-SPORTS Five-Star (floor) General Point guard Jason Williams led-the men's bas­ ketball team in its season debut in an exhibi­ THE CHRONICLE tion against the Five-Star Hawks. See page 15 WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 3.1999 CIRCULATION 15,000 THE INDEPENDENT DAILY AT OUKE UNIVERSITY WWW.CHRONICLE.DUKE.EDU VOL. 95, NO. 47 Tennyson takes mayoral election in landslide By CHRISTINE PARKINS The Chronicle Election The two candidates for mayor of Results Durham awaited last night's election re­ sults as though they had seen the near future. Incumbent Nick Tennyson watched the results pour in as he sat among the crowd in the County Commis­ sioners meeting room. Meanwhile, an ob­ viously disappointed Floyd McKissick separated himself by sitting outside in the lobby. He didn't enter until Tennyson had clearly swept the vote. Polls in the last week had showed Ten­ nyson comfortably ahead, but Tennyson said he was surprised to win by such a large margin—17,024 votes to 10,497. "[In general] 55 percent is a landslide," Tennyson said following his 62 percent showing. Tm not in any way smug about this. I've worked hard to get here." He attributed his success to the over­ all strength of the Durham city govern­ ment. "People have faith that the leader­ ship team is doing a good job and they don't need to change it," he said. Throughout the campaign, Tennyson See TENNYSON on page 8 * Voters oust Cox, keep Langley By RICHARD RUBIN Edwards appeared to have edged out The Chronicle Patrick Byker for the final slot. One incumbent fell and one barely Community activist Jacqueline hung onto her position as the Durham Wagstaff ran unopposed in Ward 6 to cap­ City Council gained five new members in ture the last seat. Tuesday night's election. The council's racial balance, long a Ty Cox, the one-term incumbent topic of concern, remained the same with from Ward 4, lost to attorney Lewis eight black members out of 13. Cheek while Ward 2 incumbent Angela Voter turnout was about 23 percent. Langley held off attorney Jim Conner. In the at-large race, insurance broker Ward 4 LIZ PflADA/THE CHRONICLE Dan Hill and preschool owner Thomas MAYOR NICK TENNYSON celebrates and receives congratulations Tuesday night following his Stith pulled away from the rest ofthe six- The most likely causes for Cox's 2,500- surprisingly decisive victory over challenger Floyd McKissick. person field. In the unofficial tally, Tamra See CITY COUNCIL on page 14

ITWEIMTY ^EARS AGO 'Death to the Klan TheCh£*^ rally turns bloody anti-KKK rally By Jaime Levy and Jason Wagner Klansmen kill four at - .marcher The Chronicle 0]S st b*de hat occurred at the intersection of Everitt and Carver Drive in Greensboro, N.C, is not a historical mystery. To 4 former. Wthose who participated in the "Death to the Klan'' march on Nov. 3,1979, what happened was as clear as the autumn sky on that sunny morning. Five local activists and members ofthe Worker's Viewpoint Organization—which would soon after rename itself the Communist Workers Party—were gunned down by members ofthe Ku Klux Klan. Most had been working tto organize unions in places as different from each other as textile factories and . Those who died: Cesar Cauce, a union organizer and Duke data terminal operator; Anvavadnate. rap See KLAN on page 9 t>

STUDENTS CONSIDER FLU SHOTS, PAGE 4 • MISSED DEADLINE BARS SOME STUDENTS FROM POLLS, PAGE 6 THE CHRONICLE • PAGE 2 WORLD & NATIONAL WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 3, 1999

NEWSFILE FROM mm REPORTS Republican Congress passes budget cut Clinton, Arafat India struggles to discuss peace recover from cyclone Clinton critically dismissed the 1 percent cut, vowing not to support it President Bill Clinton Survivors of one of bill for labor, health and education legislating was done with and began Tuesday what he India's worst cyclones programs. real negotiating began. described as a "last drank filthy flood water WASHINGTON — The final By afternoon, Clinton dismissed The president's budget and policy sprint" with Israel's and scrambled for heli­ battle of this year's budget war the budget cut as a carelessly experts were negotiating with the prime minister, Ehud copter-dropped food pack­ was joined Tuesday, as President wielded meat ax and called the chairs of major congressional com­ Barak, and the Pales­ ets as worries grew about Bill Clinton rejected as "blind" spending bill "a catalog of missed mittees over the final bill and four tinian leader, Yasser crime and a mounting and "mindless" an across-the- opportunities, misguided priorities other spending measures that Clin­ Arafat, to devise a death toll. board budget cut passed by Con­ and mindless cuts." ton has vetoed or refused to sign. peace settlement. Raleigh elects mayor gress and his negotiators hun­ "I will not let it become law," he Those four have to do with financing Weather delays by 359 votes kered down with congressional said in a written statement from foreign operations; the Departments search for victims Raleigh's republican chairs to shape the federal budget Oslo, Norway, where he was part of of Commerce, State and Justice; the Gusty wind blowing candidate for mayor, Paul behind closed doors. the Israeli-Palestinian peace Interior Department; and the Dis­ in rain and fog will Coble, won Tuesday's Tuesday morning, Senate Re­ talks. "This debate is not just trict of Columbia. hamper the search for election by less than 1 publicans, after cloakroom cajol­ about how much we spend but how "The president wants more human remains and de­ percent, defeating oppo­ ing and last-minute maneuvering, wisely we spend." money," said Senate Majority bris from EgyptAir nent Stephanie Farijul by held their noses and voted 49-48 And that debate began in Leader Trent Lott, R-Miss. "There Flight 990, investiga­ just 359 votes. A recount for the nearly 1 percent cut for earnest Tuesday. are some disagreements." But, he tors said Tuesday. is expected. federal agencies, which was at­ With final passage of the spend­ said, "they can be worked out in the tached to the year's last spending ing bill, the last of 13 to clear Con- next couple of days." French finance Son will finish out minister resigns father's Senate term The French govern­ Lincoln Chafee was ap­ ment suffered a major pointed to complete the Xerox employee murders 7 in Honolulu blow Tuesday when one term of his late father, By JAMES STERNGOLD It was one of the deadliest attacks in a series of such ofits rising stars, Finance Senator John Chafee of N.Y. Times News Service mass killings with guns in recent years, and it left Minister Dominique Rhode Island, becoming An apparently disgruntled worker for the Xerox Corp. Hawaiians particularly shocked because of the island's Strauss-Kahn, resigned the second politician in in Honolulu drove to his company's offices early Tuesday idyllic surroundings and historically low crime rates. In in the face of growing ac­ history to take over his fa­ morning and, with murderous precision, shot and killed 1998, there were just 17 homicides in Honolulu, which, cusations of corruption. ther's U.S. Senate seat. seven co-workers. with nearly a million residents, is the nation's 11th The suspect, identified by the police as Byran Uyesu- largest city. WEATHER gi, 40, surrendered peacefully later in the day to the po­ Harris said in an interview that Uyesugi was in the lice, who coaxed him out of a Xerox van that he had dri­ process of being dismissed by Xerox, perhaps Tuesday TODAY: TOMORROW: ven from the scene ofthe shootings to a public park in an morning, and that he walked into the company offices CLOUDY SUNNY isolated area, said Carol Costa, the press secretary for and shortly after 8 a.m. opened fire with a 9mm pistol. High: 52 High: 55 Mayor Jeremy Harris. Uyesugi had been sitting in the He killed five people in a conference room and two in Low: 44 Low: 26 van for about three hours, but shortly after 3 p.m. Hon­ an office nearby on the second floor of the warehouse­ "Universities incline wits to sophistry and affectation." olulu time, he moved over to the passenger seat, opened like building. All the victims were men, ranging in age -Francis Bacon the door and stepped out, Costa said. from 33 to 58, the police said.

The Friends ofDuke University Library 1999/2000 Engaging Faculty Series The Book on the Bookshelf HENRY

a a.a i Henry Petroski

PETROSKI He has been called "the poet laureate of technology" a and a writer who is "erudite, witty, thoughtful and Discussion and accessible." Now Henry Petroski turns to the subject of books and bookshelves, and wonders whether it Book Signing of 1 *!' was inevitable that books would come to be arranged vertically as they are today on horizontal shelves. , The Book on In delightful digressions, Petroski lets Seneca have his say on "the evils of book collecting"; and the Bookshelf discusses bookselling, book buying, and book collection through the centuries. Thursday, November 4 Richly illustrated and wonderfully written, this is the 5:00 pm ultimate book on the book; how it came to be and Rare Book Room, Perkins Library how we have come to keep it.

;*• Alfred A. Knopf Henry Petroski is the Aleksandar S. Vesic Professor of Civil Engineering and Professor of History at Duke University, where be also serves Duke University 20% OFF HARDCOVERS 684-3986 • Upper Level Bryan Center as chairman ofthe Department of Civil and e-mail: [email protected] 10% OFF PAPERBACKS Environmental Engineering. Student Flex Cards, Visa, MasterCard & American Express Excludes already discounted books and some special orchis. WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 3, 1 THE CHRONICLE Duke officials announce readiness for impending Y2K "Our biggest concern is that Duke Power supplies us with power and not go down," said Paris, adding that As countless millennium clocks fall below 60 days, the company has assured him that it is ready. 'They say confidence has never been higher that Duke's year 2000 they have the capacity to generate twice as much power • Wp r problem has been solved. as you normally need Jan. 1." He added that an inter­ At a conference yesterday, Executive Vice President rupted supply of power could lose some data on the Uni­ Tallman Trask and representatives of the University versity's Unix systems. « and Health System's Y2K preparation teams an­ "Even if something goes wrong, I don't think it will nounced that they were as ready as they could be for the have serious consequences," said Dietolf Ramm, associ­ millennium bug's bite. ate professor ofthe practice of computer science. "[There "We have spent at Duke a considerable amount of is] no reason why this glitch should be worse than any time and money to make sure we are ready for midnight other glitch." He added that the largest computer prob­ [Jan. 1]," said Trask. "Our current view is we're not ex­ lems generally come when they are unexpected—which ____. pecting any surprises." is certainly not the case with the Y2K bug. Duke Hospital CEO Michael Israel agreed. "While Students, too, said they felt the millennium problem ____, HHL-T you can't guarantee anything, we feel we have covered would affect their lives only minimally. all the bases," he said. All systems at Duke, Durham Re­ "I think the whole Y2K thing has been way hyped," f £?iaK^ gional and Raleigh Community hospitals have been test­ said Trinity junior Sonia Bansal. "It's just a scare that ed and over 99 percent ofthe systems are compliant, in­ the media has hyped up." cluding the most critical, Israel added. Terrence Wright, a Pratt senior, was less confi­ The hospitals have prepared for Y2K as they would dent. "I think there is a possibility that user files prepare for a natural disaster, said Israel. Duke Hospi­ might get damaged," he said. "Duke will do its best to tal has accumulated 5 percent above its normal medical prepare for that." supplies, prepared a seven- to 10-day supply of diesel Y2K preparation has been expensive. Medical Center Kara] fuel to generate power and a three-week supply of oxy­ Compliance Officer David Kirby said the University gen, said Israel. and DUHS have spent $75 million upgrading older sys­ tool Neal Paris, the University's campus Y2K compliance tems that would likely have been affected by the bug. officer and vice provost for information technology, said Although the University "replaced a lot of systems EXECUTIVE VICE PRESIDENT Tallman Trask discusses the Uni­ he now believes the largest dangers come from outside simply because they [were] old and not what they versity's millennium preparations. sources, such as a power failure. See Y2K on page 7 Graduate students consider several policy initiatives By RAMI ZHEMAN According to the document, the University must lated proposal to push WilRec's closing time back from The Chronicle focus on providing more affordable and desirable hous­ midnight to 2 a.m. Wish lists were bountiful at Tuesday's night Gradu­ ing, "hospitable personal academic space" and provid­ Another proposal—to be presented formally at ate and Professional Student Council meeting, as a ing more inexpensive on-campus child-care facilities GPSC's next meeting—will focus on extending the proposal graduate student life proposal was presented, and improving transportation. hours ofthe WilRec pool. Winkler, a fifth-year graduate as was a plan to extend hours at the Wilson Recre­ "What we decided is to consider... a sort of global student in cellular and molecular biology, said that ational Center and a Duke- Student Government pro­ Utopia—what do we envision for Duke and its grad­ forming separate gym-related resolutions could en­ posal to rejuvenate the Bryan Center. uate and professional student life in the next few hance their chances of approval. One of GPSC's most important priorities this year is years?" she said. The council also distributed a DSG legislator's propos­ a four-pronged student-life proposal that will be sent Scott Keane, GPSC treasurer and second-year stu­ al to add more casual social space to the Bryan Center. to the Board ofTrustees by Nov. 16. dent at the Fuqua School of Business, suggested a trial GPSC President Tomalei Vess encouraged members to A rough draft ofthe proposal was handed out at the period in which the WilRec would open at 6 a.m., one read over the proposal and let her know if they support it. meeting, as Kate Winkler, who co-chairs GPSC's hous­ hour earlier than its current hours, to accommodate "This is more likely to happen than building a ing and space committee, talked about the suggestions graduate and professional students who have obliga­ whole new center for graduate students," said Vess, a and encouraged GPSC members to give feedback once tions later in the day. fifth-year graduate student in zoology. "It would give they read the proposal thoroughly. "I did a poll over at Fuqua..." Keane said. "Thirty us a place to hang out and relax." The proposal focused around improving four as­ people said T would work out [in the early hours].' IN OTHER BUSINESS: Winkler was voted as a pects of graduate and professional student life: res­ That's of 660 Fuqua students." representative for the President's Advisory Council on idential life, transportation, academic space and The proposal, however, comes after Director of Resources, and Keane was voted into the President's child care. Recreational Facilities Bill Harvey denied DSG's unre­ Committee on Facilities and Environment.

