November 30, 2009

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THE INDEPENDENT DAILY AT DUKE UNIVERSITY

The Chronicle Assault reported on West

68 DUKE

H UCONN 59

Blue Devil defense nets NIT success by

Incident allegedly occurred Nov. 16 by

Lindsey Rupp THE CHRONICLE

A student reported last week that she was robbed and sexually assaulted on West Campus Nov. 16. The incident occurred between Wannamaker Dr. and Chapel Dr. Nov. 16 at about 10 p.m., said Assistant Chief Gloria Graham of the Duke University Police Department. She said the student reported that she was the victim of a strong-arm robbery and a second degree sexual offense. The alleged attacker took an undisclosed amount of cash and the student’s DukeCard, Graham said. She described the suspect as a 5-foot-11-inch black male between 28 and 30 years old. “We’re definitely going to investigate it because it’s not something that’s commonplace in our environment” she said, adding that the case is “high on [DUPD’s] priorities list.” The victim initially reported theincident to a different campus office, which brought the report to DUPD, and Graham said the student reported the incident anonymously Nov. 23. A DUPD incident report was not available for release Sunday. Although Graham said the report is SEE ASSAULT ON PAGE 4

Gabe Starosta THE CHRONICLE

NATHAN PHAM/THE CHRONICLE

Senior captainsLance Thomas (left) and Jon Scheyer (right) receives the NIT Season Tip-Off championship trophy after theBlue Devils built a big lead against No. 13 Connecticut and held on for the win.

NEW YORK— Kyle Singler did not perform up to his lofty standards on the offensive end Friday night against No. 13 Connecticut, but in the end, it didn’t matter. Despite getting only six points from their best player and shooting below 30 percent from the field, the No. 7 Blue Devils (6-0) built a nine-point halftime lead and maintained it for a confidenceboosting 68-59 win over the Huskies (4-1) in the NIT Season Tip-Off finals at Madison Square Garden. Singler finished 2-for-12 and picked up his third foul late in the first half, limiting his aggressiveness for most of the evening. With Duke’s star not as involved in the offense as he usually is, senior Jon Scheyer picked up the slack, finishing with 19 points, four ‘rebounds and five assists. Scheyer earned tournament MVP honors for his performance, yet neither he nor fellow guard Nolan Smith shot well either, going a combined 11-of-40 from the field. Smith scored 17 points but missed 17 shots, and many of those misses came from the elbow and the lane, a space clogged by big men on both ends. “The lane today was not a good place to shoot the ball,” head coach Mike Krzyzewski said. “There were a lot of distractions defensively being made by both teams for those shooters.” With all three of the Blue Devils’ leading SEE M. BBALL ON PAGE 10

Overhaul adds rigor to Duke Conversations by

Matthew Chase THE CHRONICLE

James Citrin, an author who studies leadership, has interviewed more than 3,000 top business executives in addition to athletes, politicians and musicians—including Lance Armstrong and Bono. And Nov. 19, he sat down to have dinner with Duke students. Citrin is one of many well known people who have come to Duke as part of Duke Conversations. The program, which has been in place for four years, pays student-nominated guests to come to the University to speak with students over dinner and in other venues. Following a review by membersof theDuke community,,

SEE CONVERSATIONS ON PAGE 4

ontheRECORD "To join that sorority, that's pretty special right there.... Nine defensiverebounds is possible because she works so hard." —Joanne P. McCallie on Jasmine Thomas's triple-double Friday. See story page 7

Business Swgjrs respond to smoking ban,*


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