses on the matrix was the first matrix would not be a difficult chore, as time Fass looked carefully at Cur­ jHesfttal) long as classes are clearly labeled and riculum 2000. advisors have a working knowledge of Tm not sure I fully understand it," the requirements. she said. However, Fass added, "I An Oratorio "If I had started off [under Curricu­ wouldn't be overwhelmed with how by lum 2000], I would have been easily difficult [completing the matrix] able to modify it to fit," he said. "It's not would be at all." George Frederic Handel that demanding." "Could be interesting" Tm not sure I fully understand it" The Words Selected from Holy Four years ago, Duke's curriculum Scripture Allie Fass entered the University as was attractive to prospective student a pre-medical student, loading up on Seth Katz. The freedom and leniency, by Charles Jennens chemistry in her first three semesters he said, helped convince him to attend before becoming an English major. the University. "That was one of the So, by now, she assumed that she reasons I came to Duke; I didn't have to DUKE UNIVERSITY CHAPEL CHOIR would have taken courses on the inter- take foreign languages," Katz said. AND ORCHESTRA RODNEY WYNKOOP, conductor DAVID ARCUS, rehearsal accompanist

Catholic Student Center • Catholic Student Center • Catholic Student Center SOLOISTS Penelope Jensen, soprano Steven Rickards, countertenor Neiv Mass Schedule: Perry Smith, tenor Daniel Britt, bass

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11:30am on Tuesdays & Thursdays in the Friday, December 4,1998, 7:30 p.m. Catholic Student Center Saturday, December 5,1998,2:00 p.m. There is also a 12:30pm Mass on Wednesdays in the chapel of Sunday, December 6,1998, 3:00 p.m. Duke Hospital North Tickets priced at S12 (general admission) and $5 (Duke students) Sunday Masses are: are available at the Page Box Office, 684-4444. Mail orders: 11am in York Chapel (Divinity School, second floor) & MESSIAH Tickets, Page Box Office, Box 90940, Durham, NC 9pm in Duke Chapel 27708. There are no scheduled Masses on Mondays, Tuesdays, or Saturdays J Catholic Student Center - Catholic Student Center • Catholic Student Center THE CHRONICLE MONDAY, NOVEMBER 30, 1998 LET'S GO KROGERING FOR... S Red Tap _ Price Reductions FOOD & DRUG Thousands Of Items On Sale Each Week!

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Hilary Howard and the Blue Devils cruise to the Ronald McDonald Classic title SPORTSWRAP MONDAY, NOVEMBER 30, 199S TANK aFNAMARA® by Jeff Millar and Bill Hinds SPORTSWRAP WHEW 5-TUPEtJf & PIPtiT WSOWSE EfJOUGA FOEL FOR THE MA<_*IV£ EWJ T.WK&GIVIV16 SAME SOWFtffi, A WEALTHY ALUiVp LANPLOffP CAME THROUGH TO &AVE THE I20-YEAR-OLP J* Alaskan chill TRAPITIOR Melvin Levett's slam dunk with four sec­ onds left capped off a wild finish as Cincinnati upset tne top-ranked men's basketball team to capture the Great Alaska Shootout title. See p. 1, The Chronicle

