February 23, 2015

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The Chronicle THE INDEPENDENT DAILY AT DUKE UNIVERSITY MONDAY, FEBRUARY 23, 2015 ONE HUNDRED AND TENTH YEAR, ISSUE 84 WWW.DUKECHRONICLE.COM Duke Upset by N.C. State After falling to Notre Dame, No. 10 Duke women’s basketball lost to N.C. State 72-59 Sunday | Page 7 DPS Receives Poor Grades Educators say state’s new rating system does not accurately measure school performance | Page 2 INSIDE — News 2 | Sports 5 | Classified 9 | Puzzles 9 | Opinion 10 | Serving the University since 1905 | @dukechronicle | © 2015 The Chronicle Intensive Outpatient Program (IOP) Specialized for the Treatment of Eating Disorders 919.908.9740 · [email protected] durham, nc · veritascollaborative.com Neelesh Moorthy e Chronicle Though local cab companies have lost business, they are ad- justing to Uber’s popularity ECU joins Duke in renaming of Aycock Residence Hall Emma Baccellieri News Editor See Aycock on Page 4 Uber service creates uneven playing field in Durham Rita Lo | e Chronicle After winter weather hit Durham last week, snow and ice are beginning to melt. Pictured above are stalactites which formed on the benches between Keohane Atrium and Café Edens. Winter hangs around As Uber has become increasingly pop- ular in Durham, some local cab compa- nies have struggled to keep up. Durham’s Best Cab was founded in 1999 by a group of close friends, and it has since become a 15-year stalwart of the Durham taxi scene. However, the company suffered a major hit in August 2014 when Uber and Lyft took off in the Triangle, according to Husam Hasanin, president of Durham’s Best Cab . “It was mostly a revenue issue amongst the students,” Hasanin said. “When stu- dents started using Uber, we lost 30 to 40 percent of our business.” Hasanin added that this took a toll on Durham’s Best’s drivers, who struggled with longer waiting times between calls and were unable to sustain their stan- dard of living. “A lot of our drivers had a hard time making money to maintain their basic life, and we had to dig deep into our pockets to try and help them stay afloat,” Hasanin said. Many Duke students have praised Uber, saying that it is more flexible and efficient than the traditional taxi system. “I always use Uber because its easier and everything is managed through my cellphone and credit card,” said Diana Arguijo, a freshman. But it is not just students that prefer Uber to traditional taxi options—many professors have begun using the service as well. Michael Munger, professor of politi- cal science, said that his experiences with Uber have been significantly better than his experiences with traditional cab com- panies. “I went out front and called the Uber software, and I was picked up in three minutes,” Munger said. “I live in the woods, and it would have taken 45 min- utes with a taxi and even then I wouldn’t have been sure when they were getting close. The interface with a taxi company is just brutally rude and awkward at every point, whereas Uber is smooth.” Duke is no longer the only North Caro- lina university to have removed the name of Charles Aycock from its campus. East Carolina University’s Board of Trustees voted Friday to rename its Aycock Residence Hall. The decision comes eight months after Duke’s Trustees decided to rename freshman dormitory Aycock as East Residence Hall—following years of student advocacy against using the former North Carolina governor, who had a well- documented history of white supremacy, as a campus namesake. The change at ECU followed a similar student campaign. At ECU, as at Duke, campus officials said that removing Aycock’s name from the building is not an attempt to erase his history at the university. A new campus space to be known as Heritage Hall will hold information about Aycock’s history, alongside that of others who contributed to ECU. “We believe that Aycock’s legacy to ed- ucation will be better served represented in the overall history of ECU in Heritage Hall,” ECU’s Trustees said in a statement. “We respect the new awareness and ap- preciation that have been gained by open discussion of values and legacies that im- pact our past, present and future. While See Uber on Page 3

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Transcript of February 23, 2015

Page 1: February 23, 2015

The ChronicleT H E I N D E P E N D E N T D A I LY AT D U K E U N I V E R S I T Y

MONDAY, FEBRUARY 23, 2015 ONE HUNDRED AND TENTH YEAR, ISSUE 84WWW.DUKECHRONICLE.COM

Duke Upset by N.C. StateAfter falling to Notre Dame, No. 10 Duke women’s basketball lost to N.C. State 72-59 Sunday | Page 7

DPS Receives Poor GradesEducators say state’s new rating system does not accurately measure school performance | Page 2

INSIDE — News 2 | Sports 5 | Classified 9 | Puzzles 9 | Opinion 10 | Serving the University since 1905 | @dukechronicle | © 2015 The Chronicle

Intensive Outpatient Program (IOP)Specialized for the Treatment of Eating Disorders

919.908.9740 · [email protected] durham, nc · veritascollaborative.com

Neelesh Moorthy The Chronicle

Though local cab companies have lost business, they are ad-

justing to Uber’s popularity

ECU joins Duke in renaming of Aycock Residence Hall

Emma Baccellieri News Editor

See Aycock on Page 4

Uber service creates uneven playing field in Durham

Rita Lo | The ChronicleAfter winter weather hit Durham last week, snow and ice are beginning to melt. Pictured above are stalactites which formed on the benches between Keohane Atrium and Café Edens.

Winter hangs around

As Uber has become increasingly pop-ular in Durham, some local cab compa-nies have struggled to keep up.

Durham’s Best Cab was founded in 1999 by a group of close friends, and it has since become a 15-year stalwart of the Durham taxi scene. However, the company suffered a major hit in August 2014 when Uber and Lyft took off in the Triangle, according to Husam Hasanin, president of Durham’s Best Cab .

“It was mostly a revenue issue amongst the students,” Hasanin said. “When stu-dents started using Uber, we lost 30 to 40 percent of our business.”

Hasanin added that this took a toll on Durham’s Best’s drivers, who struggled with longer waiting times between calls and were unable to sustain their stan-dard of living.

“A lot of our drivers had a hard time making money to maintain their basic life, and we had to dig deep into our pockets to try

and help them stay afloat,” Hasanin said.

Many Duke students have praised Uber, saying that it is more flexible and efficient than the traditional taxi system.

“I always use Uber because its easier and everything is managed through my cellphone and credit card,” said Diana Arguijo, a freshman.

But it is not just students that prefer Uber to traditional taxi options—many professors have begun using the service as well.

Michael Munger, professor of politi-cal science, said that his experiences with Uber have been significantly better than his experiences with traditional cab com-panies.

“I went out front and called the Uber software, and I was picked up in three minutes,” Munger said. “I live in the woods, and it would have taken 45 min-utes with a taxi and even then I wouldn’t have been sure when they were getting close. The interface with a taxi company is just brutally rude and awkward at every point, whereas Uber is smooth.”

Duke is no longer the only North Caro-lina university to have removed the name of Charles Aycock from its campus.

East Carolina University’s Board of Trustees voted Friday to rename its Aycock Residence Hall. The decision comes eight months after Duke’s Trustees decided to rename freshman dormitory Aycock as East Residence Hall—following years of student advocacy against using the former North Carolina governor, who had a well-documented history of white supremacy, as a campus namesake. The change at ECU followed a similar student campaign.

At ECU, as at Duke, campus officials said that removing Aycock’s name from the building is not an attempt to erase his history at the university. A new campus space to be known as Heritage Hall will hold information about Aycock’s history, alongside that of others who contributed to ECU.

“We believe that Aycock’s legacy to ed-ucation will be better served represented in the overall history of ECU in Heritage Hall,” ECU’s Trustees said in a statement. “We respect the new awareness and ap-preciation that have been gained by open discussion of values and legacies that im-pact our past, present and future. While

See Uber on Page 3

Page 2: February 23, 2015

2 | MONDAY, FEBRUARY 23, 2015 www.dukechronicle.com The Chronicle

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If you still need a textbook, please call or email the Textbook Store and request the textbook you need during the week of Feb. 23rd. For textbooks we have in stock, textbook requests are delivered from our warehouse twice daily, Monday through Friday. If you request a book by 1:00 pm, we will have the book available for you by 3 pm the same day. The last time to request textbooks for the Spring Semester will be Friday, Feb. 27th at 1:00 pm.

Textbooks that we do not have in stock the week of Feb 23rd, or after Feb. 27th, can be special ordered. Special orders must beprepaid, and will take 2-3 business days to arrive from our vendors.

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Most Durham public schools receive poor gradesTeachers say the state’s new rat-ing system unfairly disadvan-

tages some districts

Sarah Kerman The Chronicle

The majority of Durham Public Schools received low ratings from a new state assess-ment—but the results indicate an unfair rating system rather than poor education, educators and community leaders said.

The ratings, issued in school “report cards,” were released earlier this month for the first time. Of the 53 schools in DPS, 46 received letter grades of C, D or F. The sys-tem used to grade schools places a weight of 80 percent on students reaching certain Common Core testing benchmarks and 20 percent on students surpassing their per-formances from years past.

The school report cards were part of a new rollout of education policy initiatives for North Carolina last year that included an updated standard course of study and as-sessment model.

Local school board members have cri-tiqued the new system’s emphasis on test-ing to measure student growth, stating that a more holistic approach should be imple-mented.

“The school grades are based on the children’s test scores, and I don’t believe the score accurately reflect students’ abili-ties or the quality of the school,” said DPS school board member Leigh Bordley.

Bordley added that grading scales can change from year to year. For example, DPS grades this year were calculated on 15 point scale, with 85 to 100 being an A. Next year,

grades will be calculated using a ten point scale, meaning that schools that maintain their score from year to year could drop into a new category.

She also expressed concern that the rat-ings do not consider the additional burden faced by schools serving students who live below the poverty line. In 2013-14, 65 per-cent of Durham students received free and reduced lunch.

“It’s really just a proxy for poverty, it re-ally just shows how many kids a given school has that are living in poverty,” said school board member Natalie Beyer.

Mike Rogers, a fourth and fifth grade teacher at George Watts Elementary School, noted that report cards can have a harm-ful effect on teachers who have achieved significant growth but do not yet meet the benchmark.

“It talks about where you are at this mo-ment rather than how far you’ve come, and it’s very disheartening to educators who have been working long hours on behalf of their children,” Rogers said.

The ratings were not a surprise to DPS leadership, said Bordley.

“We’ve known this was coming,” she said.

Teachers and administrators were briefed about estimated ratings for their schools prior to the release of the grades earlier this month, she added.

The North Carolina General Assembly passed House Bill 435 in 2013. The bill mandated the inclusion of the school per-formance grading system.

“There is progress to be made at every school, we want all of our kids to achieve proficiency,” Bordley said. “We have to be realistic about where kids are starting and take a holistic view.”

Rita Lo | The Chronicle

Page 3: February 23, 2015

The Chronicle www.dukechronicle.com MONDAY, FEBRUARY 23, 2015 | 3

The Baldwin Scholars Program announces the

Unsung Heroine Award

This award will recognize a woman who has demonstrated extraordinary dedication to issues that

face women at Duke or in the larger community, but whose efforts have not received formal recognition.

The recipient can be an undergraduate or graduate student, alumna, faculty,

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Nomination letters should be sent [email protected]

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UBERcontinued from page 1

It was mostly a revenue issue amongst the stu-

dents. When students start-ed using Uber, we lost 30 to 40 percent of our business.

— Husam Hasanin

Munger added that using Uber has de-creased the amount of stress involved in getting from place to place.

