May 13, 2005

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ult Years

in Review 2001-2005

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FRIDAY,

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MAY 13,2005

THE CHRONICLE


FRIDAY,

MAY 13, 2005 3 j

THE CHRONICLE

2005 CALENDAR OF EVENTS (University-wide Events)

Chronicle Advertising Staff Supplements Coordinator

Yu-hsien Huang

Advertising Director

Sue Newsome

Account Representatives

Monica Franklin, Dawn Hall

Account Assistants

Lauren Lind, Jenny Wang

National Coordinator

Kristin Jackson

University Advertising Manager Sales Representatives

Andrea Galambos, Erica Harper, Elena Liotta, Alicia Rondon, Willy Wu, Susan Zhu

Business Assistants

Administrative Coordinator

3:00 p.m.*

Baccalaureate Service for degree candidates whose surnames begin with letters P through Z. University Chapel. Sermon by Reverend Kocher. The President’s Charge by President Brodhead. (Admission of guests by yellow tickets only.**)

4:30-6:00 p.m.

Reception honoring the graduating classes. East Duke Lawn, East Campus. (In the event of rain, East Campus Union.) Music by the Duke University Wind Symphony.

8:30 p.m.

Demonstration Recital. Brombaugh, Flentrop and Aeolian Organs. University Chapel.

Mary Weaver Shereen Arthur, Rhonda Lewsi, Ashley Rudisill, Melanie Shaw Stephanie Risbon Jonathan Angier

©2005 The Chronicle, 101 W Union Bldg., Box 90858, Durham, NC 27708-0858. All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced in any form without the prior written permission of The Chronicle Business Department. For advertising information, call 919-684-3811.

O 200S ÜBS. All rights reserved.

Baccalaureate Service for degree candidates whose surnames begin with letters H through O. University Chapel. Sermon by Reverend Kocher. The President’s Charge by President Brodhead. (Admission of guests by blue tickets only.**)

Barbara Starbuck

Operations Manager

General Manager

11:30 a.m.*

Tiffany Swift, Charlie Wain

Production Manager

Baccalaureate Service for degree candidates whose surnames begin with letters A through G. University Chapel. Sermon by Craig T. Kocher, Acting Dean of the Chapel. The President’s Charge by Richard H. Brodhead, President of the University. (Admission of guests by green tickets only.**)

Saturday, May 14

Nalini Milne

Carly Baker, Evelyn Chang, Erin Richardson, Janine Talley

Classifieds Coordinator

Creative Services

Friday, May 13 5:00 p.m.*

Sunday, May 15 9:30 a.m.

Procession of Candidates.

10:00 a.m.

Graduation Exercises. Wallace Wade Stadium. Conferring of degrees by President Richard H. Brodhead.

*The procession of candidates for the baccalaureate service begins ten minutes prior to the hour **Tlckets allow for seating in Page Auditorium or Duke Chapel.


THE CHRONICLE

4 I FRIDAY, MAY 13, 2005

President Ricardo Lagos

2005 Commencement Speaker

by

Seyward Darby THE CHRONICLE

Ricardo Lagos, the president of Chile and a recipient of a Duke Ph.D. in economics, will deliver the 2005 graduation commencement address Sunday at Wallace Wade Stadium. “I’m delighted that it is someone who has a connection to this University rather than someone who goes and gives 100 commencement speeches a year,” President Richard Brodhead said after announcing Lagos’ acceptance in early November 2004. “[He is] a major international figure in human rights and the democratically elected president of a major country..,, I think he’s an excellent choice.” Lagos is the third president of Chile since the country became returned to democracy 14 years ago. He served in the government of President Salvador Allende until Allende was deposed in a bloody coup by Gen. Augusto Pinochet in 1973. Lagos was exiled for several years, but he returned to Chile in 1978 and became a leader of the opposition to Pinochet. Throughout the 1980s, Lagos voiced criticism of the president in speeches and advertisements, winning him the admiration of many democratic reformers and supporters. Before becoming president in 2000, Lagos served as both the education and public works ministers of Chile. As president, he has faced charges of corruption within his administration and dealt with poverty and other issues generated by the political instability of the region.

Nonetheless, he has signed several international free trade agreements and approved compensation for 28,000 victims of torture under the Pinochet regime. Lagos’ selection reflects an ongoing push by the Duke administration to enhance student and faculty interest in global relations and issues. “[Lagos] really reflects the depth of Duke students,” senior Elizabeth Dixon, a member of the selection committee, said in November. “Duke is a place that focuses on international issues, and he reflects that in a very distinguished way.” Last year’s speaker was former Secretary of State Madeline Albright. United Nations Secretary-General Kofi Annan was set to give the speech in 2003 but did not come because of an illness. President Nan Keohane read excerpts from his prepared remarks. Lagos received his law degree at the University of Chile before coming to Duke in the early 19605. He worked at the University of Chile after returning to his native country, serving in the Schools of Political and Administrative Sciences, Law and Economy. Lagos also taught at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill during his exile in the 19705. Lagos will receive one of five honorary degrees presented Sunday. The other recipients are Nobel laureate Roald Hoffman, environmental advocate John Adams, former President of Ireland Mary Robinson and University of Maryland at Baltimore County President Freeman Hrabowski.

Chilean President Ricardo Lagos will deliverthe keynote commencement address Sunday.

2005 WILLIAM

GRIFFITH UNIVERSITY SERVICE |.

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THE CHRONICLE

FRIDAY,

MAY 13, 2005 5

Welcome Parents and Families of the Class of 2005 Along with the Chapel, Perkins Library and the Gardens, the Gothic Bookshop is a place not to be missed when you are on campus.

Graduation Weekend Hours Friday, May 13 8:30 am 7:00 pm Saturday, May 14 8:30 am 6:00 pm Sunday, May 15 11:00 am 3:00 pm -

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Helen Ladd (*C-A) Bruce Lawrence (*C-A)

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Majority Finds It's Past Sex, Gender, and the Body Latin American Cultural Studies New Black Man Pushing the Limits

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Ariel Dorfman Laura Edwards Thomas Ferraro Faulkner Fox John Hope Franklin (*F) David Caspar Tracy Goudet Martin Golding (*C-E) Forshid Guilak (*C-E) Michael Hardt Donald Horowitz Reinhord Huetter Reinhard Huetter Reeve Huston (*C) Andrew Janiak (*E)

Judith Kelley William Kort Anna Krylova (*C)

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Henry Petroski Henry Petroski Stuart Pimm Joe Ashby Porter (*C) Reynolds Price Maureen Quilligan

Revolution and the Word Mascara Other Septembers Many Americas Scarlett Doesn't Live Here Anymore Feeling Italian Dispatches from A Not So Perfect life

A Matter ofLaw Beyond Bondage Consciously Female The Blackwell Guide to Philosophy ofLaw and Legal Theory Functional Tissue Engineering Multitude Facing Ethnic Conflicts Bound to Be Free Reason & the Reasons ofFaith Beyond the Founders Isaac Newton: Philosophical Writings Ethnic Politics in Europe CS. Lewis: Then & Now Memory and the Impact ofPolitical Transformation in Public Space

Small Things Considered A Scientist Audits the Earth So the Story Goes Good Priests Son Incest and Agency in Elizabeth's England Jenny Reardon Race to the Finish Jacqueline Reynolds (*C-A) Nature's Robots Modem Inquisitions Irene Silverblott Thomas Sprogens Jr (*C-E) The Communitarian Reader Ishi's Brain Orin Stom (*E) David Steinmetz The Cambridge Companion to Reformation Theology Charles Tonford (*C-A) Nature's Robots Modem Blackness

Deborah Thomas Lorry Todd Corel Van Shoik Geoffrey Woinwright (*C) Samuel Wells William WiUimon (*C) William WiUimon (*E)

Mendelssohn Among Orangutans The Cambridge Companion to Hans Urs Von Balthasar Improvisation The Upper Room Disciplines 2005 Sermons from Duke Chapel

Confucian Ethics

David Wong Peter Wood Xuenguong Zhoa

Weathering the Storm The State and Life Chances in Urban China

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THE CHRONICLE

6 FRIDAY, MAY 13, 2005

Rob Painter

2005 Student Speaker

by

Seyward Darby THE CHRONICLE

Senior Rob Painter will have one last chance to perform for his fellow students Sunday, as the longtime Duke University Improve member has been selected as the student speaker for the 2005 graduation ceremony. Painter, a theater studies major, said his four years with DUI and love of being on stage inspired him to submit his speech to the annual selection committee for consideration. “This is the way I’ve contributed to the Duke community my entire career,” he said of his acting, noting that his work with DUI has taken him to almost every dormitory and major theatrical facility on campus. “I saw [the speech] as away to continue that.” Painter said he wanted to give his speech for another simple reason: he adores Duke. “It’s about love—it’s about a long illicit love affair between a man child and a place that is coming to a tragic end after four years,” Painter said of his speech. “It’s about pulling away from something you 10ve.... It’s appropriate to honor the fact that on some level, we don’t want to leave.” Painter said he came up with the idea for his speech while lounging on the East Campus Quadrangle “trying to quantify this general feeling ofcontentedness I feel at Duke.” He said he was looking at the statue of Benjamin Duke that stands in front of Baldwin Auditorium and, ironically, made a mental connection between the scene and his first day of kindergarten, when his parents had to pull him from

the banister of their staircase because he did not want to go to school. “What if on the morning of graduation I were to do the same thing except I was clinging to the statue?” Painter asked. “How funny would it be if my parents had to pull me from the statue and drag [me] to graduation?.... That’s the line through my speech.” Selection committee member Sue Wasiolek, assistant vice president for student affairs and dean of students, said Painter’s speech was the “very clear choice of the committee.” “His cleverness, his intellect, his quick thinking and quick wit and his real love and appreciation for his Duke experience come through very loudly and clearly in his speech,” Wasiolek said. “He will just have the graduates as well as their families reflecting on the part of experience that really appeals to At the same time, his speech reminds folks of the real power of education, and I think he challenges folks to leave this place to pursue their passions that hopefully they’ve identified while they were here.” Wasiolek also praised Painter’s skills as a performer and orator, which she believes will enhance the appeal ofhis speech. This is the second year in a row a DUI member has been selected to speak at the graduation ceremony. Painter said last year’s speaker, Paul Downs, “heaped pressure” on him to submit a speech. He added that DUI is proud of the “sweet little tradition” the group seems to be establishing. “We’re considering forming a speech think tank,” Painter said jokingly.

TOM MENDEL/THE CHRONICLE

Senior Rob Painter, a long-time member ofDuke University Improv, will give the student graduationspeech at Sunday's commencement exercises.

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Barbara Blocker Brenda Booth Amanda Boyle Catherine Brailer Cynthia Brantley Sarah Brown

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Jennifer Khcker

Adam Kokoszka Sharon Krumwiede Margaret Lam

Chirrl Lambeth Mary Lee Brian Lightwine Aaron Loukonen Debra Lynch Ella Lynch Kathleen Macek Mora Maloney Nykedtra Martin

Sherri Martin Shawn Massicot Tami May Candace Mayer James McNemey Michael Meyers Gabriella Miller Sharon Minda Allison Mitas Julie Mobley Amna Mohammed Ehsabeth Murphy

Jeanellen Newkirk

Catherine Neyland Kelly Nicklas Maiy Nyhan Kerry Ogrodowczyk Marcy Owen Tamara Owens Sheila Owens Rebecca Owens

Pruthvi Palekar Teresa Parham LaShanda Penn Kara Penne Denise Pilyk Tana Porter

Elizabeth Purvis Kathleen Raymond Elizabeth Redd Patti Reindle Bessie Richard

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Jennifer Weisner

Kelly Werner

Deborah Westmoreland Benjamin Wharton Sandra Wheatley Amy Whichello Nathan Wilkins Kelly Wiseman Mingfen Xu Amanda Yopp Cheryl Zadd Rita Zambelas


Sept 11 attacks and aftermath Slow economy, tight market Sweet 1—

2001

Life at

Campus safety concerns

Sanctioning selective groups Embezzlement at The Hideaway

Freshman Year Football going for a record... American Tobacco progresses Bell for mayor

Capita!

cMpail

Moneta’s

arnva^^

DSG vs. Campus Council

Women’s basketball Final Four Construction everywhere

The Sept. 11 attacks on the World Trade Center in New York City and the Pentagon and their aftermath dominated the first semester of the Class of 2005’s freshman year. The planes hit the buildings when many students lay sleeping, and most spent the day watching the events unfold on television. The next day, 2,500 community members held a vigil in front of the Chapel, mourning the deaths of lost friends, family and six Duke alumni. The attacks left an emotional scar not only on student life but also on academic endeavors. One FOCUS group was forced to cancel its trip to Greece, while another faced tight security at Raleigh-Durham International Airport on its way to Russia. In addition, the University hosted a series of forums on topics ranging from healing to

foreign policy.

