The Chronicle Tailgate alternative considered a success by
Ally Helmers THE CHRONICLE
ERA STARTSWITH CELEBRATION jfftH JMU 7 31 DUKE
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Many students donning neon leggings and condiment costumes Saturday took some time out from pregame festivities in the Blue Zone to partake in a family-friendly cookout and field games on Main West Between 300 to 400 students, employees, alumni and families gathered to celebrate the first football game of the season, Vice President for Student Affairs Larry Moneta said. Rather than dancing under showers of beer and grilling in the Blue Zone, students who participated in the events on Main West chose to climb a rock wall, jump on a moon bounce and indulge in free non-alcoholic refreshments. Moneta said the events were sponsored by the Department of Athletics and University administrators to quell the traditional binge drinking and general debauchery that characterizes Tailgate, as well as to gamer greater support for the football program. “Hundreds left the tailgate to come participate in it,” he said. “It was pretty healthy to sort of spread out the hours of
tailgating.”
SEE TAILGATE ON PAGE 2
The seven maxims were still there afthe game, the ones David Cutcliffe had written on the whiteboard in the team meeting room before Saturday’s game with James Madison—his first as Duke’s head coach. And after the Blue Devils’ 31-7 victory on a rainy Saturday night in Wallace Wade Stadium, they served as easy grading material. The team that makes the fewest mistakes will win. Check. Protect our punter, our kicker, our quarterback, our lead and respect the ball. Check. Play for and make the breaks, and when they come your way, score. Check, check, check. “They’re principles,” Cutcliffe said. “We recite them together. We recite them together because we want to believe in them.” And finally, after Duke’s first home win since 2005, the 32,571 fans in attendance might start believing in Duke a little more, too. Following an 87-minute lightning delay, the two teams were deadlocked after trading first quarter touchdowns, but the Blue Devils (1-0) began to pull away with only five seconds left in the first half. Quarterback Thaddeus Lewis rolled right and found wideout Eron Riley from five yards out to give the Blue Devils a 14-7 lead. The score ter
Quadrangle.
Although Moneta said the event had a great turnout, University administrators will debrief at a meeting Tuesday to evaluate the success of the Main West Quad events and the status of the Blue Zone tailgate because
Matthew Iles
THE CHRONICLE
CHASE OLIVIERI/THE
CHRONICLE
TheBlue Devils rejoice after winning their first home game since 2005, topping Division l-AA James Madison 31 -7 in front of more than 30,000 fans in Wallace Wade Stadium Saturday night.
SEE FOOTBALL ON PAGE SW 5
ELECTION 2008
McCain adds Palin to GOP ticket Program offers Surprise pick said to boost new options to McCain’s maverick image by
Liz Sidoti
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
DAYTON, Ohio Republican John McCain introduced first-term Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin as his vice presidential running mate Friday, a stunning selection of a little-known conservative newcomer who relishes fighting the establishment. “She’s exactly who I need. She’s exactly who this country needs to help me fight the same comment on McCain's VP choice; p. 3 old Washington politics of ‘Me first and country second,’” McCain declared as the pair stood together for the first time at a boisterous rally in Ohio just days before the _______
PresumptiveRepublican presidential candidate Sen. John McCain campaigns with
his running mate, Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin,ata rally in O'Fallon, Mo.Sunday.
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w. soccer Duke beat Campbell and UNCGreensboro this weekend to improve to 3-0, SW 3
travel abroad by
Naureen Khan
THE CHRONICLE
World traveler and Duke junior Annie Schetinnikova will live on her third continent of the year during the Fall semester. After spending the summer developing a curriculum to teach skills to female entrepreneurs in Santiago, Chile as part of DukeEngage, she will
A look at.
Duke Engage
SEE TRAVEL ON PAGE 4
SEE PALIN ON PAGE 2
barnstorming for barack Actor Kal Penn campaigns for Obama at Duke Monday in his tour of N.C college campuses, PAGE 2