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Students tutor and mentor public school students in Durham, PAGE 3
Profs team up with 4-H to bring science program to schools,PAGE 3
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The Blue Devils roll over Elon 6-o Thursday night PAGE 9
The Tower of Campus Thought and Action
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Anne Llewellyn THE CHRONICLE
It may not look like something from “The Jetsons,” but it does have air-conditioning, which is already more than what some Duke students have. JVC of America and Popular Science Magazine teamed up to bring the “Dorm Room of the Future” to campus Thursday and Friday. The event runs from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m., and the display is set up in the visitor’s parking lot behind the Bryan Center. Duke University Union decided to bring the tour, which aims to increase brand name recognition among college students, to campus earlier this summer. “This is the first year that Popular Science Magazine is presenting a college tour, and I thought that it might be fun to be one of the first schools included in the tour,” senior Rachel Saperstein, director of external liaisons for DUU, wrote in an e-mail. “I also thought that students might enjoy taking a break to check out some of the fun items that the tour is bringing to Duke.” The dormitory room is housed within see-through windows in the back of a truck and features a flat-screen television, a microwave, a laptop and other electronic appliances. “It’s not quite realistic. No dorm room would be this neat,” JVC representative Jim Carroll said. “We need some clothes thrown in the comers.” Next to the dorm-display truck are several tents housing other electronic gizmos and gadgets. Students can play a game of “Quake 4” at a station of laptop computers as well as try their hand at flying a remote-
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still murky by
Yousef AbuGharbieh THE CHRONICLE
If David Evans, Collin Finnerty and Reade Seligmann’s proposed civil suit goes to trial, the three former Duke lacrosse players may be sitting in an unfamiliar spot in the courtroom —at the plaintiff s table. Last week, the players’ lawyers presented Durham city officials with a proposed out-of-court settlement requesting $lO million over five years for each of the players and requiring changes to
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GLEN GUTTERSON/THE CHRONICLE
A truck carrying a futuristic, air-conditioned dorm on wheels parks behind the Bryan Center Thursday. controlled Fly Tech dragonfly. There are also several contests and raffles students can enter, such as a 30second video competition called “Pimp My Dorm.” The grand prize is a $5,000 voucher that can be spent on electronics at Circuit City. Staff members have been filming students explaining why they need
their room pimped out in order to select a winner for the competition. Carroll said they already had about 25 videos Thursday afternoon, adding that he was pleased with the level of participation. The best video Carroll said he saw featured two members of Duke University SEE DORM ON PAGE 6
Delaykeeps senior off Minn, bridge by
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judicial procedures
in Durham. The Durham City Council has a month to accept the offer. The council has yet to issue a response Durham’s liability insurance policy only covers claims of up to $5 million. The deal presented last week would require Durham to pay the other $25 million from the city’s coffers—a fact that makes the council unlikely to accept the proposed deal, Duke law professor Thomas Metzloff said. That does not mean that the two parties will not settle out of court, Metzloff said. “I have no doubt that [Evans, Trinity ’O6, Finnerty and Seligmann] would accept less,” he said. “It’s an opening offer the game of negotiation starts high.” If the suit goes to trial, the players have no guarantee that they will win, he added. Though there is probably enough evidence to prove wrongdoing on the part of former Durham district attorney Mike Nifong, the city of Durham is not necessarily legally responsible, Metzloff said. Municipal governments, unlike businesses, cannot be held responsible for the —
SEE CIVIL SUIT ON PAGE
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THE CHRONICLE
Senior Matthew Campbell never expected that three minof tardiness would be the difference between being a rescuer and a victim. On the evening ofAug. 1,had Campbell not been running late, he too may have been hurt during the Minneapolis bridge collapse. A Minneapolis native and a Chronicle photographer, Campbell and 10 ofhis friends were piled in a van headed to a Minnesota Twins baseball game that evening. About a third of a mile away from the Interstate 35-West bridge, however, they pulled their car off the road because of the collapsing bridge. “For me the most shocking thing is that if our car had not been late, we would have been on the bridge,” Campbell said. “I would have taken some car’s spot on the bridge and our van would have gone down instead of somebody else in front of us.” Campbell said at the time of his arrival, only about 15 to 20 civilians and several firefighters and police officers were on hand to help victims of the collapse. utes
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Gviiians leave their cars behind asauthorities establish orderaround the coliapsed bridge.
SEE CAMPBELL ON PAGE 5
SARA GUERRERO/THECHRONICLE
The threeformer lacrosse playersoffered the dty of Durham a $3O-miTlion settlement last Thursday.