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The Chronicle,*
Admins show students new Central plans by
Diversity of faculty stays issue After Initiative
Holley Horrell THE CHRONICLE
Tubs or showers? Administrators outlined Phase I plans for Central Campus to a gathering of student leaders Thursday night and asked for feedback on a number of upcoming project decisions—even on small details, such as bathroom features. “Right now we’re trying to get closure on the master layout, begin to get architectural design and simultaneously look at [construction sequencing],” said Larry Moneta, vice president for student affairs. Moneta and Provost Peter Lange, using slides from the presentation recently given to the Board of Trustees, highlighted changes and issues that have been areas of focus since last spring. Lange announced that administrators are aiming to limit the utility consumption for Phase I to the levels of the current Central, even though the renovated campus will have more facilities. “Those [current] buildings are phenomenally inefficient,” he said. A more efficient bus route between campuses, increased impetus for pedestrian and bike travel and protection of natural wedands will contribute to the goal of
sustainability. “It’s a great commitment, and it sounds like they have some really useful ideas,” said Chris Oishi, a fifth-year Ph.D. student in ecology and a representative of the Graduate and Professional Student Council. Central will serve as a residential
minority hiring has seen slowdown by
CHRONICLE FILE PHOTO
The last timeDuke and UNC met in Durham, Danny Kramer's late goal lifted the Blue Devils to a win.
Duke and Carolina renew soccer rivalry by
Tim Britton
THE CHRONICLE
The Duke-North Carolina rivalry may get more publicity for what happens on the hardwood, but over the last few seasons, it’s been just as intense on the pitch. The Blue Devils and Tar Heels have ißk met six times in the last five seasons, \ with each game decided by a single goal and three requiring overtime. The rivalry was particularly dramatic last season, when the teams played 240 min- < utes of scoreless soccer over two matches. Duke prevailed in the second meeting —the ACC tournament Championship—on penalty kicks. The teams split the meetings the previous
Sophomore Mike lla nailed the winner over last year's ACC mament finals.
Meg Bourdillon THE CHRONICLE
The Faculty Diversity Initiative has been characterized by both successes and slower progress in its first three years. At the Academic Council meeting Thursday, Provost Peter Lange and Nancy Allen, vice provost for faculty diversity and
faculty development, updated professors on
efforts to recruit and support female and minority professors. Overall diversity has increased relatively little since the current initiative began in Fall 2003, following Peter Lange the conclusion of the Black Faculty Strategic Initiative Lange noted, however, that the University has a more ethnically diverse faculty than some peer institutions and is continuing to improve mentorship and recruitment.
Lange and Allen also announced that the University received one of five 2006 Alfred P. Sloan Awards for Faculty Career Flexibility. The award includes a $250,000 grant for accelerating improvements in career-path flexibility. Such flexibility may be particularly
SEE M. SOCCER ON PAGE 14
SEE CENTRAL ON PAGE 10
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SEE ACAD. COUNCIL ON PAGE 9
Dukies unveil invisibility cloak Data show prototype effectively redirects light by
Carolina Astigarraga THE CHRONICLE
So, if you’re not magician Harry Houdini, how hardis it to make something disappear? Not as hard as Duke researchers
thought
Administrators briefed student leaders on the progress of the new Central Campus Thursday.
Science Express published a report Thursday recording a successful test of the first invisibility cloak—a year before it was supposed to work. The experimental data were gathered by a team of scientists, led by David Smith, associate professor of electrical and computer engineering, and research associate David Schurig. The data demonstrates that the cloak can redirect microwaves around
itself and have the waves appear behind it relatively undisturbed—a technique that could eventually be applied to visible light, researchers said. “One first imagines a distortion in space similar to what would occur when pushing a pointed object through a piece of cloth, distorting, but not breaking, any threads,” Schurig explained. “In such a space, light or other electromagnetic waves would be confined to the warped ‘threads’ and therefore could not interact with—or ‘see’—objects placed inside the resulting hole.” Schurig said it was not easy to “warp SEE INVISIBLE ON PAGE 7
Researcher David Smith, with his associates, hasinvented a product that some have compared to an invisibility cloak.