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A Strong Foundation
The Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation is
giving Duke $30 million to support a new science facility and another
$5 million for student life-initiatives, President Nannerl O. Keohane
announced at the May meeting of the university's Academic Council,
the faculty governance body.
Melinda French Gates '86, M.B.A. '87, a former Microsoft executive,
is a member of Duke's board of trustees and vice chair of its student
affairs committee. As an undergraduate, she majored in computer
science and economics before earning her M.B.A. at the Fuqua School
of Business. Her husband, Bill, is the founder and chairman of Microsoft.
In announcing the gift, Keohane said that expanding Duke's teaching
and research capability in the sciences by bringing together different
disciplines to address major scientific challenges, and enhancing
students' out-of-classroom experiences, are important priorities
in "Building on Excellence," the university's strategic
plan.
The new multidisciplinary sciences building is expected to be
named the French Sciences Center in honor of Melinda French Gates'
family. Gates is a native of Dallas, where her parents, Elaine Amerland
French and Raymond French, still live.
"Melinda French Gates is a wise and visionary leader at her
alma mater," said Keohane. "We're grateful not only for
the resources provided by the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation,
but also for Melinda's personal leadership in helping us shape and
implement university priorities. Melinda, Bill, and the foundation
staff have been typically thorough in evaluating Duke's priorities
and generous in helping us meet them.
"The gift will enable us to create a much-needed science
teaching and research facility that will unite disciplines and improve
teaching and research in the biological sciences and related disciplines,
giving more undergraduates opportunities to experience the excitement
of science and research. It also will speed our efforts to continue
enhancing the ways in which Duke students live, study, work, and
socialize."
The building is expected to house faculty from the departments
of biology, chemistry, physics, and biological anthropology and
anatomy, says Provost Peter Lange. It will be located adjacent to
the math and physics building and the Biological Sciences Building,
and near the Levine Science Research Center. Lange, the university's
senior academic officer, says the building "will feature state-of-the-art
research and teaching laboratories appropriate for conducting twenty-first-century
research and for training students in emerging fields such as genomics,
biological chemistry, physical biology, and bioinformatics."
Larry Moneta, vice president for student affairs, says the $5-million
gift will support student life through projects such as the renovation
of the university's West Campus Union and Bryan Student Center.
"This generous gift will accelerate our plans to improve the
quality of meeting places available to students on our West Campus,"
he says. "We're looking to create or improve both formal and
informal gathering places, including better offices for extracurricular
activities, more multipurpose areas, and considerably more locations
for informal interaction."
The Gates family has provided support to Duke before: In September
1998, they awarded a $20 million grant to establish Duke's University
Scholars Program, which supports interdisciplinary study by outstanding
undergraduate, graduate, and professional students. University Scholars
are chosen not only for their record of "intellectual brilliance
and fearlessness," but also for financial-aid need and diversity.
They include undergraduates from every class, as well as graduate
students and representatives from each of Duke's six professional
schools, making the program both interdisciplinary and intergenerational.
The Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation is dedicated to improving
people's lives by sharing advances in health and learning with the
global community. www.gatesfoundation.org.
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