The Chronicle
FRIDAY. MARCH 23, 2001
CIRCULATION
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THE INDEPENDENT DAILY AT DUKE UNIVERSITY
WWW.CHRONICLE.DUKE.EDU
VOL. 96. NO. 118
Ad protesters submit demands, get responses By AMBIKA KUMAR The Chronicle
ANDREA OLAND/THE CHRONICLE
A LONG LINE OF STUDENTS, numbering more than 100 and some in tears, filed silently into the Allen Building to deliver their list of demands to President Nan Keohane.
Protests continued yesterday morning over an anti-reparations ad printed in the March 19 edition of The Chronicle. More than 100 students held a silent and passionate demonstration outside President Nan Keohane’s office. The group of mostly black students, many in tears, formed a human chain as they handed Keohane petitions that listed two demands of the University and four ofThe Chronicle. Following delivery, the group filed out of the Allen Building. Later in the day, Keohane sent protest organizers an e-mail rejecting one demand and agreeing to the other. Chronicle editors rejected all four demands in a lengthy and resolute statement.
Protesting students won their battle for the one demand tangentially related to the ad itself: that the administration compile a report addressing progress on demands made by black students in 1969, 1975 and 1997. Keohane expects the report to be issued March 29. But she rejected the students’ second demand—that the administration and individual departments withdraw ads placed in The Chronicle. Keohane expressed hope that The Chronicle’s editors carefully consider the demands, but said that the University does not and would not place restrictions on departments’ ability to advertise. Following a meeting of the protesters at 10:15 p.m. last night, students reSee PROTEST on page 8 P-
Blue Devils ruin Bruins’ season Duke prepares By CRAIG SAPERSTEIN The Chronicle
91 PHILADELPHIA Those who preSt. John’s 59 dieted the DukeUCLA matchup to be a fast-paced, high-scoring, exciting basketball game guessed wrong. In what turned out to be one of their ugliest wins of the seasons, the Blue Devils followed the old NCAA tournament adage of “survive and advance,” disposing of the physical, yet turnover-prone Bruins 76-63 in Philadelphia’s First Union Center late last night. “It ended up being a very different game than people anticipated,” UCLA coach Steve Lavin said. “It was more of a half-court slugfest.” Blue coach Mike Devils Krzyzewski expressed similar postgame sentiments, noting that Duke benefited from its stifling defense. “It wasn’t a pretty game, but we beat a really good team,” Krzyzewski said. “And we got a lot of offensive stuff out of our defense.” Playing suffocating man-to-man defense throughout the evening, the Blue Devils forced 23 UCLA turnovers, created 17 steals and blocked five shots. More importantly, they held the streaky Bruins to only 38.3 percent shooting from the field, including a paltry 25.8 percent in the game’s first half. However, Duke was not able to capitalize on its defense due to poor shooting of its own. The Blue Devils rushed into bad shots as a result of UCLA’s aggressive full-court press, producing a meager 29 percent field goal percentage in the first half. Duke also shot well under its normal three-point shooting percentage of 39.5 by making only 4-of-19 treys in the opening stanza. In particular, Duke’s leading scorer, sophomore Jason Williams, struggled mightily om the field, making only two of eight first-half shots. his JASON WILLIAMS, goes for a layup past UCLA’s Billy Knight. The Duke point guard scored See DUKE-UCLA on page 19 � 19 straight points in the second half. Duke
Pulitzer-prize winning poet visits duke, page
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for West semis By BRODY GREENWALD The Chronicle When the NCAA tournament draw was announced, fifth-seeded Southwest Missouri State struck fear into the hearts offew teams. However, the little-hyped program has begun a course of systematically breaking those onceintrepid hearts. The Blue Devils (30-3) could be next, if they follow in Rutgers’ footsteps and look past tomorrow night’s West Regional semifinal against the Bears (27-5). Duke’s players insist they will not make the same mistake as the ousted Scarlet Knights, who let it be known that they considered the West Region an easy draw. “I just keep telling [the underclassmen] not to look ahead and to just worry about who we play next,” said senior Georgia Schweitzer, who was named a first-team All-American by Basketball Times this week. “It’s so easy to get caught up in [everything]. This time of the year, it’s all over the TV; you turn on the TV and they’re talking about this team and that team. You really have to ignore all that and
concentrate on yourself and the team that you’re going to play.” Tomorrow night at 10:07 p.m. (EST), Schweitzer will lead Duke into Spokane, Wash., where the Blue Devils’ point guard showcased herself as a premier high school recruit at a national tournament four years ago. Schweitzer’s appearance in Spokane then caught Duke’s attention; a similarly dazzling performance this weekend could help the Blue Devils successfully move past their fourth consecutive Sweet 16. Gail Goestenkors had her motivational material—primarily newspaper clippings of overly confident Scarlet Knights—assembled for tomorrow night’s game even before her team defeated Arkansas last Monday, but then Rutgers’ loss to Southwest Missouri State forced the coach to scrap her collection. Instead of taping her clippings to the walls ofDuke’s locker room, Goestenkors found herself readying her players for a team that not only boasts the nation’s leading scorer, but also has nothing to lose and everything to gain against Duke. See WOMEN’S PREVIEW on page 18
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