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Pratt School opens project workspace for students, PAGE 3
Law students try to prove convicted murderer's innocence, PAGE 4
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No. 1 Blue Devils travel to Georgetown Saturday, PAGE 11
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THE INDEPENDENT DAILY AT DUKE UNIVERSITY
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New Webmail 71 DUKE, 2,^ W] BELMONT 70 to be more BLUE DEVILS SURVIVE UPSET BID («)
user friendly
Changes to be made to layout9 not services by
Emmeline Zhao THE CHRONICLE
An extreme Webmail derway to keep up with
makeover is unthe latest e-mail
trends and styles. The Office of Information Technology is currently experimenting with various prototypes to make the Duke Webmail experience more aesthetically appealing and user friendly, IT Senior Analyst Chris Colomb said. A new e-mail client is projected to launch by the end of the spring semester. “There’s been some push to modernize our infrastructure and to better serve Duke’s needs,” he said. “And this is part of that effort” OIT is currently looking at multiple versions for a new Webmail. Colomb said his favorite makeover features a login screen that requires users to type in the Duke domain address and a new mailbox that boasts a layout similar to a desktop mail client such as Microsoft Office Outlook or Mozilla Thunderbird. Colomb added that he hopes to further improve the prototype by optimizing speed and Duke-specific graphics. Because the current Webmail is functional, there will be little to no changes to services offered, he added. Instead, the makeover will focus on enhancing the user experience through improving the ease of use and navigation. “I feel like it’s a lot more intuitive than our current one —it manages folders well,”
by
Joe Drews
THE CHRONICLE
WASHINGTON, D.C. Duke head coach Mike Krzy/cwski has participated in 89 NCAA Tournament games during his 33-year career, including 7 National Championship games. But Thursday’s first-round game against No. 15 Belmont was one of the highest-pressure contests he has ever been involved in. Facing an unexpected challenge from the Bruins (25-9), the second-seeded Blue Devils (28-5) avoided being just the fifth secondseed ever to lose in the first round, edging Belmont 71-70 at the Verizon Outer. Sophomore Gerald Henderson went the length of the court to score the game-winning layup with 12 seconds remaining, and Duke’s defense shut down the Bruins the rest of the way to hang on for the victory. With the win, the Blue Devils move on to the Round of 32 Saturday to face No. 7 West Virginia, which topped No. 10 Arizona Thursday. “As far as game pressure goes, this has to rank in the top three or four,” said Krzyzewski, who was ill with flu-like symptoms. “The last nine minutes of the game, I thought our team had incredible game pressure on it. One, it’s the NCAAs. Two, you’re supposedly supposed to win. But even more importantly, they’re playing really well, and you have to figure out how to win.” Belmont fully erased Duke’s lead by the 10:59 mark of the second half, as Alex Renfroe completed an old-fashioned three-point play to give his team a 58-56 advantage. The Blue Devils and Bruins went back and forth VM HWANOrtMI r tmom
SEE WEBMAIL ON PAGE 6
SEE M. BBAIX ON PAGE 12
Sophomore Gerald Henderson lays in the wining b«k«tafter driving the length of thefloor following a BHmont miu.
DSG PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATE I Jordan Giordano
Candidate brings experience as exec VP by
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Jordan Giordano is one offour cantfidates for DSG President
Rob Copeland THE CHBOMCLE
For two years, Duke Student Government has been under the control of a handful of straight-'A' Angier B. Duke scholars. Junior Jordan Giordano is ready to change all of that. “We have a unique opportunity to go in a different direction next year,* said Giordano, who is DSG’s current executive vice president Two years of the exact same thing has put us on one track, and it's hard to veer off that track.”
living model aims to connect students BY
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Whai makes a home a home? Community, Duke administrator* said, along with a tense of belonging are the inspiration for Duke’s unique living model, which includes provisions requiring students to remain on campus for three of their four undergraduate years and live on an all-freshman Fast Campus. But with Few Quadrangle renovations forcing more students off campus next year, a recent houl of crime in the area and plans for a remodeled Central Campus likely to revolutionize Duke’s residential experience, some students are questioning the efficacy of the system. The Duke model At Duke, like many other private universities, most students
SEE GIORDANO ON PACE 10 SEE LIVING MODEL ON PAGE 9