October 26, 2007

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Campus Council discusses selective groups' commons spaces, PAGE 4

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visa shortage International grad students struggle to obtain visas, PAGE 8

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The Tower of Campus Thought and Action

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WISER

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Agre to depart for Hopkins

Intrasquad tipoff

expands past Duke

Chemist is the only

BY ZAB KAZZAZ THE CHRONICLE

Nobel winner at Duke

WISER accomplished a lot more this week than selling T-shirts and cupcakes on the West Campus Plaza. The Kenyan government recognized the Women’s Institute for Secondary Education and Research as an non-governmental organization Monday, propelling it toward its goal of funding 120 students to attend an all-girl secondary school in Muhuru Bay, Kenya, said Sherryl Broverman, executive officer of the NGO. “It’s a huge breakthrough for us and really allows us to start moving in Kenya,” said BroverSherryl man, who is also the coBroverman founder of WISER and an associate professor of the practice of biology. [NGO status] is a legal entity that allows you to function.” Senior Andy Cunningham, a co-founder of WISER, said the organization’s expansion extends beyond official international recognition to a broader movement to aid global

by

disparities.

Since the beginning of the month, Cunningham has been visiting schools

across the country to encourage them to

NaureenKhan THE CHRONICLE

Gerald Henderson shoots over Marty Pocius during last year's Blue-White Scrimmage.Saturday's scrimmage at 7 p.m. in Cameron Indoor Stadium will allow fans to see this season's team for the first time.

SEE WISER ON PAGE 9

Facebook groups tout LDOC bands by

Ally Helmers THE CHRONICLE

SEE AGRE ON PAGE

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For those capable of remembering it, the sight of a favorite band on stage on the Last Day of Classes is a wellearned reward for a year ofhard work. Students determined to experience this phenomenon are turning toward social networking Web site Facebook to recruit campus support for a performance by the artist of their choice. With nearly 570 members from the Duke community, the group “Third Eye Blind forLDOC” aims to persuade the event’s coordinators to have the 1990 pop-rockers as the day’s main attraction. “I feel that since a decent amount [of students] have supported the Third Eye Blind group, the LDOC Committee will have to at least consider the option,” said sophomore Kyle Gabb, the group’s creator. “It’s just away to get the idea out there.” Although Gabb’s group is the largest on Facebook, other groups advocate for hip-hop band the Roots, rapper DMX and classic rockers Journey. Last year, the day-long event concluded with performances by Young Love, rapper Common and pop musician Jason Mraz—who Gabb said had a lower profile than

Nobel laureate Dr. Peter Agre will leave his post as vice chancellor for science and technology at Duke University Medical Center to join the faculty of Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health. The decision was announced Tuesday. Agre, who won the 2003 Nobel Prize in chemistry for his discovery of aquaporins, has been selected to lead the Johns Hopkins Malaria Research Institute as its director, effective Jan. 1. “This is a terrific opportunity for Peter as he has had a long-standing interest in diseases affecting the developing world and now has the opportunity to explore and expand ways in which his own research can be applied in the fight against malaria in particular,” Dr. Victor Dzau, chancellor for health affairs and president and CEO of the Duke University Health System, wrote in an internal memorandum to the School of Medicine. Although Agre will no longer be a leading administrator in the Duke health system, he will maintain his ties to the University as a professor of cell biology and medicine. He will also continue to serve various other DUMC advisory positions, Dzau said. Agre was attracted to the position at Johns Hopkins University because of his strong ties to the school and his interest in fighting what he believes is one of the most pressing global health issues today, Michael Klag, dean of the Bloomberg School of Public Health, told The Chronicle.

Alternative rock band Third Eye Blind is one of the bands supported by Facebook groups as an act for the Last Day ofClasses celebration.The groupcurrently has 570 members.

SEE LDOC ON PAGE

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Peter Agre, the only Nobel Prize winner at Duke, will leave the University for a post at Johns Hopkins.


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