February 3, 2016

Page 1

Man-to-man defense keys win

Bias task force begins work

The Blue Devils held Georgia Tech to 2-of-19 shooting from 3-point range Tuesday | Sports Page 4

The task force conceived at the “Duke Tomorrow” forum met Jan. 21 | Page 2

The Chronicle 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

WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 3, 2016

WWW.DUKECHRONICLE.COM

OUTRUNNING THE SWARM

Krzyzewski missing from sidelines for first time since 1995

Allen powers Duke past Yellow Jackets

ONE HUNDRED AND ELEVENTH YEAR, ISSUE 70

Trinity focuses

on faculty mentorship

Jack Dolgin and Sam Turken

Adam Beyer

The Chronicle

The Chronicle

ATLANTA—Duke head coach Mike Krzyzewski missed his first game since 1995 Tuesday after not traveling with the team for the Blue Devils’ game at Georgia Tech. Despite Krzyzewski’s absence, the Blue Devils outlasted the Yellow Jackets 80-71 behind a 27-point outburst from sophomore Grayson Allen. Krzyzewski felt “under the weather” following Monday’s team meal and was evaluated at Duke University Hospital, according to a statement released by the team Tuesday evening prior to tip-off. Associate head coach Jeff Capel led the Blue Devils from the sideline in Krzyzewski’s absence. It was the first time the 68-year-old Krzyzewski has missed a game since he sat out for the latter portion of the 1994-95 season while he dealt with back troubles. Following the win, Capel said that Krzyzewski felt ill Monday night when the team was about to leave for the airport to fly to Atlanta. Krzyzewski’s doctors directed that he not travel with the team. “[Tuesday] morning is when we found out that

Increasing support for faculty members was one of Valerie Ashby’s main goals when she arrived at Duke, and in her second semester as dean of the Trinity College of Arts and Sciences Ashby is leading several efforts to meet that goal. In Fall 2015, Trinity launched a faculty mentoring program to help tenure-track assistant professors prepare for potential promotions. The college has also instituted leadership training for department chairs and program directors, and Ashby—who joined Duke in July after serving as chair of the chemistry department at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill—has convened monthly meetings with department chairs. See TRINITY on Page 8 Izzi Clark | The Chronicle Grayson Allen made a career-high seven 3-pointers in Tuesday night’s win.

See KRZYZEWSKI on Page 8

Jack Dolgin The Chronicle

Izzi Clark | The Chronicle Associate head coach Jeff Capel filled in for head coach Mike Krzyzewski at Georgia Tech.

ATLANTA—The Blue Devils knew they were going to be without senior captain Amile Jefferson for the 13th straight game Tuesday. They found out Tuesday morning that head coach Mike Krzyzewski would miss his first game since 1995 after remaining in Durham following a trip to Duke University Hospital Monday. But Duke still had Grayson Allen, and that proved to be plenty to get the Blue Devils back on track with one of their best halves of ACC play. Duke shook off the rust from an eight-day layoff to down Georgia Tech 80-71 at Hank McCamish Pavilion behind Allen’s 27 points. The sophomore guard drilled a career-high seven 3-pointers before fouling out in the

game’s final minute, and associate head coach Jeff Capel switched from zone to man-to-man as the Blue Devils stymied the Yellow Jackets in the second half. “I thought it ignited everything about us,” Capel said of playing man-to-man. “It gave us energy, I thought it ignited our offense and we rode Grayson there for a big-time part of the second half.” Georgia Tech (12-10, 2-7 in the ACC) had few problems scoring down low early on. Twenty of the team’s first 26 points came in the paint, with redshirt senior Nick Jacobs depositing six of his first seven field goal attempts. Capel used freshmen Chase Jeter and Antonio Vrankovic—seeing his first action since late December—to stop the bleeding, but they were each pulled after limited action. See M. BASKETBALL on Page 5

Special to The Chronicle One of Trinity Dean Valerie Ashby’s main priorities is increasing training for department heads.

Correction: Due to an error in reporting, Tuesday’s article about the Young Trustee finalists’ platforms incorrectly stated that senior Max Schreiber opposes cultural comptency courses, which he supports. The article has been updated online to note that Schreiber opposes the addition of an intolerance clause to the community standard. The Chronicle regrets the error.

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February 3, 2016 by Duke Chronicle - Issuu