Spring Break ~v DukeEngage/f'A The Chronide wishes you warm. and Sdences talks a
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Men's lacrosse team will travel to take on Loyola Saturday, PAGE 9
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McClendon N.C. STATE 85 80 DUKE gift raises eyebrows TACK IT UP: DUKE DONE AFTER 1 by
Greg Beaton THE CHRONICLE
by
David Graham
THE CHRONICLE
TAMPA, Fla. It had been 12 years since Duke played on a Thursday in the ACC Tournament—and it showed. Coming in off two straight losses to end the regular season, the seventhseeded Blue Devils (22-10) bowed out of the ACC DUKE Tournament 85 before the fl nals for the first time in nine years, losing an overtime battle to No. 10 seed N.C. State. Duke could not stop the Wolfpack’s offense in the second half or in the extra period, allowing N.C. State (1614) to overcome a five-point halftime deficit and win 85-80 in the St. Pete Times Forum. “It really hurts a lot,” junior DeMarcus Nelson said. “I’ve been here for two years, and in those two years we’ve won this tournament. Not being able to have that opportunity this year really hurts.” After seeing its small halftime lead evaporate, Duke forced overtime with a last-minute flurry. Down two with just under two minutes to go, Marty Pocius—who earned extra playing time due to the suspension of Gerald Henderson—finished a three-point play to give the
Several Seattle media oudets have recently reported that Duke benefactor Aubrey McClendon, Trinity ’Bl, donated more than a million dollars to an anti-gay marriage group in 2004 and 2005. McClendon and his partner at Chesapeake Energy, Tom Ward, contributed approximately $l.l million to Americans United to Preserve Marriage. McClendon and Ward also share
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principal ownership of two Seattle basketball franchises, the NBA Supersonics and the WNBA Storm—a circumstance that has brought the donations under scrutiny. The Storm is a Aubrey McClendon ma jor lesbian attrao tion in left-leaning Seattle, according to The Seatde Times, but the NBA also banned former star Tim Hardaway from the league’s All-Star Weekend for making homophobic remarks in February. “I am for the concept that a marriage should be between a man and a woman; on the other hand, I am for civil unions for gay couples,” McClendon told The Chronicle Wednesday. “In my opinion, that does not make me anti-gay at all. Instead, it makes me pro-the traditional concept of marriage, and I do not believe the biblical sacrament should be between anyone other than a man and a woman.” Junior Katharine Eggleston, president of a gay advocacy group Duke Allies, said SEE MCCLENDON ON PAGE 7
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HARISH SRINIVASAN/THE CHRONICLE
SEE M. BBALL ON PAGE 12
Self-image haunts many Duke diets Rebecca Wu
THE CHRONICLE
Duke alums Aubrey and Katie McClendon donated $6 million in 2005 to the West Campus Plaza.
IE CHRONi
N.C.State's Courtney Fells shoots over Josh Mcßoberts, who was hampered by foul trouble in Duke's loss.
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term “effortless perfection” was coined in Duke’s 2003 Women’s Initiative report, but four years later, issues of body image, eating disorders and disordered eating are still prevalent on campus. Although students take pride in the fact that they go to an elite university, several health administrators and students said Duke’s competitive environment may be the driving force behind struggles with disordered eating. “Being in a close-knit, competitive, high-achieving environment definitely makes us look at ourselves differently,” said Franca Alphin, director of health promotions for the Duke Student Health Center. ‘We ask ourselves, ‘What can I do to make myself stand out?’ and food and weight often come into question.” Alphin said few cases of eating disorders are diagnosed on campus because only a small percent-
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age of students meet all of the strict clinical criteria for anorexia nervosa and bulimia, the most common eating disorders. She added, however, that disordered eating includes an unhealthy preoccupation w food, such as counting calories ai cessively worrying about weight. “Many people go through bouts of dered eating during their time at co! Alphin said. Several students added the problem was prevalent on campt “There’s this pressure to h salad, and you think that if the? chicken in it, then it’s a good me: junior Alison Price said. “A lot of pet pie think salad is a good choice, ani SEE EATING ON P