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The Chronicle
MONDAY, J ANUARY 2 13, 2006
THE INDEPENDENT DAILY AT DUKE UNIVERSITY
ONE HUNDRED AND FIRST YEAR, ISSUE 80
Pitt pleads
RLHS to review all selectives
guilty to Blackman murder by
Despite
THE CHRONICLE
by
SEE BLACKMAN ON PAGE 8
David Graham
THE CHRONICLE
LAURA BETH
DOUGLAS/THE CHRONICI
When Duke and Tennessee met last season, the Blue Devils escaped Knoxville with a 59-57 victory over the Lady Vols.
BATTLE OF THE BEST Duke, Lady Vols to clash with No. 1 rank up for grabs
peal.
Assistant District Attor n e y David Saacks initially announced the plans to pursue the death penalty in the case in April 2005. But after Pitt pleaded guilty, prosecutors asked Blackman’s family to decide whether to settie with life imprisonment or to pursue the death penalty at trial. They ultimately agreed to show mercy.
,
moratorium upheld
Laura Newman
Thomas Anthony Pitt, 24, pleaded guilty to the brutal murder offormer Duke employee Curtis Blackman in a hearing in a Durham County courthouse Friday. After Pitt admitted his guilt in the first-degree murder case, he was sentenced to life in prison without the possibility of parole or ap-
confusion
by
Andrew Yaffe
THE CHRONICLE
The No. 1 team in the country is playing in Cameron Indoor Stadium tonight. This time, however, its uniforms will VS. orange. ;
'
Hbe
Top-ranked
Tennessee will TONIGHT, 7:30 p.m. play the No. 2 Cameron Indoor Blue Devils at 7:30 p.m., and the Duke players and coaches
know this is more than an everyday game. “We’re looking forward to the matchup,” Duke head coach Gail Goestenkors said. “I’m glad we both came through and we can have that No. 1 vs. No. 2 matchup.” Though it may seem odd for a coach to emphasize team rankings, both Goestenkors and her players know the importance of a game of this stature for each team, as well as the sport as a whole.
In a possible preview of the National Championship game, Cameron Indoor Stadium will be sold out for the first women’s game since Tennessee last came to town Jan. 24, 2004 and knocked off then-No. 1 Duke. Even though the Blue Devils (18-0) are not used to playing in front of large crowds at home, they believe they are ready to handle the more intense atmosphere. SEE W. BBALL ON SW PAGE 4
The ban on new housing sections for selective living groups will remain in place despite the fact that two groups received sections last week, Residence Life arid Housing Services officials said. Any future moves will follow' the conclusion of a four-part initiative to review and revamp the selective house system, said Eddie Hull, dean of residence life and executive director of housing services. Hull said Delta Tau Delta and Chi Psi fraternities received housing because of their long-standing requests and the anticipated length of the review process, which will take at least a year and a half to complete. “I don’t see other groups being added until the process that’s going on now is ended,” said Joe Gonzalez, associate dean for residence life. “If a group came to us next week and said, ‘We want to get housing,’ I would say, ‘I don’t think so.’” Hull said the rules of the housing moratorium—which was instituted in January 2004 were simply relaxed to accommodate the specific groups that were given housing. “Based on where we are and a commitment we’ve made to these groups, I wanted to put the two groups in a position to be successful, and that included housing for recruitment,” Hull said. “It’s very hard to be told, ‘No, no, no,’ and this process won’t be ready for a year and a half.” The information from RLHS contradicts previous statements made by Campus Council President Jay Ganatra, a junior. He said Thursday night that the moratorium on selective living houses had “officially ended.” Campus Council planned to spend most of second semester designing the Selective Community Assessment, a method of evaluating selective living groups. Ganatra said he thought RLHS —
Hoy as halt Blue Devils’ streak at 17 by
Lauren
Kobylarz THE CHRONICLE
WASHINGTON, D.C. Duke finally made one more mistake than it could afford. After a sub-par first-half effort against an inspired Georgetown squad, the Blue Devils slowly narrowed a 16-point gap and had one last scrambling PUKE 84 chance to pull out |B7 what would have G'TOWN been a record-setting 18th-straight win to open a season. But even JJ. Redick—who ended the game with 41 points—couldn’t save them. The No. 1 Blue Devils (17-1) lost for the first time this season, as Georgetown (124) held on for a 87-84win Saturday at the MCI Center. With less than seven seconds left on the clock and his team down by three, freshman Greg Paulus dribbled down the left side of the floor looking for a teammate oran open shot.
JJ.Redick consoles Greg Paulus after the freshman turned the ball over on the final play of Saturday's loss.
SEE M. BBALL ON SW PAGE 6
SEE HOUSING ON PAGE 9