healt h Students wi th diabetes discuss difficulties of college life, PAGE 4
graduation ijy
sports
University to award 4 honorary degrees at commencement, PAGE 6
No.l4Duketakesonsth-ranked UNC at home, PAGE 15
The Chronicle
WEDNESDAY, APRIL 5, 2006
THE INDEPENDENT DAILY AT DUKE UNIVERSITY
«i m
i
ONE HUNDRED AND FIRST YEAR, ISSUE 127
SHELL SHOCKED Terps overcome 13-point deficit to deny Duke title by
Lauren
Kobylarz THE CHRONICLE
BOSTON The Blue Devils were less than 10 seconds away from claiming the first National Championship in Duke women’s basketball history. Theyjust needed one defensive stop to hold on to their 70-67 advantage and start the celebration. But standing on the right wing just in front of the Maryland bench, /O Terrapin guard Kristi Toliver launched a deep Lml over three-pointer Duke’s Alison Bales. The nearly impossible shot swished through the net to knot the score at 70 and send the National Championship into overtime. The second-seeded Terrapins (34-4) rode their momentum through the extra period to take down the top-seeded Blue Devils, 78-75, and win their first National
B 75
Championship.
Duke (31-4) had led by as much as 13
during the game, but Maryland slowly chipped away, gaining confidence and shooting accuracy as the game progressed. “Early on we were the aggressor and I thought we did a great job,” Duke head
TIAN, QINZHENG/THE CHRONICLE
Jessica Foley's last-second attempt to tiethe game fell harmlessly away, and Maryland celebrated its first-ever National Championship in women's basketball.
coach Gail Goestenkors said. “But as the game wore on, they became a little more comfortable, and when Toliver hit that SEE W. BBALL ON PAGE 14
NAACP leader calls for solidarity, action in troubled times by
Ryan McCartney THE CHRONICLE
Citing the alleged rape of a black woman by members of the men’s lacrosse team, the
Reverend William Barber preached about the need to speak up and act with “tenacity” during troubled times Tuesday night. Barber, the state conference president of the North Carolina chapter of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, released a statement hours earlier detailing 10 steps that he thinks should be taken in order to ensure “justice, integrity and healing” in the wake ofrecent accusations that three members of the men’s lacrosse team raped, choked and sodomized an exotic dancer March 13. “The current events and allegations surrounding the Duke lacrosse team and a twenty-seven-year-old African American student-mother taps into deep emotional and historical themes of our flawed society,” Barber said in the statement. The statement called for a more proactive approach on the part of the University. Barber encouraged the community to de-
nounce any code of silence, show compassion for the alleged victim and push forward, among other things. “We have been there when women have been victimized and the actions of the perpetrators were dismissed by suggestions that the victim herself deserved what happened to her or by statements like, ‘Boys will be boys,”’ he said in the statement. “How we proceed will have great impact on our ability to remain a community and meet the demands of justice.” Speaking from the pulpit of the Divinity School’s Goodson Chapel, Barber, Divinity ’B9 and an adjunct professor, said the alleged incident brings to the forefront important issues of violence, racial degradation, alcohol and elitism at the University. “I want to spend a moment talking to you about trouble at the table,” Barber began. “Ain’t no need to run from it tonight. We can’t come here tonight and act like this is an ordinary night and an ordinary service.... There is a victim.” SEE NAACP ON PAGE 7
Rev.William Barber, the state NAACP president, leads a prayerand demonstration in front of the Chapel Tuesday.