Sept. 24, 2012 issue of The Chronicle

Page 1

T H E I N D E P E N D E N T D A I LY AT D U K E U N I V E R S I T Y

The Chronicle

MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 24, 2012

ONE HUNDRED AND EIGHTH YEAR, ISSUE 23

WWW.DUKECHRONICLE.COM

Coastal habitat loss yields high carbon release

DKU admin knows edu. in US, China

Gaga for Gangnam

by Parth Chodavadia

by Margot Tuchler

THE CHRONICLE

THE CHRONICLE

Forest and oceans are not the only carbon sinks out there. Duke researchers found that coastal ecosystems store significant amounts of carbon dioxide, and that coastal habitat destruction releases 0.15 to 1.02 billion tons of carbon dioxide each year. The findings, published online in PLOS ONE, show that the emissions from loss of coastal habitat such as mangroves, sea grasses and salt marshes are equivalent to up to one-fifth of the carbon emissions caused by deforestation worldwide—amounting to $6 to 42 billion in annual economic damages. These findings are guiding policy changes by the United Nations to protect coastal environments. “Although there is still a high range of uncertainty, we were greatly surprised by the magnitude of carbon stored in coastal ecosystems,” said Brian Murray, director for economic analysis at the Nicholas Institute for Environmental Policy Solutions. “On the high end of our estimates, emissions resulting from coastal habitat destruction are as large as carbon dioxide emissions produced by the world’s fifth largest emitter, Japan.” Carbon emission estimates were derived from “blue carbon,” a special type of carbon captured

The academic leader for Duke Kunshan University brings to the table experience in higher education and Chinese relations. Mary Bullock was named executive vice chancellor of DKU at Thursday’s Academic Council meeting. She will be in charge of academics and operations of the University, said Nora Bynum, vice provost for DKU and China initiatives. Bullock was one of four finalists—including both Duke and non-Duke candidates—chosen by a search committee in May. She was ultimately selected by President Richard Brodhead and Provost Peter Lange. Jeffrey Vincent, Clarence F. Korstian professor of forest economics, who led the vice chancellor search committee, said Bullock’s extensive knowledge of China makes her wellsuited for the position. “She’s really passionately committed to achieving greater connections between the U.S. and China in terms of higher education,” Vincent said. Bullock, who could not be reached for comment in time for publication, has worked extensively on Sino-American educational relations and led academic exchanges between the two countries during the 1970s, Vincent added. She currently chairs the China Medical Board

ERIC LIN/THE CHRONICLE

Attendees at the football game Saturday—where Duke beat Memphis 38-14—do the “Gangnam Style” dance from the viral music video.

SEE DKU ON PAGE 2

SEE CARBON ON PAGE 3

DGHI adds novel Co-op bakery rises in Durham language program by Jack Mercola THE CHRONICLE

by Ryan Zhang THE CHRONICLE

The Duke Global Health Institute is introducing a new language lab program to complement its undergraduate offerings. The program will work to expose global health students to the cultures and languages of the countries they examine in their classes, said Deb Reisinger, assistant director of the French language program. Language courses will be taught as halfcredit independent studies and will be an option for all global health students. “We are excited to be working on a truly interdisciplinary project that allows students to examine global health issues from the perspective of

various cultures, in the languages of those cultures,” Reisinger said in an email Sunday. The program is being piloted this semester, and was implemented by Reisinger and global health professor Kathryn Whetten, who teaches GLHLTH 161: Introduction to Global Health. The five language labs offered this semester are Arabic, French, Hindi, Mandarin Chinese and Spanish. Each lab consists of 25 students and breaks down into smaller discussion groups, said freshman Ross Luo, who is currently taking global health courses. The students themselves select

Duke beats Memphis 38-14 for homecoming victory, Sportswarap Page 4

SEE LABS ON PAGE 2

ELLA BANKA/THE CHRONICLE

Javiera Caballero, a baker at Durham’s Bread Uprising, presents the bakery’s products at Green Flea market.

ONTHERECORD

“Free speech is tricky. It can offend or uplift, terrify or exhilarate, incite or pacify....” —Joline Doedens in “Civilized speech.” See column page 7

All people are entitled to food, according to members of a Durham bakery, Bread Uprising. Operating under an unusual business model, Bread Uprising gives bread and other baked goods to the bakery’s clientele in exchange for whatever they can afford—a self-described cooperative bakery, said Tim Stallman, one of Bread Uprising’s bakers. The bakery currently serves 38 Durham households, a “radical majority” of whom are minorities, said Anna Lena Phillips, a member of the co-op since its inception in 2010. Each household pledges a weekly payment in exchange for a week’s worth of bread. A household may pay nothing, as the objective of SEE BAKERY ON PAGE 4

See more homecoming photos, Page 8 and @DukeShutter


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Sept. 24, 2012 issue of The Chronicle by Duke Chronicle - Issuu