September 12, 2007

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saacks appeal

dry dos & don'tsHH m. golf

Durham DA appointee may be ineligible for post, PAGE 3

Duke report offers suggestions for state in midst of drought PAGE 4

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The Blue Devils look back on a trip to Japan last weekend, PAGE 9

The Tower of Campus Thought and Action

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2nd CCI report offers prompts, few answers Selective living will not be eliminated, provost says by

ChelseaAllison and Nate Freeman THE CHRONICLE

The Interim Report on the Under-

graduate Experience at Duke University, a response to months of discussion that followed the recommendations of the Report of the Campus Culture Initiative Steering Committee, will be made public by Provost Peter Lange Thursday. The interim report which will be used to prompt discussion with students, faculty, staff and alumni—focuses Peter Lange on how housing, dining and social spaces on campus contribute to the creation of a sense of community. From these conversations, a set of recommendations will be made to President Richard Brodhead this winter, Lange said. Among the considerations of the report, the elimination of selective living one of the more controversial recommendations from the original CCI report —is no longer an option, John Simon, vice provost for academic affairs, said. “The elimination of selective living likely was not to be responsive to the largely expressed view of the students,” Lange said. The report notes that most students—both those affiliated with selective living organizations and those who are not—were strongly against abolishing selective living, a finding Simon said —

LARSA AL-OMAISHI/THE CHRONICLE

KC Johnson,a professor at Brooklyn Collegeand prominent lacrosse-case blogger, speaksTuesday in Page Auditorium.

Johnson chastises,

lauds lax case actors

by

Shuchi Parikh THE CHRONICLE

dents for an Ethical Duke and the Program on Values and Ethics in the Marketplace attracted an audience that filled approximately one-third of Page Auditorium. Johnson’s well-read blog criticizes members of the Duke administration and faculty and the Durham Police Department for their conduct during the case. “This case revealed a fundamental and deep-seated failure in the criminal justice system well beyond [former district attorney —

KC Johnson, a man students might otherwise only know through the Internet, appeared in person on Duke’s campus Tuesday night. Johnson, a history professor at Brooklyn College and author of the “Durham-inWonderland” blog, spoke to students, faculty, administrators and Durham residents yesterday about procedural violations in the Duke lacrosse case. The event—co-sponsored by Duke Stu-

SEE

JOHNSON ON PAGE 8

was unexpected. “One should watch one’s stereotypes,” Simon said. “The student body is much more complex, with a large array of opinions.” Conversations this fall are to be framed with the possibility of creating more selective groups as well as “elective” organized living options similar to the present living-learning communities. “If we go to this more pluralist system, there will be more co-ed selective living [and] we’ll be able to make a more coeducational campus,” Lange said. The report, however, articulates a concern that increasing the number of selective living options might make students feel obligated to join a group. This was particularly important to the drafters of the report because approximately 60 percent of West Campus residents are unaffiliated. “The whole idea is to make a campus that reflects the diversity of the preferences and needs and desires that our students have,” Lange said. “We’re going to create more ways students can define their living.” SEE CCI ON PAGE 7

Look for a special supplement with the full text of the Interim Report on the Undergraduate Experience at Duke University inside Thursday's edition of The Chronicle.

Report: Study Demand for bikes exceeds supply time low at Duke Jenke

Libby THE CHRONICLE

by

by

Caroline McGeough THE CHRONICLE

According

to the second report of the five-year

Campus Life and Learning Project, released in July, Duke students spend a “surprisingly modest” amount of time on academics and tend to preserve the homogeneity of their social networks in college. The report —which surveyed 1,533 Duke students in the classes of 2006 and 2007 annually during their time at college—presents the Duke community with a “comprehensive porKenneth Spenner trait ofthe college years” by measuring SEE CLL ON PAGE

6

The bike racks around campus are becoming increasingly crowded as more and more students discover Duke Bikes. The bike-loan program, which opened Aug. 21, is experiencing a shortage of bikes due to a high demand. The program started turning students away last Friday, said Watts Mangum, Office of Student Activities and Facilities set-up coordinator. Mangum and fellow OSAF Event Coordinator Jadrien Hill, who oversees the program, established a waitlist system last week to accommodate students in light of the shortage. “I’m not sure that everyone anticipated the success of the program,” OSAF Director Chris Roby said. “We figured we’d start out with a lower number [of bikes] and then

YATYNG CHANG/THE CHRONICLE

see bikes on page

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A near-empty rackoutslde the Outpost atteststo the popularity ofthe new DukeBikesprogram.


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