The attacks also plunged the nation into a recession, tightening the job market for seniors. Although in 2000 there were 130 firms at the annual career fair, only 84 showed up this year—big name companies like Accenture, Cisco Systems, Dell and Lucent Technologies were noticeably absent. When not focused on the attacks or the economy, many students were predictably caught up in basketball. Early in the season, Coach Mike Krzyzewski made headlines when he entered the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame and signed a lifetime contract with Duke. As the Tar Heels went 8-20 on the season, Duke’s true rival seemed to be Maryland. The Blue Devils crushed the Terps during their January game at home, but the second match-up was a sign of things to come as Maryland won, 87-73, en route to its first ever national championship. Indiana, who lost in the finals, crushed Duke’s dreams of a repeat in the Sweet 16. When the men’s team lost, campus attention shifted to the women’s team, whose talent-

ed eight players advanced to the Final Four in San Antonio’s Alamodome, losing there to Oklahoma, 86-71. The year was not as kind to the football team, which went winless for the second year in a row, setting it only one winless season away from breaking a national losing record. The Class of 2005 will also remember the continued debates on campus climate and its link to residential life. Administrators geared up to implement a requirement that all sophomores live on West Campus—designed in part to increase the diversity of residential living and create a more academic community. The requirement coincided with the opening of the 350-bed West-Edens Link that July. Residential life continued to morph as another selective house left campus. Leaders of Sigma Alpha Epsilon fraternity, citing the group’s inability to meet the requirements ofDuke and its national office, dissolved their chapter. While sanctions for various alcohol and hazing violations also fell on Theta Chi fraternity and Wayne Manor selective house, Kappa Alpha Order escaped punishment by agreeing to a contract drafted by its national office. With the crackdown on selective groups and priority on West given to sophomores, students claimed that social life at Duke was dying. They pointed both to the new policies and the closing of the student-run Hideaway bar the previous summer. New evidence brought to light in fall 2001 showed that the bar had closed not only because of its drop in customers but also because a former owner and Duke graduate had allegedly embezzled as much as $20,000. Although several Duke Student Government resoludons addressed the residential issues and subsequent social life fallout,

P°*ary

&

the organization had a rocky year of its own. Young Trustee Nominating Committee Chair and DSC President CJ. YValsh botched the selection process, violating at least one bylaw and prompting sweeping changes to the rules at the year’s end. In addition, DSC faced a turf war over residential policy against Campus Council, to whom the new vice president for student affairs, Larry Moneta, had given increased authority. Food services at Duke also changed this year, as ARAMARK Corp. took over several University-run eateries and financial woes threatened to close Uncle Harry’s grocery store and the kosher kitchen at the Freeman Center for Jewish Life’s. To save the kitchen, ARAMARK planned to take over operations for the next year. Although crime on campus remained a quiet issue during the fall semester, it exploded in the spring. When a student reported that she had been sexually assaulted in her East Campus dormitory bathroom early one January morning. Combined with several armed robberies—including one in the undergraduate Blue Zone parking lot—and other sexual assaults just off East Campus, the incident brought safety concerns to the forefront of campus politics. Duke continued to expand into Durham during the year, committing to lease 150,000 of the 1.1 million squarefoot American Tobacco warehouse, as the developer found the three tenants it needed to move forward with the project. In other local news, an election that implemented a City Council format change to reduce the group’s members from 13 to seven, Durham residents voted to keep Mayor Bill Bell in office by a slim 366-vote margin. Voters also approved $74.7 million worth of bonds for county projects.

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THE CHRONICLE

Students, employees and labor activists (above) march from East Campus to West Campus to lobby for better treatment of University employees.The march was organized by the Student-Employee Relations Committee. The University flag (right) hangs at half-mast in the wake of the Sept. 11,2001,World Trade Center tragedy in which terrorists attacked the buildings with hijacked commercial airline jets. Onlookers in the Bryan Center (bottom right) view a television broadcasting news ofthe terrorist attacks. Administrators at the University later cancelled classes for the afternoon and organized vigils in commemoration of the WTC victims. A bartender at The Hideaway (bottom left) serves drinks before the on-campus bar was permanently shut down. Following its closing, morethan $20,000 ofThe Hideaway's revenue was found to have been embezzled by a Duke alumnus.

FRIDAY,

MAY 13, 2005 9


10IFRIDAY, MAY 13,

Keohane,

Sn/derman to step down

West Campus transformation

Campaign IGSP P

Kappa

THE CHRONIC:le

2005

rog9s|l|l9 SigIMHUR

DSG president arrested U.S. invades Iraq

Capitol bomber visits

Sophomore Year Women’s golf wins NCAA title Women’s basketball Final Four BAA downsizing Israel Science

Williams, eOMeav^orlnSa

Transplant mix-up Dole wins Senate race Still more construction

The 2002-2003 academic year may well Campus that was the culmination of years be remembered as one of the most pivotal of high-level planning and incorporated several major changes: housing all sophoin Duke history, as a slew of announcements and events altered nearly every cormores on West Campus; moving selective ner of campus. living groups off the Main West Quad; and The change was most apparent at the allowing rising sophomores to live in quads top, when in March University President linked to East Campus houses. Unrelatedly Nan Keohane and Chancellor for Health and citing the burdens ofnational and UniAffairs Dr. Ralph Snyderman announced versity regulations, Kappa Sigma fraternity one day apart that they would both step dissolved itself in early November but atdown in June 2004. Neither announcetempted to remain together as an off-camment elicited much surprise, but Duke is pus organization. be witnessing a turning point in its leaderFinancing much of the University’s ship with the imminent retirement or de- major initiatives was the capital campaign, parture of several other top administra- which surpassed its overall $2 billion goal tors: Jerry Black, director of facilities in the spring. The Campaign for Duke will Chafe, William dean of the officially end Dec. 31, 2003, but by May it management; faculty of arts and sciences and vice had long been one of the most successful provost for undergraduate education; Sally university campaigns in the country and in Dickson, vice president for institutional eqDuke’s history, even as it occupied the time uity; Michael Mandl, vice president for fi- of many top administrators. nancial services; and Joe Pietrantoni, assoThe campaign got a boost early in the ciate vice president for auxiliary services. year with a $35 million gift from the Bill and At the same time, several new faces Melinda Gates Foundation to help fund a joined the University administration to new multidisciplinary science center. The help lead major initiatives. After a search building will be the latest in a Duke building that lasted over a year, Huntington Willard spree that is unprecedented since the Uniassumed the directorship of the Institute versity’s founding. Buildings completed this for Genome Sciences and Policy, Duke’s ef- year included the Yoh Football Center and fort to explore the scientific and societal the Center for Human Genetics. Projects implications of genome technology. Duke started included an addition to the Divinity School, renovations to MainWest Campus, a has invested hundreds of millions of dollars in the institute, which this year also parking deck, and the Center for Interdisciopened its first building and hired several plinary Engineering, Medicine and Applied Sciences, which split Science Drive. directors for its five centers. Student Affairs implemented the first Infighting plagued Duke Student Govmajor changes to upperclass residential life ernment for much of the year, although members’ professional and personal difin over a decade, hiring Assistant Vice President for Campus Life Zoila Airall, Director ferences did not become fully public until of Residential Life and Housing Services the spring semester. Among die highlights Eddie Hull and a handful of residence cowere competing proposals to restructure ordinators, full-time Student Affairs offi- the organization and whether DSG Presicials who live in assigned quadrangles dent Joshua Jean-Baptiste should have rearound campus. Together, they attempted signed after being charged with assault in to organize a residential system for West late March.

Campus dialogue surrounding the proposed invasion of Iraq swirled for much of the year and did not stop when the United States finally invaded in March. About 400 students walked out of classes in protest the next day, and they continued to hold speak-outs, forums and demonstration protests —one blocked traffic on Chapel Drive for 30 minutes. Campus opinion on the war was closely split, however, as many students supported the overthrow of Saddam Hussein. A visit to campus by Laura Whitehorn, convicted in 1985 for bombing the U.S. Capitol in protest of the Grenada invasion, also localized national issues of terrorism, security and free speech. The nation’s attention was focused on Duke for more than a week in February after it became known that Duke University Medical Center doctors had transplanted a heart and pair of lungs of the wrong blood type into a 17-year-old girl, Jesica Santillan. Doctors transplanted a second set of organs, but she eventually passed away, her body too damaged from the first

transplant. The University had an up-and-down year in athletics. The women’s golf team won the NCAA championship in dramatic fashion as Virada Nirapathpongporn earned individual honors. The football team sparked optimism when it won its first game of the season, breaking a 21game losing streak, before finishing the season with a 2-10 record. The women’s basketball team saw its first-ever sell-out in a home game against Connecticut. They eventually lost in the Final Four while the men’s team fell in the Sweet 16, but with young stars both teams looked toward a bright future. Earlier in the year, one time Class of 2003 members Carlos Boozer, Mike Dunleavy and Jason Williams left for the NBA.


THE

CHRONICLE

FRIDAY,

MAY 13, 200511 1

Members of the Duke community (above left) speak out in protest against the war in Iraq. Construction on campus (above right) caused Science Drive traffic to be rerouted. Students eat at Rick's Diner (below), a 24-hour restaurant that opened in the McClendon Tower in 2002, Virada Nirapathpongporn (below left) savors her victory after winning the NCAA golf championship,

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THE CHRONICLE

12IFRIDAY. MAY 13. 2005

$2.36 billion capital campaign Men’s basketball in Final Four Women’s Hurricane

jJrcl 111

k

ContinueWWfewWi Brodhead to take University reins Dzau named chancellor

Sigma Chi’s ‘Viva Mexico’ party

Junior Year Women’s Initiative Report ‘Effortless Perfection’

Ted Roof replaces Carl Franks No

confi<j|fc

DCU:

Off-campt^Wu^cSurol’ Annual review nixed Student fees raised

DSG finally restructures

As the face of the University continues to change, the 2003-2004 academic year

was marked by many comings and goings, as well as debates over issues ranging from perfectionism to racial stereotypes. President Nan Keohane’s final year at the helm of the University began with the release of the final report of the Women’s Initiative, an extensive analysis of women’s issues at Duke chaired by the president herself. The report identified concerns spanning the entire University, from graduate women’s lack of mentoring to female faculty members’ tenure concerns to the standard of “effortless perfection” to which undergraduate women were said to be held. The discussion of “effortless perfection” was fueled by an anonymous column published in The Chronicle, in which an undergraduate woman suffering from depression and bulimia described the pressures of a culture held to standards of perfectionism. Campus dialogue ranged from student-initiated “comfort days” to discussion forums sponsored by Counseling and Psychological Services. Amidst the debate of women’s concerns, the issues of racial stereotyping came to the forefront after Sigma Chi fraternity hosted a party themed “Viva Mexico,” which was deemed offensive by much of the Latino community. Mi Gente and other campus groups presented the administration with a list of demands aimed at counteracting a climate of insensitivity toward those ofLatino heritage. Administrators’ response to the demands was limited, but they did promise community members regular meetings to discuss matters pertinent to the Latino community. Hopes were high going into the football season, but once again, head coach Carl Franks was unable to deliver a successful

