RECESS Strolling down Utopia Parkway 's latest is a gem, but the Backsliders' sophomore effort Southern THE CHRONICLE Lines goes astray. SEE RECESS, p. 12-13 Sweet as Candy: Duke wins golf title When it became clear that the rain • Freshman Candy Hannemann would not stop and that the Blue Devils finished in second place and led were indeed champions, there was the usual celebration, but something was the Blue Devils to their first-ever amiss. There was an unmistakable national championship. sense of uneasiness over the way the By NEAL MORGAN tournament ended. Hie Chronicle "I was happy, but it was a weird feel­ TULSA, Okla. — When the women's ing," said second place finisher Candy golf team dreamed of winning its first-ever Hannemann of the moment she real­ national championship, it dreamed of the ized play would not resume. "I wasn't 18th hole, the sun shining and the final sure if I should be happy, or just kind of putt dropping. happy. I didn't know what to feel. But But when the Blue Devils' dreams after I was with the girls, I realized became reality Saturday, they weren't what we had done. It doesn't matter the even on the course. They were inside, way it ended." playing cards. The cause for the uneasiness was Ari­ With seven holes left in the fourth and zona State, which through the course of

final round, severe storms prevented the the day had made great strides against the NEAL MORGAN/THE CHRONICLE completion of play. With all the teams hud­ Blue Devils. The Sun Devils had complete­ THE BLUE DEVILS celebrated indoors when thunderstorms forcedth e cancellation of the final round. dled in the Tulsa Country Club, NCAA of­ ly cut Duke's lead and the two teams were ficials announced the Blue Devils the 1999 tied at the turn. Duke rebuilt a two-stroke said everyone on her team believed they great golf. They'll always in their hearts champions thanks to Duke's eightrstroke lead when, at 3:40 p.m., a siren signaled would win had the round continued. know they could have won.... They will lead after three rounds. the suspension of play. "We had momentum going our way, we always wonder." The title is Duke's first ever for a The rain never stopped and officials were only down two strokes with a lot of When the rain delay was first called, women's team, and just the fourth in were forced to cancel the final round. holes left," Vollstedt said. They were all Dianne Dailey, the chair of the NCAA school histoiy in any sport- Arizona State coach Linda Vollstedt playing with confidence and playing See CHAMPIONSHIP on page 25 • Administrators name engineering dean Colorado optics expert Kristina Johnson will replace Earl Dowell, who served 16 years Dowell's tenure will provide Johnson a stable foundation upon which to begin her term, she will face several signif­ Kristina Johnson, an internationally known expert in icant challenges in her first few years of office. optics, signal processing and computing, has been named Lurking beyond the initial hurdle of replacing retiring dean ofthe School of Engineering, University Associate Dean for Undergraduate Programs officials announced yesterday. Marion Shepard is the school's need for a new The Denver native earned three degrees comprehensive strategic plan. Johnson will from Stanford University, has filed 30 patents likely spend her first year of service, or maybe for optical materials and devices and has re­ more, drafting and tweaking this design. ceived more than $40 million in funding for 75 "We want to design a strategic plan different research projects. Johnson, a profes­ that is well integrated into the strategic sor of electrical engineering at the University plan of the University," Johnson said. "It of Colorado at Boulder, also developed and should encourage growth in the number of starred in a regional Emmy-nominated televi­ faculty positions..." sion series called "Learning 4 Pun, The Physics In his recently released thought piece on of Light." ""*""'"' sa" the state of academics at the University, out­ The 42-year-old will become the school's going Provost John Strohbehn called for DAN HaSON/M CHRONIC LE first female dean and its first new leader in more than 16 adding 20 faculty in engineering. DURHAM'S WATER SYSTEM pumps about 28 million gallons years. And although the duration of current dean Earl See ENGINEERING on page 18. i- per day, but city officials cannot account for a quarter of that. Officials propose workplace culture initiatives City examines water statement in the May 14 Duke Dia­ promotional opportunities." • Senior administrators said the logue, the University's senior officials The other two initiatives—Em­ bills, faulty meters University has not done all it announced these suggestions and in­ ployee Process Redesign and Perfor­ should to ensure employee troduced five initiatives to turn the mance Management Design—are The University may have been billed for principles into realities. meant to clarify job expectations and Most of the initiatives focus on provide feedback to both incoming less water than it has been consuming By JAIME LEVY training and leadership development and current employees. The Chronicle for employees throughout Duke. The "We recognize that we do not have By RICHARD RUBIN After more than a year of explo­ Supervisory Leadership Learning as effective career development and Tfo Chronicle ration and planning, the University Model is designed for supervisory professional growth possibilities [as For the past few months, city workers have been has followed the lead of many major staff while the Leadership Develop­ necessary] to compete and retain the busily replacing or repairing malfunctioning water companies, issuing a value statement ment Institute identifies and refines talent we need," said Vice President meters, beginning to plug the leaks of what could to reshape its workplace culture. the leadership skills of selected em­ for Human Resources Clint David­ turn out to be a massive, multi-year underbilling of In a report completed July 1, ployees, regardless of position. Ac­ son, chair of the task force. "Effective the city's latest customers, including the Universi­ 1998, a work culture task force iden­ cording to the statement, the Career organizations are very dependent on ty and Durham Regional Hospital. tified five core values as essential to Mobility Program "is targeted at staff having skilled, capable, strong super­ City officials recently discovered that about a creating a healthy working environ­ in lower-level pay grades and is in­ visors.... The very best organizations quarter ofthe city's water has been unaccounted for ment: trustworthiness, learning, tended to provide basic skills and have leaders throughout." See WATER BILLS on page 10 > teamwork, respect and diversity. In a abilities to be used in filling future See CULTURE on page 9 P*

• TRINITY HEIGHTS DEVELOPMENT NEARS CONSTRUCTION SEE PAGE 8 • WOMEN'S TENNIS FALLS IN FINAL FOUR SEE SPORTS, PAGE 19 THE CHRONICLE • PAGE 2 WORLD & NATIONAL THURSDAY, MAY 27,1999

NEWSFILE Panel drafts Milosevic war crimes indictment

FROM WIRE REPORTS The decision may further weaken peace negotiations with the Yugoslav president • Republicans shoot down gun control proposals sified her inquiries in recent weeks. pulled out the rug from under the Republicans yesterday beat back a Democratic attempt to N.Y. The indictment of Milosevic, whose negotiating process," said one court force a vote this week on new gun restrictions, saying the BRUSSELS — The Internation­ almost 12 years in power in Serbia official. Viktor Chernomyrdin, the House will take its time considering Senate firearms pro­ al Criminal Tribunal in The Hague, have coincided with wave after wave Russian envoy to the Balkans, is posals. The House Judiciary Committee rejected an attempt Netherlands, will indict Slobodan of violence in the Balkans, will pose due to visit Belgrade Thursday for by John Conyers, D-Mich., to have the panel approve and Milosevic, the Yugoslav president, great difficulties for the diplomatic a meeting with Milosevic. send to the floor the Senate's proposals, including mandato­ for war crimes and will announce quest to end the war in Kosovo. ry background cheeks on all firearms transactions at gun Paul Risley, a spokesman for the shows. Chair Henry Hyde said the panel will hold to its plan the indictment Thursday, officials Milosevic has been the object of tribunal, said the court's decision and consider how the Senate bill would affect constitutional said Wednesday. harsh condemnation from NATO would be announced at a news con­ rights and send a bil! to the floor in mid-June. The officials, who spoke on con­ leaders, who have recently dropped ference Thursday afternoon, but dition of anonymity, declined to all diplomatic niceties in referring would give no further details. specify the crimes for which Milo­ to him. But he has remained the If the past is any precedent, • Indian jets attack Pakistani guerrillas in Kashmir sevic is to be indicted. But Louise sole interlocutor in Belgrade for Western governments may find Indian combat jets and helicopter gunships attacked a large Arbour, the chief prosecutor of the Russian-led efforts to end the war themselves obliged to shun Milose­ guerrilla force dug into the snow-capped mountains of tribunal, began an investigation that have been broadly supported vic, who has always denied any re­ Kashmir Wednesday, drastically increasing tensions in the into responsibility for war crimes by the United States and its allies. sponsibility for Serbian war crimes subcontinent. The raids were the most serious confrontation in Kosovo last year, and has inten­ between Pakistan and India since the bitter rivals both "In effect, this decision has in Bosnia and Kosovo. exploded nuclear bombs a year ago. Experts said the conflict would test how well the two countries could manage such tensions now that the stakes are so much higher. GOP legislator signs campaign finance petition cision to work with the Democrats on the campaign • Torture case continues despite mistrial motion issue as a vote of no confidence in the new speaker. The judge in the New York City police sodomy and torture WASHINGTON — The chief House Republican pro­ "Dennis Hastert is their speaker," DeLay, R-Texas, case rejected motions for a mistrial Wednesday and told the ponent of overhauling the nation's campaign finance said Tuesday as he put his weight behind a separate jury the trial would go on without the officer who previously laws defied his party Wednesday by signing a Democ­ bill to eliminate public financing of campaigns and pleaded guilty. U.S. District Judge Eugene Nickerson ratic petition designed to force the issue to the House eliminate all spending limits. "He's been working with explained that Justin Volpe's guilty plea to violating the civil floor. He accused Tom Delay, the powerful House ma­ them. He's been very helpful to them and, frankly, I rights ofa Haitian immigrant, should not be used as evidence jority whip, of offering to finance a primary challenge think they ought to show him the respect- to work in determining the guilt or innocence of the other four officers against him and he cast the issue as a struggle with through the regular order." charged. Minutes earlier, with the jury out of the courtroom, DeLay over the soul ofthe party. two defense attorneys had asked Nickerson to declare a mis­ Delay's spokesman Michael Scanlon denied the trial. They said the jury, knowing that the lead defendant was Rep. Christopher Shays of Connecticut was one of charge that the whip had offered a contribution if some­ guilty, would assume the worst ofthe remaining defendants. five Republicans who broke with the Republican lead­ one ran against him. "We have a long-standing policy to ership Wednesday to sign the petition. That brought support incumbents and we won't break that," he said. TODAY'S FORECAST the number of signatures to 201, still 17 short ofthe Although majorities in both the House and Senate 218 majority needed to force action. have voted for the legislation to ban the unlimited, un­ Most of the nearly three dozen Republicans who regulated donations to political parties at the heart of PARTLY CLOUDY ^ for y^ grandma, she shouldn't High: 76 have mouthed off like that." support the bipartisan bill that Shays sponsors with the 1996 campaign finance scandals, leading Republi­ Rep. Martin Meehan, D-Mass., remained deeply reluc­ cans have managed to bottle up the measure since Low: 53 —Homer Simpson tant to cross their House leaders, who have cast a de­ their party took control of Congress.

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Check us out on the web CORNERSTONE Community Discover the Difference THURSDAY. MAY 27. 19! THE CHRONICLE Dining Services hopes to finalize contracts today McDonald's and Armadillo Grill are likely sircuvberi coming; George's may follow in the LSRC As the picking season From staff reports Contract negotiations with McDonald's and the draws to a close, local Armadillo Grill should be finalized by today, said residents hurry—at a Jim Wulforst, director of Dining Services. The two restaurants are slated to open in their respective leisurely pace—to pick Bryan Center spaces by Aug. 23. their own strawberries. Under the tentative contract, McDonald's will be open from 7 a.m. to 8 p.m. seven days a week, with an option to extend its hours to include late-night By Kelly Woo breakfast service if there is a demand. Ttie> Chronicle- Before the grand opening, the space previously SARAH SHEPHERD hunts for berries hidden among at Holland's Farm. occupied by a- string of restaurants—Burger King, Mean Gene's Burgers and the University-run All- Strawberries are taking over the local gro­ days, they drop by after work, right before the sun sets American Grill—will receive a $400,000 facelift. cery stores, and that can mean only one and the form closes. Construction is scheduled to begin next week. thing—summer is in full swing. Although Although it is easier and quicker to run to the su­ The Carrboro-based Armadillo Grill will take # the luscious red gems will be available in permarket for strawberries, Shepherd said, "It's a lot over the Rathskeller's space, and will serve Tex-Mex stores for most of the summer, the season is nearly more fun as a family to go out and [pick them]. Gets you food from 11 a.m. to midnight Sunday through over for local strawberry farmers. This weekend might back to nature." Wednesday and from 11 a.m. to 2 a.m. Thursday be the last chance for individuals to indulge their hunter- Picking one's own berries can also yield better results through Saturday. gatherer instincts and pick their own strawberries. than the supermarket variety. "I think they get a better "Since we couldn't get Chipotle, (McDonald's Tex- At Holland's Strawbeny Farm in the outskirts of product," Holland explained. "(The strawberries] taste Mex affiliate,] this is certainly a good option," Wul­ Apex, N.C, owner Frank Holland said this year's sea­ better. They're fresher; they don't have any chemicals." forst said. "What's missing [on campus now] is a son will probably end sometime next week. "Six weeks Shepherd agreed, pronouncing the strawberries in Tex-Mex, late-night place where you can get a meal is about all you have," he said, squinting at his tidy, sun­ her baskets "very good, big, ripe." As proof, her son for under $5." Wulforst said renovation details have drenched rows of leafy green plants. "For us, the berries Blake displayed a pair of strawberries attached to one not yet been hammered out, but he added that he is have been very good... a very good year for taste." stem— "it's twins," Shepherd told him. considering revamping the Rathskeller's entrance Apex is home to several strawberry farms; drive Raleigh residents Eric and Melissa .Andrews liked and building a bar for the new Armadillo Grill. down N.C. 55 and signs will point drivers to Holland's, Holland's berries so much, they picked two baskets' Wulforst also said the University is in negotiations Jean's Berry Patch and Phillips' Farm. That's how Cary worth. "I think they taste better, don't you think?" she with George's Garage to take over the Levine Science resident Delia Shepherd and her two children found asked. "Whenever you have to toil for your own food, it Research Center's cafeteria. Talks should wrap up their way to tasty treasure at Holland's. "The kids have tastes much better." next week, and the Ninth Street restaurant should be been bugging me to go strawberry picking, so we just Melissa Andrews grew up in rural North Carolina ready to enter the LSRC by mid-August, he said. picked a sign and followed it," she said. and missed home-grown food while living in Chicago Her daughter Sarah, hoisting a basket dripping for 11 years. When she saw the signs for Holland's, she with berry juice, chimed in, "We haven't done it in a was reminded of her grandmother's little strawberry CORRECTIONS while. We liked it the last time." patch. "Every summer, all the grandkids would pick the After tobacco farming for years, Holland started out strawberries and she and my mother and aunts would A caption on the front page of the May 20 issue in 1990 with only one acre open for strawbeny picking. make jam and cakes," .Andrews recalled. misspelled the name of a graduating medical stu­ Now, four acres hold about 88,000 strawbeny plants. She found a cluster of ruby-colored berries hidden dent. She is Susanne Engler, not Suzanne. And in the last two years, Holland said, the number of under a particularly leafy plant. "You have to dig for people who want to pick their own berries has risen. the good ones, they're elusive," she advised. Then, A page 25 story in the same issue misspelled the This year, he said, people have been picking and buy­ sneaking a peek toward the owner's stand ananda name ofa freshman on the women's golf team. She ing in larger quantities—in the 10 to 15 pound range hiding behind her husband, Andrews sur­ is Candy Hannemann, not Hanneman. compared with previous years' two to three pounds. Hol­ reptitiously bit into the biggest one of the _*__&} land estimated that about 400 to 500 people come to his bunch. "Yum," she said. "Strawberry, with a The Chronicle regrets the errors. farm each week, mostly on the weekend. On the week­ hint of dirt. Now that's summer."

