DA Elections
The Chronicle takes a closer look at the heated race for Durham DA, i5LPAGE 3
Nursing Trip 2 nursing
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faculty experience Duke's w lobal health emphasis, PAGE 5
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Women's Soccer Duke takes on the Seminoles in the 1st round of the ACC tourney, PAGE IV
The Chronicle
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4 additional faculty to live on West Wenjia Zhang THE CHRONICLE
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Four new faculty-in-residence apartwill be added in Craven, Crowell, Keohane and Kilgo quadrangles during the summer to promote faculty-student interaction outside the classroom, confirmed Eddie Hull, dean of residence life and executive director of housing services, Tuesday “The commitment is to have the faculty in residence in residence starting at the beginning of next school year,” Hull said. There are currently two faculty in residence living in Few and Edens quadrangles on West Campus. All East Campus dormitories except Aycock and Jarvis house faculty in residence. Hull noted that with this change there will be a faculty in residence for every quad on West because Crowell and Wannamaker are administratively regarded as one quad. “I’ve been hoping for this to happen ever since I came here,” Hull said. “It wasn’t a question of if it’s going to happen, but when.” Michele Rasmussen, assistant dean of Trinity College and director of the Pre-Major ments
PETE KIEHART/THE
Franklin St. hosts frightful festivities C. students, locals flood top Halloween hotspot by
Chelsea Allison THE CHRONICLE
CHAPEL HILL Mischief was afoot last night as costumed coeds poured into Chapel Hill’s Franklin Street, engaging in bacchanalian carousing, lubricated with a liberal deluge of drinks. Captain Jack Sparrow escorted an inebriated nun while a group dressed as the Duke lacrosse team, accompanied by scantily-clad girls, headed inside frat houses. These costumed revelers were joined by as many as 75,000 Hal-
loween partygoers in Chapel Hill while policemen —the real kind —looked for signs of trouble. The October festivities, dubbed the “biggest party in the state,” have grown larger every year since their inception in the 1980s. Though the event has some merchants smacking their lips in werewolf-like anticipation, others bray and complain about post-party costs and repairs. And with a crowd this size, a few policemen had to SEE FRANKLIN ST. ON PAGE 9
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Duke’s S2M deal Chinese diplomat visits Duke Zhou says denuclearization raises eyebrows ofNorth Korea ‘clear’ choice on City Council by
Anna Lieth
THE CHRONICLE
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Zhou Wenzhong, the People’s Republic of China’s ambassador to the United States, presented a lecture on “U.S. and China Relations” Tuesday evening at the Fitzpatrick Center for Interdisciplinary Engineering, Medicine and Applied Sciences. President Richard Brodhead introduced the talk, saying thatrelations between the United States and China were once “defined by a refusal to interact,” but have come far in the area of diplomatic relations since then. In his lecture, Zhou discussed the nuclear armament of North Korea, questions regarding human rights in China, China’s policy on environmental issues, the economic exchange between the two countries and U.S.-China relations regarding Taiwan. He oudined China’s policy on the nuclear testing in North Korea, saying China is hilly opposed to the testing.
Adam Nathan
THE CHRONICLE
Local concern over Duke’s donation of $2 million to the city for control of a portion ofAnderson Street has recendy sprung up. Durham City Council is scheduled to vote on the Anderson proposal Nov. 6, just weeks before it has to finalize funding for the new $44-million downtown
performing arts center.
A number of City Council members have raised objections over the “quid pro quo” nature of the gift and the timing of the donation, which also comes before the council’s vote on SEE ARTS CENTER ON PAGE 10
Zhou Wenzhong, the Chinese ambassador to the U.S., delivers a speech Tuesday night at CIEMASabout American-Chinese relations.
SEE CHINESE
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