October 23, 2006

Page 1

Pearl Anniversary Reg lonal Hospital

Durham celebrates its 30th annive rsary attheWaDuke,PAGE3

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The Chronicle hangs out with the Carolina RollergiHs, PAGE 4

Football Duke falls yards short of upsetting Miami, losing 20-15,

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University sets out on strategic mission Adam Eagun THE CHRONICLE

by

It took only a few hours for the Board ofTrustees to unanimously approve “Making a Difference,” Duke’s most recent strategic plan, at its Sept. 29 meeting. But the Board’s approval was long in the ma

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more than two years of inter views, discussions and ’

billion Making a Difference, analyzing how the document stacks up against past plans and those at other universities.

Planning the plan In 2004, with Duke’s last strategic plan, “Building on Excellence,” in full stride, administrators had already begun the process of culling through the myriad opinions and ideas of the University’s various schools, said

John Simon, vice provost for aca-

WIBUI7THE CHRONICLE

demic affairs and the coordinator of Making a Difference. First, administrators drafted a tentative list of long-term priorities. Keeping these themes in mind, the administration charged each school to chart how they planned to move forward in the coming years. Simon said the schools’ roles as both independent entities and members of the larger University community created a sometimes-disorderly convergence of ideas. “In many ways, you could call it controlled chaos,” he said. Soon, dozens ofcommittees on varying scales discussed the longterm goals of the University and the needs of the schools, and the result of those conversations was Making a Difference, Simon said. In the plan, officials chose six central themes: interdisciplinarity, knowledge in the service of society, affordability and access, the

President Richard Brodhead has emphasized the new strategic plan's practicality.

SEE PLAN ON PAGE 10

committee

meetings, administrators drafted and resubmitted a proposal of goals that promise to become the

University’s

most

powerful

themes in the coming years. In light of the Board’s recent approval, The Chronicle examined the significance of the $1.3-

ARM

UNC own-goal

JIANGHAI HO/THE CHRONICLE

Jerry Footlick (center), a former senior editor at Newsweek, was part of a panel composed to speak about the lacrosse incident.

Panel analyzes lax coverage Audience challenges media s role, tense discussion ensues Ashley Dean THE CHRONICLE

A panel about the media’s ongoing coverage of the lacrosse scandal sparked heated discussion between audience members and panel members at the School of Law Friday afternoon. The panel, titled “Why rape against men’s allegations lacrosse players became a national story on race, class and crime,” included six members of the local and national media, as well as Duke Law Professor James Coleman, chair of the University committee that ex-

amined the lacrosse program last spring. Moderator Frank Stasio, host of “The State of Things” on WUNC Radio, said the lacrosse story took on “American mythic proportions” soon after initial news coverage began.

lifts Devils by

Tim Britton

THE CHRONICLE

With 20 minutes left in a 1-0 game against North Carolina Friday night, Duke was one man down on the field. After Blue Devil defenseman Graham Dugoni was ejected UNC for a red card, the team needed a boost. DUKE Duke got it from a record crowd that seemed to become the 11th man on the field at Koskinen Stadium. With 6,549 screaming fans behind it, the fifth-ranked Blue Devils (12-2-1, 5-1-1 in the ACC) held off the No. 21 Tar Heels to preserve their third-straight shutout of their in-state rivals and to remain in first place in the ACC.

Duke players celebrate after UNC's own-goal in the first half Friday night.

Many audience members—including alumni, staff, bloggers and lacrosse players’ parents who handed out buttons that read “Innocent until proven innocent”—said the media overemphasized issues of race, gender, class and privilege. Several said the press presumed the guilt of the players following the exotic dancer’s rape allegations last March. ‘You screwed up the story,” one audience member told the panelists.

by

SEE M. SOCCER ON SW PAGE 5

SEE LAX PANEL ON PAGE

7

Duke docs find data in tumors by

Joe Clark

THE CHRONICLE

A new test developed by Duke researchers may revolutionize the treatment of cancer by evaluating the genetics of deadly tumors and predicting their weaknesses The findings, which will be reported in November’s issue ofNature Medicine, show molecular and genedc data from an individual’s tumor can be used to see how well the tumor will respond to different chemotherapeutic agents, said Dr. Anil Potti, the lead investigator of the study and an assistant professor of medicine. SEE TEST ON PAGE 10


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