January 13, 2016

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A thrilling bowl win

Senior attends State of the Union

Duke football makes history by winning its first bowl game in 54 years | Sportswrap

Jay Ruckelshaus attended President Obama’s address in Washington Tuesday night | Page 3

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 13, 2016

WWW.DUKECHRONICLE.COM

ONE HUNDRED AND ELEVENTH YEAR, ISSUE 59

New dorm BLUE DEVILS AIM TO SNARE TIGERS Duke heads to Greenville, S.C. to take on Clemson coming to East Campus Samantha Neal The Chronicle As part of an effort to modernize freshman residence halls, East Campus will be home to 12 dormitories instead of 14 by January 2018. A new residence hall will be built close to Bell Tower residence hall and will house 250 students—making it the largest freshman dorm on East. The new dorm will serve as a single residence hall to replace Epworth, Jarvis and East Residence Hall altogether. After determining that the combined costs to renovate the three dorms would be approximately the same as constructing a new residence hall, the new project was conceived, explained Rick Johnson, associate vice president of student affairs Darbi Griffith | The Chronicle Graduate student Marshall Plumlee will look to continue his strong play inside against a dangerous Tiger frontcourt led by Jaron Blossomgame.

See DORM on Page 4

Brian Pollack The Chronicle Saturday, the Blue Devils took on an upand-coming ACC opponent fresh off No. 9 a big upset, but they Duke quickly squashed vs. Virginia Tech’s hopes Clemson of a second straight win against a ranked opponent. WEDNESDAY, 7 p.m. Now, Duke finds Bon Secours Wellness Arena itself in that situation once again—just against a different opponent. After easily dispatching the Hokies in

Chronicle File Photo East Residence Hall will be one of three dormitories replaced by a new residence hall that will be constructed near Bell Tower.

their first conference home game of the year, the No. 9 Blue Devils hit the road again to take on Clemson Wednesday at 7 p.m. at Bon Secours Wellness Arena in Greenville, S.C. The Tigers were predicted to finish 12th in the ACC in the preseason rankings, but just knocked off then-No. 16 Louisville Sunday and are riding a three-game winning streak into Wednesday’s contest. Clemson’s only conference defeat came at the hands of No. 5 North Carolina—which currently sits atop the ACC standings—and a win would catapult the Tigers past Duke early in conference play. But the Blue Devils have reeled off three straight victories of their own to start off ACC action and appear to be playing some of their best basketball of the season after cruising past Virginia Tech

thanks to a 50-point first half. “We played well. We played a team that’s been playing great. The first half was sensational, not just offensively, but defensively,” Duke head coach Mike Krzyzewski said after Saturday’s win. “Overall, that was a really outstanding performance by our kids coming after the huge win in adverse situations Wednesday night [at Wake Forest].” Duke (14-2, 3-0 in the ACC) used an early onslaught of 3-pointers to put the Hokies in a deep hole Saturday, and a career-best 21 points from center Marshall Plumlee helped keep Virginia Tech from mounting a comeback. If the Blue Devils want to escape See M. BASKETBALL on Page 4

Early decision acceptance rate falls to record-low 23.5 percent Rachel Chason The Chronicle Early decision applicants will make up 48 percent of Duke’s Class of 2020—the same proportion of students admitted through the early decision process as last year. This Fall, 3,455 students applied to Duke early, which represents an 11 percent increase from last year and a record high for the University. Of those applicants, who will be able to view their admissions decisions at 7 p.m. Thursday, 813 will be accepted. This acceptance rate—23.5 percent—is the lowest the University

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has posted in the early decision process, said Dean of Undergraduate Admissions Christoph Guttentag. The early decision acceptance rates for the Class of 2019 and Class of 2018 were 26 percent and 25 percent, respectively. “This appears to be academically the strongest group of students admitted early that we’ve had,” Guttentag said. “It’s a more diverse and more interesting group than in past years. I think it’s going to be a terrific foundation for the Class of 2020.” He noted that students admitted through early decision were more socioeconomically diverse than in past years—48 percent of admitted students indicated they would

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apply for financial aid, compared to 43 percent last year. Critics of early decision point out that because the process is binding, applicants are not able to compare financial aid packages from different schools and may be deterred from applying. Guttentag noted that although this is gradually changing, the early decision pool remains less diverse than the regular decision pool. “That’s one of the reasons we don’t admit more students through the early decision process,” Guttentag said. “Diversity of students See ADMISSIONS on Page 5

INSIDE — News 2 Sportswrap 7 Classified 17 Puzzles 17 Opinion 18 Serving the University since 1905

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Chronicle File Photo Early decision applicants will make up 48 percent of the Class of 2020.

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January 13, 2016 by Duke Chronicle - Issuu