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cover story looks at affirmative action not as a legal or policy
concern but as something that students think about and live with.
Many of the students who assembled for a magazine-sponsored conversation
expressed ambivalence about race-sensitive admissions. Others said
they have been hurt by racial stereotyping. And most questioned
whether the object of affirmative action--a campus that goes beyond
simply recognizing differences and fully embraces them--is within
easy reach.
There are many dimensions to diversity. Duke for some time has worked
to "internationalize" its outlook and identity. The lead
story in the "Gazette" roundup reveals that the newest
freshman class has a record-breaking number of international students. "Campus
Observer" centers on the early-semester adjustments of those
students, coping as they are with the peculiarities of life on an
American campus (and in the South). A feature, "Through the
Eyes of Children," celebrates the efforts of two recent graduates
whose project encourages young refugees in places like Colombia and
Thailand to document their war-ravaged lives. Another feature focuses
on a Fuqua spin-off that has established a joint venture with the
London School of Economics.
What's more international than the World Wide Web? The third annual
Duke Magazine Campus Forum, appearing in this issue in edited form,
put Duke Law's James Boyle center-stage. Boyle's remarks go beyond
the issue of rampant file-sharing; he warns that thoughtless limits
on intellectual-property rights can stymie and strangle, rather than
protect and promote, creative expression.
Perhaps few cultural expressions have the international resonance
of the superhero. So the gift of 55,000 comic books to Perkins Library
has symbolic and scholarly significance. As a librarian explains, "Consumer-related
and popular culture is one subject in which there is an increasing
interest at Duke and all over the place." All over the world,
presumably.
--Robert J. Bliwise, Editor
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