   Thanks for the Memories Other Voices Gene Scene Continuing Conflict
Semper Fi Rape Response
Thanks for the Memories
Just this afternoon, I found time to begin
reading the September-October issue of Duke Magazine. On page
25, my heart stopped, for there in Campus
Observer, with the article "Make Me a Match," was a picture of part of
my family. I couldn't believe it!
Just in case you don't know who they are, I'll pass along this background.
The photograph was taken in late summer/early fall of 1956, upon
matriculation to Duke. The student on the right was my older
brother Joseph Temple "Jody" Shackford Jr., a freshman
at Duke that year. Jody did not graduate; he was accidentally
killed in an industrial accident in the summer of 1958 in Oklahoma
City. (If I recall, the yearbook for the following year had a
special dedication page to him, for which I'd like to thank whoever
made that decision.)
The proud father is Joseph Temple Shackford '34, at the time
a Methodist minister in the North Carolina Conference serving
the community of Walkertown, near Winston-Salem. Dad died in
1996.
The proud young sister, Virginia Pauline "Ginger" Shackford
Friedlein '68, later married David Friedlein '63, and they still
reside in Durham.
I do not know with whom Jody is shaking hands. This is one of
the few pictures that exists of Jody. I remember seeing it years
ago, but mom, Katherine Virginia Johnson Shackford '36, recently
died and I do not recall seeing it among her life's treasures.
In any event, it will forever hold a place deep in my heart.
Thank you for your decision to run that picture, and thanks for
the memories!
J. Hilliard Shackford '66
Davison, Michigan
Other Voices Thank
you for "A Life in Gaza" [September-October
2005] by Fulbright Scholar William Feldman. This article, fairly
free as it is from political comment and with a descriptive
style, helps in understanding the Zionist commitment and mission.
Essential to comprehending what happens "on the ground" in
that part of the world would be a similar article about a Palestinian
family, perhaps a Christian one, whose home has been demolished
by an Israeli bulldozer.
It is not that there are "two sides to the story." There
are many sides, voices, and stories in the land called Holy
by three of the world's major religions. Duke Magazine needs
to give voice to the other experiences. Reconciliation begins
with understanding and appreciation for another's story.
Robert Bacher
Chapel Hill, North Carolina
Gene Scene
In "Unraveling the Human Genome" [July-August
2005],
Dennis Meredith writes "X denotes Willard's research on
the X chromosome--the sex-determining chromosome that occurs
in two in women, but is paired with a Y-sex chromosome in men." This
statement is inaccurate.
In most embryos, it is the presence or absence of the Y chromosome
that determines whether the gonads will develop as testes or
as ovaries. The default for gonadal development is female except
for the presence of genes from the Y-chromosome. The SRY (sex-determining
region Y) gene on the Y-chromosome has been determined to be
the testis-determining factor. There are rare cases of XX male
sex reversal due to the presence of the SRY gene on one of
the X chromosomes as a result of crossing over between the
pseudoautosomal regions of the X and Y chromosomes during prophase
I of meiosis in male gametogenesis.
Richard Morris M.D.,
B.S.E. '94
Chillicothe, Ohio
Huntington Willard responds:The reader is correct. The
Y chromosome is what actually determines the sex of an individual.
But the X and the Y chromosomes are considered "sex chromosomes" and
the X chromosome (more specifically, the number of X chromosomes)
clearly distinguishes typical females from typical males. So,
in that sense, it, too, is involved in sex.
Continuing Conflict
In his letter
to the editor [July-August 2005], Ray Gordon complains that "we seldom are allowed
to hear the Palestinian side" of the "Israeli-Palestinian
conflict." On the contrary, we have heard it for years
with the screams of the civilian victims of suicide bombings
and plane hijackings. Remember that the "atrocities" of
the Israel Defense Forces were the excuse for terrorism before
it was more timely and politically correct to blame our struggles
to rebuild the Iraqi ruins left behind by Saddam Hussein.
Gordon mentions the relevant comments of the late Pope John
Paul II, a man for whom I had much respect. However, the
Catholic Church has a less than admirable record when it
comes to identifying or protecting victims of oppression,
whether it was heretics during the Inquisition, Jews/
Gypsies/homosexuals during World War II, or choir boys in
contemporary America.
Until the Palestinians (an ethnicity that did not exist even
forty years ago) realize that mass murder makes headlines
and makes people afraid, but does not advance sympathy for
their cause, and until they take responsibility for their
own evolution, using their supportive neighbors' great wealth
to build schools instead of bombing subways, then laudable
dialogues such as those sponsored recently by Duke will be
merely exercises in academic futility.
Manfred S. Rothstein M.D. '74
Fayetteville,
North Carolina
Semper Fi
A few days ago I was at the local vet
waiting to pick up my pet when I came across the May-June copy
of Duke Magazine. Browsing through it, I came to your article "The
Warriors," and I was truly impressed by the dedication
and enthusiasm of several Duke grads and their service to our
country. You are to be commended for telling their story so
well.
It is a shame that the great universities no longer encourage
service to the country. With the explosion of super-liberal
faculties, students are now mostly taught to criticize and
protest but to offer no valid solutions or contributions, lest
they haunt them at a later date.
Sadly my university, Yale, is an example of how low a once
proud institution can go. In my class, 1957, fifteen of us
joined the Marine Corps. True, the draft was on, but there
were ways of avoiding it, as many did. I've attended only one
reunion, my 25th. For three days, the majority of the jokes
and stories revolved around personal experiences in the military.
CEOs, judges, ambassadors, professors, and community leaders
from that class relished their leadership experiences and challenges
during their time in the military, to which many attributed
their success. It was easy to see that several, who were very
successful but had not served, missed out on the camaraderie
enjoyed by the vets.
I sincerely hope that your "warriors" experience
the great satisfaction that we so warmly recall and that they
enjoy the degree of success that I and my Yalie classmates
have had.
Col. Charlie Goode Jr. (ret.)
Durham, North Carolina
Rape Response
Thanks to Bridget Booher for discussing the importance of
Duke's continued involvement in sexual assault support services
and sexual assault prevention ["The Silent Epidemic," March-April
2005].
I learned many things at Duke. One of the most important occurred
during a "rape response" training session we had.
Three years after I graduated from Duke, I was attacked on
my way home from work. A one-session training I was given at
Duke played right through my head, kept me calm and partially
in control, and helped me through what might have been an even
worse ordeal.
As I began talking about my ordeal, I was amazed at what a
high percentage of my female friends and co-workers had been
through similar, if not as intense, experiences.
Thank you, Duke, for taking on these issues and giving Duke
students the education they need to succeed in the world.
Paula G. Best '80
Metuchen, New Jersey
If the portrait of Ms. Colaianni on the cover
of the March-April issue is representative of the present-day student body of
Duke, I am doubly thankful to the Good Lord that I was there
when I was. I am almost ashamed to be associated with such.
You must not want to attract the same type of students who
were my classmates by running this picture. I can assure you
that none of my progeny will ever attend Duke.
Jane Thomson
Omohundro '42
Crowley, Louisiana |