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
Monday, March 15, 2010
ONE HUNDRED AND FIFTH YEAR, Issue 110
www.dukechronicle.com
Man shot GT 61 65 DUKE and killed ACC TOURNAMENT CHAMPIONSHIP • NCAA TOURNAMENT BRACKET REVEALED Singler, Scheyer carry Duke to gold at hospital
DUPD officers involved face state investigation
by Sabreena Merchant THE CHRONICLE
GREENSBORO, N.C. — It wasn’t always pretty Sunday at Greensboro Coliseum, but when the going got tough, Duke came through. The top-seeded Blue Devils (29-5) appeared to have the ACC championship in the bag with three-and-a-half minutes to go and a 10-point lead over No. 7 Georgia Tech (22-12). Duke was in the double bonus, and all the team had to do was trade baskets with the Yellow Jackets the rest of the way. All of a sudden, Derrick Favors slammed the ball home and the Blue Devils were nursing a one-point lead with under a minute remaining. Enter Jon Scheyer. Scheyer struggled shooting throughout the Tournament, hitting 13-of-40 shots in three games. He had a particularly difficult
by Lindsey Rupp THE CHRONICLE
See ACC final on SW 9
inside:
• Find out what Kyle Singler did to earn ACC Tournament MVP honors • Check out the full NCAA Tournament bracket, and a breakdown of Duke’s path to the Final Four
IAN SOILEAU/The Chronicle
Junior Kyle Singler cuts down the nets for the second time in a week after Duke’s four-point defeat of Georgia Tech in the ACC Tournament title game. Singler shot poorly from the field but put up 20 points.
The Duke University Police Department has released the names of the two officers involved in the fatal shooting of an unidentified man early Saturday morning. The incident occurred at about 1 a.m. outside Duke University Hospital’s main entrance on Erwin Road and Fulton Street. DUPD Chief John Dailey said the shooting resulted from an “altercation” between the man and officers Larry Carter and Jeffrey Liberto. Carter has worked for DUPD for 23 years and Liberto has served for two. “This is a tragic thing, it’s tragic for everybody that was involved,” Dailey said in an interview Saturday. “Absolutely our thoughts are with this person’s family.” Dailey would not comment Sunday on the events leading up to the altercation or the incident itself. He declined to say how many shots were fired or whether the victim was armed, citing the pending investigations by the department and the State Bureau of Investigation. DUPD officials identified the officers involved in a statement Saturday at about 5 p.m. Carter and Liberto are now on paid administrative leave in accordance with procedure, a Duke official announced in See shooting on page 7
DSG election calendar undergoes reshuffling by Matthew Chase THE CHRONICLE
When candidates running for Duke Student Government president or executive vice president start campaigning Wednesday, they will be running their campaigns “with less risk,” according to an August executive order. In the past, the election of executive positions—president, executive vice president and four vice presidents—was held on one day, followed by the election of senators two weeks later. This year, however, students will elect the president and executive vice president March 30 and the vice presidents and senators April 15. The change will “allow highly qualified candidates who run unsuccessful campaigns for president and [executive Awa Nur vice president] to run for a [vice president] position,” according to the executive order, which DSG President Awa Nur and her cabinet signed Aug. 25.
Check out photos from the UNC game and bonfire, Pages 8-9
Nur, a senior, said the cabinet discussed these changes after her election last year. The change should also increase voter turnout for senator elections, which will be paired with vice presidential elections, she said. “The [vice presidential] candidates have a vested interest in getting out the vote that day,” the executive order states. “We already have excellent turnout in freshman Senate as well as president elections… but Spring Senate election turnout lingers around 25 percent.” Last Spring, voter turnout for executive positions was 38 percent, down from 40.5 percent the previous year. DSG Executive Vice President Gregory Morrison, a junior who is running for DSG president, said he supports the change. “I think that it’s a good change because it increases the flexibility of options because it keeps qualified people in DSG,” Morrison said. Former DSG President Elliot Wolf, Trinity ’08 and a former Chronicle columnist, said the change will probably have a minor impact, but added that allowing candidates who lose
races to run for vice presidential spots can be helpful. “When I was elected there were a number of highly qualified people who didn’t win the executive vice president or vice president spots and I thought that was unfortunate enough that I actually appointed some of them to certain spots in DSG,” said Wolf. “When you have a lot of very qualified people, if the loser leaves the organization then that’s bad for the organization.” Former DSG President Jordan Giordano, who was in office last year, said his cabinet discussed a similar change. He added that senior Chelsea Goldstein and junior Mike Lefevre, who were unsuccessful presidential candidates last year, would have made strong vice presidential candidates this year, if given the opportunity to run. “Chelsea and Mike did a great job in their vice president positions and I was disappointed that both of them could not hold their positions, and hopefully this [executive order] will alleviate this,” said Giordano, Trinity
ONTHERECORD
“I wrote a letter to every major league baseball office, and got back 20 we-don’t-think-so’s,”
—ESPN President George Bodenheimer on his early career. See story page 3
See DSG elections on page 11
Lady Blue Devils win ACC Tournament, SW 11