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Bahamas Cruise Week in London Birch wood 1 bedroom. 1 bath, located off 3 Nights 8 Days Chapel Hill Rd. 5 min. from $412 PP $590 PP Campus. $S20-$SSS Cruise & Port Charges Land Only Forest Pointe 1 bedroom. 1 bath. 2 miles from East Campus. Walking distance to Northgate Mall. $450-$S05 Alaska Cruise Jamaica 4 Nights 1 bedroom. 1 bath, located off 7 Nights Morreene Rd. 3 miles from West $762 PP Campus. (3 month lease available! $799 PP $345-$445 Cruise Only Bradford Ridge 1 bedroom. 1 bath. 1 mile from West Campus on S. LaSalie St. AAA Travel Agency TICON PROPERTIES $530-$565 3909 University Drive 3622 Lyckan Parkway #1006 919-489-3306 \lhpK___i. Durham, NC 27707 1 bedroom, I bath, located off Neal 800-274-3306 Rd., 4.5 miles from West Campus. (919) 493-0540 $530-5565 1111il1111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111 r THE CHRONICLE • PAGE 4 MEDICAL CENTER THURSDAY, MAY 27,1999 The Duke Children's Classic Durham Regional plans expansion • After setting a budget for said George Quick, chair of the financial issues result directly Durham Regional board. Duke from its Duke affiliation, they fiscal year 2000 and becom­ University Health System began said. In response to the partner­ ing familiar with the Health to manage the hospital July 1, ship, the county made the hospi­ 1998, when a panel of Durham tal pay an annual $3.5-million System, Durham Regional County commissioners voted 5-0 lease. Until this year, Durham looks forward to growth. in favor ofthe plan. Regional Hospital had not been The original proposal called "in the business of supporting By MEREDITH YOUNG for Durham Regional to meet a other entities to that extent," T_he Chronicle 1.5 percent operating margin in Quick said. Durham Regional Hospital the first year and a 3.5 percent He said the leniency is a "re­ teamed up with the Medical margin by the third year of the flection of the working relation­ Center last July, and in its time partnership. Operating margin ship that the (Medical Center] at bat, the hospital has been requirements are calculated by administration has established thrown a few curve balls. But de­ dividing the hospital's total rev­ with our board." He stressed, spite its growing pains, the hos­ enue into operating profits. however, that even without the pital is alive and slugging. According to the new agree­ leeway, Durham Regional would Although Durham Regional ment, the hospital would have have exceeded requirements has struggled with budget issues, additional time to meet these within those three years. including an approximate $1.4- standards. If Durham Regional By June 30, the end of this fis­ million deficit, its board recently is not up to par in a reasonable TALK SHOW GREAT cal year, Quick said, the hospital approved a $150-million operat­ period of time, Duke could con­ Maury Povich, above, will have an operating margin of ing budget for fiscal year 2000. sider taking budgetary control. talks over strategy approximately 1.6 or 1.7 percent, with his caddy during At the Durham Regional In a May 11 letter to Quick- which is above the minimum. the May 22 celebrity board meeting May 12, Medical Israel said Duke would waive Last week, construction tournament that Center administrators also dis­ the requirements "in order to began on the rehabilitation fa­ raised money and cussed their decision to give focus on maximizing the benefits cility. With support from the awareness for the Durham Regional a three-fiscal- derived from the Health Sys­ Medical Center, the 30-bed Duke Children's Hos­ year window to become acclimat­ tem." Under the new arrange­ unit—operational in January pital. At another hole, ed to the partnership. ment, the benchmark indexes 2000—will provide therapeutic new Duke football Officials from Durham Re­ will only begin in fiscal year and support space. coach Carl Franks, gional hope this leeway will give 2003. Israel could not be reached The unit will "produce a right, caddies for his the hospital an opportunity for for comment. great deal of revenue for us," mentor, Steve Spurri­ expansion—such as the ongoing Durham Regional officials said Richard Myers, CEO of er, football coach of construction of a physical reha­ said the current deficit does not Durham Regional Hospital the Rorida Gators. bilitation unit. reflect on performance stan­ Corp. "We're still going through "We are moving in the right dards and has nothing to do with growing pains, but in general,. direction, and people are start­ operating margin requirements. this has been an amazingly pro­ ing to see that we are better off," Some ofthe hospital's current ductive year."

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Meeting Packages Available innacle DUKE CUSTOM HOMES, INC. For reservations For meetings (1 month out or less) please call 660-6198. please call 660-6400. [email protected] UFAIRFIELD THURSDAY, MAY 27,1999 THE CHRONICLE University, Education Department resolve Title IX complaint Under the settlement of the complaint brought by the National Women's Law Center, Duke will add 34 women's scholarships by 2001-02 Under this plan, Duke will be within the 1 percent range but two of the 25 cases had been resolved. Eight schools by the end of 2001-02. have been cleared of any violations, said OCR spokesper­ The University and the U.S. Department of Education But for the complaint to be officially resolved, Duke son Rodger Murphey Fifteen schools, including Duke, have negotiated the settlement of a Title IX gender equi­ had to be in compliance by the end of 1998-99. To help settled their cases. No schools were officially found in vi­ ty complaint against the athletic department. Duke achieve this standard, OCR'will immediately give olation of Title DC. The complaint, filed in 1997 by the National Women's the University credit for the 10 women's rowing scholar­ Murphey declined to comment on Duke's case. Law Center, criticized Duke and 24 other prominent ships it will eventually add. NWLC staff counsel Neena Chaudhry said her organi­ universities for not offering enough scholarships to fe­ The University must also issue two reports per year to zation was satisfied that it had raised awareness about male athletes. the Department of Education detailing its progress on gender equity in athletics. Partially as a result ofthe com­ Under the March 26 agreement with the Department gender equity in athletics. plaint, Chaudhry said, OCR began rethinking the regula­ of Education's Office for Civil Rights, the University The athletic department has decided not to add a 14th tions governing Title IX. pledged to add 34 women's scholarships by 2001-02. Ten women's scholarship sport; instead, it will concentrate on Chaudhry added that although no schools were in offi­ ofthe scholarships will come from the phasing-in ofthe improving the current programs. There's all kinds of hid­ cial violation of Title IX, the 15 universities that reached women's rowing program, which became a varsity sport den costs to adding a program," Kennedy said, citing agreements with the government must have had some last fall. coaches' salaries, equipment and time in the training fa­ discrepancies in their athletic programs. 'Tf there's noth­ The remainder will be distributed across track, cross cilities. "And we decided that by adding scholarships to the ing to settle on," she said, "they're not going to negotiate a country, lacrosse and field hockey, said Associate Director sports we have, our only expense is the scholarships." settlement agreement." of Athletics Chris Kennedy, who noted that the scholar­ When they were filed two years ago, the NWLC com­ Kennedy added that OCR's approval of Duke's pro­ ship allotment for the latter two sports will be boosted to plaints drew national publicity. As of two weeks ago, all gram could help if the University is ever sued. the NCAA maximum. "OCR's agreement really validated what we are al­ ready doing," Kennedy said. OCR will deem a school in compliance with Title IX if it maintains less than a 1 percent differential between the percentage of athletes who are women and the percentage of scholarship money dedicated to women's sports. In 1997-98, Duke had a 2.65 percent differential. Court finds schools liable for harassment From staff reports In a bitterly divided 5-4 decision, the United States Supreme Court ruled Monday that educational institu­ tions receiving federal funds can be held liable for stu- dent-on-student sexual harassment. If an institution is "deliberately indifferent" to a victim's reports of sexual ha- ^^^^^^^^^ rassment, the school is financially responsible for damages. "Damages NEWS are not available for simple acts of teasing and name-calling among BRIEFS schoolchildren, however, even where these comments target differences in gender...," wrote Justice Sandra Day O'Connor in the court's majority opinion. She wrote that damages will be awarded only in a case that involves harassment "so se­ vere, pervasive, and objectively offensive that it denies its victims the equal access to education."

Board to discuss potential police union: The National Labor Relations Board will hold a hearing in Winston-Salem today to discuss the procedures for deter­ mining whether Duke University Police Department offi­ cers will have the right to collectively bargain for wages and benefits. Earlier this year, more than half of the DUPD officers AT NORTHGATE MALL eligible to join the Durham Police Officers' Association filled out union cards requesting collective bargaining. At today's meeting, which will be attended by Univer­ 3 DAYS ONLY - MAY 29 through 31 sity and union officials, the NLRB will try to decide whether to conduct a secret vote for DUPD officers. SATURDAY, SUNDAY and MONDAY Several University administrators, including Execu­ tive Vice President Tallman Trask and DUPD Chief Gome to Northgate Mall and do the "low price limbo" during our Limbo Sale! Clarence Birkhead have voiced adamant opposition to col­ lective bargaining, saying that officers should deal with Save as much as 75% on merchandise throughout the mall! just look for the brightly colored their supervisors directly. banners mallwide for savings from your favorite stores! If the NLRB decides to allow the vote, it would likely occur sometime this summer. But if the University con­ tinues its opposition, the issue could be tied up in litiga­ It's The Limbo Sale this Saturday, Sunday & Monday at Northgate Mall. tion for several years. Come see how low we can go! Computer couple plans dinner: Bill and Melinda Gates—he, the Microsoft mogul, she, a Duke graduate—are extending about 100 invitations for a late- June dinner party at their Seattle estate. The criterion for N ORTHGAT.E making the guest list? A $l-million donation to The Campaign for Duke. MALL Peter Vaughn, director of community and donor rela­ tions, said the dinner is similar to many other meals host­ Th. Place To Be ed by trustees like Melinda Gates, Trinity '86 and Fuqua '87. The event will honor current campaign donors. The Gates' Seattle soiree is part of a two-day "Seattle Over 160 stores Including Heches, Hudson Belk, and sears. I-85 and Gregson street, Durham. Sabbatical," which also includes a University professor's Monday through Saturday 10 am - 9 pm, Sunday 1-6 pm. www.ngatemall.com. impressionism lecture at the Seattle Art Museum. THE CHRONICLE THURSDAY, MAY 27.1999 Keohane encourages unity on sweatshop issues • In a letter to more than 70 schools, She asked them to support the Fair recommend individual factories for moni­ Labor Association, a national monitoring toring, notifies factories in advance of some Keohane promoted continued partnership with representatives from the monitoring visits and keeps monitoring re­ activism and participation in the apparel industry and human rights groups. ports within the association. As a result, In March, the University and 16 other many schools have shied away from sign­ Fair Labor Association. schools joined the fledgling organization. ing on to the FLA. By KATHERINE STROUP In her letter, Keohane encouraged the Although she acknowledged the FLA's The Chronicle presidents to send delegates to the first- weaknesses, Keohane encouraged schools Almost two years after Duke began ever meeting ofthe FLA's college and uni­ to try to strengthen its protocol from with­ drafting its sweatshop code of condttct, the versity advisory council, scheduled for in. She recommended an "FLA-plus sys­ University remains on the front lines in mid-June. During the meeting, one repre­ tem," in which schools participate in sup­ the battle against sweatshop conditions in sentative from this council will be named plemental monitoring coalitions. Duke, for factories making college apparel. to the FLA's 14-member board. example, is in discussions with the Uni­ Last week, President Nan Keohane Since it was announced, the FLA has versity of Wisconsin at Madison, George­ sent a letter encouraging solidarity come under fire from activist groups that town University, the University of North and continued diligence on sweatshop claim its standards are too low and its Carolina at Chapel Hill and the Universi­ Johnson-Licon issues, to more than 70 college and monitoring system is too weak. Specifical­ ty of Michigan about a possible additional university presidents. ly, they note, the FLA allows companies to See FLA on page 8 > bids adieu to Suspect sentenced in fall Belmont robbery LGBT Center • After months of police-baffling antics, Roe Anthony While under house arrest in late December, Jones disappeared Jones was sentenced to between 6 1/2 and 9 1/2 years from custody, remaining at large until he surfaced as a suspect in a series of robberies in Mecklenburg County. for offenses related to robbing a University student. Earlier this month, all parties agreed to a sentencing deal that Jeannette Johnson-Licon has been From staff and wire reports would put Jones away for 80 to 114 months. But was re­ an anchor during waves of change at In a case with more twists and turns than a minis- jected by Judge Robert Hobgood, who said the Center for Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual e eries, the man who assaulted and robbed a University student in •» j « YT *^ punishment was too lenient; if tried, and Transgender Life. From the con­ her apartment has been sentenced to at least six years in prison. J\»L'> JMEWS Jones could have faced up to 84 years in troversial renaming of Gothic Queers Roe Anthony Jones, 25, pleaded guilty May 5 to two counts of in the fall of 1997 to the departure of possessing a stolen vehicle, two counts of assault with a deadly BRIEFS The very next day, Assistant District the center's first full-time director weapon and causing serious iryury, four counts of second-degree Attorney Freda Black won approval from last winter, Johnson-Licon, the cen­ kidnapping, one count of first-degree burglary, two counts of another judge. ter's program coordinator arid acting forgery and one count of common law robbery. Although the sentence might appear lenient, she said," [Jones] director, has been there. Jones was first arrested last October for impersonating a state had absolutely no prior criminal history and this fell squarely But after Karen Krahulik, a New trooper, entering the home ofa student in the Belmont apartment within the average sentence for these chaises." York University Ph.D. candidate in complex and stealing her laptop computer and Jeep Grand Chero­ She added that the victim was an international student who history and former director of Prince­ kee. He also stole the Belmont victim's Jeep again after police re­ graduated this year. Paying for her travel expenses would pose an ton University's LBG center, was covered it, kidnapped a lunch companion and forged two tuition exorbitant cost for taxpayers, Black said, adding that the victim named the Duke center's next direc- checks to North Carolina Central University. See NC BRIEFS on page 10 • SeeJOHNSON-UCONbtipage9*~ [J U Am.NORTH CREEK &~rQsr (~\// masterpiece ^_JX~J£ combining living and leisure Lots going on this weekend! • Expansive windows • Cozy woodburningfireplaces* • Fire sprinkler system OUR KIND OF C00K0UT • Nine-foot (_fvaultedceilings* th Saturday May 29 from 12 to 4 • Elegant crown molding Come out on the back porch for burgers, beer on tap, slaw, • Close to New Hope Commons Shopping Center deviled eggs, potato salad, C Francesca's gelato • Detached garages with opener available • Flexible lease terms, corporate apartments available Plus: Free insulated tote with any $50 purchase while supplies last • Fully equipped fitness center & aerobics room &spa Meet a friend for lunch. • Oval garden tubs with glass enclosures • Pre-wiredfor cable TV fcf intrusion alarms GUEST CHEF: JOHN ROOS • Business Center Wonderful, special, delightful, fresh. See what's cooking 'Select units at the deli counter this weekend. 100 Northcreek Durham, NC 27707 Wine Tasting Saturday May 29"' from 12 to 4 919-490-6013 nr t_icree__@aol .com BIG ZINS Directions: Located between Durham and Chapel Hill. From Hwy. 15-501 South, take a (a.k.a. Zinfandels) left at Mt. Mariah Road, then take immediate We will be closed May 31st for Memorial Day left onto Watkins Road. North Creek is 1/2 mile ahead on left. 112 South Duke Street • Durham See our well site at www.citysearch.com/rdu/northcreek Monday through Saturday: 9 to 7 • Sunday 12 to 6 919-683-2555 WELCOME DUKE GRAD STUDENTS .••nn.n.mi.n.iuiil.l.imunj.iu • • THURSDAY, MAY 27.1999 THE CHRONICLE Trespasser arrested for possessing weapon From staff reports at $600 and he was taken to Durham County Jail. His Duke University Police Department officers responded court date is set for June 23. May 24 at 7:41 a.m. to an employee's report ofa broken ve­ Police also learned that Brown had outstanding war­ hicle window,, said Maj. Robert Dean of DUPD. The em­ rants at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill ployee, who is not the owner ofthe vehicle, also reported for breaking and entering, felony larceny and felony pos­ that there was a subject sleeping inside a near­ session of stolen goods. The warrants were by Duke vehicle. When officers arrived at the lot « served on him by UNC-CH police. behind Jarvis Dormitory, the man was outside CRIME the Duke vehicle, and was stopped by officers, -p Employee cut: A Medical Center employee When asked ifhe had any weapons, the man KRlE.r S reported that she was the victim of an attempt­ showed a knife, Dean said. He was twice told to ed robbery May 20 at 1:38 p.m., Dean said. She drop the knife, but refused. Officers disarmed him and described the incident as follows: As she walked from placed him under arrest. Parking Garage #2 onto Elf Street and then onto Pratt The man—19-year-old Samuel Brown of 100 West Street, a man approached her on a bike and ordered her Rosemary St. in Chapel Hill—was charged with having a to give up her pocketbook. When she refused, the attacker concealed weapon on campus. He was also charged with tried to take the pocketbook from her. She jerked it away trespassing after being forbidden; he was first cited for and ran. At that instant, the suspect sliced her with a trespassing in December 1998. Brown's bond was placed See CRIME BRIEFS on page 11 »•

PRATIK PATEL/THE Ch GOV. JIM HUNT spoke at the Washington Duke Inn Monday about the importance of the upcoming Special Olympics. Symposium looks at "My doctor referred me to the Fitness Center at the mental retardation Duke Center for living. The DCL staff is so supportive—and •- As the Triangle prepares for the Special Olympics, health care and education profes­ that's just what I needed sionals gathered to discuss strategies for work­ to keep coming. Now I've gone from ing with people with mental retardation. less than five minutes ByRAMIZHEMAN The Chronicle on the treadmill to 45 minutes. In prerjaration for the 1999 Special Olympics World Summer Games, Gov. Jim Hunt kicked off an interna- [fit hadn't been for tional symposium Monday night at the Washington Duke Inn. The symposium, "Creating Healthy Communities for the Center for Living, I might have People with Mental Retardation," included researchers, policy makers, and community _md business leadens who just stayed home and reported research and discussed some ofthe obstacles re­ lated to mental retardation. worried myself to death. But now Introduced by Duke President Emeritus Keith Brodie, Hunt spoke to an authence of more than 175 people about I'm getting out and the advantages of hosting the Games in North Carolina. The events will take place at sites throughout the Trian­ getting excited about life again'' gle from June 26 to July 4. "I want to tell you that we're in for a very special treat here in this area," he said. The benefits to all of us are going to be endless." Hunt encouraged audience members to volunteer for the games, and noted the interest spreatling through local communities. "I want to urge you to throw yourself and your or­ ganization fully into these activities," Hunt said. He also praised symposium participants for creating a healthy community for people with mental retarda­ tion. "With this symposium, I think you are all win­ ners," Hunt said. ii Joining Hunt was keynote speaker and Ambassador to A year ago, I could hardly get around. the 1999 Special Olympics World Summer Games Loret- ta Claiborne. Claiborne, who has won numerous awards .. for her work both inside and outside the Special Olympics, spoke before Ein eager crowd about her experi­ Now IVe got a WllOle WW \\\%.