team. After a crushing defeat at the hands

of Wake Forest, Franks was fired midseason, and a few months later interim head coach Ted Roof, Franks’ offensive coordinator, was offered the top spot. Roof led the team to a 2-3 finish at the season’s close, including the team’s first conference win since 1999 and first win over the University of North Carolina since 1989. Even as the football season was ending on a positive note, the men’s and women’s basketball teams were both gearing up for impressive seasons. The men made it to the Final Four before falling to the University of Connecticut, and the women succumbed to Minnesota in the Elite Eight. The teams’ successes proved fruitful for the players, however, as Alana Beard and Iciss Tillis were drafted No. 2 and No. 11, respectively, in the WNBA Draft. The NBA Draft isn’t until June, but the Blue Devils are already preparing for the loss of two of next year’s would-be starters —freshman Luol Deng and recruit Shaun Livingston both already declared for the draft and are both likely top-five picks. Keohane’s departure became a bit more realistic to the entire Duke community in December, when the Board of Trustees named Dean of Yale College Richard Brodhead as the University’s ninth president. Brodhead spent the remainder of the year getting to know the many facets of the University and was an active participant in the search for a new chancellor for health affairs to replace outgoing chancellor Dr. Ralph Snyderman. That search concluded in April with the selection of Dr. Victor Dzau, chair of the Department of Medicine at Harvard Medical School. As the Duke University Health System continued to evolve, the selection of a new chancellor and the concurrent redefinition of the role to

more clearly delineate its subordination University president culminated the changes in DUHS. The transition date for both top administrators is July 1. The changes in University administration mirrored, to a certain extent, the changes that were happening on the level of student life. Campus administrators made a series of decisions that drew criticism from the entire student body, including the termination of the annual review process for selective living groups and the addition of $lOO to mandatory student programming fees. Both changes came without the input of student leaders, which student groups decried as evidence of administrative apathy to their concerns. While some students railed against the administration, others took a more active to the

approach to protesting current policies and practices. Members of the Duke Conservative Union published an advertisement in The Chronicle detailing the political party affiliations of members of various departments in the humanities and social sciences and alleging a lack of intellectual diversity at the University. Administration officials denied an active preference of liberal faculty over conservatives, insisting that party registration had little to do with intellectual diversity in the classroom. Campus political activism was at full tilt as national campaigns for the 2004 presidential election got underway. Although Democratic primaries revealed fairly quickly that Massachusetts Sen. John Kerry would win the party nomination, local support remained strong for North Carolina Sen. John Edwards. The national economy and the continued hostilities in Iraq were some of the hot topics for discussion as students debated the policies of President George W. Bush and his possible November opponents.

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THE CHRONICLE

FRIDAY,

MAY 13, 2005113

The Nasher Museum of Art (above) construction continued throughout the yearand is expected to befinished in October 2005. Ted Roof (above right) replaced Carl Franks as football head coach in 2003, five games before the season's end. Brave students (below right) trudged along the icy Bryan Center walkway on a 2004 snow day. Students protest on the Chapel steps (below) against Sigma Chi's "Viva Mexico" party, claiming it negatively portrayed Latinos.

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14 FRIDAY, MAY 13, 2005

PSM conference comes to Duke

2004 _

Off-camp{^iPtiiWp<PWebaW Former president Knight dies

Central Campus planning begins

Basketball bonfires banned

Senior Year Bush wins 2004 election Nasher art museum set to open

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The Class of 2005 experienced a senior year at Duke full of triumph and tragedy, growth and loss. From a body contested national election and a controversial, politically charged conference to an exciting basketball season and the arrival of a new president, the senior class spent its last year in the Gothic Wonderland watching—and often helping —the University and world around it change. President Nan Keohane stepped down in June after 11 years at Duke and was succeeded by Richard Brodhead, who came to Duke after several decades at Yale University. In his first year as Duke’s ninth president, Brodhead announced plans to enhance the University’s focus on international issues, including global health. Brodhead also pledged to increase research opportunities and encourage students to put their intellect and education to practical use for the betterment of society. In addition, he made a commitment to increase the University’s financial aid coffers and began by accepting a $2O million gift from alumnus William Gross. But Brodhead and the University faced several challenges this year. Just days after Brodhead took office in July 2004, the Los Angeles Lakers offered men’s basketball coach Mike Krzyzewski the job of head coach. The Duke community feared he might take the lucrative position, but Kr2yzewski ultimately declined the offer. Weeks later, Duke agreed to allow the Palestinian Solidarity Movement to have its annual conference on campus Oct. 15-17. The announcement set off a wave of debate both on and off campus; critics said the University was wrong to allow a “terrorist” and “anti-Semitic” organization like PSM onto campus while supporters applauded the University for supporting freedom of speech. In response to the conference, the Jewish community at Duke sponsored several educational events at

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Despite criticisms and amid boosted campus security, the conference went smoothly. Soon after, however, a column in The Chronicle entitled “The Jews” reignited discussion and debate. The Chronicle came under heavy fire for its decision to run the column and its overall coverage of the PSM. Duke University Health System also faced criticism when it was discovered in December that surgical tools had accidentally been washed in elevator hydraulic fluid. Several law suits regarding the incident were filed in the following months, though not against DUHS. The University mourned the death of former President Douglas Knight in January. Knight, who was president during the turbulent 19605, left a mixed legacy in the Duke community. In addition to controversy and loss, the year was marked by institutional progress, evident in the opening of several new buildings and announcements of plans for upcoming construction projects. The $lO7 million Fitzpatrick Center for Interdisciplinary Engineering, Medicine and Applied Sciences opened oir Science Drive in November, and an addition to the Divinity School opened in April. A new dormitory on East Campus, the French Science Center, the Nasher Museum of Art, additions to Perkins Library and the Sanford Institute for Public Policy and renovations to the School of Law also progressed. The University announced plans to break ground for a new student plaza that will replace the Bryan Center walkway in June 2005. It also began planning for the overhaul of Central Campus, the end result of which will be a revitalized campus complete with residential, academic and social spaces. On the academic side, the University

implemented revisions to Curriculum 2000 and debated when, if and how to change the advising and course evaluation processes. There were also several transitions among administrators, including the election ofBill McLendon as the new Dean of the Faculty ofArts and Sciences, the appointment of Catherine Gillis as the new dean of the School of Nursing and the appointment ofProfessor Bruce Kuniholm as the new director of the Sanford Institute for Public Policy. Students flexed their political muscles in the fall during the 2004 election cycle. The heated race between Sen. John Kerry, D-Mass., and Republican President George W. Bush was cause for student organizations to sponsor several speakers, rallies and debates about the election. Encouraging young people to “get out the vote” became a campuswide trend. Faculty even offered classes focused on the election to connect the political process to academia. In sports, the men’s basketball team—a long-time national powerhouse—began the season having lost several players to graduation and the allure of the NBA. Nonetheless, the team defeated the Tarheels of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill in Cameron Indoor Stadium in February and capturing the ACC tournament in March. The team was eliminated from the NCAA Tournament by Michigan State after advancing to the Sweet Sixteen. The women’s basketball team also had a successful regular season but lost to UNC in the finals of the ACC tournament and to LSUin the Elite Eight of the NCAA tournament. Women’s field hockey advanced to the Final Four of the NCAA tournament, but Wake Forest beat them in the Final Four. Men’s soccer also made it to the Final Four but lost to the University of California at Santa Barbara in their first game.


Protesters (above) stand on the West Campus Main Quadrangle during the Palestinian Solidarity Movement conference in October 2004. The conference incited intense discussion and debate both on and off campus. President Richard Brodhead (right) took the reins ofthe University from former President Nan Keohane in 2004. He prioritized expanding Duke's international presence, research opportunities and financial aid endowment. Sen. John Kerry, D-Mass. (bottom right) speaks to a crowd of supporters at a rally in North Carolina during his race for the White House in the fall of 2004. Many students worked to encourage their peers to vote in the national election. Freshmen (bottom left) unwrap their brand new iPods on East Campus in August 2004. The University gave the technological toys to all incoming freshmen as a part of a pilot projectand integrated the devices into several courses during the year.

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Every great university is great by virtue of its faculty, and an aspiring university will always be adding to the company of great minds." President Richard Brodhead (above) became Duke's ninth president in 2004. He spent four decades at Yale University before coming to Duke to take over after President Nan Keohane resigned. In his inaugural year, Brodhead challenged the student body to take their scholarship and put it to use in the world. He also introduced a broad framework of institutional priorities that will guide Duke's progress in the coming years. Student sit on a bench(top, second from left) outside their dormitory. Over the past four years, the University has refashioned residential life in an attempt to create senses of community in quadrangles and dorms.This process included introducing the "quad model" and moving all sophomores to West Campus. Leon Dunkley, former director of the Mary Lou Williams Center for Black Culture (top, second from right) participates in a community vigil Sept. 12,2001. Classes came to a standstill on Sept. 11 as the Duke community gathered to watch news coverage of the terrorist attacks and mourn their lost friends and family members. Construction equipment (top right) sits idle on East Campus next to the new freshman dorm set to open in Fall 2005. Over the past four years, construction zones spotted several areas of Duke's three campuses, as the University expanded its facilities at a rapid rate to meet institutional demands for space. The 2004-2005 men's basketball team (bottom right) accepts its trophy after winning the ACC Tournament. The powerhouse team captured three out of the last four ACC tournaments and advanced to the Final Four of the NCAATournament twice under the guidance of Coach Mike Krzyzewski.

President Richard Brodhead on the need for faculty development in his inauguration speech in the fall of 2004 â– f

ul

I wanted to lead. Your

heart has to be in whatever you lead. Duke has always taken up my whole heart." Men's basketball head coach Mike Krzyzewski in July 2004 after he declined a coaching position with the Los Angeles Lakers

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THE CHRONICLE

FRIDAY,

MAY 13, 2005117

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microcosm of the world—it's not a Duke is a people all of

a sudden place where come here and black people don't want to hang with white people. People always find something to divide themselves over, and race just happens to be the most easily distinguishable thing." TOM

MENDEL/THE CHRONICLE

Thomas Stratton, Pratt'o6, on the social interaction between different racial groups at Duke


18IFRIDAY, MAY

13,2005

fA Toast To Your Retirement

To the Soul of The Chro For 18 years of talent For 18 years

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Indelibly on this place We thank you Sue Newsome, our mentor, colleague, friend. Enjoy your retirement You have earned every minute

of it!

With all ourlove From the thousands of students, co-workers and clients you have touched throughout the years.

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THE CHRONICLE

FRIDAY,

MAY IS, 2005119

SPECIAL EVENTS Duke Gardens The Sarah P. Duke Gardens, with 55 acres of landscaped and woodland gardens immediately adjacent to Duke University Medical Center, has five miles of allees and pathways, most of which are accessible to the physically challenged. It is recognized as one of the premiere public gardens in the United States, renowned both for landscape design and the quality of horticulture, each year attracting more than 300,000 visitors from all over the world. The splendid formal Terrace Garden and the famous Pergola constitute the historical core of the Gardens. The 20-acre Culberson Asiatic Arboretum is devoted to illustrating with living examples the close relationships of the flora of eastern Asia and that of eastern North America, and is embellished with stone lanterns, beautiful bridges, charming gar-

den benches, and a secluded shelter. The Blomquist Garden of Native Plants, which displays the most beautiful Southern wildflowers in a dramatic pine woodland, will be at peak performance during Commencement Weekend. The Doris Duke Center for Sarah P. Duke Gardens provides a complete array of services and information for visitors, space for educational programs, administration offices, horticultural library, a beautiful events hall, and an expanded Terraces Gift Shop. The Center is open from 9:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m., Monday through Saturday, and from 1:00 p.m. to 5:00 p.m. on Sunday. Duke Gardens is open daily from 8:00 a.m. till dusk, and there is no charge for admission.

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The 2005 Commencement production by Hoof 'n' Horn will be "Into the Woods ." This organization is recognized as the South's oldest student-run musical theater group. During the Commencement Weekend, there are three performances: Friday, May 13, at 8:00 p.m., Saturday, May 14, at 2:00 p.m. and 9:00 p.m. in Reynolds Theater.

Parking

Parking for the Baccalaureate Services is available in Parking Garage IV, adjacent to the Bryan Center on Science Drive. For the Reception on East Campus, Duke Police Department officers will be available to asist with parking. For the Graduation Exercises, ample parking is available Dining Services in the paved facility at the corner of Highway 751 Duke University Dining Services will offer its traScience Drive and in the lots surrounding and ditional Commencement Dining Extravaganza in Wallace Wade Stadium. Directional signage will the West Campus Union on Saturday, May 14, from 6:00 p.m. until 8:00 p.m. This elegant dinner designate available parking areas. Persons with will include a wide offering of culinary delights disabilities may be driven to the entrance of each that are sure to please the most discerning palates, venue, but their vehicles must be parked elseprepared and served by our wonderful dining staff where. Please check with officers at each location for instructions. It is strongly recommended in the setting of the historic Great Hall. For additional information and for reservations, which are that persons needing assistance allow sufficient accesvisit our website at time for arrival prior to events. Additional required, please information is available at sibility http://events.duke.edu/commencementdinner. http://www.access.duke.edu, or 919-668-6213. Correction: The Chronicle printed the wrong hours for Twinnie's Cafe during exam week in the Exam Break supplement. Summer hours will be Bam-3pm. Campus dining facilities’ hours can always be found at http://auxweb.duke.edu/dining.

