April 8, 2005

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resid encelife Campus Co undl suggests student advi isory group for RCs

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campus Minority recruitment weekends get mixed reviews

Olivers;

FRIDAY, APRIL 8, 2005

THE INDEPENDENT DAILY AT DUKE UNIVERSITY

ONE HUNDREDTH YEAR, ISSUE 128

UNC president to retire by 2006 by

William Holmes

summer reading

ments, and she also oversaw ex-

THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

CHAPEL HILL University ofNorth Carolina President Molly Broad, an outsider hired from California eight years ago to lead the system, announced Wednesday she intends to leave her jobby the end of the next school year. The 64-year-old economist will leave after presiding over one of the most dynamic periods in the history of the state’s 16campus public system. Broad helped push passage of $2.5 billion in voter-approved bond money now being poured into campus capital improve-

COURTESY OF THE DAILY TAR

Duke picks 'O5

HEEL

UNC President Molly Broad will retire by the end of the next academic year.

pansion of distance education programs and a rise in the state’s college-going rate. System enrollment has grown in her tenure by 30,000 students, to 190,000. “Serving the people of North Carolina and their remarkable university will always be the greatest privilege of my professional life and an honor beyond any I might have imagined,” Broad said in a letter announcing her decision to the UNC Board of Governors. “I thank you, humbly, for this rare opportunity to lead the men and women who comprise the oldest and finest public university in America.” Broad was executive -vice, chancellor and chief operating officer of the California State University System forfour years before coming to North Carolina. She was the third system president, the first woman and the first non-North Carolina native to hold the position. Broad said she researched the state’s culture, history and food to help her connect with lawmakers and others, but acknowledged that not being SEE UNC ON PAGE 5

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Seyward Darby THE CHRONICLE

Powerful. Vivid. Engaging Ambitious. These are just a few of the words critics have used to describe author Khaled Hosseini’s popular de T novel The K Runner, whu the Univers announce Thursday a; the summe

Winding up

The Durham Bulls opened their season Thursday Toledo Mud Hens. The score was tied at the top of the against the 10th when rain forced officials to postpone the finish until today.

for the Class An epic story of friendship and political turmoil that spans more than 40 years, Hosseini’s book chronicles the intertwined lives of Amir, the son of a wealthy businessman in Kabul, Afghanistan, and Hassan, the son of a servant. The childhood companions are separated when Amir and his father flee Afghanistan after the Soviet invasion of 1979. Years later, Amir SEE READING ON PAGE 5

Annoyed residents off East form new group Adam Eaglin THE CHRONICLE

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Students file into a party in a neighborhood near East Campus, whereresidents have complained about noise.

After years of battling noise, litter and other alcohol-related problems, distressed residents around East Campus have decided it is time to develop new responses to the ongoing disruptions. Members of Trinity Park, Trinity Heights and other local communities met at Asbury Methodist Church March 31 to suggest the creation of a new organization, Mobilizing Action Toward Community Health, that would focus on solving problems created by disruptive Duke students. Using the strength of a more organized coalition, MATCH’S aims are more ambitious than the neighbors’ previous solutions and include pushing for legislative change at the city level and using media advocacy to win support for their cause. “We have the right to live in a safe and healthy environment—the same as

everyone else,” said Trinity Park resident Christina Headrick, who helped coordinate some of her community’s recent

proposals.

One of the overall goals of MATCH will be “to minimize dangerous behavior,” said Christopher McLaughlin, assistant dean for student affairs at the School ofLaw and a Trinity Heights resident. Headrick said the group would function partially as a Durham-based counterpart to BIueSPARC, a campus-community coalition established at Duke earlier this academic year to address similar issues. Claire Feldman-Riordan, BIueSPARC’s director, explained the group was created to address alcohol-related issues. It encompasses topics such as onand off-campus social life and relationships with the Durham community. SEE MATCH ON PAGE 6


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