ences and her motivations as a person growing up with ...__. Isom. nine-month Duke Center for Lining member mental retardation. "I knew that there was something special in me. I knew that I was put here for a reason," s"he said 1 fought like hell in school just to have my place, and my mother fought like hell....'' SPRING INTO SUMMER FITNESS * SPECIAL DISCOUNTS GOOD THROUGH MAY! She stressed the importance of educating people about New memberships with a $50 initiation fee (regularly $200) • Includes fitness screening test and the Special Olympics and added that the games play an a personal training session with an exercise physiologist • Up to 20 percent off our usual monthly equally important role in educating the athletes. The Spe­ cial Olympics exposes athletes of different cultures to peo­ membership fees-one-year unsupervised memberships now just $44 a month • $25 off our medically ple with similar disabilities, she explained. supervised six-week weight management program • Yoga, tai chi, and spinning classes free with "Special Olympics was the best climb in my life," Clai­ membership • Call 660-6712 for a facility tour and free one-day pass borne said. "To some of our athletes, its a way of life." In addition to the dinner, the symposium gathered pro­ fessionals to hear Ann and Rud Turnbull, cc-directors of the University of Kansas' Beach Center on Families and Debilities, discuss the chEmges that have occurred in the !|l Duke Center for Living understanding and treatment of mental retardation dur­ ^ DUKE UNIVERSITY HEALTH SYSTEM ing the past 30 years. There were also sessions on educa: tion, health, accessible communities and employment op­ 3475 Erwin Road - (919) S6Q-6712 portunities for people with mental retardation. ••

THE CHRONICLE THURSDAY, MAY 27, 1 Trinity Heights development moves ahead Administrators By RICHARD RUBIN The Chronicle tout 'FLA-plus' The University is continuing work on plans to build a housing develop­ practices ment for faculty and staff in the Trinity 19 FLA from page 6 Heights neighborhood off East Campus. monitoring group. A contractor will break ground as Jim Wilkerson, director ofDuke Stores early as mid-summer, but not before and a national expert on sweatshop is­ $500 deposits have been placed on near­ sues, said extra monitoring will help ly all ofthe 23 single-family homes and "audit" the FLA process. "It will allow us the 14 or 15 townhouses. to compare information from those groups Jeffrey Potter, director of real estate with information from the FLA until we administration, stressed the importance develop a higher level of confidence with of securing enough buyers before begin­ the program" he said. ning construction. "The thing is, we Although Wilkerson said he hopes uni­ don't want to build half a project," he versities will respond to Keohane's letter said. Three people put down deposits be­ by joining the FLA, he said it is not im­ fore the announcement was made last perative that all schools adopt the same week, Potter added. "EUTHE CHRONICLE monitoring rules. It is, however, important Prices for all homes will be about that they make a strong commitment to $100 per square foot; at that price, THE TRINITY HEIGHTS NEIGHBORHOOD will soon become the home of a housing development eliminating sweatshops, he said. townhomes would range from designed for University faculty and staff. But, "if lots of universities go in lots of $144,600 to $217,500 and single-fami­ pay about $140 because of the higher residents, the University moved the different directions with code standards, ly homes would go between $125,400 number of common facilities. townhouses to a less intrusive location then that, I think, will damage the code and $207,700. Last fell, when the University began and pledged to try and save two 100- process, because it will be extremely diffi­ Tlie houses will be built in a Univer­ developing specific plans for the new con­ year-old trees on the lot. cult for companies to implement 20 or 30 sity-owned vacant lot bordered by struction, some Trinity Heights resi­ The impending construction marks or 40 or even 50 codes in each factory.'' Markham Avenue and Green, Berkeley dents, including Wendy Goldstein, op­ the second and final phase of the East Keohane said she, too, fears these and Sedgefield Streets. posed parts of the plan. Because of the Campus Home Sites project announced disagreements may weaken the anti- Faculty and staff members will be re­ potential traffic congestion and the sheer last summer. During Phase I, the Uni­ sweatshop movement. "I am concerned quired to sign a restrictive covenant number of houses proposed, many resi­ versity put nine older Duke-owned that we will dissipate our efforts as uni­ guaranteeing that they will live in their dents said the plans could ruin the char­ neighborhood homes on the market. To versities because of disagreements with homes, not rent them out, and that they acter of their neighborhood. date, Potter said, all the houses, except specific provisions of the different codes will only sell to Duke employees. Toward the end of negotiations, [Uni­ two duplexes, have been sold. and monitoring procedures," she said. The homeowners will be required to versity officials] became amenable be­ Ifthe duplexes remain on the market "It is important that we work together pay dues for general upkeep of the de­ cause they realized that we weren't op­ much longer, Potter said he would con­ to a common system that will velopment. Those in single-family posed to the project," Goldstein said. "We sider lowering their prices or replacing achieve our common goal: fair labor con­ homes will be required to pay $50 a were just opposed to the number of them with new homes. ditions for the workers who make colle­ month, while townhouse residents will units." In the course of discussion with Greg Pessin contributed to this story. giate licensed products." Rent It. Buy It. Either Way SUMMIT SQUARE It's A Smart Move. I

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Johnson-Licon, who was also a finalist for the di­ she first came...," said Maureen Cullins, assistant Assistant Clinical Professor in Counseling and Psycho­ rectorship, said it was time for her to hand over the vice president for student affairs and dean of campus logical Services Robin Buhrke, chair of the search com­ helm completely and let the incoming director shape community development. mittee that hired Krahulik, said the committee did not the center's staff and goals. "The new director needs Being a resource to the queer community—especially consider whether appointing an outside director would an opportunity for a program coordinator who shares students—has been one of Johnson-Licon's best-known make Johnson-Licon leave. "Our focus was on who was her vision, the vision of the committee that chose her," characteristics. "As an administrator, I provided support going to be the best person to lead the center," she said. she said. "My leaving is my way of showing support for when appropriate, advice when they heeded it," she said. For now, Johnson-Licon plans to spend time in Texas the director." "Otherwise, I stepped back and enjoyed the show." with her family, which she has not seen in two years. Johnson-Licon, whose trademark conservative bow tie Many GQ members were disappointed when the "Somewhere along the line I became Jeannette John­ belies her boundless energy and enthusiasm, began in­ search committee passed over Johnson-Licon. son-Licon, program coordinator for Duke's LGBT Center," terning at the center in spring 1997. She later became a "Jeannette's presence in the Center for LGBT Life has she said. "I'm trying to tease out Jeannette Johnson-Licon volunteer program coordinator and helped guide the Duke been the lifeblood of Duke's queer community..." said from that. It's not something I can do and stay here." Gay, Bisexual and Lesbian Alliance as it replaced its lead­ Melina Shabani, Trinity "99. She added that Johnson- Katherine Stroup contributed to this story. University views workplace culture plans as way to fight negative image m CULTURE from page I member who is currently working to Although the task force's vision of initiative is about halfway through its g Davidson emphasized that while the tweak the payroll system. workplace culture is meant to apply to em­ of making recruitment practices more initiatives are important starting points, "In the local community, Duke's image ployees in all departments and at all lev­ user-friendly "Everything we're doing... is the core principles reach beyond these first is based on history—the old plantation els, the 12-member committee did not in­ value-based: treating employees with dig­ few projects and form a baseline Universi­ mentality...," Bailey explained. "The cul­ clude any lower-ranking staff members; nity, allowing departments to trust us, ty policy. "What makes up [good work cul­ ture needed to be challenged to get some of with the exception of one student, the com­ knowing that we'll send quality and di­ ture] environments?" he asked. "Not the [these identified values] back, because mittee consisted of faculty members and verse candidates," he said. initiatives themselves, but the values Duke is losing its image in the community, supervisors. But Davidson said the task Smith's project has been underway under them." and inside the place." force considered first-hand information since December, but the others are still in Executive Vice President Tallman Trask said incorporating the core val­ provided by a focus group of 100 rank-and- their infancy. Although Trask said he Trask said the task force investigation was ues into policies and initiatives would send file employees that met before the task hoped to launch all the projects during the not spurred by any specific problems, but a message to employees: "We like our poli­ force began its work. next academic year, Davidson stressed "the that there have been ongoing concerns cies and actions to be internally consistent. Stephen Smith, director of recruitment, real changes and benefits that start to ac­ about the Duke experience for employees. Sometimes people say one thing here, an­ said the Employment Process Redesign crue will be a long time in coming." The image ofDuke as a bad employer is other thing somewhere else.... [Employees] pervasive particularly in Durham's black like to know what we're thinking, where community, said Ed Bailey, a task force we want to get." 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City needs year to collect water data WHO s EARNING WHAT.. I WATER BILLS from | The following is a list of the University's top money-earners for fiscal years 1996-97 and 1997-98. The figures include salary, benefits and expense accounts. during the past two years, said Public Works Di­ "We've looked at our numbers. rector Katie Kalb. Ideally, she said, a city water FY 1997-98 FY 1996-97 They're pretty consistent over system should lose about 10 percent ofits water. Ralph Snyderman $558,995 $501,530 In a system that pumps out 28 million gallons per the last decade. There's no obvi­ Chancellor for Health Affairs, Dean of the School of Medicine day, the losses run to nearly $5 million annually. ous shortage." In April 1998, for instance, the largest of Mike Krzyzewski $487,387 $452,565 Duke's meters—attached to a 10-inch pipe—was EXECUTIVE VICE PRESIDENT TALLMAN TRASK, Men's basketball coach only billed $82,035. This year, a new meter racked Eugene McDonald $424,730 $417,588 up $103,700 in charges, said Rosa Rucker, cus­ ON DUKE'S WATER BILL Executive Vice President for Asset Management tomer and billing services manager for the cily. some city council members to push for the city to However, comparing one month's bill is not collect its unpaid bills. Under state law, Durham Nan Keohane $357,912 $341,738 an accurate way to determine the extent of can collect bad bills from up to three years back. University President the underbilling, Kalb said, noting that billing "To the extent there's been an honest mistake Michael Israel $349,142 $318,092 cycles and weather and usage patterns are here, we'll try to do our best to make up for it," Vice Chancellor for Health Affairs and CEO of the Health System not consistent. said Trask, who has a previously scheduled meet­ Alvis Swinney $346,823 Wk Executive Vice President Tallman Trask said ing with public works officials next week. "But at the University's water bill—about $1.75 million this point, I have no justification [for doing that]. Vice Chancellor for Business Development and Marketing, Associate Vice annually—does not reflect' an underbilling dur­ Tve got no information that suggests to me that a Chancellor for Medical Center Planning ing the past several years. "We've looked at our couple years ago the city did something and we •' r i',;:i;v •.•.••. • , .:..•• numbers," he said. They're pretty consistent over benefited by millions of dollars." the last decade. There's no obvious shortage." However, trying to collect back bills would also During that time, the University has added be a challenge for the city, which has more than Transportation chief resigns some buildings, but water conservation efforts 60,000 water users. "We've got to treat everybody BNC BRIEFS from page 6 should have canceled out that effect, leaving the fairly and equitably here," Kalb said. "It wouldn't "really wasn't excited about coming to Durham." total amount of water consumed about the same, just be Duke." Jones is still awaiting trial on more serious charges in Mecklenburg, Trask estimated. In the future, Kalb explained, a more regular so it made sense to wrap up the Durham case and hope he gets addi­ Durham officials do not yet have an exact ac­ testing program should prevent this problem tional jail time for those other crimes, Black said. counting ofthe missing water. Because of month- from recurring. The key for us is to set up and to-month fluctuations in water usage, the city have in place a testing program whereby we test Tolson resigns: In order to seek the Democratic nomination for will need to collect nearly a year's worth of data on a more frequent basis these large meters and governor next year, Norris Tolson resigned Wednesday as state trans­ before it can offer an approximation of the repair them as necessary" she said, adding that portation secretary. "If Tm going to get into this race, which I'm going amount of free water given to each user. city workers are also checking the meters at the to do, then I need to get out here and get started," Tolson said. "I feel like in a few more months, FU under­ central water plant and looking for leaks in the stand what fraction of the lost water came from system. The new testing program that we've set Organization regains funding: Rape Crisis of Durham, the large meters," Kalb said, explaining that in up will test them three to four times a year until which faced the loss ofits federal funding this spring, won a reprieve the meantime, city workers have begun checking we get a feel for the kind of variation we expect." from state authorities Wednesday, receiving a renewal of its two-year every large meter. It's not one of those simple But even trying to assess the data can be dif­ grant. The Governor's Crime Commission had enough money left in fixes. It just takes plodding along, and repairing ficult, she added, noting that the city's 20-year- this year's budget for Rape Crisis, spokesperson Renee Hofiman said. and fixing over and over and over again." old mainframe system was designed only for City Manager Lamont Ewell has also included $25,000 for Rape The potentially enormous discrepancy has led billing, not data analysis. Crisis in his proposed budget.

