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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.

Times columnist Kristof to speak at Duke

07 Jun 2009, Posted by Emmeline Zhao in News, 1 Comments


New York Times Columnist Nicholas Kristof will speak at Duke next Fall, Colleen Scott, associate director of the Baldwin Scholars program confirmed Thursday.

Kristof will give a public lecture at the University as part of a tour to promote his new book, Half the Sky: Turning Oppression into Opportunity for Women Worldwide.

“He’s the big voice in the world and he’s using his voice to highlight the issues the people in WISER are passionate about,” said Sheryl Broverman, associate professor of the practice of biology and co-founder and NGO chair of the Women’s Institute for Secondary Education and Research. “We hope it’ll kick off discussion on campus about the role gender plays in international development.”

She added that Kristof’s speech will help WISER move forward, beyond fundraising and toward more education about the pivotal role women play in global economic development. The event will be hosted by the Baldwin Scholars program, WISER and other campus organizations.

Kristof is a two-time Pulitzer prize winner and has been a New York Times columnist since November 2001. He is largely known for bringing to light human rights issues in third-world countries such as the genocide in Darfur.

Netflix: The New Toilet Seat

28 Mar 2009, Posted by Andrew Hibbard in Film, Playground, 2 Comments


There’s a scene in You’ve Got Mail toward the end. Right before Tom Hanks’ Joe Fox reveals himself to be NY152 to Kathleen Kelly.

Fox: …and the only thing we would fight about is which video to rent on a Saturday night.
Kelly: Well, who fights about that.
Fox: Well, some people. Not us.
Kelly: We would never.

Funny as it seems, maybe Nora Ephron understands marital bliss better than the rest of us. When I was reading Michael Wilson’s New York Times story about Netflix, it seemed especially true. More specifically, the story describes the online rental service is the “new trench on the frontlines of American marriage.” An excerpt:

But for many couples, the queue — the computer list of which films will arrive next in the mail, after those at home are returned — is as important as everything else that spouses and other varieties of significant others share, from pet names to closet space to the bathroom. For some, this is fine. For others, the queue is the new toilet seat that somebody left up.

Not to discredit Wilson, but it seemed like a lot of column inches for a story in which spouses complain about each other’s taste in movies. But maybe, 11 years after You’ve Got Mail, somewhere off in fantasy land, Kathleen Kelly and Joe Fox are complaining about each other’s Netflix queues.

More on The NY Times and Full Frame

19 Mar 2009, Posted by Andrew Hibbard in Film, Full Frame, Playground, 0 Comments


As we reported earlier, The New York Times has withdrawn its sponsorship of the 2009 Full Frame Documentary Film Festival. The newspaper’s sponsorship was more of a media exchange and involved no funding. Peg Palmer, the festival’s executive director, says that anyone worried about the festival should rest assured it will continue to go on strong this year and in the future.

Concerning the Times though, it is no secret that journalism as an industry is hurting right now, and the Times is not immune. Palmer sent me an article from the Asbury Park Press about the Times that pertains to the Times sponsorship of Full Frame. An excerpt:

The company is making “substantial expense reductions” as ad sales fall, Sulzberger said. In addition to its newspaper Web sites, the company owns About.com, purchased for $410 million in 2005. The site produced $115 million in revenue last year, 3.9 percent of the company’s total.

Although the Times’ loss this year is sad, Full Frame 11th year looks solid. The schedule of films is online right now. Of note: Hoop Dreams director Steve James has curated a series called “The Sporting Life” that looks great. Keep checking back to the Playground for more updates on the Festival and be on the lookout for our coverage in the print edition of recess.

NY Times Pulls Full Frame Sponsorship

13 Mar 2009, Posted by Andrew Hibbard in Film, Full Frame, Playground, 0 Comments


The New York Times has revoked its sponsorship of the 2009 Full Frame Documentary Film Festival. The grey lady has been a presenting sponsor for America’s fast-approaching, premiere documentary festival since 2001.

The Festival’s other main sponsor, Duke University, has been a sponsor since 2005, though in the Festival’s early years, when it was called the Double Take Film Festival, it was sponsored by Duke’s Center for Documentary Studies. Duke is staying on board. Several sponsors at a lower financial level, such as A&E Indie Films, HBO Documentary Films and the City of Durham have all maintained their connection with the 11th annual Full Frame Festival.

Because this information is from a press release, there is no news yet on how the Times’ decision will affect Full Frame but this is clear proof for anyone who needed it that the newspaper industry–even the top dogs–is not doing well.

Full Frame will still be held April 2-5 in downtown Durham. Check back here for more news related to the Festival and the Times’ sponsorship.