JRI Leaving Faculty n
Reco unt?
Congressional N.C.'s Bth-D race is still ti:oo close to call, PAGE 4
Analysis
butr^||
Duke struggles In the first half picks it up after the break, PAGE 9
DukeMed stays course as a number of its top brass depart, PAGE 3
**
The Chronicler! m
MdUKE 72 48 GA. SOUTHERN Abroad students Blue Devils move on in CBE rush to find rooms by
Lauren Kobylarz
byZakKazzaz THE CHRONICLE
THE CHRONICLE
For 12 minutes in the first half, unranked Georgia Southern was beating No. 10 Duke at home. But the Blue Devils would not stay behind long, as they rallied going into the half and were never again seriously threatened by the Eagles. Duke (2-0) clamped down on defense and defeated Georgia Southern (1-1), 72-48, in the second round of the CBE Classic Monday night in Cameron Indoor Stadium. In doing so, the Blue Devils advanced to next Sunday’s semifinal in Kansas City. “The last four minutes of the first half and then the second half we played really good defensively,” head coach Mike Krzyzewski said. “We’ve been playing well in the two exhibition games and the two games here—well defensively—and that won the game for us.” After fighting to keep up with the aggressive Georgia Southern squad, the Blue Devils found their energy at the end of the first half. In the last four minutes of the period, freshman Gerald Henderson and Josh Mcßoberts combined for 10 points, including four, made free throws by the sophomore captain. Duke sealed off its run to end the half when freshman Jon
Approximately one-third of juniors currently studying abroad who requested on-campus doubles will not receive them, the office of Residential Life and Housing Services announced Friday. Of the 117 preferred room-
JIANGHAI HO/THE CHRONICLE
SEE M. bball ON PAGE 12
Duke
to
DeMarcus Nelson scored 16 pointsMonday and won MVP of the CBE's Durham Regional.
mate pairs requesting on-campus housing, RLHS can accommodate only 75 pairs, leaving the remaining 42 to find offcampus housing or to be split up, said Marijean Williams, director of housing assignments and communications. Students were given until Wednesday to respond to RLHS. .Students said the reirmation leaves them in an uncomfortable situation to choose between roommates and living conditions. “They have essentially given us five days to either try to find a quick off-campus apartment, which will most likely not be that desirable, or hold out for the Central [Campus] lottery,” junior Matt Moschner said in an online correspondence from Australia. Williams said her office informed students as soon as they received all the necessary information. She added that the 6Tavailable spots may still change. “We depend on other offices
allot SIOOK Alpha Phi
more forfood by
carts
Saidi Chen
THE CHRONICLE
After months of waiting and legal wrangling, ity officials have begun a second
BY
SPECIAL TO THE CHRONICLE
RLHS told students abroad that those wishing to live on campusmay not be able to live with their preferred roommates.
IZA WOJCEECHOWSKA THE CHRONICLE
The Kappa Omicron chapter of Alpha Phi Alpha Fraternity, Inc. has been suspended for a period not to exceed three years, fraternity mem-
West Campus Plaza. As part of an effort to offer a more diverse selection of dining options to students, three food 00,000 total—were originally slated >n in August. But continued delays ;en the University and the original ed has left the plaza cart-less almost o the semester. pass on having Chuck [Courier, ial contractors hired,] complete the Wulforst, director of dining services. SEE FOOD CARTS ON PAGE 8
SEE ALPHAS ON PAGE 6
bring premium dining carts
SEE ABROAD ON PAGE 5
ha suspended
bers confirmed last week. The chapter was suspended from the national organization Sept. 6 for an unspecified violation of fraternity rules and regulations, senior Anthony Collins, former treasurer of the chapter and a former Chronicle columnist, said in a statement. The suspension will last at least until all five of the fraternity’s current members—four seniors and one junior—graduate, he said. “Our suspension is not just our
>rt to ;o the
give us information about who’s coming and who’s going,” she said. “Some of those meet our deadlines and some of them don’t. We try to go with what information we can without delaying the process so students can find out where they’re living by Thanksgiving.” Some students said RLHS should have warned them earlier about the situation. “It does seem a bit self-serving of them since they will be filling their housing quota regardless,” Moschner said. “It seems to
LAURA BETH DOUGLAS/THE
CHRONICLE
Because of new restrictions, Alpha Phi Alpha can no longer recruit new members. *4L fK
*
*
>
A
t *
f