ALUMNI WEEKEND ISSUE INSIDE
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Friday, April 11,2003
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www.chronicle.duke.edu Vol.
No.
98,
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X
134
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Batters Up!
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AJ.
A.
THE INDEPENDENT
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The baseball team will take
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toric Jack Coombs Field.
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No. 5
on
Tech all weekend at his-
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-