Oct. 9, 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

TUESDAY, OCTOBER 9, 2012

Students laud new reform to assault policy

ONE HUNDRED AND EIGHTH YEAR, ISSUE 34

WWW.DUKECHRONICLE.COM

Admins tie uptick to reporting

Down at the market

New standards lead to higher reported rates of alcohol and drug use

by Margot Tuchler THE CHRONICLE

Students and alumni are applauding the success of efforts to repeal the one-year statute of limitations on sexual misconduct reporting. The abolition of the statute of limitations for reporting sexual misconduct came after several months of student mobilization and negotiation with administrators. Widespread student outcry in response to the diminishment of the statute from two years to one spawned a Duke Student Government campaign, which was led by Ebonie Simpson, Trinity ’12 and former DSG vice president for student life. Simpson said she believes the policy change came only after administrators’ attitudes changed, noting that the administration was initially “on the defensive.” “They were trying to explain why they changed it,” Simpson said of her conversations with administrators last Spring. “We were finding holes in those arguments.” The campaign largely depended on input from students across campus and the ultimate instigation of research of University policy, the policies of peer institutions and state legislation, said Pete Schork, 2011-2012 DSG president and Trinity ’12. “The heart of this all along was students who

by Kristie Kim THE CHRONICLE

FAITH ROBERTSON/THE CHRONICLE

SEE POLICY ON PAGE 6

A vendor sells sunflowers and lilies at the Durham Farmers Market Saturday morning.

Shaw named Dormant bacteria chair of Duke evade antibiotics Endowment by Parth Chodavadia THE CHRONICLE

by Carleigh Stiehm THE CHRONICLE

Minor Shaw will now serve as chair of the board of trustees of the Charlotte-based Duke Endowment. The Duke Endowment is a major University benefactor and recently contributed $80 million to Duke Forward, the latest capital campaign, to be used for renovation of the West Union Building and other facilities. The Endowment, a philanthropy focused on projects in North Carolina and South Carolina, also supports education programs at Duke, Davidson College, Furman University SEE SHAW ON PAGE 4

Antibiotics kill off most, but not all, of a target bacteria. A team of scientists set out to explain why a select group of bacteria survive. The researchers at Duke and other universities found that when a phosphate group attaches itself to the bacterial protein HipA, bacterial cells containing the protein gain tolerance to antibiotic drugs.The study was published in the September issue of Cell Reports. By studying the proteins involved in drug tolerance, researchers may be able to glean solutions to eradicate bacterial diseases such as tuberculosis and cystic fibrosis. The researchers observed the addition of a phosphate group to a

protein—a process called phosphorylation—which changes the shape of the HipA protein, thereby putting it in a dormant state that antibiotics do not target. “Before conducting this study, we hypothesized that HipA phosphorylation induces protein activation and persistence,” said Kim Lewis, director of Antimicrobial Discovery Center at Northeastern University and co-author of the study. “What we found was completely unexpected. Our results showed that [HipA] auto-phosphorylation leads to HipA inactivation and multi-drug tolerance.” Lewis noted that multi-drug tolerance is not the same phenomenon SEE BACTERIA ON PAGE 4

ONTHERECORD

Track trains with a new treadmill, Page 7

“I am really frustrated about the problematic way we celebrate Columbus Day....” —Abdullah Antepli in Columbus Day reflections. See column page 11

A recent surge in on-campus drug and alcohol law violations is a result of new reporting policies, rather than an increase in student drug use, University officials say. On Sept. 30, Duke released its 2012 Clery Security Report—a campus safety report that universities are required by federal law to publish annually. According to the report, on-campus news drug law violations analysis more than tripled, and alcohol law violations increased by nearly 40 percent from 2010 to 2011. The increase is a result of several factors, including the implementation of a new information system and heightened staff training, wrote Michael Schoenfeld, vice president for public affairs and government relations, in an email Monday. “I don’t believe [the report] is a reflection in the increase in actual behavior but an improvement in the ability to track and identify those behaviors,” said Kyle Cavanaugh, vice president for administration. At Duke, 626 on-campus alcohol law violations were referred for disciplinary action in 2011, an upswing from 452 in 2010 and 423 in 2009. Additionally, 110 drug law violations were reported in 2011, compared to 34 and 36 in 2010 and 2009, respectively. The higher number of reported violations SEE CLERY ON PAGE 6

BYTHENUMBERS

110 626 alcohol law drug law

violations violations were reported in 2011, referred for disciplinary action on campus in 2011, while

as opposed to

452 34 reported in 2010

Cockrell takes junior year head-on, Page 7

reported in 2010


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.
Oct. 9, 2012 issue of The Chronicle by Duke Chronicle - Issuu