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A former Chronicle Editor tells us why the lacrosse case should have been #1

A former Chronicle Editor tells us why the lacrosse case should have been #1

03 Jan 2010, Posted by David Graham in Decade in Review, News, 2 Comments


I’ve had a few experiences in the few months since graduating that have made me feel pretty old. One was seeing wasted frosh gathering to go to Tailgate and being appalled. The second was this week, when I saw that Chronicle editors deemed the financial crisis the biggest story of the decade, over even the Duke lacrosse case.

My reaction: Man, these kids are young. And also: Do we forget so soon?

Clearly, the case will not be even a major footnote in the history of America, race relations, or academic reform (of prosecutorial misconduct, perhaps). But it will go down as a huge event in University history—think Bassett Affair—and it’s hard to imagine an event that shaped the decade at Duke more forcefully than the lacrosse case.

First, for people. It seems fair to assume that everyone in the classes of 2006 through 2010 or so had a college experience uniquely informed by the case. I think of the case as the bookends for my undergraduate life—from the party and first allegations, in the spring of my freshman year, through the quick disintegration of then-district attorney Mike Nifong’s case, then the lengthy and painful denouement, dropping of charges, disbarment, and then the end of most major action during my senior year. But anyone at Duke during that bizarre and awful spring remembers the swarm of reporters and cable trucks that invaded the Chapel circle and made going to class or Alpine an ordeal. I imagine this is just too surreal to describe to anyone who wasn’t there. We all dealt with that onslaught, the national media attention, the anxious or mocking calls from family and friends. Some of us had to reconcile the picture of friends we knew with the lies that were being disseminated about classmates.

As the case progressed, Duke students became aggressively involved in the community, launching a campaign—unsuccessful—to defeat Nifong at the polls. (One of the most moving moments of my Duke career was watching lacrosse players picket for hours in cold and constant November rain outside of a local polling station to try to sway last-minute voters.) We watched jubilantly as Attorney General Roy Cooper dropped the charges, and as Nifong was disbarred. It must have been so strange, in a different way, for admitted students deciding on a school that spring. What could convince them to come to a school under the cloud Duke was, I can’t imagine, but they deserve some special recognition.

The important part is that for most Duke students—especially this crop, which got a rather raw deal, being the one that saw Duke’s U.S. News ranking decline rather than rise, and the first not to see a National Championship for years–lacrosse was a defining moment, if not the defining moment.

And so it was for Duke, too, which brings me to my second point. No, all of the Group of 88 aren’t gone (nor should they be; the only thing more tiresome than reading the invective that says a professor who made a mistake is not a leading scholar in her or his field, is reading comments on the Chronicle site about how Duke should stop teaching the humanities altogether. Yawn.). But the case luckily rid the University of Houston Baker, for example. It helped to reform a rather decadent culture. It didn’t go nearly far enough in repairing the rift between Duke and Durham, nor in dealing with the socioeconomic and racial issues both within and outside the campus walls that were uncovered. Still, it forced a far more introspective stance on administrators, faculty and students alike. The Brodhead administration, No. 4 on this list, will always be associated with lacrosse, and Duke will, for better or for worse, be dealing with the implications of the case on its reputation—whatever they may be—for years to come.

I think the editors did a nice job with this list, with a couple caveats. It’s hard to figure how—even for the News department—the 2001 National Championship and dearth since then wasn’t top 10, given the centrality of basketball at Duke. It’s harder to figure out how the world financial crisis ends up as a bigger story for the University. For one thing, the most common start date for the meltdown—September 15, 2008—was only a few months from the end of the decade. For another, although one can’t say enough about the trouble faced by folks being laid off by Duke, it’s never really been many Duke students’ style to care about the people who clean their dorms and serve their food. For most Duke students, faculty and administrators, the crisis will only make a rich university a little less rich. And some of the projects being pushed back now—think Central Campus—might have been farther along if not for the three-ring circus of distraction the scandal provided. And finally, even if I’m wrong, these effects will truly be the story of the decade to come, not the one that just ended.

The lacrosse case is a staple of decade-end blogs elsewhere, and it should have been at the top of The Chronicle’s list too.

