February 27, 2008

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GRAD. AND PROF. STUDENT COUNCIL

GPSC elects Zong as Young Trustee BY ZAK KAZZAZ THE CHRONICLE

Xing Zong, an international student from China, was elected from a pool of three finalists to serve as the next graduate and professional Young Trustee by Graduate and Professional Student Council representatives at GPSC’s general body meeting Tuesday. Zong, a fifth-year Ph.D. candidate in physics, said he plans to serve as the connection between the Board of Trustees and his peers. “I want to be your iPhone Young Trustee,” Zong told the council in his speech. “It has many different functions. I want to learn from you—I want to store all your useful information.” Zong’s platform focused on three principles; open house, open sources and open minds. He explained in his speech that “open house” entails attracting the most talented students to Duke from around the world through innovative recruitment strategies. “Open sources” and “open minds” apply to increasing the interaction between graduate and professional students and promoting an environment

GA. TECH vs. DUKE Cameron Indoor TONIGHT 9 p.m. ESPN

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conducive to entrepreneurship. Zong added that he hopes Duke will replicate some of its peer institutions’ successful ventures. He said Stanford University has distinguished itself because it has taken advantage of its proximity to large nearby companies such as Yahoo, Hewlett-Packard and Google. “The Research Triangle [Park] is near Duke, but we have not yet utilized the area,” he said. Graduate and professional students in attendance asked the candidates questions regarding topics ranging from security issues to their plans if elected. Zong kept the council in good humor throughout his speech, parodying the daily strife ofhis peers. “Graduate and professional students typically struggle to get an ‘A’ in our 200- or 300-level classes,” he said. “We constantly struggle to survive the 36-hour [GPSG basketball] campout and we constantly struggle to get a parking space.” GPSG President Crystal Brown, a third-year law student, said she was pleased with the night’s selection and believes

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Gabe Starosta THE CHRONICLE

SEE GPSC ON PAGE 4

WILLIAM LIEW/CHRONK

Center Brian Zoubekhad the first double-double of his career Saturday against StJohn's.

Following a tumultuous week in which the Blue Devils lost two games and their sense of ACC invincibility, Duke appears to have exorcised those demons after a comfortable win over Big East' minnows St. John’s Saturday. Now, the team has a chance to get back on track in conference play as it takes on Georgia Tech (11-14,4-7 in the ACC) tonight at 9 p.m. in Cameron Indoor Stadium. The No. 7 Blue Devils (23-3,102) had been flying high in league play, as none of theirfirst 10 opponents kept the final margin within nine points. In back-to-back road trips at Wake Forest and Miami, though, Duke missed open looks and turned the ball over a total of 45 times en route to two losses. But, the Red Storm’s trip to Cameron came just in time for a Blue Devil squad hurting for continuity and confidence. “I don’t know about righting the ship yet, but I think we are on the course of righting the ship,” sophomore Brian Zoubek said. “We have not gotten there yet because where we are and where we want to be are two totally different things. Where we need to be in March for the Tournament is a lot better than it is right now.” In the game’s first few minutes, St. John’s hung right with Duke, SEE M. BBALL ON PAGE 10

Study abroad cost has litde effect on students' choices Muping Gan THE CHRONICLE

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The plane tickets cost hundreds of dollars and the food even more, but the study abroad experience really is priceless, students who have done it said. Although the majority ofDukies who study abroad choose to attend programs not administered by Duke, they said the choice is often based on available locations and academic preferences rather than costs—even though Duke-administered programs are sometimes the more expensive opdon. “If cost was an issue, some people might not go abroad [at all],” said junior Bryant Moquist, who participated in New York University in Paris in Fall 2007. “The costs of Duke and non-Duke programs in Paris are relatively similar, so your budget really affects how much you travel.” .

KEVIN

HWANG/THE CHRONICLE

Newly elected graduateYoung Trustee Xing Zong is a fifth-yearphysics Ph.D. student.

Students in Duke programs pay Duke tuition and the program’s fee, but for programs organized through other universities, students pay the host institution’s tuition and a separate Duke study abroad fee, Associate Dean Margaret Riley, director of the Office of Study Abroad, wrote in an e-mail. The study-abroad fee paid by students for Dukeapproved programs—offered in 14 international cities—is currently $2,350, which covers services like program and course evaluation and approval, advising, orientation, emergency repatriation and evacuation insurance. The program fee for Duke-administered study abroad programs, although varying, is similar in cost, with projected program fees for Fall 2008 set at SEE ABROAD ON PAGE

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