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TUESDAY, APRIL 26, 2005
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THE INDEPENDENT DAILY AT DUKE UNIVERSITY
ONE HUNDREDTH YEAR, ISSUE 140
Tenting Williams to stay for senior year changes considered by
Andrew Yaffe
THE CHRONICLE
Duke fans can finally exhale. Shelden Williams announced Monday that he will return to the Blue Devils for his senior season as a co-captain of one of the most talented and experienced teams in the nation next year. “From the time I arrived in Durham it has been my goal to earn my degree,” Williams said. “For that reason along with others, I am going to pass on the opportunity to enter the NBA draft.” The 6-foot-9 forward is coming off his most productive season. He averaged 15.5 points and led the conference -in rebounding with 11.2 per game. Williams also shot .582 from the field, second best in the league. The first team All-ACC selection attracted NBA scouts’ attention for his overpowering defensive abilities. The 2005 NABC National Defensive Player of the Year set the Duke single-season record with 122 blocked shots and is second on Duke’s alltime list with 285. “Shelden is a different type ofdefensive player than we have had in the past, but he is definitely up there with the other Duke standouts,” head coach Mike Krzyzewski said when Williams picked up the NABC award. “He’s the best shot blocker I’ve coached, and with our team this year, he was the main reason we were a good defensive team.” The 2005 senior class is one of the weakest in recent memory, prompting numerous underclassmen across the country to declare for the June 28 draft. By electing to stay, Williams resisted
Junior forward
by
Lauren
Kobylarz THE CHRONICLE
At an open forum Monday night, approximately 15 students voiced concerns to newly appointed Head Line Monitor Lauren Troyer, a junior, about Krzyzewskiville and next year’s tenting policy. Troyer is currently in the process of evaluating the tenting system to create an improved policy for next season. This year’s Head Line Monitor Steve Rawson, a senior, and newly elected Duke Student Government- President Jesse Longoria, a junior, were also present to help guide the discussion to improve Krzyzewskiville. In particular, students addressed the proposal to shorten the length of the tenting period, which has increased drastically in the last few years. With student input, Troyer will attempt to refocus the purpose of tenting to assist Duke basketball rather than promote a commercial fan image. “When it becomes a pride issue rather than support for the basketball team we’ve crossed the line,” Rawson explained. “People are just out there to prove that we are the iron men or women, and we are the most hardcore Duke fans—that’s not what it’s about and we are very close to that threshold right now.”
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SEE K-VILLE ON PAGE 8
Several ACC underclassmen have enteredthe NBA draft, butShelden Williams will return to Duke next year.
SEE WILLIAMS ON PAGE 10
Panel discusses U.S. health care crisis by
McGowan Jasten CHRONICLE THE
In a panel aimed at addressing issues surrounding the accessibility ofhealth in-
JuniorLauren Troyer and senior Steve Rawson listen to suggestions about the future ofK-ville.
surance to Americans Monday night, three professionals proposed a wide range of answers to the growing concern. The panel was comprised of Dr. StefFie Woolhandler, associate professor of medi cine at Harvard Medical School, Dr. Daniel Johnson, a clinical professor of radiology and former president of the American Medical Association, and Rep. David Price, D.-Dist. 4. The panelists answered in short individual presentations. “There are some things on which we have agreement—we want quality health care that’s affordable,” Johnson said. “A big problem is that the patient is insulated from the cost because somebody else is paying for it.” Johnson’s presentation focused on
the benefits of a system that allows for
“expanded choices, individual selection and ownership with the right to change [plans]” as opposed to a “one-size-fitsall” health system. “There are a variety of ways to implement health care, each with advantages and disadvantages,” Johnson said. “That’s what markets do best —they put all the imperfect elements together and make thinks work.” Woolhandler disagreed and argued that the key to providing more favorable health insurance coverage is to increase public accountability rather than to increase the level of privatization. Her group, Physicians for a National Health Program, is united around the concept of a single-payer system, in which the government finances health care but SEE PANEL ON PAGE 6
N.C. Rep. David Price, D.-Dist.4, and other panelists discussed the state of health insurance in America.