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THE CHRONICLE

21!O|FRIDAY, MAY 13,2005

SPECIAL CEREMONIES

SPECIAL CEREMONIES

SPECIAL CEREMONIES

Saturday, May 8

Friday, May 7 11:00 a.m.

Army ROTC. Commissioning Ceremony and Reception Nelson Music Room, East Duke Building. East Campus.

12:00 noon Center for LGBT Life. Lavender Graduation. Room 02, Union Building. West Campus.

7:30 a.m.

William J. Griffith University Service Awards. Recognition Breakfast. Von Canon Hall, Bryan University Center.

8:30 a.m

Episcopal Center. Brunch. 505 Alexander Avenue. Central Campus. Reservations: 919-286-0624. Wesley Fellowship. Brunch. Kitchen, Duke Chapel

12:30 p.m.

University Scholars Program. Luncheon. Washington Inn

9:00 a.m

1:00 p.m

Reginaldo Howard Scholarship. Luncheon. Old Trinity Room,

9:00 a.m

Nicholas School of the Environment and Earth Sciences.

Recognition Ceremony for Graduate and Professional School Degrees. Reception to follow. Courtyard, Leon S. Levine Science Research Center. (In the event of rain, Reynolds Theater. Bryan University Center.)

West Union Building. West Campus.

2:00 p.m

African and African-American Studies. Awards Ceremony and Reception. Von Canon Hall, Bryan University Center.

2:00 p.m

Naval ROTC. Commissioning Ceremony. Sarah P. Duke Gardens. Reception to follow. Location to be announced

9:00 a.m

A.B. Duke Scholarship Program. Breakfast. Faculty Commons, West Union Building. West Campus.

3:00 p.m

Program in Education. Ceremony and Reception. Freeman Center for Jewish Life. 1415 Faber Street.

9:30 a.m

Air Force ROTC. Commissioning Ceremony and Reception. Ambassador Ballroom, Washington Duke Inn.

6:30 p.m

Shabbat Services (Reform and Conservative). Dinner to follow. Freeman Center for Jewish Life. 1415 Faber Street. Reservations required for dinner only. (919-684-6422 or jewishlife@duke.edu).

10:00 a.m

Fuqua School of Business. Daytime M.B.A. Special Ceremony. Edmund M. Cameron Indoor Stadium. Reception to follow. Lafe R and Rita D. Fox Student Center.

10:00 a.m 6:30 p.m

B.N. Duke Leadership Program and Trinity Scholars. Dinner Searle Center.

Public Policy Studies. Hooding Ceremony for Master Degree Candidates. Brunch to follow. Wilson Recreation Center.

12:30 p.m

International House. Luncheon. 2022 Campus Drive

7:00 p.m

Women's Studies. Ceremony for Majors, Minors, and Graduate Students. Nelson Music Room, East Duke Building. Dinner buffet to follow. East Duke Parlors.

1:00 p.m

Public Policy Studies. Undergraduate Awards Ceremony. Reception to follow. Wilson Recreation Center.

1:00 p.m

Hindu Baccalaureate Service. Multicultural Center. Bryan University Center.

7:00 p.m

The School of Medicine. Hippocratic Oath Ceremony. University Chapel. Reception to follow.

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THE CHRONICLE

SPECIAL CEREMONIES 1:30 p.m,

2:00 p.m

3:00 p.m.

FRIDAY, •

SPECIAL CEREMONIES

•

Marine Laboratory. Reception honoring graduating undergraduate, graduate and professional school students who have attended the Marine Laboratory. A Wing Courtyard Terrace, Leon S. Levine Science Research Center. (In the event of rain, Williams Hall of Science, Leon S, Levine Science Research Center.)

4:00 p.m,

6:00 p.m

The School ofLaw. Hooding Ceremony. Edmund M. Cameron Indoor Stadium. Reception to follow. Law School Lawn.

Fuqua School of Business. Cross Continent Program. Special Ceremony. Edmund M. Cameron Indoor Stadium. Reception to follow. Lafe P. and Rita D, Fox Student Center.

6:00 p.m.

Arts Awards Ceremony. Presenting student awards in the creative, performing, and visual arts and literature, including Benenson Awards and the Sudler Prize in the Arts. Nelson Music Room, East Duke Building. East Campus.

Master of Arts in Liberal Studies. Graduation Reception. Washington Duke Inn.

6:00 p.m

Jewish Baccalaureate Service, (for Undergraduate, Graduate, and Professional School Students). Freeman Center for Jewish Life. 1415 Faber Street.

Catholic Baccalaureate Mass. Baldwin Auditorium.

MAY 13, 2005 1

SPECIAL CEREMONIES 6:00 p.m

Robertson Scholars Program. Dinner. Washington Duke Inn Presidential Ballrooms I and 11.

6:30 p.m

The Divinity School. Service of Worship and Hooding Ceremony. University Chapel. Reception to follow. North Chapel Courtyard. (In the event of rain, Alumni Memorial Common Room.)

6:30 p.m

The Graduate School. Hooding Ceremony for Ph.D. candidates. Brodie Gym. East Campus. Reception to follow.

7:00 p.m

The School of Nursing. Hooding and Recognition Ceremony. Page Auditorium, Reception to follow. Von Canon Hall.

9:00 p.m

Class of 2005 Graduation Party, Zone W Parking Lot. West Campus.


THE CHRONICLE

2!!2| FRIDAY, MAY 13, 2005

SPECIAL CEREMONIES

SPECIAL CEREMONIES

Sunday, May 15 8:00 a.m.

The School of Law. Breakfast. Law School Lawn

12:00 noon The Divinity School. Reception and Diploma Distribution Alumni Memorial Common Room, New Divinity School. 12:00 noon The Pratt School of Engineering. (Master of Engineering Management). Reception and Diploma Distribution. Center for Interdisciplinary Engineering, Medicine and Applied Science Auditorium (CIEMAS). 12:00 noon School of Nursing. Reception and Diploma Distribution. School of Nursing. Trent Drive. 12:00 noon Fuqua School of Business. Reception and Diploma Distribution. Lafe P. and Rita D. Fox Student Center. 12:00 noon The Graduate School. (Ph.D.) Doctoral Ceremony. Page Auditorium. Luncheon to follow. Clock Tower Quadrangle, West Campus. 12:00 noon The School of Law. Reception. Law School Lawn. Diploma Distribution. Room 2028, Law School. 12:00 noon The School of Medicine. Reception and Diploma Distribution Duke Clinics Courtyard. (In the event of rain, Searle Center.) 12:00 noon African and African-American Studies. Diploma Distribution Foyer, John Hope Franklin Center. 12:00 noon Chemisty. Reception and Diploma Distribution. Lobby, Paul M Gross Chemical Laboratory. 12:00 noon Classical Studies. Reception and Diploma Distribution. Room 226, Allen Building.

SPECIAL CEREMONIES

12:00 noon Computer Science. Luncheon and Diploma Distribution. Great Lawn, Leon S. Levine Science Research Center. 12:00 noon Cultural Anthropology. Reception and Diploma Distribution Room 139, Social Sciences Building. 12:00 noon Economics. Reception and Diploma Distribution. Edmund M Cameron Indoor Stadium. 12:00 noon English. Ceremony and Diploma Distribution. Reynolds Theater. Reception to follow. Schaefer Mall. 12:00 noon Environmental Sciences/Policy and Earth and Ocean Sciences. Reception and Diploma Distribution for undergraduate degrees. Courtyard, Leon S. Levine Science Research Center. (In the event of rain, Love Auditorium, 8101, Leon S. Levine Science Research Center.) 12:00 noon History. Diploma Distribution. Baldwin Auditorium. East Campus. Luncheon to follow. Front Lawn, Baldwin Auditorium 12:00 noon Linguistics Program. Reception and Diploma Distribution. 305 Allen Building. 12:00 noon Literature. Reception and Diploma Distribution. Nelson Music Room, East Duke Building. East Campus. 12:00 noon Markets and Management Studies Program. Certificate Distribution. Old Trinity Room, West Union Building. Reception to follow. 12:00 noon Mathematics (jointly with Physics). Buffet Luncheon and Diploma Distribution. Leon S. Levine Science Research Center Patio and Dining Room.

The Chronicle Class of 2005 Janine Talley Kristin Jackson Lauren Lind Ashley Rudisill Melanie Shaw Sean Biederman

Sarah Brodeur Andrew Card Meg Carroll Andrew Collins Mike Corey Jen Hasvold

Hilary Lewis Yoav Lurie Christina Ng Molly Nicholson Malavika Prabhu Whitney Robinson

Robert Samuel Jon Schnaars Irie Turner Cindy Yee

An informal reception will be held for Chronicle Seniors and their graduation guests Sunday, May 15 from 1:30 until 3:30 pm The Editorial Office of The Chronicle 301 Flowers Building •


THE CHRONICLE

FRIDAY,

SPECIAL CEREMONIES 12:00 noon Philosophy. Reception and Diploma Distribution. Lobby, Teer

•

SPECIAL CEREMONIES

12:30 p.m

Theater Studies. Buffet Luncheon and Diploma Distribution. Sheafer Theater, Bryan University Center.

12:30 p.m

Women's Studies. Luncheon and Diploma Distribution. East Duke Parlors. East Duke Building.

Engineering Library. 12:00 noon Physics (jointly with Mathematics). Buffet Luncheon and Diploma Distribution. Leon S. Levine Science Research Center Patio and Dining Room. 12:00 noon Political Science. Luncheon and

Diploma Distribution. Cambridge Inn Quadrangle, Union Building. West Campus. (In the event of rain, Room 210, Perkins Library.) 12:00 noon Program

n. Reception and Diploma

Distribution. McClendon Commons (adjacent to the Office of Undergraduate Admissions), 2138 Campus Drive. 12:00 noon Psychology. Reception and Diploma Distribution. Front Lawn, Davison Building. (In the event of rain, Zener

Auditorium, Sociology/Psychology Building.) 12:00 noon Public Policy Studies. Reception and Diploma Distribution for undergraduate and graduate students.

Fleishman Commons, Sanford Institute Building.

12:00 noon Religion. Diploma Distribution. York Chapel. Reception to follow. 12:00 noon Romance Studies. Reception and Diploma Distribution. Languages Building Portico. 12:00 noon Slavic Languages and Literature. Reception and Diploma Distribution. Room 109, Languages

Building. 12:15 p.m,

Biology. Honors Ceremony and Diploma Distribution.Wilson Recreation Center. Reception to follow.

12:15 p.m

Music. Buffet Luncheon and Diploma Distribution. Lobby, Mary Duke Biddle Music Building.

12:30 p.m

The Pratt School of Engineering. Honors and Diploma

Ceremony.University Chapel. Preceded by reception. The Chapel Court.

12:30 p.m

Art and Art History. Diploma Distribution. Room 107, White Lecture Hall. Luncheon to follow.

12:30 p.m.

Biological Anthropology and Anatomy. Reception and Diploma Distribution. Primate Center.

12:30 p.m

Germanic Languages and Literature. Reception and Diploma Distribution. Lobby, Old Chemistry Building.

12:30 p.m

Sociology. Diploma Distribution and Presentation of Awards. Great Hall, West Union Building. Reception to follow.

•

12:30 p.m

Doctor of Physical Therapy Division. Diploma and Award Ceremony. Griffith Film Theater, Bryan University Center. Reception to follow. Von Canon Hall.

MAY 13, 2005 13

SPECIAL CEREMONIES 1:30 p.m

Comparative Area Studies. Luncheon and Diploma Distribution. West Duke Lawn, West Duke Building. (In the event of rain, Room 105, West Duke

Building.) 2:00 p.m

Asian and African Languages and Literature. Reception and Diploma Distribution. 2101 Campus Drive.

