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TheChronicle
THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 2, 2006
THE INDEPENDENT DAILY AT DUKE UNIVERSITY
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ONE HUNDRED AND FIRST YEAR, ISSUE 88
Duke receives record Blue Devils survive in Boston 19,282 applications by
by
Tiffany Webber THE CHRONICLE
Got Duke? Well, 19,282 high school seniors want in. For the fifth consecutive year, Duke has received a record-setting number of applications for its future freshman class. The University received 1,193 more applications than last year, 2,541 more than two years ago and 4,572 more than five years ■■
Calif.
1,800
N.Y.
1,576
N.C.
1,400
Fla.
1,360
Texas
1,080
N.J.
1,050
ago. The Pratt School of Engineering received 3,343 applications—l,ooo more than five years ago. Christoph Guttentag, dean of admissions, said he attributes this year’s success in drawing students to a variety of factors, including the opening of the Fitzpatrick Center for Interdisciplinary Engineering, Mathematics and Applied Sciences in 2004, Duke’s increasing international and national appeal and the recent launch of a new admissions website. “We’re excited about this applicant pool,” Guttentag said. He stressed that this year’s applicant pool is “quite spread, geographically and demographically.” Applications from students of color—including Asian or Asian American, black and Latino students—are up approximately 1,200 from last year. These students made up approximately 41.6 percent of the total number of individuals who applied. There were 550 more applications from white students —
*AI! figures are approximate numbers of applications received based on state.
Patrick Byrnes THE CHRONICLE
CHESTNUT HILL, Mass With Duke clinging to a threepoint lead and less than 10 seconds remaining in the second half Wednesday night, Boston College point guard Tyrese Rice received an inbounds pass and bolted DUKE 83 toward BC 81 t h e hoop. Rice attempted a layup, but Shelden Williams blocked the shot—his seventh swat of the night. The senior recovered the ball and was immediately fouled by Jared Dudley. Williams hit both free throws to seal No. 2 Duke’s 83-81 victory in its first trip to the Conte Forum since N0.15 Boston College joined the ACC. The Blue Devils overcame a
relatively rough shooting night
from JJ. Redick by shooting 29of-37 from the free throw line the Eagles made just 10-of-13 attempts. Williams and freshman Josh Mcßoberts picked up some of the slack by contributing 21 and 14 points, respectively “They weren’t going to quit,” head coach Mike Krzyzewski said. “We feel like we won a really tough basketball game against an outstanding team.” —
SEE BC ON PAGE 8
SEE APPLICATIONS ON PAGE 5
Gregory Beaton THE CHRONICLE
Duke Student Government overwhelm-
ingly voted “no confidence” in ARAMARK, Corp., the University’s main food service provider, for the third consecutive year at a legislative body meeting Wednesday night.
The vote came after ARAMARK Resident District Manager Fred Bissinger delivered a lengthy presentation. His talk included proposals to improve both food quality among ARAMARK-operated vendors on campus and communication with its employees and Duke students. DSG’s resolution also included the recommendation that ARAMARK’s contract, set to expire after the school year, should not be renewed. “Since our first vote of no confidence, and additionally at each vote in between, we have seen neither consistency from year to year nor continued maintenance of improvements,” said senior Paige Sparkman, DSG vice president of student affairs. “[ARAMARK has] not been able to sell food, and that’s the bottom line.” All but two present voting members of
PRATS/THE
CHRONICLE
3rd no confidence’ vote 4
DSG issues by
LAUREN
Shelden Williams blocked seven shots in Duke's win over Boston College Feb. 1 helping to hold star Eagles forward Craig Smith to just eight points.
DSG voted in favor of the “no confidence” resolution, with one vote against and one abstention. During his presentation, Bissinger offered a variety of new initiatives aimed at receiving DSG’s vote ofconfidence. Such a recommendation could have helped in the food provider’s bid to extend its current contract with the University. Although they were impressed with Bissinger’s presentation, DSG officials said they could not give the provider a vote of confidence based on past performance. “I wouldn’t call it proactive management,” Sparkman said, adding that Bissinger “chastised” her through e-mail for never before inviting him to a DSG meeting. “It’s empty promises. You have to look at Duke’s past and student desires.” Sparkman said Kim Davis, who held Bissinger’s position until last February, was also impressive in a previous appeal to DSG. Before speaking to DSG, Bissinger disr tributed a brochure to DSG representatives that outlined a proposal for a substantial SEE DSG ON PAGE 5
Members ofDSG hear a presentation from ARAMARK manager Fred Bissinger at Wednesday night's meeting.