“I’m not sure when I’m going to get picked up, it’s stressful and the drivers are often extremely rude and don’t speak English,” Munger said of traditional cab companies. “I also have to give detailed directions about where I’m going, where-as Uber integrates both the payment and the GPS, so I don’t have to tell the driver anything.”

Addressing these concerns, Hasanin said that Uber has pushed Durham’s Best to educate its drivers on how to interact with customers. Durham’s Best has also created a mobile app to compete directly with Uber. The app includes a descrip-tion of the customer’s cab, the driver’s name and the cab’s estimated time of ar-rival. Customers can now schedule their taxi from the app as well.

“I think we work with the same concept as Uber,” Hasanin said. “Since we started the mobile app, business has improved a lot. The waiting times have decreased, and our efficiency has improved.”

Many taxi companies have complained that they are at an unfair disadvantage compared to Uber. Unlike traditional taxi companies, Uber is not regulated by either Durham or North Carolina, and cab companies argue that the regulation places arduous administrative burdens on them that their competitors don’t need to deal with.

“I have some sympathy for the taxi companies, because they’re playing by the rules, they’re paying their taxes, they’re accepting the regulation, and

Uber is getting around all that,” Munger said. “To the extent that the government said that only people with special licenses are allowed to drive to provide transpor-tation, the government lied. The govern-ment is not enforcing the rules.”

For a while, drivers feared this uneven playing field would force Durham’s Best to shut down, Hasanin said. He added that pride and legacy were some of the key reasons drivers didn’t leave Durham’s Best when the climate soured.

Hasanin also added that, in the long run, he thinks the unregulated nature of Uber will benefit Durham’s Best and other traditional cab companies.

“Anything that’s not regulated is just going to blow off,” Hasanin said. “Our taxi cabs and driv-ers must be certified by the state, meaning back-ground checks, drug tests and driving tests. The fare is regulated by the city—there is a certain amount we can-not exceed. Uber does not have this stuff. People who use Uber have to worry about their safety, about surge pricing, and that’s going to have an effect sooner or later.”

In an email, Uber spokesperson Kai-tlin Durkosh wrote that Uber currently has a number of security procedures in place, including background checks, in-surance, driver identification and GPS tracking.

“Ensuring the safety of our riders and partners is our number one priority,” Durkosh wrote.

While Uber is currently unregulated, it has drawn the eye of legislators in the Gen-eral Assembly. State Senator Mike Woodard, Democrat, said that the state is definitely looking into the possibility of regulating

Uber similarly to taxi companies.“I’ve been talking with some col-

leagues about how we might react to this,” said Woodard, who works as an analyst for Duke’s Administrative Systems Manage-ment office. “If we were to take it on, we would look at registration, background checks for drivers, adequate insurance, surge pricing and the possibility of fees being charged to Uber drivers.”

Woodard added that security is one of the reasons regulation might be necessary.

“I’ve heard people say, ‘How do you know who Uber drivers are? Do you keep an eye on them? Do we know what kinds of vehicles they have? Do we have any

background checks?’” Woodard said. “I think people are looking for assurances that they’re going to be as safe in an Uber vehicle as they would be in a tradition-al taxi.”

Durkosh wrote that Uber would be in favor of “smart, sensible reg-

ulation” to protect riders.“[We] welcome the opportunity to

work with local and state officials on reg-ulations that encapsulate our innovative new business model,” she wrote.

Thomas Powers, an attorney for the city of Charlotte, said that one of the reasons cities currently don’t regulate the service is because North Carolina law prohibits it. Powers said that the 2013 Regulatory and Administrative Reform Act prohibited municipalities from regulating digital dis-patching services such as Uber.

Powers also acknowledged the fact that any regulation might serve to de-crease the number of drivers who sign up for Uber, but added that this should not be the primary concern of regulators.

“I think the issue is not whether or not it leads to a decrease,” Powers said. “But rather whether the community is assured of the public safety, and that’s solely the concern of regulators. We leave the rest to the private market.”

Not all taxi companies have been aversely affected by Uber’s rise. Bell Be-lahouel, president of Charlene’s Safe Ride, noted that he actually advises his drivers to sign up for Uber in addition to fulfilling their normal duties. In this way, Charlene’s Safe Ride has managed to make some money from the increased Uber traffic.

“We encourage all our drivers to sign up for Uber, so if I lose a customer from Charlene’s, that customer will come back to us through Uber,” Belahouel said.

He added that Charlene’s has taken advantage of Uber’s surge pricing model.

“When requested by Uber, I took someone from East to West for 25 dol-lars. With Charlene’s, it would have been eight,” he said.

Unlike Belahouel, Hasanin has firmly instructed his employees not to sign up for Uber.

“Uber really tries to control the market, and when they control the market they can change their policies,” Hasanin said. “We didn’t want Uber to wipe away our identity, because we also play by the rules, and we didn’t want to break any rules.”

Ultimately, Hasanin said he feared what would happen to the city if Uber does eventually drive out the traditional taxicab industry.

“We are available to everybody. Uber does not serve the underprivileged that live in the city, people without credit cards or smartphones, “Hasanin said. “In case our kind of company isn’t available, I think a lot of people are not going to be able to make it to their work everyday.”

Page 4: February 23, 2015

4 | MONDAY, FEBRUARY 23, 2015 www.dukechronicle.com The Chronicle

AYCOCKcontinued from page 1

Darbi Griffith | Chronicle File PhotoEast Residence Hall, pictured above, was formerly known as Aycock Residence Hall but was renamed in June following years of student protest over the building’s namesake.

As an African-Amer-ican, I can’t believe

I rested my head in a place [named for] a person that wanted my own people dead.

— Lawren Ridaux

it has been a long process, we believe that we have arrived at the right decision for East Carolina University, one that supports our mission, vision and values.”

At Duke, Aycock’s history is explained by a plaque in the entryway of East Residence Hall.

“We’ve given this careful thought. One argument is that history is history, and we can’t change it by erasing,” President Richard Brod-head told The Chronicle in June, when the renaming was announced. “But I don’t regard this as an erasure.”

Responsible for opening and support-ing hundreds of public schools, Aycock was known as the “Education Governor” and held the office from 1901 to 1905. Aycock made his racial views clear in a number of speeches and policies, but his involve-ment in the white supremacy movement was perhaps most explicit in his participa-tion in the Wilmington race riots of 1898. The city’s government was overthrown and dozens of black residents were killed in an

event spurred in part by Aycock’s rhetoric.His involvement with the white suprem-

acy movement has garnered attention in recent years, sparking dialogue about his legacy.

Two other local colleges have build-ings named after Aycock—the Univer-sity of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and

the University of North Carolina at Greensboro. At both universities, the name has sparked dia-logue but remains un-changed.

The move to rename Aycock at ECU came af-ter years of discussion and protest. A decision could not be reached by the university’s Trustees

at a December meeting, delaying the vote until Friday. The school’s Black Student Union was at the forefront of the con-versation, circulating student and alumni petitions advocating for the change and hosting a campus panel on Aycock’s life last week.

“As an African-American, I can’t be-lieve I rested my head in a place [named for] a person that wanted my own people dead,” Lawren Ridaux, an ECU alumna who lived in Aycock as a freshman, wrote on a petition. “I hate this and it needs to be changed.”

Page 5: February 23, 2015

The Chronicle www.dukechronicle.com MONDAY, FEBRUARY 23, 2015 | 5

SPORTS

february 23, 2015

ERIC

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/TH

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ON

ICLE

sportswrap

the chronicle

WOMEN’S LACROSSE: OFF TO BEST START SINCE 2008 • FENCING: DUKE FINISHES 2ND AT ACC TOURNEY

COOKINGWITH FIRE

Page 6: February 23, 2015

6 | MONDAY, FEBRUARY 23, 2015 www.dukechronicle.com The Chronicle

SPORTS

6 | MONDAY, FEBRUARY 23, 2015 www.dukechroniclesports.com The Chronicle The Chronicle www.dukechroniclesports.com MONDAY, FEBRUARY 23, 2015 | 7

Izzi Clark | The ChronicleSenior Quinn Cook dropped 20 points or more for the third time in four games as he led the Blue Devils with 27 points in Saturday’s win against Clemson.

Nick MartinSports Editor

With Jahlil Okafor on the bench and Duke coming off a game in which it gave up 62 points in the paint, some worried that the Blue Devils would struggle to hold their own against the Tigers. Justise Winslow and Quinn Cook were not among them.

Behind Winslow’s 20-point, 13-rebound performance, Duke took down Clemson 78-56 at Cameron Indoor Stadium. Winslow poured in 17 first-half points, and Cook scored 17 of his game-high 27 points in the second half to keep the Tigers at bay and secure the Blue Devils’ seventh straight win.

“That was one of the best wins we’ve had here in a long time. After Syracuse and North Carolina the emotional wins, and Jahlil’s injury, we’re down to seven guys,” head coach Mike Krzyzewski said. “For us to play like this is spectacular. I’m so proud of them.... I’m not sure anybody has played any better in the league than Quinn, and he did it again today. Justise had a spectacular day.”

Playing without Okafor for the first time all season, many of the concerns before the game centered around how Duke (24-3, 11-3 in the ACC) would handle Clemson (15-12, 7-8) and its physical post players after being out-

Men’s Basketball

NO JAH? NO PROBLEM

rebounded by North Carolina 49-33 Wednesday night.

But the concerns were quelled early as the Blue Devils dominated the paint in the first half, outscoring the Tigers 30-18. This was a byproduct of the zone and 2-1-2 press implemented throughout the game as well as Duke’s willingness to get out and run—it poured in 13 fastbreak

points, nine of which came off their opponent’s 10 first-half turnovers. The Blue Devils would finish the game with 14 forced turnovers and 16 points off the Clemson mistakes.

“That zone allowed us to keep it packed in, not really allow their bigs to get a lot of shots,” junior Amile Jefferson said. “Everyone...rebounded, so there weren’t a lot of offensive rebounds [and] second-chance points.”

One of the positives of having Okafor out of the paint was that it opened the lane up for Winslow to drive and slash past his man and get to the basket for easy buckets—of the Houston native’s eight field goals, six were layups and two were and-ones.

“I try to stay aggressive every game, but especially this game with Jah out, [Cook] had to step up—I had to step up,” Winslow said. “Me being aggressive really helped out the team, defensively and offensively.”

Winslow’s aggression and Cook’s sharp-shooting—the senior drained three 3-pointers in the second half after missing his two first-half attempts—allowed the Blue Devils to build up a 19-point lead out of the break.

“Justise did an amazing job of battling and fighting today,” Jefferson said. “Him and Quinn really elevated our team, and everyone else just banded around that and followed it.”

The Tigers cut the lead down to 10 with 13:57 left in the game, but Duke responded with a pair of 3-pointers from freshman Grayson Allen and Cook and would pile on a 10-0 run to push the lead to 20.

But it was not all Duke early on, as Clemson kept things close and took a five-point lead when Landry Nnoko connected on a jumper with 15:17 left to put the Tigers up 11-6. But the Blue

Devil rookies teamed up with their senior captain to get the fans at Cameron Indoor back into the game.

Freshman Grayson Allen entered the game for the first time following the under-16 media timeout, and just 50 seconds into his court-time, the rookie got the fans on their feet when he flushed an alley-oop from Cook to pull Duke within three points. Allen finished with 10 points in 18 minutes of play off the bench.

“All the kids played—Marshall gave us a huge 24 minutes [with] just his physicality and energy,” Krzyzewski said. “Grayson keeps coming on. I’m proud of my guys. I wasn’t sure what was going to happen today. What I got was a spectacular performance from this Duke team.”

