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Duke suffers another three-point loss despite a second-half comeback | Sportswrap
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, NOVEMBER 7, 2016
WWW.DUKECHRONICLE.COM
ONE HUNDRED AND TWELFTH YEAR, ISSUE 31
Duke early voting numbers dip only slightly Claire Ballentine The Chronicle
Malice toward none Matthew King
Ben Yang | The Chronicle
Despite fears that fewer Duke students were voting in this election than last, early voting data shows that they are in fact casting their ballots, although the numbers are down slightly. According to the absentee voter file from the North Carolina State Board of Elections, approximately 3,000 people aged 18 to 22 years old who are residents of the three precincts that include Duke’s campus voted early. In 2012, this number was approximately 3,200. The total number who used the early voting location at the Devil’s Den was 8,366. “I think the turnout was pretty good,” said junior Matthew King, former YOUnite president and a columnist for The Chronicle. “I’m not unhappy with it at all.” Junior Amy Wang, vice president of Duke Democrats, said that numbers for early voting were low at first. She noted that as of Thursday night, 600 less people had voted compared with the numbers at the same time in 2012. However, she explained that numbers started to pick up Friday. “For Duke students, voting is quite possibly the most important thing you’ll do all semester,” she said. The Devil’s Den was one of 13 locations open in Durham County for early voting from Oct. 27 to Nov. 5. On election day, voters can only cast a ballot at their assigned precinct.
Opinion:
Students registered at their East Campus address will vote at George Watts Elementary School, and students registered at West and Central Campus addresses will have to vote at the Patterson Recreation Center. In Durham County, more people voted early this year than in 2008 or 2012. In 2012, 9,174 used Duke’s site when it was located in West Union for 17 days. This year, Duke’s site was only open ten days. Early voting got off to a strong start with
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927 people casting their ballots on the first day of early voting at the Devil’s Den. Site supervisor Judy Moore said that a mixture of both Duke students and Durham residents came out to vote. Gunther Peck, associate professor of public policy and history, noted that in typical Duke student fashion, more students showed up to the polls at the end of the early
Tomorrow we will witness a miracle. The miracle won’t be a Hillary Clinton victory. It won’t be a win for Donald Trump. And, I’m sorry, Gary Johnson supporters, but don’t get your hopes up either. The miracle doesn’t have anything to do with the candidates themselves. It has everything to do with the people. Deep in our rational minds, a voice tells us that our puny, individual vote does not matter. Local elections, after all, are rarely decided by a single vote, and national elections never are. Yet we vote anyway. We vote by the millions. This is nothing short of a miracle. I’ll never forget an elderly couple I saw enter a polling station where I was handing out campaign literature in 2012. The woman wore pearls, the man sported a cap that read “WWII Veteran,” and they leaned against each other with such precariousness I thought they might collapse in on each other as they inched toward the doors. Thin translucent tubes snaked down the man’s face to a pair of oxygen tanks wheeling along
See EARLY VOTING on Page 4
See MALICE on Page 4
Pressure defense sparks rout in Duke’s final exhibition Brian Pollack The Chronicle
Izzi Clark | The Chronicle Freshman Frank Jackson was one of four players with at least 15 points Friday as Duke relied on its man-to-man defense to jumpstart the offense.
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In its first exhibition game against Virginia State last week, Duke came out of the gate a little sluggish as a few key players went down with minor injuries. This time around, none of that was an issue for the Blue Devils—even without three of their top freshmen. In its second and final preseason tune-up, No. 1 Duke cruised past reigning Division II national champions Augustana 98-45 Friday at Cameron Indoor Stadium. Freshman center Marques Bolden dressed but did not play—joining injured classmates and fellow five-star recruits Harry Giles and Jayson Tatum on the bench—but the Blue Devils still had no trouble handling the Vikings. “Amile [Jefferson] and Grayson [Allen] and myself took it upon ourselves to be those leaders and say, ‘Hey, even though it’s an exhibition game and it might not count afterwards, right now we need this to get ready and to get better,’” senior captain Matt Jones said. “Just to be able to have this open run was really good for us.”
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Duke head coach Mike Krzyzewski said that because Augustana lacks a true big man, he was just resting Bolden, who impressed in the team’s first exhibition. He added that he expects everyone but Giles to be ready for the team’s season opener against Marist next week. Giles is out following a knee scope in early October, and Tatum was sidelined with a minor foot sprain last week. Krzyzewski noted Giles did a non-contact workout with associate head coach Jeff Capel Friday and that he hopes the No. 1 recruit will be ready to play ready this month. Giles still has not done any 5-on-5 work, although he should be moving toward practicing in 5-on-0 drills this week. “We thought in not playing Marques [Bolden], we could give him some rest and get Chase [Jeter] and Antonio [Vrankovic] more minutes,” Krzyzewski said. “We also wanted to take a look at Amile [Jefferson] playing the five, so we tried to take a look at many different things tonight. Again, we did think we were going to win talent-wise, but we wanted to put our guys in those situations.” In Friday’s game, Luke Kennard led a See M. BASKETBALL on Page 6
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