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ERNST&YOUNG FROM THOUGHT TO FINISH:- THE CHRONICLE WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 3,1999 Duke Dems returned voter registration forms too late From staff reports forms would be submitted. "The problem Students who participated in the was that we didn't tell the volunteers Duke Democrats' voter registration drive that they would not be in in time for this were turned away from voting booths last election," he said. night because the organization did not He added that the registration forms submit the forms to the Board of Elec­ clearly state that they must be turned in tions by the registration deadline. 25 days before the election. Trinity junior Craig Chepke, Duke Dems secretary and organizer of the Nader to give talk: Consumer advo­ drive, said he knew in advance that Duke cate Ralph Nader will speak Wednesday Dems would not be able to in Page Auditorium at 7 p.m. meet the registration dead­ Nader's career was launched line—25 days before the may­ News in 1965, when he published oral and city council elections. Unsafe at Any Speed, a best- The drive occurred the Briefs selling indictment of the auto week of Pall Break, and al­ industry and its safety stan­ though it ended Friday—the deadline for dards. As a result of his activism, submissions—Chepke said the forms Congress passed auto safety legislation could not be handed in because all Duke in 1966. He has founded Public Citizen Dems members with cars had already and U.S. Public Interest Research Group, left for home- an umbrella for many other PIRGs.

GEORGE ALLEN/THE CHRONICLE Trinity junior Michelle Kalas said she In the 1980s, many critics argued that and about six other students were turned Nader's message had lost its influence, HAVE PULITZER, WILL TRAVEL... away from the voting station when they but in 1988 he led a successful campaign flashed their DukeCards. to scale back California insurance rates. Eugene Patterson Professors of the Practice of Public Policy and Susan Tifft spoke last He made a presidential bid under night about their critically acclaimed work The Trust, on the family behind . When registering on-campus, Kalas said, she explicitly asked the person man­ the Green Party platform in 1996, and ning the registration table whether her earned 1 percent of the national pop­ form would be in on time. ular vote. "I was concerned about being able to vote in this election. They said they were GOP rep to speak: Former U.S. going to deliver [the forms that] after­ Representative from North Carolina and noon," Kalas said. "In no way did I realize current chair ofthe North Carolina GOP there was going to be anydelay.... [People] Bill Cobey will speak at 8 p.m. would have sent it in on their own if they Wednesday in room 137 of the Can- knew it was not going to be in on time." Building. Cobey—a representative from New York Style Pizza & Italian Specialties Chepke said volunteers could have 1985 to 87—is being brought to campus been under the misimpression that the by Duke College Republicans. Daily Specials (Mon-Fri) % Lots of Pizza Toppings • Sarithyiches Available ABC Permits • Take-Out Available N, - Open Monday - .Saturday for Lunch-&Dinner * 50% off $ Purchase one dinner, Pizza/Bpfet 5\ get second dinner* NEW WOMEN'S STUDIES Wednesday^lghts 5:00-8:30 pm \ for half price. 1821 HillandaleRdO -"j*i *of eqttd or lesser value SPECIAL TOPICS Credit Cords Accepted. W excluding specials. 309-1656^-* Eipires 11/30/99 COURSES... Conflicts in Faith: Feminism & Christianity includes conversation between Sense the A _ feminists inside and outside the church and a Possibilities M ^^^^— synthesis of theology and memoir as modes of ^ discourse. Examine various ways feminist theologians have constructed, reconstructed, and deconstructed a Platinum and 18 karat ^H Christianity that is faithful to women. Explore the ways engagement, anniversary. institutionalized Christianity has resonated in the lives and nnd anytime f-Love-You ^^| struggles of individual feminists. Rudy and McClintock rings ot custom ______}____ Fulkerson, WST 150.02, ACES #140692, TTh 3:50-5:05pm, design and ^^| 204D East Duke Bldg. t Women & Music in the Working- class South Explore contributions made by women in shaping the music of the South from O folk origins through the era of commercialization in the 20th century. Malone, WST w i^il. 150S.03, ACES #140706, T 3:50-6:20pm, Lyndhurst nrnfi ® House/Center for Documentary Studies. ' (_ .pmtJ ERWIN SQUAR l • DURHAM • 286-2990 _f WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 3, 1999 THE CHRONICLE

DSG hears presentations, ^^^B /rr__r?i Harris Teeter updates on ongoing initiatives ______%. Your Neighborhood Food Market From staff reports The legislature will also decide www.harristeeter.com Assistant Vice President for Student whether to recognize the Cuban-Ameri­ TfoPerfk What rYe'tvAffAOout/ Affairs Sue Wasiolek will speak at the can Undergraduate Student Association Duke Student Government legislature as a new student group. The organiza­ meeting tonight about administrative tion's goals include helping Cuban- resources for student action. Americans or Cubans who have suffered SAVE ON THOUSANDS In addition, DSG President and Trin­ at the hands of Fidel Castro and edu­ ity senior Lisa Zeidner will address the cating the Duke community about group, as she does periodically, to up­ Cuban history and culture. EMS EVERY DAY date it on her work this semester—in­ The Black History Month Commit­ cluding issues surrounding financial tee's charter request will come before aid, international students, space and the legislature tomorrow. Although the the Devils' Desires initiative. committee will focus its educational Drew Ensign, DSG vice president for programming on celebrating black his­ academic affairs and Trinity junior, will tory month, it will also try to foster update the legislature on integrating campus-wide discussion on race and the basic telephone fee into residential ethnicity all year. charges for undergraduates. Finally, the legislature wiil decide This initiative was approved at the whether to grant funding for several last DSG meeting. student organizations.

University, Health System seem 64 oz. 19 oz. In Plastic to have Y2K bug under control Campbell's Container Y2K from page 3 main on Central Campus over the winter Harris Teeter needed to be," Trask said, Y2K compli­ break. Caroline Nisbet, director of re­ Chunky ance issues forced administrators to source administration in Student Affairs, Orange upgrade sooner rather than later. The said her most pressing worry is the avail­ Soup University spent $19 million remedi­ ability of power and water. Juice ating systems that were otherwise "We will advise residents that they BUY ONE GET ONE functional. should prepare in the same way they The Health System has placed special should for severe weather," she said. emphasis on testing fire alarms, electrical A relatively higher number of inter­ < T VE systems and elevators he system is also national students are expected to stay on Card prepared to accept an influx of transfer Central Campus this winter as their M patients in case other regional hospitals home countries may be less prepared, experience problems. said the press release. The International The hospital has developed a separate House suggested that students assess 64 oz. medical response center to handle these the potential Y2K impact when making issues. Duke University Police Depart­ travel arrangements. V8 ment also plans tf ""•' :!izean additional If Y2K creates serious emergencies, 10 police officers and 12 security officers, students further away from campus Splash said the press release. could have difficulties returning, ei­ With so much effort invested in solving ther because of transportation con­ Juice the problem, administrators are confident cerns or because they need to stay at that the New Year will arrive smoothly. home and help their families recover. "If nothing happens, it's not because Trask said the University would work the problem is exaggerated," said Paris. individually with students to make ap­ /$ "It's because many hundreds of people propriate plans. have been working on this." Another potentially threatening re­ 5 But the University is preparing for sult ofY2K would be a crash of federal fi­ the unexpected. A press release states nancial aid records. 16 ct. that a set of back-up checks for Universi­ Trask said the University has been Merita ty and Hospital employees will'be print­ working on this question for two years ed during December to prevent pay dis­ and he said he expected no problems. In Sweet ruptions on Jan. 7. case there is a problem, "I have received Administrators are also particularly from the Board authority to issue some Sixteen worried about students who plan to re­ short-term credit," Trask said. Donuts COMFORTABLE & RUGGED THE ORIGINAL M' Field Coat Washington State broken-in cotton canvas, with Extra Large removable wool orprimaloft liner Red or Golden Colors: saddle, Sizes: , Delicious stone, huntert red S-XXL Tall OUR PRICE $59.95 Red :_ (Catalog Price $129.00) Crimson Catalog clothes you LOVE Prices that let you INDULGE Seedless 179 I with 706 Ninth St. Grapes • VKCaid Durham 286-7262 iLOOK OUT! 205 West Main St Prices Effective Through November 9,1999 Carroboro 933-5E Prices feiThi s Ad Effective Wednesday Mwenier 3. TYrcugh November 9,1999 fa&_ • Durham area __ms orij CATALOG & NAME BRAND OUTLET WeR_seiveTteKgrtTolitittQ1antito THE CHRONICLE WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 3,1999 Candidates say results will not hinder future cooperation

TENNYSON from page 1 campaign. "[I will be] far more restricted [in myl has relied on his track record, and he said Tuesday ability to be a vocal voice when not the mayor," he was no different. He worked in his office at the said. "Historically, I've always had respect from Home Builders Association rather than trying to other council members." sway voters. "I've got this theory that [voters] pretty Tennyson said the two should not have any much know what they're doing the last day," he said. problems with spill-over from the campaign. McKissick said he spent most of his day lobby­ "Floyd has been running for mayor for longer than ing voters in the St. Stephen's precinct because he the past three months," Tennyson said. "We both thought Tennyson would have strong support believed in Durham and are working to make there. "I was trying to mitigate my losses," he said. Durham a better place." However, his efforts went unrewarded. Some Tennyson added that he thinks his leadership cited finances as a possible factor in Tennyson's re­ style is what Durham citizens want in a mayor. election. "Nick is a good campaigner. He had the 'Teople are not looking for a General Patton," he money and the backing and the votes," said city said. "No one expects a huge war hero." council member Brenda Burnette, who finished Although the county board of elections recently fourth in the mayoral primary. Tm not surprised implemented a new reporting system, results came voters for Nick came out like they did." in more slowly than in years past. "My first reaction McKissick agreed with this assessment. "I went is, 'We've got to do a better job of getting these in in in the beginning and knew it would be an uphill quicker and adding a screen that shows what the battle against a well-financed candidate," he said. precincts [have reported] "'Tennyson said. Tennyson, however, said endorsements from As a county commissioner, Heron said she was several diverse organizations played a greater role. disappointed that returns didn't get in more quick­ "People have watched my work. I have a broad and ly because the county had put a lot of resources unusual coalition of support," he said. into the board of elections. County Commissioner Becky Heron Another factor in yesterday's election may have "Nick received very good endorsements and been the weather. Although Tuesday afternoon votes out," she said. was sunny, heavy rains in the morning may have Burnette, who supported McKissick, said she deterred some voters. "The rain was extremely dis­ was surprised by the substantia! spread. "I couraging early on," McKissick said. "At one point, thought Floyd would do better," she said. "Nick is a I literally had to go inside. [We] lost the morning great campaigner. Floyd campaigned hard. He did hours in terms of potential voters." the best he could with what he had." Tennyson said he did not think the weather dis­ Throughout the campaign period, many candi­ suaded voters. "Reality is, we just don't get good dates expressed concern that race, rather than is­ turnout for elections," he said. sues, would determine the election. "It's very clear Tennyson's celebration will not last long. He to me that 20 to 25 percent of the people find it leaves for Washington, D.C. before dawn Wednes­ hard to vote for an African American," McKissick day to lobby for federal funds to improve and relo­ said. "As a community, we need to get beyond race." cate the Durham Area Transit Authority bus ter­ LIZ PRADA/THE CHRONICLE McKissick has two more years in his current minal. But Tuesday, he happily shook hands and FLOYD MCKISSICK, disappointed over Tuesday's loss, says he will continue to work city council term. He said he will continue to work looked forward to his post-election celebration at for Durham's interests during his remaining two years on city council. on many of the issues he addressed during his

