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Performing arts firms up head spot by
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Weekend sees three robberies
David Graham
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ChelseaAllison
THE CHRONICLE
THE CHRONICLE
Duke Performances Interim Director Aaron Greenwald has been named permanent director of the office, University officials confirmed Friday. “We conducted a nationwide search for the director which yielded many candidates,” strong Vice Provost for the Arts Scott Lindroth wrote in an e-mail Friday. ‘We wiere already impressed with Aaron’s leadership of Duke Performances this year, and his vision for enhancing the presence of Duke Performances on campus and in the community is very exciting.” The hire comes only 12 months into Greenwald’s IS-month contract. After coming to Duke to head the 2006 North Carolina Festival of the Book, he was to serve as interim director for a year and a half beginning Jan. 1, 2007. In his year on the job, Greenwald booked an ambitious season, supplementing his regular budget with grants and other funding to create six series, including tributes to soul music and late jazz great Thelonious Monk. “I’m elated,” Greenwald said. “I’m really excited, mosfiy by the vote of confidence and to have gone through the full open, nationwide search, to have come out as the first-choice candidate,
win in its ACC opener over the Cavaliers. After the game, head coach Mike Krzyzewski described the effort as his team’s most complete of the season. “I thought we didn’t have one guy who didn’t play hard or play pretty well,” Krzyzewski said. “That’s kind of the first game that that’s happened.” The Blue Devils (13-1, 1-0 in the ACC)
The Durham Police Department is investigating a number of armed robberies that occurred throughout the city over the weekend, two ofwhich happened just blocks from East Campus. Larry Moneta, vice president for student affairs, sent an e-mail Sunday morning alerting the Duke community that a student was robbed at gunpoint at the corner of Trinity Avenue and Buchanan Boulevard Saturday night, urging students to be vigilant. Sgt. L.B. Evans of DPD also posted an alert Sunday afternoon to the Partners Against Crime Web site informing District 2 residents about several armed robberies, two ofwhich took place Saturday. One robbery was on the 600 block ofWatts Street and the other occurred on Woodrow Street, neither of which involved Duke students. The student mentioned in Moneta’s e-mail was walking home from the Shell gas station on Main Street around 9 p.m. when he noticed he was being followed by a sport utility vehicle about two blocks from his apartment in the Trinity Park neighborhood. “[Two men] came up to me with a gun out —I must have been yelling for them not to hurt me or something because they were telling me to shut up,” the student, who wished to remain unnamed, said in an interview. “I handed over my wallet and I had my backpack on, which had my iPod and Macßook
SEE M. BBALL ON PAGE 1
SEE ROBBERY ON PAGE 3
SEE
GREEWALD ON PAGE 5 v
NOAH PRINCI
Freshman Nolan Smith drives past halfcourt in theBlue Devils'B7-65 victory over the Cavaliers Sunday night
Duke opens in style by
Will Flaherty THE CHRONICLE
A minute and a half into the game, Virginia head coach Dave Leitao didn’t like what he saw and called a timeout after a 5-0 Duke start. But with the relentless Blue Devils running on all cylinders, that early break did nothing to halt Duke’s winning tempo. Duke built on its quick start and led wire-to-wire, notching an impressive 87-65
Panhel chapters dole out 305 bids by
CHRONICLE STAFF PHOTO
Three new members of Alpha Delta Pi sorority—Anne Marie Gordon (left to right), Katie Swaiis and Cassie Ludwig—react during bid day celebrations.
Rob
Copeland and Zak THE CHRONICLE
Kazzaz
The Best Damn Pledge Class. Ever has officially arrived. Ten of them, to be exact. After four rounds of small-talk, smiles and crafts, more than 300 freshman and sophomore women received bids to the 10 sororities of the Panhellenic Association yesterday. Following a pattern from previous years, most of the sororities filled their target quota of 32 new members. Nine of the 10 groups met or exceeded that goal. Delta Gammafinished with 34 new members, the most ofany sorority, while Alpha Omicron Pi had a total of nine, according to SEE BID DAY ON PAGE 4
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NUMBERS OBTAINED
BY THE CHRONICLE
AS OF SUNDAY