October 2, 2007

Page 1

blogg ers A small grou pof Duke students creates a We b presence, PAGE 3 k '

m anniversary N.C.-based Bojangles'celebrates 3 decades in the business, PAGE 4

“■

u

m.golf

S

”■

The Blue Devils finish 6th at the mk|Fighting lllini Invitational, PAGE 9

Tiie Tower of Campus Thought auci Action

“■

x

1 he Chronicle I

I

i

I

/

J@ML provides

1 I

V fjflß

I

%

template for unity Students debate new line policy by

Julia Love

THE CHRONICLE

ALEXIS COOK/THE CHRONICLE

Vice President for StudentAffairs Larry Moneta says he is pleased with thewidecross-section of students who gather to hear live jazz at theMary Lou Williams Center. by

Kristen Davis

THE CHRONICLE

Live jazz resonates deeply with a diverse crowd at Duke. As the fifth anniversary of Jazz at the Mary Lou approaches, students and administrators laud the music as the heart that draws the eclectic group of listeners to the Mary Lou Williams Center for Black Culture for the swanky Wednesday night event. The Duke University Union along with the center co-sponsor the performance and jam session. Vice President for Student Affairs Larry Moneta wrote in an e-mail that there are other successful events and groups on campus

that encourage diversity, such as the Nasher soirees, Cameron Crazies, the Inferno and Union productions, but he singled the J@ ML out for praise. “Jazz at the Mary Lou is an especially wonderful event because of its intimacy, partnership between students, faculty and staff and because of the regularity and predictability of the event,” he said. Every week, the dimly-lit atmosphere of the MLWC offers a space to mingle in the soft glow of jazzy sophistication for homework-doers, friends, couples on dates and jazz enthusiasts of all ages, cultural backgrounds and localities. “Jazz was born in New Orleans, which

attracted all different types of people,” said John Brown, jazz program director and Grammy-nominated bassist. “The music itself is made of merging backgrounds and interests. It is a music of purity that speaks to the nature of mankind.” If the music is the heart of J@ML, Brown is the one that keeps it beating at Duke. Each week at the event, he plays bass in a quartet alongside musicians he has invited from the Durham, North Carolina or national jazz community. The saxophonist at the latest “Jazz” night had SEE MARY LOU ON PAGE

7

Vigil will mark Burmese violence by

Mention “Duke basketball” to a Duke student and chances are the words will trigger the image of a Cameron Crazie, face and chest painted blue, eyes drooping from hours in line, bouncing up-and-down in the packed student section. But attendance at games, which has declined consistendy over the past five years and reached to a low last season, could call that image into question. In a meeting Sept. 26, Duke Student Government debated a policy presented by Head Line Monitor Roberto Bazzani, a senior, and junior Sunny Kantha, vice president for athletics and campus services. The proposed policy attempts to combat the slumping attendance rates. The athletics department said a change in policy is necessary if all 1,200 undergraduate student seats in Cameron Indoor Stadium are to remain reserved for undergraduates, said Duke Student Government President Paul Slattery, a senior. But undercurrents of student dissent have arisen since the policy was first reported in The Chronicle one week ago. “I feel like thiswhole policy of doing everything online takes away from the Duke tradition,” sophomore Matt Pilnik said. As ofMonday night, 36 Duke students hadjoined a Facebook group created by junior Barry Wright in opposition to the proposed policy change. Wright said he fears students will be discouraged from waiting in the walk-up line if all 1,200 seats are reserved prior to the game, SEE LINE POLICY ON PAGE 5

Will Robinson THE CHRONICLE

Responding to reports of violence in Burma, students on Duke’s campus are carrying out a political movement that started nearly two months ago on the other the side of the world. The Asian Students Association, Amnesty International and the Human Rights Working Group are sponsoring events in support of victims of the Burmese violence beginning with a vigil Tuesday. Students participating in the demonstration will wear red shirts—to imitate the saffron-red robes worn by Buddhist monks and gather on the Chapel steps at noon. The event is a show ofsolidarity with Burmese monks, who have been victims of violence by the Burmese military dictatorship, said senior Cristian Liu, president of ASA and a sponsor of the event. “A lot of times people are stuck in theDuke bubble and they are not able to realize the other things going on in the —

A student hands out fliersfor a vigil protesting government violence against monks in Burma.

SEE BURMA ON PAGE 6

JIANGHAI HO/CHRONICLE FILE PHOTO

As of Monday, 36 students had joined a Facebook group opposing the proposed line policy change.


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.
October 2, 2007 by Duke Chronicle Print Archives - Issuu