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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
FRIDAY, MARCH 10, 2017
WWW.DUKECHRONICLE.COM
ONE HUNDRED AND TWELFTH YEAR, ISSUE 66
Riyanka Ganguly elected DSG president State officials slam Duke’s research safety procedures Staff Reports The Chronicle
Junior Riyanka Ganguly was chosen as Duke Student Government’s next president Wednesday. Ganguly is currently the vice president for equity and outreach, and has worked to create projects such as the Peer Advocacy for Sexual Health Center as well as free menstrual projects in the Bryan Center. She has also worked with Mi Gente, the University’s Latinx student group, to make the admissions and financial aid policies for undocumented immigrants more transparent. Ganguly won with 53.5 percent of the 1,948 votes cast. Sophomore Jackson Dellinger came in second with 28.1 percent of votes, followed by sophomore Will Hardee, who received 18.4 percent. No instant runoff was necessary based on these results. In a prior interview with The Chronicle, Ganguly compared her role to that of an activist, and said she was looking to advocate for marginalized communities as DSG president. “We are heading towards a time nationally where a lot of students are, in my opinion, very rightfully fearful, for what is about to come in the next four years, or really the next year as a crucial year of change,” Ganguly said. “And already we’re seeing so many things that do affect people outside of the private institution walls of Duke.” Sophomore Kushal Kadakia, currently chief of staff, was also elected as the new executive vice president. He ran unopposed during the election. About 80 percent of
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On Tuesday, there was a lawsuit alleging that the current election system— requiring voters to rank all candidates—was unconstitutional. The DSG Judiciary agreed, but the current procedure remained in place for this election. For a period Tuesday, 56 sophomores were unable to vote, but that issue was resolved by 5:30 p.m.
State officials have strongly criticized the University’s safety procedures after what they deem the mishandling of uranium in Duke’s Free Electron Laser Laboratory. According to a final incident report from March 3, a Uranium-235 source was compromised Feb. 11 after a researcher bent “the corners of the source to fit in a target holder.” Jim Jones from the Office of Communications for N.C. Department of Health and Human Services wrote to The Chronicle that the capsule was a postage stamp-sized wafer containing 1.5 grams of Uranium 235. The report goes on to say that potential contamination was discussed between researchers, but that the concern was dismissed and University reporting procedures were not followed. It continues by stating that no contamination surveys occurred at the source of the incident—
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Special to The Chronicle 53.5 percent of students voted for Ganguly, the current vice president for equity and outreach.
voters voted for Kadakia, with about 20 percent voting “no confidence.” Last year, 2,416 students voted compared to this year’s 1,948. Current President Tara Bansal received 51 percent of the votes. In a Facebook Live video Monday, DSG Attorney General Sabriyya Pate, a sophomore, said that improving voter turnout was an “active struggle.” But she said she hoped efforts to consolidate candidate platforms on the DSG website would be a positive step forward.
Big 3 rises: Top 3 scorers guide Duke past Louisville Amrith Ramkumar The Chronicle
Ian Jaffe | The Chronicle Sophomore Luke Kennard scored 18 of his 24 points after halftime as the Blue Devils overcame a 12-point deficit to notch their third top-15 win of the season.
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INSIDE — News 2 Sports 4 Classified 5 Crossword 5 Opinion 6
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NEW YORK—After Louisville started the second half by making seven of its first nine shots and continuing to drive the ball down Duke’s throat to go up 12, it looked like the Blue Devils were not up to match the Cardinals’ intensity for the second time this year. But Duke showed how much it has grown since early January, ripping off a 16-3 run spurred by a switch to a zone defense to take the lead right back and give itself a chance to upend Louisville down the stretch. With Grayson Allen, Luke Kennard and Jayson Tatum at their best once again, the Blue Devils did just that and completed their biggest second-half comeback of the season. Duke’s leading trio combined for 67 points to lead the fifth-seeded Blue Devils to an 8177 win against the fourth-seeded Cardinals Thursday afternoon at the Barclays Center in the ACC tournament quarterfinals. Kennard
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scored 10 points in a row to help Duke erase a nine-point deficit early in the second half, before Tatum’s corner 3-pointer put the team up five with 2:24 remaining. Although No. 10 Louisville cut the lead to one after Tatum—who fouled out with 25 points—threw it away with 24 seconds left and the Blue Devils up three, two Kennard free throws and a missed Quentin Snider jumper sealed the win. The victory saw freshman big men Harry Giles and Marques Bolden play meaningful secondhalf minutes and Duke play arguably its best brand of basketball since its home victory against North Carolina Feb. 9. The Blue Devils and Tar Heels will do battle again in Friday’s first semifinal at 7 p.m. “Today was just joy,” Duke head coach Mike Krzyzewski said. “I had so much fun coaching our team today. I felt like a little kid, man…. They gave everything.” After the Cardinals (24-8) started the second half on fire by taking advantage of See M. BASKETBALL on Page 8
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