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Duke looks to stop slide against top-25 ACC teams
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FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 4, 2005
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THE INDEPENDENT DAILY AT DUKE UNIVERSITY
ONE HUNDREDTH YEAR, ISSUE 88
Could Duke yield the next Trump? by
Steve Veres
THE CHRONICLE
Maddy Sloan sat quietly, politely listening to a candidate give what sounded like a prepared speech. She looked down at his resume, noted a peculiar spelling mistake and gave the candidate what was sure to be the “You’re Fired” look. “He spelled his college’s name wrong,” Sloan said. The Donald would not be pleased. With her partner Aaron Roos, Sloan, a casting director for The Apprentice, interviewed more than 100 of Duke’s finest graduate students, faculty and alumni Thursday morning in the Bryan Center for the chance to be a contestant on the fourth season of NBC’s hit show The Apprentice—a reality program where candidates are rewarded for strong business acumen. On the show, contestants compete in various business-related tasks for the chance to work
about 300,000 applicati season nationwide, bu than fifty candidates ever to the show. Jeff Lovingood, a salesman whose wife Duke, understood the tiveness and arrived early, the first candidate inte “My chances are a li than winning the lotto good as getting struck ning,” he said. Sloan said the candid go to the next round an strong individuals with personalities. “Born lea* are not afraid to be who , are also good,” she added While casting direr fused to go on the reco any specific questions candidates, they said all are fair and are aimed at out the candidate “This is not a job Roos said. “Don’t be loosen up. If you naturally hosted by the rofessional StuHeather Dean, and a fifth-year in neurobiolo mgh she never got a chance to nterview, she felt the event was a success. “They were
by
Tracy Ke CHRONICLE
Scientific publishing is big business. As the cost of science journals continues to skyrocket, with some increasing by more than 10 percent per year, librarians like Deborah Jakubs, vice provost for library affairs, struggle to keep up their collections. Meanwhile, Duke professors have started to react by refusing to submit manuscripts to certain com-
mercial publishers who demand what they consider outrageous prices. A small but significant number of prestigious and popular science journals have increased subscription prices substantially beyond their costs of production. Even though Duke spends more than 70 percent of its annual $8 million library materials budget on serials, it has been forced to cut more than
Linking may end in 2006 Sophia Peters THE CHRONICLE
by
Aaron Roos, casting associatefor The Apprentice, grills a candidate during a tryout. great. They really loved Duke,” she said, adding that she overheard the judges mention there were several candidates they might want to see again. Casting directors were simultaneously interviewing for the newly announced show The Apprentice: Martha Stewart. Ac-
cording to an NBC press release, The Apprentice: Martha Stewart will follow a similar for-
Trump’s flagship version, but tasks and eliminations will be tailored to Stewart’s areas of expertise. mat to
SEE APPRENTICE ON PAGE 8
As journal prices rise, libraries struggle THE
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$300,000 worth of journals and databases from the Perkins Library System. Yet the demand for journals such as Brain Research, which costs more than $20,000 per year, remains because faculty members rely on these publications for scholarly research. “The commercial publishers know this, especially those in the medical arena, and have charged horrendous prices,” said James Siedow, vice provost
for research. “The university libraries are being gouged, pure and simple.” While non-profit scientific societies have resisted the artificial inflation of their publications’ prices, many of the most prestigious journals, such as Cell, are profit-seeking enterprises. It is becoming increasingly clear that libraries simply cannot SEE
JOURNALS ON
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a Campus Council presented a draft of a resolution at its meeting Thursday night that would abolish the existing linking system and significantly modify the current blocking model for Fall 2006. In an effort to better the sophomore residential life experience, the council has proposed a two-tiered change to West Campus housing: First, instead of a link from a dorm on East to a quadrangle on West, there will be a proportionally equal distribution of sophomore beds across all and second, the size of i block will increase from ■ eight to T6. The council, after discussions with administrators and quad councils, concluded that the current linking system was “solely a real estate grab” and could not properly establish community within the confines of the current West Campus dormitory architecture, according to the resolution. Eddie Hull, executive director of housing services and dean of residence life, told The Chronicle Thursday afternoon that discussions were still very preliminary. “There has ben no official decision made about the future of linking,” he said. The proposed process would allow students to block with friends outside their freshman dorms without being penalized, making all sophomores equal in the housing lottery. “We realized that the best residential communities are communities of people who want to live together,” said senior Anthony Vitarelli, Campus Council president. The proposed new residential model would give housing priority to juniors and seniors who want to return to the same quad—a move that promotes a dedicated presence of upperclassmen in each quad. New hybrid blocks of juniors and seniors will be allowed but will have a lower priority than all-senior blocks. Several council members took issue with assigning housing priority to upperclassmen returning
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