The DeWitt Wallace Center for Communications and Journalism

Presentation ofthe Futrell Award in Communications JUDY WOODRUFF SENIOR CORRESPONDENT AND ANCHOR FOR CNN The James D. Ewing Lecture on Ethics in Journalism "Covering Ethics & Character in the Presidential Campaign"

Thursday, November 4, 1999 8:00PM The Terry Sanford Institute of Public Policy - Fleishman Commons WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 3,1999 THE CHRONICLE Massacre left indelible mark on Greensboro, racial politics GREENSBORO from page I many survivors of the Nov. 3 chaotic and unbelievable scene. When the Klan was seriously dampened. Neverthe­ Mike Nathan, a Duke-trained doctor and shooting said.they never expected such vi­ gunshots stopped, she went back to where less, the next Sunday, survivors were chief of pediatrics at the predominantly olence to erupt. Signe Waller, wife of Jim they had been standing when the first back in Greensboro to bury their dead. black Lincoln Community Health Center Waller, remembered the day of the march shots were fired. Pinsky noted the tense presence sur­ in Durham; Bill Sampson, another cone and the atmosphere surrounding it. "I saw people lying all over the ground, rounding them. No one knew what to ex­ mills activist and textile worker; Sandi "It started out in a rather festive some wounded, some killed, and then I pect from another march, especially con­ Smith, textile worker and union organiz­ mood," she said. "[There was] a parade found my husband," she said. sidering that most of the marchers, er in Cannon Mills, Kannapolis, N.C; and and a conference at the end of it. We were Jim Waller had been felled by two including the widows of the slain, were Jim Waller, a former Duke physician, going to do a lot of political education blasts of birdshot. A television camera armed with rifles of their own. "It was re­ trained at the University of Chicago who about what the Klan stood for..., how it would later capture her defiantly raising ally unclear what would take place in the dropped a Duke fellowship to organize was destroying a lot of things including her fists over her husband's body yelling, march," Pinsky recalls, adding that this workers inside the Cone Mills textile union organizing." "Long live the Communist Workers Party. was the only funeral to which he felt com­ plant in Greensboro. But she continues, "We never got to Long live the working class." pelled to wear a bullet-proof vest. For those left behind, the road ahead have a conference." After that, Waller says she doesn't re­ A veteran of reporting from Northern was frightening, the prospects for change The march began just after 11 a.m., member much and the events of the day Ireland, the Sinai Desert and China, Pin­ in North Carolina's Piedmont and the na­ with chants of "Death to the Klan" and become blurry. sky said Greensboro did not compare. tion at large were a bit dimmer. clenched fists punching the air. The pro­ Nathan, a Duke-trained doctor herself, 'That was probably the saddest day of writ­ The incident, caught on videotape and testers were armed, prepared for a scuf­ said her husband was driving a first-aid ing and reporting that I recall," he said seen by many eye witnesses, garnered na­ fle—either with the KKK or police. car on the other side ofthe parade in case The sense of loss and despair was even tional attention, but those responsible "What we as marchers expected was anything happened. more pronounced among those who sur­ were never convicted of a crime. The case that police would disrupt us, arrest peo­ "That was the last I saw of him until I vived and much of that feeling continues included three separate trials and ple, try to pick fights..." said Marty saw the police cars going by," she said. until today. stretched for more than 18 months. Nathan, whose husband, Mike, died two "We knew people had been hurt. We did­ "This [union organizing] was a decent The CWP was comprised of people who days after the rally from gunshot wounds. n't know anyone had been killed." chance to get some power in a very pow­ had been disappointed by top-down Soon, a long caravan of trucks and When the police arrived, they began erless relationship," said Nathan. "The school integration's failure to spawn sub­ cars pulled up to the intersection. They arresting many of the CWP members for [unions] were making change, the kinds stantive political or economic change in were full of members of the Klan who inciting a riot. "As the crowd gathered," of change that have to do with human de­ Greensboro, said Dean of Arte and Sci­ had been involved in an incident with Nathan said, "police were not chasing the cency..., things all people deserved. But ences William Chafe, a histoiy professor the CWP in nearby China Grove only a Klan, they were arresting marchers." they weren't allowed to go on because who has extensively researched the racial few months before. When the anti-Klan Mark Pinsky, a reporter for The New [their leaders] were murdered." dynamics of Greensboro. demonstrators saw the cars, they began York Times and friend of the Nathans, They were ultimately trying to focus kicking in the side panels of the trucks rushed to Moses Cone Memorial Hospital This is the first in a two-part series • attention on the nexus between race and and hitting the sides with fire wood. as soon as he heard the story. marking the 20th anniversary of the class. That's a volatile subject to start Farther down the line, Ktansmen began With four dead at the scene and Mike murders of five Communist Workers with, and it clearly provoked many emo­ getting out of their cars. Then the gun­ Nathan to die two days later, the move­ Party members in November of 1979 in tions, some of which [were] homicidal...," shots broke out. ment to organize workers and to fight the Greensboro, N.C. Chafe said. These people were idealistic, In the marching line, Waller heard the they were people who were fundamental­ shots. "I ran with a group of people who ly reformers radicalized by the absence of were running from the gunfire. My son more substantial programs.— It's not fair was there and I ran after him to protect to characterize them as professional revo­ him," she said. BET YOU'LL POLISH OFF YOUR FREE lutionaries or people who anticipated the Waller had been separated from her armed attack that occurred on Nov. 3." husband in what she described as a BAGEL SANDWICH IN NO TIME CREATED BY DUKE STUDENTS. WITH THIS COUPON. OWNED AND OPERATED BV FORMER DUKE STUDENTS. The Cosmic Cat with you in mind, that's Free Bagel Sandwich. 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(up to a dozen total') purchase your choice of Located upstairs at 1920 Ferry St. delicious freshly baked bagel and get another (across from Brueggers) FREE with this coupon. Buy as many as six bagels Call for take-out: 286-1875 and get one FREE for each purchased. positive or negative feedback: Offer good with this coupon only. Offer applies to freshly baked bagels only. Does 286-9967 (checked daily) toppings or other condiments One offer per coupon. One per customer. WWW.CaSMICCANTINA.COM Not valid in combination with other offers. Expires 12/18/99. BRUEGGER'S BAGELS' *_____3ssm* J.J. H»ru / Life ii the Lunge Until ) A.M. DURHAM: 626 Ninlh Street • Commons at University Place (1-31 MLK Parkway at University Drive] CHAPEL HILL: 104 W. Franklin Sunday - Acoustic Open Mic, Monday • Blues Jam, Tuesday - Poetic Soul Lounge St • Eastgate Shopping Center RALEIGH: 2302 Hillsborough Street * North Hills Mall • Pleasant Valley Promenade • Sutton Square. Falls of the Neuse Rd • Mission Valley Shopping Center • Stonehenge Shopping Center. Creedmoor Rd. Harvest Plaza. :..a d ..collective Six Forks 8 Strickland Rds. GARNER: 11/ Small Pine Drive (Hwy. 401N at Pine Winds Dr CAflY: 122 S.W. Maynard Rd. • Preston Business Center, 4212 Cary Pkwy. OPEN SEVEN DAYS A WEEK WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 3, 1999 M THE CHRONICLE LETTERS TO THE EDITOR ESTABLISHED 1905, INCORPORATED 1993 Administrators respond to editorial about biology Just two brief comments on the same conclusion. For us Molecular Biology facility in The Chronicle's editorial enti­ not to proceed with the cur­ the Levine Science Research Privacy for all tled "High-Speed Merger?" rent task force would be an act Center and in a series of regarding the task force to of procrastination well worthy teaching facilities and labs. The Clinton administration's new medical restructure our biology pro­ ofThe Chronicle's criticism. To There remains much work to gram. First, in 1996, as you proceed with it seems both be done on facilities, and records confidentiality standards will know, an internal task force- orderly and deliberate. that is a top priority during including five members from Second, your editorial our long-range planning limit opportunities for abusing patients' privacy the botany and zoology assumes that there has been process, but it is important departments—deliberated for systematic neglect of the not to ignore or be insensi­ or many people, doctors visits are discomforting because they a year and unanimously con­ facilities in the biology pro­ tive to what has already involve sharing extremely personal information with cluded that a merger was, gram. As one example, been done. Fstrangers. The invasive nature of health care and the anxieties intellectually and structurally, between 1991 and 1993, we that illnesses bring are compounded by patients legitimately having the best course to adopt. This spent more than $4 million WILLIAM CHAFE to feel vulnerable and concerned about protecting the confidentiality past year, an external review upgrading the core of the Dean of Trinity College of their medical histories. of the program by nationally Biological Sciences Building. known experts emphatically Last Friday, President Bill Clinton unveiled new federal rules that We also built a whole new BERNDT MUELLER and unanimously endorsed Developmental, Cellular and Dean of natural sciences would help alleviate some of these concerns by safeguarding the for referenced editorial, see release of private medical information and allowing individuals to pursue criminal action against those who misuse their records and http:11www.chron.icle.duke.edul'exportI'w w_d_cslchroni_lell999llOI25ilOHighspe_d.html compromise their privacy. The plan, which would require an individual's consent before Football stadium off limits to non-varsity athletes releasing most electronic medical records, is slated to go into effect Feb. 21, 2000. The rules require patient consent for all purposes other As a Duke student, I am leave the field. He accused us learn that my presence on than health care and billing and they guarantee that only the mini­ afforded certain privileges by of trespassing. He threatened that field is trespassing. mum amount of information will be disclosed, even in these cases. the University. One privilege to call security. All while he Is the Duke grass so pre­ Right now, each state sets its own guidelines concerning personal which I apparently do not was riding around the field cious that my tennis shoes health records. Clinton's sensible new policy will establish a minimum have is the use of our famed on an 800-pound golf cart. pose a threat to its existence? national standard assuring all citizens a level of confidence in the pri­ Wallace Wade Stadium. As a student who has Or does Duke just not under­ vacy of their health histories. States that have laws exceeding this As I was running sprints spent excruciating after­ stand how to treat its stu­ dents? Perhaps all this does standard are free to continue with their current policies. on the field with three noons in the polished seats friends, we were accosted by of that stadium, a student make sense. After all, we The privacy of medical records stems directly from the confidential an elderly man on a golf cart, who has stormed that field won't even let Florida State doctor-patient relationship. Just because a doctor takes notes on a apparently some sort of foot­ in celebration and as _. stu­ University onto our field. conversation and enters them into a computer does not mean that ball staffer. He informed us dent whose $35,000 a year this information is any less personal or any less private. that because we were not on a goes to maintaining that EVAN HOLOD The terms of the Clinton administration's rules give people access Duke athletid team, we had to facility, I am appalled to Trinity '01 to the names of those who have seen their medical histories and the right to file criminal charges or seek civil penalties for the improper disclosure of medical information. Pickle company's president withheld truth in letter The rapid developments in modern technology make these rules essential. Through the Internet, employers can often access an appli­ This letter is in response agrees to sit down and negoti­ and religious organizations cant's or employee's health record before making hiring and promotion to William Bryan's letter to ate with FLOC, the farmers across the country. The list decisions. Banks and credit card companies have also been known to the editor in the Oct. 26 edi­ with whom his company con­ includes three Catholic bish­ tion in which he asserts that tracts to grow cucumbers will peek into their clients' records. Most disturbingly, some pharmaceutical ops (one of whom is Bishop the Mt. Olive Pickle boycott decide for themselves if they companies have examined records and directly contacted doctors to sug­ Joseph Grossman of Raleigh), was launched because he want to be part ofthe process. the city of Toledo, the United gest other medications patients might want to take. "...refused to force indepen­ Bryan either doesn't get it, Church of Christ denomina­ Critics ofthe administration's plan argue that requiring excessive dent farmers to unionize doesn't want to get it, is being tion, the Farmworker amounts of paperwork will hamper research efforts and increase their farms." That is not the disingenuous or is dishonest Ministry Committee of the health care costs. Undoubtedly, these regulations will require addi­ purpose of the boycott. The when he makes his case North Carolina Council of tional workers to handle consent requests and create a new depen­ boycott was called to per­ using those false assertions. Churches, the United Farm dency on nameless research subjects. However, these drawbacks