> Back on track The women's basketball team picked up where it left off against Vanderbilt with a Brand, Chuasiriporn up for Sullivan pair of big wins over Villanova and Marquette at the Duke Women's From staff reports Basketball Classic. 69TH ANNUAL SULLIVAN AWARD CANDIDATES Sophomore Elton Brand and senior Jenny Chuasiriporn were named candidates Wednesday See p. 3 Angelo Taylor tracks -field.":. for the 69th annual AAU James E. Sullivan Angie Trostel diving Memorial Award. basketball The two Duke stars join a list of 22 athletes in Thursday Chamique Hofdsclaw basketball contention for the award, which is presented to the Detroit 19, Pittsburgh 16 OT Chris Dairy hockey top amateur athlete who has achieved athletic excel­ Minnesota 46, Dallas 36 Dat Nguyen football lence and exhibited leadership, character, sports­ manship and the ideals of amateurism. The Sullivan Daunte Culpepper footbaH Yesterday Elton Brand basketball award, named after the pioneer in amateur sports, has been presented annually since 1930. Baltimore 38, Indianapolis 31 Janet Dykman archery. .. Tampa Bay 31, Chicago 17 Jenny Chuasiriporn golf Brand led the United States to the gold medal at Jacksonville 34, Cincinnati 17 Kristina Lum . synchronizedswimming this summer's Goodwill Games and was named the Kansas City 34, Arizona 24 Lynda Norry bowling 1998 USA Basketball Man ofthe Year for his efforts. New York Jets 48, Carolina 21 Mark Ruiz diving • • -: He also averaged over 13 points per game during his Atlanta21, St. Louis 10 Matt Kuchar golf freshman season for Duke and is a preseason All- American and Wooden Award National Player ofthe New England 25, Buffalo 21 Pat Burrell baseball Seattle 20, Tennessee 18 Ricky Williams football Year candidate for this season. Green Bay 24, Philadelphia 16 Shoni Barton . water skiing.... Chuasiriporn jumped into the national spotlight Miami 30, New Orleans 10 Sammie Henson wrestling this past summer when she finished second at the U.S. Open. She is currently the top-ranked colle­ Washington 29, Oakland 19 Sharon Crawford ski orienteering Denver, San Diego late Tim Couch football giate women's golfer and recently turned in a record- Torry Holt football setting performance in leading the United States to Tricia Saunders wrestling the amateur World Cup championship. Cover photo by Alex Belskis >..£&& NEED FUNDS FOR A PROJECT? (fyfrjfr/& &^^&?i Student organizations seeking funding for Spring 1999 projects from President Nannerl O. Keohane Vice President for Student Affairs Janet Smith Dickerson Dean of Undergraduate Affairs Robert Thompson Provost John Strohbehn must submit a proposal to the Office of Student Affairs, 106 Flowers Building by The only thing better WEDNESDAY, DEC. 9,1998 than an iMac: Each proposal must include a Request for University Funds An iMac for less than form, which can be picked up at 106 Flowers, and a budget j29-99/month. summary. Proposals wil be considered for projects or events that Apple* Computer couldn't make iMac any easier to set up or use,. So they made it easier to buy. Now, if make a contribution to the University community in one or more you're a student, you can get an iMac for less than $2999 per month*, with the first payment not due of the following ways: for 120 days. For about what you'd spend on a few pizzas, you can have a superfast computer that can • Co-Curricular education get you onto the internet in 10 minutes right out of the box. You also get a coupon book with $2,000 in possible additional savings, for things like software, games and accessories. • Multicultural Awareness Come try an iMac for yourself at: • Health and Safety Duke University Computer Store • Social Activities that are alternatives to alcohol-centered events _ Lower Level Bryan Center • 684-8956 " University/community service .""«! http://dukestores.duke.edu/cpustore/cpustr-index.html FOR MORE INFORMATION, PLEASE CALL OR COME BY THE OFFICE OF CAMPUS COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT 203 ROWERS BUILDING, 684-6538 Department ofDuke University Stores® MONDAY, NOVEMBER 30,1998 SPORTSWRAP Blue Devils capture 7th-straight Classic title with big wins Marquette's defensive Goestenkors feels the Blue strategy was unable to Devils may be getting back on contain Duke's offense track after a pair of easy wins

