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Meredith Shiner THE CHRONICLE
With an April 4 announcement that he would leave for Louisiana State University, Joe Alieva’s tenure as Duke’s director of athletics ended almost as abrupdy as it began. Just more than 10 years ago, Alieva was watching his son play second base for theBlue Devils when he was informed of a statement announcing him as the replacement for the legendary Tom Butters. At that moment, in the bleachers of Jack Coombs Field, Alieva could have analysis never imagined what the next decade would bring to Duke Athletics: from unprecedented fundraising to one of the most highly publicized scandals in the history of college sports. Six national championships and $173 million later, Alieva left Durham for Baton Rouge on a Tuesday and had a new home on the bayou on a Friday. Now, ftiose who Alieva left behind after 32 years at Duke must process this formative decade and decipher what the future holds for one of the biggest brand names in college athletics. ‘The explosion of Duke Athletics’ In February 1998, a four-month national search ended when the top external candidate held a press conference to announce he was not taking the Duke position, opening the door for Alieva—an internal option—to ascend to the top of the athletic department Alieva faced the daunting task offollowing Butters-Mhe man who founded Iron Dukes, the department’s booster club, and hired Mike Krzyzewski, who has raised Duke Basketball to national prominence. Women’s lacrosse head coach Kerstin Kimel, who came to Duke in 1996, said when Butters stepped down, one of the most pressing needs of the department was improving its facilities and that Alieva “paid immediate attention” to the demand.
attrition Some blame Assoc VP Graves for losses •
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Rob Copeland THE CHRONICLE
Imagine the uproar if Duke lost nearly one-third of its faculty in two years. That level of attrition is plaguing the Duke University Police Department, and some officers say campus safety is suffering the consequences This semes-
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After 32 years at Duke, JoeAlieva leftDurham to take the athletics directorposition atLouisiana State University. Some of the most prominent athletic hubs on campus were erected in Alieva’s tenure —Yoh Football Center, Sheffield Tennis Center, Schwartz-Butters Athletic Center, Karcher-Ingram Golf Center, the Michael W. Krzyzewski Center for Athletic and Academic Excellence. In total, 10 new facilities were built under Alieva’s watch, and almost all other prominent facilities received upgrades. The Department of Athletics spent approximately $B5 million over the past decade to support the facility needs of nearly all of Duke’s 26 varsity sports.
In an interview with The Chronicle April 7, Alieva said he hoped his legacy would be
changing “the landscape ofDuke Athletics.” But the landscape for athletics at Duke is not just a physical one. Alieva knew that the stadiums and stateof-the-art film rooms were only the foundation in bringing in the kind of personnel and student-athletes who could elevate Duke to eight top-25 Director’s Cup finishes and 44 ACC championships. SEE
ALLEVA ON PAGE 10
Students overlook 4 trivial’ cheating by
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issues of crime and safety have never been more prominent,
some DUPD officers say no one Part 1 of 3 seems to care about the turmoil in the department. “Something bad is going to happen,” predicted one officer. “We are surrounded by it, and if something doesn’t change we are talking about people getting hurt or killed.” Some of DUPD’s most experienced officers have left because of alleged dissatisfaction with current departmental policy and with the leadership of top brass including Aaron Graves, associate vice president for campus safety and security, and Maj. Gloria Graham, DUPD’s operations commander. Graves arrived in 2006 and since then at least 19 officers have left DUPD, more than double the previous rate of attrition. According to its Web site, DUPD has 67 commissioned officers. “We just don’t have enough officers and our reserves are depleted,” said SEE DUPD ON
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Jessica Lighter THE CHRONICLE
Working within the small physics department, senior Sepehr Sadighpour said he has had minimal encounters, at most, with peers cheating. “It’s not really a problem there,” he said “I’ve never seen or heard of anyone cheating. It’s never even been
brought up.” But Sadighpour, like many students interviewed for this article, said he usually only considers offenses like cheating on exams and plagiarism to be academic dishonesty. Include less recognized infractions like collaborating on homework assignments, however, and the picture changes. In thefall semester, new freshmen sign the Duke Community Standard, in which they pledge to uphold integrity in theiracademic work.
SEE CHEATING ON PAGE
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Since Aaron Graves, associate vice president for campus safety and security, took his post in January 2006,19 officers have left DUPD.
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