April 11, 2003

Page 1

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www.chronicle.duke.edu Vol.

No.

98,

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134

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No. 5

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See page 13

DAILY AT DUKE UNIVERSITY

open

for Keohane successor KEVIN LEES

By

The Chronicle

Get your engines ready. President Nan Keohane will not step down for 13

dential

been named, Board

of

months and the

more

committee has

search

but

yet

committee chair vice

Trustees is

Steel, Trinity ’73, the group and has

chair

and

Robert

rapidly assembling

already begun solicit-

ing community members for who the ninth

presi-

not

advice

on

of the Universi-

president

ty should be and what qualities the next

president should have. A Search For

details

more

and

Begins...

tial candidates,

the 24

on

see

Campus.

West

The demonstration prevented

Chapel

students from

some

Thursday afternoon, blocking

to class

getting

on

and buses from

cars

approaching

time.

Police allow 30-minute by

statements

Nevertheless,

leaving

Drive

potential presiden-

12

page

ILLER/THI

ANTI-WAR PROTESTERS STAND shoulder-to-shoulder at the entrance of

protest

war

faculty

and administrators inside and outside the

University,

as

well

suggestions about the criteria

For

the search

the

using. Keohane’s

committee will be

will likely—although not

cessor

suc-

necessar-

and

ily—have top academic qualifications strong management the

ability

The

of

pool

experience,

well

as

relate to

to fundraise and

the University’s

who might fit

applicants

candidates

possible

already

are

ers

University suddenly resembled

joined together

insiders |

from

presidents

as

within

At of

chose its

own

Peter

candidate,

group that

meeting,

Judged

provost.

to be the

Rates

said

plan,

the

at

and

over

its

HI

1,335

$l9O

a

370

on

brought

handed out

move-

flyers

we are

the

or

police.

the usual business

saying

of

that there cannot

and should not be business

usual,”

as

their statement read. The sour

environment

turned

quickly

under the pouring rain

people

as

and the mechanisms of campus reacted to the

protest.

Buses

re-

ex-

and argument

cause

sengers

dropped

at the

off and

picked

top of the traffic

up pascircle

on

and See PROTEST

on

page 8

Bryan

the

new a

$l9O

s

costs and

Center

plans

parking

Services;

assistant director for Peter

Melissa

About 500 of those spaces will

will be open to the public for

parking. After to

questions

from the nine

that attended the

ganized by junior

meeting,

Donald Wine

individual project

as

his

for Duke

or-

leg-

Stu-

sloo*

much,” news

Reeve said.

two-

A

new

issues surrounding

at

the

in different fields

policy

gathered

for

a

five-level

Iraq at the Washington Duke Inn Thursday. See page 3

contain 558

certificate

and Sciences

included reports

changed

guess

that’s

for

fee.

a

be used to

lot

and year

ter

new

expenses,”

a new

she said.

go first

to

those

held permits in the Divinity School

parking

was

are

permits will

Garage who

for

the 2001-2002 academic

their spaces

lost

when the lot

eliminated to construct the

for

Interdisciplinary

Medicine and

new

Cen-

Engineering,

Applied Sciences.

Reeve

said, permits will be of-

that

fered to Duke

good

the Bryan Center.

employees

who

work

near

Although administrators and student

change.”

Bryan

re-

Center

parking

leaders

discussed

reserving

garage per-

will garage, scheduled to open in August,

journalism Arts

“I

if you don’t like

The *rate will increase to resident

really

spaces

offset permit costs. “Obviously with

Next,

has

“Nothing

be

hourly, paid

said those fees will

deck, there

dent Government.

764

lot

5 p.m., visitors will be able

park in permits

parking and

Murphy, assistant direc-

services, described the poli-

and answered

Center parking

served for permit holders and 50 spaces

Reeve

of Parking

director

Reeve,

Transportation

islative

of next

small meeting Thursday.

tor for transit

CINTRAI CAMPUS

preview

permit

Bryan

and the other from Science Drive.

and Transporta-

a

from the

one

parking policy—in-

for

cy

be-

and

released

to

traffic; and

finalist

|e g a |

MOLLY NICHOLSON

cluding changes

page 9

Twenty-eight experts con ference

halted cars,

as

The Chronicle

students

happy

presidency

By

Harden,

***•

rate of about $l9O in 2004-2005

day

lives,

our

stood in solidarity unhindered by the rain,

and

Excellence,

on

their

Catherine

RID ZONE

as

implementation

See PRESIDENTIAL SEARCH

fused to comment,

wide-rang-

a

Protesters, who

year’s undergraduate

William Chafe, dean of the faculty

College

presence

standstill.

garage—at

polit-

provost.

the Williams

caused p.m.,

police and media a

to coincide

bystanders,

“By preventing

traffic between

heightened

campus

ment to

shouts from

be,

Members of Parking

Cost

by

served

was

essentially

planned

ing disruption of

penult

provost

as

he is currently very as

time of

plaining

traffic

praise from the faculty. Lange has publicly

a

12:10 and 12:40

Spaces

available

spearheaded

on

of arts and sciences. Chafe for

at

with

to

Iraq,

Wednesday.

tion Services

developed Curriculum

Building

presided

with his role •

group

provost, he authored the current

strategic

with

also

Lange

position.

and has

a

to be the

teach-in

a

BIUIIOMI

Spots

strongest internal

department and

the committee that 2000. As

staged

gathered

Duke’s first vice provost for international affairs

12:15 p.m.,

students, believed

Parking

John Hennessey, in

Lange has served

science

30

accounts

some

in

Brodie,

since 1999. He has also chaired the ical

to

president.

Lange,

faculty

many

a human

war

Undergraduate parking plan unveiled

Stanford University

provost,

ended

by

Drive

Chapel

walls.

own

Keith

which

of

protest against the

a

The demonstration,

last Wednesday’s Duke Student Govern-

James B. Duke pro-

a

psychiatry.

to become

2000,

its

arm-in-arm in

approximately

some

same

and chancellor of the

provost

University and was fessor of

history of hiring its

predecessor,

Keohane’s served

a

Lower

and from West Campus.

ment

Duke has had

half hour Thursday, traffic at

wall, thwarting all traffic and bus flow

emerging. The

a brief

intersection

stage

Manhattan at rush hour. Anti-war protest-

various constituencies.

those characteristics is relatively small, and

circle

The Chronicle

presidential searches, offer strong

recent

as

CHARLES LIN

By

the results of other

as

on

with

two

approved unanimously

was

Council

undergraduate

spaces

meeting,

which

also

admissions. See page 4

entrances,

See PARKING

A young child in Wake

County

on

page 7

became the sixth

victim of

SARS in North Carolina. There have been about 150

pected

cases

in the United States. See page 5

sus-


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