June 10, 2010

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The Chronicle T h e i n d e p e n d e n t d a i ly at D u k e U n i v e r s i t y

THURSDAY, JUNE 10, 2010

ONE HUNDRED AND SIXTH YEAR, Issue S4

www.dukechronicle.com

Reconstructing Duke Football Admissions

yield holds at about 42% by Indu Ramesh THE CHRONICLE

by Taylor Doherty THE CHRONICLE

If the Bostock Group has its way, football games in Wallace Wade may be an entirely different experience. Chaired by Roy Bostock, Trinity ’62, the group is putting together long-term plans for renovating Wallace Wade Stadium. Construction plans—which are in the early planning stages—are part of an effort to maximize football revenue and modernize Duke’s facilities, said Executive Vice President Tallman Trask. The University needs to provide first-rate facilities to support a more

competitive program and increase the program’s revenue, Bostock said. “My view of the University... is if we, as Duke, are involved in an activity or facet of the University.... we’re going to be worldclass,” said Bostock, a former member of the Board of Trustees. “And we haven’t been with the football program, and we need to get there.” Overhauling Wallace Wade University administrators and Bostock emphasized that the Bostock Study, which outlines construction proposals, is a preliminary document.

The primary objectives for construction, however, have already been established: to “expand capacity, [create a] dramatic entry, create intimacy [and] increase premium amenities.” In its current form, the Bostock Study lists four phases of construction. The first project would add a combination of seats and offices and improve the concourse on the west side of the stadium. The second phase would remove the stadium’s track and lower the field 5 feet to add eight rows of seats—about 2,896 total. The

Although Duke received 11.6 percent more applications for admission this year, the yield for the Class of 2014 remained roughly the same as the year before. Approximately 42 percent of the 3,372 students admitted to the University accepted their offer of admission, Director of Undergraduate Admissions Christoph Guttentag said. Last year, the Class of 2013 had a yield of 41.5 percent. “We expected the yield to remain steady,” Guttentag said. “We did not expect a big move in either direction.” As the admissions office tries to finalize the freshman class, Duke will take roughly 100 students from the waitlist by mid-June, on-par with last year’s waitlist admissions. Two thousand of the 3,382 students waitlisted decided to stay on the waitlist, Guttentag said. This year’s waitlist was 30 to 40 percent larger than last year’s, primarily to give admissions more flexibility in a year with a record number of applications, Guttentag added. The University received 26,694 applications for the Class of 2014, the most in University history. “We were pressed time-wise, and by the time we got to the end of the admissions cycle... we

See wallace wade on page 9 See admissions on page 2 michael naclerio/The Chronicle

Princeton prof to head Officers in fatal shooting had natural sciences dept. non-lethal weapons on hand by Matthew Chase THE CHRONICLE

An accomplished couple will soon join the ranks of the University. Next month Robert Calderbank will become the new dean of natural sciences in the Trinity College of Arts and Sciences and his wife Ingrid Daubechies, will be a professor in the mathematics department starting Jan. 1, 2011. The couple comes Robert from Princeton UniverCalderbank sity, where Calderbank served as director of the Program in Applied and Computational Mathematics and a professor of electrical engineering and mathematics. When he starts at Duke, Calderbank will also serve as a full professor in the department of computer science, with

appointments in mathematics and electrical engineering. Daubechies was a full professor of mathematics at Princeton. Calderbank succeeds Alvin Crumbliss, who will serve next year as interim dean of the faculty of Arts and Sciences and dean of Trinity College. Crumbliss, Bishop-MacDermott chemistry professor, wrote in an e-mail that the University actively recruited both new faculty members. Calderbank, who was vice president for research at AT&T before joining Princeton’s faculty in 2004, said he and his wife had been considering Duke since Daubechies spoke at Duke in April. Daubechies gave the Annual Sponer Presidential Lecture and two speeches in the Gergen Mathematical Lecture Series. “It wasn’t that one of us was targeted and then it was found out that there was See calderbank on page 2

ONTHERECORD

“Hopefully people will see a slightly different vision of Africa than they might be used to,”

­—Professor Laurent Dubois on the World Cup in Cape Town. See story page 4

by Joanna Lichter THE CHRONICLE

Duke Police officers involved in the fatal shooting of the man outside Duke Hospital March 13 were carrying non-lethal weapons on their persons, Aaron Graves, associate vice president for campus safety and security, wrote in an email Wednesday. According to the autopsy report released Aaron Graves Friday, no weapons were found on Durham resident Aaron Lorenzo Dorsey’s person. Although it is unclear if the officers had Tasers on hand during the incident, Graves said Duke police officers are equipped with other non-lethal weapons such as batons and pepper spray.

Setting Sail University scientists turn the BP oil spill into a learning opportunity, PAGE 3

“Duke officers do carry less than lethal weapons... and we do deploy Tasers, but not every officer carries one on his or her person,” Graves said. “As to why the officers took the specific actions they did, this information is being obtained through the investigatory progress.” A single gunshot to the head caused extensive damage to Dorsey’s skull and brain, according to the autopsy by the Office of Chief Medical Examiner in Chapel Hill. Dorsey, 25, also had a laceration and abrasion on the inner surface of his lower lip. Medical tests did not find alcohol or drugs in Dorsey’s system. Dorsey was not identified as the victim until March 17. His fingerprints were sent by Duke University Police Department to the Federal Bureau of Investigation to confirm his identity. See shooting on page 2

Ned Crotty wins Tewaaraton, picked first in MLL, Page 7


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