insid e
resolution
Duke ranks> 27th on licensing Hst; profits remain constant
sports
JHH
Campus Council suggests publicity for alcohol policy
Men's soccer takes on Virginia Tech at 7 p.m. Friday
■
rpi
*
ll
———————
1
100th ArmiversaCrv
1
Ihe Chronicle! /
FRIDAY, OCTOBER 8, 2004
•
THE INDEPENDENT DAILY AT DUKE UNIVERSITY
ONE HUNDREDTH YEAR, ISSUE 36
Brodhead learns Duke’s path Students object to
imported benches
Kelly Rohrs THE CHRONICLE
by
President Richard Brodhead stepped out of the anteroom to his office and looked around the second floor lobby of the Allen Building. Somehow, at lunchtime, the president had found a free moment news in his schedule. “When we analysis get those salads, where do they come from?” he asked one of his assistants. ‘The Loop,” the receptionist answered. The president smiled and almost raised his eyebrows as he looked cautiously back at his office and the work that awaited him at his desk. “I know where that is,” he said, looking a bit proud of his geographical knowledge. He informed his staff that on this beautiful Wednesday he was going to dash to lunch at the student hangout. “I’ll be back in 15 minutes,” he said. Much of what the campus knows about the man colleagues all describe as clever and thoughtful, energizing and directive, stems from small,
Kelly Rohrs THE CHRONICLE
by
WEIYITAN/THE CHRONICLE
President Richard Brodhead answers questions about the Palestine Solidarity Movement conference, one of the most controversial issues ofhis tenure thus far. spontaneous decisions made at moments like this one. Brodhead has regularly wandered about the Duke community, at football games and tailgates as well as a plethora of official meet-and-greets. But the small talk and humor are more than
just schmoozing.
One hundred days after he took charge of the University, a first draft ofßrodhead’s Duke is beginning to emerge from the multitude of meetings and the periodic crises that greet the president each day. He has a
new benches, said they felt blindsided by the plans. “We were all really angry about it. It seemed like it was just being brought upon us without any no-
When students troop back to campus after fall break, they will find four new benches—imported across the Atlantic Ocean tice,” junior Jonathan Agudelo from Spain—adorning the Main said. “I would really like to know Quadrangle. Many students, howjust why they’d do this.” ever, are bemoaning the lack of Several administrators and students suggested that communicainput they had in the decision. The benches will be cemented tion leading up to the decision into the ground, preventing stuwas inadequate. dents from burning them in bas‘To my knowledge, there was ketball bonfires. little to no student input regardBecause of the benches’ weight, ing the bench project,” said Deb they must be installed in specific Lo Biondo, assistant dean of stulanding sites that have already dents for residence life. been created and will ultimately Students will still be able to displace some of the student-built construct their own benches inbenches that have historically side the quads, but they can only lined the Main Quad, said Eddie erect benches on previously desHull, executive director of housing ignated sites on the Main Quad. services and dean ofresidence life. When the University purchased Students in Few Quad, the area that will contain half of the SEE BENCHES ON PAGE 7
SEE BRODHEAD ON PAGE 6
thefirsthundreddavs July 1, 2004 Mike Krzyzewski
offered head coach position with Los Angeles Lakers
August 2004 Duke agrees to host controversial PSM conference, citing academicfreedom
September 2004 4 armed robberies
on or near campus cause security concerns to rise
Sept. 18, 2004 Brodhead officially becomes Duke’s ninth president in a Chapel ceremony
Oct. 1, 2004 The Board of Trustees meets for the first time with Brodhead in office
Sophomore Julia Griffin relaxes on one of the student-builtbenches near Few Quad.
Student Health provides visitor parking vouchers by
Rachael Massell THE CHRONICLE
Visitors to Student Health can'tpark right in front of the Center, but they can now park in theclosest garage.
Parking and Transportation Services and Student Health administrators have decided to put a Band-Aid on student parking woes at the Student Health Center. Beginning Oct. 1, students can now receive free parking vouchers for Parking Garage I, off Flowers Drive. Both administrators and students view this as a stark improvement over the past situation, in which students either had to risk being towed from reserved spaces in front of the building or walk from West Campus. Under the new system, when students call to make an appointment, they will be informed that they should park in the
Medical Center’s PG-I further down Flowers Drive and obtain a parking receipt. Students can then receive a voucher from the Health Center’s front desk when they check in for their appointment. “The ideal situation would include some parking spaces closer to the center for students, but the vouchers are an admirable first step,” said Rob Saunders, former president and current community affairs coordinator of the Graduate and Professional Student Council. Graduate students have an especially vested interest in solving the parking problem, as they constitute a large portion of SEE PARKING ON PAGE 5