Cook then converted on a jump shot and fed Winslow for a transition 3-pointer to cap a seven-point run for the Blue Devils and take back the lead at 13-11.

Clemson fought back to retake the lead on a Rod Hall jump shot, putting the Tigers up 15-13. But once again, Duke received a boost from Winslow and Allen as the two combined for the next seven points.

The pair’s scoring run coincided with a stout defensive stand for the Blue Devils as Clemson went scoreless for the next 3:14. By the time it was over, Duke had put together an 18-5 run that included 12 of Winslow’s 17 points

“They had some good looks, but they missed,” Krzyzewski said. “The good thing for us is once we got a three-point lead, we didn’t let up. We had a good end-of-half with Quinn scoring.”

The Blue Devils will next take the floor Wednesday at 9 p.m. against Virginia Tech as they travel to Blacksburg, Va., to take on the Hokies for the first time this season.

Brianna Siracuse | The ChronicleN.C. State guard Miah Spencer scored a season-high 23 points to lead the Wolfpack’s upset of the No. 10 Blue Devils.

Meredith CashBeat Writer

RALEIGH, N.C.—After falling to the Fighting Irish in a game for the top spot in the ACC Monday night, the Blue Devils could not dig out of another double-digit hole Sunday.

Guards Miah Spencer and Dominique Wilson combined for 41 points and seven 3-pointers as unranked N.C. State upset

No. 10 Duke 72-59 at Reynolds Coliseum. Despite an impressive

performance from Elizabeth Williams—the senior had 19 points, eight rebounds, two blocks and an assist—the Blue Devils dropped their second straight road contest and lost more ground in the conference standings.

“The game was very simple—they shot 48 percent from the three point line, 33 percent from inside the arc and we didn’t do much to stop that,” Duke head coach Joanne P. McCallie said. “We played in spurts, and that is certainly not good enough in our league.”

Duke (20-7, 11-3 in the ACC) started out the game slowly as N.C. State (15-12, 6-8) jumped out to a 5-2 lead in the first minute. The Blue Devils rallied quickly, and strong finishes in the post from Williams and redshirt freshman Rebecca Greenwell moved them ahead of the Wolfpack 9-8.

It seemed that Duke might run away with the game from there, as it extended its lead to five with a 6-0 run nine minutes into the half, but N.C. State retaliated with a run of its own to cut the Blue Devils’ lead to just one point. After a three-minute scoring drought for both teams, the Wolfpack took the lead with 6:27 left in the half.

“We honestly just didn’t finish shots,”

Women’s Basketball

Williams said. “We missed I can’t even tell you how many layups in the first half. We got a lot of the looks that we wanted, but we just didn’t finish them.”

N.C. State retained its lead until the close of the half. Sharp shooting up and down the Wolfpack rotation extended the lead in the last five minutes, and a 3-pointer by Spencer at the buzzer sent the home team into the locker room leading 31-25.

The Blue Devils started the second half with better intensity, regaining the lead within the first four minutes. But once again, N.C. State responded swiftly, knocking down three unanswered 3-pointers and forcing McCallie to call a timeout. The Wolfpack made 12 treys on the afternoon as the Blue Devils went just 3-of-18.

“We’re a paint team,” McCallie said. “We’re

not going to just start shooting great from three-point range. That’s not what we do.”

Out of the break, a Williams turnover led to another Wolfpack triple—one of Wilson’s four on the afternoon—to push the N.C. State lead to 46-35 with 13:33 to play.

Duke then went on a much-needed run, holding the Wolfpack without a basket for almost five minutes in the middle of the half. During that stretch, Williams led a 7-0 run with four points as the Blue Devils managed to slice the deficit to four by the ten-minute mark.

“I don’t like the way our team played at all,” McCallie said. “I am not happy with the team right now. I wish they could walk home to be honest with you. [That being said], I think we can play. I think we can play with anybody. It’s just frustrating to not have more of a visionary team to see what we can do.”

The teams traded baskets from that point on, but N.C. State once again managed to pull away as the Blue Devils struggled with some of the issues that have plagued them all season—turnovers and foul trouble. Senior Ka’lia Johnson fouled out of the game with 3:26 left in the contest, and Williams, Greenwell and freshman Azura Stevens—forced to foul late to extend the game—finished the contest with four fouls each.

Duke ended with 18 turnovers compared to the Wolfpack’s seven, leading to 28 N.C. State points.

“Twenty-eight points off turnovers might be a world record,” McCallie said. “The turnovers were very poor—N.C. State didn’t really go after us in a way that you could turn the ball over. Those turnovers were 18 of the worst turnovers I have ever seen.”

The Wolfpack connected on 22-of-26 free throws—including all 10 in the final minute—to complete the upset.

Williams—a three-time All American who recently earned her 400th career block—added another benchmark onto her already-impressive list of accolades. The Virginia Beach, Va., native notched her 1,000th career rebound five minutes into the second half. Her focus, however, was not on her own performance, but on how her team needs to improve.

“Mentally we just have to be tougher,” Williams said. “Down the stretch we weren’t tough, and I don’t think we embraced the challenge when they went on runs. We didn’t respond like we should have. This is definitely a mind game for everyone.”

With the loss, Duke has only two more games to get back on track before starting tournament play. The Blue Devils will finish their road stretch at Georgia Tech Thursday before hosting rival North Carolina March 1.

Duke falls on the road again, upset by N.C. State

Jesús HidalgoBeat Writer

Despite being unable to take home their first ACC crown, there’s plenty of hope on the horizon for the Blue Devils fencers.

Notre Dame won both men’s and women’s team competitions of the first ACC Fencing Championships this weekend. But Duke took the second position and three freshmen of the men’s squad secured bronze medals in the individual contests.

“I’m very pleased with the performance of our team,” head coach Alex Beguinet said. “Notre Dame was very hard rock to break for both men’s and women’s, but we did very well. And three freshmen got medals, which is very promising for the future.”

The conference competition, held in Chapel Hill, N.C., started Saturday morning. The Blue Devil men’s squad, ranked ninth in the country, routed North Carolina 19-8 and Boston College 20-7 in the team contest Saturday morning. The foil squad took down the Tar Heels 8-1, while the sabers registered a solid 9-0 victory against the Eagles.

In the final match, however, Duke fell to No. 2 Notre Dame 17-10. Led by freshmen Dakota Nollner, who had a 3-0 ledger, the

Fencing

epée squad was the only team that beat the Fighting Irish, delivering a 5-4 victory.

“It would have been nice to beat Notre Dame,” freshman foil Jan Maceczek said. “But we fenced really well, so we can’t be upset about that.”

One Blue Devil freshman per weapon earned a bronze medal in the individual competition Saturday afternoon.

In the foil category, Maceczek reached the semifinals with nine victories during pool play. After losing to Notre Dame’s Virgile Collineau 6-15, the Duke rookie beat Collineau’s teammate Hazem Khazbak 15-11 to secure third place.

Freshman Dean Ischiropoulos had 12 wins during pool play in the epée contest but lost to Boston College’s Ethan Grab 12-15 in the semifinals. Ischiropoulos, however, rebounded to defeat Tar Heel Matthew Shlimak 15-11 in the duel for the bronze medal.

Rounding out the rookie trio, Pascual di Tella also registered 12 victories during pool play in the saber competition. After losing 9-15 in the semifinals, the freshman captured third place by beating the Fighting Irish’s John Hallisten 15-11.

For the first time in the history of the competition, the ACC hosted a fencing contest for women. Duke finished second

again, behind second-ranked Notre Dame.Led by the saber and foil teams going

5-4 each, the Duke women’s squad also took down the cross-town rival North Carolina 14-13 Sunday morning. Notre Dame, however, defeated the Blue Devils 8-19 in the second round. In their last match, the Duke fencers bounced back and routed Boston College 18-9. The saber team, consisting of freshmen Jennifer Ling, Natalie Moszczynski and Alexandra Viqueira, beat the Eagles 9-0.

“My experience [in the team competition] was a roller coaster,” Ling said. “UNC beat us in our home meet, so we took our revenge. Notre Dame is a really hard team, but we gave them a run for their money.”

Beguinet said that although the women’s squad had hard battles against the Eagles and the Tar Heels, he was very pleased with their victories.

Freshman saber Haley Fischer was the only fencer of the women’s squad who reached the semifinals in the individual contest Sunday afternoon. The rookie was defeating Claudia Kulmacz 13-11, but had to withdraw the contest due to injury.

“That is a very sad story,” Beguinet said. “Haley got a concussion when she was on her way to win the bout. She was very upset about not being able to finish the match but she’s okay

Izzi Clark | The ChronicleFreshman Justise Winslow poured in 17 of his 20 points in the first half in Saturday’s victory.

Duke cruised to a 22-point win despite Jahlil Okafor

sitting with an ankle injury

Carolyn Chang | The ChronicleThe Blue Devils had three freshmen—includ-ing Jan Maceczek—take home medals at this year’s ACC Championships.

NCSU 72DUKE 59

Blue Devils finish 2nd overall at ACC Championships

and safe now and that’s the principal thing.”The Duke fencers will return to competition

for the NCAA Mid/South Atlantic Regional March 7 in Durham.

Page 7: February 23, 2015

The Chronicle www.dukechronicle.com MONDAY, FEBRUARY 23, 2015 | 7

SPORTS

6 | MONDAY, FEBRUARY 23, 2015 www.dukechroniclesports.com The Chronicle The Chronicle www.dukechroniclesports.com MONDAY, FEBRUARY 23, 2015 | 7

Izzi Clark | The ChronicleSenior Quinn Cook dropped 20 points or more for the third time in four games as he led the Blue Devils with 27 points in Saturday’s win against Clemson.

Nick MartinSports Editor

With Jahlil Okafor on the bench and Duke coming off a game in which it gave up 62 points in the paint, some worried that the Blue Devils would struggle to hold their own against the Tigers. Justise Winslow and Quinn Cook were not among them.

Behind Winslow’s 20-point, 13-rebound performance, Duke took down Clemson 78-56 at Cameron Indoor Stadium. Winslow poured in 17 first-half points, and Cook scored 17 of his game-high 27 points in the second half to keep the Tigers at bay and secure the Blue Devils’ seventh straight win.

“That was one of the best wins we’ve had here in a long time. After Syracuse and North Carolina the emotional wins, and Jahlil’s injury, we’re down to seven guys,” head coach Mike Krzyzewski said. “For us to play like this is spectacular. I’m so proud of them.... I’m not sure anybody has played any better in the league than Quinn, and he did it again today. Justise had a spectacular day.”

Playing without Okafor for the first time all season, many of the concerns before the game centered around how Duke (24-3, 11-3 in the ACC) would handle Clemson (15-12, 7-8) and its physical post players after being out-

Men’s Basketball

NO JAH? NO PROBLEM

rebounded by North Carolina 49-33 Wednesday night.

But the concerns were quelled early as the Blue Devils dominated the paint in the first half, outscoring the Tigers 30-18. This was a byproduct of the zone and 2-1-2 press implemented throughout the game as well as Duke’s willingness to get out and run—it poured in 13 fastbreak

points, nine of which came off their opponent’s 10 first-half turnovers. The Blue Devils would finish the game with 14 forced turnovers and 16 points off the Clemson mistakes.

“That zone allowed us to keep it packed in, not really allow their bigs to get a lot of shots,” junior Amile Jefferson said. “Everyone...rebounded, so there weren’t a lot of offensive rebounds [and] second-chance points.”