suade Bryan to meet and Efforts to persuade Bryan Workers, the North Carolina should not obscure the importance of privacy. negotiate with the Farm to meet and negotiate with Occupational Safety and Because of a 1996 law, the administration's rules only apply to Labor Organizing Committee FLOC went on for more than Health Project and electronic records. But the vast majority of such documents still exist in order to improve the con­ two years before the boycott Distinguished Professor of in paper form, and Congress should now move to extend these rules ditions of farm workers who was called. These efforts Literature and Latin to records of all types. harvest the cucumbers his included letter writing, phone American Studies Ariel company processes. calls, delegation visits, prayer Dorfman—just to name a few. Nor is Bryan being asked vigils plus marches and rallies All are participating and THE CHRONICLE to "dictate" anything to any­ of support—all to no avail. helping to make North one, as he also claims. North Finally, as a last resort, the Carolina labor history. Join us! KATHERINE STROUP, Edaor Carolina cucumber workers boycott was formally launched RICHARD RUBES, Managing Editor March 17. Since that time, the have indicated overwhelming­ JOAN PREISS JAIME LEVY, University Edaor boycott has been endorsed by GREG PESSIN, University Edilor ly that they want to be repre­ Chairperson, Triangle Friends of NORM BRADLEY, Edilorial Page Editor sented by FLOC. Once Bryan over 150 community, labor the United Farm Workers JONATHAN ANGIER, General Manager for referenced letter, see chronicle.duke.edu I export I www I www_docs I chronicle 119991 NEAL MORGAN, Sports Editor PRAT1K PATEL, Photography Editor httpillw 10126/ lOColumnistinaccurately.htinl CHRISTINE PARKINS, City & State Edilor KELLY WOO, Features Editor MEREDITH YOUNG, Medical Center Editor ALIZA GOLDMAN, Sports Photography Editor TIM MILLINGTON, Recess Editor KEVIN PRIDE, Recess Editor ON THE RECORD JAKE HARRINGTON, Layout and Design Editor ROSS MONTANTE, Layout and Design Edilor TREY DAVIS, Wire Editor AMBIKA KUMAR, Hire Editor MARY CARMICHAEL, FowerVtew Editor NORBERT SCHtlRER, Recess Senior Editor 7 saw people lying all over the ground, some wounded, some killed, and then I found VICTOR CHANG, Sr Assoc.Plwtography Editor LIANA ROSE, Sr. Assoc. Medical Center Edilor my husband." JASON WAGNER, Sr. Assoc. Features Edilor ROB STARLING, Online Developer ALAN HALACHMI, Systems Manager MATT ROSEN, Creative Services Manager Signe Waller on the death of her husband Jim in the Nov. 3,1979 event known as the Greensboro SUE NEWSOME, Advertising Director CATHERINE MARTIN, Production Manager Massacre (see story, page 1) ADRIENNE GRANT, Creative Director MARY TABOR, Operations Manager NALIN1 MILNE, Advertising Office Manager LAUREN CHERNICK, Advertising Manager SAUNDRA EDWARDS, Advertising Manager DANA WILLIAMS, Advertising Manager BRYAN FRANK, New Media Manager LETTERS POLICY The Chronicle ii published by the Duke Sludenl Publishing Company. Inc, a non-profit corporation indepen­ The Chronicle welcomes submissions in (he form of leiters lo the Direct submissions to: dent of Duke Univeisity. The opinions expressed in this newspaper are nol necessarily Ihose ofDuke Universily, editor or guest columns. Submissions must include the author's name, Editorial Page Department its students, workers, administration or trustees. Unsigned edilorials represent Ihe majority view of Hit editorial signature, department or class and, for purposes of identification, phone hoard. Columns, letters and cartoons represent the views of the authors. number and local address. Letters should not exceed 325 words; contact The Chronicle To reach flie Editorial Office (newsroom) ac 301 Flowers Building, call 684-2663 or fax G84-4696. To re;ich the editorial page department for information regarding guesl columns, Box 90858, Durham, NC 27708 the Business Office ai 103 West Union Building, call 684-3811. To reach the Advertising Office al 101 Wesl The Chronicle will not publish anonymous or form letlers or leiters Union Building cull 684-3811 or fax 684-8295. Visit The Chronicle Online at httptfwu •..Liironicle.duke.edu. lhai are promotional in nature. The Chronicle reserves the right lo edii Phone: (919)684-2663 © 1999 The Chronicle, Box 90858, Durham. N.C. 27708. All rights reserved. No pan of this publication may letters and guesl columns for length, clarity and style and the right lo Fax:(919)684-4696 be reproduced in any form witlioul the prior, written permission ofthe Business Office Bad] individual is enti- withhold letlers based on [he _:: . il pugecditor. E-mail; [email protected] WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 3, 1999 COMMENTARY How do you pass out the pizza? Columnist was prepared for diversity but not for strange pizza-eating habits be eaten around in a circle. A slice can be over dinner. I acknowledged that it not more so, than my friend's method. A Strand taken from either side of the space creat­ was true that my motives were usual­ It was quite likely that everybody ed by the pizza that has already been ly selfish, as I assumed these motives would want different pieces anyway, in the Web taken, but a slice must never be taken were the same as everyone else's. I and if not, most college students should from between two other slices. When often took the pizza slice with the most be mature enough to handle getting asked about the why's of this mandate, mushrooms. Sometimes the "best slice" their second choice slice of pizza. Heather Morris my crazy roommate told me it created had the right combination of pepperoni So what is the correct way to share harmony between the pizza eaters. and green pepper. But I never rushed your pizza? My friend and I still haven't Well, as a senior looking back, I can­ Harmony? I was still confused. through my pizza to make sure some­ reached a consensus. When we eat pizza not say college has been everything I According to her, eating the pizza one didn't get the "next-best slice." If together there's still tension about expected. But some things that have around the circle in this manner kept someone ate the slice I wanted, I whose rules will be violated. How do happened to me have been more unex­ the pizza eaters from competing. If peo­ would just choose another. This never you eat your pizza? Is my friend weird pected than others. ple took any slice of pizza at will, she traumatized me. or am I? For example, when I came to college asserted, then everyone would be try­ I also pointed out that just because I Maybe it isn't about weird. When I expected to meet new people with ing to get the best piece. People would thought the piece with the most mush­ there is talk of living in a diverse soci­ diverse backgrounds. I expected to run selfishly take the piece with the most rooms was the best, it didn't mean ety, one usually thinks ofthe big things into strong and varying opinions on mushrooms or the perfect amount of other people would agree. Perhaps they like race and religion. Sometimes, politics, academics, love and life. That's cheese. No one would be able to enjoy would hate mushrooms, or would be though, the little differences, like what college is about, right? I was pre­ their pizza because they would be too looking for a slice with onions and pizza, can be just as challenging—if pared to live with people different than busy rushing to finish their first slice extra cheese. not more so. myself. I was prepared for diversity. I so they could get first crack at the The perfect slice of pizza was differ­ was prepared. But I wasn't prepared selection of a second slice. Eating the ent in everyone's eyes. Therefore, let­ Heather Morris is a Trinity senior. for the biggest difference I would run pizza would become no more than a ting people choose their pizza random­ She encourages you to have a demo­ into. Pizza. cutthroat race to the bitter end. The ly would be at least as harmonious, if cratic pizza-distribution process. Yes, pizza. When I sat down with my greediest, fastest pizza eater would roommates sophomore year to eat pizza, emerge victorious, and all others par­ I ran into a vast uncharted territory of taking of the pizza would walk away j*K."BuSH-6ur listen defeated. Her pizza rule was only to 6RN:EVULLY f To ftE W3FHEK iNWCATtON lifestyle and opinion differences that I U'^Y Vftus. fc THWTfo£W£MSHOUa> had never expected. maintain happiness and friendship f*R.RDRBeS. -^ R I reached to take a slice of pizza from within the group. the box. "You can't do that!" my room­ This is when I decided that the dif­ fREFEr*6LY. mate shrieked. I looked at the pizza and ferences I was up against surpassed Ttft IrtHtKlTEo confusedly asked her why not. everything I'd ever expected to KlCH "That's not the next piece," she encounter diversity-wise in college. responded. My roommate—Katherine Religion, race, sure, I was prepared. Stroup, now editor of The Chronicle- Political affiliation and choice of net­ proceeded to detail what an uncivilized work television station? No problem! and uncultured person I was and how But pizza? I thought she must be jok­ my choice of pizza slice was going to ing, but this was not the case. When I cause the world to fall apart. Well, insisted on continuing to take my slice maybe that is not how she phrased it, from the middle of the pizza, it both­ but this is how I came upon the phe­ ered her. nomenon my friends affectionately call So I tried explaining my viewpoint. Pizza Karma. I often ate pizza in groups where According to my friend, when one is everyone chose a slice at random, and eating pizza in a group, the pizza must no friendships were ever dissolved The emphasis is on the Short, not the Bitter ment in the state of North Carolina. As I was moving that is, if I win—you should be required to have sex Short and Bitter in, I had to ask an employee at the apartment complex with me. Unless, of course, you're a guy, in which case to help me carry my new big-screen television up the an apology and a free beer would suffice. stairs to my abode. I thought for sure that the guy who My final big adventure for the summer was buying a helped me was at least five years older than me. I asked new car. The first time I went to the dealer, I was just where he went to school and he gave me the name of looking to get an idea ofwhat was available and to look Aaron Cohn what I later determined to be a high school in the area. into costs and financing options. The second time I came He mentioned that he was graduating in the spring. to buy. The salesman said to me, "Man, when you were As any guy who tried to maintain even the slightest Anyway, needless to say, I was annoyed and intimi­ here the other day, I thought you were 15 or something." semblance of "coolness" in high school is aware, shop­ dated by how much older than me this guy appeared. You could tell from this guy's flattering tactics that he ping with your mom at the GAP as a sophomore can be But then I quickly reminded myself of who had just was a top-notch salesperson. Apparently, today's 15-year- a rather humiliating experience. Well, let me tell you, bought the new TV and who was the one carrying it up olds are a lot better off financially than I was at that age. it's a thousand times worse when you're a high school I remember when I was 15, and I don't recall ever walk­ sophomore shopping with your mother at GAP Kids. ing into a car dealership by myself to purchase a new car. Such is my life. Talking about your genitalia Incidentally, I bought a red sports car. It's one of My short stature has always been something of an those muscle cars that are often criticized as pitiful issue for me, as you might have gathered from the title in a newspaper column— attempts to compensate for an undersized "package" or of this column. (Yes, to finally clear up those nasty to buy one's way into "coolness." Well, first of all, my rumors, the "short" in "Short and Bitter" refers to my now that makes you cool. automobile purchase was determined not by the need height, and nothing else, I assure you.) Even more of to compensate for any physical shortcomings, but an issue has been my youthful appearance, which I rather by the inherent difficulty in driving one's penis have been assured will be an asset later in life. I will the stairs, and I immediately felt a lot better about to work. Of course, if I were going to drive a penis to finally look old enough to date college freshmen at myself. Nice to know the Duke elitism doesn't fade work, it would definitely have to be fire-engine red. about the same time I am begin my mid-life crisis, so after graduation, huh? Second, the car you drive doesn't make you cool. things should come together nicely. At another point during the summer, I went to see Talking about your genitalia in a newspaper column— Sure, looking like an undersized high school junior the South Park movie at the local theater. I was having now that makes you cool. was problematic during my college years. But it has a pretty good day until the smiling 16-year-old behind I could go on and on about the trials and tribulations been an even more interesting dilemma in the so- the counter asked to see my identification. Apparently, of below-average stature, and, believe me, I will. called "real world," because I feel that holding a college I didn't look old enough to see an R-rated movie with­ Meanwhile, remember to always treat short people with degree, a job and a tiny bit of pride should entitle me out adult supervision. I still can't get over the bitter respect. After all, we can head-butt you in the crotch and to some degree of age-correlated respect. irony of the fact that I was accused of being younger run away faster than you can reach down to grab us. At the beginning of the summer, I signed a lease on than 17 years of age by a girl with whom I am prohib­ an apartment, but only after presenting enough forms ited from having sex by the age of consent laws of this Aaron Cohn, Trinity '99, was 4'9" his freshman of identification and verification of employment to state. In my opinion, if you card me for a movie or an year of high school. Now, at 5'8", he feels like a prove that I am indeed old enough to rent an apart­ alcoholic beverage and I can prove that I am of age— giant, albeit a very small giant. THE CHRONICLE • PAGE 12 COMICS WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 3,19!

