From the category archives:

Media

Ken Rogerson, professor of public policy and director of undergraduate studies at the Sanford School of Public Policy, participated in the New York Times’ Room for Debate blog, “Obama on All Channels,” Sept. 23.

Rogerson was one of several professors, presidential speechwriters and authors to comment on President Barack Obama’s frequent media appearances. Posts addressed whether the president is in danger of being overexposed.

In his post, Rogerson noted that Obama is “doing his job.”

“He is out among the citizens—both virtually and physically—promoting his policy agenda, showing support for existing programs and asking us to think hard about political decisions that are being made,” Rogerson wrote.

Rogerson added that still, Obama may be overexposing himself, leading citizens to prioritize consuming other information available to them in the “maze of modern technology.”

He contrasted the surplus of information about Obama and his doings with the  author J.D. Salinger’s media shyness, noting it is “interesting” that Salinger’s reclusive behavior has made  him  more compelling to the public.

“The next time Salinger decides to say something in public, I suspect people will stop to listen,” Rogerson wrote.

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Duke slipped two spots to No. 10 in U.S. News and World Report’s influential annual ranking of America’s best colleges and universities, released Thursday.

For the past three years, the University had held steady at No. 8. Its new rank represents the lowest spot Duke has held in at least a decade–peaking at No. 4 in 2003. Harvard and Princeton tied for the top spot this year, with Yale coming in at 3rd.

Although popular among prospective students, the much-touted rankings have come under fire in recent years from critics who question their value.

Pick up Monday’s Chronicle for the full story.

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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.

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Respected historian and civil rights leader John Hope Franklin passed away Wednesday of congestive heart failure at Duke University Hospital. He was 94. The James B. Duke professor emeritus of history was the namesake for The John Hope Franklin Center for Interdisciplinary and International Studies, which opened in 2000 to celebrate his ideals.

A look back at The Chronicle’s most recent and significant stories about Franklin:

  • John Hope Franklin’s commencement address (5/1/06): Those of us who stood three-quarters of a century ago where you stand today could not have imagined the changes that would occur in the next two generations. We can only hope that you who are the beneficiaries of these significant changes have fully appreciated them and have taken advantage of them in every possible way.
  • The American Man of a Century (4/26/06): “Old hat” seems to be a term that is ingrained in John Hope Franklin’s vocabulary. The prominent scholar has written several books chronicling African-American history, chaired history departments and accrued numerous professorships at several universities.
  • Historian Franklin discusses writing (11/21/05): Historian John Hope Franklin had no intentions of becoming an author. It took a lot of persuading to encourage him to write his first book about the history of African-Americans.
  • Franklin returns to roots for new book (11/3/05): John Hope Franklin is an institution. Literally. He is a preeminent American historian, active participant in nearly a century of struggle for civil rights and namesake of the University’s John Hope Franklin Center for Interdisciplinary and International Studies. His new book, Mirror to America: The Autobiography of John Hope Franklin, hit stores Wednesday and chronicles the long and fruitful life of one of America’s most renowned scholars and activists.
  • 90 years of making history (1/21/05): Candles, balloons and gifts. This weekend, Duke can expect much birthday cheer as the campus celebrates distinguished John Hope Franklin’s 90th birthday. The celebration of the James B. Duke professor emeritus of history will feature two photography exhibits chronicling his life, a panel discussion with two of Franklin’s former students, and culminate in performances by the Fisk University Jubilee singers.
  • Franklin kicks off speaker series (1/21/98): “I don’t always think in terms of race. You almost have to hit me in the face for me to think, ‘Oh, this is racial, isn’t it?’” With those words, John Hope Franklin initiated this semester’s series of informal discussions regarding race relations on campus, speaking to a crowd of about 50 people last night in the basement lounge of the Chapel.
  • Clinton selects Franklin to head race panel (6/19/97): President Bill Clinton has chosen one of the University’s finest scholars-John Hope Franklin, James B. Duke professor emeritus of history-to play an integral part in his new initiative on race relations, naming him chair of his presidential advisory board.
  • Franklin to be honored by Clinton (9/15/95): John Hope Franklin, James B. Duke professor emeritus of history, will be one of 12 individuals receiving the Presidential Medal of Freedom at the White House on Sept. 28.

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While speaking in Page Auditorium Tuesday, Mariane Pearl spoke of violence and dialogue: how the latter can help combat the former. And in the hour she spoke, Pearl had far too many words for one printed article. So here is some more of what the journalist had to say about how she learned to value life.

When Pearl’s husband Daniel Pearl was killed in Pakistan in 2002, Pearl was five months pregnant with their son, who she named Adam. In her speech, Pearl told the audience that she and Daniel knew their son would be a world citizen: her father was Dutch, her mother Cuban and Daniel’s parents were originally from Israel. She also said she decided before Adam was born that she would need to be hopeful and optimistic about their future despite Daniel’s death. Pearl said she knew how hopeless and cruel the world could be, and she refused to give birth to a baby without any hope in her heart.

