March 9, 2016

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Looking to stay hot

‘Squeezing of the middle’

Duke baseball hosts Penn State4 coming off a 3-game sweep of Toledo | Sports Page 4

A Duke tuition expert explains recent trends in higher education costs | Page 2

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, MARCH 9, 2016

WWW.DUKECHRONICLE.COM

ONE HUNDRED AND ELEVENTH YEAR, ISSUE 89

‘There is systemic racism on Duke’s campus’ SMU’s Heath Former PTS employees join students in protest named Div. School dean Staff Reports The Chronicle

and George Williams, a former event parking specialist—said they wished there had been a larger student turnout, but that they appreciated those who voiced their support. “There is systemic racism on Duke’s campus, and that’s a fact,” Adkins said, speaking to the protestors. “Fear of retaliation is one of the reasons there aren’t more of us here today.” Adkins, who was terminated Jan. 23, 2015

After a national search, President Richard Brodhead and Provost Sally Kornbluth announced Tuesday that Elaine Heath will be the new dean of the Duke Divinity School. Heath—whose studies integrate systemic, pastoral and spiritual theology—is currently the McCreless professor of Evangelism in the Perkins School of Theology at Southern Methodist University. She will take over the position from Ellen Davis, who has served as interim dean since Richard Hays retired last August. “Elaine Heath is a leading scholar of emergence, the process by which religious faith finds new life outside familiar institutional forms,” Brodhead said in a Duke Today release. “At a time when the religious life of mainstream Protestantism is undergoing profound change, she will be a perfect leader for helping the Duke Divinity School retain traditional strengths while creatively responding to new challenges.” Heath is the co-founder and leader of the Missional Wisdom Foundation, which aims to help clergy

See PROTEST on Page 3

See DIV. SCHOOL DEAN on Page 3

Jesús Hidalgo | The Chronicle Former Parking and Transportation Services employees described their fear of retaliation during Tuesday’s student-led protest.

Rachel Chason The Chronicle Students and Duke community members gathered Tuesday to demand the resignation of Executive Vice President Tallman Trask and protest the mistreatment of employees within Duke’s Parking and Transportation Services department. The protest came one week after The Chronicle reported in a two-part series that Trask hit a female contract employee

with his car in 2014 and allegedly used a racial slur against her, and that current and former members described the department as hostile and discriminatory. Approximately 25 students, who were joined by several former PTS employees, gathered at the James B. Duke statue in front of the Chapel then marched to the West Campus bus stop and Allen Building. The former PTS employees—including Renee Adkins, who was the special events manager from 2003 until 2015; Reymond Milan, a former parking events specialist;

Blue Devils open ACC tourney against Wolfpack Brian Pollack The Chronicle Back in September, the Blue Devils celebrated their national championship with a trip to the White House. Now, Duke returns to the nation’s capital looking for another title. The No. 19 Blue Devils begin postseason play in Washington Wednesday with a 2 p.m. tip-off at the Verizon Center against N.C. State in the No. 12 second round of the N.C. State ACC tournament. vs. The 12th-seeded Wolfpack squeaked No. 5 by Wake Forest 75Duke 72 Tuesday to earn WEDNESDAY, 2 p.m. a third shot at fifthVerizon Center seeded Duke, which

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has already bested them twice during the regular season. The Blue Devils have not been playing their best basketball of late and enter the conference tournament just 2-3 in their last five games. The team demonstrated its potential during a five-game winning streak in the middle of ACC play that included three consecutive victories against ranked opponents, but has yet to show it can consistently compete at that level game in and game out. “If we take a positive away from the regular season, it’s that we can play with anybody—but the right team has to show up,” Duke sophomore Grayson Allen said after Saturday’s loss against North Carolina. “We’ve been such an up-anddown team, and if you’re up-and-down in See M. BASKETBALL on Page 8

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Carolyn Chang | The Chronicle First-team All-ACC guard Grayson Allen will look to win a third duel with fellow first-team guard Anthony “Cat” Barber Wednesday.

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March 9, 2016 by Duke Chronicle - Issuu