January 29, 2004

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mi DUKE UNIVERSITY Ninety-Ninth Year, issue 87

DURHAM, N.C.

THURSDAY, JANUARY 29,2004

WWW.CHRONICLE.DUKE.EDU

Top brass gear up for

Carolina

especially vulnerable snow

to

,

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transition by

ice

THE CHRONICLE

es the previous week. Clark matched Edwards’ 12 percent and bested Sen. Joe Lieberman ofConnecticut’s 10 percent. Ever the optimist, Edwards said in a speech after the primary results were announced that he considered New Hampshire a victory for his campaign and pointed to next week’s primaries as his real time to shine. “Look at what we’ve done. This momentum is extraordinary!” Edwards shouted to a throng of supporters. “Now we’re going to take this energy and this momentum that we saw in lowa, that we have seen in New Hampshire and take it right through February third!”

Despite a remarkably high level of turnover in the senior administration this year, top officials said they are confident of a smooth transition when the bulk of the new crop arrives this summer. The lengthy list of departing administrators from the last two years includes many names that have long been associated with the University. President Nan Keohane, Chancellor and CEO of the Duke University Health System Ralph Snyderman, Dean of the Faculty of Arts and Sciences William Chafe, Dean of the School of Nursing Mary Champagne, Vice President for Institutional Equity Sally Dickson, Vice President for Financial Services Michael Mandl, Duke University Museum of Art Director Michael Mezzatesta, Assistant Vice President for Administration Dan Rodas, Associate Vice President for Auxiliary Services Joe Pietrantoni and Director of Facilities Management Jerry Black have all either left or are on their way out. With the Dec. 31, 2003, conclusion of the Campaign for Duke, Senior Vice President for Alumni Affairs and Development John Piva’s future plans are unknown. This tremendous transition has already begun, with President-elect Richard Brodhead ofYale University and George McLendon of Princeton University leading the infusion of administrators from the Ivy League and elsewhere who have been enlisted to replace the old guard. Vice President for Financial Services Hof Milam and Vice President

SEE EDWARDS ON PAGE 7

SEE TRANSITION ON PAGE 7

Davis Ward

THE CHRONICLE

This past weekend’s winter storm

dropped three inches of snow, half an inch of sleet and a layer of frozen rain an eighth of an inch thick. The mix of wintry elements congealed into a white, opaque ice, leaving many roads dangerous and much of North Carolina in a temporary paralysis. Though North Carolina’s winters are generally weak compared to those of northern and mountain states, when winter storms hit the Tarheel State, they hit hard—putting classes, meetings and appointments on hold. Authorities have a number of theories for the state’s vulnerability to winter weather. North Carolina’s geography plays a key role in its winter weather battles, said Jeff Orrock, the warning coordinator for the National Weather Service in Raleigh. During the winter, warm, moist air from the Atlantic Ocean and the Gulf ofMexico collides with cold fronts from the North. These meteorological conditions make North Carolina especially vulnerable to freezing rain and sleet, which form ice on the ground, he said. ‘lt’s not really snow that causes the big problems,” he noted. “Ice is a big problem, and there’s not a whole lot you can do about it.... Everybody is really at the mercy of theweather until the weather improves.” SEE SNOW ON PAGE 6

Andrew Collins

JEFF MITCHELL/REUTERS

John Edwards gives a double-thumbs-up in New Hampshire Tuesday.

Edwards needs S.C. to keep momentum by

Seyward Darby THE CHRONICLE

After a whirlwind week of rallies in

high school gyms, coffee shop pit stops

and town hall meetings, Sen. John Edwards of North Carolina wrapped up his campaign for the New Hampshire democratic presidential primary Tuesday night, finishing in a virtual tie for third place with retired Army Gen. Wesley Clark. Edwards finished with just 12 percent of the vote, well behind Sen. John Kerry of Massachusetts, who garnered 39 percent to pick up his second win of the primary season. Former Vermont governor Howard Dean also topped Edwards with 26 percent of the vote after lagging behind him by 12 points in the lowa caucus-

Duke battles FSU tonight by

Jason Strasser

THE CHRONICLE

CHRONICLE FILE PHOTO

The Florida State Seminoles will return to Cameron Indoor Stadium Thursday to face off against the Duke Blue Devils... and the Cameron Crazies.

The giant slayers have arrived Florida State (14-5, 3-3 in the ACC), fresh off recent victories over then-No. 7 Wake Forest and former No. 11 North Carolina, will try to complete the hat trick Thursday in Durham against No. 1 Duke (16-1, 5-0). Seminoles’ head coach Leonard Hamilton, who has pumped new life into his program, understands the magnitude of the task. “In all my years of coaching, I've never been a part of a scenario where your team is on the rise and you play the [seventh]-

ranked team, the [loth]- ranked team, and then have a chance to go play the No. 1-ranked team all in succession,” Hamilton told Tampa Bay Online. “That's going to force you to really, really elevate your focus and intensity... Hopefully, that's what will help us understand what we have to do and hopefully it's something that will carry over for the rest of the year.” But as impressive as FSU has been in recent weeks, this has been the year of the Blue Devil. Duke comes into the game with its 36-game home winning streak intact, and having obliterated

Georgetown in front of a sold out MCI center 85-66 Saturday. Chris

Duhon and Shelden Williams highlighted the contest for the Blue Devils, scoring 17 and 26

points, respectively.

‘Those two guys work together,” Duke head coach Mike Krzyzewski said to the Washington Post. “Duhon hit a couple of threes that gave us a working margin, and then all of a sudden, he'd go right in to Shelden, and Shelden produced. He was really strong with the ball, and he finished. You should shoot a high SEE FSU ON PAGE 16


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