Duke in the News: Jan. 13, 2003
Intervention In Iraq? \ Op-Ed: Different Medicines for Different Maladies | At a Reunion in Moscow, Tales of Economic Change | A New Way to Treat Eating Disorders, and more...
Monday, January 13, 2003
INTERVENTION IN IRAQ?
PBS NewsHour, Jan. 10 -- Washington Post columnist and
Duke journalism professor William Raspberry and former CIA Director
James Woolsey engaged in a dialogue on the issues raised by the
U.S. confrontation with Iraq. (RealAudio available.) ...Listen
--Also, Washington Post: Raspberry Column -- Congress's Rollover on
War
Full story
OP-ED: DIFFERENT MEDICINES FOR DIFFERENT
MALADIES
(Raleigh) News & Observer, Jan. 12 -- The seemingly analogous
cases of Iraq and North Korea involve very different calculations
once one gets to the nitty-gritty of costs and benefits, says Peter
D. Feaver, associate professor of political science at Duke
University and director of the Triangle Institute for Security
Studies. ...Full
story
AT A REUNION IN MOSCOW, TALES OF ECONOMIC
CHANGE
New York Times, Jan. 13 -- After receiving a master's degree from
Duke University, Arkady V. Dvorkovich returned to Russia take a job
in government. At 27 he became one of the architects of Mr. Putin's
economic program. (Free registration required to access this
article.) ...
Full story
A NEW WAY TO TREAT EATING DISORDERS
(Raleigh) News & Observer, Jan. 11 -- A Duke University clinic
takes an inclusive approach to the treatment of anorexia nervosa, a
disorder marked by excessive dieting and exercise. ...
Full story
SPIRITUALISM AT WHAT COST?
Chronicle of Higher Education, Jan. 10 -- A spiritually-based
campus group promises self-awareness, but some question its
approach. Several Duke students and a Duke religion professor
comment on the Self Knowledge Symposium. ...Full
story
KAREN BETHEA-SHIELDS: IN JOAN LITTLE'S
CELL
(Raleigh) News & Observer, Jan. 12 -- On the day she passed her
bar exam in 1974, Duke Law alumna Karen Galloway, now Karen
Bethea-Shields, was named co-counsel in the first-degree murder
trial of Joan Little. It became one of the most controversial civil
rights cases in U.S. history. ...
Full story
AN ABIDING FISCAL PRESENCE
Baltimore Sun, Jan. 12 -- When President Bush announced his
economic package last week, towering in the background was the
ghost of John Maynard Keynes. Offering his comments on Keynes'
continuing importance is E. Roy Weintraub, an economist at Duke
University. ...
Full story
ON THE AIR
Erich Jarvis, an assistant professor of neurobiology at Duke, will
be the guest on NPR's "The Connection" Tuesday, Jan. 14, between 11
a.m. and noon. He will discuss his work on the vocal learning
talents of birds and what this tells us about their evolution. He
will play several audio cuts to illustrate his findings. "The
Connection" can be heard locally on WUNC-FM 91.5 and live on the
Web at Listen live. After the
program airs, it
will be archived at Listen.
ACCIDENTAL BOMBING AT ISSUE
CNN International's Q & A, Jan. 10 -- Duke law professor Scott
Silliman appeared on Q&A to discuss a possible connection
between Air Force pilots' use of Dexedrine and last year's
accidental bombing of Canadian troops by U.S. forces in Kandahar.
Silliman is a former U.S. Air Force attorney. (Text not available
online.)
'ONE STRIKE AND YOU'RE GONE'
(Raleigh) News & Observer, Jan. 11 -- Duke University is
among the most familiar with a new national computer system for
tracking foreign students. Duke was one of 21 schools that helped
develop the database since 1998. ...
Full story
DUKE, UNC HIGH ON MAGAZINE LIST
(Raleigh) News & Observer, Jan. 13 -- Two Triangle universities
were named among the "50 Best Colleges for African Americans" in
the January issue of Black Enterprise magazine. Duke University
ranked No. 12 and UNC-Chapel Hill, No. 15. (Article not
online.)
STUDENTS FINED IN DUKE THEFTS
(Raleigh) News & Observer, Jan. 13 -- Two Duke University
students captured on video surveillance cameras last year stealing
$100,000 in electronic equipment from Duke's Shaefer Theater and
Richard White Lecture Hall during break-ins have been convicted of
larceny and given fines totaling $8,000. ...
Full story
EDITORIAL: UNHEALTHY TRENDS
(Raleigh) News & Observer, Jan. 13 -- Editorial cites comments
by Duke University Health System's chief financial officer Ken
Morris on the tough economics facing hospitals. ...
Full story
