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Thirty eight of the 47 members of the 2005-2006 men’s lacrosse team are expected to sue the University and other parties today, the media representative for their attorney confirmed Wednesday. The 100-page lawsuit—the third civil suit in as many months against Duke—will be filed by Washington, D.C., attorney Charles Cooper. A press conference will be held at 1 p.m. at the National Press Club in Washington, D.C., with the players and their families, said spokesperson Bob Bork. He added that a Web site, www.dukelawsuit.com, has been established to provide updates. It will also host the complaint and video from the conference. Cooper, partner at Cooper and Kirk and a former U.S. assistant attorney general, told Legal Times in an article published last week that he planned to file suit by the end ofFebruary. “We will seek recovery for the treatment—the really shameful treatment that the players received throughout the ordeal,” Cooper said, referring to the will-be plaintiffs’ experience after bogus allegations of rape were made against members of their team in March 2006.
DUKE STUDENT GOVT
CHASE OLIVIERI/THE CHRONICLE
Point guard Greg Paulus walks off the court of the BankUnited Center in Coral Gables after the Blue Devils' 96-95 loss to the Hurricanes—Duke's first loss at the hands of Miami in 45 years.
Miami thunders over Duke Greg Beaton THE CHRONICLE
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CORAL GABLES, Fla. Duke finally woke up, but it was too late. A furious rally at the end of the game was not enough to overcome 30 minutes of deja vu from Sunday’s loss at Wake Forest, as the No. 5 Blue Devils (22-3,102 in the ACC) fell 96-95 at Miami (18-7, 5-6) Wednesday night. “There’s something missing this week,” Duke head coach Mike Krzyzewski said. “We’re not the same team the last two ballgames. It’s almost as if someone came in and invaded their
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bodies or something.” The one-point final margin of victory hardly reflected the nature of the game, in which Duke fell behind by 20 in the second half before catching fire from 3point range to close the gap in the final minutes. After speaking about the need to play with increased intensity following the loss to the Demon Deacons, the same problems plagued the Blue Devils once again against the Hurricanes. Turnovers, poor defense, uneven effort and streaky shooting all contributed to
Senior Ryan Todd was elected Duke’s newest Young Trustee at Duke Student Government’s meeting Wednesday night. “I’m really excited, as well as surprised,” Todd told The Chronicle after the meeting. “I’m especially excited for the new Central Campus. I feel like my work for Campus Council has been touching on the issues of Central Campus, and so I’m excited to really get into that and be a part of the new campus. I’m also excited to be a student voice on Ryan Todd the Board and help the Board make more informed choices.” Junior Jordan Giordano, executive vice president of DSG and a Young Trustee Nominating Committee member, said the race was a particularly close one. If either a voting member of DSG or the Intercommunity Council had changed their vote, the outcome may have been different, several sources said. But senior Genevieve Cody, DSG’s vice president for community interaction and chair of the YTNC, would not confirm this. Fifty percent of the votes for the appointment are reserved for DSG members, with the other half reserved for ICC members. At the meeting, Todd and candidates Katelyn Donnelly and Bronwyn Lewis, both
SEE M. BBALL ON PAGE 9
SEE TRUSTEE ON PAGE 7
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For the second consecutive year, Duke ranked ninth in private gifts received among U.S. colleges, according to the annual Voluntary Support of Education survey released Wednesday by the Council for Aid to Education. The University received $372 million in charitable contributions, a 15.5-percent increase from the $332 million record set in the 2006-2007 fiscal year. “It’s an expression of confidence in the school,” said John Burness, senior vice president for public affairs and government relations. Peter Vaughn, executive director ofalumniand development SEE FUNDRAISING ON PAGE
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