David Graham, Trinity ’09, was editor of The Chronicle’s 103rd volume. His writing has appeared in Newsweek, The Wall Street Journal and The National. He can’t believe he let himself be sucked into writing this.

Number 2: The Lacrosse Case

Number 2: The Lacrosse Case

30 Dec 2009, Posted by Naureen Khan in Decade in Review, Featured, News, 0 Comments


David Evans, Colin Finnerty and Reade Seligmann at a press conference in April 2007

David Evans, Colin Finnerty and Reade Seligmann at a press conference in April 2007 (from left to right)

It started, as we all know by now, with a Spring Break party hosted by the lacrosse players at 610 N. Buchanan Blvd March 13, 2006. It burgeoned into one of the most difficult crises the University has ever had to confront in its history as well as one of the most prominent examples of prosecutorial misconduct in the nation.

Crystal Gail Mangum, one of two exotic dancers hired to perform at the lacrosse party, falsely accused three members of the 2005-2006 men’s lacrosse team of rape. Even as the team’s captains “unequivocally” denied the allegations, their season was cancelled, head coach Mike Pressler was forced to resign and the case garnered national media attention as the Gothic Wonderland was swarmed with reporters and cameras looking for a story that seemingly spoke volumes about the intersection of race, sex and privilege (or not). Protestors too made their presence in Durham felt, culminating in the New Black Panthers for Self-Defense staging a demonstration just off campus in May.

Adding fuel to the fire, a group of 88 Duke professors printed an ad in The Chronicle in the midst of the allegations, asking, “What does a social disaster sound like?”–an act that drew ire from many in the following months.

Meanwhile, state investigators found that no lacrosse team members’ DNA matched biological evidence taken from Mangum and time-stamped photographs of the players further drew her varying accounts of the night into question. Nevertheless, then-Durham district attorney Mike Nifong told the media he was “convinced that there was a rape” and proceeded with his investigation. Sophomores Collin Finnerty and Reade Seligmann were charged with first degree forcible rape, first degree sexual offense and first degree kidnapping April 18. A month later, the day after his graduation, David Evans was also indicted. He told reporters that the accusations were “fantastic lies.”

Despite the continued lack of evidence and dubiousness of Mangum’s claims, however, Nifong pushed on with the charges, winning his bid for re-election to the DA’s office in November 2006 against Lewis Cheek and write-in candidate Steve Monks. It was not until Mangum said she could no longer confidently testify that she was penetrated in that Nifong dropped the rape charges against Seligmann, Finnerty and Evans in late December. At the same time, the North Carolina State Bar launched an inquiry into possible ethics violations on Nifong’s part. The DA recused himself from the case days later, handing the investigation over to North Carolina Attorney General Roy Cooper.

On April 11, 2007, after a four-month review of the case, Cooper dropped the remaining charges of sexual assault and kidnapping at a nationally televised press conference and took the unusual step of proclaiming the three indicted players “innocent” as well as condemning Nifong’s conduct.

The episode, however, was not entirely over. Duke announced a settlement with Finnerty, Evans and Seligmann and

Disgraced former district attorney Mike Nifong reports to jail in September 2007.

Disgraced former district attorney Mike Nifong reports to jail in September 2007.

their families for an undisclosed amount of money in June. Days later, Nifong resigned from the office of Durham district attorney as the State Bar concluded their investigation into his behavior and moved to disbar him. In late August, the already disgraced ex-prosecutor was convicted of criminal contempt for knowingly making false statements during the case and ordered to spend a single day in jail. In September, President Richard Brodhead, speaking at a Law School conference apologized to the 2005-2006 lacrosse players and their families for the University’s lack of support “in this time of extraordinary peril.”

Since then, the lacrosse scandal has spawned a campus culture report, numerous lawsuits (Kyle Dowd v. the University; former head coach Mike Pressler v. the University–despite an earlier settlement; the three indicted players v. the City of Durham; the 38 unindicted players v. the University and the city of Durham), several books (Until Proven Innocent, The Last Dance from Grace: The Crystal Mangum Story–reviewed here, It’s Not About the Truth), even talks of a HBO movie. And several lessons learned about the imperfect nature of the justice system.

