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
MONDAY, NOVEMBER 23, 2009
ONE HUNDRED AND FIFTH YEAR, Issue 65
www.dukechronicle.com
Pratt receives $1M gift from former chair
CDC finds 4 resistant flu cases at Duke
A packed Page performance
by Will Hyung
by Staff Reports
The Grand Challenge Scholars program has been endowed with a $1 million donation from the family of a late Board of Visitors chair. Susie Simon announced her family’s $1 million donation in early November at a Pratt Board of Visitors meeting, in honor of her husband J. Stephen Simon, Engineering ’65, who passed away unexpectedly in July. J. Stephen Simon was chair of the Pratt Board of Visitors and a former director and senior vice president of Exxon Mobil Corporation. The GC Scholars program asks Pratt School of Engineering students to address societal issues such as access to clean water. At the Pratt Board of Visitors meeting Nov. 14, Pratt Dean Tom Katsouleas and President Richard Brodhead announced the naming of room 115 in the Teer building as the “J. Stephen Simon Instructional Classroom” “My husband went to Duke and one of his primary causes in life was to work with Duke and Pratt,” Susie Simon said. “He thought very highly of education and always wanted to work for further education for young men and women. I thought of no better way to honor him than to give this to the school.”
Testing conducted last week by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention confirmed four drug-resistant cases of H1N1 influenza at the Duke University Medical Center. CDC tests, requested by infectious disease specialists at the Medical Center, found that four patients in an isolated unit of the hospital had cases of the virus that were resistant to the drug Tamiflu. According to a Medical Center news release Friday, the CDC is working with officials from the North Carolina Division of Public Health, the Durham County Health Department and the Duke Division of Infectious Diseases to research these cases. “Our extensive investigation thus far has revealed that appropriate infection control procedures have been diligently practiced on this isolated unit, and throughout the hospital,” Dr. Daniel Sexton, professor of medicine and director of the Duke Infection Control Outreach Network, said in Friday’s release. “We have experienced no illness among employees taking care of these patients
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larsa al-omaishi/The Chronicle
Students performed at Awaaz, the annual South Asian cultural show at Duke, Friday and Saturday nights. The event was sponsored by Duke Diya and filled Page Auditorium both nights.
See pratt on page 3
See H1N1 on page 4
Ceremony 16 DUKE MIA 34 honors former Bowl bid: Dead and Berry-ed homeless locals by Stephen Allan The chronicle
michael naclerio/The Chronicle
Jay Hollingsworth had some success against Miami’s defense Saturday, but Duke’s inability to cash in on red-zone opportunities gave the win to the ’Canes.
49ers visit Cameron in final pre-Thanksgiving test, Page 10
MIAMI — Duke seemingly had it all going for three quarters—a quick-strike offense, a defense that forced mistakes and a significant coaching advantage. But there were warning signs that trouble could brew in the fourth quarter. Miami running back Damien Berry, who had just one rush for one yard at halftime, ran for 47 yards on just six carries in the third quarter. And as effective as the Blue Devils had been in getting down the field, they were just as inefficient in finding the end zone with only one touchdown to show for five trips into Hurricanes’ territory. Those two problems, combined with two questionable officiating decisions that proved to be momentum-changing, undid Duke’s upset chances and bowl hopes as No. 19 Miami scored 21 unanswered points in the final period of a 34-16 victory Saturday
Success can be defined in many ways. Terry Allebaugh, executive director of Housing for New Hope, defines it as having your name on a lease. Allebaugh and others celebrated the success of three formerly homeless Durham residents yesterday at the Chapel. William Hawkins, Brian McLendon and Trico Newton all completed one-year residencies in the transitional housing programs run by Housing for New Hope, a non-profit organization that works to end homelessness in Durham. Hawkins and McLendon graduated from the program’s Phoenix House, and Newton from Dove House. All three are now living independently. Attendees of the close-knit gathering included Housing for New Hope board members and staff, current members of the Phoenix and Dove houses,
See miami on page 9
See homeless on page 4
by Maggie Love The chronicle
ONTHERECORD
“To represent Duke and put Duke back on the national scene has been an honor.”
—Men’s soccer player Cole Grossman. See story page 6
Smart Home celebrates its second year anniversary, Page 3