The very same defensive Having nicknamed its season the strategy that Marquette used journey, it may have been appropriate to upset No. 13 Florida in the that the women's basketball team first game of the Duke showed this weekend that all it needed Women's Basketball Classic was a trip home. became its undoing when it After blowing out both Villanova and battled the host Blue Devils in Marquette to claim the Ronald the last. McDonald Duke Women's Basketball In both of its games this Classic title, head coach Gail weekend, the Golden Eagles Goestenkors is about ready to forget her employed a collapsing zone team's early season struggles and pro­ defense, double-teaming oppos­ nounce it back on track. ing post players while leaving "We're starting to feel confident with openings on the perimeter. ourselves," Goestenkors said. "As a When it started the tourna­ team we're getting more confidence. ment Saturday, Marquette held Hilary Howard, even though she didn't Florida's leading scorer Tanya shoot particularly well tonight, really Washington, who averages 19.2 played with a lot of confidence. Our points per game, to 10 points. offense is getting better. We're getting Meanwhile, led by guards it bit by bit." Kiesha Oliver and Kristi Seniors Nicole Erickson and Johnson, the Golden Eagles Payton Black each scored 18 points to poured in one three-point shot lead the 20th-ranked Blue Devils (4-3) after another en route to a 77-61 over the Golden Eagles of Marquette win. Playing against the 20th- (4-2) 91-60 yesterday in Cameron, ranked Blue Devils for the tour­ clinching Duke's seventh straight nament championship yester­ tournament title. day, however, Marquette found Facing a tenacious defense that this tactic didn't work. had stunned No. 13 Florida (6-2) the "Florida played a 2-3 zone," night before, the Blue Devils showed Duke coach Gail Goestenkors no signs of a letdown against the said of Marquette's upset over lower-ranked team, riding a pair of the Gators. "It really enabled Erickson three-pointers to an early 9- Marquette to execute their 2 advantage. offense, and they just ran the ALEX BELSKIS/THE CHRONICLE "I just started off playing confident­ ball and made five, six passes GEORGIA SCHWEITZER shoots over several Marquette defenders during the Blue Devils' 91 -60 win yesterday ly tonight," said Erickson, whose per­ every possession until they got in the championship game of the Ronald McDonald Duke Women's Basketball Classic. formance in the final earned her tour­ the wide-open shot, and they nament MVP honors. "If I start that took that wide-open shot. VanGorp tallied 23 points to foot-6 center. What they did­ the Blue Devils prepared to way, I can really set the tone for my "Today they didn't have a lot carry her team to a 75-47 n't seem to realize, however, take advantage of the open game. I'm just feeling better with my of open shots. With our pres­ win over Villanova Saturday, was that Duke's backcourt looks their guards would be performance now." sure-man [defense], they didn't the Golden Eagles clamped could be just as dangerous able to find. So when the For the preseason All-ACC selection, have the same looks as they down on her, frequently dou­ as its frontcourt. Golden Eagles neutralized the game marked a turning point of had yesterday." ble-teaming and sometimes Aware that Marquette VanGorp, Duke was not at sorts in an up-and-down season. After center Michele even triple-teaming the 6- would play a collapsing zone, See VANGORP on page 6 + See ERICKSON on page 6 •

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.. -. •-.., •- 0-1 - 0-0-• 0-0 •3 that started with a three-pointer by Langdon. The IKrzyzewski] afterwards it's just a privilege to play Maggetis 17 .2-5 0-2 o-o • 3 Za Blue Devils then took advantage of their superior size against them." Team.- •5': Totals 20. 27-59 M0 13-15 28 to 4 •4- IB 75 to go inside for five baskets, while on defense they The Bulldogs never relented even as Duke started denied-the Bulldogs good scoring chances. putting some distance between them. A pair of drives Cincinnati 45 35 ™. 77..••• "[The guards] were getting us the ball in an easy by Chris Herren and two short jumpers by Courtney Ouke 35 :;4U 75. a- :• . place to score," Brand said. Alexander pulled Fresno State within six, 63-57, with — Krzyzewski said his team had its hands plenty full 11:27 left in the game. But Duke then went on a 16-8 Officials: H •-. Dixo Afier!daf!ce-~e,70O Cwson with Fresno State's uptempo game. tear to seal the victory. "We played against a team every bit as athletic as we See BULLDOGS on page 7 *-

