September 2, 2019

Page 1

The Chronicle

See Inside

Men’s soccer wins with miracle Page 6

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

MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 2, 2019 DUKECHRONICLE.COM

What can NC expect from Hurricane Dorian?

ROLLED OVER

ONE HUNDRED AND FIFTEENTH YEAR, ISSUE 6

By Ben Leonard Features Editor

Hurricane Dorian, now a “catastrophic” Category 5 storm, is the strongest storm ever in the northwestern Bahamas with wind speeds of 185 miles per hour, the National Hurricane Center said Sunday at 5 p.m. The ever-shifting storm was scheduled to plow through Florida but has shifted course to veer over the Bahamas. It will continue to be a strong hurricane over the next few days. According to the National Hurricane Center, North Carolina is in the storm’s potential path. It is increasingly likely that North Carolina could get hit by hurricane-level winds and high storm surges along its coast. The state’s coast could see isolated areas of up to 15 inches of rainfall this week, with general rainfall expectations of 5 to 10 inches along the coast. Residents should monitor the storm, the Center wrote. Duke’s emergency management team is also tracking the hurricane and has been in touch with the Marine Lab, Vice President for Administration Kyle Cavanaugh wrote in an email to The Chronicle Saturday. Raleigh has a 21% chance of seeing winds of 39-plus miles per hour from Thursday morning through Friday morning, according to the Center. There is also a 3 percent chance of eventual 58-plus mph winds, it reported. There is still a lot of uncertainty about Dorian’s ultimate path in computer projections. Its center could make landfall in Florida, Georgia, the Carolinas or simply fade into the ocean, according to the Center’s projections. Currently, the Triangle area is projected to see 1 to 4 inches of rain. North Carolina declared a state of See DORIAN on Page 12

DUKE STOMPED BY ALABAMA

Simran Prakash | Assistant Sports Photography Editor Duke football played Alabama at the 2019 Chick-fil-A Kickoff Game at the Mercedes-Benz Stadium in Atlanta, Georgia. Final score was 3-42.

By Derek Saul Sports Editor

ATLANTA, Ga. — A miracle was necessary for 34.5-point underdog Duke to overcome a loaded Alabama team that returned the Heisman Trophy runner-up in quarterback Tua Tagovailoa and the most talented wide receiver in all of college football in Jerry Jeudy. From the start of Saturday afternoon’s matchup between the Blue Devils and Crimson Tide, BAMA 42 Duke made it DUKE 1 clear that if it were to pull off the monumental upset against an Alabama team that has made the national championship

Unfortunately for the Blue Devils, the game lasted longer than 15 minutes, and prognostications were correct. The superior talent of Tagovailoa—who finished with 336 total yards and four touchdowns—and Jeudy—who had 137 receiving yards—coupled with an ineffective Blue Devil offensive attack allowed No. 2 Alabama to prevail 42-3 in the Chick-fil-A Kickoff Game at Mercedes-Benz Stadium. But for Duke, keeping the heavily favored Crimson Tide at bay for much of the game is as encouraging of an outcome as it could have expected. “[After] games like this, you go one of two ways: They set you back or you get better from them,” Blue Devil head coach David Cutcliffe See ROLLED OVER on Page 8

Scooter to doctor: Several suffer injuries By Ben Leonard Features Editor

Courtesy of the National Hurricane Center Meterologists recommend keeping an eye on Hurricane Dorian as it moves toward NC.

game each of the last four seasons, its defense would be the reason. Duke won the coin toss, electing to defer, bringing the vaunted Crimson Tide offense on the field. On third down of the opening drive, Koby Quansah—in the lineup despite suffering a fractured right thumb earlier this month—brought down Tagovailoa, ensuring a three-and-out for Alabama. On the Crimson Tide’s next possession, the Blue Devils forced a fumble, setting up a perfect opportunity for the Duke offense, starting at the opponent’s 26-yard line, but it did not cash in its golden ticket for points. For a quarter, a miracle seemed in the cards for the Blue Devils, with the score even at zero at the close of the first quarter thanks to that swarming Duke defense.

Durham’s recent electric scooter rollout has brought a fleet of them to campus for people to ride around on, but riders haven’t always stayed safe. Several people have fallen at Duke and suffered head injuries as well as at least one broken leg, according to Vice President for Administration Kyle Cavanaugh. None were students, to his knowledge. “While these scooters provide another short-distance transportation option, it is critical that people follow the safety precautions for their use,” Cavanaugh wrote in an email to The Chronicle. Duke Police incorporates ride-sharing

safety in its education programs, including those just given to first-year students, Cavanaugh added. By Durham’s ordinance that brought hundreds of Bird, Gotcha, Lime and Spin scooters to the city in June, riders are not required to wear helmets, just “encouraged.” Electric scooter injuries have spiked dramatically along with the surge of scootersharing services nationwide, according to a recent Rutgers University study. The number of people hospitalized with head injuries has jumped from 2,325 in 2008 to 6,947 in 2017, the study found. About 67% of patients with head injuries in the study weren’t wearing helmets. In a safety measure, Duke has required riders to walk scooters in main thoroughfares on campus like the East Campus Quad, the Bryan

Center Plaza and Abele Quad. Scooters are banned from the Sarah P. Duke Gardens, and they can’t be taken on buses. Technology in the scooters makes it so that scooters can’t be ridden in banned areas and are only walkable in those thoroughfare areas, Cavanaugh wrote. Two companies of the four companies with scooters in Durham have cooperated with Duke’s policies, Cavanaugh wrote—Spin and Bird. Other cities across the nation have struggled with riders leaving scooters in places that block walkways. Generally, most riders have been leaving scooters on the bike racks where they are required to be parked, Cavanaugh noted. Some scooters could be observed this week parked on sidewalks—not in bike racks—on East and West campuses.

Duke graduate and his long campaign

Get rid of the triple option

Planning Duke’s first Pride Invitational

Dan McCready is in the middle of a Congressional campaign, having to redo the first one. PAGE 2

Sports Editor Derek Saul argues why Duke football should stop using the “ineffective gimmick.” PAGE 6

Maryam Asenuga and Ivan Robles discuss the fulfilling experience of planning a LGBTQIA+ weekend. PAGE 11

INSIDE — News 2 | Sports 4 | Crossword 9 | Opinion 10 | Serving the University since 1905 |

@dukechronicle @dukebasketball |

@thedukechronicle | © 2019 The Chronicle


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.