Thursday, September 5, 2002
Mostly Sunny High 85, Low 59 www.chronicle.duke.edu Vol. 98, No. 11
The Chronicle f I
g
1
Fall Concerts From Bruce to Spoon, these are the concerts that you just have to see this
semester.
See RECESS
THE INDEPENDENT DAILY AT DUKE UNIVERSITY
Duke tops college diversity list By WHITNEY BECKETT The Chronicle
Housing changes Duke Card access By MEGAN CARROLL The Chronicle
The next time you swipe your DukeCard at a residence hall, you may be surprised by a red light denying you entry. Unbeknownst to most students, administrators changed the DukeCard policy this year by eliminating in-house voting for card access to dormitories and stripping off-campus students’
entrance privileges to residential buildings. “I think the general feeling was that it was a safer way to do it,” said Fidelia Thomason, director of Housing Management. “We want to encourage community in the quads and on East Campus.” Students expressed confusion about when and where they can swipe their DukeCards to enter buildings and hoped the University would officially notify the entire student body. “The cards are our lifelines,” said freshman Jennifer Gurevich. “We use them for everything. We should know what it’s useful for.” On West Campus, students have access to their own quad’s dormitory entrances 24 hours a day. Oncampus students can enter other quads between the hours of 9 a.m. and 2 a.m. East Campus students have access to their own dorms 24 hours a day, but they are denied entry into other residential buildings on East and West between 2 a.m. and 9 a.m. As in previous years, students living on West and Central campuses are restricted from entering any East residential halls. Students living off-campus do not. have card access to any residential halls and can swipe their cards only at academic buildings like computer clusters and libraries. “They have chosen to live off-campus,” Thomason said. “They chose to not be a part of the residential community,” But some off-campus students, such as those belonging to selective houses and fraternities, still feel they are a part of campus life.
Duke University Emory University
90.36 86.82
campus.”
Provost Peter Lange said he was pleased with the findings, but added that the University still has residential segregation issues and that departments range in their level of diversity. Dean of Humanities and Social Sciences Karla Holloway said she would like to see more tenured black faculty and higher retention rates for black faculty. “While this is very encouraging, it does not mean our job is over and everything is okay,” Vice President for Institutional Equity Sally Dickson said. “It is something to be proud of, but that is not to say that we are perfectly diverse. What it shows is that we have competition, and other universities are trying to do the same thing. So if we slip a little, we will lose our ground and won’t be number one—which of course we always like to be.” Following in the next five spots were Emory University, Princeton University, Washington University, See DIVERSITY on page 6
Republicans chase Dole for Senate
R° om re °Pene d itB doors to the Duke community this week, featuring a name change and new menu options. See page 3
By LAURA BEACH The Chronicle
With the U.S. Senate primaries looming ahead on Sept. 10, six underdog North Carolina Republican candidates are pressing onward in their efforts to counteract the political powerhouse that is
Elizabeth Dole. Dole, who visited Duke last week, is the clear favorite in the upcoming election, having received public support from both President George W. Bush and Sen. Jesse Helms, R-N.C., whose seat Dole aims to take when he retires after five terms in office. Dole’s campaign platform, of which she spoke last Thursday in Page Auditorium, includes tax relief, trade enforcement to protect manufacturing, local control of education and strengthening of national defense. Mary Ellison Baars, president and founder of Duke Students for See REPUBLICANS on page 8
See DUKECARD on page 7
lUSId 6
Phe JBHE has ranked America’s leading universities according to theirrelative success in attracting, enrolling and graduating black students and in bringing black professors to their campuses. The rankings are based on i 3 quantitative measures of racial integration.
1
JENNY MAO/THE CHRONICLE
OFF-CAMPUS STUDENTS will see a red light this year when swiping their DukeCards at dormitory entrances.
Duke leads the nation’s top-tier universities in integrating black students and faculty, according to a new report in The Journal of Blacks in Higher Education. The study used 13 quantitative factors on racial diversity to determine the rankings of 28 of the nation’s most prestigious universities. The journal gave credit to “the sincere commitment of President Nan Keohane to racial diversity” but said there still was much room for improvement. Most notably, the University had the highest five-year gain in percentage of black students in the freshman class, which’ gained 7.8 percent to 11.2 percent last year. Its lowest ranking came in at ninth in percentage of black tenured faculty. “The high ranking does not mean Duke is a Shangri-La for black students. Serious racial issues exist on the Duke campus,” the article said. “Some observers have noted there is little overall interaction between many black and white students on the Duke
A new movie program called CFlix, available via broadband Internet access, will begin services this year. See page 4
The Fuqua School of Business started the new Center for Advancement of Social Entrepreneurship through a grant from an internationalfoundation. See page 5