January 18, 2017

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Celebrating Pauli Murray’s legacy

Sticking together

The Durham activist’s home was named a national historic landmark | Page 3

Two women’s soccer standouts were drafted by the same professional team | Sports Page 5

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, JANUARY 18, 2017

WWW.DUKECHRONICLE.COM

ONE HUNDRED AND TWELFTH YEAR, ISSUE 46

Students raise money for campus cats’ veterinary care Kenrick Cai The Chronicle After a wave of wintry weather hit Duke last week, students took it upon themselves to care for a calico cat who lives on West Campus. The cat, commonly known as Peaches, lives near Few Quadrangle where students have provided makeshift shelters and food. Junior Anna Li, a Few Quad resident assistant, created a Facebook group called “Caretakers of Peaches (The Calico Cat)” after she could not find Peaches during the winter storm and feared the cat was “either dead or just suffering out the night.” “I’ve kind of thought we’ve needed a group like this for a while now,” Li said. “I’ve noticed a lot of times people feed her and then other people feed her, and I wished there was a way for us to all connect with each other because I knew we all cared about her. Like, what if she got sick?” Since its creation Jan. 8, the Facebook group has expanded in a way Li said she could not have imagined. The group had 257 members as of Tuesday. “Previously, it had largely been guesstimating,” said sophomore Anna Matthews, a member of the group. “There was a period [last year] where Peaches was gone for two weeks, and I was worried she had gotten stuck somewhere.” Matthews said she was worried Peaches

Chronicle File Photo A GoFundMe page for the cats’ health care, particularly a cat named Peaches (above), has raised $675 since last Wednesday.

may have gotten locked in a “closet or garden shed” and said having a group in such a scenario would have been “extremely helpful.” “Once the Facebook group was created, her location kept getting updated, so if you wanted to go see her, you could,” sophomore Alexandra Sánchez Rolón wrote in an email. “There’s also a sense of moral responsibility now, because if we

know where she is, we have the ability to choose whether to help her if she needs it or not.” Last Wednesday, Li and Matthews created a GoFundMe page with a goal of raising $300 toward providing veterinary treatment to “a general campus cats fund with a focus on Peaches,” Li said. As of Tuesday, the campaign had raised $675. After Peaches resurfaced following the

snowstorm, Li said she noticed the cat was moving slower, had gastrointestinal distress and communicated with a “raspier meow.” Matthews noted that some funds will be used for deworming Peaches and MamaBean, another calico cat that lives near Wannamaker dormitory. “What you end up worrying about is an See CATS on Page 12

Undergraduate student attendance drops over time Hank Tucker The Chronicle Although tenting for this year’s home game against North Carolina generated unprecedented student interest, Duke is not immune to the attendance questions that are facing athletic departments across the country. Filling up the student section at Cameron Indoor Stadium for ordinary games is still a challenge. Undergraduate attendance for men’s basketball has dropped during the last decade, Jon Jackson, senior associate director of athletics for external affairs, wrote in an email, though he added that graduate student attendance has increased to make total student attendance remain relatively constant. Without as many undergrads showing up, Duke Athletics has to sell general admission tickets to the public for most games to fill up Section 17, which officially holds about 1,200 people. Duke declined to provide raw student attendance numbers for most games, but Jackson wrote that no general admission

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tickets were sold to the ACC/Big Ten Challenge contest Nov. 29 against Michigan State. Tents started to fill Krzyzewskiville—or “K-Ville”, as it is often referred to—for that game more than a day before tipoff, and several Blue Devils remarked after the game that the raucous crowd was a factor in the decisive second-half run that fueled Duke’s 78-69 win. “The fans are a big part of what we do. They’re a part of us,” sophomore Luke Kennard said after the game. “We need them every single night to lift us when we need it most, and I think that’s what they did tonight. The fans were great. The atmosphere was unbelievable. That’s what college basketball is all about.” But that atmosphere has been hard to match since, with plenty of aging fans standing in general admission seats next to energetic students at every other home game this season. Even at some big games last year—such as a Monday night home game against then-No. 13 Louisville—there were

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See ATTENDANCE on Page 7

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INSIDE — News 2 Sports 5 Classified 9 Crossword 9 Opinion 10

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Carolyn Chang | The Chronicle More graduate students have gone to games at Cameron Indoor Stadium to make up for a decline in undergraduate attendance in the past decade.

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