In an interview with The Chronicle after the speech, Pearl said that although having a baby helped her find a reason to live after Daniel’s death, she believed she had to live for herself. Pearl said it would have been unfair to put that pressure on her son: he could not be the only thing keeping her living.

In a question and answer session with the audience, Pearl talked about her book, A Mighty Heart, and its adaptation into a film starring Angelina Jolie. Pearl, who has known Jolie for some years, said she highly respects the actress, adding that working with her was amazing. When talking about her world travels to encourage embracing diversity and to promote dialogue, Pearl also mentioned the many women—often victims of violence—and the inspiring stories they have shared with her. She told audience members that there were far too many compelling stories for her to select just one to tell, so she encouraged people to go to Glamour Magazine’s Web site where they can read the stories for themselves.

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Hello, News Blog readers! Alex Klein here. I’m The Chronicle’s Editor for New Media and its chief proponent of Twitter. In the last few days, we’ve had nothing less than a Twitter explosion (twitsplosion?) at the office. Before this Monday, only a few of us were on Twitter. Now, only half a week later, most of the top editors and many other editors, writers and photographers have joined.

Some haven’t really caught the bug yet–Photography Editor Maya Robinson’s only tweet remains “I joined because of peer pressure.” Most, however, have gotten the hang of it, even if they’ve only been communicating with each other. If you want to expand your Twitter network–or want to get to know the people behind those tiny bylines and photo credits–click away! Here are 25 29 30 Chronicle staffers dipping their toes in the Twitter stream. Many will succeed. Some might fail.

  1. Chelsea Allison, Editor
  2. Eugene Wang, Managing Editor
  3. Shuchi Parikh, News Editor
  4. Ben Cohen, Sports Editor
  5. Maya Robinson, Photography Editor
  6. Julia Love, University Editor
  7. Emmeline Zhao, University Editor
  8. Sean Moroney, Online Editor
  9. Hon Chu, Design Director
  10. Matthew Iles, Sports Managing Editor
  11. Naureen Khan, Local & National Editor
  12. Will Robinson, Local & National Editor (and Editor-elect)
  13. Nate Freeman, Features Editor
  14. Chase Olivieri, Sports Photography Editor
  15. Austin Boehm, Editorial Page Managing Editor
  16. Lisa Du, Wire Editor
  17. Tim Britton, Towerview Editor
  18. Meredith Shiner, Senior Editor
  19. Zachary Tracer, Local & National Associate Editor
  20. Julius Jones, Local & National Associate Editor
  21. Catherine Butsch, University Associate Editor
  22. Laura Keeley, Sports Associate Editor
  23. Madeline Perez, Sports Associate Editor
  24. Andrew Hibbard, recess Film Editor
  25. Kevin Lincoln, recess Literature Editor
  26. Michael Naclerio, Photography Associate Editor
  27. Michael Blake, Member, Independent Editor Board
  28. Dan Romero, Member, Independent Editor Board
  29. Dean Chen, Lead Developer
  30. Alex Klein (me), Editor for New Media

Wait! There’s more! Duke’s head football coach, David Cutcliffe, joined Twitter today after Sports Editor Ben Cohen showed him the ropes. You can find him (and follow him) here: @DavidCutcliffe. (Also, Cohen’s alter-ego Sports Blog Twitter account is here: @ChronicleSports.)

Our freshly-minted, and still very rough-around-the-edges, Chronicle account is here: @DukeChronicle. It’s not properly set up yet, but follow it and stay tuned. It’ll be up and running in no time.

Please use the comments section below this post to tell me about more Duke students, professors, staff members, coaches, or entities (libraries? departments?) who use Twitter. And you, dear reader: You should join Twitter, too! If you do, be sure to leave your username in the comments.

Update–Feb 20, 5:40p: Andrew Hibbard, recess Film Editor, just announced that recess literally just joined Twitter. Here they are: @chronicleRecess.

Update–Feb 22, 5:58p: We’re up to 29!

Update–Feb 23, 8:36p: Magic No. 30.

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Exclusive interview with journalist John Carroll

February 9, 2009

Following his speech Monday evening, journalist John Carroll spoke with me about his professional career, which spans more than forty years. The former Los Angeles Times editor discussed the future of print media and the Internet, ethics and conflicts of interest as well as advice for aspiring journalists. Carroll also reflected on a personal conflict [...]

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Duke Professors Join Cato Declaration Against Stimulus Plan

January 29, 2009

Five Duke professors signed a declaration prepared by the Cato Institute that ran in Wednesday’s New York Times . Cato is a libertarian-leaning think-tank located in Washington, D.C. A PDF version of the ad can be found here.

The five are:

John Coleman, professor in the Fuqua School of Business
Adriano Rampini, professor in the Fuqua School of [...]

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