September 26, 2006

Page 1

Mon ey Maker pgr Senior Jaso Strasser $442K wins n in an online poker tourney, PAGE 4

I

Bon Voyage

Record-setting 475 students go abroad this semester, PAGE 3

|B Bnß HUB

Men's Golf

The Blue Devils take home their first trophy of the year, PAGE 11

The Chroni.de I

Tl ESDAY. SEPTEMBER 26. 2006

-

THE INDEPENDENT DAILY AT DUKE UNIVERSITY

ONE HI M>KEl> AND SECOND YEAR, ISSUE 23

ALE cracks down in weekend sting At least 13 students cited at onand off-campus bars, restaurants BY

IZA WOJCIECHOWSKA THE CHRONICLE

WEIYITAN/THE CHRONICLE

Nobel Prize winner Paul Nurse (right) shakes hands with Victor Dzau, president and CEO of DUHS, (left) Monday.

Nobel laureates highlight 2-day DukeMed symposium by

Carolina Astigarraga THE CHRONICLE

Nobel Prize winner Paul Nurse spoke Monday afternoon to an overflowing audience at the Searle Center lecture hall at the kick-off to Duke Medicine’s 75th Anniversary Science Symposium. The two-day symposium, which concludes Tuesday, cele-

brates Duke Medicine’s achievements by bringing together some of the leading minds in science to share their thoughts on what they believe will be the next big ideas in science and how these discoveries will impact the future of medicine. In addition to Nurse, the symposium will feature two

other Nobel Prize winners and ten leading scientists. Dr. Sandy Williams, dean of the Duke University School of Medicine, said a major focus of the symposium is students and how they can—and are —impacting science. In keeping with SEE SYMPOSIUM ON PAGE 10

Alcohol Law Enforcement officials cited at least 13 students last Thursday and Friday, Duke University Police Department confirmed. In the first significant ALE sweep of the year, officers were present at the G Loft, Shooters 11, the Armadillo Grill and Devine’s Restaurant and Sports Bar, said Lt. Sara-Jane Raines, DUPD administrative services executive officer. They cited students for underage possession, distribution and use offake identification. “This is the first time that I know that they’ve had a number of ALE agents in the area [this academic year],” Raines said. Students were cautioned at the beginning of the year that ALE officers could be present at various off-campus locations. The warnings came in light of a mass ALE operation last fall in which nearly 200 students were cited during orientation week. But five weeks into the

school year, no major incidents had occurred and many underage students continued to go out and drink. A sophomore who was cited last weekend for using a fake ID at the G Loft said she will keep attending SEE ALE ON PAGE 7

Two studentsand a bartender were cited at theArmadillo Grill'sbar lastThursday.

Athletic, academic plan DSG gets new image receives mixed reviews by

Sarah Ball

THE

Greg Beaton THE CHRONICLE

by

If imitation is the greatest form of flattery, then consider professor Paul Haagen quite flattered by a recent parody of his

to improve the relationship between athand letics academics. At the AcadeCouncil mic last meeting Thursday, Haagen, a Duke Law professor who chairs the council, introduced Paul Haagen the “Faculty Athletics Associates Program,” which calls for faculty representatives to be assigned to each of Duke’s 22 varsity teams. “I was hoping to increase the connection and depth of understanding be-

proposal

tween faculty and coaches,” Haagen said. “The purpose is to have better interaction in terms of each side understanding the other.” The Academic Council’s Executive Committee approved the plan, and 80 faculty members have already offered their services to become part of the program, Haagen said. But some faculty members are not on board with Haagen’s proposal, and a version mocking it has circulated among some within the University. Co-written by Fred Nijhout and Richard Hain, professors of biology and math, respectively, the imitation is entitled “Coaches Academic Associates Program.” The parody statement closely mirrors Haagen’s original, but coaches are assigned to academic departments instead of faculty members assigned to varsity teams. “The purpose of the program is to SEE ATHLETICS ON PAGE

13

CHRONICLE

Who’s afraid of Elliott Wolf? Well, most. Wolf looks like a man who could build you a deck—a barrel-chested 6’4” guy with a craggy face and a piercing

blue-eyed stare. But something about the Duke Student Government president —the can of V-8

he’s the hugging, perspectives padded, mid-thighlength bicycle shorts he sometimes wears, the fact that he’s a math major—puts you right at ease. Maybe that ease is ill-founded. The fact that Wolf is systematically transforming Duke’s student government from what many deemed a good old boys’ playground into an efficient lobbying firm—while probably a good thing—is a little unsetding. What will students complain about? “Last year’s senate didn’t even meet .before fall break,” Wolf said in his office, eyebrows arched. Those were bleak times, he added. Wolf refererices an era when DSG senators were tomato juice

,

Junior Elliott Wolf, president of DSC, has worked to change theway DSG presents itselfto thestudentbody.

..

SEE DSG ON PAGE 6


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September 26, 2006 by Duke Chronicle Print Archives - Issuu