rn
m .
kJ
nT TT|
■
|_|
I
*
1
M
B
W
■
B J
MONDAY. APRIL 16, 2001
J B
II I|
% %
CIRCULATION 16.000
I
%
I
W
T
"TT
I I I I
1I
V
|_J
I I
% ,
I
i
I 1 I j
n
Sportsmap Tennis sweeps through ACC The women's tennis team defeated Georgia Tech and Clemson this weekend for a season sweep of the conference. See page 5
THE INDEPENDENT DAILY AT DUKE UNIVERSITY
WWW.CHRONICLE.DUKE.EDU
VOL
96. NO. 133
Search for final dean nears end By JAMES HERRIOTT and STEVEN WRIGHT The Chronicle
Is there a doctor in the house? With deanships filled at the Fuqua School of Business and the Nicholas School of the Environment and Earth Sciences, eyes are turning toward the last opening on the Dean’s Council—dean of the School of Medicine News that the search is entering its final stages—with several finalists preparing to visit campus—came as
comfort to several administrators whose
OMAR QUINTERO/THE CHRONICLE
CAPTAIN HUNTER HENRY HUGS COACH MIKE PRESSLER after the men’s lacrosse team beat Virginia 10-9 with a goal in the Senior Day game’s final 12 seconds.
Men’s lacrosse slips past Cavaliers a grudge match between two of the >Wnation’s elite lacrosse
the Blue Devils to a 10-9 upset ofninthranked Virginia in front of 1,692 spectators at Koskinen Stadium. With the electric atmosphere of Senior Day providing a thrilling
teams, freshman Mack Hardaker’s goal with 12 seconds remaining propelled
backdrop for Saturday’s contest, Hardaker’s late-game heroics sealed
By NICK CHRISTIE The Chronicle
ii'kIn Vjr„;n.i.i
the win for 15th-ranked Duke (8-4, 21 in the ACC), which rallied from three separate multi-goal deficits, before finally defeating the visiting Cavaliers (5-5, 1-2). “Our team’s a resilient team,” Duke See LACROSSE in
Sportswrap, page 4P*
work has been delayed by the dean’s absence. The medical school deanship was vacated after Dr. Edward Holmes left Duke in September for a position at the University of California at San Diego. Since then the University has launched several initiatives in which the dean of the medical school will be pivotal. In November the University launched its Institute for Genome Sciences and Policy, and in February the Board of Trustees approved a longrange plan that, in many areas, emphasized interdisciplinary work with the
School of Medicine. See MED SCHOOL DEAN on page 14 I*
Men’s golf bests DCU debuts conservative magazine other N.C. teams By KEVIN LEES The Chronicle
� At the Intercollegiate Golf Tournament, senior Kevin Streelman placed first, leading the Blue Devils to solid positioning for the ACC Championships. By ANDREW GREENFIELD The Chronicle
After a season full of frustration and struggles for the men’s golf team, it seemed like this day would never come.* Duke won the Intercollegiate Golf Tournament held at Finley Golf Course in Chapel Hill, N.C., shooting a three-round total of 8-under par. Senior Kevin Streelman captured individual honors with a final score of 209, 7-under par. “We have worked so hard this spring,” Streelman said. “We knew eventuafiy aU that hard work would pay off.” Duke opened the tournament with its best first round of the year, recording a 6-under-par 282 to give it a one-stroke lead after 18 holes. After shooting a second-round 287, a 1-under-par performance, the Blue Devils held third place, only three strokes behind tournament leader N.C. State, going into yesterday’s final round. Over the last 18 holes, four teams had a chance to win, but it was Duke—which shot a final round 287 See MEN’S GOLF in SpOltsmap, page 7 �
In its inaugural issue, vative magazine New Sens women’s studies and atf Student Government, th» Local 77 worker’s unioi the Center for Lesbia Gay, Bisexual and Tra: gender Life, the Black S
dent Alliance, Counsel
and Psychological Servi admissions practices, the fice of Institutional Equit; SAT, North Carolina p schools’ history texts, Nan hane and Spike Lee. Not bad for the first
said publisher Martin G
junior. “If anything, I wt [New Sense] is rathe: stream,” he said. The magazine, which debuted Saturday, hopes conservative views on cam and national issues. New Sense staffers exp lish about three issues p and have been excited by the positive reaction to the new magazine. “We felt like there was no conservative voice anymore,” said editor John Zimmerman, a junior. Green, president of the Duke Conservative Union,
Students participate in love-in, page 4
�
said the magazine is only the latest indication of the
growing need for a conservative voice on campus and itrates conservative enDuke only two years
was established, motivations for creatzine was the desire to ehicle for mobilizing e opinion on campus, in the wake of heated ;his year over same-sex the Chapel and slavations. if the most distinct asthe magazine is its Even the title, New is a pun; Both Green limmerman hope to be a ice to the administra'ut in a playful way. lot of people take mselves and their causey too seriously here,” Zimmerman, a colum, for The Chronicle. ,*n hoped the magazine :en as an ideologue’s ■ approach to both campus and national issues, something at which both he and Zimmerman thought The Duke Review—the campus’ traditional conservative publication—had failed. “There’s a gap,” Zimmerman said. “They’ve gone off See NEW SENSE on page 14 !�'
Duke to distribute 3 honorary degrees, page 5