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| Baird: took a
look at what was lacking |
| photo:Les
Todd |
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onnel
Baird is hardly one to sit back when he sees something wrong. Whether
he's co-chairing Duke's Martin Luther King Jr. Day committee or
helping local youth basketball leagues find student coaches through
FIELDS (Fundraising Initiatives In Enterprising Leadership in Durham
Sports), Baird, a junior, speaks his mind and does while others
talk.
Baird first became involved with FIELDS through the organization's
co-founder Adam Grossman, a senior. Grossman originally established
FIELDS to renovate the Little League fields in Durham. The organization
got off to a quick start last year when it received a $15,000 grant
from Major League Baseball; FIELDS hopes to raise $300,000 by next
April.
After they became friends through a class, Baird learned about
FIELDS. He told Grossman he didn't like baseball, but would be interested
in coaching basketball. The two created a new basketball wing of
FIELDS, with Baird as its coordinator.
Working with leagues set up by the Durham Parks and Recreation
Board, he asked fraternity members and other Duke students to be
coaches. "I was really overwhelmed and shocked by the responsiveness
of Duke students," says Baird, who estimates fifty people replied
almost immediately after he sent out letters to e-mail lists soliciting
volunteers.
Says Grossman, "Donnel is one of the most thoughtful and
analytical people I have met here at Duke. He is a terrific leader
who is fully dedicated to enhancing the lives of Durham's children,
and he has been a valuable leader for FIELDS."
Last semester, in addition to coordinating the basketball program,
Baird coached. "It was great to get off campus, to see the
kids. It was real rewarding," he says. His team, made up of
eight-year-old girls from St. John's Church in Durham, hadn't won
any games during the regular season. "I don't know where all
these other coaches found all these little eight-year-old ringers
who are going straight to the WNBA," he says. "There were
girls [on other teams] shooting threes, and nailing them. I couldn't
shoot a three until I was in seventh grade."
Under Baird's charge, the St. John girls improved, winning their
first two playoff games before being eliminated by the number-one
ranked team.
He has had other successes this year as well, most recently with
the undergraduate Martin Luther King Jr. Day committee. After a
Duke Student Government official asked him to co-chair the student
committee responsible for planning the weekend's events, Baird says
he decided to use a different approach.
Before, he says, "the event was de-politicized and really
very much the opposite of what Dr. King would have wanted. I wanted
to bring back the more radical Dr. King. Not the kind of thing you
see in the Cingular cell phone commercials, but the Dr. King who
spoke out against Vietnam."
Previous celebrations were filled with "a bunch of singing
and dancing--and not even singing relevant music," he says.
"We'd have an MLK extravaganza and people would be up there
singing N'Sync. What does that have to do with anything?"
In his effort to politicize the weekend, Baird and his committee
organized a series of events designed to "take a serious look
at Duke and be critical of Duke, as well as to celebrate MLK, because
I think the two go hand-in-hand." Among those events was a
lecture from a psychologist on the biological effects of racism
and how the stress that racism engenders affects physiology.
Other activities included video presentations in Durham elementary
schools, community service with local seniors, a community forum
with representatives from the Edgemont Community Center, a cultural
extravaganza featuring junior Richard McCrae reading King's first
speech against Vietnam, and a speech delivered by controversial
"Boondocks" cartoonist Aaron McGruder, an outspoken critic
of America's "war on terrorism."
Says Baird, "Dr. King's coming out against the Vietnam War
was very unpopular. We picked McGruder because of his voice, his
voice crying out in the wilderness."
The weekend also featured a panel discussion "on how King's
notion of community differed from ours," as Baird puts it.
"I wanted to take a look at our idea of community as it related
to Dr. King's idea of community and take a look at how closely Duke
was to being a community. I think we're a far cry away from making
a true campus community."
--Lucas Schaefer '04
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