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Up to $1000 Healthy ma!es and females, Sm^L^ ages 18-45 ,„„' WorldTeach Harvard Insuiule {pr Inlernalional Development 800-4-TEACH-O IMiMiMMW*. info Bv, o rldt eac h .org MONDAY, NOVEMBER 30,1998 SPORTSWRAP SPORTSWRAP MONDAY, NOVEMBER 30, 1998 Erickson helps Blue Devils VanGorp takes over inside to capitalize out on perimeter spark Duke's rout of Wildcats M ERICKSON from page 3 court, we were able to dictate their VANGORP from page 3 the perimeter, adding three and two "Nicole is playing with a lot of con­ offense. And I think a lot of that is just all surprised. trifectas, respectively. With nine min­ fidence now," Goestenkors said. "She's the senior in her." "I knew they were going to piay utes to go in the first half, 15 of Duke's a great shooter, and she's the type of It was the same defensive intensity zone, that sagging 2-3 zone made 22 points had come from threes. player who is going to work harder that led Duke over Villanova (2-3) 75- famous by Tfexas Tech, where they dou­ Meanwhile, the Blue Devils stifled than anybody else. She's been in a 47 in its opening-round game. After ble team your post players," the Golden Eagles' backcourt, prevent­ slump recently, but she's just got to trailing for most ofthe first 15 minutes Goestenkors said. "What is open is the ing it from replicating its performance shoot herself out, which she is start­ of the contest, the Blue Devils upped guards. We knew it ^m^^—mamm against Florida. Duke ing to do." the pressure, quickly turning a one- was going to be there, held Oliver to two Duke parlayed the lead into a dou­ point deficit into an eight-point half- and we came out hot." points and Johnson to ble-digit margin, which it held for the time advantage. Nicole Erickson one assist* rest ofthe contest after a pair of Black led the Blue Devils "I was really pleased with the way we "We were really free throws just over 12 minutes into played the second half, and the way we from the perimeter, pleased with the the game. A Peppi Browne layup at racking up 18 points, played near the end of the first half," defense tonight, espe­ the 12:50 mark in the second half Goestenkors said. "We really got after 12 of which came cially in the second capped off a 23-9 run that pushed the from beyond the arc. them then." half when we extend­ lead to 28 points and put the game After the break, Goestenkors adjust­ Coming out of a ed the defense out well out of reach. recent slump, ed her offense to place the emphasis on and took their guards "We were really pleased with the its post play, as Michele VanGorp, who Erickson attributes "I just started off out of the flow," defense tonight, especially in the second Goestenkors said. led the team with 23 points and joined increased confidence playing confidently half," Goestenkors said. "When we Erickson on the All-Tournament team, to her improvement extended the defense out, we took their tonight.... I'm just Finding itself frus­ went to work against the smaller yesterday. trated by Marquette's guards out of the flow. Wildcat front line. "I just started off feeling better with my defense, the Blue "Then (the early second-half run] "In the second half I think we real­ playing confidently performance now." Devil frontcourt was ignited by our defense. Our inten­ ized VanGorp was going to be able to tonight," she said. "If evaded the pressure sity in denying the ball really sparked score whenever she got the ball," I start that way, I NICOLE ERICKSON and the double teams this team... and a big part of the Goestenkors said. "Then we really start­ can really set the — — by passing the ball [defensive pressure] is Hilary ed to pound the ball inside to her, and tone for my game. I'm just feeling bet­ back out to the guards. Forward Howard. It starts with her. When she she did a great job for us. In the begin­ ter with my performance now. Georgia Schweitzer collected three started picking up defensively full- ning of the game, we just weren't look­ "Right now it's all mental for me. assists on the afternoon, and Rochelle Parent and Payton Black ing for her enough." This year I haven't been aggressive DUKE 75, VILLANOVA 47 If anyone took note of enough at times, waiting for the ball had two apiece, helping Duke's back- court to capitalize on its open looks. UP w l(ni n A TO SUC SI PF PTS VanGorp's performance, it instead of going after my shot." was Marquette head Erickson wasn't the only Blue Devil "[The post players] did a great job tonight [kicking the ball out], and coach Terri Mitchell, hitting shots from downtown either. whose Golden Eagle Naz Medhanie and Krista Gingrich that's exactly what we're going to need from them," Erickson said. defense held the 6-foot-6 contributed to Duke's barrage from senior to just four points on three shots. However, they were unable to con­