Zits/ Jerry Scott and Jim Borgman THE Daily CrOSSWOrd Edited by Wayne Robert Williams

TMSPu ••... com ACROSS 1 1 l_ J 1 Groom oneself ' l" 6 Have on ' ' , - • a. 10 Brains ,"; III 1. paniheon 15 Nick and Nora's pooch '" V I ^_o 16 Operatic \w highlight " " SS IS 1 JJ 17 First National c Wyoming? a * '' I 1 J " u * 1 I • u u 1 " " ___MM 1 .. >, S3 " H M bl _i _.a to _ _ U ...... m • • .. B""y Jame s E.Buel•l • 11/3/99 Fort Washington, MD Tussda 's Funis Solved «"!|'i.ni|i!i. A L LHK. A 1 M E DMC U R D N 0 L'lo C I A V E|E K E D condition 6 Squander THEBREEZEANDlll 7 MY minute? RABEE|SELLS|VER 8 Small particle ASSETS|||SAHABA 9 Chased down ||TENDS||AKIN 10 Elk BLOWININTHEWIND 11 OPEC member L i KE||PAYUP|| 12 Exhaust ALLI ES|||_ i . r no 13 Oh, for BAA|BOVER|COWEH 18 Soaks ||HURRTCANEDECK 19 Seventh Greek FOO LUR 0 L L 0 NBE 0 N letter 1 R M AHE LAPS E|D U E 24 Eleventh B E A M|L A T H E s|. P Y president 35 Conference . 29 French cleric 31 Carryall bag 32 Dressed 42 Siva's title 33 Towel ID 47 Mel Gibson film 34 Jam-pack 49 Demeanor 35 Desire 51 Money roll 36 Clinches 53 Grads 37 Ids' 54 Period In power Brooklyn" companions 55 Egg-shaped 64 Yammer 38 Andrew's ride 56 Flower with 65 Oolong or 41 Filth velvety petals darjeeling THE CHRONICLE: Quirks of the editor: Bizarre pizza-eating habits: Kate TVles to wear "bite me" shirt to Important meetings:.. Ambika Sleeps well through alarms and phone calls: Norni and Jaime? Breaks out into show tunes: Ray Foxtrot/ Bill Amend Adores Neal: Jenny Mot affected by toxic levels of Diet Coke: „ ..Jake and Matt Double major too long for one breath:,. MerecBhC SoDJA HEAR I W_2_f HMMPH. THE W_ TOTALLY Can watch back-to-beek-to-back-to-back moves: A8ouT6RE6 CAN YOU NERVE OF THAT WERE Loves to tell stories about Phllly: Liz, Rich, George. Jennifer LIBRARIAN TO AVERAGING ktolizesthat crazy Hflier kid: Roily AND MICHELLE B&JEVE Kick US OUT.' _ WWSrSt. H°OKIN&UP?.' IT*' Account Fk^xeserrtatives:.. ...Monca Franklin, Dawn HaS. Yu-Hsten Huang, Account Assistants: Kathy Lin, Caroline Nichol, Stephanie Ogidan. Pauline Gave Sales Representatives: ....Betty Chung, Jillian Cohen, Jasmin French, Erin Holland, Jordana Joffejommy Sternberg, Ashley Wick Creative Services: Dallas Baker, Alise Edwards, Bill Gerba, Annie Lewis, Dan Libra!, Rachel Medlock, Jeremy Zaretzky Business Assistants: Veronica Puente-Duany, Preeti Garg, Ellen Mielke Classifieds: Matthew Epley, Nicole Gorman, Richard Jones

Wednesday Jose Saldivar, Professor at University of Cal­ Presbyterian/UCC Campus Ministry ifornia-Berkeley will present a lecture on: "In Bible Study meets from 12:15-1:00 p.m. COMMUNITY CALENDAR Search of the Mexican EMs: Americanity,' in the Chapef Basement, Room 036. Border Matters, and Post-lntetpeliations" 3:45-6:45 p.m. in 130 Biological Sciences Bring your lunch and bring your Bible. Building. Jbs6, Saldivar, Professor at University of Ouke Garden Fall Classes: "Lesser Thursday California-Berkeley will present a lecture Westminster Presbyterian/UCC Fellowship Henry Petroski, Aleksandsar S. Vesic pro­ Known Woody Plants of Duke Garden" on: "On Empire, Modernity, And Inter- with Paul Jones is scheduled for 2:00 Drop-in Lunch in the Chapel Basement fessor of civil engineering at Duke, will dis­ American Criticism" from 3:45 p.m.-6:45 Kitchen from 12:00-1:00 p.m. Cost is $1.50. cuss his book, 'The Book on the Bookshelf p.m. at the Garden's main gate. To reg­ p.m. in 130 Biological Sciences Building. ister, call 684-3698. Tickets are $10 for Come join usi at 5:00 p.m. in the Rare Book Room, Perkins Library, WestCampus. general public and $7 for Friends of the Duke University Museum of Art Film Night, Garden. Teer House Healthy Happenings: "Living featuring the premiere of David Byrne's lat­ with a Stroke: Exercise and Fair Prevention" Henry Petroski, the Aieksandar S. Vesic Pro­ est film, lie Aiye." 6:00 p.m. Free and open with Jennie E. Moore. 2:00-4:00 p.m. at fessor of Civil Engineering and Professor of "Places at the Sacred Extreme: Four is­ to the public: lands at the Edge of the Known." Profes­ 4019 Roxboro Road, Durham. To register, History, will speak about his most recent cali 416-3853. book, 'The Book on the Bookshelf." 5:00 sor of Classics Diskin Clay and Andrea Dawson's Greek-Come arid watch this Purvis, a post-doctoral research assis­ p.m. in Perkins Library Rare Book Room. For great show at 8:00 p.m. in the Freeman Renowned Israeli writer Amos Oz will pre­ more information, call 660-5816. tant in the Department of Classical Stud­ Center, with yummy muhch.es arid other ies, will speak about their new book, sent the Rudnick Family Lecture on Israel and Jews out fbr the same reasons..TV, food World Affairs. 3:00 p.m. in Griffith Film Theater "Italian Table," 5:00 p.m. Meet in front of the "Four Island Utopias." 5:00 p.m. in and procrastination! jewishiife Perkins Library Rare Book Room. For in the Bryan Center. Followed by book signing Language Center and then move to Perkins more information cail 660-5816. in the Gothic Bookshop. Free to the public. For cafe. Please, come along, "we eat, drink, information, contact Doug Sershen 684-2910 chat and do it in Italian!" WEDNESDAY. NOVEMBER 3, 1999 CLASSIFIEDS THE CHRONICLE • PAGE 13

