November 18, 2004

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THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 18, 2004

THE INDEPENDENTDAILY AT DUKE UNIVERSITY

ONE HUNDREDTH YEAR, ISSUE 63

DSG: ARAMARK'unlikely to excel' by

Duke Student Government served ARAMARK Corp. a 24-12 vote of no confidence Wednesday night, following a lengthy debate about the company’s “excellence” in the dining program it offers at its five oncampus locations. Senior Lindsey Mazzola Paluska and junior Dave Gastwirth, Duke University Student Dining Advisory Committee cochairs, gave an extensive presentation revealing survey results from a Nov. 1 to 11 poll of 436 students. The survey revealed that during the past year 93.4 percent of students felt that quality has remained the same or has gotten worse at the Marketplace, where freshmen are required to eat 12 meals a week; 72.7 percent responded in kind concerning the quality of the Great Hall. Students gave the two dining halls mostly C grades for quality. ARAMARK also operates Trinity Cafe, Subway and Chick-Fil-A, but those venues were not discussed in DUSDAC’s survey. DUSDAC recommended that the Senate deliver a no-confidence vote based on a lack of improvement in quality since DSG previously voted “no confidence” last February. The chairs described a failure to

Failure to evolve positively

The vast majority of students polled felt that the quality levels of both the Marketplace and the Great Hall have either remained stagnant or decreased.

.

Neglect of nutrition needs ARAMARK has failed to provide nutritional content information for the food it serves to campus nutritionists and to address DUSDAC's requests for healthier alternatives.

Lack of innovation DUSDAC has supplied the ideas for improving selection and variety while encountering resistance from ARAMARK to expanding selection in areas like cereal variety.

provide promised employee training ses-

Lack of training/guidelines Despite guaranteeing employee training when originally contracted, ARAMARK has failed to supply workers with adequate employee development and training.

Julie

Stolberg THE CHRONICLE

sions, a lack of innovation in menu development and offerings, a disregard for nutritional concerns and a failure to provide its “branded” specialty offerings. Kim Davis, resident district manager for PETER GEBHARD/THE CHRONICLE

ARAMARK District Manager Kim Davis speaks at Duke Student Government's meeting Wednesday night.

SEE DSG ON PAGE

7

International Vowell shares Incredible tales enrollment figures drop by

Jenny Bonilla

THE CHRONICLE

tion, we have not seen a decline in the number of international students applying to Duke,” said Phyllis Supple, associate director of undergraduate admissions. Gilbert Merkx, vice provost for international affairs, said the Class of 2008 is 8 percent international, the highest it has ever been.

As the popular Pixar animated film The Incredibles tops the box office chart, the voice of the movie’s teenage superhero spoke to a packed Griffith Film Theater Wednesday night about the quirks of forgotten American history and popular culture. Sarah Vowell, a writer, social commentator and voice of Violet Parr in the film, educated and entertained the audience while reading excerpts from her books. ‘The more history I learn, the more the world fills up with stories,” Vowell said. She used her own personal anecdotes to connect stories about contemporary America with the past. By accentuating her own eccentricities, Vowell drew her audience into her excitement for untold history. Her style is “brave and really funny too,” said senior Jenn Davis, secretary of the Duke University Union’s Major Speakers Committee, which sponsored the event. In one story, Vowell described how, as she was drinking her morning mocha latte from Starbucks, a variety of related topics, scrambled through her mind, such as imperialism, genocide and Seattle lifestyle marketing—all related to her simple cup o’ joe. While some of her stories ventured on the bizarre, Vowell managed to make historical idiosyncrasies relevant and entertaining for her listeners, urging them to

SEE ENROLLMENT ON PAGE 6

SEE VOWELL ON PAGE 8

Security rules, visa delays drive decline in applications by

Laura Newman THE CHRONICLE

For the first time in 32 years, overall enrollment of for-

eign students at American universities has declined, according to a report released Nov. 10by the Institute of International Education. This trend, however, has not significantly impacted Duke, which has maintained its diverse student body. “Speaking on behalf of the undergraduate popula-

VARUN LELLA/THE CHRONICLE

Sarah Vowell, who was the voiceofViolet Parr in the recent blockbuster hitThe Incredibles, speaks at Griffith Film Theater Wednesday.


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November 18, 2004 by Duke Chronicle Print Archives - Issuu