November 19, 2014

Page 1

DSGRU Investigates Student Life

‘We’re not here to be followers’

Faculty and students raise concerns over the University’s investments in fossil fuels at panel discussion | Page 2

The independent research arm of DSG will study infrastructural inequality, the food plan and other topics this year | Online Only

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

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WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 19, 2014

ONE HUNDRED AND TENTH YEAR, ISSUE 50

For semi-pro A spartacular performance Patton named basketball team, Middlebury ‘sky is the limit’ president Duke students who formed the Triangle Run N’ Gun hope to win a championship this season

Dean of the Trinity College of Arts and Sciences will assume position July 1, 2015

Ryan Neu

Sydney Sarachek

The Chronicle

The Chronicle

If someone watched them practice, they might be mistaken for a Division I basketball team. Intricate passes are distributed throughout the court, a coach is explaining defensive sets and someone is throwing down a nonchalant dunk every thirty seconds. Then you remember that you are standing in Wilson Recreation Center, and the tallest of these players is only about 6-foot-6. Duke students are often lauded for being entrepreneurial and innovative. But these Duke undergraduate and graduate students, along with one student from the University of North Carolina at Greensboro, have done something unique—they formed their own semi-professional basketball team. “At the beginning of the year, I realized that while I like playing [intramurals] and

Laurie Patton, dean of the Trinity College of Arts and Sciences, is leaving her position at Duke to become president of Middlebury College. Middlebury made the announcement Tuesday afternoon, following a unanimous decision by their Board of Trustees. Patton will assume her new role July 1, 2015—four years after she came to Duke from Emory University. “We’re really going to miss Laurie,” said Steve Nowicki, dean and vice provost for undergraduate education. “The opportunity available at Middlebury is an outstanding opportunity, and I think she is a very good choice for the presidency of that institution in particular.” Nowicki, who worked closely with Patton,

See Basketball on Page 5

Darbi Griffith | The Chronicle Freshman center Jahlil Okafor scored 17 points in the Blue Devils’ 81-71 victory of the Spartans, despite foul trouble and playing against a steady defense.

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NO. 4 DUKE

NO. 19 MICH. STATE

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See Patton on Page 5

Although unfinished, DKU offers positive first semester “Right now, it’s just not done,” says Duke junior studying abroad at DKU Danielle Muoio Towerview Editor KUNSHAN, China—Students studying at Duke Kunshan University in its inaugural semester have largely reported a positive classroom and residential experience, though the incomplete nature of the campus has limited students in some ways.

At the start of the semester, students lived in a Swiss-managed hotel five minutes from the Kunshan South Railway Station that shuttles Kunshan residents back and forth from Shanghai in 20 minutes. It was not until Oct. 24 that students moved into the conference center, where they also attend classes. The academic center and student dormitories will be complete in two to three weeks. Faculty also currently live in the conference center, as the faculty residence hall is unfinished. Their hall is also slated to be finished on the same time frame. The third floor of the conference center has been reserved for male students and the

fourth for female. The rooms in the conference center will later be for guests who come to visit DKU and need a place to stay. Liu Yi, a student from Wuhan University who is part of the undergraduate global semester, said she has a private room in the conference center with a king sized bed. She also had a television in her room before it broke and was taken away. Jordan Elkins, a Duke junior studying abroad at DKU, said it is possible to sometimes go days without leaving the conference center because students eat, take classes and sleep all in the same building. “It’s going to be an experience I look back

in five to 10 years and I’ll cherish it more then than I do now, but it’s not a fully developed thriving school yet,” he said. “A lot of the Chinese students will tell you here that it’s the greatest experience, but I’m spoiled from going to Duke.” Kennedy Opondo, a student from Kenya pursuing a master’s degree in global health, also commended DKU’s state-of-the-art facilities. “It’s a new establishment…there have been challenges so we handled that well,” he said. “The program itself is quite good…I find See Kunshan on Page 3

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