The lacrosse case is Number 2 on our stories of the decade list. These are the issues and events that made headlines for weeks at a time over the last ten years, those that sparked the most debate on campus and beyond, and the ones that we believe will continue to shape our coverage in the years to come.

Number 4: The Brodhead Era

Number 4: The Brodhead Era

30 Dec 2009, Posted by Naureen Khan in Decade in Review, News, 0 Comments


“Do I, Richard, take you, Duke, to be my chosen life?” Richard Brodhead asked himself when he became Duke’s ninth University President in the summer of 2004. “I do.”

Richard Brodhead. (Photo courtesy of Duke News)

Richard Brodhead. (Photo courtesy of Duke News)

The former dean of Yale College and English professor was chosen after a months-long, nationwide search to succeed popular former president Nan Keohane in December 2003. At Yale, where Brodhead spent forty years as a student, professor and administrator, the 19th century literature scholar built a legacy on “having a finger on the pulse of the undergraduate student body” and his approach to academics.

During his five years at Duke, Brodhead has prioritized fundraising for financial aid ($300 million to be exact) and integrating civic engagement and service into the academic experience, both with the University’s most recent $1.3 billion strategic plan “Making a Difference” and the launch of DukeEngage.

Brodhead’s tenure at Duke, however, has been anything but smooth sailing. From the beginning, the President has had to confront a series of crises, difficult for even the seasoned veteran of academia to navigate. In 2004, head basketball coach Mike Kryzewski almost left the University to take over as head coach for the Lakers. Just months later, Brodhead and the University drew fire for allowing the Palestinian Solidarity Movement to host its annual conference on Duke’s campus. Then of course, there was lacrosse and the new financial reality created by the recession (but again, we’ll save the best for last).

The Brodhead Era is number 4 on our stories of the decade list. These are the issues and events that made headlines for weeks at a time over the last ten years, those that sparked the most debate on campus and beyond, and the ones that we believe will continue to shape our coverage in the years to come.

The Chronicle News Blog Presents: Top Ten News Stories of the Decade

The Chronicle News Blog Presents: Top Ten News Stories of the Decade

28 Dec 2009, Posted by Naureen Khan in Decade in Review, Featured, News, 5 Comments


If you haven’t noticed as we draw to the close of this decade, the media loves its lists. There’s Time’s annual world’s most influential people list, Rolling Stones’ Best Albums of the Decade, the New York Times Book Review’s Best of 2009, the New Yorker’s Best Films of the Decade…and the list goes on and on and on, if you’ll pardon the pun.

The Chronicle too has caught listmania with Recess staff members  compiling their own Top Ten Tracks of 2009 and Sports doing a series on Duke’s All-Decade Teams. We at News have been perhaps a little slower on the uptake, but we too wanted to bring you a list–of the top ten news stories of the decade.

These are the issues and events that made headlines for weeks at a time over the last ten years, those that sparked the most debate on campus and beyond, and the ones that we believe will continue to shape our coverage in the years to come.

As we publish our picks, we’ll be posting an updated list here:

10. North Carolina swings blue in 2008

9. Building, building, building

8. The murders of Abhijit Mahato and Eve Carson

7. Problems for the Duke University Health System

6. September 11th and the wars on terror

5. New rules for living and learning

4. The Brodhead Era

3. Duke Goes Global

2. The Lacrosse Case

1. Making a smaller Duke

Disagree with our choices? Think our news sense is bogus? Let us know what you think. We’d love to hear from you.

Duke Magazine's 25 on 25

01 Oct 2009, Posted by Andrew Hibbard in Art, Culture, Playground, 0 Comments


We’re a little late in posting this but Duke Magazine’s 25th anniversary issue is out now and it includes a feature where 25 Duke faculty member make predictions about the next 25 years at Duke. Kristine Stiles (full disclosure: I’m in her class) theorizes about the future of art, and many more arts faculty weigh in. Check out some art/culture-themed ones below.

There are lots of other names–Brodhead, Dean Sue, etc.–in the to check out as well. Coach K is there as well–if you’re into that…