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
FRIDAY, DECEMBER 4, 2009
ONE HUNDRED AND FIFTH YEAR, Issue 71
www.dukechronicle.com
Trustees weekend: eyeing China and the world Trustees to discuss finances, health care by Lindsey Rupp The chronicle
is the richest, the most successful small city in China being 1.5 million [people],” Blue said. “The way Duke delivers education is the way China feels education should be delivered to China in the 21st century.” Pending Board approval, the Kunshan government will provide 200 acres of land at no cost to Duke and build the facilities for the Fuqua programs on the land, Blue added. Under the proposal, the initial facilities
The Board of Trustees will review the University’s financial situation, consider replacements for two trustees and discuss the potential effects of health care reform on Duke and the health system. As the University continues to try to cut about $70 million from its budget this year, the Trustees will hear an update on Duke’s financial state at its meeting this weekend. Executive Vice President Tallman Trask said he and Provost Peter Lange are on target to meet their budget goals so far. Trask added that with monthly retirement incentive decisions due Dec. 8, the Duke Administrative Reform Team has completed its major personnel projects and has begun to examine program budgets, including those for the units of Information Technology and Communications. Lange said that as units begin to see reductions in personnel from retirement initiatives, vacancy management and reductions in overtime, he will look to update the Board on how those units are beginning to adjust to smaller staffs.
See china on page 6
See trustees on page 6
Duke’s Board will consider groundbreaking expansion into China by Lindsey Rupp The chronicle
The Board of Trustees will consider the first phase of the University’s involvement in China at its meeting this weekend. Duke is considering building a presence in Kunshan province in two phases—the first is a partnership between the Fuqua School of Business, the government of Kunshan province and Shanghai Jiao Tong University, said Trustees Chair and Democratic state Sen. Dan Blue, Law ’73. If the Trustees approve the Fuqua
phase in China, the University will send a delegation to China to sign the phase one agreement and break ground on facilities for Fuqua programs in Kunshan in January 2010, according to a Nov. 19 slideshow presentation posted on the Academic Council Web site. The facilities would be ready for occupancy in 2011, the document states. “As people look at the kind of interdisciplinary approaches that we have to dealing with different issues, it’s attractive to people, and the government of Kunshan
Duke weighs consulting option Complaints prompt RGAC UNC, Cornell among peers who have hired Bain & Co. to revise menu by Will Robinson The chronicle
by Nicole Kyle The chronicle
The Residential Group Assessment Committee has decided to revise the section menu for selective living groups beginning in early January. The shift follows complaints from the Interfraternity Council and the Selective House Council. “This is going to be a collective process between [IFC, Selective House Council and Campus Council] to make sure, at the end of the day, we have a menu that’s most beneficial for all stakeholders and students—both unaffiliated and affiliated,” said Campus Council President Stephen Temple, a junior. Although the original RGAC scores will remain, there will be changes to where groups can choose to live. The scores determine the order in which SLGs can See RGAC on page 4
RLHS RLHStotorestore bring Saturday back Saturday cleaning,Page Page33 cleaning,
When the Board of Trustees Business and Finance Committee convenes this weekend, its members will be acutely aware of the steps that Duke’s peer institutions are taking to confront the challenge of a recession. Several of those schools have hired external consulting firms, just like a private company would do, to scrutinize management practices and identify ways to save money. The trend-setter for this approach is located only eight miles down the road from Duke. Holden Thorp, chancellor of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, announced last Spring that he would use a gift from an anonymous donor to hire management consulting firm Bain & Company to help UNC cut about $150 million, or 7.9 percent, of its $1.9 billion operating budget. The donor specifically requested that UNC hire Bain. “Public confidence in the way that universities are managed, is strained,” Thorp said in a video posted on UNC’s Web site after Bain completed its report in July. “I’m proud that Carolina has been ahead of the curve in addressing these concerns this year.” Several weeks later, Bain started working on similar
projects at Cornell University and the University of California, Berkeley. When Duke’s Board of Trustees last met in October, the growing trend was a focus of conversation for its Business and Finance Committee. “We did discuss the possibility of bringing in an outside consultant,” professor of biomedical engineering Warren Grill, a faculty representative on the committee, said in an October interview. “I think it’s something we will consider going forward.” But for now, the committee has opted to pursue a “ground up,” “grassroots strategic planning process” that will occur at the level of the University’s individual schools, Grills said. “There’s going to have to be some shared pain at all levels,” he said. The Duke Administrative Reform Team, created in February to identify ways to help the University trim $125 million from its budget over three years, will continue its own efforts to reduce costs. DART is headed by Provost Peter Lange and Executive Vice President Tallman Trask. Trask said in an October interview that members of DART will rely on its existing experience in cost-containment
ONTHERECORD
“Our aspirations in the last year or two certainly have not declined... but the capability to fund all those aspirations has.”
—Warren Grill, University Priorities Committee Chair on objectives. See story page 3
See consulting on page 5
Duke pulls the upset against Buckeyes, Page 7