May 28, 2009

Page 1

The Chronicle Law prof Cecil takes individual crown tapped for OLP post by

Felicia Tan

THE CHRONICLE

Freshman Mallory Cecil won the 2009 NCAA women’s tennis singles champion-

ship Monday.

by

Cecil had a game plan against unseeded butredhotLaura Vallverdu: take the feisty player out ofher comfort zone by staying inside the baseline and staying aggressive. Cecil stuck with it all the way through, setting

Julius Jones

THE CHRONICLE

Professor Christopher Schroeder was nominated by President Barack Obama last week to become the assistant attorney general for the Office of Legal Policy. Provided that he is confirmed by the U.S. Senate, Schroeder, the Charles S. Murphy professor of law and public policy studies, will be making a return engagement to the U.S. Department of Justice. He previously served as assistant attorney general in the Office of Legal Council during the administration offormer president Bill Clinton. “I’m grateful that such experienced and dedicated individuals have joined my administration at a time when our nation faces great challenges,” Obama said in a May 21 White House news release. “Their deep commitment to their individual areas of work gives me confidence that they will help us put America back on a path to prosperity and security.” Officials at' the Office of Legal Policy in the Department of Justice declined to comment further. Schroeder joins a growing list of public officials with Duke ties whom Obama has asked to serve in Washington. Others include Secretary of Veteran Affairs Eric Shinseki, Grad ’76, a retired U.S. Army general who earned his master of arts degree in English literature from Duke, and Nicholas School of the Environment professor Richard Newell, who was nominated to be administrator of the Environmental Information Administration in the Department of Energy May 18. Michael Schoenfeld, vice president for public affairs and government relations, SEE SCHROEDER ON PAGE 4

onship May 20 in College Station, Texas. “It feels amazing,” Cecil said. “Just like with the team, words can’t describe how much fight and heart went into this for me, and for me to be out here representing my team and representing Duke, I couldn’t ask for more.” The freshman’s singles title caps an extraordinary rookie season which saw Cecil leap into the No. 1 position for Duke within three matches. The South Carolina native closed her season with an individual SEE W. TENNIS ON PAGE 10

Orange Crush

LAWSON

KURTZ/THE

CHRONICLE

In its third straight men's lacrosse Final Four appearance,Duke again fell shortofitsfirst national championship, going down 17-7to No. 2 Syracuse. SEE STORY PAGE 9

Scholarships see increased ields by

Toni Wei

THE CHRONICLE

Yields for the University’s merit scholarships improved for the Class of 2013, with only the Robertson Scholars Program and the Reginaldo Howard Scholarship failing to reach their target numbers. The Benjamin N. Duke scholarship exceeded its target of 10, with 12 con-

Christopher Schroeder, Charles S. Murphy professor of law, was nominated to become the assistant attorney general for the Office ofLegal Policy last week.

Vallverdu back on her heels on Championship Point and not easing up until she saw the Miami junior’s return long. Game, set, match and championship, 7-5, 6-4. For more than two hours Monday, No. 5 Cecil batded her third Miami foe in the individual tournament’s six rounds. For the sixth time, Cecil prevailed in straight sets, outlasting the Venezuelan-bom Vallverdu in an all-ACCfinal and barreling her way to her second national tide in less than a week. The freshman helped lead the Blue Devils to their first team national champi-

firmed acceptances out of 17 offers, said Don Taylor, program director of the B.N. Duke scholarship program. The University Scholars Program, Trinity Scholarships and Alumni Endowed Scholars all hit their targets exactly, with eight, two and one scholar, respectively, in the incoming class. The Angier Duke scholarship in particular saw an increase in yield, from

8..

ontheRECORD "...Our current [testing] method probably catches about one in 10 to one in 20 [cases] that are really happening here."

State HealthDirector Dr. JeffreyEngel on N.C s swine flu epidemic. See page 4

36 percent to 69 percent Melissa Malouf, director of the Office of Undergraduate Scholars and Fellows, said the A.B. Duke scholarship extended 26 offers this year, 18 of which were accepted, three more than the target number of 15. “It’s better than the last two years, although three years ago it was 16,” Malouf said. “It kind of goes up and down, and we’re not quite sure what it will be each year.” Current A.B. Duke Scholar Nick Altemose, a junior who has served on the A.B. recruitment committee for the last two years, said it was difficult to pinpoint the cause of the changes.

A.B. Duke scholarship yield increased from 36 percent for last year's class to 69 percent for the Class of 2013. »

B.N. Duke scholarship exceeded its target of 10 by bringing in 12 scholars for next year, but its yield dropped. »

Robertson Scholars Program just missed its target of 18, accepting 15 scholars for the Class of 2013. »

SEE SCHOLARSHIPS ON PAGE 4

Men's Baseball; Snubbed Blue Devils defeat Clemson 10-4, but lose to Virginia 11-7 in ACC tournament. Duke did not receive an NCAA tournament bid, PAGE 10

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