Rally in Durham
Truffle dog
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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
XXXXXDAY,SEPTEMBER TUESDAY, MMMM XX,3,2013 2013
WWW.DUKECHRONICLE.COM
Crime incites multiple reactions
ONEONE HUNDRED HUNDRED ANDAND EIGHTH NINTH YEAR, YEAR, ISSUE ISSUE XXX9
Pratt HIV pouch waiting on funds
by Elizabeth djinis THE CHRONICLE
After a string of robberies occurring around Central Campus this summer and new security measures in response, opinions vary among students as to whether the University is doing an adequate job improving campus security. Residence life staff have taken measures over the summer to ensure that students would return to a safer campus. Both the doors and sliding doors of the apartments have been equipped with automatically locking mechanisms, said Dean for Residential Life Joe Gonzalez. He added that the number of security guards stationed on Central has increased from previous years. Still, some students have expressed concern. “My perceived sense of safety has declined over the summer,” sophomore Udit Agrawal said. “Late at night I don’t feel as safe as I used to.” Although he has never been to Central Campus, senior Xin Zhang, a visiting student from China, said he would not feel safe doing so. But senior Jacquie Schindler, a first-time Central resident, said the security additions have been helpful in alleviating students’ worries. “People were initially hesitant but I think that Duke understands that it’s an issue,” Schindler said. “I originally [was nervous] last year and for that reason I decided to live on the second floor…but [the University] has made a bunch of improvements.” Another new resident, sophomore Elizabeth Buckley, echoed Schindler’s statements, See CENTRAL SAFETY, page 6
SPECIAL TO THE CHRONICLE
A Pratt School of Engineering class has created a new delivery method for antiretroviral drugs.
by Maggie Hammerle THE CHRONICLE
Modeled after a ketchup packet, an invention made by a Pratt School of Engineering class could revolutionize the way antiretrovirals are delivered to newborns. Robert Malkin, professor of the practice of biomedical engineering and director of Engineering World Health, and the students in his Design for the Developing World course developed the new antiretroviral delivery method—the Pratt Pouch—in 2011 and began testing it the following summer. Previously, the essential medication was
delivered to developing countries in syringes, but the medication often dried up before reaching the pregnant mothers. By storing the medicine in the Pratt Pouch, the medicine does not dry up before reaching the developing countries. The Pratt Pouch has gone through clinical trials, with 100 percent of mothers involved in the study reporting that they’d rather use the the pouch than other single-dose methods. The product has not yet been launched, but with increased funding it could be unveiled in China, Malkin said. “If you buy a can of paint and put it
on the wall, it is permanently a solid,” Malkin said. “It changes state because you change the surface to volume ratio. This is analogous to the problem the people are having with the syringe.” An HIV antiretroviral is a medication that should be injected into a newborn within 24 to 28 hours of birth. The medication works to suppress HIV replication in the baby in order to reduce the chance that the virus will develop into AIDS. Students in the Design for the Developing World course tackled the See HIV, page 6
Shooters rates double due to damages by Linda Yu THE CHRONICLE
Prices for Duke students to get low just got higher. Due to rowdy freshmen and extensive property damages in the last two weeks, the Durham club Shooters II Saloon has raised its cover fee for Duke students under 21 years old from $5 to $10. “Something about these kids is totally different this year,” Kim
Cates, the club’s owner, said. “I don’t know what’s happened to them.” Cates said she has been forced to hire three new bouncers and a new police officer because of unruly students—who have destroyed cabinets and torn the bathroom doors off four times in the past two weeks. She noted there has also been an increase in students trying to get in with their DukeCards but no IDs.
“I love Duke students, I try to take care of them, but when I don’t get help from them—when they disrespect me and tear up my building—it puts me in trouble,” she said. An increased number of underaged Duke students have been trying to purchase alcohol, Cates said, adding that her main concern is that this will cause See SHOOTERS, page 12
Shooters, a popular spot for Duke undergraduates, has raised the cover price from $5 to $10, due to an increase in rowdiness in the last couple of weeks.
CHRONICLE FILE PHOTO