September 22, 2015

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‘Onion’ founding editor visits

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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

TUESday, SEPTEMBER 22, 2015

www.dukechronicle.com

ONE HUNDRED AND ELEVENTH YEAR, Issue 21

Graphic by Carolyn Sun | The Chronicle

Faculty find housing near campus Native

Neelesh Moorthy The Chronicle President Richard Brodhead and Dean of Students Sue Wasiolek might live on campus, but other faculty or staff live more than 50 miles away. Since the 1930s, Duke has worked to help faculty and staff find homes close to the University, often by buying tracts of land and developing houses later sold to Duke employees. Examples include the “Duke Homesites,” which are houses in the

Duke Forest built by the University, as well as 40 housing units developed in the Trinity Heights neighborhood near East Campus—a program that began in 1998 and ended in 2002. Currently, the University sponsors a Homebuyers Club designed to help lowerincome Duke employees find homes. “Duke has played such a large role in the renaissance of Durham that having that partnership between Duke and Durham is better fostered by having people from the University living there,” said Wasiolek, a prior resident of the Duke Homesites. In the early 1900s, it would have been

American association seeks growth Frances Beroset The Chronicle

difficult for the University to convince new talent from other prestigious universities to live in Durham, said Jeffrey Potter, director of real estate administration. To correct this, Duke began buying land near West Campus and selling it to employees, allowing them to pay it off over time like a student loan, he explained. By the end of the 1980s, Potter said, Duke had contributed to more than 100 different Homesites on streets just off of West Campus, such as Pinecrest Road,

Although North Carolina has the second-largest Native American population of any state east of the Mississippi River, Native representation among students and faculty is notably small. Native American students make up less than one percent of students at Duke as of 2014. Representation can be a challenge for a demographic that makes up approximately 1.7 percent of the U.S. population, according to the 2010 U.S. Census. This year, the Native American Student Alliance, or NASA, aims to increase the visibility of Native American students on campus. “When I say that I’m Native American—I introduce myself that way because I’m proud to say it—[people] say, ‘oh, you’re Native American! You’re the first one that I’ve ever met!’” said sophomore Ashley Claw. “I’m kind of proud to be that first person, but then again, that kind of makes me sad.” The most notable event organized by NASA is the annual powwow on the Main Quadrangle, which was first held in 2001 and features drum circles and dancers in traditional dress. Although

See HOUSING on Page 4

See NASA on Page 4

Duke scientists treat depression with intestinal worms Teresa Meng The Chronicle Eating intestinal worms may be a possible treatment for depression and other neurological diseases, according to a group of Duke scientists. The research of William Parker, associate professor of surgery, and Staci Bilbo, associate professor of psychology and neuroscience, indicates that certain organisms, like intestinal worms called helminths, can exist inside the human body in a mutually beneficial relationship with bacteria in the gut. Parker

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and Bilbo argue that modern society’s efforts to remove organisms such as helminths has resulted in increased rates of autoimmune diseases such as allergies. Helminthic therapy is an effort to rebalance the immune system and address a variety of disorders by putting the helminth worms back into the human body. Although the Food and Drug Administration has not currently approved helminths as a treatment method, some people have begun to treat themselves using the organisms and have reported positive effects. Parker and his colleagues are currently planning a clinical trial to investigate whether

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helminths could treat depression. “The goal here at Duke is to get helminths approved by the FDA so we can begin clinical trials,” Bilbo said. “The first target is depression because the condition is thought, at least for a significant subset of people, to involve the immune system having a proinflammatory signature, so the idea is, treat your gut and heal your brain.” These efforts have been prompted by reports from people who ingested commercially brought helminths to treat their own disorders, ranging from depression

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See WORMS on Page 4

Serving the University since 1905

Special to The Chronicle Scientists are experimenting with organisms in the human body that can have mutually beneficial relationships with bacteria.

@dukechronicle

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© 2015 The Chronicle


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