T H E I N D E P E N D E N T D A I LY AT D U K E U N I V E R S I T Y
The Chronicle
XXXDAY, MONTH WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY XX, 2013 13, 2013
ONE ONEHUNDRED HUNDREDAND ANDEIGHTH EIGHTHYEAR, YEAR,ISSUE ISSUE98 X
WWW.DUKECHRONICLE.COM
DUKE vs. UNC, EDITION NO. 235 DUKE
UNC
CAMERON INDOOR STADIUM • TODAY • 9 p.m. by Andrew Beaton THE CHRONICLE
Mike Krzyzewski said the Blue Devils don’t care about their ranking—only their opponents do. “They get a chance to get a huge win, a resume win. We are a resume win,” the Duke head coach said. “It’s not only their best shot, it’s a hungry shot.” North Carolina enters tonight’s 9 p.m. game at Cameron Indoor Stadium as one of those foes starving for a season-altering victory—the Tar Heels (167, 6-4 in the ACC) have just one win against a top-25 opponent, a UNLV team that has since tumbled from the rankings. They are sitting on the bubble of this year’s NCAA Tournament and play two of those final games against the Blue Devils (21-2, 8-2), with others against Virginia and N.C. State, teams
that they have already lost to this season. So when Krzyzewski talks about a “hungry shot,” he means the type of one that North Carolina will take tonight. “They can beat the heck out of us,” Krzyzewski said. “We could play well and lose to them.” And playing on the road has not stopped either of these teams from bringing the necessary energy to win. Since 2006, the road team has won nine of the 14 games between the two squads. But the Blue Devils are not worried about matching the vigor of the high-octane Tar Heels, even if their resume needs more beefing up than Duke’s does. “I would like to think other SEE M. BASKETBALL ON PAGE 10
CHRONICLE PHOTO ILLUSTRATION BY ELYSIA SU
Rivals Duke and North Carolina will face off this evening at Cameron Indoor Stadium at 9 p.m.
GRADUATE YOUNG TRUSTEE
Joe Van Gogh to Council picks Duch to join Board close for Plaza construction by Emma Baccellieri THE CHRONICLE
The Graduate and Professional Student Council elected Katherine Duch as the next graduate Young Trustee Tuesday. Duch, a fourth-year candidate for a Ph.D in public policy, won against Andrew Barnhill, a third-year student in religion and law and Christopher Marsicano, a second-year master’s candidate in public policy. “I am thrilled to have been selected,” Duch said. “I look forward to bringing graduate and professional student perspectives to the Board of Trustees.” She currently serves on the Board’s Institutional Advancement Committee as a representative for GPSC, and she has additional experience from her undergraduate career at Cornell University, during which she was a student representative for its board of trustees. “My two-year term at Cornell provided a firsthand learning experience, which shaped my understanding of the challenges that confront higher education institutions and my approach to improving postsecondary education for students,” Duch noted. She also cited her knowledge of higher education SEE DUCH ON PAGE 4
State of the Union 2013, Page 2
by Maggie Spini THE CHRONICLE
STEVEN BAO/ THE CHRONICLE
Fans of Joe Van Gogh coffee will soon need to look elsewhere for their dose of caffeine. The University notified the coffee shop chain last week that it will have to temporarily close starting March 1 due to ongoing renovations to the Bryan Center, said Dave Jernigan, Joe Van Gogh’s director of sales and marketing. The cafe plans to reopen in early June at its same location. “Anytime you work as an outside vendor on campus, it’s part of the reality that sometimes construction will impact your business,” Jernigan said. “At some point, we imagined it would impact us.” Realizing construction would likely affect the business, Jernigan called the notification “hasty,” as it will impact Joe Van Gogh’s employees in addition to the
The Graduate and Professional Student Council elected Katherine Duch, a public policy Ph.D. candidate, to Young Trustee Tuesday.
ONTHERECORD
“The questions... is how to best afford each and every individual the opportunity to deal with [risk]....” —Chris Bassil in ‘What makes the workplace safe.’ See column page 15
SEE JVG ON PAGE 6
Purdue becomes Sanford Fellow, Page 3