One of the positives of having Okafor out of the paint was that it opened the lane up for Winslow to drive and slash past his man and get to the basket for easy buckets—of the Houston native’s eight field goals, six were layups and two were and-ones.

“I try to stay aggressive every game, but especially this game with Jah out, [Cook] had to step up—I had to step up,” Winslow said. “Me being aggressive really helped out the team, defensively and offensively.”

Winslow’s aggression and Cook’s sharp-shooting—the senior drained three 3-pointers in the second half after missing his two first-half attempts—allowed the Blue Devils to build up a 19-point lead out of the break.

“Justise did an amazing job of battling and fighting today,” Jefferson said. “Him and Quinn really elevated our team, and everyone else just banded around that and followed it.”

The Tigers cut the lead down to 10 with 13:57 left in the game, but Duke responded with a pair of 3-pointers from freshman Grayson Allen and Cook and would pile on a 10-0 run to push the lead to 20.

But it was not all Duke early on, as Clemson kept things close and took a five-point lead when Landry Nnoko connected on a jumper with 15:17 left to put the Tigers up 11-6. But the Blue

Devil rookies teamed up with their senior captain to get the fans at Cameron Indoor back into the game.

Freshman Grayson Allen entered the game for the first time following the under-16 media timeout, and just 50 seconds into his court-time, the rookie got the fans on their feet when he flushed an alley-oop from Cook to pull Duke within three points. Allen finished with 10 points in 18 minutes of play off the bench.

“All the kids played—Marshall gave us a huge 24 minutes [with] just his physicality and energy,” Krzyzewski said. “Grayson keeps coming on. I’m proud of my guys. I wasn’t sure what was going to happen today. What I got was a spectacular performance from this Duke team.”

Cook then converted on a jump shot and fed Winslow for a transition 3-pointer to cap a seven-point run for the Blue Devils and take back the lead at 13-11.

Clemson fought back to retake the lead on a Rod Hall jump shot, putting the Tigers up 15-13. But once again, Duke received a boost from Winslow and Allen as the two combined for the next seven points.

The pair’s scoring run coincided with a stout defensive stand for the Blue Devils as Clemson went scoreless for the next 3:14. By the time it was over, Duke had put together an 18-5 run that included 12 of Winslow’s 17 points

“They had some good looks, but they missed,” Krzyzewski said. “The good thing for us is once we got a three-point lead, we didn’t let up. We had a good end-of-half with Quinn scoring.”

The Blue Devils will next take the floor Wednesday at 9 p.m. against Virginia Tech as they travel to Blacksburg, Va., to take on the Hokies for the first time this season.

Brianna Siracuse | The ChronicleN.C. State guard Miah Spencer scored a season-high 23 points to lead the Wolfpack’s upset of the No. 10 Blue Devils.

Meredith CashBeat Writer

RALEIGH, N.C.—After falling to the Fighting Irish in a game for the top spot in the ACC Monday night, the Blue Devils could not dig out of another double-digit hole Sunday.

Guards Miah Spencer and Dominique Wilson combined for 41 points and seven 3-pointers as unranked N.C. State upset

No. 10 Duke 72-59 at Reynolds Coliseum. Despite an impressive

performance from Elizabeth Williams—the senior had 19 points, eight rebounds, two blocks and an assist—the Blue Devils dropped their second straight road contest and lost more ground in the conference standings.

“The game was very simple—they shot 48 percent from the three point line, 33 percent from inside the arc and we didn’t do much to stop that,” Duke head coach Joanne P. McCallie said. “We played in spurts, and that is certainly not good enough in our league.”

Duke (20-7, 11-3 in the ACC) started out the game slowly as N.C. State (15-12, 6-8) jumped out to a 5-2 lead in the first minute. The Blue Devils rallied quickly, and strong finishes in the post from Williams and redshirt freshman Rebecca Greenwell moved them ahead of the Wolfpack 9-8.

It seemed that Duke might run away with the game from there, as it extended its lead to five with a 6-0 run nine minutes into the half, but N.C. State retaliated with a run of its own to cut the Blue Devils’ lead to just one point. After a three-minute scoring drought for both teams, the Wolfpack took the lead with 6:27 left in the half.

“We honestly just didn’t finish shots,”

Women’s Basketball

Williams said. “We missed I can’t even tell you how many layups in the first half. We got a lot of the looks that we wanted, but we just didn’t finish them.”

N.C. State retained its lead until the close of the half. Sharp shooting up and down the Wolfpack rotation extended the lead in the last five minutes, and a 3-pointer by Spencer at the buzzer sent the home team into the locker room leading 31-25.

The Blue Devils started the second half with better intensity, regaining the lead within the first four minutes. But once again, N.C. State responded swiftly, knocking down three unanswered 3-pointers and forcing McCallie to call a timeout. The Wolfpack made 12 treys on the afternoon as the Blue Devils went just 3-of-18.

“We’re a paint team,” McCallie said. “We’re

not going to just start shooting great from three-point range. That’s not what we do.”

Out of the break, a Williams turnover led to another Wolfpack triple—one of Wilson’s four on the afternoon—to push the N.C. State lead to 46-35 with 13:33 to play.

Duke then went on a much-needed run, holding the Wolfpack without a basket for almost five minutes in the middle of the half. During that stretch, Williams led a 7-0 run with four points as the Blue Devils managed to slice the deficit to four by the ten-minute mark.

“I don’t like the way our team played at all,” McCallie said. “I am not happy with the team right now. I wish they could walk home to be honest with you. [That being said], I think we can play. I think we can play with anybody. It’s just frustrating to not have more of a visionary team to see what we can do.”

The teams traded baskets from that point on, but N.C. State once again managed to pull away as the Blue Devils struggled with some of the issues that have plagued them all season—turnovers and foul trouble. Senior Ka’lia Johnson fouled out of the game with 3:26 left in the contest, and Williams, Greenwell and freshman Azura Stevens—forced to foul late to extend the game—finished the contest with four fouls each.

Duke ended with 18 turnovers compared to the Wolfpack’s seven, leading to 28 N.C. State points.

“Twenty-eight points off turnovers might be a world record,” McCallie said. “The turnovers were very poor—N.C. State didn’t really go after us in a way that you could turn the ball over. Those turnovers were 18 of the worst turnovers I have ever seen.”

The Wolfpack connected on 22-of-26 free throws—including all 10 in the final minute—to complete the upset.

Williams—a three-time All American who recently earned her 400th career block—added another benchmark onto her already-impressive list of accolades. The Virginia Beach, Va., native notched her 1,000th career rebound five minutes into the second half. Her focus, however, was not on her own performance, but on how her team needs to improve.

“Mentally we just have to be tougher,” Williams said. “Down the stretch we weren’t tough, and I don’t think we embraced the challenge when they went on runs. We didn’t respond like we should have. This is definitely a mind game for everyone.”

With the loss, Duke has only two more games to get back on track before starting tournament play. The Blue Devils will finish their road stretch at Georgia Tech Thursday before hosting rival North Carolina March 1.

Duke falls on the road again, upset by N.C. State

Jesús HidalgoBeat Writer

Despite being unable to take home their first ACC crown, there’s plenty of hope on the horizon for the Blue Devils fencers.

Notre Dame won both men’s and women’s team competitions of the first ACC Fencing Championships this weekend. But Duke took the second position and three freshmen of the men’s squad secured bronze medals in the individual contests.

“I’m very pleased with the performance of our team,” head coach Alex Beguinet said. “Notre Dame was very hard rock to break for both men’s and women’s, but we did very well. And three freshmen got medals, which is very promising for the future.”

The conference competition, held in Chapel Hill, N.C., started Saturday morning. The Blue Devil men’s squad, ranked ninth in the country, routed North Carolina 19-8 and Boston College 20-7 in the team contest Saturday morning. The foil squad took down the Tar Heels 8-1, while the sabers registered a solid 9-0 victory against the Eagles.

In the final match, however, Duke fell to No. 2 Notre Dame 17-10. Led by freshmen Dakota Nollner, who had a 3-0 ledger, the

Fencing

epée squad was the only team that beat the Fighting Irish, delivering a 5-4 victory.

“It would have been nice to beat Notre Dame,” freshman foil Jan Maceczek said. “But we fenced really well, so we can’t be upset about that.”

One Blue Devil freshman per weapon earned a bronze medal in the individual competition Saturday afternoon.

In the foil category, Maceczek reached the semifinals with nine victories during pool play. After losing to Notre Dame’s Virgile Collineau 6-15, the Duke rookie beat Collineau’s teammate Hazem Khazbak 15-11 to secure third place.

Freshman Dean Ischiropoulos had 12 wins during pool play in the epée contest but lost to Boston College’s Ethan Grab 12-15 in the semifinals. Ischiropoulos, however, rebounded to defeat Tar Heel Matthew Shlimak 15-11 in the duel for the bronze medal.

Rounding out the rookie trio, Pascual di Tella also registered 12 victories during pool play in the saber competition. After losing 9-15 in the semifinals, the freshman captured third place by beating the Fighting Irish’s John Hallisten 15-11.

For the first time in the history of the competition, the ACC hosted a fencing contest for women. Duke finished second

again, behind second-ranked Notre Dame.Led by the saber and foil teams going

5-4 each, the Duke women’s squad also took down the cross-town rival North Carolina 14-13 Sunday morning. Notre Dame, however, defeated the Blue Devils 8-19 in the second round. In their last match, the Duke fencers bounced back and routed Boston College 18-9. The saber team, consisting of freshmen Jennifer Ling, Natalie Moszczynski and Alexandra Viqueira, beat the Eagles 9-0.

“My experience [in the team competition] was a roller coaster,” Ling said. “UNC beat us in our home meet, so we took our revenge. Notre Dame is a really hard team, but we gave them a run for their money.”

Beguinet said that although the women’s squad had hard battles against the Eagles and the Tar Heels, he was very pleased with their victories.

Freshman saber Haley Fischer was the only fencer of the women’s squad who reached the semifinals in the individual contest Sunday afternoon. The rookie was defeating Claudia Kulmacz 13-11, but had to withdraw the contest due to injury.

“That is a very sad story,” Beguinet said. “Haley got a concussion when she was on her way to win the bout. She was very upset about not being able to finish the match but she’s okay

Izzi Clark | The ChronicleFreshman Justise Winslow poured in 17 of his 20 points in the first half in Saturday’s victory.

Duke cruised to a 22-point win despite Jahlil Okafor

sitting with an ankle injury

Carolyn Chang | The ChronicleThe Blue Devils had three freshmen—includ-ing Jan Maceczek—take home medals at this year’s ACC Championships.

NCSU 72DUKE 59

Blue Devils finish 2nd overall at ACC Championships

and safe now and that’s the principal thing.”The Duke fencers will return to competition

for the NCAA Mid/South Atlantic Regional March 7 in Durham.

Page 8: February 23, 2015

8 | MONDAY, FEBRUARY 23, 2015 www.dukechronicle.com The Chronicle

SPORTS

8 | MONDAY, FEBRUARY 23, 2015 www.dukechroniclesports.com The Chronicle

TOWERVIEWFEBRUARY 2015 | VOL. 16 | ISSUE 5

WHEN WEST RAN DRY

‘It’s just not done’ ‘A SECOND-BEST DECISION’WHERE THE LACROSSE HOUSE STOOD

HOW DUKE’S SOCIAL SCENE SHIFTED OFF CAMPUS

could an unfinished kunshan one

day be great?

