Feb. 11, 2013 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

XXXDAY, MONTH MONDAY, FEBRUARY XX, 11, 2013 2013

ONE ONEHUNDRED HUNDREDAND ANDEIGHTH EIGHTHYEAR, YEAR,ISSUE ISSUE96 X

WWW.DUKECHRONICLE.COM

‘Other issues’ Med school under one roof at last prompt KSig investigation by Danielle Muoio and Julian Spector THE CHRONICLE

by Georgia Parke THE CHRONICLE

The Eta Prime chapter of the Kappa Sigma fraternity has been suspended by both its national organization and by Duke. Vice President for Student Affairs Larry Moneta announced the University’s suspension of the fraternity in an email to the student body Thursday. The email also addressed the recent controversy over the “Asia Prime”—later known as “International Relations”—party Kappa Sigma hosted Feb. 1. Students from the coalition that organized the protest against the party last Wednesday will meet with Moneta Monday to discuss their demands. Although Moneta’s email makes reference to the party and protests and directly refers to its effect on the Asian community at Duke, he said in an interview Sunday that the fraternity was not suspended at Duke because of the party. “[The suspension] has nothing to do with the Asian theme party,” Moneta said. “In my meeting with [Kappa Sigma leaders] we discovered other issues that are being investigated.” Moneta said he was unable to elaborate on the nature of the issues that resulted in the chapter’s suspension due to confidentiality agreements. He explained that the Office of Student Conduct is administering an ongoing investigation of Kappa Sigma’s conduct. Eta Prime president Luke Keohane, a senior, did not respond to multiple requests for comment. “The status of the Kappa Sigma fraternity will be subject to decisions made by their national organization in consultation with Duke,” the Thursday email reads. “Though the party itself was offensive and may not necessarily have violated the formal rules of the Duke Community Standard, the fraternity faces serious consequences.” The Kappa Sigma national fraternity released a statement Wednesday explaining that it is investigating Eta Prime’s “social event” from Feb. 1, which allegedly violated the fraternity’s Code of Conduct. “The Kappa Sigma fraternity finds that the actions which have been associated with the event are inappropriate and insensitive and Kappa Sigma does not condone such activity,” Kappa Sigma Executive Director Mitchell Wilson said in the release. SEE KSIG ON PAGE 2

After 73 years scattered throughout the Duke Medicine campus, medical students finally have a home. Found in the heart of the medical campus and Research Drive, the Mary Duke Biddle Trent Semans Center for Health Education provides a much needed home base for medical students of all years. Glass walls flood the structure with natural light, while students utilize study nooks to cram for an exam or nap before class. Before the completion of the LEED silver certified building, students learned and studied throughout the

basement of Duke Medicine’s Purple Zone, the Davison Building and occasional rented spaces for large gatherings. “It was really dark, always quiet and I felt like I was just trapped.” Terence Verla, second-year medical student and Pratt ’09, said of the previous medical school space. “Now that [the new building] exists I can look at it and say ‘We needed this’.... It feels like you’re actually alive now.” Although the center has been open for just three weeks, a dedication ceremony Friday celebrated the legacy of its namesake and the way this SEE SEMANS ON PAGE 3

JISOO YOON/THE CHRONICLE

Students at the School of Medicine gather in the main atrium of the Mary Duke Biddle Trent Semans Center for Health Education, the school’s first centralized location in its 73 years of existence. The center has now been open for three weeks.

UNC, Duke students tied by ‘portal’ by Emma Baccellieri THE CHRONICLE

JACKIE KLAUBERG/THE CHRONICLE

Students and staff look into a new video portal to the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. The Bryan Center installation is a collaborative project between the two universities.

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With Wednesday’s basketball game drawing nearer, many students’ attitude toward the neighboring school is more competitive than collaborative, but for those seeking partnership, a new opportunity is now available in the Bryan Center. Friday afternoon, a video portal between Duke and the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill was officially unveiled, allowing students to see and converse with each other between the campuses. From the outside, each portal appears as a large oval television screen housed in a white cube. Inside the cube, the communication is enabled by a computer running Apple’s FaceTime software. The portal is the brainchild of UNC sophomore Christopher Batchelder, with Duke sophomore Zac Elder managing Duke’s half of the project. “We’re just capitalizing on the opportunity that comes with having two great universities so close together,” Batchelder said. “It’s a SEE PORTAL ON PAGE 2

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