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WEDNESDAY, MARCH 30, 2005
THE INDEPENDENT DAILY AT DUKE UNIVERSITY
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ONE HUNDREDTH YEAR, ISSUE 121
Academic measure on ballot by
Seyward Darby THE CHRONICLE
After Duke Student Government unanimously passed the
measure March 9, a constitutional amendment referendum that addresses several aspects of undergraduate academic life will come before the student body for ap-
proval Thursday. If passed, the Academic Expectations and Responsibilities referendum will amend Section 2 of the DSG Constitution to include seven broad “expectations” students should have with regard to their undergraduate academic experience. The expectations include a strong intellectual community, freedom from bias, mutual respect between students and faculty, an atmosphere of honesty, quality advising, access to academic facilities and increased flexibility for students who need to make up exams or assignments. Sophomore Senator Joe Fore, the amendment’s author and a candidate for vice president of academic affairs in Thursday’s DSG executive elections, said the measure unifies SEE REFERENDUM ON PAGE 8
Longoria promises Lt. Gov. lauds women's progress more responsive DSG by
by
Andrew Gerst THE CHRONICLE
A new commitment to finding the pulse of the student body tops presidential candidate Jesse Longoria’s agenda for Duke Student Government. “I’ve seen a lot of areas where I feel like change could be made to benefit the school,” said Longoria, a junior and biomedical engineering major. “I want to be in the role to set the agenda for DSG to help initiate the change—change based on student input.” Specific measures Longoria said he would like to pursue include better dining options on East Campus, an opt-out professor evaluation system, healthier
BROOKS FICKE/THE CHRONICLE
Candidate Jesse Longoria hopes to increase student involvement in DSG.
relationships between students and campus police, support for student initiatives such as the SEE LONGORIA ON PAGE
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Englander THE CHRONICLE
Dan
As part of Women’s History Month activities on campus, North Carolina Lt. Gov. Beverly Perdue came to Duke Tuesday to deliver a speech entitled “Women, Leadership and Public Service.” The daughter ofa West Virginian coal miner, Perdue learned early that education was the only way out of her poverty-ridden town. The hard worker in high school went on to attend the University of Kentucky before earning a master’s degree and a Ph.D. In a state where few women were trying to make it big in politics in the early 1980s, Perdue met resistance. “When I told [male politicians] I wanted to run for office, they looked at me like I’d fallen off the turnip
truck,” she said of her decision
to run for the N.C. House of
Representatives. After serving in the House, Perdue rose through the ranks of N.C. state government. In 2000, she became the second-ranking public official behind Gov. Mike Easley and the first woman to earn that position. Perdue warned young women about taking their rights for granted and encouraged them to learn about the history of the women’s rights movement. “Truth be told it’s important to have this kind of time forfolks to think about how far we’ve come,” Perdue said. She also said the women’s rights movement has a long way to go before women and men have the same opportunities and enjoy equal pay. “Every time a
PETER
GEBHARD/THE CHRONICLE
North Carolina Lt. Governor Beverly Perdue speaks about being a woman in government on East Campus Tuesday. guy gets paid a dollar with the same education at the same job, I SEE LT. GOVERNOR ON PAGE
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