Mar. 23, 2011 issue

Page 1

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

WEDNESDAY, MARCH 23, 2011

ONE HUNDRED AND SIXTH YEAR, Issue 118

www.dukechronicle.com

gpsc

Presidential scholar

Council VP elected to be next president by Matthew Chase THE CHRONICLE

successful,” Hendrick said to a standing-room-only crowd. “It’s the human capital inside the company that’s so important. The companies that don’t believe human capital is important don’t last.” Hendrick’s team-first business philosophy allowed him to transform what was originally a struggling car dealership in South Carolina into a multi-billion dollar private company that, in 2011, features 90 dealerships

The Graduate and Professional Student Council has elected its new leaders for next year. Felicia Hawthorne, current GPSC vice president, will serve as president of the student group. At its meeting Tuesday night, the GPSC general assembly elected the fourthyear doctoral candidate in genetics and genomics to head the body, which aims to represent the interests of students in Duke’s nine graduate and professional schools. “I am very excited—I have been thinking about this a lot,” Hawthorne, who ran for the position last year, said after the meeting. “I learned a lot being VP this year. I learned about the interactions of GPSC.” Hawthorne defeated Yuvon Mobley, a Board of Trustees academic affairs committee representative and former GPSC vice president. Each candidate gave a brief speech and fielded questions from general assembly members. Few students ran for other positions on the executive board, resulting in only one other contested race. In her platform, Hawthorne, who previously served as co-chair on the GPSC Basketball Committee, emphasized improving campus safety, advocating for mental health services, establishing a graduate student center and expanding communication between GPSC and the graduate student body. Safety was one of the president-elect’s priorities, especially in light of recent robberies on or near campus.

See hendrick on page 8

See gpsc on page 7

ted knudsen/The Chronicle

Bard College President Leon Botstein leads a discussion with undergraduates detaling the shortcomings of career-focused education.

Hendrick stresses value of employees by Nicholas Schwartz THE CHRONICLE

One of North Carolina’s most successful businessmen gave away a few prized trade secrets Tuesday evening. Rick Hendrick, chairman of the Hendrick Automotive Group and owner of Hendrick Motorsports, stressed the importance of taking care of his employees in order to maximize their effectiveness and improve business in a discussion at the Fuqua School of Business. “You don’t have to be ruthless [as a company] to be

University uses new technology to deliver information by Maggie Spini THE CHRONICLE

Duke is making efforts to stay technologically savvy, one pixel at a time. Students may have noticed quick response barcodes on ePrint stations as well as event and student group posters around campus. QR codes—black and white pixelated symbols common on advertisements and billboards—can be scanned by mobile devices to give the user instant, handheld information. QR codes available at ePrint stations give students up-to-date messages about the ePrint system, including which printers are working and the closest working printer to a student’s location. “We thought we would try them because we envisioned users coming up to the ePrint station, not with their computer running, but with a smartphone,” Stephen O’Donnell, senior communications strategist at the Office of Information Technol-

Blue Devils win Collegiate Match Play Championship, Page 9

ogy, wrote in an email. “We hoped that the QR code would lead those smartphone users to the ePrint status and locations page.” QR codes have become recently popular outside the University as well, gracing the pages of print advertisements within magazines and other periodicals, on buses and in airports. The codes were originally developed in Japan to track parts in vehicle manufacturing but are now used in marketing, targeting mobile phone users. Codes can be generated online at a variety of free websites. In order to link to QR codes, students must install and launch a QR application on their smartphones and point their phone’s camera at the barcode, which will instantly direct users to websites, photos, videos or text. OIT does not yet have enough data to See qr code on page 7

Chronicle Graphic BY Addison Corriher

Quick response barcodes have become a common feature on event posters and and can give students easy access to changing information. Try scanning our code to visit www.dukechronicle.com.

ONTHERECORD

“Being in the middle of a conflict changes your life in ways that can take a long time to understand.”

­—Professor Phil Bennett on reporting in a conflict zone. See Q&A page 3

Study shows investment in education pays off, Page 5


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