February 11, 2016

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The waiting game

DukeEngage size plateauing

With Amile Jefferson sidelined, Ryan Kelly talks about his own 2013 foot injury | Sports Page 15

The number of participants have remained relatively constant in recent years | Page 2

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

thursday, february 11, 2016

www.dukechronicle.com

ONE HUNDRED AND ELEVENTH YEAR, Issue 75

‘A QUANTUM LEAP’

Vice President Biden outlines goals of recently-announced cancer moonshot

Jamal Edwards wins undergrad YT race in rout Sarah Kerman The Chronicle

Senior Jamal Edwards was elected undergraduate Young Trustee Wednesday. Edwards won the election with 2,302 votes, senior Max Schreiber came in second with 622 votes and senior Wills Rooney came in third with 528 votes, wrote senior Robin Zhang, Duke Student Government attorney general, in an email Wednesday. Edwards is a Robertson scholar majoring in global health at Duke and journalism at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. He is the former president of the Black Student Alliance, a member of Dukes and Duchesses, a student ambassador group for the Office of the University President and was one of 10 See EDWARDS on Page 4 Jack White | The Chronicle Biden toured Nobel laureate Paul Modrich’s lab and talked about overcoming bureaucratic obstacles on the path to cure cancer Wednesday.

Ryan Zhang The Chronicle Vice President Joe Biden joined a panel of experts to discuss barriers to curing cancer Wednesday afternoon. Last month, Biden announced a new initiative for cancer research—a “moonshot” that aims to speed up the process of finding cures for cancer. During his Duke visit, Biden engaged in a roundtable conversation with 10 other panelists about a number of issues, placing special focus on the main challenges

facing researchers and policymakers today. More than 100 people attended the invitationonly event, including physicians, administrators and scientists. Topics that were touched upon included using big data to enhance research, addressing disparities in patient care and increasing access to clinical trials. “Together, we can find a lot of answers to these questions, and in the process I think we can end up developing game-changing treatments and delivering them to anyone who needs them,” Biden said. “We’re not looking at incremental change. What we’re trying to do is end up with a quantum leap on the path to a cure.”

The goal of the initiative is to double the rate of progress, making “a decade’s worth of advancements in the next five years,” Biden said. Nonetheless, the vice president repeatedly mentioned that he was not “naïve” and that developing a cure would be a long and difficult process. “I’m not looking for a silver bullet. There is none,” Biden said. The vice president said he saw big data as “the greatest hope” for cancer research, adding See BIDEN on Page 3

Special to The Chronicle Senior Jamal Edwards received more than three times as many votes as the runner-up.

Christopher Paul elected graduate Young Trustee Gerardo Parraga The Chronicle

Special to The Chronicle Paul will serve a three-year term on the Board.

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Christopher Paul was selected as Duke’s next graduate Young Trustee last Tuesday. Paul was chosen through a parliamentary selection composed of more than 150 student-voted representatives in which every graduate school was represented at last week’s Graduate and Professional Student Council meeting. A Ph.D. student in the University Program in Environmental Policy, he will serve a three-year term on the Board of Trustees, although he will be a non-voting member during his first

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INSIDE — News 2 Sports 15 Classified 17 Puzzles 17 Opinion 18

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year. Having been an undergraduate and graduate student at Duke, Paul has held many leadership roles and has a passion for the University, he explained. “I’m honored to be selected by my peers to apply my broad and interdisciplinary experience at Duke to advancing the future of the University as a whole,” Paul wrote in an email. He noted that he has high hopes for Duke’s future and only wants to see the University flourish more. “Universities represent the best of society, and Duke represents the best of universities,” Paul wrote. The four major themes Paul hopes

Serving the University since 1905

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the Board will focus on are maintaining core strengths in education and research, ensuring and promoting diversity, enhancing the University’s global reach and using the work and research generated at Duke as a service to society. Despite graduating with the first class of Robertson Scholars in 2005 and now studying as a Ph.D. candidate in the Sanford School of Public Policy and Nicholas School of Environment, Paul noted that Duke has never stopped challenging him and that is why he loves the University so much.

@dukechronicle

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See PAUL on Page 4 © 2015 The Chronicle


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