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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, 9, 2014 2013
James Balog to be awarded LEAF award
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ONE ONEHUNDRED HUNDREDAND ANDEIGHTH NINTH YEAR, YEAR, ISSUE ISSUE XXX 110
Sliding success
Duke faculty to team-teach across institutions
by Staff Reports
by Yiyun Zhu
Nature photographer James Balog has been announced as the 2014 winner of Duke’s LEAF Award for Lifetime Environmental Achievement in Fine Arts. The award will be conferred Saturday afternoon in the Bryan Center’s Griffith Film Theatre. The LEAF has been presented by the Nicholas School of the Environment every year since 2009. Balog’s best known photographs focus on glaciers melting as a result of global climate change. His work has been featured in National Geographic and in the film “Chasing Ice,” which premiered at the Sundance Film Festival in 2012. In 2007, Balog began the Extreme Ice Survey—the largest ground-based photographic glacier study ever done—and he has authored eight books, including “ICE: Portraits of Vanishing Glaciers.” He is also the first photographer to be commissioned by the United States Postal Service to create a full set of stamps. He is a founding fellow of the International League of Conservation Photographers and has received a number of awards, including the North American Nature Photography Association’s Outstanding Photographer of the Year and PhotoMedia’s Person of the Year. Among past winners are actor Robert Redford, musician Jackson Browne, film director John Sayles and writers Barbara Kingsolver and Alexander McCall Smith. Tickets to the event are free. The
Trinity College of Arts and Sciences will introduce new and redesigned classes in 2015 in which Duke professors team-teach with research partners at other universities. Proposals for the development of collaborative courses that enable faculty to teamteach with their colleagues at other U.S. or international universities are currently under review at the Office of the Dean in Trinity. Three selected proposals are likely to be approved by the end of April, and the collaborative courses will be offered in Spring or Fall 2015. “We are aiming to help faculty do what they love most, and that is to teach their research,” Dean of Arts and Sciences Laurie Patton wrote in an email Sunday. The three course projects are expected to come from the three divisions—humanities, social sciences and natural sciences. The courses will include both face-to-face teaching and online learning modes such as web conferencing, online tutorials, synchronous and asynchronous discussions and other webassisted learning tools. The selected courses will be offered concurrently to students at Duke and the university where the partner professor teaches. The goal in creating these new courses is to use online technology to facilitate communication between universities. “Duke is fortunate to have brilliant people in the Center for Instructional Technology with considerable technological and pedagogical expertise, who have already
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Duke Baseball hit it out of the park Tuesday against North Carolina Central University at Jack Coombs Field. Check out the full story on page 8.
See LEAF, page 3
See PARTNERSHIP, page 4
N.C. fraternity chapters fundraise for domestic violence awareness By Jenna Zhang THE CHRONICLE
The Duke chapter of the Phi Delta Theta fraternity has joined the state-wide Fraternities4Family campaign to increase domestic violence awareness. During the month of April, five North Carolina fraternity chapters will each be fundraising for a domestic violence agency. Duke’s Phi Delt will be raising money for Families Living Violence Free, a domestic violence and rape crisis center in Granville County. The goal is to broaden awareness on Duke’s campus as well as the local community, said junior Edgar Baldridge, president of Phi Delt. “It’s fine and dandy that you get [Prevent. Act. Challenge. Teach.] training,” Baldridge said. “It teaches you a lot of good stuff, but if you don’t take what you learn and put it in
the community—it’s kind of for nothing. We saw it as a way to continue that education, to put it into practical use.” The chapter will be fundraising on the Bryan Center Plaza between April 14 and April 20, accepting both cash and FLEX donations, said Phi Delt member Sam Coons, a freshman. Additionally, members of the fraternity will be speaking to students in the Granville County School District about sexual and child abuse awareness and response. Both Baldridge and Adam Burke, president of the participating Phi Gamma Delta fraternity at North Carolina State University, noted that fundraising efforts have been somewhat dispersed due to time constraints. “Our chapter’s been very busy at the end of the year, so it’s not like we’ve been able to approach this with a great plan,” Burke said. “We’re just doing what we can to help. Next
year, we’ll have a better idea of what we want to do.” The Duke Phi Delt chapter was contacted by the Fraternities4Family campaign in late March and did not have the time to coordinate with other non-Greek groups on campus, Baldrige added. Phi Delt will be competing with other fraternities to raise the most money. The winning fraternity will receive game tickets or signed merchandise from the Carolina Hurricanes hockey team. Although Fraternities4Family has not set a fundraising target, campaign coordinator Marjorie Marr noted that it would be “phenomenal” if the participating groups fundraised $2,000 in total. The idea for Fraternities4Family came from years of experience working with victims of domestic violence and sexual assault in the local community, said divorce attorney
Charles Ullman, who spearheaded the campaign. “Over the years, there have been a lot of things I’ve learned and witnessed,” Ullman said. “Women come in and say ‘But it didn’t send me to the emergency room.’ To get it out that that is domestic violence and to do it with fraternities—that’s not something that’s done often.” Ullman noted that it is particularly important for men to begin engaging in dialogues about domestic violence. “I don’t think men talk about domestic violence a lot,” Ullman said. “They are not always aware of what domestic violence is and what to do when it happens. The goal is to get everyone involved and start a conversation.” See FRATERNITIES, page 3