Volume 92, No.1, January-February 2006

ARCHIVE EDITION
Under the GargoyleQ & AGazetteUpdateSyllabusForumBooksAlumni RegisterHomepage of this issue
In Brief
Bostock LIbrary, von der Heyden Pavillion Dedicated •  $300-million FInancial Aid Initiative Launched •  Class Project Yields Online Campus Map •  Duke Trading Cards, Without the Gum •  Three for the Rhodes •  Tisch Gift to Cancer Center Sets Record •  Nixon's Letter to Sirica Given to Law School •  Sanford Center Dedicates Rubenstein Hall •  Wallter, Wall-crawling Robot •  Spring Break Project: Rebuilding Gulf Coast •  Fullbright Scholars •  Risky Monkey Business Could Help Humans •  Tweaking Aging Brains •  Redheads and Skin Cancers •  Keeping Belly Fat at Bay •  Aspirin Might Prevent Vioxx Damage to Heart •  Festival of the Book •  Rwanda Pilgrimage •  Euripides Goes to the Circus •  In Brief •  Portfolio: A Life in Photos

Sanford Center Dedicates Rubenstein Hall

Powell point: former Secretary of State addresses leadership qualities
Powell point: former Secretary of State addresses leadership qualities
Photos: Chris Hildreth

Rubenstein Hall, a second building at the Terry Sanford Institute of Public Policy complex, was dedicated November 4 in a celebration underscored by a focus on the future: University officials spoke publicly for the first time about creating a new school of public policy.

The $12-million Rubenstein Hall, which opened in August, houses technologically up-to-date classrooms, computer labs, a resource room, and on-campus space for the institute's growing research centers.

At the dedication ceremony, administrators thanked Duke trustee David M. Rubenstein '70 for his $5-million gift to the project. Rubenstein, in turn, thanked the anonymous Duke admissions officer who admitted him forty years ago, as well as university officials who provided financial aid so he could enroll. "Tuition was $2,000 a year then, but it seemed like $200,000 to me," he said.

Rubenstein, who heads a leading private-equity firm, said he hopes his contributions encourage more students to study public policy and spend time in public service. The day of festivities also included a late-afternoon speech by General Colin L. Powell. Powell, former U.S. Secretary of State, spoke to a crowd of more than a thousand students, alumni, administrators, and local residents about the importance of developing service and leadership qualities. He described his own rise from underachieving high-school student, and talked about the U.S.'s role as a world leader.

A task force appointed by Provost Peter Lange recommended last fall that Duke take steps to create a school of public policy. Duke's public-policy program is the only top-ten policy program in the nation that is not supported by a school structure.

Lange said such a structure would offer the institute an opportunity for "greater autonomy and expanded ambitions," while allowing it to "remain deeply integrated with the rest of the university." He noted that "hurdles to be overcome remain," including financing the school and resolving complex administrative issues.