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Duke in the News: Jan. 6, 2003

Duke to Study Smallpox Vaccine | Fuqua Expands to Seoul | Now in Control, GOP Has Big Ideas | Universities Ask Supreme Court to Reverse Patent Ruling \ Predicting 2003, and more...

By Stuart Wells

Monday, January 6, 2003

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DUKE TO STUDY SMALLPOX VACCINE
(Durham, N.C.) Herald-Sun, Jan. 6 -- Duke University Medical Center researchers are seeking volunteers for a national study to see if diluted smallpox vaccine can boost immunity in people vaccinated more than 20 years
ago. ...Full story
--Also, News 14 Carolina: Duke Researchers to Participate in Smallpox Vaccine Study
Full story
USA Today: Armed Against Smallpox
Full story

FUQUA EXPANDS TO SEOUL
(Raleigh) News & Observer, Jan. 6 -- Duke University's Fuqua School of Business announced Friday a partnership with Seoul National University that will give Fuqua a new presence in Asia. Final approval is expected within two months from both universities' faculties, administrations and boards of trustees. ... Full story
--Also, (Durham, N.C.) Herald-Sun: Fuqua Expanding Its Global Reach
Full story

NOW IN CONTROL, GOP HAS BIG IDEAS
Sacramento Bee, Jan. 6 -- Duke University political science professor John Aldrich said he believes Bush will move quickly to try to build on momentum from the election. ... Full story

UNIVERSITIES ASK SUPREME COURT TO REVERSE PATENT RULING
Science, Jan. 3 -- Duke and other universities are concerned a patent court's decision will hinder research by forcing scientists to obtain permission before using patented technologies. ...Full story
--Also, Charlotte Observer: Duke University Goes To U.S. Supreme Court To
Settle Lab Squabble
Full story

PREDICTING 2003
Washington Post, Jan. 5 -- Forget the dazzling high-tech breakthroughs. At the end of 2003, it will likely be the incremental improvements in familiar everyday technologies that we appreciate the most, says Henry Petroski, A.S. Vesic Professor of Civil Engineering and a professor of history at Duke University. ... Full story

A SOUTHCOAST SABBATICAL
(New Bedford, Mass.) Standard-Times, Dec. 23 -- Some people moonlight as bartenders or waiters when they're trying to break into the book world. Duke English professor Joe Porter settled on a university job as a Shakespearean scholar to support his fiction writing. ...Full story

WEB WINNERS: UNDERSTANDING KWANZAA
Associated Press, Jan. 5 -- In heartwrenching words, a slave pleads to a former owner for news of her daughter, in a letter that is part of a Duke University collection of writings by African-American women. ...Full story

GENDER GAP TAXES TURTLES
(Raleigh) News & Observer, Jan. 4 -- Professor Larry Crowder, a marine biologist at the Duke University Marine Lab, approaches a holding tub, and 10 small loggerhead turtles wheel around, mouths open, each with a splash of pink nail polish on their mottled brown shells. ...Full story

LAWYER OFFERED SERVICES TO ALL
Charlotte Observer, Jan. 6 -- Colleagues say Duke law grad Arthur Goodman Jr. believed -- even before the advent of court-appointed attorneys -- that everyone should have access to the best criminal defense possible. Goodman, 76, died Sunday. ... Full story

ACQUAINTED WITH THE HOUR THAT FALLS BEFORE THE NIGHT
New York Times, Jan. 5 -- In the crepuscular universe of Duke grad Lynn Saville's photographs, things are mercifully not what they seem. (Free registration required.) ...Full story

WILLIAM SCHLESINGER FEATURED
UNC-TV, Jan. 3 and 5 -- William Schlesinger, dean of the Duke University Nicholas School of the Environment, was Bill Friday's guest on his North Carolina People show.  They discussed global warming and other environmental issues. (Transcript is not online; Web site provided.)Web site

DUKE GETS GIFTS FOR NEW BUILDING
(Raleigh) News & Observer, Jan. 6 -- Duke University has received four gifts totaling $3.1 million toward a $22 million addition for the Divinity School. Construction for the 47,000-square-foot addition is scheduled to start this month. ... Full story

PEOPLE
(Raleigh) News & Observer, Jan. 6 -- An educator and administrator who has specialized in programs for at-risk children has been named director of Duke's Holistic Opportunity Plan for Enrichment program. ...Full story