3:00 p.m

Physician Assistant Division. Diploma and Award Ceremony. Presidential Room, Washington Duke Inn. Reception to follow.


THE CHRONIC:le

24 FRIDAY, MAY 13, 2005

DISTRIBUTION OF DIPLOMAS

DISTRIBUTION OF DIPLOMAS

Following the Graduation Exercises, diplomas will be distributed in ceremonies sponsored by the several schools/college. TRINITY COLLEGE; 8.A., B.S. Diplomas will be distributed at departmental ceremonies after the conclusion of the Graduation Exercises. If the department of the first major held its Commencement event prior to the Graduation Ceremony, then the diplomas will be available at the Quadrangle at Perkins Library. (In the event of rain, Lobby, Allen Building.) THE PRATT SCHOOL OF ENGINEERING: B.S.E. Honors and Diploma Ceremony. University Chapel. -

M.Egr..M. Student Lounge, Teer Engineering Library. -

THE SCHOOL OF NURSING: 8.5. N., M.S.N. School of Nursing. Trent Drive. THE NICHOLAS SCHOOL OF THE ENVIRONMENT AND EARTH SCIENCES: M.E.M., M.F. Williams Hall of Science, Leon S. Levine Science Research Center.

THE FUQUA SCHOOL OF BUSINESS: M.B.A. Lafe P. and Rita D. Fox Student Center. THE DIVINITY SCHOOL: M.C.M., M.T.S., M.Div., Th.M. Refectory Room, Westbrook Building. THE SCHOOL OF LAW: J.D., LL.M., S.J.D., M.L.S. Room 2028, Law School. THE SCHOOL OF MEDICINE: M.D. Duke Clinics Lawn. (In the event of rain, Searle Center.) Following the Reception.

T)u

D.P.T. (Doctor of Physical Therapy) Griffith Film Theater, Bryan University Center.

ul& urroxx/

M.H.S. (Physician Assistants) Washington Duke Inn.

rr2 /i& HT* err&cC’ offers: •

Located in the Duke Gardens Historic Terraces,.at the cottage that was formerly The Terrace Shop.

Freshly baked desserts

M.H.S. in Clinical Leadership Conference Room 302, Hanes House.

Assorted teas and gourmet coffees Ice cream Soft drinks, water

THE GRADUATE SCHOOL: M.S., M.A. Room 127, Allen Building, Conference Room

Assorted sandwiches

Soups Catering ...and more to come! •

M.A.T. (Master of Arts in Teaching) Room 213, West Duke Building, East Campus.

Hours: Monday Saturday 10-4 Sunday 12-4 -

For more information please visit our web site at www.sarahpduke3ardens.info or call 919.660.3957 Food and Flex accepted.

|

Congratulations to Library Student Employees Graduating in 2005 From the Staff of the Duke University Libraries

We couldn’t do it without you! Katherine Anthony Linda Brogdon Sarah Cork David Dabney Christopher Davis Yuanshu Deng Kristen Dennis Laura Dilly Paloma Duong Margo Eastlund James Finchum Kevin Fogg Nicholas Foley Ben Greenberg Amelia Hairston-Porter Natalie Hardwick Bryant Harris

Eboni Hedgspeth Daniel Heimer Casey Held Shomari Hogan Yubingji Lily Kinross-Wright Dave Kuban Khalid Kuiji Aneil Lala Danielle McGregor Kareen Murray Yaw Nyame E.Oidoudanzan T. Osorpurev Leif Overvold Ehas Parisca Ehsa Pleasant

M.H.S. in Clinical Research Davison Lawn.

Brianna Powers Kevin Reese Suzanne Roberts Caroline Smiley Patrick Smith Steven Solis Jasmina Stanojevich Dan Stepner Julianna Swanson Alok Tewari Vijay Vanna Steven Verdi Pavla Vesela Kathleen Whams Sarah Wingate Hanwook Yoo Amanda Zimmerman

M.A. (Liberal Studies Program) Room 001-E, Allen Building. M.A. (Program in International Development Policy) Sanford Library. Second Floor, Sanford Institute Building. M.P.P. Sanford Library. Second Floor, Sanford Institute Building Ph.D. Page Auditorium


rzij

Graduate School Fundin offered by the Program

on Values and Ethics in the Marketplace

Congratulations,

G RADUATES

Applications due May 20: o Grant for graduating Duke seniors, $12,000

The

For application information visit our website at: The Program on Value*asd PAics io Ike Marketplace

future looks

bright

Hamilton “i

www.vem.duke.edu/news.htm

INTERNATION

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261 FRIDAY, MAY 13, 2005

Announcements FREE $3OO off coupon for any Kaplan Course (MCAT.LSAT, GMAT, etc.) Email Ict4@duke.edu New, upscale restaurant, Symposium Cafe, is looking for hosts & hostesses, wait & bar staff. Apply at the restaurant in American TobaccoWarehouse, 318 Blackwell St., Durham.

Excellent full-time nanny available July Ist. Responsible, reliable, and experienced (newborns as well as older children). We’re leaving Duke, but wish we could take her with usl Call 919-4521305 (leave message).

Seeking babysitter Friday and Saturday afternoons (2:30-6:00) for fun loving 2 year-old in Duke-UNC family. $lO/hour. Mid-June through Mid-August. Experience and referEmail Julie: ences please. mell@email.unc.edu.

TestMasters LSAT Instructor $3O/hour

(part-time/fulltime available) Requires 99th percentile, 171 or higher, on actual LSAC administered LSAT. 800-6965728x180, jobs@testmasters.net

Apts. For Rent

Studio Apt: modern, attractive on lovely old farm 15 mins, from Duke. Rent includes heat, AC, power, water, appliances. Quiet beautiful setting. $450/month. No pets. 6200137.

1 bedroom furnished, spacious in Belmont © Duke. $6OO utilities. 206351-8593 or 310-962-1618 +

Beautiful, furnished IBR/IBA with all utilities including high-speed Internet access. 150ft from Duke East Campus. Full kitchen. Washer/Dryer. Central Heat/Air.Private entrance and parking.

A national leader in mail presorting is seeking PT production employees Mon & Tues 4:oopm to 10;00pm.This position requires physical movement, standing, attention to detail and the ability to work in a fast paced environment. Apply in person or forward resume to 2410 Presidential Drive, Suite 105, Durham, NC 27703. EOE

BARTENDERS NEEDED!!! Earn $l5-$35/hrs. Job placement assistance is top priority. Raleigh’s Bartending School. Have fun! Make money! Meet people! Call now about our spring tuition specials.

919-676-0774. www.cocktailmixer.com.

$700.00/m0.656-9919 jim.manson ©duke.edu

TOWNHOUSE 3 Pinnacle Rd. Beachhill #2. 3BR/38, fireplace, deck, dishwasher, laundryroom w/extra storage. Access to pool & tennis. Close to 15-501, $1250/month. 336-674-5069 or maguyrick@earthlink.net.

Autos For Sale 1975 Fiat Spider convertible. Candy apple red, camel top and interior. 49,000 miles. Refurbished. Runs great, looks great, blast to drive. $3,500.3838444 A LOT OF CARS 3119 N. Roxboro St (next to BP). Over 75 vehicles. Financing Guaranteed Or We Pay You $5O. 919-220-7155

NEED A SUMMER JOB? Why not be a tutor for the Peer Tutoring Program? Tutors needed for both sessions. Courses needing tutors: Chemistry 151 L & 1521, Economics 51D & 55D, Physics 53L & 54L, Math 31L, 32L, 103. Undergraduate tutors earn $lO/hr and graduate student tutors earn $l3/hr. Applications available in 201 Academic Advising Center, East Campus, 684-8832 or on our website; www.duke.edu/web/skills

OFFICE MANAGER Unique real estate office close to

Duke Alum Seeks Childcare provider for 4-year-old daughter. Excellent pay, lovely home, bright, engaging child. 34 days per week. 1.0 mi from Duke Gardens, .5 miles from Ninth Street. Must have excellent references. Call 919-423-5331.

Duke needs someone w/ outgoing personality, good clerical skills and pleasing telephone manner. Must know Microsoft Word & Excel. Layout skills helpful for designing brochures & website. Part-time, flexible hours. E-mail cover letter & resume to: teton@earthlink.net

Needed Immediately: Biology or chemistry major to prepare biochemical solutions, micrbiological media, and do lab tasks for a nucleic acids research lab. 10-20 flexible hours per week for the summer terms and the potential for next year. Email steege @ biochem.duke.edu.

POSTDOCTORAL POSITION Duke cancer genomics lab seeks postdoctoral fellow to start July/August. Lab focus is identifying cancer gene targets and biological functions/clinical implications via novel approaches. Applicants with excellent communication skills and experience in cancer biology and molecular genetics are See especially encouraged. www.duke.edu/web/oncogenomics for literature references. To apply, send CV and references to hai.yan@duke.edu.

RARE BOOKS

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SPARTACUS NOW HIRING Waitstaff & bartenders. Fulltime/Part-time, flexible hours. Apply in person Tues-Fri., 2-spm. Durham, South Square area in front of SuperTarget. 489-2848.

ing/adjusting digital images; able to safely handle fragile items, work independently. Dependable, organized, detail-oriented. Flex sched, May-Aug Contact

tina.kirkham @duke.edu.

FULL-TIME RESEARCH ASSISTANT Duke cancer genomics lab seeks research assistant to start June/July. Duties to include biological experiments, data analysis, and lab management. We seek highly motivated applicants with excellent communication skills and interest or experience in cancer research. BS/BA preferred. See www.duke.edu/web/oncogenomics for literature and lab description. To apply, send resume and references to

hai.yan@duke.edu.

IN TOWN THIS SUMMER? Seeking upbeat, creative and responsible Duke undergrad/grad to be parttime nanny to bright Durham 2-yr-old this summer. 15-20 hours/wk; nonsmoker with transportation. 919-682or 8974 marjoriebrown@mindspring.com Research position for a graduating Duke senior in chemistry, biology, or the biochemistry concentration to work as a research technician on an independent project in a nucleic acids and molecular biology laboratory. Great training for the future. Send resume to steege@biochem.duke.edu. Please include major, science courses, and GPA.

Services Offered

Room For Rent Furnished room

and

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and

private off street entry. Cable, small refrig, & micro. Near East Campus, avail. May 12. Call 3836703.

screened porch

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Three bed two bat hapt. for rent. Erwin square on Ninth Street summer months. Will rent rooms separately, $4OO/month. For more info call (850) 556-9601.

Technical/scientific editing. I will do what you want. Call Phyllis , 489-5473.

SPRING BREAK/ GRAD WEEK. WWW.RETREATMYRTLEBEACH.CO M. AS LOW AS $lOO PER WEEK. 1800-645-3618.

SUMMER WORK-STUDY Work-studies to assist with psychiatry research on anxiety disorders, including PTSD, social phobia, and obsessive-compulsive disorder. Data entry, database design, computer programming, and/or library work, depending on your skills and interests. Contact Dr.

Tupler at ltupler@duke.edu.

Wanted: Scanning Assistants. Use scanners to digitize Perkins Library collections, prep materials, input data. Required: familiar w/ Windows & creat-

extendable.

GET PAID FOR YOUR OPINIONS! Earn $l5-$125 and more per survey!

Summer work study student needed for child oriented research program. Duties include data entry, filing, and library work but may also involve some assistance with children during research assessments. This position requires sensitivity, confidentiality, and reliability. Must have transportation to off-campus clinic near the former South Square Mall. Email wendy.conklin@duke.edu

VARSITY ALE HOUSE

Now Hiring. Bartenders, waitstaff and hostesses to work in a high energy sports bar & restaurant. Full-time/part-time. Flexible hours. Please call to set up an interview. Mon-Sat, 2-spm, 489-5800.

WANT TO PLACE A CLASSIFIED BUT CAN'T WAIT FOR THE NEXT ISSUE? THEN LOG ON TO

www.chronide.duke.edu/dassifieds/ AND PLACE YOUR AD NOW! Online classifieds are able to be viewed immediately.

Houses For Rent 1-5 Bedroom Homes. Duke Special Call 416-0393.

Going Homo for Summer? ng Distance Shi|

House for rent. Close to Duke. Lovely 2 bdr., 1 bath bungalow. Recently renovated, gorgeous hardwood floors, central air, appliances, W/D available. Deck and detached garage. Great storage space. Safe neighborhood close to park. $750/month. 522-3256. Northern Durham, Milton Rd. 3 BR fenced 2BA large backyard. $925/month call 919-489-9699.