WHY ADHAN WAS MOVED FROM THE

DUKE CHAPEL

NINE YEARS AFTER THE DUKE LACROSSE CASE, A NEW HOUSE

FINALLY FILLS THE VOID

Read these cover stories on Wednesday, February 25

PLUS: • BEST FOOD ON CAMPUS

• BASKETBALL WINS AND LOSSES

• THE STORY BEHIND THE CAMEL

• FACES OF DURHAM

• STUDENT DOG TRAINER

and more!

Lesley Chen-Young | The ChronicleJunior goalkeeper Kelsey Duryea shutout William & Mary for the first 42:28 in Sunday’s victory.

Nick MartinSports Editor

Playing at the West Campus turf fields, Duke turned in another solid performance, downing William & Mary 17-7 to clinch its fifth straight win. The 5-0 opening by the Blue Devils is the best since 2008.

Coming into the game, Duke was playing its third game in seven days and

was fresh off a road upset of then-No. 5 Northwestern. Blue Devil head coach

Kerstin Kimel knew that the Tribe was not a team to be overlooked—Duke barely edged out an 11-8 victory last year in Williamsburg, Va.—and pointed toward the men’s basketball’s victory against Clemson Saturday as a similar performance.

“We used the basketball team as an example. If you watch that team and Coach K and watch how animated he was yesterday, he understood that was the ultimate trap game,” head coach Kerstin Kimel said. “This game, being wedged between Northwestern and Notre Dame, it could’ve been the same thing for us. I think it’s a sign of maturity for our team.”

The Blue Devils (5-0), much like men’s basketball, came out of the gate strong Sunday. Senior Chelsea Landon posted a hat trick in the first half and was one of seven Blue Devils to find the back of the net in the opening 30 minutes.

Women’s Lacrosse

By the time the buzzer rang for the half, Duke had amassed an 11-0 lead, marking the first time the Blue Devils have held an opponent scoreless in a half this season.

“A lot of people have stepped up this year and made it difficult for defenses to mark one person,” senior Kerrin Maurer said. “In a couple different games, we’ve had nine different scorers, and that was huge for us. Moving forward, I think that makes it difficult for people to stop us.”

The second half was more of the same for the opening 13 minutes, as Duke netted the first three goals—two coming from Maurer—to go ahead 14-0. But as impressive as the Blue Devil offense was, it was the defense that once again came up big for the home squad.

Junior goalkeeper Kelsey Duryea bolstered the defense with a season-high 10 saves in her 49:52 in the cage. It was not until her 42nd minute protecting the net that the Tribe (0-2) finally managed their first goal of the game, dashing any thoughts of what would have been Duke’s first shutout since a 2013 victory against Providence. But even with the goose egg on the board for the majority of the game, Duryea said she and the defense did not pay attention to it.

“I like to not think that because I feel like if I do, my mind’s not in the right place,” Duryea said. “[I am] just thinking about the next shot that’s coming. If it’s a goal, it’s a goal and I just move on to the next shot. Obviously, I’d like it to be a save, but I think today we just did a great job looking forward to the next shot.”

Shutout aside, there is something that might be worth paying attention to in regards to the defense’s performance—for the first time since 2006, the Blue Devils have held their first five opponents to single digits. Part of the success has come from Duke’s ability to field five players who all have at least a year of experience under their belt.

“Defensively, we’ve been working on our communication and chemistry,” Duryea said. “A lot of us have played together for two years but there are some new girls getting in. Really just working to get the chemistry and anticipating what each other’s going to do, we work on that in practice, and games are great for that.”

The Blue Devils played Sunday’s game on the West Campus turf fields due to flooding in the corners of Koskinen Stadium. The unusual game environment marked the second time in as many games that Duke was forced to play in an odd setting, as it defeated Northwestern at its indoor facility Thursday.

Part of the Blue Devils’ success has been a result of their ability to adapt to different challenges, and Sunday’s change in location—announced Saturday—was another example of the focus the team brings into each game.

“A theme for us this year is we’ve got to be adaptable,” Kimel said. “Here, there, everywhere—it’s been a tough travel week. I think our kids have responded really well, and I’m really proud of them.”

Duke will have a week off to rest after its whirlwind week before opening ACC play Sunday March 1 at home against Notre Dame.

Duke routs William & Mary, off to best start since 2008

DUKE 17W&M 7

Page 9: February 23, 2015

The Chronicle www.dukechronicle.com MONDAY, FEBRUARY 23, 2015 | 9

ACROSS

1 Groundbreaking

4 After-bath powder

8 ___-ski

13 Sounds during a massage

15 Gorbachev’s land

16 New York hotel in “The Great Gatsby,” with “the”

17 Smile

18 Arctic seabird

19 One paying close attention

20 Kind of case for a lawyer

22 Beer, slangily

24 “A League of ___ Own” (1992 film)

25 Skype necessity

27 Howled, as the wind

29 Faux ___ (social slip-up)

30 Tennis great Arthur

34 Where you might see the sign “Do not feed the animals”

36 Youngest “Downton Abbey” daughter

38 Building add-on39 Get ___ on (ace)40 Ruffles, as the

hair42 Texter’s “Wow!”43 Basil and bay

leaf45 Beaks46 Big name in

video games47 Zilch48 Neither Rep. nor

Dem.49 Green dip, for

ashort51 Disappointing

response to “Is it ready?”

54 Hurdles for future docs

57 Really bothers60 Kind of barbecue

or mine

62 Mystic’s device with letters and numbers

63 Home plate figures, informally

65 Sporting sword

66 :50

67 Finishes, as a cake

68 Big name in video games

69 Big, thick slices

70 Lemonlike

71 Broadband letters

DOWN

1 Bother persistently

2 Google ___ (map tool)

3 Surface for a dry-erase marker

4 Derrière

5 Cockeyed

6 Baton Rouge sch.

7 Shellfish hors d’oeuvres

8 Sleeper’s breathing problem

9 Farmer with oxen

10 “Gosh darn it!”

11 O.T. book before Daniel

12 Dress in Delhi

14 Escargot

21 Tops of waves

23 Some colas

26 Word in every “Star Wars” title

28 Home of Cheyenne: Abbr.

31 Like alpine peaks … or what each half of 3-, 7-, 9-, 37- and 44-Down can be?

32 Prefix with sphere

33 Vet

34 Newswoman Paula

35 Fit for service

37 Easter costume

38 Take for granted

41 Brain activity meas.

44 Heist of a sort

48 Suffix with meteor

50 Teen skin ailments

52 Five Norse kings

53 Souse

55 Supermodel Cheryl

56 Sneak (in)

57 Goes bad

58 Jean who wrote “The Clan of the Cave Bear”

59 Jazzy Simone

61 “Hey you!”

64 Old record label

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Page 10: February 23, 2015

10 | MONDAY, FEBRUARY 23, 2015 www.dukechronicle.com The Chronicle

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10 | MONDAY, FEBRUARY 23, 2015 commentary The Chronicle The Chronicle commentary MONDAY, FEBRUARY 23, 2015 | 11

Last month, a group of Stanford students publicized a discovery that FERPA rights can be invoked by students to gain access

to their admissions files, complete with comments and evaluation. As students in colleges across the nation increasingly begin issuing demands to view their files, the question of whether this tendency is doing more harm than good becomes espe-cially poignant. We cannot prevent students from taking advantage of their rights as provided by FERPA. However, we discourage accessing admis-sions files and recommend that those who choose to view their files do so in a responsible manner. While seemingly constructive on the surface, it is necessary to be conscious of the negative effects this new movement could have.

First, accessing one’s admissions file can affect student confidence. Discovering that one was very close to rejection can be discouraging and students who discover such may feel isolated among peers who were “sure” admits. Although it is easy to shrug off the shadow of other merit-based numbers such as SAT results, admissions scores may be perceived as a more holistic evaluation of the student as a per-son. Such evaluations are therefore more prone to being used as tools of ostracism and stratification.

We know that these feelings may already be com-mon among students admitted off the waitlist, but their ability to move beyond this perception is a valuable example to be followed.

Second, from accessing files, students can glean important information about the pref-erences and tendencies of admissions offices. Although such access may yield greater trans-parency in an otherwise murky and ambiguous admissions process, the potential negative rami-fications outweigh the benefits. Knowledgeable students can share important admissions prac-tices gleaned from their files selectively with friends and family, thus giving unfair network-based advantages. Alternatively, this information can be bought and sold or used by admissions consulting companies as a service provided for money. Although we do not completely oppose a “market” for college admissions information, this new knowledge may be used by applicants to construct their application—and even their whole high school experience—as a targeted effort tailored to the admission tendencies of a specific school rather than as a reflection of their holistic growth as a person.

Proponents of the new movement claim that

it promotes admissions transparency. Officers now must own up to their policies and will be incentivized to eliminate criteria that they are ashamed of. However, these same results would more easily come about if admissions offices were pushed to release detailed aggregate data on admissions procedures. If communal trans-parency is our goal, allowing individual students to minutely study their files for personal satisfac-tion might not be the best way to achieve it.

We cannot stop a process already underway, but we can try to minimize its negative effects. If you do choose to examine your files, or learn the admissions information of other people, take everything with a grain of salt. There must be a healthy skepticism on the ability of admis-sions officers to effectively evaluate the true character and competency of an individual from an array of scores and short essays. An ad-missions score is, therefore, more of an enter-taining tidbit rather than a total judgment of a student. Finally, students’ activities and stand-ing on campus are far more important than the specifics of how they got there. These backward-looking curiosities should never detract from a sense of future potential.

LETTERS POLICYThe Chronicle welcomes submissions in the form of letters

to the editor or guest columns. Submissions must include the author’s name, signature, department or class, and for purposes of identification, phone number and local address. Letters should not exceed 325 words; contact the editorial department for information regarding guest columns.

The Chronicle will not publish anonymous or form letters or letters that are promotional in nature. The Chronicle reserves the right to edit letters and guest columns for length, clarity and style and the right to withhold letters based on the discretion of the editorial page editor.

Direct submissions to:

E-mail: [email protected]

Editorial Page DepartmentThe ChronicleBox 90858, Durham, NC 27708

Phone: (919) 684-2663Fax: (919) 684-4696

The C

hron

icle

TH

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EP

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ITY FERPA wisely

”“ onlinecomment The longer I’ve been here the more I’ve come to realize undrgrad major is pretty irrelevant. If you have a good GPA, extracurriculars, and interview well, you can get a job somewhere completely unrelated to your major.

