January 14, 2019

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The Chronicle

See Inside Barrett drops 32 in Tallahassee

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T 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, JANUARY 14, 2019 DUKECHRONICLE.COM

ONE HUNDRED AND FOURTEENTH YEAR, ISSUE 32

Is a recession on the horizon?

MEN’S BASKETBALL

Cam Reddish’s game-winner lifts men’s basketball to win at Florida State

Fuqua survey of CFOs suggests economic pullback may arise in US before 2021

By Winston Lindqwister Sports Managing Editor

TALLAHASSEE, Fla.—All season long, the brightest lights of sports media have shined on Zion Williamson. But with an eye injury late in the first half sidelining arguably Duke’s biggest star, the Blue Devils turned to a resurgent five-star to be the hero. No. 1 Duke took down No. 13 Florida State 8078 Saturday afternoon at the Donald L. Tucker Civic Center thanks to a wide-open game-winning 3-pointer from the wing with 0.8 seconds left by freshman Cam Reddish. R.J. Barrett and Reddish combined for 55 points 78 on 19-of-34 shooting, and FSU DUKE 80 despite hardships late in the first half and early in the second half, the Blue Devils never stopped battling to get the win. “Thank you God. That was it,” Reddish said of his final shot. “That’s all that went through my head.” Down by one with a just four minutes left to play, Reddish nailed a 3-pointer to claw the visiting team back on top. Although Tre Jones had the chance to widen Duke’s lead with a one-and-one, the freshman bricked the front end to give the Seminoles the ball back. Poor free throw shooting haunted the Blue Devils all night, with Duke making just 60.0 percent of its shots from the line. See M. BASKETBALL on Page 9

By Rose Wong

Nearly half of American chief financial officers are predicting a recession by the end of 2019, according to a recent Duke survey of more than 500 CFOs. The Duke/CFO Global Business Outlook survey found that even more U.S. CFOs—82 percent—thought that a recession would occur by the end of 2020. The survey also asked foreign CFOs to predict whether a 2019 recession would occur in their country—97 percent of CFOs from Africa, 86 percent from Canada, 67 percent from Europe, 54 percent from Asia and 42 percent from Latin America predicted a recession. “The U.S. outlook has declined, and moreover the outlook is even worse in many other parts of the world, which will lead to softer demand for U.S. goods,” said John Graham, survey director and

OPINION

Columnist

Eric Wei | Staff Photographer

D. Richard Mead Jr. family professor of business administration at the Fuqua School of Business, in a press release. Signs of a recession are also emerging on Wall Street, according to a CNN Business article. The S&P 500, an American stock market index, has fallen 6.2 percent in 2018, posting its worst performance in a decade. Multiple factors could contribute to the anticipated U.S. recession, which Graham explained to be a natural part of the economic cycle. “We’re in the longest growth streak that the U.S. economy has had in a very long time. It’s natural to have slowdowns or corrections,” he said. “The economy can’t grow forever.” The U.S. economy depends on the growth of its trading partners, which are also experiencing economic slowdown,

Graham explained. He suggested that the Federal Reserve Bank take a pause in increasing interest rates, which are associated with slowed economic growth. The government can also soften the economic fall by investing in new infrastructure, which would inject jobs and money into the economy. Improving the economy requires creating an improved political climate and resisting government shutdowns, Graham said. A shutdown temporarily withholds income from some government employees—who may become reluctant to spend—and causes economic uncertainty that makes businesses hesitant to invest. “A more efficiently functioning See RECESSION on Page 12

My roommate, the snake

By Jordan Diamond

Freshman Cam Reddish hit the game-winning threepointer to lift Duke over Florida State Saturday.

Staff Reporter

Jeremy Chen | Graphic Design Editor

Finals week for most Duke students is a time defined by long nights of studying, stress and tests. Or so I hear. Somehow, I ended up with no finals last semester and instead used that time to travel to New York with my boyfriend. The concrete jungle where dreams are made of, New York was our idyllic paradise; an Eden of sorts 400 miles away from Edens Quad for a figurative Adam and Steve who can’t populate the world on account of being gay men. But like the biblical garden of Abrahamic lore, my Eden too was liminal, accessible now only in memories of my once innocent state of mind. And like the outcome for the inhabitants of that allegorious space, my bliss was ended by a snake.

On December 17, 2018, my roommate Gabriel Goldhagen texted me “Jordan! There was a teeny tiny dead snake in the room. I’m not even kidding. There has been a snake in our room all semester. Lol.” My brave roommate who picked it up and disposed of it described the reptile as “curled up in a ball, decaying.” He said it “wasn’t too big,” and then we made penis jokes about that comment (“How big is your snake?”). Within my head, however, this development was no laughing matter. Over winter break, I had nightmares of a giant basilisk emerging from under my twin bed at school and killing me with a single stare. On other nights it was a boa constrictor slithering across my body and slowly squeezing the life out of me, hissing with cruel pleasure. Any time I remembered my dorm, I felt an imagined snake gliding over my legs until

I reminded myself that it wasn’t real. As someone whose primary exposure to snakes growing up was from “Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets,” I learned early on that snakes were horrifying monsters and (spoiler alert) also the last horcrux that Harry and his crew have to destroy. Harrison Ford, screaming in panic about a snake in his plane in “Indiana Jones,” socialized me to fear reptiles early on. Come to think about it, Nicki Minaj’s “Anaconda” may be the only positive media portrayal of snakes I was ever exposed to, and even then, the song is (spoiler alert) mostly about butts. Needless to say, then, my immediate reaction was terror, and an entirely rational refusal to return to Duke or the state of North Carolina at all. See SNAKE on Page 11

RIP the STINF

Men’s basketball faces Syracuse

Monday Monday

New ‘Incapacitation Form’ to replace the STINF is not limited to just physical illness. PAGE 2

The teams will do battle Monday evening in a rematch of the Sweet 16 from last year. PAGE 8

Our satirical columnist University’s plans for 2019.

INSIDE — News 2 | Sports 4 | Crossword 9 | Opinion 10 | Serving the University since 1905 |

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