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Student shot with pellet gun near East Campus

09 Aug 2009, Posted by Staff Reports in Crime, News, 1 Comments


An undergraduate student was shot with a pellet gun and robbed while walking home late Saturday night on Watts Street, about one block from East Campus.

The student was injured in the abdomen and was hospitalized. The student is expected to recover fully, Aaron Graves, associate vice president for campus safety, said in Sunday’s statement.

The student was walking with a woman, who was not injured, when they were approached from behind by a man. Two shots were fired after a conflict between the parties, members of DPD said.

The suspect was described as a black man in his 40s with bulging eyes, a stocky build and 5 feet 11 inches tall, according to the news release.

Those with information regarding the crime should call the Duke University Police Department at 684-2444 or CrimeStoppers at 683-1200.

More information will be provided on The Chronicle’s News Blog as it becomes available.

Post updated 5:15 p.m. August 10, 2009, to reflect new information.

Arrest controversy highlights Gates’ Duke year

27 Jul 2009, Posted by Zachary Tracer in Faculty and Staff, media, News, 1 Comments


The controversy surrounding the arrest of Henry Louis Gates, Jr., a black Harvard professor, has brought issues of race and prejudice back into the media spotlight.

Most of the attention has been focused on how black men and the police view each other. But some light has also spilled onto the year Gates spent in Duke’s English department, a period Gates described as, “The most racist experience I ever had in my professional life,” according to a 1993 New York Times article.

In the 1993 article, which focuses on Duke’s struggle to attract black professors, Gates’ contributions paint an unfavorable picture of the University.

“No matter what kind of car I drove or house I had, it was assumed it was a gift from the university,” Gates told the New York Times. “It was all a ‘Where did that nigger get that Cadillac?’ kind of thing.”

This characterization of Duke (though not Gates’ 1993 comments) was raised again Friday on the front page of the New York Times Web site by Stanley Fish, a regular blogger for the paper.

In a blog post titled, “Henry Louis Gates: Déjà Vu All Over Again,” Fish, who was chair of Duke’s English Department when Gates was hired, describes how Duke professors questioned Gates’ academic credentials, speculated on his salary, and spread rumors about him when he left the university. He also says workers and delivery people at Gates’ house routinely mistook the professor for a servant, a mistake whose message was, Fish writes, “What was a black man doing living in a place like this?”

By the time Gates left Duke, he had taken to calling the University “the plantation,” Fish says.

But according to an ABC-11 story, also published Friday (which brought up Gates’ 1993 description of his time at Duke) both students and administrators say the situation for blacks at Duke has improved since the early 1990′s.

And a 2002 report from The Journal of Blacks in Higher Education ranked Duke first on a list of prominent universities, based on its success at hiring black professors and attracting black students. Still, the journal’s description of Duke notes racial segregation among students and high turnover among black faculty as continuing problems at the University.

Nevertheless, it concludes, “A decade ago, Harvard’s Henry Louis Gates Jr. called his one year experience at Duke the most racist experience of his academic life. But clearly the climate at Duke for both black students and black faculty has improved immeasurably since that time.”

Duke saw the fruits of this improved climate last year, when it hired J. Lorand Matory who had been co-chair of Harvard’s Association of Black Faculty, Administrators and Fellows and a professor of anthropology and African and African American Studies, to chair the University’s African and African American Studies Department beginning this month.

The hiring represented a reversal, of sorts, of Gates’ decision to leave Duke for Harvard, The Chronicle noted at the time.

As he discussed leaving Harvard with the Boston Globe, Matory said Harvard’s professors were not diverse enough. “Harvard clearly has an insufficient number of African-American professors, and it’s being abandoned by one more,” he told the Boston Globe last September.

Durham Is So Hip.

13 Jul 2009, Posted by Andrew Hibbard in Durham, Music, Playground, 0 Comments


(Via my friend, via her other friend) Back when Jamie Stewart played a Xiu Xiu show at the Coffeehouse, John Darnielle was in attendance, and it was great. Now, the two Durham denizens are popping up on Flickr, spending summer evenings on swinging benches. Check out the photo here.

Forbes: Durham No. 3 college town for jobs

21 May 2009, Posted by Emmeline Zhao in Durham News, News, The Economy, 0 Comments


Forbes magazine has ranked Durham third in its Top College Town for Jobs list Tuesday.

With  7.4% of workers in university jobs and 2.49 employment growth since last year, Durham is one of the top cities seeing “business booms,” the magazine reports. Although job availability decreased by 3.5% over the course of 12 months from March 2008, 62 college towns reportedly saw employment growth. The magazine also considers Duke Durham’s primary university.

Forbes defines “college town” as an area where “employment from universities, four-year colleges, two-year community colleges and university medical teaching hospitals supplied 2 percent or more of area jobs.”

The magazine also considers research universities “great environments” for employment and businesses because of the availability of recent college graduates, providing talent and inexpensive labor.

LIVE BLOG: Durham and Duke Police speak at graduate meeting

16 Apr 2009, Posted by Zachary Tracer in Crime, News, 0 Comments


And that’s a wrap. Brought some cookies back to the Chronicle office for the staff. Look for the full write-up tomorrow.

6:34: Had a chance to ask Capt. Smith about demands placed on police by Trinity Heights party house complaints.

“I run about anywhere from 7 to 9 patrol cars to cover my entire district. So at any given time, there is probably not a car in Trinity Heights. We’re running everything from a larceny call, to a wreck to a crime in progress. When someone picks up my phone and says there’s a loud party over here—does that get a police resp? Yes. I would not say it has increased patrol in that area. Has it increased a perception of a problem in that area? Yes, it has.”

6:19: Dailey says students should take the initiative and use Crime Mapper and other resources to investigate housing before they decide where to live. DPD can’t tell people that some areas of Durham are more or less safe than others.

6:03: DPD officer recommend Crime Mapper for tracking crime in Durham. Williams says students should follow crime on the DUPD website. Dailey also mentions using Twitter or Facebook to get out information.

5:51: DPD generally reports crimes committed against Duke students to the University, Capt. Smith said.

5:36: There are four students here, including myself. The meeting is being held outside BioSci 111. Attendees include: Larry Smith, DPD district 2 commander, John Peter, DPD district 3 commander, Dave Williams, crime prevention manager for DUPD, Dean Sue, and several student affairs staffers.

5:32: Officials from the Durham (DPD) and Duke (DUPD) police departments are scheduled to speak at a townhall meeting for graduate students this evening. According to an email from GPSC President Alethea Dunca, DUPD Chief John Dailey will be at the meeting along with commanders from Durham police districts two and three. So far, there are no graduates in the room for the 5:30 meeting, but at least one person is setting up food outside.

While waiting for the meeting to start, why not learn more about Dailey from this Chronicle Q&A?

Or perhaps you’re interested in reading about a scam artist who targeted graduate students and other residents, raising concerns about safety-related communication between graduate students and University administrators.

The security concerns of graduate students were also thrust into the spotlight last year after the slaying of graduate student Abhijit Mahato.