Team tain her understudy, Tom Black, who poured in 18 points to match Erickson's game-high total. Reserves Naz Medhanie and Peppi • ->- % Browne added nine points frnxt G'nji-ir,'. each as the Duke bench Sriwri* outscored the starters 46-

r-nvm 45, outdistancing the Golden Eagles1 bench by 34 points. ghrt "The bench did a great job tonight," Goestenkors said. "I feel really good with the way they can play, and I feel better devilnet about it every day." gurm

well, it's not totally flushed out yet. ON* «Wr, oNr ftekttr. oNi GBsAT «**¥!!! IT'S 1_tt TlMl Or -sttl WH»(| THOUSitoS OP JTl'r r*Ts COME TO jMMiCt TO rm. tu. BiGHT - ton -X -NB_u-MBU PBiCr!!! _n Splash Toms 1860-.26-7110 sunn. Travel Services 1800-648-4849 JAMAICA http://devilnet.duke.edu Price is per person based on Quad occupancy; Irom i lect departure CU . alrfy (or reduction r require surcharge. US and Jamaica departure taxes (currently 159) ai $9 handling charge additional. Rates increase $30 on surcharges/ufl-week discounts may apply. Restrictions i d cancellation penalties apply. Limited avail.bii. . Cali foi- full details en hotel selection and availability. MONDAY, NOVEMBER 30, 1998 SPORTSWRAP Blue Devils hit 15-of-20 from 3-point range in rout of Irish SI BULLDOGS from page 4 Avery scored 22, and Langdon added 20 as Duke Harold Swanagan scored 17 and David Graves 16 Herren led all scorers with 29, 17 of them in the overwhelmed the Irish, 111-82. for the Irish, which fell far behind early despite shoot­ second half. Alexander had 19 and Mevin Ely 18 for Avery hit six three-pointers, and Langdon went 4- ing just under 50 percent on the night. Fresno State. for-4 behind the arc. Freshman came A pair of dunks by gave Notre Dame a Chris Burgess added 1§ points and 16 rebounds for off the bench to add 20 for the Blue Devils, who coast­ 6-3 lead in the game's opening minutes, but two foul the Blue Devils and Chris Carrawell scored 14. ed after taking a 28-point halftime lead. shots by Avery and a Domzalski hook put the Blue A 15-4 burst by Duke early in the second half Brand scored 14 points and Taymon Domzalski con­ Devils up for good. opened up what had been a back-and-forth game. With tributed 10 points for the Blue Devils, who led by as Duke, which shot 71 percent from the floor in the Fresno State ahead 46-45, Langdon connected on a much as 38 points. first half, steadily built up its lead before going on a three-pointer. The Blue Devils then went inside time Duke connected on 12 ofits 13 three-point attempts 25-8 tear to take a 62-34 lead at the break. after time to their big men, while at the other end the in the first half and finished 15 for 20 from long range. Avery had 19 of his points in the first half and Bulldogs couldn't find the range. "Our shooting was amazing tonight," Krzyzewski said. Langdon, whose introduction at the start ofthe game Fresno State shot only 44 percent for the game and The Blue Devils, in fact, shot better on three-point­ set off a raucous ovation, had 14. was outrebounded 53-30. The Bulldogs did force 15 ers than it they did from close in and ended the night Notes: Battier missed Duke's game against Fresno Duke turnovers. with 64 percent from the floor. State with a flu bug but returned against Cincinnati and Alexander opened the scoring with a jump shot, but Notre Dame coach John MacLeod was in awe of played 16 minutes.... Brand and Langdon were also Langdon came back with a drive followed by a three- Duke's offensive performance. named to the All-Tournament team.... This was pointer to put Duke ahead 5-2. "I think they had 15 straight possessions on which they Cincinnati's first win in eight tries against a No. 1 team. The Bulldogs got out to their biggest lead of the scored," said MacLeod. "I've never seen a run like that." Nathan Stephan contributed to this story. half at 23-19 on a basket by Herren before three straight by Carrawell gave the Blue Devils the lead that they built to five points. Fresno State scored the last six points ofthe half to even the score at 38 at the break. You toy be a worfd away. Duke's only easy win ofthe tournament came in the opener on Thursday against Notre Dame. The X Fighting Irish kept pace with Duke for about five min­ You fhpy be right here. utes—just long enough for the Blue Devils to warm up \ their long-distance shooters. % DUKE 93, FRESNO STATE 82 But you're never out of touch with Duke.

