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The Chronicle 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
XXXXXDAY, MMMM WEDNESDAY, APRIL XX, 16, 2014 2013
WWW.DUKECHRONICLE.COM
ONE ONEHUNDRED HUNDREDAND ANDEIGHTH NINTH YEAR, YEAR, ISSUE ISSUE XXX 114
Gloria Steinem says ‘we are linked, not ranked’ by Danielle Muoio THE CHRONICLE
IZZI CLARK/THE CHRONICLE
Feminist activist Gloria Steinem spoke at the Duke Chapel as part of the Baldwin Scholars’ Jean Fox O’Barr Distinguished Speaker Series Tuesday evening.
Feminist activist Gloria Steinem asked a sold-out crowd in the Duke Chapel to begin making the link between what happens in daily life and local communities to issues of state, national and even global importance. Steinem came to Duke Tuesday through the Jean Fox O’Barr distinguished speaker series, an annual event hosted by the Baldwin Scholars program. Much of Steinem’s lecture focused on how making connections can allow people to “see the world more wholly.” By connecting the way in which our everyday surroundings can contribute to larger societal issues, people can begin to come up with “positive, practical solutions,” she said. Becoming linked to the natural world then allows people to see there is no such thing as a hierarchy or pyramid, but a circle, she added. “There is no such thing as gender, race or class,” she said. “They are cultural inventions.... We are linked, not ranked.” After graduating Smith College in 1956 as a member of Phi Beta Kappa, Steinem spent two years in India on a Chester Bowles Fellowship writing for Indian publications. She then helped See STEINEM, page 3
Alumni recall violent encounter with Kansas City shooter years ago by Emma Baccellieri THE CHRONICLE
For two Duke alumni, the shootings at Jewish community centers in Kansas City last weekend had an unusual significance. As reporters for The Chronicle in the 1980s, Robert Satloff and Shep Moyle interviewed the alleged shooter, Frazier Glenn Miller, for a piece examining the local presence of the Ku Klux Klan. But the interview turned into something more daunting when Miller discovered
that Satloff is Jewish—resulting in Satloff being locked in a hot car under armed guard for two and a half hours while Moyle interviewed Miller, surrounded by a circle of followers carrying guns. The pair recalled the encounter more than three decades later, noting with regret that Miller apparently had not changed over the years. “I was stunned by the coincidence that in a country full of 350 million people—with more than its fair share of crazies—the same person I had met so
many years ago was behind this horrible shooting,” Satloff, Trinity ’83, said. Miller allegedly shot a boy and his grandfather outside a Jewish community center and a woman at a Jewish assisted living facility, both near Kansas City, Kan., Sunday afternoon. Miller was said to be shouting pro-Nazi phrases at the time of the shooting. Satloff noted that before the interview, Miller— the Grand Dragon of the KKK’s Carolina Knights at the time— instructed him not to bring any black
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or Jewish reporters or photographers. Satloff decided to go to the interview regardless, taking several precautions for safety—wearing a cross around his neck, manufacturing a press pass that used the name Robert Statler, Jr. and bringing along a fellow reporter who met Miller’s qualifications. But Miller’s first words to Satloff were, “Are you a Jew?” and he refused to believe anything to the contrary, Satloff
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