February 10, 2016

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Sirk ruptures Achilles tendon

Q&A with Clinton expert

Duke’s starting quarterback will undergo surgery Wednesday | Sports Page 4

Professor William Chafe analyzes the Clinton campaign after writing book on Bill and Hillary | Page 3

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

wednesday, february 10, 2016

www.dukechronicle.com

ONE HUNDRED AND ELEVENTH YEAR, Issue 74

Survivor reflects on Charleston shooting, faith VP Biden

to visit Duke Cancer Institute Abigail Xie The Chronicle

Franklin Humanities Institute. Valerie Ashby, dean of the Trinity College of Arts and Sciences, delivered opening remarks and described her personal connection to Mother Emanuel, which she called “family.” One theme of the evening was the responsibility of churches not only to their members, but also to their communities, especially on issues of racial and socioeconomic inequality. “As the church, we cannot become an obsolete social club,” Middleton said. “We have a responsibility not to be mute on these subjects, but to stand up and make sure that

Vice President Joe Biden will visit the Duke Cancer Institute Wednesday to discuss his new cancer initiative with Duke scientists and leaders. Biden initially promoted “an absolute national commitment to end cancer as we know it today” in his speech in October announcing he would not run for president. President Barack Obama formalized the government-led push to cure cancer in his State of the Union address Jan. 12, when he called on Biden to lead the $1 billion National Cancer Moonshot initiative— which aims to accelerate progress in cancer research through increased funding to the National Institutes of Health and cancer centers around the country. Biden will host a round table discussion Wednesday with oncologists, researchers and community and public health leaders in the area, said Don Graves, deputy assistant to the president and counselor to the vice president, in a press call Tuesday. “The goal of the moonshot is really to make a decade’s worth of advances in five years and put us on a path to end cancer as we know it,” Graves said. “[Biden is] encouraged by the research that’s being done all around the country and in particular the research that’s going on at Duke.” In addition to increasing data sharing, the initiative focuses on the development of some of today’s most cutting-edge

See PINCKNEY on Page 8

See BIDEN on Page 8

Jesús Hidalgo | The Chronicle The widow of the Rev. Clementa Pinckney was part of a panel discussion focused on faith and race Tuesday at Page Auditorium.

Ryan Zhang The Chronicle Charleston shooting survivor Jennifer Pinckney and other panelists covered topics such as gun violence, human rights and the role of churches in the community in a wideranging discussion Tuesday evening. Pinckney is the widow of the Rev. Clementa Pinckney, a pastor at Mother Emanuel African Methodist Episcopal Church and South Carolina state senator who was among the nine people killed in the June 17 church shooting. Pinckney was joined by two friends of her husband,

the Rev. Chris Vaughn and the Rev. Kylon Middleton. The three panelists discussed the role of black churches such as Mother Emanuel, a black congregation described by Middleton as “the epicenter of African Methodism in the South.” “The AME church itself was born out of a social justice protest,” said Middleton, a graduate of Duke’s Divinity School. “Mother Emanuel continues to stand tall as an example and a beacon of hope for reconciliation and peace in the world.” The event—titled “Reflections on Charleston: A Conversation on Faith and Race”—was held in Page Auditorium as part of a series of discussions hosted by the

DKU student ambassadors working to generate interest Shayal Vashisth The Chronicle The Duke Kunshan Student Ambassador Council will host events this week—including information sessions, a lantern lighting ceremony and a yo-yo show—to promote awareness about opportunities at Duke Kunshan University. Members of KSAC, a student group including students from Duke and DKU, will focus on providing insight and advice about the DKU student experience. Students will table in the Bryan Center to offer information on DKU and its study abroad program, and administrators from DKU will attend events to speak with potential applicants. “I’d like to see people gaining some interest in DKU and potentially applying for the

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program,” said junior Justin Bryant, a member of the council. “We want to up the interest in the student body and community.” DKU—which is a collaboration between Duke and Wuhan University— offers a semesterlong visitor program to undergraduates in the Fall and Spring. Each semester is divided into two seven-week sessions, and students take two for-credit classes during each session. Senior Tarela Osuobeni, co-chair of KSAC, said the division of the semester into two sevenweek periods made classes easier because students were able to focus more intensely on the two classes they were enrolled in. DKU also does not have classes on Fridays, which allows classes with service learning components to travel off-campus. DKU began accepting students in Aug. 2014, and Osuobeni was part of the first class of Duke students to attend.

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“I thought this would be a time when a lot of attention was on us, and we as students would be able to have influence on what happens at DKU in terms of social life and academics,” Osuobeni said. “This was a great opportunity to have an impact on something.” While at DKU, Osuobeni co-founded KSAC. She said that some of their first students’ impact included their advocacy for more student support resources. A nurse and doctor fluent in both Chinese and English were recently hired, as well as a Counseling and Psychological Services-style counselor, Osuobeni said. She said that student organizations are still developing. Bryant said he organized an a cappella group called Shockwave during his semester at DKU. He noted that forming the group was a slow process. Everyone interested was accepted See DKU on Page 8

Serving the University since 1905

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Chronicle File Photo The Student Ambassador Council is trying to attract more students to DKU.

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© 2015 The Chronicle


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