Friday, September 28, 2001
Sunny High 70, Low 47 www.chronicle.duke.edu Vol. 97, No. 26
The Chronicle
Blue Zone Blues Due to the basketball ticket campout, students must move their cars from the last two right parking lots by 3:30 p.m. today.
THE INDEPENDENT DAILY AT DUKE UNIVERSITY
Students camp out for basketball tix
Construction on WEL progresses � Despite concerns that construction on the new dormitory would finish late, the University expects to complete the WEL next summer.
By WHITNEY BECKETT
By DAVE INGRAM
Although basketball season is still months away, some fans are already tenting. Graduate and professional students begin their 36-hour campout for season tickets tonight at 7:30 p.m. “It’s different than [Kzyzewskiville],” said Drew Brown, a third-year law student. “The only thing it can be compared to is the night before the UNC game, because everyone has to be there, and everyone is so excited.” This year, the campout will offer many new additions for its participants, including T-shirts commemorating the event and a big-screen television that will play the Duke-Virginia football game and past basketball games. There will also be social events and opportunities for community service. “It is similar to the undergraduate camping experience in that it is very fun,” said Will Tyson, a third-year sociology graduate student who helped plan the campout.. “It’s an older crowd, but we still know how to have fun. Campout is basically the crown jewel of the graduate and professional student year.” Unlike undergraduates, graduate and professional students do not camp out for each game, but instead use this one opportunity to win season tickets. See CAMPOUT on page 8 �
The West-Edens Link is nearing its final form, and is on schedule for completion in July 2002. The three-building, $37 million complex will include about 350 undergraduate beds, and administrators and students hope it will bridge the residential divide between Main West Campus and Edens Quadrangle. Administrators had questioned the completion date after construction workers discovered a large pit of debris last winter. After some intense work over the summer, however, the construction is on a tight schedule to be finished by next fall. “We are on schedule. We don’t have much slack, and we’re thankful that the hurricanes didn’t hit this year,” said Judith White, assistant vice president and director of the Residential Program Review. The structures of the buildings have reached their final height, with the exception of the 75-foot tower of Building D, the section closest to Few Quadrangle. In the final stages, the University is focusing on how best to integrate the WEL into its surroundings. A bridge and ground-level staircase will connect Buildings A and B to the staircase
The Chronicle
The Chronicle
A CRANE INSTALLS FRAMES into the windows of Buildings B and C in the West-Edens Link Thursday. Behind Building B is one of three towers in the 350-bed complex.
See WEL on page 7 &
Blue Devils hunt for first win this season against UVa. Team hopes to rekindle magic of past upset in Charlottesville By PAUL DORAN The Chronicle
Twenty-two games ago, the football team marched into Scott Stadium in Charlottesville, Va., and came away with a 24-17 double overtime victory. After coming from behind 17-10 to tie the score in regulation, Duke began overtime by missing a field goal and, fortunately for the Blue Devils, Virginia reciprocated on its next possession. One possession later, Duke was on the Cavs’ seven yard line and landed in the endzone on a botched gimmick play that somehow found the hands of tight end Benjamin Watson. A Lamar Grant interception on the Cavaliers’ final try sealed the deal for the first win of the Carl Franks era and the first for the Blue Devils in Charlottesville since Franks played tight end for Duke in 1981. But that was 22 games ago. Since then, Duke has won only two games, and currently holds the longest losing streak in the nation —a streak that recently hit 15 games after last weeks’ 447 loss to Northwestern. This weekend, when the Blue Devils (0-3, 0-1 in the ACC) make the return trip for a 1 p.m. game Saturday against former New York Jets coach A1 Groh and the Cavaliers (2-1,1-0), they can only hope the magic from two years ago somehow finds them again. “We need to get some turnovers on defense; that’s
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going to be critical,” said Franks. “We need to make sure we take care of the ball on offense. We need to score when we cross the 50 [yard line] whether it’s a field goal or a touchdown. Whatever it is, offensively we’ve got to score. Defensively we’ve got to show that last week was not the way we tackle people. We’ve got to tackle better.” Since their last meeting in the Old Dominion State, the two programs could not be on more different trajectories. While Duke has been one of the worst teams in Division I, UVa. has been on the rise, going to bowls in the last two seasons and recently upsetting then-No. 18 Clemson 26-24 last weekend in South Carolina. That win gave the Cavaliers a reason to believe they can make some serious noise in the ACC this season. “We are in the hunt. It’s a long hunt, but we’re in it,” said Groh, who last faced Franks while coaching Wake Forest to a 46-26 loss during the Duke coach’s playing years. “There has to be a first step to raise the level of expectations and to learn the difference between really trying hard and competing. When you compete, you find away to win, whatever it might be.” Duke will also be looking for away to win, but unfortunately for the Blue Devils, they may be a little shorthanded in their efforts.
Researchers at three universities have found that choline consumption by preg nant women may improve their unborn children’s memory See page 3
See FOOTBALL
on page
16
>
CHRONICLE FILE PHOTO
THE BLUE DEVIL OFFENSIVE LINE rests poised for a play to begin at practice. The team faces the Caviliers Saturday.
Projectors make good teaching tools, but they seemingly make easy targets for burglars. Six projectors have been stolen from the Fuqua School of Business alone. See page 3
Gov. Mike Easley approved the long-delayed state budget bill. The final plan calls for a $620 million tax hike and a 2.86 percent pay raise for teachers. See page 4