March 6, 2013 issue

Page 1

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, MARCH XX, 2013 6, 2013

ONE ONE HUNDRED HUNDRED AND AND EIGHTH EIGHTH YEAR, YEAR, ISSUE ISSUE 113 X

WWW.DUKECHRONICLE.COM

Seniors bid adieu with 85-57 win against VT

Durham crime hits 23-year low from Staff Reports THE CHRONICLE

BRITTANY ZULKIEWICZ/THE CHRONICLE

Seniors Mason Plumlee, Seth Curry and Ryan Kelly combined for 52 points in their final game at Cameron Indoor Stadium. by Zac Elder THE CHRONICLE

Duke turned to its three most veteran players on senior night to take care of Virginia Tech and finish the regular season undefeated at Cameron Indoor Stadium for the third time in the past four years.

Seniors Seth Curry, Ryan Kelly and Mason Plumlee combined for 52 points as the No. 3 Blue Devils outpaced the Hokies (13-17, 4-13 in the ACC) in the second half to pull away for an 85-57 victory. Curry, Kelly and Plumlee became the second senior class in program history to

win all of their home games in three of their four seasons. “I’m so proud of my seniors,” Duke head coach Mike Krzyzewski said. “They’ve been absolutely amazing—their four years and being a part of 120 wins and SEE MBB ON PAGE 1

In 2012, the combined number of property crimes and violent crimes reached its lowest point in 23 years, according to an annual report released by the Durham Police Department. The rate of violent crime per 100,000 persons in Durham, which includes such incidents as homicide, rape, robbery and aggravated assault, decreased 1 percent from 2011 to 2012. The actual number of violent crime offenses, however, increased slightly from 1,712 incidents in 2011 to 1,721 in 2012. Violent crime composed 14 percent of all crime in Durham in 2012. In contrast, property crimes such as burglarly, larceny, vehicle theft and property crime fell 9 percent—a total of 969 fewer incidents from 2011 to 2012. Burglaries specifically fell 15 percent. The report noted that DPD cleared 49.5 percent of violent crime cases and 22.2 percent of property crimes cases, adding that the rates were above the

FBI’s 2012 clearance rates. “The department’s goal was to have a violent crime clearance rate of 45 percent and a property crime clearance rate of 22 percent,” the report’s executive summary reads. “We met our property crime goal and significantly exceeded our goal for violent crime clearance.” The report attributes some of this decrease in burglaries to the Residential Awareness Program, an initiative launched in 2012. Through the program, DPD analyzes target areas with recent burglaries, and designated community resource unit police officers inform residents about the incidents going door-to-door. Police officers also conduct additional patrols in areas designated as high risk. Burglaries in Durham dropped about 15 percent in 2012. There were also 21 homicides in 2012, with victims ranging from 13 to 81 years old. The number is down 19 percent from 26 homicides that occurred in 2011. SEE CRIME ON PAGE 6

DUKE STUDENT GOVERNMENT ELECTIONS

For a DSG pres, Oathout Scott drops out of EVP race, leaving one candidate says experience matters by Carleigh Stiehm THE CHRONICLE

Sophomore Tre’ Scott canceled his campaign for Duke Student Government executive vice president, leaving sophomore Nikolai Doytchinov as the sole candidate. Scott, currently DSG vice president for services, announced his decision Tuesday, following almost two weeks of campaigning. Doytchinov, vice president for academic affairs, will be the only executive vice presidential candidate on the March 7 ballot. “It took two days of really reflecting, praying and thinking about what I wanted and where I stood,” Scott said. “This isn’t a decision out of sadness, this is a decision out of happiness because the future that I see myself trying to accomplish for Duke is a brighter one and that is what is most important.” Doytchinov said he was excited to start working towards accomplishing

his goals a day sooner. “I am a little bit relieved by the announcement, and frankly I was very surprised,” Doytchinov said. “I would like to thank [Scott] for a good campaign that was also very clean.” Scott said he realized that the traditional managerial role assigned to EVP did not agree with his desire to be a vehicle for student opinion and social change. Even though his previous involvement in DSG has allowed him to move forward with some of his goals, he said EVP would be a step in the opposite direction. The role of EVP is too structured for a “loose cannon,” he said. Additionally, he has decided not to return to DSG next year. “The idea of branching out and doing something different with the position of EVP has not been done before, and I had to ask myself, has it not been

Duke assesses number of credits for lab-heavy courses, Page 2

SEE SCOTT ON PAGE 5

Junior Patrick Oathout, candidate for Duke Student Government president, is a public policy and philosophy double major from Houston. He is currently DSG executive vice president, a student representative on the Board of Trustees, president and founder of Duke Colloquium Fellows and a founding father of Duke’s chapter of Sigma Pi fraternity. His Chronicle column is on hiatus during the campaign. The Chronicle’s Sophia Durand sat down to discuss his accomplishments, vision for DSG and the upcoming March 7 election.

JESSIE LU/THE CHRONICLE

Junior Patrick Oathout from Texas is running for Duke Student Government president. The election will take place March 7.

ONTHERECORD

“Outsourcing people’s social responsibility isn’t necessarily a bad thing if that’s what it takes to be effective....” —Lydia Thurman in ‘Couch po-tay-toe, couch po-tah-toe.’ See column page 10

The Chronicle: What defines you as a leader and qualifies you for this position? Patrick Oathout: The position of DSG president is a couple of things—it’s an advocate, an idea generator and a representative for students. And I have experience in all of those areas. SEE OATHOUT ON PAGE 2

Genetics research could help criminal psychopaths, Page 3


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March 6, 2013 issue by Duke Chronicle - Issuu