FREEto lovin g home, female black MUST RENT BRIGHTLEAF 905 Help Wanted. Earn up to $375 Quick SSSS lab mix, 7 months old, all shots, not 2 bedroom apartment near Is seeking experienced & motivated weekly assembling MEDICAL ID Free Lance writer! Earn S25 per spaded. Call 682-1868 or 403- Northgate Mall close to Duke, hard­ servers, & bartender Please apply CARDS at home. Immediate open­ article or story. earn@maincam- 2202. ings, your area. Call 1-520-505- wood floors, washer/dryer included, in person between 2-5P.M. 4411 Ext. D1015 '"HOUSE COURSES GO DIRECT! call 416-0393. Monday-Friday or fax resume to SPRING 2000"* 680-8849. 905 West Main Street DRIVER/DOCK WEEKEND MANAGER APPLICATIONS available in 04 Internet-based company offering (BrightLeat Square) -Winner of Saturday, 12-8:30p.m., Sunday Allen for people wishing to WHOLESALE Spring Break pack­ Esquire Magazine's Best New WORKERS 10:30a.m-6:30p.m. Call 403-1758 or Restaurant For 1999- apply at Jersey Mike's, 4201 teach a House Course in ages! Guaranteed Lowest Price! J8.55/HR Spring 2000. DEADLINE tor 1-800-367-1252 www.spring- University Drive, Durham 1980-90 cars from S500. Police If you're ready to join an elite com­ submission College work-study position avail­ breakdirect.com. impounds and tax repos for listings pany committed to efficiency, orga- Monday, November 15,1999 able in a Neurobiology lab in the call, 1-830-319-3323x4617. Teaching is more than telling. Duke Med. Ctr.. The position that's second to none, you're ready Learning is more than remem­ 1991 RED GEO STORM involves various lab and library for Airborne Express. We are cur­ Duke University/Organization tor bering. Take a Program in chores and requires 10 hours or rently seeking Driver/Dock Workers Country house 2BR, 1BA, LR, DR, Tropical Studies Summer 2dr, 5speed. 107K miles, a/c, power more of time/week. Please contact for our Morrisville location. Early modern kitchen, porch, central Education course for interac­ steering, runs great, S1800 obo Programs in Costa Rica-Tropical Keiko at 681-6165. or e-mail at am and evening shifts are available. heat/AC Located on horse farm, 15 tive discovery and inquiry. Cail leave message for Jennifer 942- All shifts are Monday-Friday with Ecology & Plantains, Iguanas 660-3075 for more information [email protected] mins Irom, Duke, available N no Saturday hours available. pets, S700/month. 620-0137 and Shamans: An Introduction to or visit our website; j rei neke @ b iochem du ke edu Field Ethnobiology. Come to the www. d u ke. ed u/we b/education Conservatory Attendant! PT lobby of the Bryan Center and meet position to assist in 'Magic Wings' Qualified candidates will be ener­ FURNISHED HOUSE 1993 Geo Metro two door hatch­ Butterfly Conservatory at the 4-5 bedroom in Watts Hospital neigh­ Dr. Donald 8rightsmith, Instructor Teaching is more than telling. back. One owner 32,950. (919) 365- getic, motivated, quick-learners. of the Tropical Ecology Summer Learning is more than remember­ Museum. Responsibilities Vou must be 21 years of age. For borhood available January through 4855. June 2000. $1200 per month. Pets Program. Wed. Nov. 3 -12:00- ing Take a Program in Education include: Must have high school the Driver position, you must pos­ sess clean driving record. OK. references, deposit, lease 2:00PM. For more information con­ course for interactive discovery diploma, and strong verbal and observation skills Must be able required. 286-7214 or tact OTS at Ph. 684-5774. Email and inquiry. Call 660-3075 for [email protected] more information or visit our web­ to work in high heat & humidity, Pre-employment drug screening and •[email protected]> or visit our web­ and able to work weekends and site at wwm.duke.edu site: www.duke.edu/web/educa- background chech required. LIVE OFF CAMPUS Babysitters wanted, 18 mo boy, holidays as required. Knowledge Interested candidates may apply in looking for responsible, playful, reli­ and interest in people, plants and person at: Airborne Express, 400 Spacious five bedroom house, 1 able babysitters. Please call buttertlies is desired, and being Kittyhawk Dr., Morrisville, No phone block from East Campus, hardwood FRANCE Wendell Theater Presents Margaret 286-3225. bilingual in Spanish is a plus. calls please. Equal Opportunity floors, all appliances, available SPRING 2000 The Heidi Chronicles, a play by Salary is $6.00/hr plus excellent Employer. January 1, 2000 Call 416-0393. Wouldn't you like to be in Paris Wendy Wassertein, Directed by Chapel Hill Mom seeks part-time benefit package. Send resume this Spring? Become totally im­ Janna Elphinstone. Follow Heidi's help caring for 3-yr old twins. to: NC Museum of Life and MATH TUTORS North Durham, 3009 Banner Street mersed in French life & culture, journey through the 1960's, 70's Flexible hours 932-4860 Science, HR Dept, PO Box Be a tutor in Math 31L. 32L, 41 2BR, 1BA, 1LR, dining room, patio, while earning Duke credit. Ap­ and into the 80'2 in this cleverly 15190, Durham, NC 27704. NO or 103 for the Peer Tutoring utr. Call 688-3033 Start renting Nov. plication deadline has been crafted piece. All shows in the Seeking Kid Sitter. Now Phone Calls. Program. Apply in 217 extended until Fri., Nov. 19. Coffeehouse on East. November ing for part-time sitter for two Academic Advising Center, East Applications are available in the 4th at 7pm, November 5th + 6th, charming children ages 3 and 5. DO YOU LOVE WINE campus, 684-8832. Office of Study Abroad, 121 Al­ at 8pm, and November 7th at Work references and an essay on Fowler's Fine Food & Wine Store is Undergraduates earn $S/hr and len Bldg., 684-2174. 2pm Tickets $5 at the door. "Why I would be perfect for this job" looking for a motivated, passionate graduate students earn 312/hr. should be emailed to wine Salesperson to help out part- College Republicans Meeting. [email protected]. time over the Holidays. Call Dan or Speaker: Bill Cobey, 11-3-99, WORRIED Craig 683-2555. MEDIA SERVICES WORK 8:00PM, 137 Carr. Student wanted to work at Law SPRING 2000 NEW because your period is late? The Duke Eye Center seeking work- school, Monday to Friday, 12PM to COURSE Duke Student Health Service study student for general office 2PM. Must have computer and AV DISTINGUISHED PROFES­ offers Confidential pregnancy duties, including obtaining articles skills, incl. operating video cam­ testing and counseling for Duke from library. Pay $7.50, hours flexi­ eras. May include extra hours as SOR COURSE 195 LEADER­ ANOTHERTHYME Queen Anne style King-size wave- Students FREE & ON CAMPUS. ble, call Robin at 684-6622 or email needed. Contact Michael Butler, SHIP AND THE BROADWAY RESTAURANT less water-bed. highpost, darkwood, Walk-in to triage in the Student [email protected] 613-7024 THEATER (DPC 195/DRAMA 489-8070. $325 196/PPS 196) Taught by Health Clinic (Pickens), the Seeks WAIT STAFF and SUSSER Student Infirmary, or the East Fine dining experience preferred. The Catering Company Richard Riddell and Emanuel gmbid.com is a pre IPO start-up TENT FOR SALE Azenberg. See ACES and Campus Wellness Clinic. Apply M-F 2-6pm (come in back luxury action web site, pioneered Specialty off-premise caterer seeks Course Synopsis Handbook for door), 109 N. Gregson, adjacent to by, Georges Marciano, the energetic, hardworking individual 2 person Mountain Hardware tent details. Available online at Apts. For Rent Brightleaf Square. founder of Guess? Jeans. We for event lead wait position, flexible and Gregory hi king-backpack each www. reg istrar.duke.edu/regis- are looking for a part time cam­ hours, catering experience $125, both originally $250 and barely trar/aces.htm College grads needed as part-time pus representative to join us in required, salary based on experi­ used. 956-9506. The Belmont Apartments currently tutors for flexible afternoon and arranging local promotions, PR, Saturday morning instruction. ence. Call Molly at 929-4775 or fax has one-bedroom and two-bed­ Requires enthusiasm for teaching giveaways, e-mail campaigns, resume to 967-7728. Free CD of cool indie music room homes available for next and working with kids. 309-9966. sponsorships, etc. Must be inter­ when you register at semester. If interested please call ested in marketing, a self-starter, mybytes.com, the ultimate web­ Laurie at 383-0801. All Residents fun and a team player. Please e- We Love Kids! Do you? Childrens To the beautiful brunette soprano site lor your college needs. must be 21 or older. mail resume to: Educational Toy Store seeks who knows I couldn't keep my eyes off her last Saturday, please e-mail [email protected]. upbeat, energetic staff members to join our team. Applications avail­ WE'LL ERASE HELP WANTED able at The Play House Toy Store, Hiring Millwrights Welders, 702 Ninth St. and Northgate Mall, or YOUR COLLEGE Email application request to THECHRONICLE LOAN. [email protected]. 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BEAU VOU CAN BE! ^ http://www.va_l.net/c_s/ _j No refunds or cancellations after first insertion deadline. www.goarmy.com Available November 17 THECHRONICLE WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 3,1999 Unpopular votes on pay raise shape election outcome CITY COUNCIL from page i loss, Conner said he was pleased that his main issue— Hill, in fact, said he had never before been to the old vote defeat were his votes for a 37 percent council-mem­ "smart" growth and development in Durham—seemed to county courthouse to watch election results, and was un­ ber pay raise and for delaying of the referendum on resonate with voters. sure what to expect. shrinking the council. These stances put him at the cen­ "I went from no name recognition to 12,000 votes in "I'm relieved that all of the campaigning is over with ter ofthe public's disappointment with the group. two months," he said. and the forums over with and the questions from the au­ "I think that the voters agreed with me that... this is Langley likely benefited from an endorsement from dience over with and now we can move on to the real is­ a very important period of time for Durham and,., that the conservative group Friends ofDurham, said Friends sues," he said. some ofthe votes-by some members ofthe past city coun­ chair Bill Brian. Mike Shiflett, former president of the Inter-Neigh­ cil were out-of touch with what people of Durham "The Ward 2 race was so close, it may have been the borhood Council, finished in fifth place, and decried thought," Cheek said. "I think that the voters agreed that straw that blew one way or the other," he said. what he called the negative tone of the campaign. He it was time to make some changes with some members said he plans to stay involved in local issues. "I'm not of the council and to move in a different direction." At-large going away," he said. "Fm going to continue doing the Cox said he was honored to have served on the coun­ work I've done with the Inter-Neighborhood Council and cil and that he will turn his attention to his wedding The race for the final at-large seat was even closer Partners against Crime. I'll still be a neighborhood per­ later this month. than the Ward 2 contest, with Edwards earning 11,987 son, whether I'm on city council or not." "For me, it was a win-win situation. I would have been votes to Byker's 11,826. The new council has quite a set of tasks in front of it: honored with the opportunity to serve two more years Tm disappointed, but I think I ran a great race," developing a framework for city-county merger, reducing but... what I will do is be a good husband and a good fa­ Byker said. "I feel like I did the best I could." crime, managing Durham's growth and revitalizing the ther, and that's what I'm focusing on right now." Byker, who finishedsixt h in the primary, said he will city's downtown. likely ask for a recount. Brenda Burnette, who lost in the mayoral primary Ward 2 There is still, however, a chance that he could be but will retain her council seat for two more years, said named to the council this week because election officials she was optimistic about her new colleagues. Langley voted with Cox on the pay raise and the ref­ still have to make an official count and add in the "pro­ "I think they're good," she said. "They are very di­ erendum, and her support probably eroded because of it. visional" ballots from voters who moved within Durham verse. This will be a new era. It will be different but good. Conner led the early balloting and remained close even but failed to inform the board of elections. I'm definitely glad I'm still there." after Langley passed him. As in the Oct. 5 primary, Hill and Stith led the field Christine Parkins contributed to this story. "I wasn't disappointed because I knew that I had easily. Each will join the council for the first time. more to come in, but I didn't like to see low numbers for "We got a good indication in the primary that people myself" she said. were responding to our message," said Stith, the top Although somewhat disheartened by the 800-vote vote-getter. STUDENT TRAVEL Planning Trips Carolina Computer Center Cornc for the Price, Stay for our Service for Generations trough Road • Next to Krogei L K Y, and Z. 309-2629 AMP System on SAIE £-arnpu£ 15" Monitor, Mid-tower Case, Motherboard, 32MB SDRAM, 6.4GB Hard Drive, 45x CD-ROM, 1.44MB FD, Mbit AGP, 8MB 3D Video, 3D Full Duplex Sound Your Gimpus Floral Card, 56K Modem, 140W Amplified Speaker, 109 Connection Keyboard, and Mouse. 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Coles, a senior, was nnent other than itself. And it was good. kicked oft the team by head Duke took a 67-29 lead into the locker coach Bobby Bowden after the room at halftime and cruised the rest of the player and fellow teammate Peter way to a 128-80 win over the Five-Star Hawks Warrick were arrested for grand last night at Cameron Indoor Stadium. theft at a local Dillard's. "I thought our kids looked really good out there tonight," coach Mike Krzyzewski said. "We played really hard, especially in the first half, both offensively and defensively, • Juan'Gone' gone and we rebounded very well." In a blockbuster nine-player Just 50 seconds into the game, Matt trade between Texas and Detroit, Christensen grabbed an offensive rebound and Ail-Star rightfielder Juan laid the ball in off the backboard for the Blue "Gone" Gonzalez became tne Devils' firsttw o points, and the rout was on. newest Tiger in exchange for six Duke opened a 21-2 advantage with 14:02 to play in the first stanza due in large players, including top rookie part to four three-pointers and stellar play Gabe Kapler and Justin by Jason Williams. Thompson, ihe Tigers'top Just over two minutes later, Casey pitcher. Catcher Gregg Zaun and Sanders hit Chris Carrawell inside for a Danny Patterson were also slam dunk, extending the lead to 29-4. shipped to Detroit, The Hawks finally connected on their first field goal with 10:22 to play in the first SHANE BATTIER led a Duke defense that gave up just 29 points in the first half, limiting the Hawks to just 25.7 • San Diego puts charge half when Michael Byers hit a three-pointer percent shooting from the floor in the opening frame. into Leaf from the wing. Despite the basket, Duke Second-year quarterback Ryan still held a 29-7 lead. said. "One was keeping spacing. It seemed led behind the play of Carlos Boozer. Leaf was suspended without pay The Blue Devils used runs of 16-2 and 12- like our team was spread out all over the The Alaskan big man put in an easy lay- for four weeks yesterday after 4 to create their largest lead of the first half court.... And the second thing was that they up off a feed from Dunleavy, then rejected what teammates described as an at 57-18 with 3:18 remaining. The half ended were very, very unselfish. They were making Cedric Carter on the other end. On the ensu­ obscenity-laced tirade at general in grand fashion with Williams splitting a the extra passes." ing offensive possession, Boozer used deep manager Bobby Beathard and double team and finding Mike Dunleavy in The second half played out much the inside position to convert a hook shot, bump­ other Charger personnel. The the right corner for a wide open three-pointer. same as the first. After the Hawks mounted ing Duke's lead to 80-40 with 14:25 to play. episode was yet another low "I told them at halftime that they were their best run of the game, outscoring Duke "It was good to see Carlos, even See BASKETBALL on page 18 • point in a two-year career that doing two things really well" Krzyzewski 9-2 to start the half, the Blue Devils has seen the once-promising Washington State quarterback relegated io the backup spot. Williams rises to role as floor leader Two recruits • McKeon named NL By KEVIN LLOYD manager of the year The Chronicle say no thank Cincinnati Reds manager Jack The Blue Devils hammered McKeon was named NL manag­ the Five-Star Hawks 128-80 er of the year yesterday, after he last night, but the story was not you to Duke nearly guided his team to the so much the margin of victory, From staff reports playoffs. The Reds lost to the as it was the play of freshman T.J. Cummings and Ann Mets in a one-game playoff, point guard Jason Williams. O'Neil both gave verbal com­ Williams led the Blue Devils mitments yesterday, neither • Dominating the DL with 25 points and nine assists to choosing Duke. Two-lime Hart Trophy winner go along with seven rebounds Cummings, a 6-foot-9 power Dominik Hasek of the Buffalo and earned the praise of coach forward from Homewood- Sabres learned Tuesday he has a Mike Krzyzewski. Flossmer High School in 90 percent tear of his right groin "I thought Jason did a really Homewood, 111., committed to muscle and will be sidelined nice job of handling our team," UCLA, saying he wanted to be indefinitely. Although no defini­ Krzyzewski said. "He did a real­ closer to his father, Golden tive timetable has been set, it ly good job tonight." State Warrior Terry Cummings. appears Hasek wili be out for at The statistics make Williams' The 25th-ranked senior had least the next two months. impact apparent, but do not fully narrowed his decisions down to demonstrate the impact the Duke, DePaul and the Bruins, freshman had throughout much finally choosing UCLA. of the game. Williams led the "Duke is a great school and Blue Devils in playing time and I like the staff and players a controlled the ball for almost Pacers 119, Nets 112 lot," Cummings told the every minute Duke was on Insider's Report. "But I felt a Celtics 103, Raptors 90 offense. In the process, he turned better fit at UCLA." the ball over only four times. Mavericks 108, Warriors 96 Cedar Rapids, Iowa's Ann Bucks 98, Rockets 93 Williams started the game O'Neil also announced her Nuggets 107, Suns 102, OT and jumped down the throat of decision yesterday, declaring the Hawks from the opening for Illinois. SuperSortics 104, Clippers 92 tip-off. He personally outscored Trail Blazers 106, Grizzlies 86 the Hawks 6-2 in the first four The 5-11 guard,- ranked Wizards 94, Hawks 87 minutes of play. 13th in the nation by the Blue Star Report, opted for the Illini Hornets 100, Magic 86 Throughout the game, over -h«. Blue Devils, Iowa Heat 128, Pistons 122,20T Williams was most effective State, Purdue and Stanford. driving to the hoop. The pene­ Knicks 92, Cavs 84 A second-team Parade All- tration he created set u^ many ERIC H.ANG.'IHE CHRONICLE ' Lakers 91, Jazz 84 American last year, O'Neil of the 15 three-pointers the JASON WILLIAMS played his first game in a Duke uniform last night, putting on Spurs 89,76ers 76 needs 401 points to become See WILLIAMS on page 18

