March 27, 2014

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University

Recess

meet the new duu president

duke colloquium presents art as career series

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recess page 3

The Chronicle 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

xxxxxday, march thursDAY, mmmm 27, xx, 2014 2013

www.dukechronicle.com

ONE ONEHUNDRED HUNDREDAND ANDEIGHTH ninth YEAR, YEAR, Issue Issue xxx 103

Donation given to help fund West Union

Spring in the air

CollegiateACB to be sold due to media attention by Carleigh Stiehm

by Emma Baccellieri

After more than 1,500 topics that span 103 pages on the Duke section alone, the founder of CollegiateACB has decided to sell the university gossip forum due to recent negative attention the website has received. Since its launch almost exactly two years ago, the Duke page has remained steadily in the top five most active universities on the site, said CollegiateACB founder Tim O’Shea. Following the firestorm of media attention surrounding The Chronicle’s Feb. 14 profile on Lauren, the freshman adult film actress, the site exploded with negative attention. More than 800 new threads have been posted to the Duke section in the past 30 days. O’Shea is selling the website through an auction online. Bids are accepted via a Flippa account. In the description, O’Shea wrote that one of the reasons that he wants to sell the site is because recent media attention “is something that has deeply impacted relationships with friends and family.” “The whole Duke debacle has helped it gain more notoriety than it already had,” O’Shea said of the site. “The traffic is the highest it has ever been.” Rather than being a place for expression, CollegiateACB became a place known for harmful comments and potential bullying, O’Shea said. He noted that he no longer wanted to read

The University received a $10 million donation to help fund the ongoing renovations to West Union Wednesday. The donation was given by the Crown family—including Board of Trustees member Paula Hannaway Crown, Trinity ’80—and will be used to “create opportunities for social and intellectual interaction” in the renovated union, according to a Duke News press release. The donation comes after Executive Vice President Tallman Trask said the University would be using private philanthropic gifts to help fund the West Union renovations in an interview with The Chronicle March 2. “A university thrives when it offers inviting spaces for faculty and students to gather and connect in a host of programmed and unprogrammed ways,” President Richard Brodhead said in the press release. “This thoughtful gift, at the heart of Duke’s campus, is truly a gift for the entire Duke community. We are grateful to the Crown family for their generosity and vision.” Plans for the renovations have gone through a number of iterations over the past year. The remodel is being funded in large part by an $80 million donation that the University received from the Charlotte-based Duke Endowment in

The chronicle

See collegiateACB, page 4

The Chronicle

dayou zhuo/The Chronicle

Students rehearse for the Duke Dance Program’s annual Spring performance, ChoreoLab, which will take place March 28 and 29. Read the review in today’s issue of Recess.

See donation, page 10

AccessDuke presented undocumented students initiative to Senate By Hayley Trainer The Chronicle

AccessDuke, a coalition of students with the goal of supporting undocumented students in the undergraduate admissions process, spoke to the Duke Student Government senate Wednesday night about their initiative. The coalition created a proposal to the University administration to help undocumented students gain equal access to and support from the University. Five undergraduate

representatives from AccessDuke addressed the senate about what they see as current problems with the University’s admission system and their proposed solutions. “We want the administration to say, ‘Not only do we admit undocumented students, but we welcome them here with open arms,’” senior Adam Rodriguez said. Senior Jacob Tobia, vice president for equity and outreach, presented a proposal to the senate to support the AccessDuke initiative,

and the senate will conduct the vote to determine support at next week’s meeting. One of the problems noted with the current admission system is the use of needaware, rather than need-blind, admission for international students. Sophomore Jessica Del Villar said this system often discourages undocumented students from applying and noted that currently five to 10 percent of undocumented high school students go on to higher education.

“This leaves a large percentage of collegeeligible students stagnant and not able to move forward with their education,” Del Villar said, noting that the administration does not report how many undocumented students apply yearly and how many are admitted. When completing the undergraduate application, undocumented students are required to identify as either domestic or See dsg, page 10


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