December 1, 2009 issue

Page 1

The Chronicle 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

TUESDAY, DECEMBER 1, 2009

ONE HUNDRED AND FIFTH YEAR, Issue 68

www.dukechronicle.com

DSG Special session

Outlook darkens for Duke Athletics Senate finalizes YT reform by Naureen Khan The chronicle

The opulent Schwartz-Butters Athletic Center, home to Coach K’s office and nestled in the heart of Duke’s athletic complex, serves as a testament to the Department of Athletics’ successes in the last 75 years. First, there’s the building itself, encased in glass and constructed as part of a $75 million construction blitz in the late 1990s. Athletics in Then, there’s the Sports a recession Hall of Fame housed in Schwartz-Butters’ lobby, Part 1 of 2 celebrating accolades ranging from Danny Farrar’s 1936 NCAA boxing championship to Duke basketball’s national titles in 1991, 1992 and 2001. But down the athletics department’s administrative hallway, senior officials don’t have time to rest on their laurels. They are confronting perhaps their biggest challenge yet—one that has little to do with the next NCAA title; namely, how to stay afloat in the choppy financial waters that have threatened to knock over athletic programs across the country. The Executive Budget Committee for Duke Athletics, created by Director of Athletics Kevin White in August 2008, has prepared a five-phase plan to slash costs wher-

New bylaw similar to one vetoed by Nur by Matthew Chase The chronicle

After almost a month of debate, Duke Student Government senators passed a bylaw Monday night that will allow the student body to elect the Young Trustee. According to the bill, the Young Trustee Nominating Committee will select three Young Trustee finalists and the student body will then elect a Young Trustee from among the finalists. “I’m in favor of an election,” said Athletics and Campus Services Senator Ben Bergmann, a junior. “I think many of us feel that that is the most fair.” The Young Trustee Nominating Committee will be composed of six DSG members elected by the Senate, six non-DSG affiliated at-large members who apply for the positions and six student group presidents selected by a council of student group presidents. In its regularly scheduled meeting

See athletics on page 8 Michael Naclerio/The Chronicle

See DSG on page 7

Visiting student killed in New York car crash Brazilian native Sartori was ‘passionate about life,’ friends say by Will Robinson and Lindsey Rupp The chronicle

Luísa Pinho Sartori, a visiting international student from Brazil, died Sunday in a car accident in New York state. She was 20 years old. A student at Universidade Federal do Rio de Janeiro, Sartori was studying at Duke during the Fall semester. Sartori was on her way back to campus from Vermont Sunday when the car she was riding in hit the back of another car in traffic on the New York State Thruway, according to a Duke News release. An investigation into the accident is still pending. Sartori, a back-seat passenger who was wearing her seat belt, died from her injuries at a nearby hospital about an hour after the 1:30 p.m. collision. Three other people in the car were treated and released. Alcohol was not involved in the accident. Sartori’s friends, senior Rebeca Benchimol, sophomore Daniel Benzecry and freshman Ana Graneiro wrote in a statement that they “rejoiced” at having Sartori as part of the close Brazilian community at Duke. “Luisa was honest; she said what she felt and felt what she said” they wrote. “She was passionate about life, and lived it accordingly.”

Few easy wins on Duke’s schedule, Page 9

Sartori was studying biology at Duke, and had hoped to eventually work in the Amazon Rainforest, according to her friends. A volunteer at the Lemur Center, Sartori was also studying zoology and ecology. Sartori arrived in North Carolina with her parents in mid-August and moved into her Central Campus apartment. She wrote about her experiences at Duke on her personal blog titled “Small things that brighten your day,” which she wrote in Portuguese. In her blog posts she described shopping to furnish her apartment, wanting to collect all 50 state quarters and attending her first Tailgate. In one post accompanied by a photo of the Convocation ceremony in the Chapel, Sartori described her impressions of Duke. “They have this sense of unity about their University that we in Brazil just don’t,” she wrote in Portuguese. “That ceremony was for every freshman at Duke—there was no division by major or course of study, you know?... Everyone who came in this year is identified like one entity, the Class of 2013. That creates a really cool atmosphere of integration.” Sartori’s friends said she will be remembered for her See sartori on page 5

photo courtesy of Ana Graneiro

Visiting international student Luísa Pinho Sartori died in a car accident in New York Sunday afternoon. She was 20 years old.

ONTHERECORD

“The thing is... I want you to get home safe at night.”

—State Rep. Garland Pierce on the new law banning texting and driving. See story page 3

Later deliveries Up late? Merchants on Points will be too, PAGE 4


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.