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Field Hockey
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Native Amerkan students talk about their experiences at Duke, PAGE
The Blue Devils play in the national semifinals this weekend, PAGE
A professor discusses the life of the revolutionary PAGE 3
The Chronicled
Juniors start H scramble to find housing
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UNC-G
Jfc Faculty see 4 new int'l
initiatives
Competition for off-campus
by
apartments surprises many by
we tried to run,” UNC-G head coach Mike Dement said. “We’re a little more of a team that likes to run sets and get good shots, and they took us out of all that. We didn’t get good shots.” The Blue Devils held the Spartans to just six field goals and 20 points in the first half en route to a 25-point lead at intermission. Dave McClure led the defensive charge with seven steals in the game to go along with his 11 points and nine rebounds. SEE M. BBALL ON PAGE 12
SEE ACAD. COUNCIL ON PAGE 6
Nate Freeman
Ever-growing waitlists and restrictive
leasing policies have sentjuniors scrambling to secure off-campus housing arrangements for the 2007-2008 academic year. Adding to the stress of applying
for off-campus housing, Erwin
Square
apart-
changed its lease policy last February, barments
ring graduating
IE CHRONICLE
seniors from passing down apartments to friends and forcing all potential tenants to join a waitlist. Erwin Square apartments—one of the most popular off-campus housing sites with 119 student occupants—began enforcing its policy against subletting last February as current seniors applied for their residences. Under the revised system, juniors had the option of securing a spot on the waitlist as early as Aug. 1. Property Manager Sandra Masters said she informed senior tenants via e-mail of the required waitlist process, explaining that they would no longer be able to simply hand their apartment over to friends. “We sent a mass e-mail to students saying ‘the waitlist starts Aug. 1 and tell all your friends,’” Masters said. “We let them know right up front. We don’t have to do that but I thought I would give them the
Josh Mcßobertsand Duke's defensehave yet to allow an opponent to score more than SOpoints thisyear.
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Defense holds strong in win by
over
Tim Britton
THE CHRONICLE
After trailing Georgia Southern for much of the first half in its last game, Duke jumped out to a 9-0 lead and never looked back in its 75-48 victory over UNC Greensboro Thursday night at Cameron Indoor Stadium. The Blue Devils (3-0) used full-court pressure to force the Spartans out of their offensive rhythm early on. UNC-G (0-3) turned the ball over 15 times in the first half alone. “They took us out of everything that
Meg Bourdellon THE CHRONICLE
Studying abroad is not just for undergraduates. At the Academic Council’s meeting Thursday, members heard about four proposed joint and dual professional degree programs, on which they will vote Nov. 30. The School ofLaw, the School ofMedicine and the Fuqua School of Business developed three of the programs in partnership with universities in Paris, Singapore and Seoul, South Korea. Elizabeth Gustafson, assistant dean for academic affairs at the law school, said the proposed programs would build on existing strengths in interdisciplinarity. “The law school considers itself a leader in interdisciplinary education,” Gustafson said. “There’s one area in which we are currently not ahead of the curve, and that is in dual-degree programs with foreign educational institutions.” One of the law school’s proposed degrees is a joint Juris Doctor/Diplome d’etudes superieures specialises in global business law. Students would spend two years studying at Duke and a third year taking classes at the University of Paris I and Sciences Po. Other American institutions that already participate in the Global Business Program include the University of Pennsylvania and Columbia University. Gustafson also presented a proposed joint program with the Pratt School of Engineering that would allow students to earn both a doctor of law and master’s in engineering management degrees in three years.
THE CHRONICLE
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UNC-G
Panel discusses race at Duke by
Samuel Iglesias THE CHRONICLE
Eight administrators addressed racial discrimination on campus —focusing on the experience of black students—before a packed White Lecture Hall Thursday night. Hosted by the Black Student Alliance, the event, entitled “Black Like Me: Race and Academic Excellence,” included panel members Provost Peter Lange, Dean of Trinity College Robert Thompson and Benjamin Reese, vice president for institutional equity. Panelists discussed and answered questions from audience members about the results of the Campus Life and Learning report, which extensively examined members of the classes of 2005 and 2006 throughout their undergraduate careers. One section of the study found that black students JEONGIN LEE/THE
CHRONICLE
Apanel of eight addresses racial tension on campus,among other things,Thursday night.
SEE BLACK LIKE ME ON PAGE
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Professor Edward Buckley discusses Duke's association with a medical school in Singapore Thursday.