Duke in the News: Feb. 11, 2003
Curbing Chronic Hostility May Improve Heart Health | Art, Incorporated | Aging: Scuba Forever. Almost | Black Memories of Jim Crow, and more...
Tuesday, February 11, 2003
CURBING CHRONIC HOSTILITY MAY IMPROVE HEART
HEALTH
Wall Street Journal, Feb. 11 -- Redford B. Williams Jr., a
psychiatrist and director of the Behavioral Medicine Research
Center at Duke University Medical Center, comments on a growing
body of evidence that being an angry person increases your risk for
heart disease. (Subscription required to access article.) ...
Subscriber access
ART, INCORPORATED
Christian Science Monitor, Feb. 11 -- Duke University is among the
many colleges that are making art resources a part of everyday life
on campus. The Institute of the Arts at Duke provides a "cultural
ticket subsidy." Faculty in any discipline may ask for free tickets
to take students to relevant performances. ...Full
story
AGING: SCUBA FOREVER. ALMOST
New York Times, Feb. 11 -- Older scuba divers who are wondering
whether it is time to hang up their flippers can take heart: as
long as they are in good general condition, a new Duke study
reports, there is no reason to give up the activity. ...Full
story
BLACK MEMORIES OF JIM CROW
(Little Rock) Arkansas Democrat Gazette, Feb. 9 -- "Remembering Jim
Crow," first published in 2001 and freshly released in paperback by
the New Press, records the oral histories of six dozen blacks
interviewed as part of Duke University's Behind the Veil Project.
Their words speak volumes of an era of legally enforced racial
segregation in the states of the former Confederacy. (Article not
available free online; Web site provided.) ...Web site
DUKE PROFESSOR CHALLENGES AREA TO LEARN FROM SOUTH
AFRICA'S STRUGGLE
Tallahassee Democrat, Feb. 10 -- Retired Bishop Peter Storey, an
anti-apartheid activist from South Africa who is now a professor at
Duke, said Sunday that divine intervention lured him away from the
"wrong side" of his country's civil rights struggle. ...
Full story
HOT TYPE
Chronicle of Higher Education, Feb. 7 -- In March Penguin Books
will release "American Indian Stories, Legends, and Other
Writings," edited by Duke Provost Cathy N. Davidson and one of her
doctoral students, Ada Norris. Ms. Davidson, a literary scholar,
discovered Zitkala-Sa's stories in the early 1970s, while doing
research for her dissertation. ...Full
story
A STAR-CROSSED FLIGHT
U.S. News & World Report, Feb. 17 -- Alex Roland, a Duke
University historian, acknowledges that people are intoxicated by
space but says, "We don't have anything to do up there." Many
researchers agree that the science done by astronauts is marginal
compared with returns from automated Mars rovers, space telescopes,
and satellites. ...Full
story
--Also: (San Jose) Mercury News: Remembering a Space Pioneer
Full story
REDEFINING OUR MISSION IN SPACE
(Durham, N.C.) Herald-Sun, Feb. 9 -- Al Rossiter Jr., former
director of the Duke News Service and a veteran UPI reporter
covering the space program, writes in an op-ed that the Columbia
tragedy may force us as a nation to make key decisions affecting
international missions beyond Earth orbit. (Article not online; Web
site provided.) ...Web
site
MORE STUDENTS GET MBAs ONLINE
USA Today, Feb. 11 -- College degrees over the Internet must fight
a reputation for being inferior, and if they ever become
mainstream, they will owe a lot to traveling executives who earn
MBAs from airplanes and hotel rooms. Duke University's Fuqua School
of Business has 709 students in its Global Executive MBA program
that combines online learning with traditional classroom sessions
that convene every eight weeks. ...
Full story
TEEN USE OF ECSTASY, OTHER DRUGS DECLINED
USA Today, Feb. 11 -- A new survey finds that one out of nine
children in America had tried Ecstasy. Scott Swartzwelder, a drug
and alcohol researcher at the Duke University Medical Center, says
that is "frightening." ...
Full story
'THE CALL' TO ART
(Ft. Lauderdale, Fla.) Sun-Sentinel, Feb. 10 -- It was only after
earning a bachelor's degree in theology from Duke University and a
short career as a banker that George Gadson received what he refers
to as "the call."
Full story
