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CAPS aims to increase accessibility
Senior wins Rhodes Scholarship
Teams up with Med School to help ‘most vulnerable’ BY
WOJCIECHOWSKA
BY IZA THE CHRONICLE
IZA WOJCIECHOWSKA THE CHRONICLE
Counseling and Psychological Services has recently begun a new collaboration to provide immediate services for all students extensive requiring psychological health care through the Rapid
Referral Assistance Program. CAPS is currently working with the Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences in the School of Medicine in a pilot phase of the program, which began about
three weeks ago. CAPS Director Kathy Hollingsworth said the program will focus on students who need attention for eating disorders, though services for students with bipolar disorder, depression and alcohol and substance addiction will also be available. “The whole thing is to help our most vulnerable students who need specialized attention,” she said. The Office of Student Affairs, which oversees CAPS, will provide initial funding for all students seeking help who receive a referral from CAPS, said Richard Surwit, vice chair and chief of the division SEE CAPS ON PAGE 6
Duke had little trouble tearing through Lehigh's defense Sunday, tallying three goals in the game.
Blue Devils cruise into NCAA quarterfinals Taylor Field THE CHRONICLE
by
Sunday brought yet another win and another shutout for Duke. The top-seeded Blue Devils (18-3-1) defeated Lehigh (15-2-3), 3-0, to advance to the quarterfi-
LEHIGH
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NCAA College Cup. In doing so against the Mountain Hawks, Duke has now held its opponents scoreless for four straight contests. Although the first minutes of the game were spent with the two teams battling back and forth in the midfield,
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Duke capitalized on a scoring opportunity in the 20th minute to take a lead it would never relinquish. After the ball was knocked out of bounds by a Mountain Hawk player, sophomore Darrius Barnes launched a throw in toward the box from the right sideline. Junior Michael Videira was poised and ready. As the ball dropped in front of the goal, the midfielder headed it up and over the fingers of the leaping Lehigh keeper into the top right comer of the net. “It was great, because Paul [Dudley]
Senior Charles “Chas” Salmen was one of 32 students awarded the prestigious Rhodes Scholarship Saturday. Salmen, a native of Glenwood Springs, Colo., will use the scholarship to attend Oxford University next fall. He intends to pursue a Master of Science in medical anthropology. “I certainly didn’t expect it at all,” he said. “I was very honored and pretty surprised.” During his time at Duke, Salmen—an English major and an Asian and African Languages and Literature minor—was captain of both the indoor and outdoor track teams and the cross country team. He also founded the Arab-Jewish Student Coalition this year and has conducted and published research in the Department of Urology. “I am absolutely delighted that Chas has been selected as a Rhodes Scholar,” President Richard Brodhead said in a statement. “He is a person of extraordinarily varied gifts and accomplishments.... Duke is proud of Chas’ achievements and we wish him well in his studies at Oxford.” Salmen has won a prize for his photography, and his senior thesis on Walt Whitman and D.H. Lawrence was selected as the most original and most outstanding senior thesis. ‘We talk a lot about the athletics/acaSEE RHODES ON PAGE 5
SEE M. SOCCER ON PAGE 10
Off-East complaints see sharp drop With Dukes purchase
of 12 houses
,
Trinity Park residents find life quieter by
Victoria Ward
THE CHRONICLE
SARA GUERRERO/THE CHRONICLE
Instead of calling to complain about Duke students hosting loud parties, this year, Trinity Park neighbors are socializing with them. At the beginning of the semester, senior Max Milliken and his housemates hosted a barbeque to meet their Trinity Park neighbors. Milliken lives in one of the 12 houses purchased for $3.7 million by the University last February. According to an official statement released last year, the properties were bought in order to curb off-campus partying and improve relations between students and Trinity
Since the Universitybought 12 houses in Trinity Park, residents have reported fewer student-caused disturbances.
SEE TRINITY PARK ON PAGE 6
Chas Salmen was one of 32 students, the only one from Duke, awarded a Rhodes Scholarship Saturday.