—“DJRicin” commenting on the editorial “Declare your major for the right reasons”

Inc. 1993Est. 1905 The ChronicleCARLEIGH STIEHM, Editor

MOUSA ALSHANTEER, Managing EditorEMMA BACCELLIERI, News Editor

GEORGIA PARKE, Executive Digital EditorNICK MARTIN, Sports Editor

DARBI GRIFFITH, Photography EditorMICHELLE MENCHACA, Editorial Page Editor

TIFFANY LIEU, Editorial Board ChairMICHAEL LAI, Director of Online Development

CHRISSY BECK, General Manager

RACHEL CHASON, University Editor KALI SHULKLAPPER, University Editor

ALEENA KAREDIYA, Local & National Editor JENNA ZHANG, Local & National Editor

GAUTAM HATHI, Health & Science Editor GRACE WANG, Health & Science Editor

EMMA LOEWE, News Photography Editor BRIANNA SIRACUSE, Sports Photography Editor

KATIE FERNELIUS, Recess Editor GARY HOFFMAN, Recess Managing Editor

IZZY CLARK, Recess Photography Editor YUYI LI, Online Photo Editor

KYLE HARVEY, Editorial Page Managing Editor RYAN HOERGER, Sports Managing Editor

DANIEL CARP, Towerview Editor DANIELLE MUOIO, Towerview Editor

ELYSIA SU, Towerview Photography Editor ELIZA STRONG, Towerview Creative Director

MARGOT TUCHLER, Social Media Editor RYAN ZHANG, Special Projects Editor

PATTON CALLAWAY, Senior Editor RITA LO, Executive Print Layout Editor

RAISA CHOWDHURY, News Blog Editor IMANI MOISE, News Blog Editor

SHANEN GANAPATHEE, Multimedia Editor KRISTIE KIM, Multimedia Editor

SOPHIA DURAND, Recruitment Chair ANDREW LUO, Recruitment Chair

MEGAN HAVEN, Advertising Director MEGAN MCGINITY, Digital Sales Manager

BARBARA STARBUCK, Creative Director MARY WEAVER, Operations Manager

The Chronicle is published by the Duke Student Publishing Company, Inc., a non-profit corporation independent of Duke University. The opinions expressed in this newspaper are not necessarily those of Duke University, its students, faculty, staff, administration or trustees. Unsigned editorials represent the majority view of the editorial board. Columns, letters and cartoons represent the views of the authors.

To reach the Editorial Office at 301 Flowers Building, call 684-2663 or fax 684-4696. To reach the Business Office at 2022 Campus Drive call 684-3811. To reach the Advertising Office at 2022 Campus Drive call 684-3811

@ 2014 Duke Student Publishing Company

JamesTian ONISM

“Duke is a progressive, equality-driven institution.”Phrases like those paint an optimistic image

of Duke. Duke has its social problems, but it usually isn’t long before they are addressed in some sort of campus dialogue or another. With programs like the Me Too Monologues, You’re Not Alone and Common Ground, most marginalized groups have some degree of a platform. So you can imagine my surprise at a recent RA team building activity, when the question “are housekeepers discriminated against?” was asked, and everyone instantly responded “yes.”

I could definitely understand the answer, but I would not have jumped to that conclusion so quickly. And with the help of the team, here are some of the reasons we came up with.

Most housekeepers are members of minority ethnic groups that have historically been marginalized. I cannot speak for all of Duke’s campus, but in my four years at Duke, I have only seen two housekeepers who were not African American or Hispanic. When those minorities make up a significant portion of the employees working at the Duke minimum wage of $12 an hour, that probably contributes to our association of those minorities with their socioeconomic status.

But ethnicity and socioeconomic status aren’t likely the sole reason for this discrimination at Duke. The Duke community at least is described with pride for its inclusivity, and I don’t think our student body is that shallow. We kept thinking. What about the nature of being a housekeeper?

I’ve seen people often leave trash around a common room, thinking that the housekeeper will clean up after them the next morning. I almost universally observe a complete absence of worry about vomit or clogged toilets—it’ll all be someone else’s responsibility soon. It isn’t uncommon for RAs to send emails to their hall urging residents not to make a large mess over a three day weekend. No, that’s not to help the housekeeper. It’s so the residents don’t have to live with the mess for an extra day… until the housekeeper comes in and cleans it.

Housekeeping is supposed to consist of basic cleaning tasks, yet when a huge mess is made, we still expect them to clean it up. This creates a dangerous hierarchy of power that leads to their exploitation and disrespect. Duke needs to manage expectations for housekeeping and create student accountability for messes.

So why should the average Duke student care? After all, we are very busy people who would gladly pay someone else to clean up our messes. And by the nature of the institution we attend, we probably think we have more glamorous lives in our futures. But this relationship is also problematic and adds to the dangerous hierarchy that leads to disrespect.

Besides the obvious reasons of respect and integrity, there are strong reasons to respect housekeepers. Though we may be ambitious, we are still young and naïve. A 50-year-old housekeeper has much more wisdom than a 20-year-old college student, no matter what the student is studying. The professors and doctors I respect the most know they can learn something from anyone and to treat any person as their equal. Doing so keeps them humbled and grounded, which is a vital component of their lives. No matter how ambitious their resumes, they measure their character by how they treat those of a lesser status.

So let’s talk about what we can do. For one, each quad has a resident cleaning closet. If you make a mess that can be cleaned up, use those supplies and clean them. Housekeepers almost always take a lunch break around noon. You can catch them in the kitchens heating up their food. If you aren’t bothering them, introduce yourself and thank them for their hard work. Apparently, housekeepers aren’t even allowed to be in the common room with a student. Break that rule. Get to know your housekeeper. Lastly, housekeeping appreciation week is March 23-27th. It’s not for another month, but mark that down in your calendar. Work with

your house council, or do something special for your housekeeper on your own.

Upon reflection, I realized the most important value from housekeepers is that they are actually all unique people who take pride in their work. Many of them are proud to work for Duke, making the facilities we live in desirable. Good, clean facilities are just as important in a top ten university as the professors, students and ideas. We should respect them just as they respect themselves as an integral part of the university.

At this point though, you’re probably wondering what Coach Cutcliffe has to do with any of this. Well, when Cutcliffe first came to interview at Duke, he drove through the night and arrived at Duke very early. Here is an account of his visit.

“I got on this campus about 3 o’clock in the morning. I went in and out of buildings, talked to some of the housekeeping people. They were more like me than anybody I met, to be honest with you. My kind of people. I just liked their pride in being a Duke employee. I asked them about that, about what was good about working for Duke.”

If the most popular man at Duke not named Coach K could see the values and dedication of the housekeepers, then perhaps we can reflect on our attitudes as well. Instead of disrespecting a group of people we tend to think are below us, let us value them, as Coach Cutcliffe has, for their unique contribution and pride for their work.

James Tian is a Trinity senior. His column runs every other Monday.

Housekeepers and Cutcliffe

Ishmael here! Due to our Blue Devils’ last minute public lashing of Chapel Hill’s Basketball Demimonde, I am currently suffering from hangover as treacherous as the Ten-Day War. I am also nursing sec-

ond-degree burns from my most recent attempt to make celebratory bonfire out of Penn Pavilion in sacrifice to the rivalry gods. Unfortu-nately, I was caught by the Duke University riot police for these actions and sentenced to three years of maintaining main quad mulch paths.

No matter how much I boast about my epic blackout actions on YikYak, my fraternity GroupMe and Pinterest, I cannot fix fact that I have been lying in my dorm bed since Thursday morning, incontinent and without beautiful Shooters woman to comfort me. Since these burns make it dif-ficult even for my hands to perform most basic pleasurable tasks like typing, I will provide you readers instead with exclusive transcripts from my newest occupation on the Duke campus.

Recently, as you may know, I have been knighted as new donation sol-dier for the Duke Phonathon. There, I am bequeathed with extraordinary task of begging for donations from Duke Alumni. I am unsurprised to find that this task is not very different than begging for affection from Duke female: often one is met with busy indifference; more often one is met with disgust. But with enough charm and manipulation, one can achieve returns that while certainly more than nothing, are nonetheless under-target! Any-way, much like in the glorious illiberal democracy of Zembla, my calls are monitored by the Duke Phonathon overlords. Here is exclusive excerpt from Phonathon transcript I have located:

Susan, 56, Greenwich, CT: Mmmyello?Ishmael: This must be Susan. Hello and how are you, Susan?Susan: I’m…well. Who is speaking, please?

Ishmael: This is Ishmael, Susan. Susan…ah, such a pretty name that is. I am sure you must know this. I detect in this disyllabic dulcet a sultry sibi-lance that simultaneously triggers within me a bodily tingling and a fervent longing for my mother tongue. O, I could repeat your name forever, Susan! Susan… [Hangs up]

[Second call] Susan, 56, Greenwich, CT: Yes?Ishmael: You made a grave mistake, Susan. Do not turn your back on me.Susan: Please stop calling this number. I have no time for this. Call again

and I will—Ishmael: Do not get so cross, sweetheart. This call is no prank. I am call-

ing about your son, Paul. What a great boy, he is. Wouldn’t you agree? So smart, he is. Biomedical Engineer, pre-med, star actor on “Me Too Mono-logues” and facilitator of the Common Ground. Such a sensitive soul. He was destined for such great things. What a shame it would be if…

Susan: What…Ishmael: Oh have you not been informed?Susan: Enough with this! My boy is alright I spoke with him last week.Ishmael: Last week, an eternity ago! When the world was still bright for

Paul and the Chapel still a shining bastion of Paul’s future. He does not call you enough, does he? You must have spoken with him before the surfacing of the binge drinking, the dorm-room noise complaints, his accumulation of parking violations. Before life toppled from beneath him like the second-floor of a Soviet-era Zemblian village hut. Life is much bleaker for Paul now. He is catatonic in a gothic basement-cell, shivering in his Vineyard Vines fleece. He has exhausted his FLEX and is in crippling debt. He has an orgo test for which he cannot study. If he is not freed soon, he may…he may fail orgo.

Susan: [Sobbing]. WHO ARE YOU AND WHAT DO YOU WANT FROM ME!?!

Ishmael: Susan, Susan, Susan. I must admit that your weeping does something to me. Your voice is now so exquisitely hollow. Susan, do not fret. I have told you my name. Besides, it is not me who is important. I did not im-prison your dear child. He imprisoned himself. I want him to be orthopedic surgeon as much as you do, my sweet honeysuckle. But in order to help him, I need your help. I need a payment of $2,000.

Susan: [Weeping subsides into confused whimper] Wha-what?Ishmael: Yes, Miss. I will need $2,000. For this charitable donation I can

guarantee you the freedom and nourishment of your son, along with main-quad bench named after your honorable family. I would be willing to accept this gift in the form of check, money order or credit card.

Susan: I can give you $200.Ishmael: Wonderful! Deal! Thank you so much Susan. Your son will be

very grateful to have his life back. We have saved him, and in doing so have pushed Duke Forward. I see in Paul’s future wonderful grade point average, many satisfying hook-ups, and liberating three-year healthcare consulting hiatus before he ultimately abandons his puerile medical dreams. You are such a beautiful person, Susan. Suuuu-sannn. [Line goes dead]

As you can see, I take this job very seriously. It is of utmost importance to me that my precious Duke University moves Forward with endowment larger than GDP of Mongolia so that it may continue to offer top-notch re-search opportunities to Harvard rejects! It is due to my patriotic efforts that I am named Mr. Employee of the Month and given a glorious $50 bonus to feed myself. Ciao!

Ishmael is currently under investigation by three different offices at Duke.

Dialing Duke forward

Francis Curiel18 OR OVER

These words are therapeutic though I am not as strong as they pretend to be. There are still so many stuck behind my teeth and I no lon-

ger know where to begin. I have questions that de-mand attention when the sky is as gray as it has been these last few days—When did this happen? Could I have done something to prevent it? Why did it end? Though I’m sure they will go unanswered, I have found momentary comfort in their release. I hope, if you can relate, this piece grants you the same.