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No Deposit for Graduates, Faculty & Staff Beautiful Setting Approximately Durham Art Council's Seventh Annual Celebration 8 minutes to Duke SundayJune6^r 4:30-7:30 pan, 2 Bedroom Townhome Special Preview Parly starts at 330p. m. $685 Durham Arts Council Building • 120 Morris Street (at Morgan St.) • Dufham, NC • 1 Bedroom & H_worMf__«iramtwenty-niiiepar_aixitingrestauraiits Corporates Available including "four-star" and award winning establishments ' Washer/Dryer Unique Silent Auction items Connections live Music Two Bedroom • Pool Sponsoredhipartby Townhome • Pets Conditional gtieaferqlft-flun Sq. Ft. 1175 _iSB_Ema3- Ticket Outlets Preview party tickets are limited and only available at the Durham Arts Council i THE Westgate Rd. "\% Other outlets only accepting cash and checks for general admission tickets include: 489-1910 'MEWS Durham- d'Artiste, Page Auditorium Box Office, Fowler's Fine Food & Wine, SOUTH \ \ £ C*t Francesca's Dessert Caffe, and Regal University Hotel or SQUARE \\ k Carrboro - Weaver Street Market 493-4244 Shannon Rd. % Preview Party $75 • General Admission $35 in advance & $40 at the door ^ •>"" &H1560-ARTS to charge your ticket order www.durhamaris. Org a_ mm__page Twelve •*<***>-#*%*>fc RECESS thufsday, may twenty seven, nineteen-hundred ninety-nine CONDENSED CALENDAR (JLCA/ EVENTS Five"l_ocal boys Ben Backsliding Folds. Robert Sledge and Darren Jesse take to the road to promote What do you get if you cross a chicken with a i their new album The Unauthorized Biography of Reinhold Messner. The goat? Kevin Pride walks the Southern Lines, and show features opening act Jude. Thursday, May 27, at The Ritz. steps on a buffalo chip. Raleigh. For show time and ticket information, call 836-8535. If the new Backsliders disc was a rowdy—yet at times sin­ movie, I'd tell you to go out and rent it. If cere—Throwin' Pocks at Katharine Whalen»The Squirrel Nut Zippers vocalist kicks off her it was a car, I'd tell you to lease it. And if the Moon. It introduced first solo tour next week, joined by it was a book, you'd wanna call . the band to America as fellow Zippers Jimbo Mathus (her But Southern Lines, the latest release an aggressive quintet husband) and Stu Cole as well as a from the Raleigh-based band, is none of which would lament the slew of other backup musicians. the above. It's an album, and even if you loss of a girlfriend, but The show features opening act find it second-hand a dingy, old bookstore, do so over raucous, dis­ Dirty Dozen Brass Band. Tuesday, torted bar chords. They June 1, at The Cat's Cradle, you still have no choice but to buy it. Carrboro. For show time and ticket Here's a little insider information for confronted cops, but did information call 967-9053. you regarding the media. There's a ten­ so with a strange con­ dency for regional newspapers and sciousness. They La Soheme»Tri angle Opera magazines to offer primarily cordial and rocked. presents the Puccini classic of a positive words for local music acts; that Now, several years destitute poet in 1920s Paris, is, there's an inclination to be soft on and probably a hundred desperate to marry his sweetheaa the hometown boys. To avoid the igno­ but without the financial wherewith­ malfeasant, ochlopho­ al. Friday, May 28-Saturday, June 5, ble task of being mean to local acts, re­ bia bar gigs later, the at the Carolina Theatre, 309 W. gional publications will scrap the cover­ Backsliders sound tired Morgan St. For show times 3nd age. If your music sucks then, like out. Southern Lines ticket information call 560-3030. 's "Soup Nazi," there's "No lacks the spunk that Press For You!" was the hallmark of Summer Festival of Music*This I'm not going to do that to Southern Throwin' Hocks. The festival runs for 10 days and Lines, but I'm also not going to bash it. music here is undeni­ features music performed by ably country/rock, but it local musicians, Duke faculty and It was about three years ago friends alike. It kicks off Tuesday when the Backsliders re­ lacks the genuine, off- with the Ciompi Quartet and leased their first nation­ the-hook character that Friends, featuring Arturo Ciompi, these good 'ol boys had MACHO CHIP: The guy al studio album, in the lower left, Chip Robinson, still lives in a trailer, clarinet, and Randall Love, piano. come to embody. The Has national attention the rough gone to his head? Hell no. Pieces to be performed include and songs have a whinier Hummel, Quartet for Clarinet and quality, and the guitar presence has a brusque, unruly style, however, lends it­ Strings; Mozart, Trio in E-flat for cliched feel. Clarinet and Piano K. 498; self more to drunken revelry than sin­ The first song, "Abe Lincoln," Beethoven, Piano trio TBA. cere lamentation—in other words, their catches the listener's attention Tuesday, 8 pm ($5, free for medium just doesn't fit their message. immediately, but soon wallows students, tickets available at But Southern Lines has some merits, if the door), at Reynolds in monotony, with lead singer only a few. When the Backsliders do, al­ Theater in the Bryan Center. Chip Robinson's unmoving vo­ though rarely, engage in balladry, the re­ cals lapsing into a single, un­ sults are wistful and listener-friendly, Particular Visions 'This is an wavering pitch that runs evocative of late-night, last-call, drunken­ exhibit featuring the artwork of throughout the song. ness-inspired honesty. The instrumenta­ students from the Durham School of "Never Be Your Darling" tion and musicianship on the album is, the Arts, featuring a collection of is cacophonously repeti­ more than 100 drawings, paintings, also, generally clean and skillful. tive and whiny. In fact, sculptures, pastels, computer I'm just not sure if the new Backslid­ graphic work and other media. This most of the album's 11 songs is the third year that students' works and their titles carry a vein of melan­ ers album is worth your for your dad's} have appeared on campus. Friday. cholia: Other artists, like Radiohead— hard-earned money. The downs out­ May 28-Sunday, June 13, at the and even the Gin Blossoms—are able to shine the ups, and overall, Southern Duke University Museum of Art, convey sadness convincingly, infec­ Lines fails where Throwin' Rocks at the East Campus. For museum hours, tiously and skillfully. The Backsliders' Moon succeeded. call 684-5135. A free reception open Better luck next time, fellas.G3 to the public will be held Friday from 5 to 7 pm. Fountains of Wayne identification with the music and its lyrics. NEW RELEASES Utopia Parkway (ATLANTIC} Every song on this CD has its merits, and I'd like to describe the music of within this consistency emerge quite a few GRADE: Fountains of Wayne as infec- true gems. "Red Dragon Tattoo" displays f 1 I' "f ^ Film •• tious, but! don't mean that in to near perfection the bend's grasp of the ™ the communicable disease musical "hook," repeatedly pulling the May 28 Naming Hill sense of the word. Rather, the listener into the melody and its variations. The Thirteenth Floor music on Utopia Parkway is catchy and fun, "Troubled Times" mediates between soft while at the same time complex and acoustic guitar strumming and well-timed deceptively baroque. This New York-based drumming, seamlessly flowing between f Music quartet has served up a collection of truiy one and the other, or a combination of the June 1 magnificent music, employing four-part two. Frontman 's vocals harmoriies reminiscent of great bands of are the tie that binds, telling the tale of $• Harry Connick, Jr.: Come by Me MEN EN BLACK: These four gays somehow look DJ Rap: Learning Curve the past, the most striking similarity being couple whose unlikely union has somehow British, but they're from New York. And they rock. En Vogue: Best of En Vogue the music of the Beatles (a beneficent managed to survived troubled times. Jennifer Lopez: On the Six comparison never to be taken lightly}. The real kicker, however, is "Prom If there is one weakness, however it is Meja: Seven Sisters Theme," a song that couldn't be more that Utopia Parkway leaves the listener Moby: Play Utopia Parkway draws upon a mind- wanting more. The album rings in near the Spin Doctors: Here Comes the boggSingly broad range of pop culture appropriately titled—a perfect soundtrack Bride references, freely gallivanting from soccer for awkward slow dancing between two industry-standard 45-minutes. but in this Various Artists: Short Music for moms to high school proms, Bactine to awkward, pimply high schoolers. The case, it's not enough. Short People hockey teams, fans of Puff Daddy to lyrics, however, capture the sincerity that With music this good, a person can Original Soundtrack: Austin never get enough. • Powers: The Spy Who Shagged Me primer-levei karate. The resulting effect for lies beneath the whole prom spectacle, Original Soundtrack: Xena: the listener is one of distinct familiarity and and are, quite frankly, very touching.. —Kevin Pride Warrior Princess (Volume 4) Ihursday, may twenty seven, nineteen-hundred ninety-nine •»*fc#*->-*»*«^». RECESS FREEWATER MOVIES coming this June Already seen The Phantom Menace more times than you can count? Need something to divert your attention as you count down the days until South Park's 3%M£f* big-screen debut later this summer? Let Freewater Films take you on a journey from the sublime to the ridiculous. All and a shows are in the Bryan Center's Griffith FilmTheater at 8 p.m..

June 2»Cabaret (1972). One of the best-loved musicals of all time, Cabaret propelled Liza Minnelli out from under her PRETTY WOMAN mother Judy Garland's shadow once and for all. blends beautifully choreo­ graphed dance numbers with the forebod- menace of pre-war Nazi Germany.

June 9' Who's Afraid of Virginia Hugh Grant and Julia Roberts don't broaden their dramatic repertoires Wootf? (1966). Not University much in Notting Hill, but the movie is charming, funny and true to life. President Nan Keohane, appar­ ently. She's an expert on the fem­ By Kelly Woo inist author and rhetorician. This film version of Edward Albee's I like romantic comedies. stellar supporting characters, most notably play features Richard Burton and A I've tried not to, but I do. William's flatmate Spike (Rhys Ifans) who Liz Taylor locked in a hopeless And worse, I like Hugh Grant. scratches himself, parades around in his marriage—is it love that holds them The nervous gestures, the perpetual underwear and wears a shirt that says together, or hate? blinking, the incessant stammering—I "Wanna have a f-k" on a first date. But find them, well, charming. But for those Spike is also sweet, in his own weird June .B'Gitizen Kane (1941). Last who find Hugh's mannerisms grating, way. And that's another way in which year, the American Film Institute dubbed you're in luck—he tones them way down Notting Hill resembles Four Wed- Orson Welles' epic the greatest U.S. in his new movie Notting HiU. dings—while the main characters movie of all time. Were they right, or is " Kane just a self-indulgent, over-produced Hugh is back in Four Weddings and a are fairly predictable, the minor ones tale about a newspaper owner? Funeral form, and no wonder—he's teamed are subtle and surprisingly real. They act up again with writer Richard Curtis in the like normal people; I mean, what would you do if the most famous movie star on June 23'What About Bob? (1991). Bill genre that made him a star. Notting Hill is Murray as a clingy mental patient makes very much like Four Weddings, and that's a Earth came to your birthday party? Oh my comic mayhem for Richard Dreyfuss, a GAWD, it's Leol Um, kidding. All the DIVINE COMEDY: Will Hugh Grant's love for Julia good thing—Hugh is amiable, the American Roberts survive the tabloids' prurient attention to snippy psychotherapist. At times a spot-on Girl (in Notting Hill, a very appropriately cast same, I might scream after Leo left—just her sexual history? Poor Liz Hurley must be parody of America's infatuation with shrinks Julia Roberts as a world-famous movie star) as Notting Hiii's characters do. squirming at the irony. and self-help books, this movie is also fre­ is okay and the supporting cast members Julia Roberts doesn't have much to do quently a smorgasbord of bad taste appetiz­ steal every scene they're in. here; she's basically playing herself and and now Notting Hill. Art imitating ing mostly to devotees of Meatballs. If you've seen the previews, you'll does a pretty good job of it. More impor­ life or whatever. June 30*A«i 9 From Outer Space know that Notting Hill is about an unlikely tantly, she's not Andie "someone thought Hugh's already been this character—a (1958). At the other end of the cinematic I could act" MacDowell. If anybody knows romance between small bookshop owner decent guy with awesome friends—so spectrum from Citizen Kane is Ed Wood's Wiliiam Thacker and movie star Anna what a swarming pack of paparazzi are theie's not much to mess up. Fortunately masterpiece Plan 9 From Outer Space—a Scott. They literally bump into each other like, it's probably Julia Roberts. Her char­ he's a little less bumbling in Notting Hill, forgotten B-movie until critics dubbed it the in London, and of course, William is acter goes through all the movie star because the man can be quite dashing worst film ever made. There are movies starstruck and lovestruck. But as he says, dilemmas—naked pictures from the old when he's not stuttering like a fool. that are so bad they're fun, and then he's from Notting Hill, she's from Beverly days, public breakups with boyfriends, It's so rare to find a romantic comedy there's Plan 9—it's a staple for connois­ Hills and rarely do those worlds collide. strangers dissecting her personality and that is actually romantic and actually a seurs of mediocrity, but casual viewers may When they do, the result is sweet, en­ life. It seems like the entertainment biz is comedy, so when a Notting Hill comes find it more than they can handle. dearing and very funny. going through a phase of parodying its along, fitting both labels, I can't help but —77m Millington Much of the humor comes from the own culture—Tne Truman Show, EdTV like it.Q

