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The Blue Devils fall 4-3 at home versus Ala. A&M, SPORTSWRAP
The Tower of Campus Thought and Action
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Global health Prez's Yale tenure may offer glimpse center marks Duke's future into by
Chelsea Allison THE CHRONICLE
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A long-time champion of undergraduate education, with
the lacrosse scr behind him an ments of three trators in front dent Richard Bi has an opportunity focus toward his own And after spending New Haven, Conn., h by modeling it on what' Brodhead’s third term Yale College be 2003, barely five months before he was appointed the ninth president of Duke. He gradu. j in 1968 and r. torate in Engl; fore joining the Ivy League instf named dean o: L ■ in 1993, a post A aspects of Duk( dean of the fac Sciences positi The deans of Yale’s 5,200 students and a. of faculty, reporting to both the provost and the president, Brodhead said. “The interest of the job was that it drew everything together,” he said.
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“I was generally regarded by faculty as the leader of the faculty. And [to] students... I spoke on behalf of their education.” he was considered wildly *oth students and adminis,rt because he knew the colired students and faculty sensitive, perceptive and seeches,” Richard Levin, Yale University, wrote in He was beloved for his easy ly rapport with students, deeply respected by the is wisdom and good judgis
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While at Yale, Brodhead chaired the largest undergraduate education over-
had seen in 30 years, revamping was the Comic College Education, a 'e academic review rel 2003. t recommended an inIty, vouched for the cre-
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ence teaching center on ’s central campus and nges in distributional re-
he left for Duke before lementation of these recommendations through, Brodhead was still able to incite change. “Every aspect of what we call the ‘Brodhead Report’ has been successfully
anniversary Eddie Zhang THE CHRONICLE
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Dr. Michael Merson is a very busy man The director of Duke’s $3O-million Global Health Institute, Merson has spent the last 12 months building an organization designed to reduce health disparities both abroad and in the United States. Launched in April 2006, DGHI did not begin officially functioning until Merson’s arrival in November. Since then, Merson has met with faculty, administrators and student groups to learn about their interests and expectations. He has also hired new staff and created a long-term plan for the first five years of DGHFs existence “Global health shows us the future ofhow universities can work—to have the best scholarship, and to focus our educational programs to train the best leaders, and, in that process, making a difference,” Merson said. To do that, DGHI has expanded the number of global health courses offered to students and has identified more opportunities and funding for summer internships and fieldwork. DGHI is also currently exploring the possibility of a global health major, Merson said. “What was clear to me from the beginning
SEE BRODHEAD ON PAGE 8 SEE
Drought persists in Durham by
Joe Clark
THE CHRONICLE
OLIVIERI/CHRONICLE FILE PHOTO
Even though Durham County received four inches ofrain last weekend, the added water did little to affect the drought, city officials said. “The weekend rains only gave Durham about seven more days of news water,” said Eben Polk, associate in research at the Nicholas School of analysis the Environment and Earth Sciences. “Though it’s helpful, this creates small a impact.” only pretty Durham should not expect that amount of rain over the course of three days to occur very often, Polk added. Since the county still has a rain deficit of approximately 20 inches, it will take much more than a few days ofrain to break the drought, he said. “I think an inch of rain in a day is a pretty substantial amount and is not a typical rainfall” Polk said. “We are still in an ‘extreme drought’ and likely will stay that way,
Rain showers last week were not enough to end the severe drought in Durham and the region.
SEE DROUGHT ON PAGE 6
CHASE
HEALTH ON PAGE 5