Houses For Sale

MOVING We Pick Up You Conveniently Located Less than Climate Controlled Stora Boxe

Falls Lake House with beautiful views. 1.5 acre private retreat surrounded by over 1000 acres. Wildlife refuge. Only 15 minutes to RTP/Duke/UNC. By owner. 678-9372. Priced to sell.

Location! Location! Location!

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CLASSIFIEDS

CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING RATES business $6.50 for the first 1 5 words

5 or more insertions

2 line bold headline 1 line bold headline bold words

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MAY 13, 2005127

A NEW CLASSIFIED WEBSITE! Beginning Monday, May 16, The Chronicle will have a new and improved classified system. The new system will allow you to enter your own classified and have advanced web features, including photos!

DISCOUNTS -

n*

personal / non profit $5.00 for the first 1 5 words

3 or 4 insertions 10% PECIAL PRINT FEATURES

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FRIDAY,

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BE SURE TO CHECK OUT THE NEW CLASSIFIED SITE ON MONDAY, MAY 16!

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SPECIAL ONLINE FEATURES featured/spotlight ad include a picture link to a website

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$2 extra per day $2.50 extra per day $l.OO extra per day

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.edu/classifieds/

Seniors/Parents! Get your

005 ONLY AVAILABLE HERE! .

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Cost: $3O tapes

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Featuring: Commencement Speaker

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Share your memories with family and friends. copy TODAY! Call 660-1740 or order Reserve your J . online at http://www.duke.edu/web/graduatton7vimpsMml

DUK6 KeCOTUtflg -

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0044 Bryan Center Box 90846 Durham, NC 27708 Phone: (919) 660-1740 Fax: (919) 660-1719 Email: swells@duke.edu

,

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THE CHRONICLE

28 FRIDAY, MAY 13,2005

Congratulations TO THE NEW MEMBERS OF THE

Career

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Team ! Shannon Cambridge (Brandy Canady Audrey Christopher Ishar CarmichaeC Shehfi Edison

Doug Cerny

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SEEKING SPECIAL EGG DONOR NYC Summer 2005

$25,000 PLEASE HELP AN IVY LEAGUE COUPLE IF YOU ARE: A DUKE student, or graduate student or graduate, Caucasian, athletic, 57" to 5'10" tall, German, Eastern European, English or Irish (Other heritages considered), very pretty, age 21-32; kind and fun personality... Please consider being our Egg Donor-The medical procedure is easy!

Hopefully, this will pay for graduate school. Please send a picture and resume of your background and where you can be reached during the school year and summer to: DONORS FOR KINDNESS POST OFFICE BOX 442 MOUNT KISCO, NEW YORK 10549


THE CHRONICLE

FRIDAY,

MAY 13, 2005

cosmic CfINTINn York A Duke Tradition in New

E

4

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TO THE STUDENT ADVERTISING, BUSINESS A CREATIVE STAFF OF THE CHRONICLE:

Thanks for a

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THE CHRONICLE

301FRIDAY, MAY 13,2005

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THE CHRONICLE

FRIDAY,

MAY 13, 2005131 An

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THIS SUMMER TAKE OFF, RELAX. ENJOY YOURSELF. And keep in tune with your world through a special student summer subscription to The New York Times. When you have The Times delivered, you’ll have more time to sit back and savor your favorite interests from Arts & Leisure to business and politics. And N-Jr-w-r* r-/» : everything in between. All brought to you with the unique depth and perspective of The '

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llChave appreciatedyour jriendship andpatronaye the last jour years andwish you the eery hest in your juture endeavors. over

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Special Store Hours or Graduation Weekend

Friday, May 13 B:3oam-7:oopm

Saturday, May 14

B:3oam 6:oopm -

The

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Sunday, May 15 11am- spm

UMlYuKul 1 L WHERE REAL DUKE FANS SHOP Upper Level, Bryan Center

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Shop with us 24/7 via our online catalog at VISA, MasterCard, American Express, Discover, FLEX, IRIs, Cash, Personal Checks Duke

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The Chronicle

Duke University Class 0f2005

SENIORS

Frida’

May 13,2005*5

CLASS OF 2005!

We broke every attendance record for Senior Week events and are on our way to setting a new senior gift participation record IF we meet our goal of 60%! But we need your help. .if you have not given your $20.05 to the Senior Gift Campaign, there is still time! Checks can be mailed to The Senior Gift, Box 90600, Durham NC, 27708 or go online to http ://annualfund .duke .edu/pages/senweek .htm. .

All Senior Gift contributions go to the Duke Annual Fund to help pay for the many expenses of our Duke experience that tuition does not cover (tuition only covers 50% of the cost of a Duke education!). This includes faculty support, financial aid dollars to ensure need-blind admissions, innovative curriculum like FOCUS, and information technology. Remember that if we reach 60% President Brodhead will write a check for $2,005 to the campaign. We do not want to miss this opportunity! ,

A big thank you to the more than 765 seniors who have supported the campaign to date.


6 Frida

1

*

May 13,2005

DbkeWrtiVetstty Ctdss

of 2005

DUKE

Thri Chibhi’cle


The Chronicle

Friday, May 13,2005 7

Duke University Glass 0f2005

*

Lauren

Johnston Always a Great Smile! You’re dazzling and we’re so proud of you! Love, Dad, Mom and Ryan

mtion www.dukealumni.com


8* Friday May 13,2005

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Dukt University Clbs's

1005

DUKE

The Chronicle


Friday, May 13', 2Qos't 9 o

Lauren

Jonas Congratulations

IAURHN!

Adeola Adeniji

Adeola Flies High From duke!!! 2005 We are very proud

ofa

wonderful daughter sister for whom we know &

the sunshine never ends.

May you spend your days on things you like to do.

*We ARE

SO PROUD OF YOU; and

Congratulations on your great achievement from Duke.

WE LOVE YOU VERY MUCH ~

Jl JL

Mom, T>ad, ancfnaclief

May all your dreams come true as you continue reaching for greater heights & depths.

~

We are very proud of you.

/3ooe, QaJ, JKom, Cftcfedoyin an JCQfolaSi

The Order of Omega Congratulates the Recipients of the 2005 Greek Awards Chapter of the Year Chi Omega

Outstanding Scholarship

Kappa Kappa

Most

Gamma

Fraternal Values Sigma Phi Epsilon

Improved Scholarship Sigma

Nu

Outstanding Philanthropy

Outstanding Programming

Delta Sigma Phi

Delta Sigma Theta

Education

&

Risk Management Alpha Delta Pi

Programs

Intramural

Most

Greek Collaboration Alpha Omicron Pi .

-

Alpha Delta

Pi

Involvement Alpha Omicron Pi

University

Mel Baars

-

Greek Man of the Year Will Connolly- Sigma Nu Best

Order

Improved Chapter

Chi Omega Citizenship

Outstanding Chapter President

AshleyĂ&#x;udisill

Sports Champion

Kappa Alpha

wishes to the graduating seniors in

Eboni Hedgspeth- Zeta Phi Beta Greek Involvement James Saad Delta Kappa Epsilon -

Greek Woman of the Year Jessica Chilson Chi Omega -

The Order

of Omega

Mel Baars, Caroline Baker, Jennifer Beall, Chris Carlberg, Jessica Chilson, Sarah Conley, Will Connolly, Erin Crawford, Julius Degesys, Christine Eyler, Eboni Hedgspeth, Andrew Holbrook, Jill Hopman, Matt Ivester, Jena Jamal, Elizabeth King, Courtney Kraus, Oluseyi Ojeifo, Margaret Peloso, Kimberly Roller, Allison Serra, Rob Smith, Mimi Wachendorf Larissa West

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May

13,2005Ml

Pr

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Congratulation** on your

DL

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career at Duke

moment

and your development

onz

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young man.

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Our lorn and support always Mom, Dad and Danielle

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Alumni Events

DukeAlumni.com

for a list of club contacts and the complete list of Alumni club summer events. For any questions about Alumni Clubs around the world, contact the club president or call the Duke Alumni office at (800) FOR-DUKE.


12'•'Ffida'

May 13,2005

T

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DUKE

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Duke

University Cl

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May 13,2005*1 3

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Patrick Johnson

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Car(duL& Yon Am Out*

Sunshine!

(Congratulations on a great

beginning^ meeting your

goals and %

From kindergarten to high school and now Duke, you have made the world a brighter place.

fulfilling our expectations

IA/o ar&

With love from your family.

u

*7l

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•JOS

! CATs Thank You Senior

Joe Fiores

Nataue Hardwick

Derek Kennedy

Amy

Bryant

Naxhanson

Harris

Meera Patel

Renee

The Career Center thanks you for all of

Vaughn

your help

AND WISHES YOU THE BEST OF LUCK IN THE FUTURE!


14

•

Friday,

Mi

13,2005

a f

u University Class of 2005

DUKE

The Chroniolfe


The

Ghronidle

Duke Universii

May 13,2005

0f2005

Justin and Michelle Leonard

CLAUDIA M. REUBEN

Duke Class of 2005 Congratulations on your many Journeys together

DEAREST BEARSY, CONGRATULATIONS!!!

WE ARE ALL SO PROUD OF YOU.

isa

r« LOVE MOM, DAD, JESSICA, DILLON

&

CHLOE

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The Chronicle’


t)iike Untiertity Class

Frida

oj

May

1

The Chronicle

13,2005*«17

Samira Abu-Ghazaleh

Katie Blaszak

To a wonderful child

Congratulations

Congratulations Samira

Duke 2005

Always

C

Keen

c

T^emember...

mind, kind heart, indomitable

knowing that our

spirit.

talents and abilities

means

when

we go to

sleep at night

were used in away

that served others.

We love you.

k i

Mom, Dad

&

Meg

CONGRATULATIONS, Program in Education Students Early Childhood Education Studies Program Benjamin Wolinsky

Evan Davis Natalie Zervas

Elementary Teacher Preparation Program Vanda Chou Adrienne Duffy Anne Farland Julia Gelf and Michael Lamb Kimberly Schafer Nick JVoil

Lauren Bailey Rebecca Davis

Tiffany Elbert Jamie Frank Emily Kolb Lauren Ruderman

Colleen Schilly Kristen Zwiener

Secondary Teacher Preparation Program Lauren Abell Cedric Dargan Stuart Pierce '

Craig Seyfried

Laurel Cooper

Lauren Jonas Vanessa Sanchez

Katherine Straka

Winfred Q. Holton Prize for Educational Research Lauren Ruderman

D.T. Stallings Award Jamie Frank Lauren Ruderman

Holton Award for Brussels Fellow Katherine Bernstein From the Faculty and Staffof the Program in Education

cTVtarian Williamson ~

,

Love, Mom

&

Dad


18

trida’

May

I

ll ‘2ods

bukeCniversity Class ofl()05

DUKE

The Chronicle


The Chronicle

Duke

DEPARTMENT OF ART AND ART HISTORY NANCY KANEB ART HISTORY AWARD Jessica Bell West T’os

MARY DUKE BIDDLE FOUNDATION VISUAL ART AWARD Ek Han Tan T’os

University

Class 0f2005

Friday, Ma

13,2005 19 •

HENRY SCHUMAN MUSIC PRIZE Recipient: Jessica Laun TO5 Honorable mention: Joseph Bates TO5

JULIA WILKINSON

MUELLER PRIZE FOR EXCELLENCE IN MUSIC Recipient: Stephanie Weston TO5 Honorable mention: Bina Vasantharam TO5

DEPARTMENT OF THEATER STUDIES

VERNON G. PRATT AWARD Michael Faber T’os

REYNOLDS PRICE AWARD FOR SCRIPTWRITING Recipient: Martin Zimmerman TO7 Honorable Mention: Shane Ryan T’os

THE DUKE UNIVERSITY MUSEUM OF ART MARY DUKE BIDDLE SUMMER INTERNSHIP AWARD IN MUSEUM STUDIES

Alicia Garcia TO6

DASHA EPSTEIN AWARD IN PLAYWRITING Tomas Lopez TO6 DALE B.|. RANDALL AWARD IN DRAMATIC LITERATURE

Emily Slater T’o7

THE DANCE PROGRAM

KENNETH

JULIA WRAY MEMORIAL DANCE

AWARDS Tameeka Renita Norton T’os Elisa Schreiber TO5 Tonya Nicole Taylor T’os

DEPARTMENT OF ENGLISH CREATIVE WRITING

-

ANNE FLEXNER POETRY AWARDS Jonathan Fisher T’o6 Karen Rembold TO6

).