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Morgan St • Downtown Durham Durham, NC 27705 Box Office 560-3030 • www.carolinatheatre.org THURSDAY, MAY 27, 1999 LETTERS TO THE EDITOR THE CHRONICLE All cultures have both strengths and weaknesses ESTABLISHED 1905, INCORPORATED 1993 The May 20,1999 issue of tions" {to use his own words) point is that all societies The Chronicle published a the Holocaust, slavery and the have positive and negative letter by Professor Edwin Western colonization of large aspects, and it is perhaps Workplace worries Locke from the University of parts of Africa and Asia, just impossible to say that one Maryland, who was weighing to name a few instances society is objectively the Given its often negative image in the community, in on the recent controversy where human rights and rea­ best. Arguments that focus at Duke regarding the possi­ son were ignored. He seems on the positive aspects of a the University should take the necessary steps ble addition of a Hindi major. willing to ignore the rampant society, and intentionally Although it may be true that prevalence of drugs and vio­ ignore the negative aspects to make sure all employees feel valued. a Hindi major should not be lence in our society when he are simply not objective. added at Duke, the debate talks about quality of life. He ust because a problem is not a smoldering bonfire of It is indeed disappointing has evolved into a large one uses life expectancy as a mea­ that a professor at a presti­ debate and discourse does not mean it's not a hot-but­ on the supposed superiority of sure of the best society, but ton issue. gious institution like the J one civilization. does not touch upon the fact University of Maryland would Based on the recommendations of a task force, the Locke argues for the supe­ that the concept of family- resort to such arguments. University's senior officers recently issued a values state­ riority of Western civilization based care ofthe old in India ment that strives to improve the University's workplace cul­ based on respect for human is arguably better than shunt- ture. Derived from five core principles—trustworthiness, PRASAD KASIBHATLA rights, reason and science. I ing the old into retirement Assistant Research Professor learning, teamwork, respect and diversity—the document homes as is done in the West. assume he is willing to dis­ Nicholas School of specifically mentions five initiatives to improve the I can go on and on, but the miss as "temporary excep­ the Environment University as an employer. This is the proper course of action; the University, as Durham's largest job provider, must give back to the commu­ Professor advocates air conditioning for all dorms nity. Perceptions such as the "plantation mentality" still exist In his April 22 letter to The I write to endorse Watkins' environment, especially with both in the work force and the local community, and the Chronicle, graduate student suggestion. It is a miserable the recent focus on putting administration must demonstrate through substantive pro­ Seth Watkins advocated turn­ situation when some stu­ computers there. grams that it is committed to developing personnel. ing off the air conditioning in dents have to begin and end By announcing these guidelines, the administration has the Allen Building until all the the academic year in quar­ ROGER BARR acknowledged that there is more to a job than the number at dorms have a working air con­ ters that do not allow a rea­ Professor of Biomedical the bottom of a paycheck. In light of the low unemployment ditioning system. sonable sleeping and working Engineering rates in the Triangle region, the University must strive to utilize and develop the talent of its staff. Otherwise, employ­ ees will find work elsewhere. Many companies have promoted United States should reconsider its India policy employee development for years, and it is about time the The threats made by them since 1984. India is one of the largest University started focusing on these kinds of programs. Duke University students These acts are just the tip recipients of American aid. Although the five core principles are laudable, they mean against Trinity sophomores of the iceberg. In India, reli­ America must impose on nothing unless the initiatives are correctly translated into Berin Szoka and Jay Strader gious differences can cost India the sanctions the law effective teaching mechanisms. The five initiatives focus on after they criticized the pro­ you your life. These students requires us to impose on reli­ training University employees to be leaders; perhaps a supple­ posed establishment of a received a threat; that is gious oppressors. Cut off U.S. mental troubleshooting initiative should also be created to Hindi major are an outrage. more than Indian minorities aid to India until it respects respond when leadership fails. This can be one of the most These threats illustrate the get. We must assign India human rights and declare frustrating aspects of workplace culture, and the administra­ true face of Hindu tolerance. its proper place as one ofthe American support for the tion should ensure that all supervisors treat employees with Unfortunately, this is typ­ worst human rights viola­ independence of the Sikh honesty and respect. ical of the way Hindus treat tors in the world. India has homeland, Khalistan and the elections, but since the pop­ 16 other nations seeking It is surprising that the "inclusiveness committee" did not non-Hindus in India. The ulation is 80 percent Hindu, their freedom from India. include a single lower-ranking staff member. This task force Indian government has mur­ dered more than 250,000 the minorities only get to Only then will the people of gathered suggestions and information through focus groups, choose their oppressors. South Asia be able to live in but it missed a golden opportunity to symbolically show its Sikhs since 1984, more than 200,000 Christians in India is neither democratic freedom. Democracies don't concern for people near the bottom of the traditional Nagaland since 1947 and nor secular. commit genocide. University hierarchy. Hopefully, all employees will be involved more than 60,000 Muslims in the concept and formulation stages of the specific initiatives. We must begin to treat in Kashmir since 1988. Tens India like the intolerant DR. GURMFT SINGH AULAKH It's nice to see the administration tackle an important of thousands of Sikhs are country that it is. While we Washington, D.C. issue before it becomes a crisis, a marked break from the languishing in Indian jails as are trying to stop ethnic The author is president of approaches used in previous years. This issue is clearly political prisoners, some of cleansing in the Balkans, the Council of Khalistan. important, even though it has not yet reached a breaking point. With the University's history in mind, workplace cul­ ture should be a priority of the administration this coming Laws should reflect the importance of human life academic year. If the teachers at 1 its citizens, the good with human beings? We are Columbine High School in citizens are going to obey the teaching kids that truth does­ Littleton, Colo, had been law, but the criminals are going n't matter, values are silly and THE CHRONICLE armed, they could have imme­ to obtain arms anyway. In this that human beings are envi­ KATHERINE STR0TJP, Editor diately put a stop to those boys way government policy puts ronmental outcasts, and as RICHARD RUBIN, Managing Editor the kw-abiding citizens at the such, human beings don't mat­ JAIME LEVY, University Editor killing one student after GREG PESSIN, University Editor another. If the good customers mercy of any irrational person. ter. What do these kids have to NORM BRADLEY, E~ at the McDonald's in Our present culture bears livefitf? JONATHAN ANGIER, G California had been armed, even graver responsibility for Its high time we take a NEAL MORGAN, Sports Edkor PRAT1K PATEL,. they could have put a stop to those killings. What can we look at the values required for CHRISTINE PARKINS, Or. * State EMor KELLY WOO, Features Editor the mass slaughter by one expect if our politicians and a society of freedom and MEREDITH YOUNG, Media* Center Editor ALIZA GOLDM AN, Sports Photography Editor TIM MILLINGTON, Recess Editor KEVIN PRIDE, Recta Editor man several years ago. community leaders are more responsibility. If we value JAKE HARRINGTON, Layout and Design Editor R0SS MONTANTE, Layout and Design Editor The government bears concerned with what the latest human beings, we need to TREY DAVIS, Wire Editor AMBIKA KUMAR, Wire Edilor poll shows than with pursuing revamp our laws and reassess MARY CARMICHAEL, Currents Editor ROB STARLING, Systems Manager grave responsibility for the loss MATT ROSEN, Creative Services Manager SUE NEWSOME, Advertising Director of its citizens' lives because it . More concerned with our cultural values to show CATHERINE MARTIN, Production Manager ADRIENNE GRANT, Creative Director has made it a legal maze for a "fitting in" with the crowd than that human life matters. MARY TABOR, Operations Manager NALJNI MILNE, Office Manager law-abiding person to carry a seeking the proper values by LAUREN CHER-NICK, Advertising Manager SAUNDRA EDWARDS, .Advertising Manager which to live? More concerned DANA WILLIAMS, Advertising Manager weapon for his own-self TERRY TAYLOR-BIRD with fivgs and grasses than defense. When government The Chronicle is published by Ihe Duke Studenl Publishing Company, Inc., a non-profit corporation indepen­ McConneIls,S.C. dent oTDuke University. The opinions expressed in this newspaper are not necessarily those of Duke University, its students, wcrfceu, athninistralion or trustees. Unsigned editorials represent the majority view of the edilorial board. Columns, letters and cartoons representIh e views of the authors. ON THE RECORD Phone numbers: Editorial/News: phone: 684-2663, fax: 684-4696; Sports: 68+6115; Business Office: 684- 3811; Ad«ni_ing Office: phoie: 684-3811, fax: 684-8295. Editorial Office (Newsroom): 301 Flowers Building; The key for us is to set up and have in place a testing program whereby we test on a Business Office: 103 West Union Building: Business and Advertising Office: 101 West Union Building, Duke University. Visit The Chronicle Online at http://www.chronicle.duke.edu. more frequent basis these large meters and repair them as necessary. © 1999 The Chronicle, Box 90858, Durham, N.C. 27708. All rights reserved. No pan of this publication may be reproduced in any form without the prior, written permission of the Business Office. Each individual is entitled Durham Public Works Director Katie Kalb on efforts to ensure the accuracy ofthe meters that measure the to one free copy. water pumped to the city's largest customers (see story, p. 1) THURSDAY\Y,, MAYY 27,, 19999 COMMENTARV^_>IYHTI__,I um\ Yi Sending a note to the parents will not suffice In light of recent tragedies, colleges must develop multiple programs to combat alcohol abuse There is sobering news from the state many student organizations are fighting action must be taken. of Massachusetts. Column as I see 'em this myth, and universities should ensure College is a time for exploration. On May 18, the state's Board of Higher these groups get necessary funding, not Inevitably, students under the age of 21 Education passed a controversial measure Norm Bradley in place of other social outlets, but in will drink, regardless of rules and regula­ that forces Massachusetts' 29 public col­ experience is learning to function as an indi­ addition to traditional campus groups. tions. For many students, college is the leges and universities to notify the parents vidual. Universities should not be relying on Another solution is to work with off- first time in their lives they have easy of underage students who are caught parents to teach their students life lessons. campus bars that sell to minors. When access to alcohol. Some will choose never drinking or possessing alcohol on campus. Almost all college students are at least students drink off campus, it introduces a to drink, others will become infrequent or The state should be commended for 18 years old. In the eyes of the state, colle­ slew of additional safety concerns, includ­ social drinkers and others will develop taking a step to curb alcoholism and gians are legal adults and are responsible ing drinking and driving. These establish­ dangerous drinking habits. binge drinking on its campuses. for the choices they make. Unfortunately, ments can be forced to change by town or There is little administrators can do to Massachusetts, in particular, was under the increased freedom that adulthood state officials if universities exert enough limit the presence of alcohol at universi­ tremendous pressure from parents to brings is coupled with increased account­ pressure. Colleges should provide ade­ ties. Instead, it is their responsibility to take action after the September 1997 ability. If an adult makes the decision to quate counseling options for students, give students as many choices as possible death of Scott Krueger, a freshman at the drink while underage, he alone should face and behavioral standards should be while informing them of the dangers and Massachusetts Institute of Technology. the potential repercussions of his-actions. enforced so the experience of those who potential repercussions of alcohol. At Just last fall, Congress passed a provi­ A basic tenet of all student discipline don't drink is not tainted by those who do. times, it will be necessary to discipline a sion that allowed colleges to send letters codes is parity. If two students break the But above all else, universities should student. But this isn't kindergarten- home for alcohol violations; already sev­ same law—special exceptions aside—they strive to illustrate to students the impor­ there is no need to call mommy and daddy. eral colleges—including the University of should be given the same punishment, tance of curbing alcohol abuse. The rising Delaware, Georgetown University and regardless of sex, age or even the values of number of alcohol induced tragedies on Norm Bradley is an engineering junior and Clemson University—have adopted par­ their parents. By requiring its universities college campuses is a grim reminder that editorial page editor ofThe Chronicle. ent-notification policies. The University to send these letters home, Massachusetts of Delaware reports a significant drop in creates a system where students guilty of repeat offenders after sending 1,414 let­ an equal crime get unequal punishments. ters home last year. Many baby boomer parents accept college But just because a policy is successful as a time of experimentation; they would doesn't mean it is the correct way of doing not take action if informed that their child things. Academic communities are built was drinking. Other parents may respond on trust. We operate on the premise that more severely; some might even yank students are not cheating on tests or pla­ their child out of school. Handling prob­ giarizing papers. When evidence to the lems internally ensures that an equal contrary emerges, corrective action is standard is applied to all, taken through disciplinary boards. Simply put, this method of confronting Universities don't send letters home to the problem of alcohol abuse leaves much inform parents that their children have to be desired. There are other steps uni­ cheated—instead, the matter is handled versities can—and should—take. An between the student and her school. important first step is providing all Stu­ Colleges should be in the business of dents with non-alcoholic social options. establishing community standards and Students are fed the perception that get­ working to reduce dangerous behaviors ting drunk is the only socially acceptable such as binge drinking, not passing the option on a Friday or Saturday night. problem onto parents. Part of the college This is not the case. Across the country, No movie should monopolize American culture While many people in my age bracket were lies the rub and the secret to the movie's power. camping out for the first new George Lucas movie The reason the movie was expected to be so popular A stone, a leaf, a door in 15 years, I jeered at the antics of the sheep-like is because it packed a dangerous one-two punch of nos­ masses that lined up outside movie theaters earli­ talgia and almost complete control of the entertain­ Jason Wagner er this month. ment industry. with the devil we know rather than the one we don't. Their battery-operated lightsabers and Darth When I mention nostalgia, I don't mean to deprive While some may disagree, the fact remains that all Maul costumes, their pre-movie excitement and their any of America's adults the opportunity to go back and films, especially lai^e, multi-million-dollar ones, are rampant yet subservient midnight shopping sprees at be a kid again. From two to 102, ifyou want to wear cultural documents. They both reflect and affect cur­ toy stores—could they have been any more ridiculous? your Superman underwear, go ahead. rent society. As individuals and as a collective people, Notwithstanding the considerable entertainment I Still, nostalgia is a shady, not to mention subversive, we must be aware ofthe messages that are out there, received from seeing these clowns on parade, there is way of selling a movie. For someone to sell you on a how they may be conveyed and received. a more serious reason for my objection to what I shall nostalgic basis you've got to trust the storyteller to get This brings me to the second punch: the power of from now on refer to as simply, the movie. What real­ advertising and its role as evidence of cultural monop­ ly pushed me, what truly fired my engines to full oly. Never before have companies seemed to prostitute throttle, is what I see as an attempt on the part of themselves to a single cultural object in the hopes that Lucas to monopolize culture. That I regard with sim­ Yes, and whoever is against the their attachment to it might lead to higher profits. I ple contempt. American way—Star Wars being one saw the manifestation of this in everything fromnews ­ Only one other film dared debut on the same week­ papers to the soda bottles in my family's refrigerator. I end as the movie. The fact that one entertainment behe­ symbol, apple pie the other—is a think control ofthe Taco Bell chihuahua, the Kentucky moth can control when and what consumers see is Fried Chicken colonel and the Pizza Hut girl speaks harmiul to the entire cultural landscape. Fbrgetting film bloody Communist bastard. for itself for one second, we have no idea what other products of At the veiy least, seeing CBS News' Dan Rather end a higher entertainment quality were ignored in the wake piece on Kosovo with a report on the earnings ofthe movie of this, by most critical accounts, mediocre film. it right—to get the story as it was, rather than how was disturbing. At the most, it was damn frightening. I realize when you start attacking unbridled capi­ they remember or reinterpret it. Does anyone question Lately, I have been heartened by the drop in the talist expenditure and start using phrases like the feet that the next three scheduled movies, includ­ movie's earnings and masses of mediocre reviews. And "monopolizing culture" that those with power and ing the one currently in release, are all prequels? while I am sure the movie will be an economic suc­ money fire this volley at you: Tou can't blame people And won't these "prequels" change, however subtly, cess—because as the saying goes, "bad movies never for wanting to see a quality film. Good things sell. It is how we view Episodes IV, V and VI? Even though the die, they just go to video"—I can at least take some the American way after all." reason that we came to see Episode I was because of comfort in the feet that Lucas and his friends at Yes, and whoever is against the American way— the merits and ideals of the three original movies? Industrial Light and Magic cannot yet fully predict the Star Wars being one symbol, apple pie the other—is a Merits and ideals that might now be altered? universe, or for that matter, control it. bloody Communist bastard. Yes, we've heard it all The first three movies presented us with the basic before. But the question remaining is why did this good vs. evil, and the dark side And although those Jason Wagner is a Trinity senior and senior associate fea­ average film seize America's attention? And therein notions also carry ideological baggage, Td rather stick tures editor ofThe Chronicle. THE CHRONICLE »PAGE I COMICS THURSDAY, MAY 27,1999

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THE CHRONICLE: Jaime and Norm's solutions to Chronicle workplace culture: Make Pooh editor: k8 (w/rr) Refill soda machine regularly (especially with Diet Coke): .jalgep Asbestos-free carpet: n steohen bradley Two words: feng shui: noal. bat* Irom tho wilds of Tulsa Keep Greg dry: ppp Wild burros for trip from Central Campus:. tim and kewwvin Staff retreat to Maui: .- - merry Working elevator:. . Mc, rZ, Woo Hire Rekar as morale booster:. roily Account Representatives: Monica Franklin Dawn Hall Yu-Hsien Huang Account Assistants:. ...Annie Hull Jason Jenkins Kathy Un Business Assistants: Lisa Helem Kate Stroup sends a loving shout-out to her dear friend Megan, who will be visiting Duke this weekend.

Thursday Notices Teer House Healthy Happenings: "Basic Campus; Organizations lhat wish to be Investing and Asset Allocation," 7 pm, for listedin The Blue Devil's Advocate 1999- more information call 416-3853. 2000 issue need to complete an informa-; tion form. These forms can be picked up Duke Gardens Benefit: "Floral Design fn The. Chronicle's advertising office or Dan with Libbey Oliver, manager of floral Tuesday Volunteers Summer Festival of Music: Ciompi Quartet Become a;Duke Ambassador, Help; the call 684-2663 or 684-3811 for more in­ services for Colonial Williamsburg. For formation. The deadline is June 28. details cal! 684-3698. and Friends. Arturo Ciompi, clarinet and 2,000+ patients and visitors who come Randali Love, piano. 8 pm, Reynolds The­ through the Duke Hospital lobby each day: ater. Call Page Sox Office, 919-684-4444 check out pagers, check.ihe computer for Friday for more information. room numbers, answer the phone, assist Opening Reception for "Particular Vi­ Children's Miracle Network Telethon: patients with admissions forms and lots of : sions," the third annual Durham School other tasks! For more information call: Kay Fair, Duke Uhiveristy Medical Center, of the Arts/DUMA juried exhibition, 5-7 Satterwhite at 684-3835. Visit our website Searle. Center,.: Sunday June 6, 1999 pm, Duke Universiry Museum of Art. For at http'J/voSuntee..mc.duke.edu. 7 from 1 -5 pm. This fair is for children of more information cail 684-5135. Wednesday all ages,; Admission is FRED The fair is Teer House Healthy Happenings: "Mindful- put on by Duke medical students in sup­ ness-Based Stress Reduction: Applying port of the telethon. Attractions at the fair Saturday an Ancient Practice to Contemporary include: face-painting, clowns, moon- Teer House Healthy Happenings: "Os­ Lives," 7 pm, for more information call 416- Duke Tumor Registry is looking for com­ walk, bake sale, Pillsbury doughboy, raf­ teoporosis: Management and Preven­ 3853. passionate volunteers who love to talk.on; fles, Disney store booth with prizes and tion," 7 pm, for more information call 416- the phone. Call 419-7911 for more infor­ games, USS: Kitty Hawk members and 3853. mation. Shadow Players mock battle.

