November 21, 2005

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students

durham

6 School of Law students offer help in Gua ntanamo Bay cases

Organization introduces PLENTY currency to spark local economy

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sports

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Blue Devils come up just short of Tar Heels

The Chronicle

MONDAY, NOVEMBER 21, 2005

DAILY AT DUKE UNIVERSITY

THE INI

3 named Rhodes scholars by

writing

Saidi Chen

THE CHRONICLE

Ashley Dean THE CHRONICLE

by

SEE FRANKLIN ON PAGE 6

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ONE HUNDRED AND FIRST YEAR, ISSUE 60

Historian Franklin discusses Historian John Hope Franklin had no intentions of becoming an author. It took a lot of persuading to encourage him to write his first book about the history of African-Americans. “I found myself under enormous pressure from a big publishing company in New York... and finally it became irresistible,” he said. “I could not decline.” Franklin, an active supporter of civil rights and namesake of the John Hope Franklin Center, spoke to a gathering of fans Friday evening to cap off a day-long symposium in his honor. The symposium, “Cross Currents: Conversations about Collecting and Documenting African and African-American History and Culture,” commemorated the 10th Anniversary of Duke’s John Hope Franklin Collection for African and AfricanAmerican Documentation. Durham was just one of several

i

JIANGHAI HO/THE CHRONICLE

Following their third straight loss in the National Championship game,theBlue Devils were depressed and disappointed.

Duke falls short of title bid by

Galen Vaisman

THE CHRONICLE

LOUISVILLE, Ky. Another year, another disappointing outcome to the Blue Devils’ final game. For the third season in a row, Duke’s DUKE pla ers MARYLAND I 1 were forced to tearfully pack up their equipment and watch from the sidelines as another team celebrated a victory in the NCAA Field

Hockey Championships. The third-seeded Blue Devils (18-5) were shut out by first-seeded Maryland, 1-0, in the finals of the NCAA Tournament. It was the first 1-0 championship game in tournament history. After avenging its last two championship game loses with a 3-2 win over second-seeded Wake Forest Friday night, Duke’s players entered Sunday afternoon’s game confident that they would finally bring the National Championship trophy

home to Durham. Yet despite dominating the majority of the game, the Blue Devils were held back by a relentless Terrapin defense that held them scoreless for the second time this season. For Bozman, the loss was the fifth of her career in the National Championship game and her third as coach of the Blue Devils. Bozman said this tide-game loss was particularly painful because it was the first time that she felt SEE TITLE GAME ON SW PAGE 1

Three Duke seniors were awarded prestigious Rhodes Scholarships Saturday. Adam Chandler, William Hwang and Rahul Satija were among the 32 Americans selected to study at the University of Oxford for two or three years with die scholarship. All tuition and expenses are covered for as long as an individual needs to complete his or her course of study. Duke had eight finalists for the scholarship going into this weekend’s regional interview process. “I don’t think anyone ever expects to win something like this,” Satija said. “It’s an amazing honor and an amazing opportunity.” Last year, for the first time since 1992, no Duke student was chosen for the scholarship. In the past four years, seven students from the University have been selected as scholars. All three of this year’s winners said though the University was supportive in helping them submit applications and prepare for interviews, they did not see any institutional change officials made from years past that may SEE RHODES ON PAGE 8

Redick, Williams overpower Davidson by

Alex Fanaroff THE CHRONICLE

After absorbing a 29-point beating by No. 1 Duke, Davidson head coach Bob McKillop

Professor emeritus John Hope Franklin spoke about writing his autobiography at a symposium this weekend.

resorted to a comparison from his high school days in New York City to describe the way the Blue Devils played “This is an entire DAVIDSON 55 team that plays like DUKE 84 they live on Park Avenue, but they refuse to give the court up on West Fourth Street,” McKillop said. “West Fourth Street’s a pretty darn competitive park, and it’s asphalt, and these guys aren’t afraid of getting their knees bloody and their fingers stuck in the chain rims. And that’s what makes them so special.” The Blue Devils needed that toughness to defeat Davidson (0-1), 84-55, Saturday night, McKillop and Duke head coach Mike Krzyzewski both said. The Blue Devils (54)) used a 14-5 run that spanned from the last minute of the first half to the 15:42 mark of the second peri-

od to push an 11-point advantage to 20. The run, sparked by JJ. Redick’s threepointer as time expired in the first half and capped by back-to-back threes by Redick and Lee Melchionni, effectively ended Davidson’s chances for an upset. Redick’s three-pointer to close the half was also particularly devastating, McKillop said. The Blue Devils’ lead never again dipped below 18 points, and they closed the game on a 14-4 streak to win going away. Redick and forward Shelden Williams— Duke’s two preseason All-Americans—provided much of the offensive punch in a game when only one other Blue Devil reached double figures. The two combined to shoot 18for-31 and finished with 49 total points. Redick’s season-high 29 points included four of Duke’s 10 three-pointers. Williams avoided the foul trouble that plagued him during Duke’s win over Seton Hall SEE DAVIDSON ON SW PAGE 1

Shelden Williams was one blockaway from a triple-double, as he tallied 20 points, 10rebounds and nine blocks.


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