REARDON AWARD IN THEATER

DESIGN, MANAGEMENT, OR PRODUCTION Kate McCormick T ‘O5

RICHARD CYTOWIC ACTING AWARD Dana Berger TO5 Kymberlle Stansell TO5 THEATER STUDIES DIRECTING AWARD Marshall Botvinick T’o6 ALEX COHEN AWARDS FOR SUMMER INITIATIVES IN THEATER

jimmy Son! T’o7 Madeleine Lambert T’oB

ANNE FLEXNER FICTION AWARDS First Prize: Edward Heifers TO5 Second Prize: Chris Good T’os

HAROLD BRODY AWARD FOR EXCELLENCE IN MUSICAL THEATER

TERRY WELBY TYLER, JR. AWARD FOR POETRY Michaela Kerrissey T’os

JOHN M. CLUM DISTINGUISHED THEATER STUDIES

Maura Farver T’os

GRADUATE AWARD

ACADEMY OF AMERICAN POETS PRIZE Sabrina West TO5

Amit V. Mahtaney TO5

MARGARET ROSE KNIGHT SANFORD SCHOLARSHIP

TRINITY COLLEGE

Talya Lieberman TO7 BASCOM HEADEN PALMER LITERARY PRIZE

FRANCIS K. PEMBERTON SCHOLARSHIP Alessandra Colaianni TO7

WILLIAM BLACKBURN SCHOLARSHIP Macy Parker TO5

EricVivier T’os THE LOUIS SUDLER PRIZE IN CREATIVE AND PERFORMING ARTS

Amit V. Mahtaney T’os EDWARD H. BENENSON AWARDS IN THE ARTS

FILM/VIDEO/DIGITAL PROGRAM F/V/D

FILMMAKER AWARDS Sarah Brodeur TO5 Nlkyatu Jusu TO5

DEPARTMENT OF MUSIC WILLIAM KLENZ PRIZE IN MUSIC COMPOSITION

Arisitides Llaneza, Graduate Chiayu Hsu, Graduate

Joost Bosland T’o6 Sarah Lamoureaux Brodeur T’os Ricky C. Chen T’os Michael Faber T’os Rebecca Ann Herman T’os Andrew B. Kay T’os David A. Lewis T’os Lauren Elizabeth Miller T’os Erica Mutchler T’os Vanessa Rodriguez T’o6 Kymberlie Stansell T’os Ragini Tharoor Srinivasan T’o7 Naike Swai T’o7


20

•

Friday, May 13,2005

T

Duke

University Class

0f2005

DUKE

The Chronicle


The Chronicle

Duke University Class 0f2005

Friday, Ma'

ATTENTION: WTTI ik* J K

At Morgan Dodge Jeep Your Price is Always •

1

UNDER INVOICE EVJSUI

Bh

DODGE DURANGO

Vehicle We Sell DODGE RAM 1500 QUAD CAB -

V

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DODGE GRANDCARAVAN j—-

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To

DODGE I DAKOTA

EiWSHZ

Duke Einployee

'■‘i

DODGE STRATUS

m*

—-

(

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«

JEEP WRANGLER

W

JEEP LIBERTY

Visit our virtual

24/70ft

3601

Before You Go Out Into The World On Your Own, Have The Folks Pick U One Last Great Meal.

1

Reservations still a able Friday, Saturday and Sunday for our prix fixe menu. For graduation reservations or gift certificates, www.starlu.com 11 Shannon Road On the courtyard 919.489.1500 Durham •

It's about the good stuff.

13,2005*21


22 Fi •

May 13,2005

Duke University Class 0f2005

DUKE

The Chronicle


The Chronicle

Duke

University

Class 0f2005

Friday, May 13,2005

Maze I Tov!

Hillel

to the Class of EDDS Stacy Greeter Blake London Erica Smolow Dana Berger Matthew Yoeli Rebecca Davis Jared Strumwasser Andrew Meyerson Zachary Brodsky Daniel Kedem Andrew Kay Daniel Zuckerman Maital Guttman Daina Falk Melissa Wachtel Micheline Anderson Ross Mitchell David Sackel Justin Shapiro Laurel Cooper Alexie Riofrio Adam Hill Melissa Berman Toby Brownstein Chu Paul Heymann Joshua Modell Ashley Sherwin Ariel Alter Joshua Makaron Roy Ben-Dor Robert Koslow Jacob Flomenberg

Hannah Ludwin David Galst Eric Schwartz Jennifer Kindman David Penn lan Roth Marc Needleman Matthew Greenfield Alexandra Gil Michael Weinstein Jessica Brodsky Matthew Nusnbaum Elizabeth Brenner Daniel Landau Todd Joseph Katie Bernstein Todd Mendelson Courtney Baron Ethan Schiffres Lauren Jonas Stephanie Davis Michael Laskin Nathan Partin Allison Rosen Yelena Kogan Jason Black Benjamin Leshin Zachary Bosin Alex Guttler Leah Greenberg Robert Mitchell Aaron Dinin

Kate Hansen David Cohen Karina Lifschitz Matthew Lundy Brian Rafkin Monica Chaplin Katie Butler Jonathan Weiss Jared Miranda Daniel Kramer Joshua Solomon Heather Feinberg Evan Shaw Evan Davis Amy Lazarus Robert Goodman Franklin Winokur Barry Gewolb Deborah Breisblatt Adam Katz Jennifer Hainsfurther Jeffrey Miller Sara Edelstein Mordejai Burstein Armond Schwartz Ekaterina Kruglenko Stanton Malowitz Rachael Solomon Justin Segall Yoav Lurie Whitney Florin Oaz Nir

Julie Cohen

Elisa Schreiber Dalia Grad Julia Gelfand Kimberly Roller Brian Goldberg Amanda Zimmerman Lauren Johnston Meredith Levy Jeremy Chapman Russell Zwerin Jonathan Oren Elias Silverman Steven Poliner Whitney Robinson Jennifer Solomon Michael Rosenberg Kate Stamell Alexander Witten Jason Schanker Leigh Spoon Justin Zelikovitz Suzanne Nussbaum Cameron Levy Rebecca White Kira Rosoff Stephanie Roos Jordan Funk Joshua Alien-Dicker Sarah Levin Rebecca Prince Adam Mendelowitz Alison Constantine Jonathan Rick Melissa Cohen Jane Bloomgarden Claudia Reuben Michael Boyle Steve Gore Lacey Fox Amy Nathanson Tara Arschin Andrew Axelrod Daniel Stepner David Eisinger Steven Gersh Sean Biederman Joshua Friedman Sarah Breneman Diane Garbow Seth Gottlieb Jeremy Cox Barbara Luxenberg Dahlia Gitelson Rachel Lawrence Matthew Miller Marni Polansky Livia Fine Rita Polikov Lara Samet Eric Abrams

We’re praud of you and hope to see you and your family at

Jewish Baccalaureate at thG Freeman Center for Jewish Life corner of Swift Avenue and Campus Drive Also serving Bhabbat dinner at 7:DD p.m. an Friday following Reservations reguired for dinner only (E584-54EE]

services

•

23


24

•

Fri(

May 13,2005

Duke University Class bf 2005

DUKE

The Chronicle


Duke

Markets

University Class

hf2005

Frida

1

The Chronicle

May 13,2005

Management Studies Program Recipients ,Spring 2005 Certificate &

Niloufar Aazam-Zangaheh Ernest Adimora-Nweke, Jr. Giuseppe Aguanno Andrew Martin Axelrod Chaya Babu Richard Paxton Badham 111 Sachin Shaan Bansal Casey Baucum Emily W. Behl Brian Lynn Benson Yuriy Berdichevsky John H. Berger Viviana Marcela Betancourt Christopher Borges Zachery Benjamin Bosin Nathan Elliott Bragg J. Benjamin Brenneman Jessica Brooke Brodsky Melissa Buckmiller J.J. Bujalski Gregory Francis Burke Natalie Alexandra Centeno Monica Janette Chaplin Ivy Yuing Chen Laura Hwei-Yuan Chen Ruoxi Chen Julie Anne Cohen Christopher Lee Cox Anne Elise Crawford Joseph R Crotty Morgan Krysta Dali Gregory Brian D'Angelo Michael Davis Akbar Dawood R. W. Charlotte Decker Rika Blondene Dixon Daina Falk Shanikki T. Ferguson Ana Paula L. Fernandes Courtney Alexandra Finley James Crawford Flajser Joseph C. Flores, Jr. John Frerichs Sooraj Gera Dahlia Ingrid Gitelson Alexander M. B. Green Brian Michael Greene Deedee H. Grummett Meagan Kathleen Guerzon Mark K. Gunia Matthew Karl Gunia Alex Marshall Guttler Natalie Reid Hardwick Emily Louise Hartye Adetola Kunle-Hassan Ryan R Hamilton Heinberg ,

**

,

**

**

Ml

Lindsey A. Hess Caitlin Miller Hogan Kirstin E. Hopkins Ashraf Mohammad Hossain Joshua Alexander Hutton Timothy J. Hyer Kristin Nicole Jackson Nikhil Arvind Jariwala Courtney N. Jerdan Julie Lee Jin Alexander H. Johnson Crystal M. Johnson Kori Dashah Jones Lauren A. Jones Joseph M. Kelly Vaidehi Khaitan Emily Efrosini Khoury Kristen Marie Kirby Lindsey G. Kister Monica Sarita Ana Kohli Joseph Cates Konefal Senterrio Gamble-Landrum Linh Thuy Le Margaret Ann Lea Joy Chia-I Lee Erica Arlene Lepisto Karina Lifschitz Lauren Ann Lind Blake Benjamin London Christopher LoVerme Yoav Lurie Randall Hayden Madry Jr. Piper Chanelle Malone Marcel a Mayorga Lugo Casey Marie McCluskey Kate Lister McCormick Robert Wade McDonald Vanessa A. Miceli Jeffery David Miller Logan Alexius Miller Taryn Elizabeth Monjo Roberto Michael Montesinos Kathryn Christine Murphy Matthew David Murphy Erica Hermann Mutch ler Geoffrey Mwaungulu, Jr. Erin Leigh Noble Caroline Lee O'Connor MatthewS. Oesterle Amanda E. Paredes Daniel J. Park Ji Young Park Jamin Shayne Pastore Meera Piyush Pate! Tan may Patna ik Grant Lee Petersen **

*

*

*

*

Rita J. Polokov Calen Cory Powell Roman John Ptakowski Braimoh Rahman-Esene Elizabeth F. Reaves Nicolas Richardson Andrew James Roland Ryan Sember Vanessa Sendros Ayse Ceylan Sepil Caitlin H. Sherry Stephanie Elizabeth Shinn Suzanne Elizabeth Simpson J'Mill Wintry Smith Katherine Elaine Smith Logan S. Smith Jasmina Stanojevich Elizabeth Mary Stanton Katherine Ann Straka Janmina Amarie Talley Mark Thompson Colleen Michelle Torke Johanna T Torres Elizabeth S. Trenkle Justin W. Trowbridge Elizabeth W Tucker Zeynep Ugur Andrew Brian Ullao Mark Anthony Valdez Sarah Kathryn Van Kirk Nicole Lynn Vanderhurst Bryan Cody Voellinger Boyd L. Vor Broker Blake Allen Walker Michael Richard Waltman Kejing Wang William B. Waters Linden Mae White Matthew White Tavis Renard White Wynter C. Whitney Matthew Larkin Widham Pelham Wilder, IV Andrew David Wisnewski JunWon Yoo Jason Everett Zimmerman *

**

**

**

*December 2004 recipients **Summer 2005 recipients

**

Fifteen years ofpreparing undergraduates for the business

world.

9

*25


'26'Frida’

May 13; 2005

Duke University Glass 0f2005

DUKE

The Chronicle


The Chronicle

Duke University Class vf2005

International Comparative Studies Congratulates Their

2005 Graduates

•Friday,' Ma'

Congratulations Graduates & Families

jMtt

y.