Love is messy. It spills in large, uncomfortable amounts from fragile hearts pieced together over

and over again. When relationships, friendships and marriages end, we must accept the mess our bodies have made and mop ourselves up. There is currently a cleanup back home, and I am 800 miles away from the damage. I am a phone call away from my mom, and a text message away from my dad—struggling to bear the weight of their problems, trying my best to comfort them both. Though I have always held multiple hearts in my own, their pain has never overwhelmed me as much as today. 22 years of marriage has run its course and the family I grew up with is breaking apart. I know it is ultimately out of my control; a child cannot save a marriage. This is not about me, but about my parents, their happiness and their right to happiness. I know. I get it. But, I still have the right to react. To feel confusion and loss. To question the only love I thought would last for-ever. It’s scary. Because I have always looked at my parents’ marriage with stars in my eyes—as the ide-al union of a shared and trusting life exploration. It is because of them that I love love. The thought of their marriage slipping through my fingers and the sheer, inevitable helplessness I now face, is sin-cerely unsettling. I question how love could last in my own relationship if it couldn’t last in the example set before me. I wonder if my house can ever be a home if I can’t find them drinking wine

and sharing stories in the kitchen.I do not blame them for growing apart though

I wish they’d tried harder to grow back together. I understand that life is a series of hellos and good-byes that we must learn to adapt to. I just don’t recognize who they have become. Divorce, for ev-eryone involved, is never easy at any age. Adults, however, are expected to get over it because they, at least, enjoyed a wonderful upbringing. A friend of mine told me that “I’m lucky my parents were to-gether for the most important part of my life.” I am in no way ungrateful for the childhood my parents

granted me. We were a team of three against the world—traveling, exploring, fighting, loving. The two of them, together, are my constant, my rock. And it is the loss of this unit, this togetherness, which makes this blow especially hard to handle.

I understand now that words are easily lost between two—that grudges are powerful enough to eat away at even the strongest of relationships. I would rather acknowledge their separate lives than force an unhappy one; would rather sup-port their decision than return home to empty eyes and crooked smiles. If a more abundant fu-ture is to be built apart, then it must be the right thing for them both.

They showed me 19 years of companionship, and I will show them 19 more of support, but it is an emotional and traumatic event to accept. If you too are in the midst of something similar, I can’t tell you to feel better. I can only tell you to have pa-tience. There are bad and better days, but it will get easier to accept and understand. Now more than ever, they need your unbiased support. Remember that, even apart, your parents will love you no less. You owe it to them to continue growing—to live and love with the utmost intensity.

Francis Curiel is a Trinity sophomore. Her column runs every other Monday.

Upside down Monday MondayPEACE! LAND! BRODHEAD!

Interested in reading more Opinion?Check out the Opinion pages at

www.dukechronicle.com/opinion

Page 11: February 23, 2015

The Chronicle www.dukechronicle.com MONDAY, FEBRUARY 23, 2015 | 11

edit pages

10 | MONDAY, FEBRUARY 23, 2015 commentary The Chronicle The Chronicle commentary MONDAY, FEBRUARY 23, 2015 | 11

Last month, a group of Stanford students publicized a discovery that FERPA rights can be invoked by students to gain access

to their admissions files, complete with comments and evaluation. As students in colleges across the nation increasingly begin issuing demands to view their files, the question of whether this tendency is doing more harm than good becomes espe-cially poignant. We cannot prevent students from taking advantage of their rights as provided by FERPA. However, we discourage accessing admis-sions files and recommend that those who choose to view their files do so in a responsible manner. While seemingly constructive on the surface, it is necessary to be conscious of the negative effects this new movement could have.

First, accessing one’s admissions file can affect student confidence. Discovering that one was very close to rejection can be discouraging and students who discover such may feel isolated among peers who were “sure” admits. Although it is easy to shrug off the shadow of other merit-based numbers such as SAT results, admissions scores may be perceived as a more holistic evaluation of the student as a per-son. Such evaluations are therefore more prone to being used as tools of ostracism and stratification.

We know that these feelings may already be com-mon among students admitted off the waitlist, but their ability to move beyond this perception is a valuable example to be followed.

Second, from accessing files, students can glean important information about the pref-erences and tendencies of admissions offices. Although such access may yield greater trans-parency in an otherwise murky and ambiguous admissions process, the potential negative rami-fications outweigh the benefits. Knowledgeable students can share important admissions prac-tices gleaned from their files selectively with friends and family, thus giving unfair network-based advantages. Alternatively, this information can be bought and sold or used by admissions consulting companies as a service provided for money. Although we do not completely oppose a “market” for college admissions information, this new knowledge may be used by applicants to construct their application—and even their whole high school experience—as a targeted effort tailored to the admission tendencies of a specific school rather than as a reflection of their holistic growth as a person.

Proponents of the new movement claim that

it promotes admissions transparency. Officers now must own up to their policies and will be incentivized to eliminate criteria that they are ashamed of. However, these same results would more easily come about if admissions offices were pushed to release detailed aggregate data on admissions procedures. If communal trans-parency is our goal, allowing individual students to minutely study their files for personal satisfac-tion might not be the best way to achieve it.

We cannot stop a process already underway, but we can try to minimize its negative effects. If you do choose to examine your files, or learn the admissions information of other people, take everything with a grain of salt. There must be a healthy skepticism on the ability of admis-sions officers to effectively evaluate the true character and competency of an individual from an array of scores and short essays. An ad-missions score is, therefore, more of an enter-taining tidbit rather than a total judgment of a student. Finally, students’ activities and stand-ing on campus are far more important than the specifics of how they got there. These backward-looking curiosities should never detract from a sense of future potential.

LETTERS POLICYThe Chronicle welcomes submissions in the form of letters

to the editor or guest columns. Submissions must include the author’s name, signature, department or class, and for purposes of identification, phone number and local address. Letters should not exceed 325 words; contact the editorial department for information regarding guest columns.

The Chronicle will not publish anonymous or form letters or letters that are promotional in nature. The Chronicle reserves the right to edit letters and guest columns for length, clarity and style and the right to withhold letters based on the discretion of the editorial page editor.

Direct submissions to:

E-mail: [email protected]

Editorial Page DepartmentThe ChronicleBox 90858, Durham, NC 27708

Phone: (919) 684-2663Fax: (919) 684-4696

The C

hron

icle

TH

E I

ND

EP

EN

DE

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DA

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AT

DU

KE

UN

IVE

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ITY FERPA wisely

”“ onlinecomment The longer I’ve been here the more I’ve come to realize undrgrad major is pretty irrelevant. If you have a good GPA, extracurriculars, and interview well, you can get a job somewhere completely unrelated to your major.

—“DJRicin” commenting on the editorial “Declare your major for the right reasons”

Inc. 1993Est. 1905 The ChronicleCARLEIGH STIEHM, Editor

MOUSA ALSHANTEER, Managing EditorEMMA BACCELLIERI, News Editor

GEORGIA PARKE, Executive Digital EditorNICK MARTIN, Sports Editor

DARBI GRIFFITH, Photography EditorMICHELLE MENCHACA, Editorial Page Editor

TIFFANY LIEU, Editorial Board ChairMICHAEL LAI, Director of Online Development

CHRISSY BECK, General Manager

RACHEL CHASON, University Editor KALI SHULKLAPPER, University Editor

ALEENA KAREDIYA, Local & National Editor JENNA ZHANG, Local & National Editor

GAUTAM HATHI, Health & Science Editor GRACE WANG, Health & Science Editor

EMMA LOEWE, News Photography Editor BRIANNA SIRACUSE, Sports Photography Editor

KATIE FERNELIUS, Recess Editor GARY HOFFMAN, Recess Managing Editor

IZZY CLARK, Recess Photography Editor YUYI LI, Online Photo Editor

KYLE HARVEY, Editorial Page Managing Editor RYAN HOERGER, Sports Managing Editor

DANIEL CARP, Towerview Editor DANIELLE MUOIO, Towerview Editor

ELYSIA SU, Towerview Photography Editor ELIZA STRONG, Towerview Creative Director

MARGOT TUCHLER, Social Media Editor RYAN ZHANG, Special Projects Editor

PATTON CALLAWAY, Senior Editor RITA LO, Executive Print Layout Editor

RAISA CHOWDHURY, News Blog Editor IMANI MOISE, News Blog Editor

SHANEN GANAPATHEE, Multimedia Editor KRISTIE KIM, Multimedia Editor

SOPHIA DURAND, Recruitment Chair ANDREW LUO, Recruitment Chair

MEGAN HAVEN, Advertising Director MEGAN MCGINITY, Digital Sales Manager

BARBARA STARBUCK, Creative Director MARY WEAVER, Operations Manager

The Chronicle is published by the Duke Student Publishing Company, Inc., a non-profit corporation independent of Duke University. The opinions expressed in this newspaper are not necessarily those of Duke University, its students, faculty, staff, administration or trustees. Unsigned editorials represent the majority view of the editorial board. Columns, letters and cartoons represent the views of the authors.

To reach the Editorial Office at 301 Flowers Building, call 684-2663 or fax 684-4696. To reach the Business Office at 2022 Campus Drive call 684-3811. To reach the Advertising Office at 2022 Campus Drive call 684-3811

@ 2014 Duke Student Publishing Company

JamesTian ONISM

“Duke is a progressive, equality-driven institution.”Phrases like those paint an optimistic image

of Duke. Duke has its social problems, but it usually isn’t long before they are addressed in some sort of campus dialogue or another. With programs like the Me Too Monologues, You’re Not Alone and Common Ground, most marginalized groups have some degree of a platform. So you can imagine my surprise at a recent RA team building activity, when the question “are housekeepers discriminated against?” was asked, and everyone instantly responded “yes.”

I could definitely understand the answer, but I would not have jumped to that conclusion so quickly. And with the help of the team, here are some of the reasons we came up with.

Most housekeepers are members of minority ethnic groups that have historically been marginalized. I cannot speak for all of Duke’s campus, but in my four years at Duke, I have only seen two housekeepers who were not African American or Hispanic. When those minorities make up a significant portion of the employees working at the Duke minimum wage of $12 an hour, that probably contributes to our association of those minorities with their socioeconomic status.

But ethnicity and socioeconomic status aren’t likely the sole reason for this discrimination at Duke. The Duke community at least is described with pride for its inclusivity, and I don’t think our student body is that shallow. We kept thinking. What about the nature of being a housekeeper?

I’ve seen people often leave trash around a common room, thinking that the housekeeper will clean up after them the next morning. I almost universally observe a complete absence of worry about vomit or clogged toilets—it’ll all be someone else’s responsibility soon. It isn’t uncommon for RAs to send emails to their hall urging residents not to make a large mess over a three day weekend. No, that’s not to help the housekeeper. It’s so the residents don’t have to live with the mess for an extra day… until the housekeeper comes in and cleans it.

Housekeeping is supposed to consist of basic cleaning tasks, yet when a huge mess is made, we still expect them to clean it up. This creates a dangerous hierarchy of power that leads to their exploitation and disrespect. Duke needs to manage expectations for housekeeping and create student accountability for messes.

So why should the average Duke student care? After all, we are very busy people who would gladly pay someone else to clean up our messes. And by the nature of the institution we attend, we probably think we have more glamorous lives in our futures. But this relationship is also problematic and adds to the dangerous hierarchy that leads to disrespect.

Besides the obvious reasons of respect and integrity, there are strong reasons to respect housekeepers. Though we may be ambitious, we are still young and naïve. A 50-year-old housekeeper has much more wisdom than a 20-year-old college student, no matter what the student is studying. The professors and doctors I respect the most know they can learn something from anyone and to treat any person as their equal. Doing so keeps them humbled and grounded, which is a vital component of their lives. No matter how ambitious their resumes, they measure their character by how they treat those of a lesser status.

