February 3, 2005

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camp us

recess

Parents, profs voice concern about tou gh tenting rnln

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sports

Best of the rest: the awards the Academy missed

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Blue Devils head south to Miami for first-ever matchup

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The Chronicle V FTll

"1 100th Araiiversarv

THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 3, 2005

THE INDEPENDENT DAILY AT DUKE UNIVERSITY

Bush touts Social Security reforms by

Terrence Hunt

THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

WASHINGTON

President

George W. Bush challenged a hesitant Congress on Wednesday to “strengthen and save” Social Security, saying the nation’s costliest social program was headed for bankruptcy unless changed. Bush’s plan would cut guaranteed retirement benefits for younger Americans but would not affect checks for people now 55 and older. Bush, in his State of the

LARRY DOWNING/REUTERS

Bush said Social Security must be changed to save itfrom financial ruin.

ONE HUNDREDTH YEAR, ISSUE 87

THE SHOT FALLS SHORT Redick leads failed comeback at Wake

Union address, pledged to work with Congress “to find the most effective combination of reforms,” although he has ruled out some remedies such as raising Social Security taxes. Democrats said that Bush’s proposal to divert Social Security revenues into private investment accounts was dangerous and that there were better ways to fix the program. stood and Republicans cheered when Bush urged lawmakers to approve “voluntary personal retirement accounts.” Democrats sat in stony silence, underscoring the partisan divide on an issue likely to dominate the year in Congress. Democrats also groaned and grumbled when Bush said Social Security would re q uir& 4i^^Gallv-4»»b^r taxes, massive new borrowing or severe benefit cuts unless the system is changed. Bush’s speech spanned problems at home and abroad, but it was the first State of the Union address since the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks that focused most heavily on domestic issues. Despite Democrats’ criticism, he offered no hint of a timetablefor a troop withdrawalfrom Iraq. SEE BUSH ON PAGE 5

~I

by

Matt Sullivan

THE CHRONICLE

WEIYITAN/THE

CHRONICLE

JJ.Redick attempts a long-distance three with less that a second remaining, which would have sent Duke into overtime after coming back from 14 points down.

WINSTON-SALEM It had all the makings ofHill-to-Laettner. Patrick Johnson, a former baseball player, wound up at the baseline with 2.2 seconds remaining Wednesday night, and everyone in the house knew where the ball was going. J. J. Redick, who had just DU KE 89 unleashed WAKE \92 his third threepointer in the game’s final 2:14 to miraculously bring fourth-ranked Duke back to within three points of No. 7 Wake Forest, was ready for The Shot 11. But no sooner than Redick had received the heave, dribbled down the sideline and chucked up a miracle did the ball clank off the rim, crushing any hopes of a repeat of the Blue Devils’ heart-stopping win in the 1992 Elite Eight and the potential shot of the year as the Demon Deacons held on in a thriller, 92-89. “I thought it might go in, the way the things we’re going,” Wake Forest head coach Skip Prosser said. “When he’s shooting ’em from the 919 area code SEE WAKE ON PAGE 10

Prof's play takes center stage Pariz ade employee by

faces peeping charge

Grace Ha

THE CHRONICLE

Purgatorio, a new play by Ariel

Dorfman, distinguished professor of literature and Latin-American studies, will make its world premiere Feb. 4 in Reynolds Theatre. Under the direction ofDavid Esbjomson, it will run from Friday to Sunday during a trial run. As Dorfman observes the audiences’ reactions, he will make changes to the script before releasing the play to major theater companies. Although Dorfman does not workshop all of his plays, he had a suspicion that Purgatorio would need it. “[A play] is not real until actors say it,” he said. He hopes to see how the ideas and the themes within his play are accepted among the Duke community, a group he esteems as informed and astute. “It’s an ideal place to open a play which is intelligent,” he said, adding that he was particularly interested in how stu-

by

Sarah Kwak

THE CHRONICLE

Professor and playwright Ariel Dorfman's new play will debut in a trial run Friday. dents watching this piece will react to the violence and sex.

In the hands of award-winning Priscilla Lopez and Tom Hewitt, this mind-derailing piece harks the audience to introspective mediation. Following the actors

themes of Dorfman’s other literary work and theatrical pieces, it deals with the concept of redemption and forgiveness. “Purgatorio deals with these issues in a SEE PLAY ON RECESS PAGE 7

After two Duke students reported that a man was photographing them through a hole in the wall of the women’s restroom at Cafe Parizade, charges have been filed against Jose Adrian Gloria Tovar, a busboy at the restaurant, for felony secret peeping and misdemeanor secret peeping. At about 11 p.m. Jan. 27, two women attending a party at the popular nightspot went to the back room to use the single-occupancy ladies’ restroom. They were discussing a picture that was hanging on the wall when they both saw a flash from directly underneath the frame, one of the women said. Upon closer investigation, they discovered a quarter-sized hole in the

wall that connected to the men’s restroom.

The two immediately left the ladies’ room and knocked repeatedly on the door of the men’s room, according to a statement from the Durham Police Department. “The busboy answered the door, and we confronted him,” said one of the women, who both asked to remain anonymous. “But he was holding the door in such away that we couldn’t see the wall.” After a bartender working the back room bar intervened, the women entered the men’s restroom. They said that behind a hanging frame on the wall they discovered a large hole that allowed a clear view into the SEE ARREST ON PAGE 5


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February 3, 2005 by Duke Chronicle Print Archives - Issuu