Faculty vote to unionize
Spring Break blowout
Approximately 300 non-regular rank, non-tenure track faculty will have union representation | Page 2
Duke men’s lacrosse dominated Georgetown 20-6 Saturday | Sports Page 7
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
MONDAY, MARCH 21, 2016
WWW.DUKECHRONICLE.COM
BLUE DEVILS PASS TEST Duke Sweet-16 bound after Yale almost erases 27-point lead
ONE HUNDRED AND ELEVENTH YEAR, ISSUE 91
Lawsuit filed against EVP Trask, Duke Amrith Ramkumar and Rachel Chason The Chronicle
Jesús Hidalgo | The Chronicle Grayson Allen poured in 22 first-half points and the Blue Devils held off a furious rally to advance to the Sweet 16 for the second straight year.
Jack Dolgin The Chronicle PROVIDENCE, R.I.—Duke seemed destined for the Sweet 16 at halftime Saturday, leading 48-23 after shooting 60.7 percent from the floor and knocking down nine 3-pointers in the first 20 minutes. With a minute to go, nothing was certain. But the fourth-seeded Blue Devils made six of seven free throws down the stretch and survived a huge Yale comeback, downing the 12th-seeded Bulldogs 71-64 at the Dunkin’ Donuts Center to advance to the West Regional semifinals next week in Anaheim, Calif. Sophomore Grayson Allen scored 29 points—22 of them in the first half—and freshman swingman Brandon Ingram added 25 for Duke, which watched a 27-point lead dwindle down to four in the closing minutes. “We didn’t let the building crash in on us,” said freshman Luke Kennard, who hit a pair of free throws with the Blue Devils leading 6561 with 52 seconds left. “Everything was going their way, the momentum was their way…we just stuck in there, made big shots, made big free throws.” Duke (25-10) broke the game open with
|
|
an 18-0 outburst in the first half to take a 4619 lead. The Blue Devils scored on six straight possessions, with Kennard and Ingram first nailing triples and Allen scoring four straight times in a variety of ways—a breakaway dunk, two 3-pointers and a jumper. Yale (23-7) responded with four straight points by sophomore Makai Mason, who had been held in check to that point after scoring a career-high 31 points Thursday against Baylor. Only two days earlier, Marshall Plumlee energized his team with a few minutes left in the first half by taking off his mask despite a broken nose and leading Duke to a second-half comeback victory. But at around the same juncture Saturday, Duke head coach Mike Krzyzewski sensed a lack of focus in his team—up 46-23—and called a timeout, in which he animatedly chastised his players. “We’re young, and we acted young,” Krzyzewski said. “Grayson was in a zone there…and when he hit the last one, he came back, and he didn’t know who he had, and he was in la-la land.” Allen and the Blue Devils showed their youth again on what appeared to be the final play of the half. With about 12 seconds left, Krzyzewski motioned from the sidelines
|
|
|
for Allen to start dribbling toward the hoop. Instead, he turned the ball over, and with six seconds remaining, fouled Brandon Sherrod. “They got open, and he commits that dumb foul,” Krzyzewski said. “Like what are you doing?” The Bulldogs carried the momentum into the locker room and emerged playing like a new team. Yale—led by senior starters who did not want to see their careers end—opened the second half with a flurry of baskets, going on a 15-0 run to get back within seven. Sherrod and Ivy League Player of the Year Justin Sears—who finished with a combined 10 offensive rebounds—dominated the interior and scored 11 straight points during the run. After shooting 1-of-11 from beyond the arc in the first half, the Bulldogs added a pair of triples, and a Blue Devil team that gave up a 16-point lead to Notre Dame in the second half of last week’s ACC tournament quarterfinals was watching another big lead evaporate. During another timeout, Plumlee shook teammates and implored them to get things together. “We just weren’t into it,” Kennard said. “That is what Marshall saw in all of us.... It was See M. BASKETBALL on Page 8
INSIDE — News 2 Sportswrap 5 Classified 9 Puzzles 9 Opinion 10 Serving the University since 1905
|
Shelvia Underwood, the contract parking employee who alleged that Executive Vice President Tallman Trask used a racial slur after hitting her with his car, has filed a lawsuit against Trask and Duke. The complaint, filed last Monday afternoon in Durham County Superior Court, lists four counts—battery, negligence, civil conspiracy and obstruction of justice—and requests compensatory and punitive damages in excess of $25,000 for each count. Trask is the University’s primary financial and administrative officer. Underwood seeks compensatory damages due to the “pain and suffering as a result of the intentional and malicious conduct by defendants,” according to the complaint, in addition to punitive damages for the “willful and wanton conduct of the defendants.” The complaint lists the second defendant as Duke, which is represented by Pamela Bernard, vice president and general counsel for the University. “Duke followed its standard operating procedures in responding to Ms. Underwood’s allegations,” Michael Schoenfeld, vice president for public affairs and government relations, wrote in an See LAWSUIT on Page 4
Special to The Chronicle A lawsuit has been filed against Executive Vice President Tallman Trask, who oversees Duke’s finances and administration.
|
@dukechronicle © 2015 The Chronicle