February 4, 2008

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Former Nifong colleague Freda Black mijivrw to run for di strict attorney, PAGE 3

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scrap exchange

giant upset

Bazaar offers cheap alternative for recycling materials, PAGE 3

NewYork captures Super Bowl, ends Patriots perfect season, SW 2

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The Tower of Campus Thought and Action

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Cameron Indoor Stadium TONIGHT 7 pm ESPN2 •

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Friends, alums fete Price's 50 Panels,speech,play celebrateprof's 50-year tenure by

Jared Mueller THE CHRONICLE

JIANGHAI HO/CHRONICLE FILE PHOTO

Bolstered by strong play under the basket, the No. 9 Blue Devils are looking for an upset victory over thethird-rankedTar Heels tonight at 7 p.m. in Cameron IndoorStadium.

Tobacco Road rival comes to Cameron by

Meredith Shiner THE CHRONICLE

The last time North Carolina traveled to Durham, tents were pitched in Goestenkorsopolis, Duke was undefeated and those signature campus benches were

kindling-in-the-making. A lot has changed since that 67-

62 Duke victory last March. Head coach Gail Goestenkors left for Texas. In her place, Joanne P. McCallie came from

“AJubilee for Reynolds Price” continued Friday and Saturday with distinguished panels, a keynote speech by Nobel Laureate Toni Morrison and a dramatic reading of “Private Contentment,” a television play written by Price, Trinity ’55 and a James B. Duke professor of English. Friday’s program included a discussion in Reynolds Theater between Dean of the Chapel Sam Wells and former chair of the •English department Stanley Fish,

KEVIN HWANG/THE CHRONICLE nowDavidson-Kahn distinguished university professor of humanities Professor Reynolds Price, who was honoredfor hislife's workthis weekend, andrenowned

Michigan State. National Player of the Year Lindsey Harding and 6-foot-7 Alison Bales moved on to the WNBA. In their place, junior Chante Black, finally healthy, has emerged as Duke’s top player. And when the third-ranked Tar Heels (19-2, 6-0 in the ACC) prepare for a 7 p.m. tip tonight in Cameron Indoor Stadium, it will be the first time in 18 contests in

and a professor of law at Florida International University. Like Price, Fish is a renowned scholar of John Milton, and he and Wells discussed the religious elements ofPrice’s writing. Several hundred people returned to Reynolds Theater later in the afternoon to hear two Southern novelists—Richard Ford and Josephine Humphreys, Trinity ’67—talk about Price’s work, life and Southern themes. “His writing is redemptive, at least in a secular way,” said Ford, the author of the 1995 Pulitzer

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SEE JUBILEE ON PAGE 4

authorToni Morrison sharestoriesabout theirfriendship in theChapel Sunday.

Toni Morrison speech culminates jubilee Ryan Brown THE CHRONICLE

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In his five decades at Duke,

Reynolds Price has made many friends in high places. But few loomlarger than Nobel Prize-winning novelist Toni Morrison, who addressed a packed crowd in the Chapel Saturday morning. Morrison’s reading was the centerpiece of the four-day “A Jubilee for Reynolds Price,” a series of presentations and workshops celebrating the esteemed

author’s 50 years at Duke. “This has been one of the greatest weekends of my life,” Price told the crowd as he introduced Morrison. But he did not dwell long on the present. “Since I’vebeen teaching here for the past 150 years, I thought it would be appropriate to introduce Toni with a poem,” he said. The poem, entitled “To Toni SEE MORRISON ON PAGE

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IFC frats snag 73 250 for new Defense, tenacity lift Duke over Miami pledge class MIAMI

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THE CHRONICLE

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CatherineButsch THE CHRONICLE

The 15 Interffatemity Council chapters recruited approximately 250 new members, IFC officials said Sunday. Pledge classes ranged in size from seven to 25 new members, fraternity representatives confirmed. Following a two-and-a-half-weekrush process, the chapters distributedbids last Monday, giving students until Friday to accept their bids, said IFC PresidentDavid Melton, a senior. Regardless of their group’s intake, fraternity representatives said they were pleased with how rush worked out. ROB GOODLATTE/THE CHRONICLE

Gerald Henderson, who was 6-of-l 0 from the free-throw line, drives in Saturday's Duke win.

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Even though they were beating Miami Saturday 38-31 at half, the No. 3 Blue Devils entered the locker room for the third consecutive game having played a lackluster first period. This time, though, it was different. Fundamentally, Duke was doing everything right in the first half of its eventual 88-73 win. Despite a collective 37 fouls that disrupted the flow of play, the team shot well from beyond the arc, drew the fouls off the drive and played tough defense. But the shots just weren’t falling. The Blue Devils went for more than 16 minutes without scoring a 2-point field goal and converted only 10 of their 21 shots from the charity stripe.

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