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The Chronicled
WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 8, 2006
THE INDEPENDENT DAILY AT DUKE UNIVERSITY
Interim leader to stay on as DUPD director BY
IZA WOJCIECHOWSKA THE CHRONICLE
After serving seven months as the interim director of Duke University Police Department, Robert Dean was named DUPD director, officials announced Tuesday. A d ministrators asked Dean who had worked for DUPD since 1973 but retired as a major in 2003—t0 serve as interim director in July 2005 while the University was conducting a search for an associate vice president for campus safety and security. The new position was filled by Aaron Graves Jan. 9. No search was conducted for a new DUPD director, and officials asked Dean to stay on as di-
title of DUPD “chief’ as soon as his status as a police officer is reactivated—a stipulation under North Carolina law. Officials said Dean’s enthusiasm for the job, combined with his institutional knowledge, garnered their support as they considered him for the position. “He did an outstandingjob in the interim period, and he was fully committed to staying longer and making the community safer,” Graves said. Executive Vice President Tailman Trask told The Chronicle in October that the decision of whether or not a search for a chiefof police would occur would be made once Graves was hired. “There was no search,” Graves said. “[Dean] had been filling the position for several months, and he had previously been very much involved in various leadership positions. Based on that experience and based on current needs, I thought he was a great fit to lead the University department.” Dean was the ideal—and
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DUKE
ONE HUNDRED AND FIRST YEAR, ISSUE 92
UNO
THRILLER ON THE HILL
rector.
Dean will also take on the
SEE DEAN ON PAGE 6
LAURA BETH DOUGLAS/THE CHRONICLE
Duke senior JJ. Redick scored 12 points in the final four minutes of Duke's 87-83 win over North Carolina Tuesday night.
Duke holds off 2nd-half UNC rally by
Alex Fanaroff
THE CHRONICLE
CHAPEL HILL There was no way the Blue Devils should have beaten North Carolina Tuesday night. Duke was playing its third game in six days, and the Smith Center was rocking for most of the second half. But somehow, even though the team blew a 17-point second-half lead and trailed by five with 4:33 to play, No. 2 Duke pulled out an 8783 win over the No. 23 Tar Heels. “When we lost the lead, I think we showed the spirit that I had sensed in this team throughout the year,” Duke head coach Mike Krzyzewski said. “We just had a good spirit—a spirit that we’re going to win—and we kept our poise and hit some big shots.” Spirit was not the only thing the Blue Devils (22-1, 10-0 in the
pointers in the final four and a half
minutes. The last trifecta—on a behind-the-back stepback move—came with 56 seconds left and gave Duke an 84-77 advantage. It provided the last of Redick’s gamehigh 35 points on the night. After the game, Blue Devil guard Sean Dockery said even when Duke trailed, he never doubted his team because, “you know, we’ve got J.J. Redick.” But even after Redick’s lategame heroics, the contest was far LAURA BETH IE CHRONICLE from over. The Tar Heels (14-6, The Blue Devils won for the 16th time in 5-4) made two baskets—with a their last 19 games against the Tar Heels pair of missed free throws by Tuesday night in Chapel Hill. Dockery sandwiched in between—to cut the lead to three ACC) had going for them—they with 41 seconds to play. also had JJ. Redick. Duke inbounded the ball to The senior guard was spectacu- Redick, but he airmailed his pass lar when his team needed him most, draining three critical threeSEE UNC ON PAGE 13