Miyyassah Hamad Al-Thani

Courtney Wells Morton

Emma Boa-Durgammah

Erica Hermann Mutchler

Natalie Alexandra Centeno

Aprelle Ekunia Neal

DeeDee Hansen Grummett

Ami Beruriah Paik

Maital Bougess Guttman

Elias Arturo Parisca

Milouska Alexis Hoppenbrouwer

Russelle Ann Passim

Julia Antonina Hueckel

Francesca Marie Pignaturo

Courtney Nicole Jerdan

Lauren Aden Salisbury

Portia Arianne Jones

Suzanne Elizabeth Simpson

JuddDaniel King

Thayer Whitney Swollen

Lindsey Gardner Kister

Emily Paige Uhre

Jessica Harris Laun

Karen Lorraine Wilson

Jang Won Lee

Sarah Irene Wingate

Karan Maheshwari

Sarah Shaw Pomaika 7 Wong

Stephanie Ann Miller

Katherine Michelle Young

Catholic Baccalaureate Mass Saturday, May 14 6pm Baldwin Auditorium East Campus

All are welcome This will he the last scheduled Mass on

campus until August.

Have a great summer.

NEWMAN

Catholic

Explore the Opportunities

Student

www. duke.edu/web/catholic catholic@duke.edu

CENTER

AT DUKE UNIVERSITY

Room 037, Duke Chapel Basement

ts

gement STUDIES

An Interdisciplinary Certificate Program at Duke University

Congratulations! To Fall 2004 and Spring 2005 r-.

h

recipients of the Markets & Management I Studies Certificate

A reception honoring the Certificate Awardees will be held Sunday, May 15,2005 Old Trinity Room in the West Union Building Graduates may receive their certificates from program faculty members any time between 12 noon and 2:3opm. There is no formal ceremony.

Congratulations!

13y 2005

TheD

tnumt of

684-8959


28 Friday, May 13,2005 *

Duke

University

Class 0f2005

DUKE

The Chronicle


Thfe Chronicle

Dukt

University'ClMS

bf 2003

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The Fannie and John

Hertz Foundation takes great pleasure in announcing its Fall 2005 Fellowship Awards.

Mr. Oaz Nir Graduating in Applied Mathematics at Duke University and

Mr. Yi Zhou Graduating in Quantitative Biology at Duke University

The Division

of Earth and Ocean Of the

Sciences

Nicholas School of the Environment and Earth Sciences Congratulates the following 2005 graduates: Ph.D.

are two of the 15 Hertz Foundation Fellows chosen from a field of 678 applicants to receive a Graduate Fellowship Award, valued up to $200,000 and up to five years of Graduate Support, in the Applied Physical and Engineering Sciences. The Hertz Foundation would like to extend its congratulations to Duke University for attracting these Fellows to their

Shannon Maureen Sterling

Juan Andres Chavarria M.S.

Lisa Marie Valvo Jan Martin Nielsen

undergraduate program.

See www.hertzfoundation.org for more details.

B.S. Earth and Ocean Sciences

Andrew David Bray Jamie Michelle Kilgo David Andrew Lewis (with Highest Distinction) Sarah Elizabeth Ogburn Alexa Ramirez A.B. Earth and Ocean Sciences

Maureen McLean Clair Mark N. Wigal Second

tnors Earth and Ocean Sciences Michael David Austin Nicole Genette Desrosiers William Leonard Reynolds Zachary Wayne Dunn Patrick Arthur Flight

Mg lors

Thomas V. Laska Memorial Award

David Andrew Lewis Estwtna Award

Sa v ah Elizabeth Ogburn

Z ■


!

30 Friday, iCtiy 1^3,2065

c

bake ilrtiversiiy ClaM 0f2005

DUKE

The

Chronicle


Ihrpni

'uKe Univi

omg hornet When it’s time to pack up and move out, call us. We specialize in packaging and shipping small loads. Computers, skis, bikes... you name it!

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Congratulations, Graduates! Before you leave town, be sure to celebrate with a homemade treat

s

706 Ninth Street, Durham 286-4177 416-3158 Fax •

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Gowns

Caps and Gowns picked up on the xtbook Store level and tomorrow from 9am spm.

DESSERT CAFFE

Son 11:00-10:00, Mon-Thors ’til 11:00,Fri

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Sat ’til midnight

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Upper Level, Bryan Center 684-2344 Shop with us 24/7 via our online catalog at www.shopdu xores.duke.edu VISA, MasterCard, American Express, Discover, FLEX, IRIs, Cash, Personal Checks •

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®


13.2005

1005

DUKE

icle


The Chronicle

Duke University Class 0f2005

jq: rj 'j/ Friday, Ma\

13:2005 *33

Congratulations to all our Graduating Political Science Majors!

Graduation with Distinction: Jennifer Hainsfurther Leah Hunt-Hendrix Hayden Kantor Bridget Newman

Award Winners:

Smile with Dr. T by Peter A. Tzendzalian, DDS

Alona E. Evans Prize in International Law Daniel Kennedy

my, allergies have Q: Can an on

Elizabeth G. Verville Award

A:

Ole R. Holsti Award in American Foreign Policy and International Relations

Leah Hunt-Hendrix

impact my dental health?

The answer is “yes,” especially if you take antihistamines for relief. Antihistamines can sometimes cause a dry mouth. That means saliva is not able to wash away food from teeth, which in turn can cause a buildup of plaque and, eventually, cavities. If you use an antihistamine, your dentist will likely recommend that you drink plenty of water, or keep sugar-free candy available to help keep your mouth moist. Another concern is an allergy to one substance may signal or develop into allergies to other things. It’s important for your dentist to know of any allergies you have, particularly to any medications. Penicillin, for instance, is a drug to which many

people are allergic. Substitutes are available. Allergic reactions can be mild—itchy eyes and a runny nose, for instance. However, they can also be severe and life-threatening. So, discuss your allergies with your dentist. Presented as a service to the Duke Community' by Dr, Peter A. Tzendzalian, DDS. More questions? Call me.

www.drpetert.com 402-9200 •

Jennifer Halnsfurther Roberts. Rankin Award in American Government and Constitutional Law

Scott Lemmon Robert S. Rankin Award in American National, State, and Local Governments Mary Baars Robert S. Rankin American Government Award for Leadership and Academic Achievement

Nathan Carleton


34 Friday, Ma; 13,2005 *

f

Duke University Class'of2oos

DUKE

The Chronicle


The Chronicle

DtikeUnivehity Ctats of 2005

Frida

:

May

13,2D05*35

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Asian and African f Languages and Literature -

Congratulates the following recipients: MAJORS

Arabic

Aisha Elizabeth King Judd Daniel King (2nd Major) Lindsey Gardner Kister (2nd Major) Courtney Wells Morton (2nd Major)

:

Chinese

:

Jing R. Chen (2nd Major) Kevin William Fogg (2nd Major) Ekaterina Kruglenko (2nd Major) Elise Victoria Saegert (2nd Major) Emily Ann Sweet (2nd Major)

Hindi:

Tushar Sharma (2nd Major)

Japanese:

Duncan Mark Grimshaw (2nd Major) Alexis Cara Taylor (2nd Major)

MINORS

V

Arabic:

Nathan Joel Hodson Sameer A. Syed

Adnan Siddiqui

Chinese:

Erin Lee Chu Hanna Chaesun Kim Supanika Leurcharusmee Christopher John Paul Jason Michael Walcott

Thomas W. Horn,lll Jang Won Lee Christina Weiling Ng Steve J. Smith Wenshuo Zhang

Hindi:

Sachin Shaan Bansal Raj Jayantilal Vasnani

Animesh Jain

Japanese: Jill Chen SooJin Lee Ji Young Park Siyin Tan

Catherine Leigh Hansen Robert Spence Moriarty James T. Pineda


36 ‘Friday, M;

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13,2005

Duke University Class Oj

DUKE

The Chronicle


The Chronicle

DiikeXMversity CbSs of 2005

DUKE

Prtday, toy'll 3; 2005 v37


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Dtike'Unrtettity

Clabsoi 2005

MAy'l3,'2oos 39 •

TERRY SANFORD INSTITUTE OF PUBLIC POLICY

DUKE

Congratulations Public Policy Graduates! | « Class of 2005

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GRADUATE CEREMONY

K

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DEPARTMENT OF ROMANCE STUDIES SALUTES THEIR 2005 GRADUATES French Majors Mindy Allison Bender (F 04) Bahlj Justin Tamer Rebecca L. White

Italian Majors

Meredith L. Montgomery

Vianca Elize Cabrera Suzanne Nussbaum

Jessica Lindsey Mowry

rend :ond Ma ors Laura Louise Beach Rongrong Fan Andrew Furlow

Peter Daniel Messa

Nicole Diann Newman Elizabeth A. Newsom (F 04) Patricia Elizabeth Paula Caroline Paulsen Dinushi Senanayaka Perera Brianna Elizabeth Powers

alian Second Ma ors

William Kirk Hoskyn Portia Arianne Jones Michelle Anne Mangan Whitney Robinson

Elias Arturo Parisca Charlotte Reiss Vaughn

Spanish Majors

Franklin Winokur

French Minors Sarah A. Breneman Andrew

J. Collins

Erin Crawford Kate Elizabeth Hansen (F 04) Emma Elizabeth Harvey Kathryn A. Hawrylyshyn Deirdre R. Hess Carlee M. Hobbs Caitlln Miller Hogan Brynne Cherise Holt Shannon M. Jones

Italian Minors Johnson

Tyson Martin

Maria E. Balzaretti Catherine B. Gutermu tr Kori Dashah Jones Robin Forest Roark Michael Edward Stober Elizabeth Wegner Tucker

h Secon Cheyenne McNary Beach Edward Cason Callaway Amy Wai-Jua Cheng

Vlnltha Janaki Kaushik Douglas William Mishkin Misha Matongo Mutizwa Lori ana Newman Lauren Salisbury Elias Gabriel Silverman Kari Kirksey Zander

Elan T. Church Andrew Crane Barry Jordan Gewolb Brooke Hartt Gleason

Rebecca Ann Herman

Peter J.

Jannuzzi

Courtney Nicole Jerdan Neelum Dilip Jeste

ft / J

Alma C. Sanchez

Joanna Mary Sherry Lindsay Allison Stanga

J. Walsh Jessica Bell West

Adam

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Alice M. Williamson Kimberly Ann Wilson Sarah Irene Wingate

Spanish Minors William K. Alexander Dominique D. Bailey Jennifer L. Beall Christopher William Beatty Emma Boa-Durgammah Kimberly Buehring

Katie A. Butler Lauren Michelle Carpenter

Jennifer E. Cheesborough Olivia Mi Chung (F 04) Laurel Nicole Cooper Colleen Cabrey Denny Armando E. Estrada (F 04) David Jefferson Finch Alex Fokin

Javier Gonzalez Marco Alejandro Gonzalez Victor M. Gonzalez Claire Louise Grandadam Renee Monique Haynes (F 04) Sara j. Hernandez Caroline M. Hile Malcolm Spencer Hochenberg Nicole Dionne Holland Sravan Kakani Jason A. Keith Elizabeth Bonnelle Ladner Natalie Lamela Jessica H. Laun Rachel Jocelyn Lawrence Amy Melanie Lazarus Scott Andrew Lemmon Casey Marie McCluskey Ellen A. McGinnis Justin Hamilton Mease April Laetltla Mims Salvatore P. Negrete Deborah Ann Palacios Maurldo Antonio Palau Christina A. Peppers Mark Evan Rozeboom Matthew Markham Small Rachael Lee Solomon

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Jason S. Stewart

Emily Uhre Melissa Joy Wachtel Edward V. Williamson Patrick Nelson Winter William Watts Yavlnsky

PLEASE JOIN US FOR A RECEPTION HONORING OUR GRADUATES SUNDAY, MAY 15, 12:00-2:00PM, FRONT PORCH OF LANGUAGES BUILDING

&

/£?

AA

wMii


1 40 Frida' May 13,2005 •

Duke

University Class

o.

The Chronicle

2005

Hwy. 70 (Church St.)

COX TOYOTA

©reenter TOYOTA

www.coxtoyota.com

Only 30 minutes from Tiiangle or Triad

BTBYIINPLWIiy 3336?”“/ OG/22/05

£

1-40/1-85

Exit 150 to


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