Video produced by Lawson Kurtz and Chase Olivieri/The Chronicle.
Pulitzer Prize-winning New York Times Columnist Nicholas Kristof told a packed Page Auditorium that women’s rights is the issue of the 21st century Sept. 17. His visit to the University was the first stop on his tour to promote his new book “Half the Sky: Turning Oppression into Opportunity for Women Worldwide.”
Unequal access to health care, food and education has crippled developing countries and left the world short of about 100 million women, Kristof said.
Telling stories of sex trafficking, physical abuse and mental neglect, Kristof illustrated his emotional and often disturbing anecdotes with photographs of the women of whom he spoke.
Kristof followed his lecture with a question and answer session and a book signing. The first 200 audience members to arrive received free copies of his book, and more were available for purchase.
Rep. David Price, D-N.C., came to Duke last Tuesday to talk about healthcare reform with students and answer their questions. Watch the video above, shot and narrated by The Chronicle’s Allie Prater, to see Price speak and hear an interview with one of the event’s planners.
As the year begins, before work piles up, Duke students have a lot of free time on their hands. Different Dukies do different things to fill the hours, most of which don’t make it on to a police blotter.
But sometimes, Duke students get drunk. And when they do, they don’t always make the best choices.
In the latest instance of drunk Duke student shenanigans, Duke Police found an intoxicated student sans clothing (yes, naked) in McClendon Commons around 9 a.m. Friday. According to the police report summary, an officer escorted the student back to his room.
Ten days earlier, Duke Police discovered a naked intoxicated student passed out near the Fitzpatrick Center for Interdisciplinary Engineering, Medicine and Applied Sciences, which students know as CIEMAS, at 2:12 a.m. No word on what the student was doing over there so early on a Tuesday morning. The student was taken to the hospital.
Sometimes, however, drunk naked Dukies are a bit more active. Have a look at this police report from April:
“I witnessed two subjects running from the Kilgo Quad area towards the Bus Stop. The male subject was completely naked with the exception of his hat and holding his boxers in his hand. The female subject was wearing only underclothes. The two stated that they had been at an unknown room in Kilgo Quad playing beer pong and had lost the game and as a result had been asked to run to the bus stop naked.”
When the officer encountered the students, he “asked the male subject to please put on his boxers,” the report states. After getting the students’ information, the officer let them go and get dressed.
The two did not get off scot-free. The students were not arrested, but a Dean was advised of the incident, the report notes.
Sen. Ted Kaufman, Engineering ‘60 and a senior lecturing fellow in the School of Law, wrote a letter urging Security and Exchange Commission chairwoman Mary L. Schapiro to undertake an in-depth review of the mechanisms in place to oversee a wide range of issues under the agency’s jurisdiction, according to The New York Times DealBookblog.
“What I am doing right now is standing in the middle of the road waving a red lantern saying, ‘There’s a problem,’” Kaufman said in an interview with DealBook Monday. “Before we careen into another problem, we have to take a hard look at these things — and looking at them in piecemeal is not going to do it.”
The Delaware Democrat has been highly critical of the S.E.C. since taking his Senate seat in January, Replacing then-Sen. Joe Biden, who resigned his seat to become vice president of the United States. Many have blamed lax financial oversight by the S.E.C. as a principle cause of the financial collapse in September 2008.
Read Sen. Kaufman’s letter to S.E.C. Chairwoman Mary Schapiro here.
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.
A Duke senior robbed at gunpoint over the weekend remains in the hospital and no charges have been filed in the case, a Durham Police Department spokesperson wrote in an e-mail today.
It is now unclear what kind of gun was used in the robbery. The Chronicle originally reported that the student was shot with a [...]
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 [...]