Tuesday, November 26,2002
Mostly Cloudy High 53, Low 36 www.chronicle.duke.edu Vol. 98, No. 67
The Chronicle I
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Caribbean Turkey The women’s basketball
team heads to the Virgin Islands to play in the Paradise Jam Thursday. See page 9
THE INDEPENDENT DAILY AT DUKE UNIVERSITY
Blue Devils fend off pesky Davidson Public policy may offer joint degree By PAUL DORAN The Chronicle J.J. Redick buried the Duke _95 front end of a pair of 80 foul shots and Daniel Davidson Ewing grabbed the ball after an ugly Davidson three-point attempt as the
men’s basketball team survived the Davidson Wildcats 95-80 Monday night at Cameron Indoor Stadium. “We feel fortunate to win,” head coach Mike Krzyzewski said. “Our kids did some real pressure things down the stretch, which was important because Davidson never gave up.” After a rough opening in which the Wildcats (0-1) led the Blue Devils (2-0)
Sanford directors plan to present a proposal for the creation of a joint doctoral program with other departments in the Graduate School. :
By WHITNEY BECKETT The Chronicle
Although it is still closer to a dream than reality, the Sanford Institute of Public Policy has narrowed its doctorate degree plans to joint degree programs with other graduate and professional schools in the University. internal An committee, which has yet to meet, plans to have a
by as many as five and hung with heavily favored Duke for the majority of the first half, the Blue Devils blew things open in the second, capping off a 17-10 run with a falling down trey by Redick from the right hand corner with 13:52 remaining. The freshman, who was fouled on the play, then drained his free throw, and a Davidson turnover followed by a couple of Shavlik Randolph baskets from the charity stripe gave Duke a 75-56, their largest of the game. “WeTe a young team and we got so
excited like all of a sudden we were going to blow somebody out of there,”
Krzyzewski said. “We let them back from 17 points to 10. We thought we were going to win from our momentum instead of working it, working it, working it.” The Wildcats stormed back, scoring nine unanswered points and pulling within eight of the Blue Devils with a little less than three minutes left. On the next possession, with Duke now playing a stall-type offense, DahnSee DAVIDSON on page 12
full
proposal
ready by the end of the academic year, Public Policy Director of SHAVLIK RANDOLPH creates a turnover in Monday’s game against the Davidson Wildcats. The Blue Devils went on to win the game, 95-BQ.
when then-sophomore Jay Williams rattled off 19 straight points in seven minutes, not missing a shot and leading the Blue Devils over the Bruins, 76-63, en route to a national championship. After 20 months, a lot has changed See UCLA on page 10
See PUBLIC POLICY on page 7
Duke takes on UCLA in Indianapolis Saturday By PAUL DORAN The Chronicle
The last time the men’s basketball team faced off against the UCLA Bruins, everything was on the line. It was the 2001 Sweet 16 in Philadelphia and the fourth seeded Bruins gave top seeded Duke a fit for most of the game, until halfway through the second
Graduate Stud-
ies Frederick Mayer said. An Frederick Mayer approved plan could come to fruition within two to four years. Public Policy leaders have discussed having a doctorate program for the past decade. When the department was last reviewed more than five years ago, the former leaders of Sanford had proposed a stand-alone doctorate program that the review committee did
frame
Hectic holiday season brings traffic, long airport waits By MELISSA SOUCY The Chronicle
There’s no place like home for the holidays—except travelers will have to battle dense congestion to get there this Thanksgiving. As in years past, officials for both airport and ground transportation services are advising travelers to prepare for the hectic travel conditions this season. In the wake of 2001’s terrorist attacks, passenger travel through Raleigh-Durham International Airport dropped 30 percent from Thanksgiving week in 2000. Although fears of flying diverted travelers to the roads, Sgt. Jeff Freuler of the North Carolina Highway Patrol’s Durham office said travelers
Incirio »“
An ongoing art exhibit, sponsored by the Duke institute of the Arts will examine how art is influenced by war. See page 3 '
North Carolina residents and students spoke at a panel Monday that addressed the alleged racial injustice of drug laws. See page 3
this year may notice less road congestion. “People’s
confidence has gotten back up to where they will be flying,” Freuler said. Departures out. of RDU have increased by an average of 15 flights a day since last year, and officials expect more passengers traveling per flight this week. RDU spokesperson Karen Dunton anticipated 200,000 would passengers pass through RDU between Nov. 25 and Dec. I—a 10 to 15 percent increase since last year’s levels. Dunton also predicted the airport will service about 30,000 travelers on each of this week’s busiest days, Wednesday and Sunday. See HOLIDAY TRAVEL on page 6
The Wake County Board of Education voted to revise the current sex education program despite controversy over its wording. See page 4