December 1, 2005

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At 36 years old, Carrboro club still anchors southeastern music scene

sports

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Despite disappointing finish, ..nit' J Duke has record-setting

DSG discusses election reform, SOFC denies new group funding

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The Chronicle!

THURSDAY, DECEMBER 1, 2005

THE INDEPENDENT DAILY AT DUKE UNIVERSITY

Committee drums up financial aid support by

Rob

Copeland

THE CHRONICLE

Students’ e-mail inboxes, normally diluted with facebook.com invitations and advertisements for low mortgage rates, have recendy included requests of a different sort. An e-mail signed by Johnny Dawkins, assistant head coach for men’s basketball, was sent to all students encouraging support for the Duke Financial Aid Initiative via online petition. The Nov. 23 request was followed by a second e-mail six days later. “Financial aid can change

ONE HUNDRED AND FIRST YEAR, ISSUE 65

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people’s lives,” Dawkins, Trinity

Redick pours in 29 to carry Blue Devils

‘B6, wrote, noting that he would not have been able to attend

Duke without it. The petition was sponsored by the Financial Aid Initiative Student Advisory Council, a newly formed group of 22 undergraduates that was organized this semester. much-heralded A new fundraising project, the Financial Aid Initiative is the first largescale fundraising campaign President Richard Brodhead has undertaken since coming to Duke in July 2004. “The idea is to make sure Duke never has to close its doors to students with talent bemse of family circumstances,” redhead told The Chronicle September. FAISAC Co-Chair Mary rvin, a junior, said the petion is meant to act as a mesige to the administration that e Council is willing to help in ly way it can. “We just want to show the •nors that the student body really ipports this Initiative,” she said. Susan Ross, director offmanal aid development, said the petition is part of a larger effort

by

SEE PETITION ON PAGE 7

John Taddei

THE CHRONICLE

BLOOMINGTON, Ind. When Indiana capped off an 110 run with Marco Killingsworth’s thunderous dunk that gave the No. 17 Hoosiers (3-1) a 59-58 lead—their first of the game— Assembly Hall was sent into a frenzy, and momentum was squarely on Indiana’s side. The No. 1 Blue Devils (6-0), however, got a combined nine points from their two All-Americans during a three-minute stretch that put them back in control, and Duke shook off the raucous crowd to escape with a 75-67 win over Indiana. “I think during that time period a lot of teams would just lose,” head coach Mike Krzyzewski said. “I’m very proud of my team because you cannot simulate that type of a situation.” Senior captain JJ. Redick led Duke with 29 points, including

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A committee supporting financial aid handed out buttons (above) this week.

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MICHAEL CHANG/THE CHRONICLE

Lee Melchionni and JJ. Redick celebrate No. 1 Duke's 75-67 win over No. 17 Indiana Wednesday night, as theBlue Devils improved to 7-0 in the Big Ten/ACC Challenge.

SEE INDIANA ON PAGE <NONE>

Divinity weighs Packed classes frustrate students new doctorate

Mingyang Liu THE CHRONICLE

by

Computer screens around campus have been glowing with the familiar ACES course registration page—and the übiquitous red boxes of waiting list numbers. Although there are more classes offeredfor the upcoming Spring 2006 semester than in previous terms, waiting lists are still high for some undergraduate classes in the Trinity College ofArts and Sciences. Departments create their own schedules, but the University enforces a system that evenly spreads class times across the entire week, said University Registrar Bruce Cunningham. “We try to keep an eye on things to adjust the schedules,” he said. Many departments communicate in order to avoid scheduling conflicts, Cunningham said. There are also departments, such as chemistry, that create new sections in order to accommodate student demands after registration windows open. Even with accommodations, certain time periods fill up quickly, especially for required classes or those with

WOJCIECHOWSKA

BY IZA THE CHRONICLE

The Divinity School may soon implement a new doctoral program for its students in hopes of giving students the opportunity to study religion and theology with more

practical applications,

Students in the program would be able to obtain the docdegree in four to five years and pursue fields such as worship, preaching and evangelism —fields often

tor of theology

neglected by current offerings. Before the Th.D. program can be implemented, however, it must be approved by the Academic Council, the

University’s Board of Trustees and the Association of Theological Schools. If the proposal is approved without delays, officials hope to begin accepting students into the program in Fall 2006. The Academic Council will vote on the program proposal at its meeting Thursday afternoon. Similar to Th.D. programs at other universities, Duke’s program is designed for students who hope to go into careers as church officials in positions that require SEE TH.D. ON PAGE 7 • VVVV V V V VVAVA\ V.kAVV VV V. UItAJ. V\X X >.>T.

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popular professors. Sophomore Aijun Madan-Mohan was relieved when a new afternoon section opened for Math 108, a require-

ERIN CONWAY/THE CHRONICLE

Hundredsof students, like sophomore Robert Bazzani, are eyeing the waiting lists on ACES, hoping to gain slots in popular but full classes. .

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ment for his major in biomedical engineering.

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