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SB w. basketball Blue Devils travel to Tampa to take on South Florida, RAGE 10
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City Council likely to see little change
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Karl Rove to speak in Page Dec. 3
Duke drops 1 st-round match to UNC
Ali fills Stith's seat,
by
Caroline McGeough THE CHRONICLE
Right-wing political guru Karl Rove will speak on campus Dec. 3, political sci-
remains a wild card by
I
#
ence professor Peter Feaver confirmed
NaureenKhan
Wednesday.
THE CHRONICLE
“He’s one of the most consequential recent times,” Feaver said. “People who liked what he has been involved with and who didn’t like what he’s been involved with both would find it fascinating to come hear him firsthand.” Feaver worked with the former deputy chief of staff and chief political strategist for President George W. Bush while working on the National Security Council from 2005 to thisyear. During “A Conversation with Karl Rove,” which will be held in Page Auditorium, Rove will likely discuss his involvement with the 2000 presidential campaign, his career within the Bush administration and his perspectives on the 2008 presidential election. “This is a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity,” said Duke College Republicans Chair Sam Tasher, a junior. He added that he hopes students of all political persuasions will attend the
Last week’s re-election of Mayor Bill Bell and incumbent City Council members Diane Catotti and Eugene Brown in Durham’s municipal races leaves the City Council almost unchanged from 2006. The departure of conservative Thomas Stith, who vacated his council seat to run for the mayor’s office, and the election of newcomer Farad Ali, however, may have significant consequences for the city’s major governing and policy-making board. “[Ali] is a bit of a wild card,” said Kevin Davis, a close follower of Durham politics and the author of the blog “Bull City Rising.” “[He] has many of the same sensibilities that Stith brought to the Council... but he comes from a place where he has much more knowledge in the community.” Some council members said they hope Ali will be able to work with the rest of the council more effectively than his predecessor. “Farad is going to bring a lot of energy and a lot of good ideas... and I hope he’ll work well with others and participate,” said Catotti, “Frankly, Thomas didn’t do that.” Stith often cast lone opposition votes and publicly criticized his colleagues on contentious issues in his eightyears on the council. “Thomas liked therole thathe played as the SEE COUNCIL ON PAGE
public figures of
event.
“The requirement
to
bring someone
to Duke to have a talk is not that everyone
agree with everything this person has said or done,” Feaver said. “You don’t get a good education by only listening to people you agree with.” Although some students may oppose must
SYLVIA QU/THE CHRONICLE
The Blue Devils fell to theTar Heels 1-0 in the quarterfinals of the ACC tournament held in Cary Wednesday night. Duke lost to UNC by the same score in Chapel Hill earlier this season.
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Omelette guywhips up eggs, T-shirts by Ally
Helmers
THE CHRONICLE
Every morning, Marketplace employee Wallace Burrows offers
Marketplace employee Wallace Burrows said he applies the same philosophy to designing T-shirts that he does to making omelettes.
up more than just eggs with mushrooms and cheese—he serves up size-medium airbrushed T-shirts. Most easily recognized for his skills with a spatula, the Marketplace’s affectionately dubbed “omelette guy” also applies his dexterity to the world of fashion with his T-shirt company B and W Creations. “Our motto is, ‘Our only limitation is your imagination,’” Burrows said between a rush of breakfast orders. “Almost all of the designs are [the customers’] ideas.” His design book, which lies on the side of the omelette station,
SEE ROVE ON PAGE 4
contains both Duke-related graffiti and street-style prints of cartoons, pop culture symbols and basketball players in action. From caricatures of Tupac to SpongeBob SquarePants and Winnie the Pooh donning full-on gangster gear, Burrows’s T-shirts offer something for “anybody who wants to buy one,” Burrows said. “I try to make sure all my customers get treated the way I’d want to be treated,” he said. “I don’t know anybody who wants to get treated badly.” Burrows said he applies this philosophy every day, whipping up fresh egg batter and chopping vegetables from 6 a.m. until the SEE
ON PAGE
4
Karl Rove, former deputy chief of staff to President George W. Bush, will speak in Page Auditorium Dec. 3.