March 10, 2006

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The Chronicle i

Here's to wi:shing everyone a safe and res tful spring break!

New safety VP has plans for campus security cameras, PAGE 3

FRIDAY, MARCH 10, 2006

Duke kicks off the ACC Tourney

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against Miami tonight, PAGE 9

THE INDEPENDENT DAILY AT DUKE UNIVERSITY

ONE HUNDRED AND FIRST YEAR, ISSUE 114

Council gets more say in A&S changes

Pit driver hoped for retribution Adam Eagun THE CHRONICLE

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A week after a violent attack shook the campus at University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, details continue to emerge concerning the confessed culprit of the incident—recent UNC graduate Mohammed Re z a Ta h e r i azar. UNC Police Department Detective Matthew Dodson interMohammed Reza viewed Taheri-azar Ta h e r i azar after he drove a Jeep Grand Cherokee through the Pit, a central gathering place on campus, injuring nine pedestrians. In the interview, Taheri-azar confessed that he has been planning retribution against the U.S. government for as long as two years and began planning

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SEE TAHERI-AZAR ON PAGE 7

Steve Veres

THE CHRONICLE

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CHAD CUSTER/THE CHRONICLE

Many students will travel to New Orleans during their Spring Break to help rebuild the hurricane-stricken city.

Students take break to serve by Ryan Eick THE CHRONICLE

Forget MTV’s Carson Daly and his pool-partying cohorts. Many Duke students will put partying aside this Spring Break, as they devote their vacations to community service projects around the world. Members of campus organizations such as Break for a Change and the Duke Chapel will be joined by an assortment of participants in academic classes and Durham initiatives to bring the

fun and unity back into “functioning community.” And they are doing it voluntarily. “If you have the option of going to Cancun versus making a difference in people’s lives, it’s not even a question,” said junior Ali Herman of her decision to spend her break in New Orleans. Herman will be traveling with the other members of her 18-person Documentary Studies class, “Social Activism Motivations.” With them, she will tackle the issue of prisoners’ rights

violations that occurred in the wake of Hurricane Katrina. Her classmates’ tasks will include home construction and food distribution. David Schaad, assistant chair of the civil and environmental engineering department in the Pratt School of Engineering, has also organized a Duke initiative to assist in the hurricane relief effort in New Orleans. More than 50 independent student SEE SERVICE ON PAGE 6

Some find help for learning disabled lacking by

The Arts and Sciences Council resolved Thursday that it should be consulted regarding any proposed substantial change in the structure of the Trinity College of Arts and Sciences. The resolution, which was passed unanimously, clarifies the role of the Council in major decisions that affect Trinity. Although the Council has no legislative authority over structural changes—the Council is only charged to legislate on academic issues facing the College—the resolution forces the dean of the Faculty of Arts and Sciences to consult the Executive Committee of the Arts and Sciences Council on all major structural changes. The Executive Committee will in turn consult the full body if it deems it necessary. After hearing a proposed change to the College, the Council will then give their input. Lee Baker, chair of the Council and associate professor of cultural anthropology, said he hopes the SEE COUNCIL ON PAGE 6

Jasten McGowan THE CHRONICLE

Senior Sarah Finkelstein’s application to Duke featured her top-three class ranking at Columbia Preparatory School in New York City, a love for the law—and a diagnosis of dyslexia. Since she arrived on campus three years ago, Finkelstein has faced the reality of having a learning disability at Duke. Prior to attending the University, she received accommodations under “lenient regulations” at her high school, she said. Finkelstein found few details on the University’s policy regarding students with learning disabilities before she began her freshman year. “I figured they that if they didn’t have much information, receiving accommodations [at Duke] wouldn’tbe a major issue,” she said. “But I soon learned I couldn’t be accommodated under Duke’s strict interpretation of the ADA.” The Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990 requires institutions receiving federal funding to accommodate students with disabilities that cause “a substantial limitation in relation to the Senior Sarah Finkelstein, who has dyslexia, said Duke strictly interprets the Americans with Disabilities Act

SEE DISABILITIES ON PAGE 8

WEIYITAN/THE

CHRONICLE

Lee Baker, associate professor ofcultural anthropology and chair of theA&S Council, leads Thursday's meeting on by-laws.


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