April 1, 2005

Page 1

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THE INDEPENDENT DAILY AT DUKE UNIVERSITY

ONE HUNDREDTH YEAR, ISSUE 123

NO DSG PRESIDENT DECLARED

Senator talks to

students by

100th

0

VP races all run smoothly

DS

by

Englander THE CHRONICLE

Dan

At the first event sponsored by the brand-new Duke Politi-

cal Union —a student group that plans to bring high-profile political speakers to campus Sen. Richard Burr, R-N.C., spoke to a crowd of about 50 students in the Bryan Center Thursday morning. Over danishes and coffee, he offered students a behindthe-scenes glimpse into how a bill becomes a law. He also outlined what he sees as the three most important issues currently facing Congress: Social Security, Medicare and Medicaid. In addition to domestic issues, he spoke at length about President George W. Bush’s foreign policy, which he says led to the easing of Israeli-Palestinian tensions, Syria’s withdrawal from Lebanon and the elections in Iraq. “Looking at the international landscape, the president has tried to change the way our Congress acts and how to inject our foreign policy into an everchanging world,” he said. Midway through his 50 minute talk, Burr received an alert on his Blackberry disclos—

E ELG DSG PRESIDENT STILL UNDECIDED:

EXECUTIVE VICE PRESIDENT

BRANDON GOODWIN VP OF ATHLETICS & CAMPUS SERVICES 51% BRENDA BAUTSCH

48.9%

Ryan Strasser

VP OF STUDENT AFFAIRS PAIGE SPARKMAN Emily Aviki Russ Ferguson Jesse Longoria Results of investigation to be released Monday

VP OF COMMUNITY INTERACTION LOGAN LEINSTER VP OF ACADEMIC AFFAIRS JOE FORE Christopher Chin

68.9%

REFERENDUM TO AMEND CONSTITUTION “Academic Expectations & Responsibilities”

31%

PASSED

VOTE FOR CLASS REPRESENTATIVES APRIL 12

Duke admits Class of 2009 by

Steve Veres

THE CHRONICLE

The weeks of waiting are fi-

nally over for the 18,062 high school seniors who sought placein Duke University’s Class of 2009. Admission officials mailed decision letters Thursday, but students were able to check their decisions online as early as 7 p.m. Wednesday. Duke accepted 3,479 regular decision applicants, yielding an acceptance rate of just under 22 percent—the lowest rate in more than a decade. So far, Duke has extended 3,949 ment

PETER

The outcome of Thursday’s Duke Student Government presidential race is still unknown, as the vote-counting process —tempered with scandal and investigation into an apparent campaign law violation—has been put on hold. Results will not be publicized until Sunday at the earliest. Candidate Emily Aviki, a junior, has been cited with posting a link to the DSG voting website on her AOL Instant Messenger profile—effectively a campaign violation that is prohibited by DSG bylaws. The Election Commission is prepared to conduct a 48-hour investigation into Aviki’s alleged illegal behavior; until the commission’s inquiry concludes, a winner will not be declared. Statements from Aviki’s opponents juniors Russ Ferguson and Jesse Longoria —may be released within the investigation period; neither Ferguson nor Longoria could be reached for comment. DSG officials refrained from releasing final voting numbers. Attorney General Elizabeth Ladner, a senior, said she “could not comment” until computer-tallied numbers are finalized. But Aviki maintained she was notified that she had “the most votes.” Aviki denied that she ignored —

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SEE BURR ON PAGE 4

Sarah Ball

THE CHRONICLE

GEBHARD/THE CHRONICLE

An admissions official files applications. Duke received more than 18,000this year.

SEE ADMISSIONS ON PAGE 6

SEE DSG ON PAGE 4

New SAT with writing debuts BY

IZA WOJCIECHOWSKA THE CHRONICLE

Analogies are to the SAT as the Spice Girls are to the radio—outdated. The College Board administered a revamped SAT for the first time earlier this month. Duke’s Class of 2010 will be the first to have it considered as a criterion for college admission. The new, longer test has dropped analogy questions but added a writing section worth 800 points, bringing the total

score up to 2400. Pretty soon, a 1600just won’t cut it anymore. But in terms of scores necessary for admission to Duke, Director of Undergraduate Admissions Christoph Guttentag said the writing section of the test will be considered separately and standards for the critical reading and math sections will remain the same. “The adding of the verbal and the math scores is a conSEE SAT ON PAGE 6


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