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
THURSDAY, JUNE 9, 2011
ADF to begin 78th season, Reinhart’s last
ONE HUNDRED AND SEVENTH YEAR, SUMMER ISSUE 4
WWW.DUKECHRONICLE.COM
Shaw University rebuilding after disaster
by Anna Koelsch THE CHRONICLE
by Julian Spector THE CHRONICLE
The theaters of Durham are alive once again with the pitter-patter of dancing feet. The American Dance Festival begins its 78th season today with an impressive performance lineup of more than a dozen acclaimed leaders in modern dance. ADF, which was founded in 1934 and moved to Duke University in 1977, also includes a robust six-week dancing school and awards for excellence in choreography and dance teaching. This summer marks the last season for ADF Director Charles Reinhart, who will retire at the end of this season after 43 years as director. “[Reinhart] is an extraordinary visionary in terms of identifying talented artists and sticking by the talented artists he wants to nurture and develop,” said ADF co-Director Jodee Nimerichter, who is slated to assume the role of director when Reinhart steps down. “He has helped move modern dance onto the international map.” Since its founding, the festival has played an integral role in the development of modern dance, she said. “I think ADF’s history is pretty synonymous with the history of modern dance,” Nimerichter said. “So much of what is created and premiered at the festival—and, for the last
Scholarships vary in yield
TED KNUDSEN/THE CHRONICLE
A tornado that struck the Shaw University campus April 16 destroyed much of the school’s infrastructure, causing the university to cancel classes for the remainder of the semester. SEE STORY PAGE 3.
SEE ADF ON PAGE 4
Fifty-four members of the Class of 2015 will come to campus in August with the honor of having received one of Duke’s coveted merit scholarships. These students have been awarded one of the seven individual merit scholarship pronews grams Duke offers. Of the seven, only five met analysis or exceeded their target acceptance yield for the Class of 2015, as two slightly missed their goal. The Angier B. Duke program will enroll 15 freshmen this Fall, the University Scholars Program will enroll eight, the Alumni Endowed Scholars will enroll one, the Trinity Scholarships will enroll four and the Robertson Scholars Program—which has students at both Duke and the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill—will enroll 14 Duke scholars, said Melissa Malouf, director of the office of undergraduate scholars and fellows. These programs were the five that achieved their target yield. Malouf said she does not think the financial component of merit scholarships specifically draws students to Duke as opposed to peer institutions. “I think that Duke’s scholarship programs do better, overall, in competing against these schools for top applicants not because of the financial package,” Malouf SEE MERIT ON PAGE 5
Activists storm House, arrested during rally by Caroline Fairchild THE CHRONICLE
Three gay rights activists stormed the N.C. House of Representatives last Thursday chanting “liberty and justice for all”— only to be immediately arrested and detained by the police. The trio, which included openly gay former U.S Senate candidate Jim Neal, a Democrat, was participating in the “Rally in Raleigh for Equality” event that day— along with roughly 200 other lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender activists. The event was held to protest Senate Bill 106, titled “Defense of Marriage,” which would ban private businesses from offering domestic partners insurance benefits, as well as create other legal restrictions for the
SPECIAL TO THE CHRONICLE
ONTHERECORD
Blue Devils fall in match play, Page 6
“He lived and breathed Duke—he was a diehard Dukie, that’s for sure.” —Steve Eller on the late Roger Dubay. See obituary page 3
gay community. Rally in Raleigh was organized by the national LGBT rights organization GetEQUAL. Neal and Mary Counce and Angel Chandler, the N.C. state organizer for GetEQUAL, was arrested at the rally. Chandler said the decision to disrupt the legislative chamber that day was not planned by the organization, but quickly agreed upon by the three members of the group. “We are a fairly new organization and we wanted a movement that would utilize civil disobedience to affect change,” she said. “That is the only way that we can gain civil rights.... This was a perfect SEE ARRESTS ON PAGE 5
Duncan rolls to eigth in NCAA Championships, Page 7