•| ... •• - •• :.' ...... •••...•... • THURSDAY, MAY 27, 1 CLASSIFIEDS THE CHRONICLE • PAGEV

1980-90 cars from $500. Police NANNY Experienced, educated CALLING TEACHERS COLLEGE STUDENTS PART-TIME RESEARCH ASSIS­ impounds and tax repos for listings and energetic nanny needed to Well established international Filling 40 summer openings. 10-40 TANT needed for the Risk call, 1-800-319-3323x4617. care for bright and cheerful boys Montessori School seeks full-time weeks, flexible schedules. Communication Laboratory ot tne ages 1 S 3 in our home in distin­ teachers. Must have experience $9.?5/hr. Scholarstiip/lnternship Duke Comprehensive Cancer guished Durham neighborhood. w/children 2-5. Beautiful environ­ available, conditions apply. Center conduct in-person and Nice play area at home, close to ment. Major medical insurance, Customer sales/service. Will train. telephone interviews for several park, memberships in children's paid vacation time, full montessori Call for appt: 403-1918. research projects, data entry, inter­ facilities. Two year min. commit­ training-program. Starting salary pretation of results and creation of ment Additional house manage­ S8.O0-1 3.00 per hour. Call 490- HELP WANTED summary reports for presentation ment responsibilities. Good salary, GREAT DOG HUGE Internet 0287. to assist elderly Durham woman at project meetings Must be able insurance. 493-7658. needs greai home. Golden during weekends with dressing, to work some evenings and week­ PROFITS! ends. Salary S11.00 per hr./20hrs. Retriever mix, 50 lbs., 3 yrs. Old, Caring housekeeper with own bathing, meals, light chores and Refer people to the World's First Professional Durham family seeks per week. Graduate students inter­ male, loves everyone, gets transportation with flexible hours for errands. Prefer one person to work along with other dogs, all shots 3D Virtual Reality Shopping Mall nanny to care for twin toddlers Start­ ested in research preferred Please family of four in West Durham. 9am to 9pm Sat. and Sun. each current. A wonderful friend. Call and make money when they ing late summer Competitive call Michael A. Bryant lor more Duties include: after school care for weekend ($!25/wkend) but would 732-1749 or email shop online with your VIP salary, pleasant environment 382- children ages 5 - 7 and housekeep­ information. [email protected]. Discount Code. Free! No sell­ 0458. consider person to work every other ing. References required. Call weekend or only one day per week­ ing. Call 1-877-507-8936 (toll 383-6739. free); dr write to Positive end. Please call 404-633-1948. Productions. P.O. Box 2420, HOUSE CLEANING Children's fitness center has Pasta Bella Restaurant Opening House Cleaning a burden? Call Alameda, CA 94501. Try it! full/part time positions with possible Soon. Immediate employment. Joyce for help. Duke employee ref­ codes LJA 3677 at www.ath- management training available. Looking for a job in North All positions. Apply in person. omemall.cc A full time Data technician position Currently accepting applications Homestead Market. 261 54 erences available. 528-4780. is available with a research group in Carolina? We need two from energetic, self-motivated indi­ sales/marketing representatives West or call 361-3666 and ask the Anxiety and Traumatic Stress for Dave. LOOKING FOR SOMETHING TO viduals looking for career opportu­ for a Durham-based distributor program at Duke Medical .Center. nities Child development, fitness, DO in the evenings and on the This position is ideal for a recent of DuPont Corian One territory weekends? Contact Nate Saint athletic backgrounds helpful but not would cover from Charlotte Positions are available for several graduate in psychology considering required. Salary/benefits DOE. Victor at [email protected] for details further education. Programming west: other position would cover work study students to assist a of activities, or check out the Call 403-5437 or fax resume to the Triad area. Overnight travel research group in the Psychiatry Babysitter needed June 13-18 skills are desirable but not required. 403-1083. -Activities Calendar" on our web­ (8am - 4pm), will pay well. For Patient contact and work-study requried. Good benefits pack­ Department in the Medical Center. site- www.learnmore.duke.edu/ more infromation call Dwayne 660- supervision also possible, contact age including 401K plan and Duties may include assistance with SummSess 3655. Dr Larry Tupler @ 684-4921 or Erik CHRONICLE BUSINESS competitive salary for long term data management, entry and scan­ Churchill @ 681-5750 for further OFFICE career. Please send your ning We also have opportunities Duke Professor looking for reliable, needs student for July-Aug., (may resume to Keith Edmonds, PO available tor those interested in warm-hearted caregiver for 2 tod­ begin sooner) approximately 8-10 Box 2628, Durham. NC 27715 database programming. Rate of or fax to 919-383-7524. dlers. For approximately 10 hours A part-time opportunity to log-in hours per week. General office pay $6.60/hr. minimum. Contact duties, data entry. Contact Mary Ron Garrison, 684-5130. $80Q/month. per week. Call 490-1488. and to manage e-mail for a scientif­ ic journal. Approx. 6 hours per Tabor, 684-3811. S400/6edroom/Month. RESEARCH POSITION: Furnished Kensington Trace. 2 week, $8 per hour. Contact profes­ sor Paul P Wang. Voice 660-5259 Summer rob a. office assistant in 40 hours; Duke Medical Center to Bedroom, freshly painted condo in lOiirnai offico. 'Ohr/week; $6.75/hr. North Chapel Hill with pool, tennis Great News for parents look­ or 5252, or e-mail EXCELLENT INTERNSHIP assist with memory disorder/neu- Call Ann Tamanz, 681-6770. on bus line. Near shopping. Joel ing for quality child caret This [email protected] OPPORTUNITY with maior roimaging research, Ideal for Pre- Duvall Properties. 990-3152. fall, Immaculata Catholic Early investment firm. Mustbehigny Med and Psychology majors; High Learning Center in Durham will Computer savy student needed for motivated with superior written Love Kids? The Little Gym is hiring GPA and good LUXURY APARTMENT be moving into the school facili­ part-time network and oral communication skills. gymnastics instructors and/or birth­ communication/computer/statistic HOMES FOR YOU! ties and will be able to serve troubleshooting/set-up. HTML pre­ 25 hours/week required. If inter­ day party leaders. Must be able to skills. Pay negotiable; opportunity work weekends Male or female to interact with medical setting and Free locator service for the Durham more children age 3. Our week­ ferred but not mandatory, flexible ested, fax resume to 490-4714 instructors wanted. Good pay, fun publish/present papers. Please call area at 1-877-SEEK-APT. ly curriculum includes Spanish, schedule. 10-20 hours per week. and call John at 490-4732. ari, music, physical education, Pay neg. Call 688-7744 x10O. work. University Drive, Durham. 6B4-3497 for information. religious education, and library 403-5437. Resumes can be faxed to 681 -7668 Two bedroom, two bath, large visits. We are currently accept­ or dropped off in hospital south, office/loft area, fully furnished. ing applications for the fall. For room 3547-blue zone. Available summer and/or fall. 3 more information, please con­ Minutes from Duke west. (Forest tact Rosa Pena at 682-5847 ext. Oaks Complex) $950 per month. 255 SUMMER WORK Call Roya at 383-0868. DUMC Development Office seeking student for 10-15 Apartments! hours/week. Work study pre­ ferred. Duties include special projects, data entry, filing and '95 Chrysler LeBaron. White con­ babysitter/nanny needed 2-3 morn­ other office work. Office located vertible, black leather interior, black ings and/or afternoons per week. at the Durham Bulls Ballpark - top, fully loaded, single owner, 54K, Very sweet, easygoing 1- year old transportation necessary. not a scratch. $9,900. 942-0150 girt, Mollie. Call Laura at 49a Starting salary. $7.00/hr. For Trinity Properties more information, call Shannon at 667-2541 or e-mail [email protected]. THECHRONICLE Walk to Campus classified advertising rates Please call (919) 309-9765 EXECUTIVE business rate - $6.00 for first 15 words e-mail [email protected] DIRECTOR private party/N.R - $4.50 for first 15 words The Orange County all ads 10© (per day) additional per word Rape Crisis Center 3 or 4 consecutive insertions -10 % off Serving the Duke Community for 23 years! 5 or more consecutive insertions - 20 % off A United Way Agency Serving Orange County for 25 Years. special features 1278,000 budget, (Combinations accepted.) Land or Air, We'll Get it There! two offices, six staff positions, $1.00 extra per day for all Bold Words HAIRCUTS One Stop Shopping Shipping 110 volunteers. $1.50 extra per day for a Bold Heading Qualifications Required: I 286-9494 (maximum 15 spaces) PERMS & COLOR FetEx • Bachelor's degree. $2.50 for 2 - line heading • Strong communication and West Campus 1720 Guess Rd. Shops at Northgate organizational skills. $2.00 extra per day for Boxed Ad Between Harris Teeter and Boston Market • Demonstrated effectiveness in deadline Union Bldg. Hours: Mon-Fri 10AM -6PM building coalitions, working on next to the multi-disciplinary teams, and 1 business day prior to publication by 12:00 noon Sat 10AM-4PM working with diverse populations. payment Bryan Center • Boxes * Ability to maintain personal • Packaging/ Shipping balance while accomplishing Prepayment is required Supplies multiple tasks. Cash, Check, Duke IR, MCA/ISA or Flex accepted Mon.-Fri. 8:30-5:30 • Next Day Air Sat 8:30-3:30 Qualifications Preferred: (We cannot make change for cash payments.) 24 - hour drop off location • Graduate degree. Barbers & * Five years administrative •101 W.Union Building experience in a nonprofit or Hairdressers Happy Birthday human services program or mail to: to serve you. • Experience working wi .h issues Chronicle Classifieds of sexual violence. Box 90858, Durham, NC 27708 - 0858 We welcome Adrienne! Salary: ISO's - J40's. fax to: 684-8295 everyone! Cafeteria plan benefits. Your parole officer said it would be ok to Annual and sick leave. phone orders: Call for job descriptioi WALK IN OR BY call (919) 684-3811 to place your ad. have cake and ice cream with us today 19191 966-4647. Resume (with APPOINTMENT three references) and letter of Visit the Classifieds Online! but you have to be back by 5. sent bv lun ht^:/Awww.chronicle.duke.edu/classifieds/today.html Love, OCRCC, PO Box 4711. Chapel Hill. MC 27511 n Call 684-3811 if you have any questions about classifieds. 684-3909 3 Floor. Flowers Block bmoylanigmindspr No refunds or cancellations after first insertion deadline. y. . THE CHRONICLE THURSDAY, MAY 27,1999

SAL'S PIZZA Now hiring part-time and full-time waitstaff. Apply in person. New dean considers administrative changes Loehmann's Plaza. Hillandale Road. 309-1656. Country Bungalow. 3 mi to DUMC. m ENGINEERING from page 1 3 bedroom, 2 bath, pine floors. The school is really on the rise ifyou look at the bench­ "She knows the game, and she knows WANTED! Front porch, back deck with hot marks, like quality of students, quality of faculty and the STUDENTS/GRADS tub. 0.5 Acre lot. 402-9595, pager how to play the game." With good communication skills 970-9087. $116,900. amount of research support," Strohbehn said, in an inter­ for marketing/sales. Possible view. "What's very needed is for the dean to sit down and PROVOST JOHN STROHBEHN, exposure to management. Work F.S.B.O., Hope Valley, picturesque, secluded. Open floor plan, 2 to 3 say, Here's where our school is,' but as a new individual, 1-on-1 /face-to-face through pre­ ON KRISTINA JOHNSON'S ABILITY TO PROCURE GRANTS bedroom, 1S1/2 bath, DR, den. to look at the strategy for going forward. Her first chal­ set appts. S9.75.hr appointment FP, skylight, gas grill, patio, wheel­ plus incentives. Conditions lenge will be to work with faculty and administrators to In sports, it's okay to have a new coach bring in all of his chair access, attic, workshop. decide what are the directions that will really pay off" apply Call 403-1918. $129,500. 493-2811. own assistants, but in academic spheres, it's good to have Johnson will have to decide whether to concentrate the [continued] authority." WANTED: school's expected boost in faculty in its four depart­ Obtaining another Engineering Research Center grant ENTREPRENEURS ments—biomedical, mechanical, civil and electrical engi­ from the National Science Foundation could be an impor­ What if you could make life long, CD player, JVC 6 disc magazine. 3 neering—or use them to expand to other majors like aero­ tant first step toward the school's ultimate goals. Stro­ continuous, passive, residual years old. Like new. Asking space, chemical or industrial engineering. This policy hbehn explained that the ERC grants are the largest the $200.00. Call Linda at 620- the world made a local or long choice could be one ofthe school's most important and in­ NSF gives, and the University's grant for its current distance call, received a page, fluential in many years. ERC—the Center for Emerging Cardiovascular Technolo­ surfed the internet, purchased gies run by Professor of Biomedical Engineering and something through e-com­ GREAT DOG "My instinct is to build on our success, and to invest in merce, or flipped a light switch? needs great home. Golden making connections to other schools and departments on search committee member Olaf Von Bamm—is about to Sound more lucrative than deliv­ Retriever mix, 50 lbs, 3 yrs old, run out. As the grant dictates, the CECT will become fully ering subs during the school campus—business, school of the environment, chemistry loves everyone, gets along with self-sufficient by September. year? More appealing than other dogs, all shots current. A and physics, medicine—I don't really have enough data impressing that corporate right now," she wrote in an e-mail. recruiter just enough to earn 60- wonderful friend. Call 732-1749 Several years ago, Johnson co-founded an ERC, the 80 hour work weeks so that you or email [email protected]. But before she can lead the faculty, she must first meet Center for Optoelectronic Computing Systems, at Col­ can build the company's dreams orado. The ERC later spun into five different businesses. not yours Call '91 Duke graduate them and establish an administrative infrastructure. Michael Koldan « 716-467- Johnson said she also wants to create a new position, "She turned that failing program into a successful center," 4587 to learn more. associate dean of research, that most other major engi­ Von Ramm said. That showed that she had great skill at LOSE WEIGHT naturally by los­ being an administrator.... She has teaching expertise, she ing hungerl NEW IMAGE PLUS neering schools have. As a result of her relative unfamil- with Chromium Picolinate. Just iarity with the school's faculty, however, Johnson has not has demonstrated scholarly abilities at the highest level $29.95 for one month's supply. and she has administrative experience at the highest 100% Money Back Guarantee. yet decided who she will appoint as her associates, but she CAROLINA SUCCESS CEN­ hopes they will come from within the school's faculty, level.... But all [three] finalists were strong candidates." TER: 919-598-3203. 2 BR, 2 1/2 BA in Five Oaks, 12 which she called "awesome." Johnson said Von Ramm will be key to developing a min. from Duke. A/C, W/D, F/P, C- "I'm sure there are [faculty within the school who "new center with a new director." Fans, Clbhse w/fit rm, Pool, NO Strohbehn acknowledged that Johnson "should be able PETS. $970/mth, 687-2201 ext. Queen mattress set, quitted top, would be successful deans]," said Associate Professor of #114, 554-3S6S new, still In plastics, 5 yr. warran­ Mechanical Engineering and Materials Sciences to support" the University's efforts to obtain a new ERC ty. Cost $559.95, sell for $185. Lawrence Virgin, a member ofthe dean search committee. grant. "She knows the game, and she knows how to play 3 bedroom , 1 1/2 bath house, Call 528-0509. fenced backyard in quiet Hillandale 1 think it is not good to have too much change at the top. the game," he said. Golf Course Neighborhood. 5980/mo. 477-2911.

3-4 bedrooms, 2 baths, living- GREAT DOG room, kitchen/dining 1,300 SF needs great home. Golden brick home, in established Retriever mix, 50 lbs, 3 yrs old, DCVB Is CELEBRATING neighborhood, hardwood and loves everyone, gets along with The Durham Convention and Visitors Bureau ceramic tile floors; washer/dryer, other dogs, all shots current. A dishwasher, central air/heat, wonderful friend. Call 732-1749 mission is to attract and serve visitors. And for ceiling fans, partial basement, or email [email protected]. attic storage and outdoor stor­ our tenth anniversary, we thought we'd share age shed, 1/3 acre lot with perennial flowers, herb garden, ten things that make our work so rewarding. and raised vegetable garden beds, pets OK, 15 mins to Duke, 5 mins to Northgate Mall, walk to Northgate Park, near bus line, Convenient to Duke, UNC. NC Mus of Life Separate entrance. Share W/D. Partly furnished. Females only. DURHAM IS HOME TO $350.00 per month. 489-5473. A LOT OF ACCIAIM. Seeking non-smoking grad. stu­ dent for private room in quiet The list keeps getting longer every year. Five Oaks townhouse 2 Bedroom, home. 10 minutes from Duke, 2-1/2 bath, appliances, health club laundry 8 kitchen privileges. privileges, convenient to Duke, $425/month includes utilities. Call UNC, NCCU and RTP Minutes to for appointment Thurs.. or Fri.. Fri.. 1-40. No pets, no smoking $900 Saturday Fri.. 382-9707. per month. Available June 1. 572- Durham is: 0935, leave message. Two Rooms For Rent - Each w/pri- vate entrance, bath, fully furnished, #2 Best City for Women to Live Nice 2 bedroom, 1 and 1/2 bath all utilities included. Minimal cook­ #3 Most Enlightened City duplex for rent. Close to Duke ing. Grad students and visiting pro­ Deck, storage area, fenced yard. fessors preferred. Available now YEARS OF ATTRACTING borne to one of world's largest R&D centers Wei I-trained dog negotiable. for summer and fall semester. 2 Flexible availability date. blocks from East Campus. AND SERVING VISITORS home to j of the lop 40 golf courses in NC $725/month. Call 477-7512. S350/month. Call 286-2285. TO DURHAM. one of the top cities for alternative lifestyles Durham is pinnacle of a region: # ! in economic strength for 25 years #2 best places to live in tbe South #j most improved for business #16 best places to live #18 best for telecommuting If you're looking for one of top ten coolest places for young people and working moms, this is it.

Put Some"Good" In the Goodbye! Unid ii Donate your used car to the National Kidney Foundation Kidney Cars join us in ttltbrating an years of sink, tc Durham hy Program. The funds can help save lives. We 11 arrange a pickup and you Including X. Research Triangle Park might qualify for a*— J- sharing _ Durham ixprritnct with your frimd. and family. For all there is to do in Durham, come by the Visitor Information Center or visit our website. National Kidney Foundation" DURHAM 101 East Morgan Strtel • Durham, North Carolina 27701 Convention&rVisrtorsBureaii Phom (919,1687-0268 • Fax (919J 68j-

• Big Girl in the By ADAM GANZ Root trailed Louisiana defeat Hand in three sets, fight­ In a dramatic final game, The Chronicle State's Tom Hand late in the ing off multiple match points. Hand fought off two break ATHENS, Ga. — Doug Root third set of their No. 2 singles Michele VanGorp graduated two "I was thinking maybe he points and finally put the Blue had been in this situation before. match, a match which had weeks ago and is now in New would start remembering Devils away with a hard fore­ already lasted four hours and York practicing with the Liberty. The junior, desperately try­ that, too," said Root. "You hand volley for a 6-7, 6-4, 64 two rain delays. VanGorp talks about the draft ing to rescue the men's tennis know, just to put a little more decision and a 4-3 LSU victory. and her adjustment to pro ball. team and its national title With the team score tied at 3- pressure on him." "I felt like I came up with See page 22 dreams in the NCAA quarterfi­ 3, Root was Duke's last hope. But Hand proved equal to the some good shots to keep the nals on Sunday, could hear And as Hand served for the challenge this time, persevering pressure on him," Root said. teammate Jordan Wile scream­ match at 5-4, the Blue Devils even after the tenacious Root "But he didn't really miss any ing, "Remember Milwaukee!" recalled the 1998 Milwaukee saved two match points and easy balls or anything. He just and understood exactly what Classic, when Root, then a stayed focused as the match played well." • Stars take 2-1 series he meant. sophomore, came from behind to moved indoors to avoid the rain. See ROOT on page 23 • lead over Avalanche Joe Nieuwendyk scored a goal and had two assists in leading Defense falters, Dallas to a 3-0 win against Unsung players shine in Tulsa Colorado. Ed Belfour posted his sixth career playoff shutout. men's lacrosse

