February 5, 2001

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Duke came out slowly but ended with a fury in a 42-point rout over Florida State yesterday in Cameron Indoor Stadium.

Cargill falls short in Rolex Indoors Swing space

talks heat up

By RAY HOLLOMAN The Chronicle

Familiar face. Unfamiliar result Freshman Ansley Cargill, already a winner of three tournaments, came within four games of becoming the second Duke tennis player to win the Rolex Indoor Tournament and the first to win two straight legs of the collegiate Grand Slam. She fell to longtime junior circuit rival and current Stanford topseed Laura Granville 6-3, 6-7(7-4), 6-3 in the finals in Dallas yesterday. It was just her second loss this season. “I knew it was going to be a tough match,” she said. “Laura and I always have tough matches. We grew up playing each other it seems. She’s someone I love to play to gauge my game by. In the end today, she just came out a little bit stronger.” Granville, who claimed the Indoor title for a second straight year, extended her personal win streak to 55 matches and became See TENNIS in SpOftSWiap, page 3/

With dorm renovations scheduled for fall 2002, selective groups are considering three proposals that suggest ways to use Trent as transitional housing. By AMBIKA KUMAR The Chronicle

REGAN HSU/THE CHRONICLE

ANSLEY CARGILL practices before heading to Dallas for the Rolex Indoor Tournament, where she came within four games of taking the championship.

Sophomores living on West Campus who thought they had sidestepped living in Trent Dormitory may need to think again. Beginning in fall 2002, the much maligned dorm will serve as swing space to store students as buildings on West Campus are renovated. Administrators, the Interfratemity Council and selective living groups are now discussing three ideas to allocate that space equitably. Under one plan, an entire quad would move to Trent for each year of renovations, which are expected to last three to four years. Plan two suggests that during one year, all selective houses would be moved to Trent; See TRENT on page 4

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THE TOBACCO WAREHOUSE adjacent to the Center for Documentary Studies will likely be used for an arts complex if Duke’s negotiations with Liggett are successful.

Arts programs to receive new space The steam plant and a tobacco warehouse are being considered as sites By JAIME LEVY The Chronicle

ROSS MONTANTE/TUE

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CHRONICLE

Less than a month after a task force on the programs in dance, drama, and film and video reported that the University should consider creating an arts complex to house all three programs, it looks like the committee’s suggestion may materialize. Executive Vice President Tallman Trask said he is currently negotiating with the Liggett Group for a warehouse adjacent to the Center for Documentary Studies. If Duke acquires the site, an eight-acre plot just off Swift Avenue, it will likely be used for the arts complex complete with studio, office and performance space.

page award for academic excellence,

At the same time, Trask is also considering converting the steam plant off of East Campus into a similar facility. “I’m trying to provide loft art space in an old warehouse—the type of space artists kill for,” Trask said. In its Jan. 6 report—made available only to senior administrators and contributors to the committee until it was obtained by The Chronicle in mid-January—the task force concluded that “the arts community at Duke is in sore need of leadership, financial support and new or renovated space.” The five-person committee praised each pro-

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