February 27, 2004

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Opinion Denise Napoli takes a ride on a bus .

mi DUKE UNIVERSITY Ninety-Ninth Year, issue 108

Duke plans panels on DCU ad

Aren't We In North Carolina?

|

FOCUS to

spring by

lan Crouch

THE CHRONICLE

The University will host a panel discussion on academic freedom and faculty political affiliation March 1, weeks after a Duke Conservative Union advertisement ran in The Chronicle alleging a lack of intellectual diversity among Duke faculty. Since the advertisement ran, campus has been abuzz with debate about the role of politics in the classroom and the extent to which students may feel restricted in their course work by their professors’ ideologies. “The DCU raised a really interesting question with their advertisement, and the provost thought to put together faculty from a broad range of the political spectrum and political affiliations to discuss the issue,” said John Bumess, senior vice president for public affairs and government relations. Monday’s panel discussion—’The Politics of Academic Freedom: Does Political Affiliation Matter?” —will be held at 8 p.m. in room 130 of the Sociology/Psychology Building. Provost Peter Lange, who selected the panelists, will moderate the discussion.

DUKE 97

WWW. CHRONICLE, DUKE. EDU

may expand

by Cindy Yee THE CHRONICLE

SEE PANELS ON PAGE

DURHAM, N.C.

FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 27,2004

9

Administration officials are exploring an expansion ofFOCUS to include a single program in the spring semester for the upcoming year. FOCUS Director Angela O’Rand said the specific program had not yet been chosen but that a decision would be made within the next two months. O’Rand said the popularity of FOCUS among all involved—students, faculty members and administrators—led to the desire to make it available to more students. Although O’Rand said she was excited about a wider FOCUS program, she noted that the incremental and experimental nature of the expansion is necessary. “We are being encouraged by the administration to carefully experiment,” she said. “We have to move carefully because FOCUS is a great success as it is

[currently]. If [the spring program] flops, then we will see that second semes-

ter freshman students don’t need or want

A bicyclist rides across the Main West quadrangle Thursday during a break in the snowfall. By early evening, Duke's severe weather policy was in effect, but as of 3 a.m., no decisions had been made regarding Friday classes.Anywhere between 3 inches and a foot of snow was expected to fall over Thursday and Friday, but in Durham, the heavy snow did not begin sticking to roads until after midnight.

a FOCUS program.” This minor expansion is part of the administration’s greater plan to make FOCUS available to more freshman; in recent years an increasing number of students have SEE FOCUS ON PAGE 9

VALPARAISO 63

Men's hoops takes care of Valpo by

Michael Mueller

rate. The Blue Devils held the Crusaders to a

paltry

31 percent shooting effort from the floor, including It may have been cold outside, but inside a 24 percent effort in the second half. “I think we were as cold as that snow outside Cameron Indoor Stadium, head men’s basketball coach Mike Krzyzewski’s Blue Devils kept everyone from shooting in that first ten-minute period,” Drew joked. “I’ve always admired Mike’s defense from warm with their torrid three-point shooting. Duke (23-3,11-2 in the ACC) made a season-high afar, and today I got to admire it from too close.” Senior forward Joaquim “Kikas” Gomes had 18 15 treys in slamming Valparaiso (13-12, 10-5 MidContinent) 97-63. points and 11 rebounds for the Crusaders, who, de“Duke was extremely hot, and I think that the spite the lopsided score, still managed to outredifference in the game happened too early for us,” bound Duke by a 45-39 margin. Sophomore Dan Valparaiso head coach Homer Drew said. “They Oppland, tl\e team’s leading scorer, added 11 points went ten for eleven in three-point shooting in that and eight rebounds Regardless, the Blue Devils put the game away span when they really just dominated us, and if been human for a while and early, opening the game on a 21-4 run. Valparaiso they could have just missed some of those, it would have helped us stay countered by cutting the deficit to 27-13, but the Blue Devils then scored 12 points in just 109 seca little bit closer.” finished the an onds to put the game well out of reach. The Blue Devils game shooting arc, the led by 58 from beyond otherworldly percent Junior guard Daniel Ewing started the onslaught with a three-pointer. Sixteen seconds later, Ewing Redick and Daniel with three But Ewing apiece. JJ. the two off guards did not provide all the hot shootgrabbed a steal and found JJ. Redick, who hit anhit threes the other trey despite being fouled. After converting the different against ing. Eight players Crusaders, including Luol Deng, Shelden Williams, free throw, Ewing stole the ball again, this time finishing with an emphatic one-handed jam that sent Shavlik Randolph and Nick Horvath. Duke’s defense for was Unfortunately Valparaiso, SEE VALPO ON PAGE 13 just as stifling as its long-distance shooting was accuTHE CHRONICLE

Luol Deng scored 18points to help Duke beat Valparaiso Thursday.


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