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The independent news organization at Duke University
MONDAY, MARCH 8, 2021
ONLINE DAILY AT DUKECHRONICLE.COM
ONE HUNDRED AND SIXTEENTH YEAR, ISSUE 23
Meet the DSG president candidates Duke Health saw 4
virus safety complaints last year, all closed By Nadia Bey University News Editor
Carlos Diaz
Christina Wang
By Paige Carlisle
By Chris Kuo
Staff Reporter
Features Managing Editor
Duke Student Government presidential candidate Carlos Diaz, a junior, plans to work closely with student groups and make Duke more equitable for all. Hailing from a small suburb southwest of Chicago, Diaz is majoring in neuroscience on the pre-med track. He currently serves on the Latinx caucus within DSG and is the president of Mi Gente. With Mi Gente, he expanded the Familia program and implemented a peer mentorship program in Durham public schools. As a facilitator advocating for change and equity at the Center for Multicultural Affairs, he assisted in the creation of multiple databases such as a Black, Indigenous and People of Color Faculty/Staff, BIPOC Triangle Businesses and BIPOC Triangle Restaurants database. His campaign centers on his experience witnessing failures
Duke Student Government presidential candidate Christina Wang wants to work with administrators and student groups to make Duke more equitable, accessible and student-centered. “I know there’s a lot of room for Duke to improve in terms of becoming a really equitable space. I’ve seen that being on the [DSG] Equity and Outreach Committee for the past two years,” Wang said. “I have the experience and the relationships built, and the kind of platform set for all these changes that I want to make happen.” A junior from Phoenix, Wang is studying public policy and psychology. She knows the difficulties that can accompany socioeconomic inequality. Her parents fled China in 1991 with $100 between them, and Wang grew up in predominantly white schools where it was difficult to
See DIAZ on Page 12
See WANG on Page 3
The Duke University Health System has played an instrumental role in the management of the COVID-19 pandemic, from delivering vaccines to treating over 1,000 patients, but not without some raising concerns about worker safety. Between March and May, at least four COVID-19-related complaints were filed with the Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) against DUHS facilities, all of which were closed without additional inspections. Additionally, the Occupational Safety and Health division of the N.C. Department of Labor (N.C. OSH) opened an inspection into Duke Regional Hospital in December after an employee died of COVID-19, in accordance with guidelines that require it to open inspections after employee deaths. Sarah Avery, director of the Duke Health News Office, wrote in a statement in September that Duke had not received OSHA violations or actions related to COVID-19. “At Duke Regional Hospital, the safety of our team members and patients is our top priority,” wrote Katie Galbraith, president of Duke Regional Hospital and interim head for Community Health, in a statement to The Chronicle. She stated that the hospital experienced a 40 percent decrease in OSHA Total Recordable Injuries from 2010 to 2019, which are incidents that must be reported to the government. Overall, the hospital has an “A” safety grade from the nonprofit Leapfrog Group as of fall 2020. “The global pandemic in 2020 was challenging, yet Duke Regional and Duke University Health System have been unwavering in our commitment to safety through ensuring our team has necessary Personal Protective Equipment (PPE) and access to testing and contact tracing,” Galbraith wrote.
Complaints
Workers can file OSHA complaints if they feel that a serious hazard exists in the workplace or that their employer is not following national safety regulations. See COMPLAINTS on Page 2
UNC crushes Duke for regular-season sweep By Evan Kolin Sports Editor
CHAPEL HILL—The last time Duke went into Chapel Hill, two buzzer-beaters led the Blue Devils to a miraculous comeback win. there would 91 be But UNC no comeback this DUKE 73 time around, as North Carolina held on to a commanding first-half lead to topple Duke 91-73 victory Saturday night in the Dean E. Smith Center. The Blue Devils’ defeat marked their third loss in a row to close out the regular season, and they’ll now need a miracle in next week’s ACC tournament to try and sneak into the NCAA tournament. It was an all-around effort from the Tar Heels, with four different players scoring in double-digits. Kerwin Walton, Armando Bacot and Caleb Love each notched 18 points for the home team, while Garrison Brooks followed with 14 points of his own.
Freshmen Mark Williams and DJ Steward tallied 18 and 16 points, respectively, for Duke, but it wasn’t enough to make up for a Blue Devil offense that looked ugly all night en route to 15 turnovers, a 40.6% overall mark from the field and an 18.5% mark from three. Sophomore forward Matthew Hurt totaled 14 points but on a mere 6-of16 shooting from the floor and 2-of-10 from deep. The ACC Player of the Year candidate has struggled against the Tar Heels throughout his career, scoring no points in 15 minutes in two matchups last season and only seven points in the Blue Devils’ loss to North Carolina earlier this season. “[North Carolina head coach Roy Williams] had his team really prepared. You know, it’s senior night and their fans were great. And I didn’t have my team prepared the way they did,” Duke head coach Mike Krzyzewski said. “Coming off these two tough losses, I thought the things we did in
practice were really good, but they didn’t come into fruition. They didn’t work out. So that’s on me, because they really knocked us back.” Duke (11-11, 9-9 in the ACC) appeared to be generating some momentum in the middle of the second half, with graduate transfer Patrick Tape stealing a Tar Heel inbound pass and the Blue Devils eventually finding Hurt for a three to cut North Carolina’s edge to 54-40 with 13 minutes remaining. Just under a minute later, a Jordan Goldwire steal seemed to be leading to a wide open breakaway layup, but Tar Heel junior Leaky Black swatted Goldwire’s attempt out of bounds, firing up the limited capacity crowd of 3,200. Then, after a few minutes of quiet backand-forth scoring, five consecutive points from Brooks on a jumper and top-of-the-key three
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Courtesy of the ACC North Carolina took down Duke 91-73 on Saturday, dealing the Blue Devils their third loss in a row to close out the regular season.
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