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The Chronicled THE INDEPENDENT DAILY AT DUKE UNIVERSITY
TUESDAY, OCTOBER 4, 2005
S7SM financial aid gift Contribution from Duke Endowment increases funds netted for new aid initiative to nearly SIOOM
by
Tiffany Webber THE CHRONICLE
The University’s financial aid coffers received a shot of support Monday—to the tune of $75 million. Donated by the Duke Endowment—a private, non-profit entity separate from the University—the sum is the largest single gift ever received by Duke and the largest ever given by the Endowment. The gift is the third major, publicly announced contribution in Duke’s Financial Aid Initiative, which is officially set to begin in December. The Initiative is an effort to increase the percentage of
sets
Duke’s financial aid that is endowed rather than funded by the University’s operating budget. It will benefit undergraduate, graduate and professional students as well as fund athletic scholarships. Russell Robinson, chair of the Duke Endowment, formally announced the gift at a ceremony Monday morning. Students, faculty and staff joined the University’s top brass in celebrating the gift, which will be paid over three years. “We unanimously and joyously approved a challenge gift to help initiate the campaign,” Robinson said. Brodhead thanked the Duke
ONE HUNDRED AND FIRST YEAR, ISSUE 28
donation record
Endowment for helping the University take steps toward providing aid for all students in need. “I thank you today for giving us the ability to build not the superstructure but the real foundation on which a great university is founded,” he said. “I have not been here long, but there’s not a week that goes by without some fabulous new thing happening.... I can’t imagine a more deeply fulfilling moment in my career.” The $75-million donation will be used as a matching fund—meaning it will be utilized to encourage other organizations and individuals to contribute to the Fi-
nancial Aid Initiative “This is the gift that keeps on giving,” President Richard Brodhead said. Robinson noted that the Duke Endowment’s gift falls directly in line Duke Endowment and University founder James B. Duke’s vision for the institution. has University] “[The achieved his dream of attaining a place of real leadership in the educational world,” Robinson said in a press release. “An essential part of that dream is providing financial aid so that the SEE AID GIFT ON PAGE 6
Tabling to move to Med school honors anniversary main West Campus by
Saidi Chen
THE CHRONICLE
At the urging of student leaders, administrators announced a new tabling policy Wednesday that will allow groups to set up
shop along the sidewalk in front of the West Union Building. Since the Bryan Center walkway was closed off on the first day of classes to accommodate for construction of the West Campus student plaza, student groups have been lacking a high-traffic space where they can advertise, sell tickets or publicize events. Tabling will now be permitted in the mulch area in front ofMain West Quadrangle running from the comer ofWest Union to Kilgo Quadrangle, Deb Lo Biondo, assistant dean for residence life, wrote in an e-mail. Administrators have set a cap of 10 tables to ensitfe that stu-
dents will not be overwhelmed along one of the campus’ most frequendy traveled paths. “As long as students don’t feel as though they’re being overly bombarded by student groups trying to advertise then I think it’s a good idea,” said senior Wintta Woldemariam, president of Black Student Alliance. Lo Biondo’s e-mail also said an Event Manager from RLHS will check on the groups on the quad to make sure that those present have registered with the Office of Student Affairs and Facilities. Organizers say that the solution is a temporary one but will likely be in place until the construction is completed. “If everything goes well and people follow all the rules and don’t damage the tables or any-
ARMANDO HUARINGA/THE CHRONICLE
SEE TABLING ON PAGE 7
Celebrating its75th anniversary, theSchool ofMedicine held a convocation ceremony Monday afternoon at the Searle Center. by
VictoriaWeston THE CHRONICLE
Major figures in the history of medicine mingled with current residents and students at a cele-
Once a popular place to advertise, the walkway entrance to the Bryan Center was closed earlier this semester, forcing administrators to relocate tabling to the main quadrangle.
bration of the intersection of education and health care at Duke Monday. The School ofMedicine celebrated its 75th anniversary in a convocation held at the Searle Center—an event that included speeches by health system and medical school administrators and honored former faculty who helped establish its unique curriculum and desegregate the school. “There is a kind of magic in the brief history of only 75 years that created this magnificent institution,” said Dr. Sandy Williams, dean of the medical school. Nick Viens, Trinity ’O3 and third-year medical student, noted that the opportunity to learn about the medical school’s history drew him to the event
“Duke’s med school is pretty well known for its unique curriculum, and there have been a lot of big names in American medicine that have come through here,” Viens said. “A lot of them will be here today.” The doctors who initiated Duke’s “New Curriculum”—including Dr. David Sabiston, who performed the first cardiac bypass surgery, and Dr. James Wyngaarden, current National Institutes of Health director—were honored with the presentation of a display that recognized their contributions. Chancellor Emeritus Dr. William Anlyan, former Department of Biochemistry Chair Dr. Philip Handler, former Associate Provost Dr. Thomas Kinney and former Department of Medicine chair Dr. Eugene Stead were also recognized for their contribution to the curriculum. SEE ANNIVERSARY ON PAGE 8