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thursday, january 28, 2016
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Grace’s Café closing at end of semester
ONE HUNDRED AND ELEVENTH YEAR, Issue 67
Alcohol-related incident halts sorority events Staff Reports The Chronicle
Carolyn Chang | The Chronicle After being passed over as a potential West Union eatery, Grace’s Café will close at the end of the semester due to maintenance costs.
Anupriya Sivakumar The Chronicle Grace’s Café, an eatery in Trent Hall on Central Campus featuring Asian cuisine, will close at the end of this semester. The restaurant’s closing is due to several factors—including unusable kitchen conditions and the opening of West Union June 1—said Dayla Bonds, customer service coordinator for Duke Dining. Grace’s owner Jack Chao, who also owns Quenchers, a smoothie and
health food vendor in Wilson Gym, said Grace’s participated in a menutasting competition to try to earn a spot as a vendor in West Union, but Duke Student Government and Duke University Student Dining Committee members instead unanimously opted for new vendors Ginger + Soy and Gyotaku. Ginger + Soy will feature East Asian and Southeast Asian cuisines, and Gyotaku will be a sushi bar. Bonds noted that renovations on the kitchen ventilation system in Trent would cost $500,000, making it
impossible for any vendor to remain at the facility. Several students expressed disappointment about the departure of Grace’s. “I really like the authentic feel of Grace’s,” said freshman Evangeline Marecki. “I’m definitely disappointed it is closing down, and I hope that any future Asian restaurants will even compare to Grace’s.” Sophomore Adam Yaseen described news of Grace’s closing as “a serious
Panhellenic sorority activities have been partially suspended after a new member was hospitalized due to an incident with alcohol Tuesday night. The new member is currently in critical condition in the hospital and the incident is being investigated, according to an email sent to Duke’s Panhellenic community Wednesday morning signed by Clarybel Peguero, director of Fraternity and Sorority Life and Anya Ranganathan, president of Panhellenic Council. “We will discuss the incident, review Duke’s expectations for all chapters and their members and ask each chapter to review its activities to ensure compliance,” Peguero and Ranganathan wrote in the email. “The safety of members of our community is of utmost importance.” An emergency meeting was held Wednesday at 5 p.m. with all 10 Panhellenic chapter presidents and the Panhellenic Executive Board in the Office of Fraternity and Sorority Life conference room, according to the email. Following the meeting, Peguero and See SORORITIES on Page 3
See GRACE’S on Page 3
Baby lemur delivered during snowstorm Saturday Isabella Kwai The Chronicle A male Coquerel’s sifaka lemur was born at the Duke Lemur Center during the snowstorm Saturday. Staffers stayed at the center overnight amid the inclement weather to care for the lemurs and to support first-time mother Gisela. Gisela is the daughter of Zoboomafoo—whose real name was Jovian—the beloved star of a PBS children’s show who passed away in 2014. His new grandson is “bright and happy” and in a healthy state, weighing in at 98 grams, the center confirmed Wednesday. “It’s great that the legacy lives on,” said Anne Yoder, biology professor and director of the Lemur Center. “Jovian was near and
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dear to many in the country.” Despite the snow, staffers soldiered on to provide care for the nearly 250 lemurs at the center, ensuring their cages were cleaned and food was provided. After discovering that her car was snowed in and that her brakes had frozen, veterinary technician Megan Davison walked two miles in the sleet to reach the new baby for the scheduled post-birth check-up. She added that she did not mind the detour. “It gave me a chance an opportunity to check out the trails of the Duke forest,” Davison said. Yoder praised the devotion of the staffers and of Davison in particular during the storm. “She never hesitated—when we knew the infant had been born, she made sure she did her job,” Yoder said. “Come
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wind, hail and dark of night, the staffers are there.” The new baby does not yet have a name, but a Roman name will be chosen, according to a statement by Janice Kalin, the center’s community and foundation relations coordinator. The center’s technicians and staffers have returned to their normal schedule and will continue to monitor the baby lemur for healthy weight gain over the next few days. Jovian’s grandson is not the only celebrity lemur baby born recently. Last May, the Lemur Center welcomed two female lemur babies, both named Princess Julien after the popular Dreamworks character King Julien, the star of the “Madagascar” franchise. See BABY LEMUR on Page 3
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Special to The Chronicle Lemur Center staffers worked during last weekend’s snowstorm to deliver a baby Saturday.
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