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Dining cons iders extending meal equivalent (plan to West, PAGE 3
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Center aims to advance knowledge about sudden cardiac death, PAGE 5
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No. 2 Duke heads to Boston to face ACC newcomer BC, PAGE 9
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WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 1, 2006
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THE INDEPENDENT DAILY AT DUKE UNIVERSITY
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ONE HUNDRED AND FIRST YEAR, ISSUE 87
Rush ends, Bush: "America is addicted to oil 7 reactions of Energy policy. Social Security, Iraq among frats vary topics in State of Union by
by
Tiffany Webber THE CHRONICLE
After a flurry of events and a revised process that yielded both praise and criticism, the Interfraternity Council’s rush season ended late Monday night with varied results for and reactions from the IFC chapters. In similar fashion to last year, IFC groups did not disclose the number of bids they distributed. Unofficial reports reveal that individual chapters had yielded anywhere from three to 35 bid acceptances from recruits as of Tuesday night. “We told them to be cautious,” said IFC Rush Chair Tom Califf, a senior. “There have been times in the past where the numbers released were inaccurate.” Senior Jay McKenna, president of IFC, said each of the 16 on-campus fraternities will release final bid acceptance results Feb. 8, after the newly implemented SEE RUSH ON PAGE 6
Bernard named new VP, counsel by
Saedi Chen
THE CHRONICLE
Pamela Bernard was named Duke’s president and general counsel, President Richard Brodhead announced Tuesday. Bernard will take office July 1, succeeding David Adcock who has been the University’s general counsel for more than two decades. “Duke is a wonderful school with a lot of challenges and meaningful ambitions of which I want to be a part,” Bernard said. “In higher education today, so many changes are happening that with a school like Duke you’re dealing with global issues in the same way that other large, complex research institutions are.” next vice
REUTERS
President George W. Bush deliversthe State of the Union address to a joint session ofCongress Tuesday.
Students sound off on annual speech Eric Bishop THE CHRONICLE
by
Monday night in the Southgate Dormitory commons room the Xbox was switched off, the ping pong table was deserted and the piano was silent. These diversions were replaced by thoughtful political dialogue, as four faculty members joined a group of Southgate residents for a viewing and discussion of President George W. Bush’s State of the Union speech. The event —organized by a Southgate residential assistant —gave students a chance to engage with a diverse array of
professors in a casual setting. The attending professors were David Banks, a professor of the practice in the statistics departments, Elizabeth Fournier, a writing fellow in the public policy studies department, Donald Taylor, assistant professor ofhealth policy in the public policy studies department, and Southgate facultyin-residence Zbigniew Kabala, an associate professor of civil engineering. Before the speech began, Southgate RAs passed out scorecards to guide viewers in their assessment of the president’s SEE STUDENTS ON PAGE 5
WASHINGTON A politically weakened President Bush declared Tuesday night that America must break its long dependence on Mideast oil and rebuked critics of his stay-the-course strategy for the unpopular war in Iraq. “America is addicted to oil, which is often imported from unstable parts of the world,” Bush said as he sought to drive the election-year agenda in his annual State of the Union address. Rejecting calls for the withdrawal of troops from Iraq, Bush said, “There is no peace in retreat.” He also slapped at those who complain he took the country to war on the erroneous grounds that Iraq possessed weapons of mass destruction. “Hindsight alone is not wisdom,” Bush said. “And second-guessing is not a strategy.” In an unscripted moment, anti-war activist Cindy Sheehan, the mother of a fallen soldier in Iraq, was taken into custody by police in the House gallery just before Bush spoke to ajoint session ofCongress. She was escorted from the visitors gallery after she caused a disruption, a Capitol Police official said. With Congress facing midterm elections in November, there was a partisan mood in the chamber as Bush, hampered by big budget deficits, offered a modest program. SEE BUSH ON PAGE 7
Dean promotes liberal agenda in Bull City Adam Eaglin THE CHRONICLE
by
A diverse group of community mem-
bers—jeans-clad teenage activists mingling with top county and
state
Democratic offi-
cials—gathered in Durham Tuesday night
hear Democratic National Committee chair Howard Dean speak. “We will stand together to make sure this country works forall of us,” Dean said in his speech, addressing a number of major national issues, from the continuing energy crisis to a need for better health care. The former Vermont governor and 2004 presidential hopeful made appearances at two downtown Durham restaurants, Satisfaction and Devine’s, in front of packed crowds. In a visit timed with President George W. Bush’s annual State of the Union address, to
SEE
SEE BERNARD ON PAGE 8
Terence Hunt
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
DEAN ON PAGE 7
CHAD CUSTER/THE
CHRONICLE
Howard Dean, a prominent Democratic leader, makes an appearance at SatisfactionRestaurant Tuesday.