• Junior goes deep for TULSA, Okla. — The night falls to G'town 19th time before the final round, the women's golf team gathered for one last By RACHEL COHEN Ken Griffey Jr. homered lor the team meeting. There wasn't much The Chronicle major league leading 19th time that could be said that the Blue HEMPSTEAD, N.Y. — No one had yesterday as the Mariners rout­ Devils didn't already know. But scored more than 10 goals on the men's ed the Twins 11-3. Seattle had Duke gathered for one last show of four home runs in the game, lacrosse team all year. support—they huddled together in including a grand slam by Not Georgetown's offense, third-best a massive group hug. Edgar Martinez. in the nation, which posted its only sin­ Less than 24 hours later, gle-digit output ofthe season March 27 • Palmer, Eastwood in there was another group hug. in a 10-8 loss to Duke, the Blue Devils' This one celebrated a national 12th win in as many meetings against talks to buy Pebble Beach championship. the Hoyas. Pebble Beach golt course is Golt by its nature, is an indi­ close to being sold to a group of vidual sport. But at the collegiate investors that include golfing level, one plays as part ofa team. legend Arnold Palmer and actor And last week in Tulsa, it was a Clint Eastwood. One of the team effort that won the national nation's most famous courses championship for the Blue Devils. But in the two schools' first-ever does not come cheap. The deal "I wish I could have con­ postseason matchup, the fifth-seeded to purchase Pebble Beach Co. is tributed a little more," Jenny Hoyas (13-2) disregarded history and believed to be worth $1 billion. Chuasiriporn said. "But I have a made some of their own, knocking off great team behind me.... I'm really fourth-seeded Duke 17-14 Saturday at • Top seed ousted from proud of all of us on the team. The Hofstra Stadium for their first trip to French Open way we pulled together just sums the Final Four. up the whole year.... Everyone had Yevgeny Kafelnikov was whistled "Giving up 17 goals is amazing to a big part in this win." off the court by fans after falling me," said coach Mike Pressler after in the second round 6-4,6-1,6- Instead of Chuasiriporn and his Blue Devils and their second- 4 to Dominik Hrbaty. Andre ___ Beth Bauer leading Duke to the ranked scoring defense were denied Agassi also struggled, but held '• promised land, it was less-herald­ their second semifinal appearance in THE BLUE DEVILS celebrate on for a five-set win against with a group hug after being ed Candy Hannemann and Kalen three years. "I didn't think there was crowned NCAA champions. Frenchman Arnaud Clement. See TEAM on page 24 • a team in the country that could score See MEN'S LAX on page 2_P- THE CHRONICLE THURSDAY, MAY 27,1999 Men's golf earns trip to NCAA finals QB Bryant declared By NEAL MORGAN himself last week. After shooting a 75 in the first The Chronicle round, Elfers became sick that night and woke up feel­ ineligible for fall term Just one month ago it was unclear ifthe men's golf ing ill. He shot a 77 that day but rebounded with a team would qualify for the East Regionals. Now the tremendous round, a career low, 4-under-par 67. Blue Devils are headed the NCAA Championships. Elfers finished in 37th place with a 6-over 219. Freshman quarterback D. Bryant is academically Duke finished in sixth place at last week's East Marc Chatelain and Matt Krauss tied for 43rd ineligible to play football this fall, the athletic Regionals in Providence, R.I., and by finishing in the place, finishing with a 7-over 220. The Blue Devils department announced Monday. top 11 of 23 teams, the Blue Devils earned the right to found themselves in fifth place after the first round, Bryant, who was a walk-on basketball player last compete for a national championship at Hazeltine largely due to Krauss' opening 69. In each round ofthe spring, will be forced to miss the fall semester and National GolfCourse in Chaska, Minn., fromJun e 2-5. Regionals, Duke had one player shoot in the 60s, a lift will have to reapply for admission to the University "We're obviously really pleased," coach Rod Myers that the Blue Devils missed earlier in the season. for the spring 2000 semester. said. "This has been a lot of fun. This group has worked This is not the most talented group IVe had," Myers hard and when goals start to be achieved, that's where said. "But it's a testament to them that they're achiev­ the fun is. We're really getting better each week." ing at this level. They're all just working really hard." "I look at it as a hurdle Kevin Streelman, who before the Regionals had Rounding out Duke's scorecard was Minnesota I have to jump over native Mike Christensen, who finished at 9-over-par. "This isn't the most tal­ The junior gets to return home, but the homecoming and I look forward to ented group I've had. may not be that sweet. that challenge." Duke will be competing with 29 other teams, all But it's a testament to among the nation's best, on a very long and demanding D. BRYANT them that they're course. The Blue Devils enter the tournament just look­ achieving at this level." ing to make the 36-hole cut, but Myers believes there's Bryant said in a statement released by the school always a chance for something special to happen. that he is optimistic about his future and he fully COACH ROD MYERS "Realistically, this group won't come into the tour­ intends on returning to Duke next January. nament with much of a chance to win," Myers said. "I want to thank Coach [Carl] Franks for his sup­ Duke's worst stroke average and played the fewest "There's a lot of really good teams out there. But port during this difficult time," Bryant said. "I look at rounds, led the way for the Blue Devils, finishingwit h stranger things have happened. Golfs a strange game it as a hurdle I have to jump over and I look forward a 5-over-par 218. His 69 in the second round was a that way. And we have the potential to do some things to that challenge." career low, and it was his surprising success over all when we're all playing well." Bryant redshirted last fall, but former Duke coach three days that propelled Duke to its strong finish. Fred Goldsmith believed the 6-foot-3", 190 pound "Kevin did a really nice job, he made the differ­ Detroit native would likely become the starting quar­ ence," Myers said. "His performance was a big sur­ terback this season. Bryant suffered through a dis­ prise really. He started to get things together these appointing spring, though, and found himself third past three weeks, but never really got the opportunity on Franks' quarterback depth chart. to show it. It's finally coming together for him, he's "I'm certainly disappointed that this situation has striking the ball well and he's probably the longest occurred but it is one we will handle," Franks said in driver on the team. a statement released through the school. "We look Streelman's surprising performance is symbolic of forward to D.'s return in January." the entire Blue Devil team lately. Duke reentered the Rising juniors Spencer Romine and Bobby Regionals picture with a second-place finish at the Campbell are considered one and two on the depth ACCs in April, but a dismal first two rounds at the chart, respectively, and rising senior Kevin Wofford Invitational once again placed the Blue Thompson now moves onto the third team. Yesterday, Devils on the bubble. Franks said Bryant was not going to figure into his But in the final round at Wofford, Duke fired a offensive plans. field-low 8-under 280 to jump from 10th place to fifth, "D. was never in contention for the starter's securing the invitation. job," Franks said. "He's not ready to play quarter­ "I thought the guys had kicked themselves out for back for us." sure," Myers said. "But they came back with just a Bryant's unexpected departure will force him to super round that got them into the NCAAs. miss a year's worth of practice and learning, which "The thing that pleases me most with this group is will set him back further. Bryant was recruited by their attitude. They have really stayed positive, and higher-profile schools as a wide receiver and defen­ when you do that, good things start to happen." sive back, but came to Duke when Goldsmith gave Senior Kyle Elfers made a nice little come back him the opportunity to try out for quarterback. 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THURSDAY, MAY 27,1999 THE CHRONICLE Allen wins Duke's 1st IC4A title Webb ousted early in singles, since 1971 with top hurdles time By NEAL MORGAN Pan-Am junior team. receives honor as top player The Chronicle At the women's equivalent ofthe IC4As, It's not going out on a limb to say- the ECACs, Jillian Schwartz took home a By RAY HOLLOMAN improvement on Monday," Goldstein that Jessie Allen had a pretty good title in the pole vault with her jump of 11- The Chronicle said. "We had a chance to recover a weekend. feet, 7 and 3/4 inches. Her title also clinched GAINESVILLE, Fla. — She may little bit by not playing yesterday, and The senior captured the IC4A 400- her a spot on the All-East team. have had to wait a few days, but a we came out and played well today." meter hurdles crown with the fastest "This caps an absolutely stellar year week that started off in uncharacter­ The Blue Devils top team will get a time in the nation this year, 49.42. The [for Schwartz]," women's coach Jan istic disappointment is turning into a chance to improve upon last year in time gave Allen an automatic bid to the Ogilvie said. "To win this championship typical Vanessa Webb week. the semifinals as they meet up with NCAAs held next week in Idaho. is probably just the start for the next After losing in both the team and Amanda Augustus and Amy Jensen of Allen's time is a new school record two years. She has really become dedi­ singles competition, ______California, the same and gave him Duke's first IC4A title cated to the sport." Duke's most decorat­ team that eliminat­ since 1971. Because he holds the But the real story of the weekend ed tennis player ever ed Webb and nation's fastest time, he will be the top was Allen's performance in hurdles. added another award Goldstein from last seed at the NCAAs, a remarkable jump Before this meet, Allen's previous best to her resume as she year's tournament. from No. 22, where he was ranked in the 400-meter hurdles was a 50.95. became the first Duke Duke owns the before this weekend- During Saturday's trials, he ran a player to receive the lone meeting But Allen's success did not end with 50.10, one-tenth below the NCAA Honda Award as col­ between the two the hurdles.-The Maine native anchored qualifying time. legiate tennis' top teams this year, a the Blue Devils' 4x800 relay team, With an NCAA berth in hand, Allen player Tuesday. semifinal showdown which finished in third with a time of was running with no pressure when he "It's so great to be in the Rolex Indoor 7:28.11. During Allen's leg of , shaved his time again and ran the recognized," she said. "It's so great to be Championships. he ran a lifetime best of 1:50.6. 49.42. The nation's previous high was a "Last year I won the recognized.... It's just However, past his­ As a team, Duke finished in 13th 49.49, ran by Southern Cal's Felix NCAA championship tory proved to be of place out of 104 teams. The Blue Sanchez. During the run, he was taking and didn't win the such an honor." little use in the sin­ Devils finished 14th in the Indoors, just 13 strides between each hurdle award, and this year I gles tournament as finally did. It's just the defending cham­ and coach Norm Ogilvie was pleased to through the first five hurdles, some­ VANESSA WEBB ON thing that requires taking the hurdles such an honor." pion Webb was elimi­ see the improvement. THE HONDA AWARD "We had a fantastic IC4As," Ogilvie with alternate lead legs. Webb was undefeat­ nated in her third said. "Thirteenth place, that's outstand­ "Jumping from 22nd place to first is ed in all 31 dual team match. After fighting ing. We're doing very well and we're really quite remarkable," Norm matches this season and was named through to the round of 16, a visibly out really happy with how we're doing." Ogilvie said. "I've been around awhile, the ACC's Player of the Year for the of synch Webb fell to Georgia's Vanessa Joining Allen on the All-East team and I've never seen someone do some­ second straight season, leading Duke Castellano, a player she had beaten in were the three other runners on the thing like that. In track, times are to a 27-4 mark and a fourth straight dual-match play earlier in the year. relay team and sophomore pole vaulter usually cut by lOths or lOOths, and he national semifinal appearance. "I was just off," Webb said. "I made Seth Benson. Benson finished in sixth cut one-and-a-half seconds. It was But the 1998 NCAA singles cham­ so many errors at the net that I don't place with a leap of 16-feet, 3/4 inches. kind of a surprise." pion is still eyeing one more addition normally. make. I think I started to All-East honors are awarded to all com­ The NCAAs are from June 2-5 at to her trophy case. panic a little bit because I normally petitors who finish the top six. Boise State. Allen is looking to become A semifinaiist in last year's tourna­ make them, and I didn't know what The 4x800 relay team All-America, awarded to the top eight ment, Webb and Karen Goldstein stand was going on." of Mike McKeever, Bill Spierdowis, finishers. Allen's time is good enough to two wins away from becoming the first Sophomore Megan Miller, ranked Kyle Leonard as well as Allen. The earn him a spot at the USATF doubles team from Duke to ever win a No. 19 in the nation and making her team ran a strong race as Spierdowis Championships, the Olympic trials and national title. After an uninspiring vic­ first tournament appearance also ran a career best during his leg of trials for the World University Games. tory over Ohio State on in the round of advanced to the second round before the race (1:51.1). "This is big time stuff," Norm 32 Monday and a Tulsa default on falling to ACC rival Mariel Verban, Spierdowis has been invited to com­ Ogilvie said. "I know it's cliche, but he's Tuesday, the senior duo, seeded No. 2 in Wake Forest's top player. pete in the USATF Junior overcome a lot. He missed his entire the tournament, dismantled Amanda Senior Kristin Sanderson failed to Championships, which is open to ath­ junior year and missed most of the Basica and Annica Cooper of UCLA, 6- advance past the first round, losing a letes age 19 and under. At the indoor season with an Achilles injury. 1,6-2 to advance to today's semifinals. three-set battle with Stanford's Championships, held in Texas, he will But he's finally put it all together. "Anything would have been an Gabriella Lastra. have the chance to earn a spot on the We're proud of him." THRIFT WORLD Great Bargains Now Open til um 1000s of Items Added Daily! • Men's, Women's, Children's pwryThunday, Friday, Saturday Clothing and Shoes • Furniture • Antiques • Bedding • TVs • Jewelry • Small Appliances • Cookware & Dishes RESTAURANT & BAR • Much, Much More! * j Bring in this ad and get up to Plm 1/1 off all pizza* from midnight til iam evwy nightl $10 OFF ($loff for every $10 purchase) exp. 5-31-99 (One Topping Only) The Shoppes at Lakewood near Duke Surplus BRIGHTLEAF SQUARE • MAIN ST. • DURHAM 682-7397 Mon.-Fri. 9am-7pm • Sat. 9am-6pm www.cityscarch.com/rdu/satisfaction 490-1556 • 2000 Chapel Hill Rd. Durham THE CHRONICLE THURSDAY, MAY 27, t VanGorp adjusts to changes between college ball, WNBA loaded with players from the defunct ABL, and VanGorp was just the second Michele VanGorp is in a different college player taken, behind No. 1 over­ world now. all pick Chamique Holdsclaw. The Duke graduate learned that in a Before the draft, VanGorp had heard hurry when last Saturday she stepped her name mentioned anywhere fromth e onto the floor of Madison Square first to the fourth round. Both New York Garden for her first exhibition game and Charlotte expressed considerable with the New York Liberty. She looked interest, but it was the Liberty who around and saw the 13,690 fans that moved first. had flocked to see New York take on "She is young, enthusiastic, talented two-time defending champions Houston. and has good hands, and you can't grow Thirteen thousand for an exhibition? size," said first year Liberty coach Richie That was more than a little surprising Adubato to the Herald-Sun of Durham for the All-American center. on the night of the draft. "She has a lot "I was very surprised to see that many of tools, and it is not like we have to people," VanGorp said. "I was really happy throw her right into .... All we about it though. This is a big part of the need from her is the desire, and we will New York community. The support is give her the playing time to develop." there and it's obviously a big issue for this On the court, VanGorp has had to deal whole city. It's just a great place to be." with all the adjustments typical of a VanGorp never visited New York rookie season. She likes her teammates a before being drafted. She arrived in the lot, and so far, she says, she's doing okay. Big Apple two weeks ago for Liberty "It's a lot more physical [than in col­ Media Day and then her first practice lege] ," VanGorp said. "There's a new sys­ with the team. That weekend she trav­ tem, new teammates and I'm just trying MICHELE VANGORP was the second collegiate player taken in May 4th's WNBA d :. VanGorp is eled to Durham for graduation but was to get used to everything. We're trying to now a part of a deep frontcourt on the New York Liberty. back in New York on Monday. find ourselves as a team.... We're more And although she's spent just over a athletic than we were at Duke. We're not great assets to have as mentors." And as for New York fans and media week's time with the Liberty, VanGorp so much a shooting team, and more of an But playing with such a talented front- that tend to jump on athletesas soon can already she the biggest difference attacking team." court may make it difficult to see much as they make a mistake? VanGorp isn't between college ball and the pros. VanGorp joins a Liberty frontcourt playing time. Lobo is one of the league's too worried. There's just a lot more media, which that is already rich in talent. Centers top spokesmen and the most popular "As long as you go out there and do is definitely good for the sport," VanGorp Rebecca Lobo and Kym Hampton aver­ player on the Liberty. But Hampton is 36 what you're supposed to be doing, the said. "In college, women's basketball and aged a combined 20.8 points and 12.9 years old, so eventually VanGorp may be fans will be okay," she said. The fans are a lot of other sports don't get a whole lot rebounds per game. expected to replace her mentor. paying to see you play, and they pay a lot of attention. There's men's football and "I think it will be great," said "I don't know [about playing time], it of money to see you play, and ifyou don't men's basketball, and everyone else is VanGorp of playing with such a strong will probably depend on game situations," perform, I think they have a right to be kind of out in the dirt." frontcourt. "They have both been real VanGorp said. Tm here to learn first and unhappy. If you went out and bought a VanGorp was selected in the second helpful talking me through things and foremost. It's going to take a little bit of computer, paid good money for it, and round of May 4th's draft and was the helping me with the adjustments. I patience on my part to break into my own. then it didn't run the way it's supposed 18th player taken overall. 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PPD DEVELOPMENT< THURSDAY, MAY 27,1999 THE CHRONICLE Blue Devils lose doubles point Burgess announces plans to for only 3rd time this season continue hoops career in M ROOT from page 19 there in that.situation." real comfortable with the players and The tense battle at No. 2 singles LSU's run ended in' the semifinals coaches there. I also love Salt Lake and was the match of the day at the at the hands of top-ranked UCLA. But Chris Burgess officially have a lot of family there." University of Georgia's Dan Magill host Georgia, seeded 10th in the 16- announced what has been widely Burgess said that Majerus has told him Tennis Center, but that was little con­ team field, stunned everyone by upset­ assumed for a while— he would play power for­ solation for the Blue Devils, who ting the Bruins 4-3 in the finals to he is headed to Utah. ward when he becomes missed out on a chance to reach the capture their third national champi­ Last Friday morning, eligible for the 2000- NCAA Final Four for the first time in onship in school history. Burgess contacted local 2001 season. At Duke, school history. In singles competition, Dukes media in Burgess played mostly Dmitry Muzyka fell in the first round to confirm that he would in the post as a renter. "[Root's] defi­ Wednesday 6-3, 6-2 to a familiar foe: indeed continue his bas­ Coming out of LSU's Hand. ketball career with Rick Woodbridge High in nitely one of The Blue Devils other entry, Root, Majerus' Utes. Burgess, Irvine, Calif, Burgess the guys I'd dropped a first-round decision to Illinois' who announced his highlighted Duke's like to have Oliver Freelove, 6-1,6-4. Root had defeat­ intentions to leave Duke Class of 2001 when he ed Freelove earlier this season, 6-2, 7-5. in late April, will be "I just felt [Utah] was chose Duke over BYU. out there in forced to redshirt next Muzyka and Jordan Wile will team the best possible situ­ But once he arrived that situation." up in the doubles competition begin­ season in accordance in Durham, Burgess ning today. with NCAA regulations. ation for me to get was rarely used in JAY LAPIDUS "I just felt [Utah] was better and be the Duke's offensive attack LSU 4, DUKE 3 the best possible situa­ and he spent most of "I feel this is the best team we've tion for me to get better player I wanted to be." Iffl K_M