So let’s talk about what we can do. For one, each quad has a resident cleaning closet. If you make a mess that can be cleaned up, use those supplies and clean them. Housekeepers almost always take a lunch break around noon. You can catch them in the kitchens heating up their food. If you aren’t bothering them, introduce yourself and thank them for their hard work. Apparently, housekeepers aren’t even allowed to be in the common room with a student. Break that rule. Get to know your housekeeper. Lastly, housekeeping appreciation week is March 23-27th. It’s not for another month, but mark that down in your calendar. Work with

your house council, or do something special for your housekeeper on your own.

Upon reflection, I realized the most important value from housekeepers is that they are actually all unique people who take pride in their work. Many of them are proud to work for Duke, making the facilities we live in desirable. Good, clean facilities are just as important in a top ten university as the professors, students and ideas. We should respect them just as they respect themselves as an integral part of the university.

At this point though, you’re probably wondering what Coach Cutcliffe has to do with any of this. Well, when Cutcliffe first came to interview at Duke, he drove through the night and arrived at Duke very early. Here is an account of his visit.

“I got on this campus about 3 o’clock in the morning. I went in and out of buildings, talked to some of the housekeeping people. They were more like me than anybody I met, to be honest with you. My kind of people. I just liked their pride in being a Duke employee. I asked them about that, about what was good about working for Duke.”

If the most popular man at Duke not named Coach K could see the values and dedication of the housekeepers, then perhaps we can reflect on our attitudes as well. Instead of disrespecting a group of people we tend to think are below us, let us value them, as Coach Cutcliffe has, for their unique contribution and pride for their work.

James Tian is a Trinity senior. His column runs every other Monday.

Housekeepers and Cutcliffe

Ishmael here! Due to our Blue Devils’ last minute public lashing of Chapel Hill’s Basketball Demimonde, I am currently suffering from hangover as treacherous as the Ten-Day War. I am also nursing sec-

ond-degree burns from my most recent attempt to make celebratory bonfire out of Penn Pavilion in sacrifice to the rivalry gods. Unfortu-nately, I was caught by the Duke University riot police for these actions and sentenced to three years of maintaining main quad mulch paths.

No matter how much I boast about my epic blackout actions on YikYak, my fraternity GroupMe and Pinterest, I cannot fix fact that I have been lying in my dorm bed since Thursday morning, incontinent and without beautiful Shooters woman to comfort me. Since these burns make it dif-ficult even for my hands to perform most basic pleasurable tasks like typing, I will provide you readers instead with exclusive transcripts from my newest occupation on the Duke campus.

Recently, as you may know, I have been knighted as new donation sol-dier for the Duke Phonathon. There, I am bequeathed with extraordinary task of begging for donations from Duke Alumni. I am unsurprised to find that this task is not very different than begging for affection from Duke female: often one is met with busy indifference; more often one is met with disgust. But with enough charm and manipulation, one can achieve returns that while certainly more than nothing, are nonetheless under-target! Any-way, much like in the glorious illiberal democracy of Zembla, my calls are monitored by the Duke Phonathon overlords. Here is exclusive excerpt from Phonathon transcript I have located:

Susan, 56, Greenwich, CT: Mmmyello?Ishmael: This must be Susan. Hello and how are you, Susan?Susan: I’m…well. Who is speaking, please?

Ishmael: This is Ishmael, Susan. Susan…ah, such a pretty name that is. I am sure you must know this. I detect in this disyllabic dulcet a sultry sibi-lance that simultaneously triggers within me a bodily tingling and a fervent longing for my mother tongue. O, I could repeat your name forever, Susan! Susan… [Hangs up]

[Second call] Susan, 56, Greenwich, CT: Yes?Ishmael: You made a grave mistake, Susan. Do not turn your back on me.Susan: Please stop calling this number. I have no time for this. Call again

and I will—Ishmael: Do not get so cross, sweetheart. This call is no prank. I am call-

ing about your son, Paul. What a great boy, he is. Wouldn’t you agree? So smart, he is. Biomedical Engineer, pre-med, star actor on “Me Too Mono-logues” and facilitator of the Common Ground. Such a sensitive soul. He was destined for such great things. What a shame it would be if…

Susan: What…Ishmael: Oh have you not been informed?Susan: Enough with this! My boy is alright I spoke with him last week.Ishmael: Last week, an eternity ago! When the world was still bright for

Paul and the Chapel still a shining bastion of Paul’s future. He does not call you enough, does he? You must have spoken with him before the surfacing of the binge drinking, the dorm-room noise complaints, his accumulation of parking violations. Before life toppled from beneath him like the second-floor of a Soviet-era Zemblian village hut. Life is much bleaker for Paul now. He is catatonic in a gothic basement-cell, shivering in his Vineyard Vines fleece. He has exhausted his FLEX and is in crippling debt. He has an orgo test for which he cannot study. If he is not freed soon, he may…he may fail orgo.

Susan: [Sobbing]. WHO ARE YOU AND WHAT DO YOU WANT FROM ME!?!

Ishmael: Susan, Susan, Susan. I must admit that your weeping does something to me. Your voice is now so exquisitely hollow. Susan, do not fret. I have told you my name. Besides, it is not me who is important. I did not im-prison your dear child. He imprisoned himself. I want him to be orthopedic surgeon as much as you do, my sweet honeysuckle. But in order to help him, I need your help. I need a payment of $2,000.

Susan: [Weeping subsides into confused whimper] Wha-what?Ishmael: Yes, Miss. I will need $2,000. For this charitable donation I can

guarantee you the freedom and nourishment of your son, along with main-quad bench named after your honorable family. I would be willing to accept this gift in the form of check, money order or credit card.

Susan: I can give you $200.Ishmael: Wonderful! Deal! Thank you so much Susan. Your son will be

very grateful to have his life back. We have saved him, and in doing so have pushed Duke Forward. I see in Paul’s future wonderful grade point average, many satisfying hook-ups, and liberating three-year healthcare consulting hiatus before he ultimately abandons his puerile medical dreams. You are such a beautiful person, Susan. Suuuu-sannn. [Line goes dead]

As you can see, I take this job very seriously. It is of utmost importance to me that my precious Duke University moves Forward with endowment larger than GDP of Mongolia so that it may continue to offer top-notch re-search opportunities to Harvard rejects! It is due to my patriotic efforts that I am named Mr. Employee of the Month and given a glorious $50 bonus to feed myself. Ciao!

Ishmael is currently under investigation by three different offices at Duke.

Dialing Duke forward

Francis Curiel18 OR OVER

These words are therapeutic though I am not as strong as they pretend to be. There are still so many stuck behind my teeth and I no lon-

ger know where to begin. I have questions that de-mand attention when the sky is as gray as it has been these last few days—When did this happen? Could I have done something to prevent it? Why did it end? Though I’m sure they will go unanswered, I have found momentary comfort in their release. I hope, if you can relate, this piece grants you the same.

Love is messy. It spills in large, uncomfortable amounts from fragile hearts pieced together over

and over again. When relationships, friendships and marriages end, we must accept the mess our bodies have made and mop ourselves up. There is currently a cleanup back home, and I am 800 miles away from the damage. I am a phone call away from my mom, and a text message away from my dad—struggling to bear the weight of their problems, trying my best to comfort them both. Though I have always held multiple hearts in my own, their pain has never overwhelmed me as much as today. 22 years of marriage has run its course and the family I grew up with is breaking apart. I know it is ultimately out of my control; a child cannot save a marriage. This is not about me, but about my parents, their happiness and their right to happiness. I know. I get it. But, I still have the right to react. To feel confusion and loss. To question the only love I thought would last for-ever. It’s scary. Because I have always looked at my parents’ marriage with stars in my eyes—as the ide-al union of a shared and trusting life exploration. It is because of them that I love love. The thought of their marriage slipping through my fingers and the sheer, inevitable helplessness I now face, is sin-cerely unsettling. I question how love could last in my own relationship if it couldn’t last in the example set before me. I wonder if my house can ever be a home if I can’t find them drinking wine

and sharing stories in the kitchen.I do not blame them for growing apart though

I wish they’d tried harder to grow back together. I understand that life is a series of hellos and good-byes that we must learn to adapt to. I just don’t recognize who they have become. Divorce, for ev-eryone involved, is never easy at any age. Adults, however, are expected to get over it because they, at least, enjoyed a wonderful upbringing. A friend of mine told me that “I’m lucky my parents were to-gether for the most important part of my life.” I am in no way ungrateful for the childhood my parents

granted me. We were a team of three against the world—traveling, exploring, fighting, loving. The two of them, together, are my constant, my rock. And it is the loss of this unit, this togetherness, which makes this blow especially hard to handle.

I understand now that words are easily lost between two—that grudges are powerful enough to eat away at even the strongest of relationships. I would rather acknowledge their separate lives than force an unhappy one; would rather sup-port their decision than return home to empty eyes and crooked smiles. If a more abundant fu-ture is to be built apart, then it must be the right thing for them both.

They showed me 19 years of companionship, and I will show them 19 more of support, but it is an emotional and traumatic event to accept. If you too are in the midst of something similar, I can’t tell you to feel better. I can only tell you to have pa-tience. There are bad and better days, but it will get easier to accept and understand. Now more than ever, they need your unbiased support. Remember that, even apart, your parents will love you no less. You owe it to them to continue growing—to live and love with the utmost intensity.

Francis Curiel is a Trinity sophomore. Her column runs every other Monday.

Upside down Monday MondayPEACE! LAND! BRODHEAD!

Interested in reading more Opinion?Check out the Opinion pages at

www.dukechronicle.com/opinion

Page 12: February 23, 2015

12 | MONDAY, FEBRUARY 23, 2015 www.dukechronicle.com The Chronicle

Too many midterms? Were you working on finding

that perfect summer internship? It’s not too late to

submit your application for the 2015-16

Not just for pre-law students, the Undergraduate Conduct Board is an opportunity open to all rising juniors and seniors (even those currently abroad, and those planning on studying abroad!) interested in serving as Duke leaders and role models. UCB members adjudicate the most serious allegations of undergraduate misconduct in panel hearings with Duke faculty, staff, and deans, allowing them to interact outside the typical academic setting.

The UCB is a pool of students, faculty and staff who are selected/appointed to hear referred cases of potential violations of university policy. A three- or five-member panel, chaired by a student, hears each case. The Board has the ability to issue any sanction available through the undergraduate disciplinary process for a finding of responsibility, including suspension or expulsion.

Our members’ majors span from Public Policy and English to Mechanical Engineering, Program II, and Biology. They participate in diverse campus organizations such as fraternities and sororities, varsity and club sports, DSG, DUU, Honor Council, the Chronicle, and pre-professional societies. Students who serve on the Board are in a unique position to influence attitudes and behavior of their peers and shape a campus character and integrity in which they take pride.

This Weekend at Duke

Darbi Griffith | The ChronicleThe Alpha Alpha Chi Chapter of Phi Beta Sigma Fraternity, Inc. hosted a Black History Month quiz bowl at the Mary Lou Williams Center Sunday evening.

Darbi Griffith | The ChronicleThe Alpha Alpha Chi Chapter of Phi Beta Sigma Fraternity, Inc. collected canned goods and clothing for the to benefit the Durham Rescue Mission Thursday evening.

Samantha Schafrank | The ChronicleMembers of the senior class reunited at their East Campus dormitories Thursday evening.