GRIDIRON NOTES 1i/idE?i ACC STANDINGS ACC LEADERS NEWS & NOTES QUOTABLE "Playing Duke, you ACC Overall PASSING EFFICIENCY • Romine, Robinson honored Florida State 7-0 9-0 realize they are proba­ Games Pts Duke quarterback Spencer Romine was named the Georgia Tech 4-1 6-1 bly the best team with J. Hamilton, GT 7 182.1 ACC's offensive back of the week following his Clemson 4-2 4-4 two wins that I've ever : career game Saturday against Maryland. Romine Virginia 3-3 4-4 played against... You D.Js8lis,OTa 8 123.2 threw for 404 yards and three touchdowns on 27- 2-3 5-3 kind of feel sorry B. Sankey, WFU 6 122.3 of-42 passing. N.C. State wide receiver Koren Duke 2-3 2-6 for them because they _, McCall, UMd Robinson continued his recent tear and was named N.C. State 2-4 54 deserve to win a lot the conference's top rookie for the week. His 168 _l_____t_I______L__ Wake Forest 1-4 4-4 RUSHING YARDS more than they do." North Carolina 0-5 1-7 G Att Yds receiving yards on five catches Saturday broke the N.C. STATE LINEMAN TODD Wolfpack freshman record he set earlier this year. ". Jones, UVa 235 1273 BOYLE AFTER DUKE'S WIN _,. Jordan, UMd 8_ 182 1082 OVER MARYLAND W. Kane, WFU 8 201 866 • Vanderlinden questions holding call "Furman has a good : Minor, FSU y 158 729 Maryland coach Ron Vanderlinden confirmed yes­ Saturday, Oct. 30 I .-. Clem 7 132 495:, terday that he has filed a complaint with the ACC football team. Still, Clemson 12, Wake Forest 3 over a controversial holding call lhat proved costly North Carolina should RECEIVING YARDS in Saturday's 25-22 loss to Duke. Maryland had a not lose a football Duke 25, Maryland 22 Yds G Rec. 61-yard run by LaMont Jordan called back when game to Furman." Furman 28, North Carolina 3 tight end John Waerig was whistled for holding. UNC's CARL TORBUSH. Georgia Tech 48, N.C. State 21 P. Wat-rick, KSU 7 53 '" 710 Jordan's run had brought the ball within a foot of Florida State 35, Virginia 10 R. Gardner, Clem the goal line when the Terps already led 19-17. "I believe it's going to . work itself out in prac­ h_ m 7 28 615 r s • Jones breaks Virginia record !f» tice this week.... I sure Saturday, Nov. 6 Running back Thomas Jones' 71-yard run in the sec­ INTERCEPTIONS wouldn't tell [Duke] ond quarter Saturday broke the Cavaliers' all-time Maryland @ N.C. State, JP, noon G No. Yds. three or four days Duke @ Clemson, 1 p.m. rushing record, formerly held by New York Giant Tiki before the game." Barber. Jones finished the game with 164 yards, his CLEMSON'S TOMMY BOWDEN, Wake Forest @ UNC, 1:30 p.m. L. Harrison, NCSU 9 5 0 16th career 100-yard game. His effort Saturday Ga.Tech @ Virginia, ABC, 3:30 p.m. ). Clark, DU 4 83 a marked the first time in 24 games that FSU allowed a D. Polite, Clem 8 28 running Pack to break the century mark. is. UVa :=. 8' 4 .1 "We had a 35-10 win at Thursday, Nov. 11 _ : Virginia. But it was the N.C. State vs. UNC (in Charlotte), TACKLES PER GAME • One touchdown away... way in which you do it ESPN, 8 p.m. G Tackles TPG N.C. State's Jamie Barnette is just one touchdown that is what you don't i _ Adams, Clem 8 120 15.0 pass away from setting an all-time ACC record. like. After the game I 1. Moore, UMd 8 98 12.3 i Saturday against Georgia Tech, Barnette found Koren thought, Tm mad about • . Carson, Clem = 8a •a95. 1.1.9 Robinson for a 70-yard touchdown, Barnette's 57th something and I don't . Carswell, Clem 8 94 11.8 of his career. The touchdown strike tied the ACC know what it is.'" 9 105 ' 11.7 - record held by FSU's Danny Kanell (1992-95). FSU's BOBBY BOWDEN

• FV 4* i Y E. hcholloftbe ft NT VI_^_? ISf IME _

Duke University Marine Laboratory Duke Marine Lab Spend Saturday at the Beach

J on the sun-drenched North Carolina coast on n ~ November 6 to explore the Duke Marine Laboratory. Spend a day at Duke's coastal campus exploring the educational opportunities and facilities, speaking with faculty, taking a boat tour and enjoying a seafood feast! The day includes roundtrip bus service from East Campus (9 a.m.) and West Campus (9:15 a.m.). Buses return to Durham at 11 p.m. Space is limited and is filled early. Spend a day at the beach — without leaving Duke!

Visit the Duke Marine Lab Saturday, November 6 Freshmen and Sophomores Invited! Free Seafood Feast!

Interested? Sign up by contacting Helen Nearing: 252-504-7502 • hnearingiaduke.edu • www.env.duke.edu/marinelab/marine.html WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 3, 1999 THE CHRONICLE Rose lacks Gray matter to know that apology is overdue Fm not jealous of Jim Gray. black eye with his gambling problems "sheer.will," and sticking a microphone Only a few people can perform at the 10 years ago, Charlie Hustle would have Upon further in his face. absolute top of their professions and be made the All-Century team without fan­ Although Gray and Rashad work for carved out as the American villain. fare and found a nice little bronze review the same network, they're on opposite Last week, Gray became one of those plaque of himself hanging in a building ends of the spectrum when it comes to people—and it's certainly not an envi­ in Cooperstown. interviewing style and, more important­ able position. The cold fact remains, however, that Victor Zhao ly, quality. Gray has never been afraid to On the night of Pete Rose's tri­ Rose was banned from baseball for life ask the difficult questions, the intimi­ umphant return to a Major League ball­ in 1989 by A. Bartlett Giamatti, and in and asked baseball for its forgiveness. dating questions, and more often-than- park last week before Game 2 of the the 10 years since, Rose has given But that's entirely too much to ask for not, the absolute correct questions. World Series, Gray repeatedly bombard­ baseball absolutely no reason to wel­ a man so enamored with his pride and his After all, this is the same guy who had ed Rose with a series of questions relat­ come him back. Since baseball has dignity, or the very little that's left of it. won a Sports Emmy in 1998 for having ing to his gambling past and his refusal never reinstated a player who had Rose repeatedly dodged Gray's line of the resolve, and more importantly, the to admit guilt during a live interview been banned for life, it will take a lot questioning and ultimately responded guts, to grab Mike Tyson around the waist broadcast on NBC, more than a weak application for rein­ with the retort, "I'm surprised you're seconds after he had bitten off part of What Gray did was give the all-time statement for Rose to hustle his way bombarding me with this, I'm here to do Evander Holyfield's ear, and shout in his hits leader the perfect occasion to back into the game. an interview with you." ear, "Why did you bite the man's ear off?" explain himself. Since Rose's banishment, the entire Surprised, Pete? Why should you? Perhaps Gray should apologize pro­ But all Gray got in return were eva­ baseball landscape has undergone You were kicked out of the game for fusely for doing his job as a sidelines sive answers from Rose, a classless cold wholesale changes, but one thing has­ gambling. Baseball had the good graces reporter and asking the tough ques­ shoulder from Chad Curtis and the n't—Rose's unrepentant, arrogant denial to allow you back on the field for a cele­ tions the people want answered, not the Yankees and a swarm of backlash. And of his involvement with gambling. bration, and you're stunned that some­ ones the athletes want to hear. Still, instead of being recognized for con­ Granted, Rose can point out until his one had the gall to ask you about gam­ Pete should not be surprised at Gray's ducting another gutsy and top-notch face turns blue that the lifetime banish­ bling? Sounds a bit naive to me. line of questioning. interview, Gray was lambasted by the ment agreement he signed in 1989 is nei­ Secondly, what Gray was doing was So next time Mr. Gray, just skip all public and somehow, Rose emerged the ther "an admission nor a denial" he bet exactly what Rose said, interviewing the civilized questions when you're sympathetic hero. on baseball. But if that clause fools any­ him. But maybe Rose thought Gray was interviewing Rose. Just go ahead, put Does it seem ridiculous at all than one, then I'll take this forum to announce there to massage his ego, which is exact­ him in a headlock and scream in his one man is ridiculed for doing his job the availability of a nice tract of rural ly what many sideline reporters think ear, "Why do you keep lying?" Oh, one while another man gains respect for land just outside of Chernobyl. Would their job entails (see Rashad, Ahmad). more thing: Don't forget to turn to the continuing to deceive the public? you sign a statement agreeing to your Rashad, who patrols the NBA side­ camera afterward, smile and say hi to What else can you really talk to permanent ban from baseball if no evi­ lines mainly to tell Michael Jordan your grandma. Pete Rose about if you don't talk dence ofyour wrongdoing existed? how great he is (while theoretically It's a win-win situation for Gray. about gambling? What Gray offered Rose, in effect, was providing insightful commentary), is He might be able to scream some The intriguing aspect of Rose's the ideal stage and audience to address the most over-the-top example of the actual sense into Rose, and if he did­ return to the field after a 10-year his fans and the entire baseball world reporter-turned-sycophant. His idea of n't, he'll receive the same amount of absence wasn't how he felt about the about his past problems. Rose could a good postgame question is hugging public backlash. occasion. It was, rather, why there was have struck a poignant and convincing an exhausted Jordan after his heroic UPON FURTHER REVIEW is a week­ an occasion at all for his return. chord with everyone only if he had Game 5 performance against Utah in ly column written by a Chronicle sports If Rose hadn't dealt baseball the admitted his guilt, expressed his regret the 1997 NBA Final, whispering columnist. It appears every Wednesday.