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Strategic solutions for a decided advantage™ „PPD DEVELIipillENr THE CHRONICLE THURSDAY, MAY 27,1999 National Champions Unsung Anderson plays well when Duke's stars struggle "This means everything to me. It's been a m TEAM from page 19 third rounds, but had a complete break­ goal for me for so long. And to actually Anderson who carried the load. down in the second. Bauer lost her touch know the last four years have built up to Hannemann never did anything eye- on the greens, usually a strength of her boggling, save for a chip-in birdie on day game, and the, freshman phenom finished 1 this, ifs a great feeling." one and a few long putts, but her 34 pars with an 11-over-par 82. JENNY CHUASIRIPORN over the three days keyed a veiy solid and "fThe second round] was really, really consistent outing. weird," Bauer said. "I played bad, I got a Sophomore Anderson is the least-her­ lot bad breaks, my putting was terrible.... alded and least-experienced member of It was probably one of my worst rounds of the top four Blue Devil golfers. Her best the year." "I was happy, but it was a weird feeling. I performances have gone relatively unno­ Ordinarily, when a team's top two play­ wasn't sure if I should be happy, or just ticed. But her week in Tulsa certainly ers struggle like that, a 12-stroke lead kind of happy. I didn't know what to feel" caught a few eyes, including her coach's. could disappear in a hurry. But "I'm so happy for Kalen Anderson right Hannemann and Anderson stepped up CANDY HANNEMANN, ON THE CONCLUSION OF THE TOURNAMENT now," coach Dan Brooks said. It was a fan­ and played some of their best golf of the tastic performance when we needed it the season when the team needed it the most. most. You talk about moving into the next Anderson shot a solid 76, a very low level, well, she took it to the next level in score given the fact that it was the "it was definitely fair and square. There's this tournament.'' Championships' windiest day. Her perfor­ It was the surprising play of mance was critical in enabling Duke to really no doubt in my mind that we Hannemann and Anderson that saved maintain a six-stroke lead. shouldn't have won the tournament. We the tournament for the Blue Devils. No Hannemann proved that she was not a led wire-to-wire." where was this more evident than dur­ one-round wonder, firing a 1-over 72, ing the second round. capped by a beautiful 25-foot birdie putt JENNY CHUASIRIPORN Up 12 strokes after the first day, Duke on 18. She used two birdies and 13 pars to nearly had a total collapse the very next turn in yet another consistent scorecard. • day. In the second round, superstar And while Hannemann's and "This is a great accomplishment for our program Chuasiriporn began struggling with her Anderson's performances were vital at the and Duke University. I'm extremely proud of the way alignment and her drives started to miss tournament, they are also a good omen for this team battled out there this week. I certainly fairways and hit trees. She began the sec­ the team's future. have mixed feelings about the way the thing fin­ ond round with three straight bogeys and "This spring has really kind of been a ished. You always want to win a tournament at its never scored a birdie on the afternoon. stepping stone for me. Hopefully I'm kind completion, but we will take it. We led from start to Her slicing woes became so prolific of moving to the next level," Anderson finish. It's a great feeling for me to see this team that during the back nine of the third said. "Next year, I think we'll be just as handle the pressure of being No. 1 most of the year round, the graduated senior put her dri­ strong as ever. I think it's pretty neat, this and see the seasor; through to a national champi­ ver away and only used her 3-wood the tournament, Jenny obviously didn't have onship. It's very rewarding." DAN BROOKS rest of the way. her strongest tournament, but it just kind Beth Bauer, the third-ranked golfer in of shows what we have next year is going the country, played well in the first and to be just as strong. Tm excited about it." Triangle SportsPlex a for l Duke Ice Skating Students, First person pays regular admission, Employees, and guest skates FREE! (skate rentals not included) and Family Not valid with any other offer. One coupon per person only. Members Triangle SportsPlex features ice skating, adult & youth hockey, 3 indoor swimming pools, fitness center and much more. Save Triangle SportsPlex One Dan Kidd Dr Hillsborough (919)644-0339 20% NC 86 & Business 70 IS minutes from Duke on a complete Call for public skating hours. pair of Valid through August 31, 7999 Eyeglasses MEMORIAL DAY WEEKEND SPECIAL Latest in Fashion and Lens Technology $55/night Local Lab • 24 Houe Service or Less* Friday.:Saturday or Sunday Night Arrival (*in most cases) Make 2000 Graduation reservations beginning June 1.

EYECARE Duke Eye Center Main Lobby RROQKWOODK SUPER OPTICS 684-4012 'M-F9-5 INN • Clos«» Hotel to Duke & VA Medical Centers Northgate Mall South Square Mall Homestead Market • University Grille-Breakfast, Lunch & Dinner Every Day 493-3668 544-3937 286-7732 M-F 9-9, Sat 9-6 M-F 9-6, Sat 9-5 M-Th9-8,F-Sat9-6 RESERT^IONS: 1-800-716-6401 2306 Elba Street • Durham, NC 27705 • 919-286-3111 • www.brookwoodinn-. _k uke.com THURSDAY, MAY 27,1999 THE CHRONICLE Hannemann finishes just 1 stroke behind champion Park M CHAMPIONSHIP from page I On the course, Hannemann was sensa­ course cooperation within the team." women's golf committee, announced that if tional, finishing in second place overall And while Chuasiriporn, Bauer and NCAA CHAMPIONSHIPS the last round could not be finished, the with an even-par 213. The freshman was senior Filippa Hansson struggled, Kalen TULSA COUNTRY CLUB third round leader would win. Upon hear­ paired with ASU star Grace Park on the Anderson played extremely well. Anderson ing this announcement, the Blue Devils final day, and at one point Hannemann finished the tournament in 12th place with became visibly shaken, not wanting the tied Park for the individual lead. But Park her 13-over-par performance: Her play was Championships to end in a clubhouse. regained the lead and held a one-stroke vital in maintaining Duke's lead, which "Everyone wanted to finish in a com­ advantage when play was cancelled. became all the more important when the plete way," Jenny Chuasiriporn said. "But Tou can't really say what would have fourth round was cancelled. when you look at it, we played 60-some happened," Hannemann said. "It's a game Dailey said the reason play could not holes out ofthe 72, and we were still lead­ of chance.... Anything could have happened resume Sunday was because last summer, ing. I kind of hold onto that." out there. I'm just happy we won, and the sport voted not to play on Sundays in that's all that matters to me consideration of BYU and Campbell—nei­ right now." ther of which were in the Championships. But while Hannemann The tournament's uneasy finish was fit­ played some of her best golf of ting, seeing how it began. The Blue Devils the year, Duke's biggest stars were coming off of a disappointing fourth- struggled. Freshman phenom place finisha t the East Regionals and then Beth Bauer was solid for most suffered a poor final practice round before ofthe week, but suffered a dis­ the Championships last Tuesday. astrous 11-over 82 on the sec­ "[Tuesday] didn't feel exactly right for ond day. She finishedth e tour­ some reason," coach Dan Brooks said after fourth round would have surely set up a nament in 15th place with a the first round. "But what we got from[th e thrilling competition over the final holes. 14-over 227. mediocre practice] was positive, rather But there would be no fantastic finish, Chuasiriporn, meanwhile, than negative. They all came out today just a declared national champion. never really found her touch with a real kind of determination that I "I felt a little funny about it at that after her first-round 72. haven't seen for a long time.... In retro­ time," Brooks said. "But then I realized all Chuasiriporn finished in a spect, I see that [Tuesday] was perfect for that we've done and that fact that we've surprisingly low 24th place, today. It made them see that we're just held the lead throughout this tournament, shooting a 16-over 229. Still, another really good team here." we were leading when this thing ended, I don't feel too sorry for Duke's But on that first day, Duke was any­ think we're okay about it.... I don't think star who finished her colle­ thing but just another good team. The Blue it's tainted at all." giate career with the champi­ Devils jumped out to a blistering start in And although the Blue Devils are dis­ onship she coveted for so long. the first round, firing a tournament-low 4- appointed their first-ever national champi­ This means everything to over 288, and took a quick 12-stroke lead. onship didn't have the storybook ending me," Chuasiriporn said. "It's Duke would come back to the rest of the they had written in their minds, it is a title been a goal for me for so long. pack over the next two days, but the Blue they will certainly cherish. And to actually know the last Devils still maintained a comfortable "We all had in our heads the picture four years have built up to eight-stroke lead going into the final day. perfect endings with a match-ending ISRAEL/THE CHRONICLE this, its a great feeling. It But the Sun Devils, winners of six ofthe putt on 18, but that didn't happen," CANDY HANNEMANN chipped in from the bunker on this shot comes from a lot of hard work previous eight national champions, would Hannemann said. "It was great the way get her first birdie of the tournament. and a lot of on-course and off- not simply go away. Their impressive it was." Walk to Campus or What MCAT course did Ride the FREE Shuttle people who got Into medical school take ?

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Sample: first-fourth year medical students at U.S. schools who took a commercial test preparation co THE CHRONICLE THURSDAY, MAY 27,1999 Georgetown attackmen combine for 9 goals on Duke defense IS MEN'S LAX from page 19 time around, capturing 15-of-22 to boost too good today not to 17 goals on us."" their nation's-best percentage. But take advantage." Georgetown ran off five unanswered Georgetown won that category Duke actually out- goals in less than eight minutes in the Saturday, 18-16, and converted both of shot Georgetown 46- fourth quarter to build an insurmount­ its extra-man opportunities after going 40 for the game, but able 17-10 lead with 4:15 to play. The l-for-8 two months earlier. the Hoyas made the Hoyas' high-scoring trio of Greg "There was no magic for us today," most of their oppor­ McCavera, Scott Urick and Andy Flick, Pressler said. They whipped us in every tunities, scoring who managed only three tallies between phase ofthe game. Georgetown whipped goals in bunches. them against Duke in March, had a goal Duke today, and they did it in the things After Jared Frood apiece in the spurt and totaled nine for we take pride in." put the Blue Devils the afternoon. That reversal of roles allowed the up 1-0 to open the That wasn't the only difference Hoyas to score eight times in the first scoring, Georgetown between the two games. The Blue half, equaling their output for the entire notched four straight Devils dominated in faceoffs the first game in March. And yet Georgetown goals to kick off what only led by one at the break. would be a tough day . GEORGETOWN 17, "We were lucky to be at 8-7," Pressler for goalkeeper Matt said. "They had a lot of opportunities." Breslin. OUKE14 Pressler still had reason to feel fortu­ "They stuck in a nate early in the fourth quarter when couple early I thought Nick Hartofilis scored to pull Duke I should have had," within two at 12-10. The coach knew his the sophomore said, team had rallied from larger deficits in "and it was downhill shorter periods of time. from there." But never happened. Duke responded Instead, the Hoyas raced back down with a 3-0 spurt of the field and McCavera found Urick its own to tie the for a goal and a 13-10 lead a mere 14 score early in the seconds after Hartofilis' score. Over second quarter, and the next minute, the Blue Devils' John the two teams traded O'Donnell and Adam Dretler were goals for the rest of VICTOR ZHAO/THE CHRONICLE each called for illegal body checks. the half. SCOTT DIGGS, shown here against Virginr , scored one goal in the final Georgetown needed only 11 seconds of McCavera, who game of his collegiate career. the two-man advantage to open up a *• Shots: Georgetown-40, Duke-46 set Georgetown's sin four-goal lead, as Mike Henehan found • Ground Balls: Georgetown-46,0uke-41 gle-season scoring record with the goal Saturday as Georgetown solved the back of the net. 5* Face-offs Won: Georgetown-18, Duke-16 that put his team up seven, credited Duke's defense and captured the • Clears: Georgelown-22/26, Duke-17/22 The Hoyas added three more scores the improved play of midfielders Tyler biggest win in Hoyas lacrosse history. • Saves: Georgetown-17 (Brian Hole-17,14 GA), to complete the 5-0 run and then cele­ Gamble and Henehan with sparking "When two good teams get together Duke-14 (Matt Ereshn-14.17 GA) brated their all-expenses-paid trip to the recent run by preventing oppo­ twice in a season, it's hard to beat a • Penalties: Georgetown-5/4:00, Duke-3/3;00 College Park, Md., this weekend. nents from focusing solely on the team twice," said Hoya goalie Brian • EMO: GeorgetOwn-2/2, Duke-2/3 "We made some mistakes defensive­ Hoyas' three star attackmen. Henehan Hole. "I'm just glad we didn't win in the ly," Pressler said, "and Georgetown was and Gamble tallied three goals apiece regular season." ATTENTION STUDENT GROUPS! In order to be included in the 1999-2000 Blue Devil's Advocate, pick up an application form in The Chronicle Advertising Department and return it to The Chronicle by Friday, May 28. If your group's listing was in last year's Blue Devil's Advocate, copies of that issue are available at The Chronicle Advertising Department at 101 West Union Building for your review. Return the completed form to The Chronicle Advertising Department (101 West Union Building, near the Alumni Lounge), or fax a copy of the form to (919) 684-4696. Don't be left out, get an application and return it today! Questions - email [email protected] or call Catherine Martin or Adrienne Grant at 684-2663. THURSDAY, MAY 27,1999 THE CHRONICLE Duke drops 3 matches in 3rd set in semifinal loss to Gators ii GATORS irom page 19 senior Kristin Sanderson became the the first point ofthe day in an emotion­ give everything they had on the court. only Blue Devils ever to play in four al 6-2, 6-2 win over Jessica Lehnhoff at And that's what they did." national semifinals. "The reason I came No. 3 singles. The Blue Devils then But being a historical footnote in one to Duke was to help them win their first dropped the No. 2 match as Stephanie ofthe greatest tournament matches was national title, and I didn't do that. I real­ Nickitas defeated Kristin Sanderson. little consolation to a team that fromda y ly feel like I failed in that respect." But Webb's straight-set victory over one was national championship or bust. And what made it worse was that on Whitney Laiho put Duke on top and in "It's extremely hard to handle Saturday, the story of what was, was control of the match. (Duke) d. Laiho, 6-2.6-3 because I am a real goal-oriented per­ what could have been. As the final three matches all went to 2. Mickitas (UF) d. Sanderson, 6-3,6-3 3. Miller (DlAe) d. Lehnhoff, 6-2,6-2 son," said Vanessa Webb, who along with Sophomore Megan Miller claimed a third set it looked as though Duke's 4. Haztett (UF) d. GriMM, 6-1.2-6,7-6 (6 vaunted singles lineup, which had never 5. Green (UF)d. Biro, 0-6,7-6 (3), 6-3 surrendered more than three matches to White (UF)d. Sell, 6-7(1). 6-3,6-1 anyone, might finish the Gators without even going to doubles. "It did not look good," Florida coach Andy Brandi said. "We could have very easily lost the whole match in singles... but little by little we started clawing our way back into the match." Then little by little became the shot that changed the match. seeds Traci Green and M.C. White After losing the first set 6-1, Goldstein quickly pulled away from Duke's Erica battled back to force a third set. But Biro and Kathy Sell, and within six Duke's No. 4 seed couldn't pull away from minutes, a match that was in doubt for the tenacious Hazlitt and the match the first two and half hours was effec­ went to a deciding tiebreak. Goldstein tively concluded. fought off a match point to even the score The Gators No. 1 doubles team of at 6-6, and it looked as though Duke was Jessica Lehnhoff and Stephanie Nickitas about to claim a 3-1 lead. finished off the Blue Devils, dropping Webb Hazlitt left her return short and and Goldstein and moving Florida into the Goldstein pounced, drilling her approach finals for the fourth straight season. deep to Hazlitt's backhand. But somehow But even with the loss, the season the Gator not only got to the ball, but she that could have been couldn't destroy buried a running backhand down the line, the season that was. igniting the raucous crowd of 1,322, seiz­ "It wasn't great to finish my career ing control ofthe momentum. like that, but being a part of this team "That was the greatest shot of the has been just amazing," Goldstein said. match," Ashworth said. "There was one "I wouldn't have traded it for anything. place she could hit it, one place she had I wouldn't trade it for winning. I would­ to hit it and she absolutely nailed it." n't be on any other team except this one MEGAN MILLER won her match at No. 3 singles against Florida but was knocked out of the second With the momentum firmly in and if it takes losing to Florida three round in the singles competition. Gator orange, Florida fifth and sixth times, then that's what it takes." A A DUKE UNIVERSITY'S * ^CHOICE IN PIZZA! GALL DOMINO'S! 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