durh am City Council hears debt report, limits negot iations, PAGE 3
wH campus
sports
GPSC hears about strategic planning from top brass, PAGE 3
Duke takes on Holy Cross at 3 p.m., PAGE 9
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The Chronictr'
TUESDAY, MARCH 7, 2006
THE INDEPENDENT DAILY AT DUKE UNIVERSITY
ONE HUNDRED AND FIRST YEAR, ISSUE 111
Taheri-azar Bostock, Perkins to stay open 24 hours Libraries extend Sunday charged for to Thursday times only UNC attack by
by
Daniel Feinglos THE CHRONICLE
Adam Eagun
THE CHRONICLE
Mohammed Reza Taheri-azar, a 2005 graduate of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill who struck several bystanders on campus with his car last week, was officially charged in an Orange County court Monday with 18 felony counts, including nine counts of attempted first-degree murder. Taheri-azar confessed Friday to driving a Jeep Grand Cherokee through the Pit—a popular gathering place on UNC’s campus—and to wounding multiple students and pedestrians. Although no serious injuries were inflicted, six people were hospitalized and three others were treated at the scene of the incident. Taheri-azar could face more than 100 years in prison if convicted on all
felony counts. After turning himself in to law enforcement Friday, the defendant told police that the goal of the violent act
was to “avenge the deaths or murders of Muslims around the world.” Observers in the the courtroom Monday said Taheri-azar—who was handcuffed and wearing an orange prison uniform—remained calm and SEE UNC ON PAGE 7
SARA GUERERRO/THE CHRONICLE
Starting March 20, students will be able to study at all hours Sunday throughThursday in West Campus libraries.
Students pulling all-nighters will soon have a new home. University administrators confirmed Monday that beginning March 20, Perkins and Bostock Libraries will keep their doors open 24 hours a day, Sunday through Thursday. Aided by a skeleton crew of two student employees, a library staffer and one roving security guard, library patrons could theoretically sit uninterrupted in the library from 10 a.m. Sunday to 12 a.m. Saturday. Tom Wall, associate University librarian for public services, said the extendedhours pilot program will allow often-nocturnal students to more easily use the library facilities. “We’d like to provide as much access to the library and its contents as possible,” Wall said. The decision to extend library hours to a 24/5 schedule was made by early February, but library officials delayed the switch because of practical concerns. “We didn’t want to do it in the beginning of the semester because library use will only really pick up just before finals [in April],” Wall said. Although the pilot program is only scheduled to run until the end of the spring term, the library hopes to continue it indefinitely. “I’m not promising, but I’m planning SEE LIBRARIES ON PAGE 4
Court upholds C-SPAN to show Horowitz speech live recruiting law by
Neal SenGupta THE CHRONICLE
students for military recruiters. The case, Rumsfeld v. Forum for Academic and Institutional Rights, was argued before the Supreme Court in December. Duke Law Professor Erwin Chemerinsky was a plaintiff in the case. Chemerinsky and FAIR, backed by law schools across the nation, argued that the Solomon Amendment was unconstitutional because it violates the First Amendment rights of the freedom and association of universities that do not support the discriminatory “Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell” policies of die military. Chemerinsky explained that law schools maintain an
Outspoken conservative author and activist David Horowitz has been fighting against liberal bias for decades. His fight will continue at Duke Tuesday when he speaks in Page Auditorium at 8 p.m. Horowitz chose Duke to be the first University where he discusses his new book, The Professors: 101 Most Dangerous Academics in America—which includes miriam cooke, professor of Asian and African language and literature, and Fredric Jameson, professor of comparative literature and Romance studies. C-SPAN will be broadcasting the event. The book is a part of Horowitz’s campaign to reform American academia through his Academic Bill of Rights, which is a set of rules meant to ensure that professors do not attempt to indoctrinate students. Horowitz said the Academic Bill of Rights aims to prevent professors from discriminating against students with different political views—a problem that he said plagues the University. “Duke is the prime example of the intellectual corruption in America,” said Horowitz on why he chose to come to Duke. “Its departments simply serve as recruitment for the radical left.”
ON PAGE 5
SEE HOROWITZ ON PAGE 6
BY SHREYA Rag THE CHRONICLE
to
The Supreme Court ruled in a 8-0 vote Monday afternoon uphold the Solomon Amendment, which requires university campuses to allow equal access to
SEE
SOLOMON
Controversial writer David Horowitz will speak at Duke Tuesday, focusing on his new book aboutacademic freedom at universities.