"1 DUKE LEADERSHIP IN AN AGING SOCIETY PROGRAM u, you re INTERNSHIP OPEN HOUSE

• Exciting opportunities in 2000 to work with key national, state, mmDing to work for and local leaders concerned about public policy issues affecting fa older adults. • Stipended internships for both graduate and upper level undergraduate students with an expressed interest in aging issues. dams.Haikiess • Past interns addressed such issues as nursing home quality; religion and aging; life stories of older women; and long term care financing. • Interdisciplinary - Students in humanities, social sciences and sciences, including pre-clinical programs, encouraged to apply. • Also leam about Glaxo Wellcome Long Term Care Career Development Awards for young researchers. Chances' are, you and many of your fellow students have never heard of Adams, Harkness & Hill (AH&H), We're a full-service, Boston-based investment bank with a nationwide focus on YOU ARE INVITED TO FIND OUT MORE! emerging growth companies in the most dynamic industry sectors - from 1999 Leadership Program Interns and Mentors including, technology, healthcare and healthy living/consumer. and Glaxo Wellcome Awardees Due to our focused approach, the AH&H investment bank­ ing associate is given the opportunity for unmatched responsibili­ ty and exposure right from the beginning. You'll work closely with Thursday, November 4 key players inside and outside of our firm, providing financial as 5:00 - 6:00 pm well as strategic guidance every step of the way. Room E, Searle Center To learn more about the what, when, where, why and of course, who Duke University Medical Center Library of Adams, Harkness & Hill, visit us on Nov. 4, 6:15 PM atthe Faculty Lounge at the Fuqua School of Business. For more information visit Light Refreshments our website atwww.ahh.com or call Susan Mazzarella at 617-371-3736.

mformatiun, contact; George L. Maddox, PhD, Director (919) 660-7542 Visit our website at http:llwww.geri.duke.eduihclltc2.html Adams, Harkness &Hill u _S4= THE CHRONICLE WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 3,1999- Williams' 25 points, 9 assists top Dunleavy, Battier lead Duke 128-point Blue Devil scoring spree over weak defense of Hawks > WILLIAMS from page 15 While Williams earned praise from S» BASKETBALL from page 15 This last week of practice was the best Blue Devils scored. the coaching staff and cheers from the though he fouled out" Krzyzewski Nate has ever played, and it was nice to "I think penetration is one of the fans, the team is still working to keep said. "That was after a week of prac­ see him carry it over to the game. Our stronger points of my game," Williams him in his place. Junior captain Battier tice. He'll keep getting better; he just veterans were right there." said. "When I kept penetrating my used his movie viewing over the summer needs to play and practice." James also noted how important a defender would slack off me, then I was to fashion a nickname for the fres'hman. Dunleavy then took a turn putting on role the veterans will play in the able to find Shane [Battier] and Mike "You've got to bust the freshmen's a show of his own, as he buried a three upcoming season. [Dunleavy], and I'd get open looks. bubble a little bit when they come in," from the left corner. On the following "We have to be vocal out there and When I get the open looks I'll knock it Battier said. "Senior year, everyone was defensive series, he stole the ball on the show, as well as tell, the guys what's down, that's no problem." calling [Williams] the greatest thing baseline, drove the floor and found Nate going on," he said. "Even though the Williams' nine assists look good in since sliced bread. Jason sort of reminds James on the break for the crowd-pleas­ freshmen are great players, they don't the box score, but numbers alone cannot me of Mini-Me from Austin Powers, so ing slam dunk, making the score 90-47. know exactly what to expect and don't describe the fashion in which many of it's a fitting nickname." The Blue Devils opened their largest know what Duke basketball is about yet. them came. The most spectacular of his lead at 118-59 when Williams drove the "It is important for us every night to assists came with nine minutes remain­ OUKE VS. FIVE-STAR lane for a lay-up with 4:34 remaining. go out there and set the tone, so they ing in the second half. While this was the first real game can follow our lead." Dunleavy hit Williams on a fast- experience for the Duke freshmen, they Battier continued to show off his Civile offensive game last night against, the break, Williams dribbled, then pulled .-a- .... a did not play much like freshmen. off a no-look-pass in the face of a Krzyzewski, however, took note of who Hawks. He netted 19 points, including defender, hitting a streaking Dunleavy. the opponent was. 3-of-5 shooting from behind the arc. Dunleavy dropped the ball in without "I'm not sure that [they've been] at the "I'm looking to score," Battier said. putting it on the floor. five-star stations working on individual "For us to be the best team possible, I'm and team defense," he said. going to have to be really aggressive While Williams seemed to pull off M- a-a-3\. .#••->.; and open things up for my teammates.... complicated maneuvers all night, he Among the returning players, James "I've learned to, what I call, 'lose him said that he does not look for more diffi­ had an impressive outing. The junior through the forest,' where I take my cult ways to get the job done. connected on 8-of-ll from the field for 19 points and grabbed eight rebounds. man all over the court to where he loses "Like my mom and dad and my "Nate really played outstanding," me. Then I'm sticking out there open for coaches always used to say, they gave 16 5-6 0-1 '5 "0 •' Krzyzewski said. "He played his role. a three-pointer." me the phrase K.I.S.S.," Williams said. 25 •• e-n-OO- 8\ • [ ;: "Keep it simple, stupid. i.]\\_r^. 27 ' 9-14 44 " ?•• 9 •• t.1 •.4-S:.- o-O;. 3" 0'..- Are you fiowtl al: "I can make a spectacular pass and it Dimleaw 2\ 7-12. 2-2 5 3 will give me the same sensation as mak­ H^rvalh 18 M 2-_ 2 2 1) Sitting on your butt?

ing the basic pass." _• j; ;t rita r 2) Clicking .stall? . Whether or not Williams' fantastic Simpsen play will stand up in the long run ': ".-. < If so. then you're a natural-born photographer, remains in question, but his early impact rotate 3 46-7/ 21-26 G5 . is clear. Krzyzewski acknowledged that ru-.iv.. your butt: Omlai:l the Ota-1« "I Aliza w lultill v...m Williams' early performance is forcing him to rethink the offense. ri. siiny. D-mail aag4vduke.edu OT c;d] 684.2663. "He's got some intangibles," SJfifS ..--•-.• ' .! • . m . • Bannister Ol, Wen- '• *i,i.raJ. 0-1 ,*&!_-. .... Krzyzewski said. "Penetrating-wise, I i2,Byersl-3 b have to get accustomed to coaching [him]. i ••••:avy3-7. RUDIHCK LECTURESHIP It's like coaching Bobby [Hurley]. He makes plays for you and you have to give him the chance to make plays for you." 3&BSIS- Row. Konwy. N_tl__ The Challenges Facing Israel at the Millennium: A Writer's Perspective

Celebrate Amos Oz Summer 2000 Abroad! Israeli writer and leading figure in the Israeli Peace movement

Europe • Asia • Africa Thursday, November 4, 1999 Australia • South America 3:00 PM Griffith Film Theater, Bryan Center SYRACUSE UNIVERSITY West Campus, Duke University Division of International Programs Abroad Organized by the Office of the Vice Provost for International Affairsj Summer Programs 119 Euclid Avenue and the Center for International Studies with support from the Syracuse, NY 13244-4170 Rudnick Family Lectureon Israel and World Affairs Fund. (800) 251-9674 [email protected] For more Information, contact Doug Sershen . 684-2910 . doug.shershenlsduke.edu http ./sum web.syr.edu/dipa/sumtner j Or visit the GVC calendar at http://www.d_ke.e-u/meb/CIS/calenelar/1999Al-99.ht_l *' • .a l'­ 'i__m il IIHIIIWWIT --«»——. .... ---• ...... ' WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 3,1999 THE CHRONICLE Langdon, Maggette lose NBA openers; Hill, McLeod shine From staff and wire reports points in the first quarter, including a 50- Hardaway had 32 points for the Heat, Hardaway,- Nick Anderson and Horace Former Blue Devils Trajan Langdon footer at the buzzer. McLeod also con­ who won despite shooting 26 percent in Grant in the offseason, struggled with its and Corey Maggette made their profes­ tributed five rebounds and two assists the third and fourth periods. new lineup under first-year coach Doc sional debuts as the NBA began its reg­ while playing 37 minutes. Hornets 100, Magic 86 Rivers. Corey Maggette played 22 minutes, ular season last night. Roshown Heat 128, Pistons 122, 20T David Wesley and Eddie Jones pow­ getting seven rebounds and scoring 10 McLeod, who graduated from Duke in Reserves Mark Strickland and ered a third-quarter run that helped the points on 5-of-7 shooting. Reserve forward 1998, scored a career-high 22 points for Clarence Weatherspoon sparked Miami Charlotte Hornets open their season of Chris Gatling led the Magic with 15 points. the Hawks while Grant Hill turned in in the second extra period as the Heat high expectations with a victory over Knicks 92, Cavaliers 84 41 points. Elton Brand and Will Avery overcame a 41-point performance by revamped Orlando. Larry Johnson had 24 points, his had off nights. Brand takes the court Grant Hill. Jones had seven points and a steal as highest scoring game in two seasons, tomorrow against New York, while Hill scored Detroit's first 13 points in Charlotte took control by opening the and cemented a late 14-0 run with one Avery must wait until Friday to make overtime. He also added nine rebounds second half with a 15-3 run. of his three 3-pointers to lead New York his debut with the Timberwolves. and five assists in a 52-minute night. Jones wound up with 24 points, seven over Cleveland. Wizards 94, Hawks 87 Teammate Jerry Stackhouse had 26 rebounds and four steals, while Wesley Shawn Kemp had 17 to lead Juwan Howard scored 21 points to points, including a 3-pointer with half a had 16 points, and nine assists. Bobby Cleveland in Randy Wittman's regular- help Gar Heard win his coaching debut second left in the fourth period to force Phills added 20 points for Charlotte, which season coaching debut. Duke's Trajan with the Washington Wizards. overtime. Christian Laettner had a dou­ was picked by several preseason publica­ Langdon played just two minutes, scor­ Former Blue Devil and current Hawk ble-double for the Pistons, scoring 15 tions to win the Eastern Conference. ing two points (on two free throws) and McLeod scored 14 of his career-high 22 points and grabbing 11 boards. Tim Orlando, which unloaded Penny grabbing one rebound. Mathematical Immunology Math 23&, Spring 2000, Tu/Th 10:55-12:10 While math e mat icai theory ofthe population biology of infectious I i/i Off Att Pizza* disease dates back at least as far as D. Bernoulli's analysis of Hopping only smallpox in the 1£Hh century, the combination of mathematics in § immunology and virology is fairly new. New advances in from midnight til iam every night experimental techniques and computational power have opened the^ door to remarkable advances in the understanding of biological I systems which would have not been possible without the use of mathematics. This course will cover some of these advances while I RESTAURANT & BAR providing an in-depth look at previous modeling work and the challenging problems which lie ahead. Now open til iam every Thunday, Friday, Saturday!

Instructor: Dr. Patrick Nelson BRI6HTLEAF SQUARE • MAIN ST. • DURHAM 682-7397 Contact: 660-2850, [email protected] i™ www.citysearch.com/rdu/satisfaction IM Basketball Officials Duke University Earn $7.50 an hour Telephone Directories 1999-2000 Here are the basics: • Go to the location ofyour choice for your directories. • After the distribution dates (see below), directories will be available at the Tel-Com Building. • Distribution questions? Please call 660-0091. • Recycling questions? Please call 660-1448.

West Campus For the locations to the left, directories Bryan Ctr, upper level will be available for all departments East Campus Student Union and students on: Levine Sci. Res. Building B Tuesday & Wednesday Sands Building November 9th & 10th Main Entrance from 9:00 AM to 4:30 PM Hospital South Basement Red Zone Hospital North PRT Lobby

East Duke Bldg For the locations to the left, distribution Lobby will only take place on: Hanes House Lobby 406 Oregon St. Tuesday, November 9th Computer Lab from 9:00 AM to 4:30 PM

Please recycle your old directories. THE CHRONICLE WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 3, 19!

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