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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
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ONE HUNDRED AND TWELFTH YEAR, ISSUE 54
Plaintiff settles lawsuit against EVP Tallman Trask
Graphic by Ben Yang | The Chronicle
WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 8, 2017
Staff Reports The Chronicle A lawsuit filed against Executive Vice President Tallman Trask for hitting a contract parking employee with his car has been dismissed. The Chronicle reported last year that Trask hit Shelvia Underwood with his car and allegedly used a racial slur while attempting to park for a football game. Underwood later filed a suit against Trask and Duke on counts of battery, negligence and civil conspiracy. In April, a judge removed Duke as a defendant in the case. “It was settled last month by my insurance company for nuisance value,” Trask wrote in an email. Donald Huggins, attorney for Shelvia See TRASK on Page 6
Sameer Pandhare The Chronicle
Chronicle File Photo EVP Tallman Trask oversees Duke’s finances and administration.
As Duke head coach Mike Krzyzewski strolled onto the court in his return to the sidelines following back surgery, the Blue Devil crowd did not hesitate to shower the legend with adulation. But even the roar Krzyzewski received Saturday against Pittsburgh may not compare to the decibel level inside Cameron Indoor Stadium later this week. No. 18 Duke and No. 8 North Carolina will renew the Tobacco Road Rivalry when they square off for the first time this season Thursday at 8 p.m. The Blue Devils come into the contest riding a three-game winning streak and will look to close the gap on a Tar Heel
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team that has won nine of its last 10 and sits atop the ACC standings, 2.5 games ahead of its rival. However, Krzyzewski’s return means Duke finally has all its rotation players and coaches active at the same time as it searches for a signature win. “He brings a sense of urgency and a verve to our team that makes us better,” Blue Devil graduate student Amile Jefferson said after Saturday’s game. “He’s amazing as a coach, as a leader, as a bringer of emotion and toughness, and when we get on his bus and follow the energy and the verve that he has, we’ll be a really good team.” After battling injuries early in the season and playing without Krzyzewski for the last month, Duke (18-5, 6-4 in the ACC) has slowly righted the ship despite dropping three of four in the middle of
January. During their winning streak, the Blue Devils have made key defensive stops when needed down the stretch and held their opponents to just 27.3 percent shooting from beyond the arc. Although co-captains Matt Jones and Amile Jefferson have played at less than 100 percent recently, Duke has continued to grow more cohesive as a group and will need all hands on deck to slow down the best rebounding team in the nation. “We’re more together. It wasn’t about attitude or anything like that,” Kzyzewski said Saturday. “The two single biggest things to develop something good are preparation and continuity, and this group has been denied a lot of preparation and continuity.” The Blue Devils will have their hands See M. BASKETBALL on Page 15
go for it.
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