Q&A with senior admins
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Three top admins discuss their stalled negotiations with sit-in students | Page 2
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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
TUESDAY, APRIL 5, 2016
WWW.DUKECHRONICLE.COM
ONE HUNDRED AND ELEVENTH YEAR, ISSUE 99
TALKS BREAK DOWN
Students remain inside Allen late Monday after negotiations with admins reach impasse
Han Kang | The Chronicle Students began pitching tents outside the Allen Building Sunday and protestors have since added more to show support for those inside the building.
Staff Reports The Chronicle Administrators ended negotiations with the nine students holding an Allen Building sit-in until the students leave the building, which will remain closed Tuesday. The sit-in participants—who have been inside Allen since Friday afternoon and remained in the building as of midnight Monday—have said that they will not leave until administrators meet all of the seven demands they issued Friday. After their demand for amnesty was met late Sunday night, a second demand was met Monday afternoon when Executive Vice President Tallman Trask issued a public apology for his conduct during an August 2014 incident in which he hit parking attendant Shelvia Underwood with his car and did not stop to help her. However, negotiations broke down once administrators and students moved to discussions about working conditions at Duke. The sit-in participants have demanded an investigation into working conditions at the University and an
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increase in the minimum wage to $15 per hour. The students in Allen wanted to have Duke workers present at the negotiations, but administrators would only allow faculty and graduate students inside Allen for negotiations. “The students are putting themselves on the line because there’s a lot of intimidation around the workers, threats to their jobs, and the students have just a little more security and now they’ve gotten amnesty,” said Danielle Purifoy, a Ph.D. student in environmental policy who participated in negotiations inside Allen. “But we want to have the workers at the table, because so much of this is about students being in solidarity with workers, and if the workers are not at the table to meet the demands that are impacting their lives, then these are not real negotiations.” Administrators have said that they cannot open the Allen Building—which was also closed Monday as a result of the sit-in—until the nine students inside Allen leave the building, citing safety and security concerns. “[With] the closure of the Allen Building, there were 35 classes [disrupted], close to 1,000 students, not to mention staff and faculty,” said
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Larry Moneta, vice president for student affairs in a Q&A with The Chronicle Monday. The protestors said, however, that the Allen Building did not need to be closed while the sitin continued. “That was never the plan for the protestors, to shut the entire building down,” Purifoy said. “I think it’s a bit ridiculous to say that you can’t figure out how to secure the administrative offices of a building as big as this so that people can go to classes.” A recap of Monday’s events with most recent updates at the top can be viewed below. For full coverage with tweets, videos and pictures from Monday, visit dukechronicle.com. 11:50 p.m. Administrators announce that the Allen Building will remain closed Tuesday as students refuse to leave voluntarily. An email to students and faculty notes that administrators are trying to ensure that classes can be relocated. 8:30 p.m. Protestors held a “teach-in” near the
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entrance to the Allen Building. Students, faculty and community members discussed the context of the ongoing sit-in and gave words of encouragement to the occupiers. Mark Anthony Neal, professor of African and African American studies, linked the protestors to the 1969 student takeover of the Allen Building. “Those young folks who sat-in in this building in 1969 were also being unreasonable,” Neal said. “And because that generation of student scholars were unreasonable, I can actually teach here in 2016.” Other speakers praised the protestors for their efforts. “I’ve just always been amazed and shocked by the great stuff that people do when they have a love for people and a love for justice,” Alan Colston, a P.h.D student in history, said. 7:45 p.m. Students staging a sit-in in the Allen Building announced in a statement Monday night that night that they will not negotiate with
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