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on't
walk backwards. That's rule number one. It's distracting,
and the goal of student-led tours is to create a personable
atmosphere for prospective Blue Devils and their families.
Rule number two is, don't overemphasize basketball. "Prospectives"
get enough of that from Dick Vitale. We want to give the impression
that our students care foremost about their education.
During my stint as a summer tour guide, I soon learned that,
while not having to walk backwards is a relief, steering clear
of basketball is a skill unto itself. Even the undergraduate
prospectus, produced by the same people who made up the tour-guide
rules, opens with a two-page photograph of Krzyzewskiville,
complete with captions detailing what the occupants of each
tent are up to the night before the game.
Then there's rule number three, the most important of the
tour guide commandments: "Have fun!" Prospectives
like to see that students are enthusiastic about the school,
all smiles and suntans. Today it's 90 degrees at eleven in
the morning, and I haven't eaten breakfast. I'm having trouble
with enthusiasm. After introducing myself, I begin the long
march from admissions down Chapel Drive with my fifteen captives
in tow. I make small talk with whatever family happens to
be right behind me until finally, with some parents gasping
for breath, we reach the first stop on the tour: James B.
Duke.
I begin at this statue because it's a good place to talk about
university history and warm up the crowd with jokes about
Big Tobacco. This morning, however, an anonymous prankster
has beat me to the punch by rolling a prophylactic over the
cigar in the statue's hands, a detail I don't notice until
I gesture upwards while describing Buck Duke's endowment of
Trinity College. Several parents shoot distressed glances
my way. I try to keep talking, but a mix of awkward laughs
and fatherly scowls tells me it is time to move on.
So I curtail history, skipping campus layout and religious
life, and leading the crowd on to Duke Chapel. After sufficient
gawking at the family sarcophagi inside, the tour continues
to the Bryan Center. This is where most tours get interesting.
While there aren't too many questions to ask about campus
layout (religious life usually gets one or two), parents and
students have concerns about student life. Moms want to know
if their sons, who are all gifted journalists, will have to
try out for The Chronicle. Fathers want to know if their daughters,
who are all gifted actors, will have parts in drama productions.
The sons and daughters themselves want to know if students
can have cars on campus. And everyone wants to know if first-years
actually have to eat at the Marketplace twelve times a week.
The Bryan Center is also where alcohol comes up, usually right
after I mention that the Armadillo Grill has a beer and wine
bar. What's the drinking age? Do they card? Predictably, alcohol
is the trickiest subject on the tour, and I am never sure
just how honest to be. Duke is a big place, I tell them, with
many different social outlets. Alcohol has a role in campus
life, but many students don't drink at all. Without detailing
the complexities of Duke's drinking culture, I communicate
that Duke students are responsible enough to make their own
decisions, given the rules set by the university. To this
one young man asks with pleading eyes, "Yeah, but East
Campus isn't really dry, is it?"
We move outside to discuss residential life. I describe what
things will be like in the West Campus quads when the new
residential system takes effect this fall. I talk about housing
selection, selective living groups, and Greek life (also something
we're not supposed to overemphasize). The most common questions
here are about the lack of air-conditioning and the prevalence
of co-ed dorms, both of which inspire concern. The amount
of construction on campus is also a popular topic.
Somewhat surprisingly, rush doesn't come up often, though
on almost every tour a dad asks me my fraternity affiliation.
This is also when visitors bring up the more obscure subjects:
"Can you keep pets in the dorms?" asks one father;
"How are the girls?" asks a fourteen-year-old younger
brother; and an older gentleman with a European accent asks,
"What do you do about bullies?"
Inevitably, someone inquires about the benches. I rely on
this as a segue to athletics, explaining that the benches
have three functions: a display of dorm pride, a social gathering
point, and kindling. By now, the crowd is ready for bonfires,
basketball, and jokes about Chapel Hill Community College.
Tour guides agreed early on that rule number two doesn't make
any sense since you can't overemphasize basketball. So I shamelessly
mention that, while the football team hasn't had a win in
two seasons, you can't pitch your tent outside Cameron more
than six weeks before game day. Disbelieving laughs all around.
The last stop is Perkins Library, where we talk about academics.
The information is basic, though my explanation of Curriculum
2000 elicits blank stares and furrowed brows. The key here
is anecdotes: that professor who took you out to dinner, or
that one class that changed your worldview. The truth is,
the facts of a Duke education aren't all that different from
everywhere else. Most of our peer institutions have core curricula,
study abroad, and a roster of superb faculty with a sincere
interest in teaching undergraduates, just like us. A lot of
schools have several million books in the library and wireless
Internet connections, just like us.
So what exactly is different about a Duke education? Well,
there's FOCUS, for freshmen--that's good. And the Grateful
Dead house course. But the real difference? Only at Duke can
you hear the third pick in the NBA draft give a twenty-minute
presentation on the Gold Rush of 1849.
Despite the impossibility of accurately representing Duke
in an hour and fifteen minutes, I enjoyed leading tours this
summer. In the admissions office is a bulletin board with
positive notes from visitors. The more experienced guides
have fan letters telling how so-and-so "totally made
me want to come to Duke." In my six weeks, I received
only one comment: "Our guide was great! The best part
was when a squirrel fell out of a tree and almost hit him!"
I guess walking backwards isn't the most distracting tour-guide
phenomenon after all.
-Nurkin is a senior English major from Atlanta, Georgia.
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