Duke in the News: April 3, 2003
Experts Disagree on Future of Shuttle | Documents Show U.S. Tried To Enlist Saddam as an Ally | Military Academy Admissions May Be Key to U-M Case, and more...
Thursday, April 3, 2003
EXPERTS DISAGREE ON FUTURE OF SHUTTLE
(Melbourne) Florida Today, April 2 -- The space shuttle is a death
trap and a budgetary sinkhole, Alex Roland, a Duke University
history professor and former NASA historian, told U.S. senators
Wednesday. ...
Full story
DOCUMENTS SHOW U.S. TRIED TO ENLIST SADDAM AS AN ALLY IN
THE 1980s
(Newark) Star-Ledger, April 3 -- U.S. officials in the
1980s "forgot that the enemy of my enemy might be my enemy, too,"
said Bruce Jentleson, director of Duke University's Terry Sanford
Institute of Public Policy and author of "With Friends Like These:
Reagan, Bush, Saddam 1982-1990." ...
Full story
ON THE AIR
Duke Law's Scott Silliman is slated to discuss military and legal
aspects of the conflict in Iraq on NPR's "Talk of the Nation" today
(Thursday), from 2 to 3 p.m. Listen live or on a delayed basis
at
http://www.npr.org/programs/totn/index.html.
MILITARY ACADEMY ADMISSIONS MAY BE KEY TO U-M
CASE
Detroit Free Press, April 3 -- Scott Silliman, a Duke University
law professor and expert on national security, says a brief filed
on behalf of a group of prominent retired military officials in the
University of Michigan affirmative action case stood out because
the military has been successful in diversifying its ranks and in
reducing racial tension. ...Full
story
TAKING CARE OF YOUR WHOLE SELF
Cincinnati Enquirer, April 2 -- A blood protein might be a better
indicator of heart attack risk than high blood pressure, obesity
and cholesterol levels, say researchers at Duke University Medical
Center. ...
Full story
PRESENTATION TO EXAMINE DIPLOMACY, WAR IN
IRAQ
Wilmington Star-News, April 3 -- Duke political science professor
Robert Keohane, a speaker tonight in the Great Decisions Program at
UNC-Wilmington, says that while the war may deprive Iraq of nuclear
weapons, it may spark a revolution in Pakistan that could put such
weapons in the hands of Islamic terrorists. ...
Full story
PICTURES ONLY A COMPUTER COULD LOVE
Science News Online, March 29 -- With a new generation of optics,
engineers are recasting visual scenes for computers' consumption,
and engineers anticipate making lenses that can process other
portions of the electromagnetic spectrum, says David J. Brady of
Duke University. ...Full
story
PREDICTIONS FOR TV COMMERCIAL SALES FOR THE FALL SEASON
ARE CUT
New York Times, April 3 -- An expert on the media
expresses concern about the results of a survey of chief financial
officers by Financial Executives International and the Fuqua School
of Business at Duke University. Two-thirds of those responding to
the survey, released last week, said they expected their company's
ad and marketing spending in the next 12 months to be flat or
decline.
Full story
LAWYERS PUSH OPPOSITION TO DEATH PENALTY
(Durham, N.C.) Independent Weekly, April 3 -- Duke law professor
James Coleman spoke in Cary last month at the North Carolina
Leadership Summit on the Death Penalty. The summit, sponsored
by the American Bar Association, was part of a push by the ABA on
its call for a moratorium on executions. ...Full
story
TABLETS SNEAK UP ON LAPTOPS
Chronicle of Higher Education, April 4 -- The new tablet personal
computers offer flexibility and portability, but they may become
popular only in certain fields. Michael P. Pickett, deputy chief
information officer at Duke University, comments on the the latest
gadget to vie for the attention of students, professors, and
administrators. ...Full
story
TEACHER SNEAKS LEARNING IN DURING FUN
ACTIVITIES
Rock Hill (S.C.) Herald, March 24 -- Kindergarten teacher Kay
Gordon, who holds a master's degree from Duke University to teach
the emotionally handicapped, says she "sneaks the learning in" when
her students are involved in dancing and playing. ...
Full story
DUKE STUDENT PRESIDENT TO KEEP HIS OFFICE
(Durham, N.C.) Herald-Sun, April 3 -- Duke University student
leaders said they will allow the student government president who
was arrested Sunday on an assault charge to finish out the final
three weeks of his term. ...Full
story
COLLEGIATE 'P.C.' AWARDS 'HONOR' DUKE,
UNC
(Durham, N.C.) Herald-Sun, April 3 -- Duke University and UNC have
'won' top-five dubious achievement awards for "political
correctness" from a student newspaper organization dedicated to
conservative causes. ...Full
story
