August 28, 2007

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Harvard doctor Patio serves u booze, food named med dean by

Chelsea Allison THE CHRONICLE

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Rebecca Wu

the chronicle

Nancy Andrews, a physicianscientist and dean for basic sciences and graduate studies at Harvard Medical School, has been named dean of the Duke University School ofMedicine. Andrews has ex“Nancy cepti o n a I achievements as a research scientist, she has experience administering a topflight medical school and she cares

passionately aboutmedical education,” President Richard Brodhead wrote in an e-mail. “In short, she is the whole package.” Andrews is a pediatric hematologist/oncologist, the former director of the Harvard-MIT M.D./Ph.D. program and a member of the Institute of Medicine of the National Academy of Sciences. She will not only be the first female dean of Duke’s School of Medicine, but also the first woman to lead any of the nation’s top 10 medical schools, Tm proud forDuke to have that distinction, but I’d add that excellenceand diversity were completely complementary goals,” Brodhead said. “She quickly emerged at the top of a very strong field.”

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Beginning with a debut party Friday, students will be able to enjoy spirits, music and sports on a new outdoor patio at the Armadillo Grill. Duke Dining Services has teamed with the Office of Student Affairs to add the approximately 100-squarefoot social space—complete with a 52-inch television, seating for 75 to 100 and beer on tap—outside the Bryan Center restaurant Electrical equipment has also been installed for the $400,000 project, which was funded as part of the strategic planning project, Wulforst said. It is another effort to give students a taste ofthe more physical and immediate changes stemming from the Campus Culture Initiative Steering Committee Report released in February. “Part of its creation is a response to the CCI report to do more on campus to build community,” said Jim Wulforst, director of dining services. “The space has been there for years, but itjust was not a comfortable place to sit I think it’sall part of a bigger plan to keep students engaged in

Dr. Victor Dzau, president and CEO of Duke University Health System and chancellor for health affairs, said he has known Andrews for more than 10years, and added that she has very unique qualifications as a physician-scientist Dzau was previously chair of the Department of Medicine at Harvard’s Brigham and Women’s Hospital, “She is a great fit [for Duke] because she is a physician-scientistand thatis whatDuke needs—someone who understands both the clinical and research aspects,” he said. “She is also passionate about her students, and her positions as director of the HarvardMIT. M.D.-Ph.D. program and the first woman dean of any of the top 10 medical schools make her a great role model.” Andrews wrote in an e-mail that she was shocked to discover that none of the nation’s top medical schools has ever had a female dean. “I think the fact that Duke is first is a good reflection of what I see in Duke —a university where tradition is valued, but innovation is a strong part of the culture,” she said, As dean, Andrews will be responsible for all the educational missions of the medical school, Dzau said, “Duke is already ranked among the top 10 medical SEE ANDREWS ON PAGE 5

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The patio outside the Armadillo Grill was built at a price of $400,000 as part of the strategic planning project, Director of Dining Services Jim Wulforst said.

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Students question DUPD handling of race issues o

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Yousef AbuGharbieh THE CHRONICLE

As part of its core values, the Duke University Police Department aims to be fair, inclusive and caring. Some students, however, claim that in the lastfew years, DUPD has been anything but. These students, many of whom are black, complain that DUPD has been unreasonably harsh in its treatment of minority cultural groups. In particular, they point to perceived differences in police activity at events thrown by black groups and those thrown by fraternities and se-

lective-living groups on West Campus. “There is a general lack of universal police enforcement on campus,” said Malik Burnett, Trinity ’O7, former presidentofBlack Student Alliance and a firstyear medical student. “On West, there’s no real police presence at frat parties. There was, however, a police presence at black parties held in [the Von Canon Rooms in the Bryan Center], Brodie [Gym] and the Great Hall.” BSA and other black groups were

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Making Campus Culture Change a Reality: Second in a series of articles on programs enacted in response to the Campus Culture Initiative Steering Committee Report

New soft quota aims tocut ePrint by

Kristen Davis THE CHRONICLE

Free, unlimited ePrinting is gone forever, well, not exactly. Beginning this fall, the Office of Informatio. Technology has added a soft quota to tfie numbe of pages each student can print per semester oj ePrint and set double-sided printing as the d* fault ePrint option. The soft quota means students may apply fo free additional pages online if they need them any time. What may be confusing for students is that th OIT website uses monetary values to explain th quota, even though no money is actually charged to students’ accounts, said junior Alex

SARA GUERRERO/THE CHRONICLE

SEE EPRINT ON PAGE 6

Students will still be effectively allowed infinite pages under a new ePrint quota.


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August 28, 2007 by Duke Chronicle Print Archives - Issuu