May 24, 2001

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As deadline nears, wage talks go on

Duke leads after 2nd round ends By PAUL DORAN

� The University and the mainte-

The Chronicle

nance workers’ union continue to argue over issues of pay, sick leave and retirement benefits.

HOWEY-IN-THE-HILLS, Fla.—An

old golf course tucked into the Florida countryside that IS rumored to have at one time been a hideout of gangster A1 Capone carries a signature 17th hole known as the Devil’s Delight. And delight is what the women’s golf team has found there—the El Campeon golf course at the Mission Inn Golf Resort, where the Blue Devils entered the third day of the NCAA championships tied for the lead. The No. 1 ranked and top-seeded Blue Devils are knotted on the leader board with Oklahoma State as both teams shot 16-underpar. “I’m happy with our results after the first two days,” coach Dan Brooks said before his Blue Devils took the See WOMEN’S GOLF on page 22 �

By DAVE INGRAM The Chronicle

VIRADA NIRAPATHPONGPORN sits at 1-over par going into today’s third round of the NCAA championships. Duke took the lead in the tournament yesterday.

With the contract between the University and its maintenance workers set to expire at midnight tonight, talks over wages and benefits appear to be headed down to the wire. Officials with the International Union of Operating Engineers Local 465 have scheduled a 5 p.m. meeting today to act on any proposals from the University, but representatives of both parties have said that they do not know if they will reach an agreement in time. See LABOR on page 8 l»-

Wasiolek to take interim dean job From staff reports

Interim Vice President for Student Affairs Jim Clack will announce today that Sue Wasiolek, assistant vice president for student affairs, will serve as interim dean of student development. Wasiolek will assume those duties—in addition to her current resposibilities—after Barbara Baker, who currently oversees the Office of Student Development, leaves June 15 for a similar position at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. “[Wasiolek was chosenl because ofher years of experience

and knowledge of the areas,” Clack said. “She is someone the staff

will trust.” Clack said that Wasiolek’s Wasiolek experience would make it less urgent for incoming Vice President for Student Affairs Larry Moneta to find a permanent replacement for Baker. “This will give him a lot of time to consider who he wants in that position,” Clack said. Moneta, who will take office this August, visited the University earlier this week to meet with administrators Wasiolek, Trinity ’76, has been with the Office of Student Affairs since 1979. Known as a leading advocate for students among administrators, “Dean Sue” has not missed a men’s basketball game in Cameron in 28 years, dating back

to her time as a student. As interim dean of student devlopment, Wasiolek will oversee residential life and community development, housing assignments, leadership development, judicial affairs and new student orientation.

Race

splits

Durham

THAD PARSONS/THE CHRONICLE

FIREMEN RELAX outside Durham’s Firestation #2 on Ninth Street, one of the stations that serves Duke. Soon, the University may compensate the city for fire services with an annual payment of at least $300,000.

Duke may pay city for fire service By JAMES HERRIOTT The Chronicle

The next time firefighters are called in during a bonfire, it may be on Duke’s tab. Following several months of talks, the University has tentatively agreed to pay Durham $300,000 an-

nually for fire services. Executive Vice President Tallman Trask said official Duke action awaits approval from the Board of

Trustees but that he feels the figure—which has been included in Durham’s budget for next year—is

reasonable. “[lnterim City Manager Greg Bethea] came to me

school board, page

and said... ‘l’m going to put $300,000 in the budget,’” Trask said. “I said Tes, as long as you understand the Trustees have to approve it and I can’t do it on my own.” Bethea said the Durham City Council must also approve any agreement, which Trask hopes can be made on a multi-year basis. In addition, Trask and Bethea must agree to a methodology for assessing Duke’s use of Durham fire services. Two payment systems have been proposed. Under one, the city would charge Duke based on the numSee FIRE SERVICE on page 17 >

5 � Men’s tennis falls to Georgia, page 19


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