September 30, 2004

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THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 30, 2004

THE INDEPENDENTDAILY AT DUKE UNIVERSITY

ONE HUNDREDTH YEAR, ISSUE 30

County selects

ECE to revamp courses

interim

manager by

Kelly Rohrs THE CHRONICLE

by

Faculty are planning a complete overhaul of the undergrad-

Davis Ward

uate curriculum in the Depart-

THE CHRONICLE

The Board of Durham County Commissioners named Deputy County Manager Wendell Davis the interim county manager in a

special meeting Wednesafterday The meeting came two days after commissionnoon.

ers, in a surmove, prise

voted 3-2 to remove County Manager Mike Ruffin from office. Wednesday’s two-hour meeting was open to the public when it began, and more than 200 people attended. Twenty people, mainly Ruffin supporters, spoke on the floor for three minutes each. The board then moved into a closed session to lay out the terms of Davis’ contract. He will be paid a pro-rated salary of $140,000, and when a permanent county manager is appointed, Mike Ruffin

SEE MANAGER ON PAGE 8

of Electrical and Computer Engineering that is designed to revamp the way students think about problems in engineering. Starting in 2006, freshmen will begin their ECE curricula with a hands-on course featuring a project that will be threaded through four core upper-level classes. The goal is to let the theories of engineering flow from real-world products like iPods and medical devices. “This is much more a change in the way we teach as opposed to what we teach,” said Lisa Huettel, assistant professor of the practice in electrical and computer engineering. Under the current curriculum students often have to wade through several introductory courses before they get a chance to explore applications for any information. Faculty said students sometimes leave engineering because they do not get a chance to actually create useful things. “Ultimately what we as engiment

KATHLEEN KOWNACKI/THE CHRONICLE

Dr. Paul Farmer (left) and author Tracy Kidder discuss Farmer's travels and life experiences in Page Auditorium Wednesday.

Farmer shares by

Elizabeth Floyd THE CHRONICLE

The world-renowned infectious disease specialist has an infectious wit. Freewheeling humor infused nearly every breath of Dr. Paul Farmer’s speech Wednesday night in Page Auditorium, as he and Pulitzerprize winning author Tracy Kidder discussed Mountains Beyond Mountains, this year’s summer reading selection, which chronicles Farmer’s life.

Farmer made very clear from the beginning that educating freshmen was the focus of his talk. In between repeated goading of his student audience with insinuations that they had not actually completed the book, Farmer buckled down to the task: describing his experiences at Duke and encouraging students to appreciate their own. “Don’t be as blind as I was,” he said. “Make sure and take a measure of our own privilege

wisdom and be sure to use it wisely.” Farmer, Trinity ’B2, went on to describe Duke’s influence in his life. He traced back to his undergraduate years all of the interests that now define his work, from a fascination with medical anthropology to the Clinique Bon Saveur, a small hospital he founded in Cange, Haiti. “I feel a great debt to this place,” he said of Duke. Farmer SEE FARMER ON PAGE 6

SEE CURRICULUM ON PAGE 6

Northgate unveils plans for movie theater, plaza Mingyang Liu THE CHRONICLE

by

Officials at Northgate Mall announced 13-million renovation project last week to redevelop and expand die oldest mall in Durham over the next year. Anchor tenant Hudson Belk is scheduled to close its Northgate store in February. In the eight months to follow, the 102,000-square-foot department store will be split into two parts, with the top floor being renovated into a 10 to 12-screen cinema. The lower level will also be renovated and leased to one or two “junior anchor” tenants. In an effort to “turn shopping inside-out” the plan calls for the creation of a 33,000-square-foot outdoor plaza and the reconstruction of the parking lot in that area. The proposed changes will allow Northgate, located off of Club a

$

Boulevard near East Campus, to develop their indoor and outdoor venues to attract more customers, from both local communities and neighboring Duke. Talk of expansion started before Belk’s April announcement that it was leaving, said Gerry Boyle, the mall manager at Northgate. The new Northgate and other malls, including The Streets at Southpoint in southern Durham and Triangle Town Center in Raleigh, all reflect the new national trend to offer a more attractive outdoor setting “We had been working on it for quite some time because ofBelk’s departure,” said Ginny Bowman, the owner of Northgate Mall. “But [if Belk did not decide to leave] we would have made the changes anyway.” SEE NORTHGATE ON PAGE 7

SPECIAL TO THE CHRONICLE

Northgate Mall plans to begin a comprehensive renovation next year to update the mail's image.


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September 30, 2004 by Duke Chronicle Print Archives - Issuu