: Fresno Si. MP FG 3PS FT R • au sr PF PTS Abney.- • •23. 1-5 0* 1-2 7 ' :3-6-,:Q-3: 3-6 9 II : • 88 8-12 0-0 2-5 6 m- .-.10-20 -4-5. 5-5::.-Q-: 0 •6-21 '..:0-a:;: 3-i v . • • a O-O 0-0 y.{?_ 0 • "Ofesfc ; Richard ••:;;• U" 1-2 0-1 C-0 0 ..'_:•• a - 1 2 2 :«;:• • : •17 • 1-4 W-- 0-11 •:&'•• • • 2 • Totals •• • HM 32-72 £13; 14-22 28 12 M-. 6 20 82 OuU> HP FQ JPG FT fr 4 TO ST PF PTS I • •• Ma •ti •- • m • 10-16 0-0 1-2 21 Burgest 0-12 CHJ u ;-'34': 2-7 0~% 5-6 0 : ; 3a . 8-19.: 4-12 •6-6;:. 2 .-: "•' JS:; r>1 0-- 0-0 0 •fl • : 16. 0-1 0-0 0-0 4 •m

• 1i> 3-6 0-1 •• . • 2-2 : 0 •m fl K.\ 13 8 •••5 _ Totala a 200 36-77.4-20 17-22 48 21 15 t 6 1T 93

; Fresnostaie Sfl 44 - 85' Duke 55 - 93

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WATCH THE CHRONICLE FOR . „. - TkrChronicle Online MORE www.chronicle.cluke.edu INFORMATION Bringing Duke to you. SPORTSWRAP MONDAY, NOVEMBER 30, 1998 What have been your most memorable experiences as a Duke student? Reply to: [email protected] or visit "change@duke" at http://devilnet.duke.edu On DevilNet's site, you will be able to respond to ten specific questions about social life and see how others have responded. All responses will remain anonymous, and some responses will be published in upcoming ads.

Here are more of your responses about social life: • "I hate that everyone here is so intent on change. I like Duke the way it is and I get sick of people thinking that just because part of the student body is less than happy that we should revamp everything." • "I love the fact that for those who DO choose to make an intellectual and cultural experience out of being here the University provides every resource we could want. I love the fact that even though speakers have small crowds, those speakers are still here and I could find a great one every night of the week if I wanted to." _ • "I certainly expected more than I got from my FAC, with his cavalier attitude and desire to initiate his FAClets to "the ways of college life." There is and should be more to life on the weekends than bad parties and drunken children procreating for the next generation." • "I hate the fact that dating has become a thing of the past and that sleazy hook-ups are the replacement."