SAS I nstitute r< Employees at the Cary business
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work 35-ho ur weeks, PAGE 3
Tutoring
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A Writing 20 class completes its service at a local school, PAGE 3
Duke gets ready to take on the Crusaders of Holy Cross, PAGE 9
The Chronicler
Mi
ay-tillB!
focus on | residential diversity
Does diversity live in the dormitory?
Several campusleaders have saidthereis a
posters around campus provides some circumstantial information. On Central Campus, flyers trumpet Delta Sigma Theta, Sigma Gamma Rho, Zeta Phi Beta and the NAACP. Boards on West Campus advertise Chi Psi, Delta Kappa Epsilon and Delta Tau Delta. The first four: a black advocacy group and three members of the traditionally black NationalPanhellenic Council. The last three: Interfraternity Council members. And although campus leaders said they hesitate to make conclusive statements, they acknowledged that conventional Duke wisdom holds that West Campus is predominantly white and Central is mostly black and Asian. “There’s a perception,” said Campus Council President Jay Ganatra, a senior. “It’s definitely something I’ve heard before,” said senior Kevin Fang, president of the Asian Students Association. “The perception is reinforced in that it’s traditional,” said senior Malik Burnett, president of the Black Student Alliance. Hull said although RLHS does not have exact figures, it is concerned about ensuring a diverse representation of students across the entire campus. “We always talk about self-seg-
perception that CentralCampushas a larger percentage of blackand Asian students.
SEE RESIDENTIAL ON PAGE 8
by
David Graham
THE CHRONICLE
As the Campus Culture Initiative and echoes of last spring’s lacrosse scandal place race relations at the University under a microscope, some campus leaders have said the diof resiversity npWc dential arrangebears ments analysis re-examination. Eddie Hull, dean of residence life and executive director of housing services, said Residential Life and Housing Services does not keep statistics on ethnic background for residents. In the absence of numbers, some have noted, a quick survey of
PETER GEBHARD/THE
CHRONICLE
JASON
REED/REUTERS
Andrew Young(right) speaks as Rev. Jesse Jackson weeps during the groundbreaking for Martin Luther King's memorial inWashington.
Civil rights leader Young to be MLK Day speaker Wenjia Zhang THE CHRONICLE
by
Officials announced Tuesday the selection of civil rights leader Andrew Young as the keynote speaker at the 18th annual commemoration ofMartin Luther King Jr. Jan. 14. Young was both the first black ambassador to the United Nations and the first black Georgia congressman since the Reconstruction. A close friend and ally of King, Young’s relationship with King and his work with civil rights made him a clear choice as the keynote speaker, committee members said.
“He is not only a close confidant and colleague of Dr. King, he really exemplifies some of the values and tenets of Dr. King,” said committee co-chair Ben Reese, vice president of the Office for Institutional Equity. “He has been working for social justice and equity for so long, he just really stands out as a model for so many of us on campus.” Young is also one of the most notable and still-prominent figures from the civil rights era, added committee member Myma Adams, an independent consultant to the University.
•
Bom 1932, New Orleans
Named executive director of SCLC in 1964 •
Served in U.S. Congress from Georgia, •
1972-1977
Served as Ambassador to the U.N., 1977-1979 •
•
Served as mayor of
Atlanta, 1981-1989
SEE YOUNG ON PAGE 6
DSG project aims to capture ideal Duke Ashley Dean THE CHRONICLE
For a new project slated
to
begin in January, Duke Student Government wants undergraduates to consider their ideal colle-
giate experiences.
really gather student input that would help drive a lot of decisions that are going to be made in the coming months and years about the direction of the University,” Fore said. Although the Campus Culture Initiative is also investigating Duke’s social scene, its main concern is to examine what already exists on campus and to to
by
“We as students have an idea what makes students tick, but we want to get as broad a perspective as possible,” said DSG President Elliott Wolf, a junior. DSG Executive Vice President Joe Fore, a senior, is at the helm of the Duke Story Project, currently in draft-proposal form. “The concept was to find away
SEE DSG
PROJECT
ON PAGE 6