September 27, 2004

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insid e Duke profe: ssors dress in drag for pol litical advocacy

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professors, students recall

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Football loses fourth straight in home opener vs. Maryland

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100th Anniversary

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MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 27, 2004

mk WW* ONE HUNDREDTH YEAR, ISSUE 27

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THE INDEPENDENTDAILY AT DUKE UNIVERSITY

PSM lists planned speakers

Dan

Englander THE CHRONICLE

Competing with the first home football game of the year for attendance, members of Duke For Kerry and Duke Democrats organized a rally to get Duke students and Durham residents fired up about the Democratic presidential ticket of John Kerry and Sen. John Edwards, D-N.C. The rally kicked off the two groups’ political activities at Duke for the fall, said senior Andrew Collins, president of Duke for Kerry and former University editor for The Chronicle. Duke Democrats President Jared Fish, a junior, said although Duke has been labeled an apolitical campus, the students at Saturday's rally proved that political fervor is still alive and well. Many important players in city and state politics came to praise Kerry and Edwards, gripe about Bush and encourage people to vote. Rally speakers included U.S. Rep. David Price, professor of political science; Bruce Payne, lecturer in public policy; William Schlesinger, SEE RALLY ON PAGE 7

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Students rally for Kerry by

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Kelly Rohrs THE CHRONICLE

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Tlje Palestine Solidarity Movement released Sunday night the

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CAMPBELL/THE CHRONICLE

Students and community members gather on West Campus Saturday to support Sen. John Kerry and Sen. John Edwards.

Cate Edwards reaches by

Skyward Darby THE CHRONICLE

Cate Edwards is living out of a suitcase and running on adrenaline. The 22-year-old daughter of vice presidential nominee Sen. John Edwards, D-N.C., has been on the campaign trail for months, balancing appearances at events like the Democratic National Convention with a nationwide tour of college campuses. “I’ve actually left a schedule in

out to

my apartment of where I’m going to be over the next few weeks so that my friends actually have a clue where their roommate is,” Edwards said Saturday after giving a speech at a KerryEdwards rally on the Main West

Campus Quadrangle. Next on her schedule are stops at several other North Carolina colleges followed by a quick plane flight to Michigan for appearances and a “debate-watch-

college voters ing party” there Thursday night, when Sen. John Kerry, D-Mass., and President George W. Bush will go head-to-head on the issues at a debate at University of Miami in Coral Gables, Fla. Edwards said she hopes she will get to meet up with her parents in Ohio for a joint appearance in a few weeks. But Edwards quickly added that the constant travel, long SEE EDWARDS ON PAGE 7

list of panelists for its annual conference Oct. 15 to 17 at Duke. The eight speakers will comprise three panels: one on divestment—or the selling off of stocks—as a tool to end the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, a second about the historical background of the conflict and a third about garnering support for the Palestinian cause. Rann Bar-on, local spokesperson for PSM and a graduate student in mathematics, noted the organization advocates only nonviolent solutions to the lyaeliPalestinian conflict and all the speakers support that goal. “They are all on the left wing, but they vary in their views, and they’re not all political,” Bar-on said. Leaders from Hiwar said they were part of the organizing committee and are happy with the speaker list. Several groups have accused PSM of supporting terrorists and advocating militant activity in the SEE PSM ON PAGE 6

Police raise Undefeated Duke upsets No. 1 Terps visibility by

Jordan Koss

THE CHRONICLE

As the University bolsters its security programs in an effort to increase campus safety, additional police officers are noticeable all over campus. Officers from both the Duke University and Durham Police Departments cite this visibility as a key element of any strategy to decrease crime at Duke, but many students see the increased security efforts as misdirected. In a letter to the editor published in The Chronicle Sept. 13, Executive Vice President Tallman Trask wrote that DUPD would expand its pedestrian and vehicular patrols and increase overtime hours for its officers. In addition, the DUPD would supplement its own forces with

The men’s soccer team once stood atop the ACC, annually contending for and often taking home the conference championship. In recent years, head coach John Rennie’s squad had taken a backseat to rivals North Carolina, Virginia and Maryland, but the backDUKE -2 seat ohase mav be coming to an end. MARYLAND 1 With a huge 21 victory Saturday over No. 1 Maryland (5-2-1, 0-1-1 in the ACC), the 13th-ranked Blue Devils (9-0, 2-0) continued their unexpected resurgence. Freshman Michael Videira put Duke on the board six minutes into the second half when the midfielder’s intended pass from 25 yards out missed his target, but the ball squirted through the Maryland defense and found the back of the net. After another six minutes, junior Danny Kramer scored what ultimately became the game-winning goal. Freshman

SEE SAFETY ON PAGE 6

SEE M. SOCCER ON SPORTSWRAP PAGE 7

on campus Paul Crowley THE CHRONICLE

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SPECIAL TO THE CHRONICLE

Sophomore Danny Miller fends off a Maryland player during Duke's secondACC win of the season.


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