Feb. 1, 2012 issue

Page 1

T H E I N D E P E N D E N T D A I LY AT D U K E U N I V E R S I T Y

The Chronicle

WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 1, 2012

Graduate YT finalists nominated

ONE HUNDRED AND SEVENTH YEAR, ISSUE 88

WWW.DUKECHRONICLE.COM

Duke’s rise in applicants contrasts with decline at some Ivy League peers

by Lauren Carroll THE CHRONICLE

Three students are vying for one spot to represent the University’s graduate and professional students on the Board of Trustees. The Young Trustee Screening Committee of the Graduate and Professional Student Council has chosen three finalists for the position of Young Trustee. The finalists are: Malik Burnett, a fourth-year in a joint MD and MBA program at the School of Medicine and the Fuqua School of Business; Will Evans, a second-year Slavic and Eurasian studies masters candidate; and Felicia Hawthorne, a fifth-year genetics and genomics doctoral candidate. The finalists were chosen last week from a pool of 22 applicants, compared to last year’s 30. The GPSC General Assembly, which represents the graduate and professional student body, will vote on the finalists at its meeting Feb. 21, said Katherine Duch, chair of the YTSC and third-year public policy studies doctoral candidate. This closed election is one of the primary differences between the undergraduate and graduate Young Trustee processes. “The finalists are all outstanding candidates,” Duch wrote in an email Monday. “They understand the responsibilities of the Young Trustee position, they recognize SEE YOUNG TRUSTEE ON PAGE 6

CHRONICLE GRAPHIC BY KATIE NI

Duke’s 6 percent increase in applicants for the Class of 2016 was moderate, as compared to University of Chicago’s 16.1 percent increase in applicants. by Kristie Kim THE CHRONICLE

Some discrepancies in the rise and fall of application rates at top institutions follow a distinct geographical divide. Although Duke admissions saw a 6 percent increase in the news total number of applianalysis cations from last year, some elite institutions have reported a decrease in applications

for the Class of 2016. Dean of Undergraduate Admissions Christoph Guttentag attributed the varying admissions trends to a regional divide, with schools in the Northeast receiving less applications than in past years. “We are approaching a point where the number of high school students is declining, and this phenomenon is happening at a much quicker rate in the Northeast,” Guttentag said. “It’s not surprising that universities in the northeastern region are

significantly more affected than those that are outside of the region.” Duke received a record high number of early and regular applications at 31,565. Several other schools’ application rates also rose—Northwestern University experienced a 3.5 percent increase in applicants, and the University of Chicago saw a 16 percent increase. Applications to Stanford University rose nearly 7 percent. SEE ADMISSIONS ON PAGE 5

ELECTION 2012

He’s Not Here to be sold to Romney wins former UNC football player Florida primary by Patton Callaway THE CHRONICLE

University students can still expect Sunday night karaoke and quarter cent beers on Tuesdays at He’s Not Here Bar despite an upcoming change in ownership. He’s Not Owner David Kitzmiller came out of retirement last year to run the Chapel Hill-based bar after it recorded a 15 percent drop in sales for three consecutive years, bar manager Fleming Fuller said. Under Kitzmiller—a 76-yearold native of Nova Scotia—the bar has continued to be a favorite for University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and Duke students alike and is boasting profits once again. Kitzmiller put the bar on the market earlier last month and was immediately greeted with more than 250 offers. After originally listed on bizquest.com and craigslist.com as an anonymous bar for sale price at about $165,000, Kitz-

miller asked Neal DePersia, Raleigh broker of National Restaurant Properties to take over the selling of the business. Noting that it typically takes eight months to sell a business, DePersia said he was overwhelmed by the community response to buy He’s Not and the desire by potential owners to maintain the bar’s current image, culture and traditions. “Bartenders are not known for keeping secrets,” DePersia said. “Word got out, and it pretty much went viral…. Everyone was interested in buying and interested in not seeing anything change.” Kitzmiller declined to comment until the sale—expected to go forward Wednesday—is final. DePersia said that they are currently in the final stages of negotiation to sell the bar to a former UNC-Chapel Hill football player and a male alumnus of Elon University. Although

Electability surfaces as priority by Jack Mercola and Michael Shammas THE CHRONICLE

Mitt Romney’s Tuesday victory in the Florida Republican primary has likely cemented his position as the GOP frontrunner. Romney, former governor of Massanews chusetts, won 46 percent of the primary vote, the Florida Division of Elections reanalysis ported. Newt Gingrich, former speaker of the U.S. House of Representatives, came in second with 32 percent. Former Pennsylvania senator Rick Santorum won 13 percent, and Rep. Ron Paul, R-Texas and Medicine ’61, came in last with 7 percent. Florida—a winner-

SEE HE’S NOT ON PAGE 5

DCRI director to head Stanford dept. of medicine, Page 3

ONTHERECORD

“Tuition hikes at Duke are all too often justified by the common rejoinder that ‘everyone else is doing it, too.’” —Jeremy Ruch on rising tuition. See column page 11

SEE PRIMARY ON PAGE 4

Duke athletics a McCaffrey family tradition, Page 7


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