November 09, 2000

Page 1

INSIDE: ACC Basketball Preview

The Chronicle

Moving on The women's soccer team, led by Gwendolyn Oxenham, advanced with a 3-1 NCAA tournament win over Furman yesterday. See page 15

Two da s in, still no winner

More than 19,000 votes thrown out in controversial Fla. voting district By RICHARD BERKE

N.Y. Times News Service

For the first time in more than a century, the winner of a presidential election remained unknown a full day after the polls closed as Texas Gov. George W.

Bush and Vice President A1 Gore dispatched teams of high-powered lawyers to Florida Wednesday to supervise a recount upon which their White House dreams now rest. The fate of the two foes appeared to ride on the verdict in Florida, where an incomplete vote count found that Bush was leading Gore by 1,784 votes, an ex-

traordinarily narrow margin in a nationwide race in which more than 96 million people voted. His lead in Florida was 0.03 percent of the votes cast there. Florida Secretary of State Katherine Harris said she would likely declare a winner by the close of business Thursday after a recount of the voting. But it was far from certain that the matter would be resolved swiftly. Even if Florida’s 25 electoral votes are delivered to Bush, Democrats suggested they would press forward with complaints about voting irregularities there. Some Democrats in Palm Beach, for example, called for a new election, saying the punch-card ballot was so perplexing that people mistakenly voted for Pat Buchanan instead of Gore. Late last night, Florida elections officials revealed that 19,120 ballots in this district’s presidential race were tossed out before they were counted because they contained votes for more than one candidate. In addition, election officials in other See ELECTION on page 9 >

PAUL RICHARDS/AFP PHOTOS

MICHAEL

NELSON/AFP PHOTOS

THE PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATES continued to sweat it out yesterday as Florida’s votes were recounted. Each candidate made a short appearance with his running mate and delivered a statement to the media, announcing the team he would send to supervise in the deciding state.

Closeness, not victor, represents election’s legacy By STEVEN WRIGHT The Chronicle

While most Americans sit on the edge of their seats awaiting the final declaration from Tallahassee of who will be the 43rd President of the United States, some distinguished University scholars said the campaign and election process itself may be more important than the actual outcome.

With the results of the national elec-

tions hinging upon a few thousand votes

in Florida, social scientists said this election will serve as a great topic of study and debate for future Americans. One of the most likely topics of discussion for the next several months will be the electoral system. With the strong possibility that Vice President A1 Gore will win the popular vote, yet lose the election, some scholars predict that this will cause citizens to question the method by whichAmericans elect their president.

“I think this may make people rethink the purpose of the Electoral College,” said John Transue, a lecturer in political science. “If it were to be abolished, some small states would never be visited. States like California and New York would receive the overwhelming attention.” While scholars agree that the validity of the Electoral College will be called into question, Assistant ProfesSee ANALYSIS on page 8 P-

Dedicated teacher, thoughtful colleague dies at 36 By TESSA LYONS The Chronicle

Nancy Staudenmayer, a dedicated academic and innovative teacher, died this week at her home in Durham. She was 36 Although the assistant pro-

fessor of management at the Fuqua School of Business had suffered from a long-term illness, her death came as a surprise to many of her colleagues. Staudenmayer, a New York native. Colleagues described her as a focused scholar with

much potential. “Doing research and teaching Nancy Staudenmayer was the absolute center of her life, and she was very, very good at them,” said Sim Sitkin, an associate professor at Fuqua. Sitkin and Staudenmayer co-chaired the schools

distinguished speaker series, worked with each other

on a number of administrative projects and were plan-

ning to begin research together. After not hearing from Staudenmayer earlier this week, her family began to worry and contacted the Durham Police Department to investigate. On Tuesday, police found her dead in her home. A police spokesperson said she died of natural causes. Staudenmayer’s illness—the details of which she kept private, even from her friends—did not stop her from successfully overcoming the obstacles that junior faculty face. “We are very sad about the loss of Nancy. She has been a wonderful colleague,” said Gerry DeSanctis, a professor at Fuqua and a friend of Staudenmayer. “Junior faculty have a lot of pressure to do many things: to do their own research, to achieve excellence in the classroom, to aid in the recruitment of new faculty, to serve on committees—and she worked extremely well at all of these.” Staudenmayer’s academic pursuits focused on problems related to product development, particularly on how businesses can overcome inefficiencies posed by dynamics among customers, testers, programmers and

other employees. Her Ph.D. work at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology’s Sloan School of Business was a comparison of how two major companies dealt with these types of problems. “Nancy didn’t pick something where she’d write a theory paper—she did a piece of empirical work,” said Steve Eppinger, an associate professor at Sloan and a member of Staudenmayer’s thesis review committee. “It requires maturity, devotion and seriousness that not every student has—which is why she ended up at Duke.” In addition to her passion for traditional academic work, Staudenmayer had taken on a number of non-research activities since her arrival at Fuqua in 1997. Colleagues said she was a key force in enhancing the Ph.D. and strategy curricula at Fuqua. “[Nancy] has been instrumental in the past years in expanding and enhancing the quality and breadth

within the school,” Sitkin said. “This has been a key part in building up the academic climate at Fuqua.” Eppinger said that the combination of StaudenmaySee STAUDENMAYER on page 9

_


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.