June 17, 2004

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New stem cell therapy may save baby's life

DUKE UNIVERSITY ONE HUNDREDTH

DURHAM, N.C.

THURSDAY, JUNE 17,2004

YEAR, ISSUE S6

WWW.CHRONICLE.DUKE.EDU

Football star dies in weekend crash Matt Sullivan

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THE CHRONICLE

PETER GEBHARD/THE CHRONICLE

Jacqueline Walker, 40, was pinned under a campus bus Tuesday. She is currently in serious condition at Duke University Hospital.

Duke bus runs over employee Paul Crowley THE CHRONICLE

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A Duke University Medical Center employee was in serious condition Wednesday after a campus bus ran over her left arm and both legs Tuesday morning on Trent Drive. Jacqueline Walker, a 40-yearold medical secretary in the medical center’s pediatric neurology

division, stepped off the campus bus around 7:20 a.m. Tuesday, falling in front of the bus as it headed toward Erwin Road. The front wheel of the bus rolled over Walker before the bus could stop. After the bus came to a halt, Duke Emergency Medical Service workers and members of Duke University Police Department used airbags to lift the bus, freeing Walk-

er and moving her to Duke University Hospital, where her condition was pronounced critical. The driver of the bus, Henry McNair, has been driving at Duke for 15 years without a blemish on his record. Catherine Reeve, director of parking and transportation services, said SEE BUS ON PAGE

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Micah Harris, a senior with an infectious smile to match his standout play as a defensive lineman on the football team, died Friday when he apparently fell asleep at the wheel driving through Virginia to visit his girlfriend. He was 21. Harris was an hour away from his destination ofRichmond just before noon, when his 1989 Volvo veered off Interstate-85 in Brunswick County, struck a tree in the median and burst into flames Sgt. D.S. Carr of the Virginia State Police said Harris was driving 10 miles over the speed limit but was wearing a seat belt at the time of the crash, after which witnesses rushed to the scene of the accident. “Passers-by saw the crash and stopped immediately,” Carr said, “but they were unable to help before the car caught on fire and burned up.” Carr could not confirm whether Harris, who had left for the weekend after summer school classes and a workout at

Duke, died on impact, but he speculated that the Poland, Ohio, native had dozed off on what he called “a very monotonous and boring drive.” Word got back to Durham Friday night, and the several dozen football players and coaches in town for the summer gathered at Harris’ off-campus apartment to remember the two-year starter known for having one of the most energetic personalities on the team —let alone the senior class “He was just the type of guy that you can put him to anyone and you instantly like the guy,” said quarterback Chris Dapolito, Harris’ best friend and roommate last year. “He was Just that nice, that caring, just a funny guy all around.” Even at 6-foot-4 and 235 pounds, Harris blended into the student body and became very well-liked among athletes and non-athletes alike—jamming on his acoustic guitar in the dorms, singing and dancing SEE HARRIS ON PAGE 9

Admissions figures echo Class of 2007 Paul Crowley THE CHRONICLE

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Nearly four out of every five high school seniors who applied to be a member of Duke’s Class of 2008 had to make other plans for the fall. But preliminary numbers describing the 81st class to matriculate at the University reveal a handful of interesting trends—many of them continuations of patterns observed in years past. Director of Undergraduate Admissions Christoph Gutreleased statistics indicating that the Class of 2008 will be very simr

atentag

The new viewbook has drawn more applicants in the past two years.

ilar to its immediate predecessor. The Office of Undergraduate Admissions handled 16,714 applications this year. “[lt was] as close as we can be to the

16,719 applications processed in 2003,” Guttentag said. ‘This year was a lot like last

year,” he said. “[The applicants] really caught our attention last

year; it’s a little harder to improve upon that. Still, I’d hate for anyone to be disappointed with this class.” The past two years have constituted a significant bump in application numbers, an increase Guttentag credits to a colorful new viewbook which premiered in 2002. Of the thousands of applicants, only 3,780 were admitted, SEE ADMISSIONS ON PAGE 10


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