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In Brief
- Remembering Jim Crow: African Americans
Tell About Life in the Segregated South, edited by professors William
H. Chafe, Raymond Gavins, and Robert Korstad, and the staff of
the Behind the Veil project at the Center for Documentary Studies
at Duke, received a 2002 Lillian Smith Book Award. Presented annually
by the Southern Regional Council, the awards recognize authors
whose fiction and nonfiction writing extends the legacy of the
outspoken writer, educator, and social critic who challenged her
fellow Southerners and all Americans on issues of social and racial
justice. The awards are the South's oldest literary honor. Remembering
Jim Crow was also awarded the 2002 Carey McWilliams Award, presented
annually by the MultiCultural Review to an outstanding scholarly
or literary work related to the U.S. experience of cultural diversity.
- Edward Hull, former director of residence life and student housing
at Southern Methodist University, was appointed to the newly created
position of director of residence life and housing services. With
oversight of an annual budget in excess of $25 million, he is responsible
for the management of programs that support undergraduates and
graduate students living in university residence halls and apartments.
- Reynolds Price, novelist, poet, dramatist, and essayist, was
awarded the 2002 John Tyler Caldwell Award for the Humanities from
the North Carolina Humanities Council. The Caldwell Award recognizes
those who strengthen the educational, cultural, and civic life
of North Carolina through the humanities. Price '55, James B. Duke
Professor of English, was cited for his work as a "writer,
devoted scholar and educator, and mentor to aspiring writers."
- R. Sanders Williams M.D. '84, dean of Duke's medical school,
and Debra A. Schwinn, professor of anesthesiology at Duke, have
been appointed to the National Academy of Sciences' Institute of
Medicine, one of three institutes within the NAS. Medical professionals
consider it a high honor to be included in the group, which consists
of national scholars and leaders in health and medicine, behavioral
and social sciences, administration, law, the physical sciences,
and engineering. Williams, a physician-scientist, has made major
contributions to the understanding of the basic mechanisms of cardiovascular
disease. He was appointed dean of medicine and vice chancellor
for academic affairs at Duke Medical Center in April 2001. Schwinn
joined the Duke faculty in 1989; she is also professor of pharmacology/cancer
biology and surgery, vice chair for research in anesthesiology,
and director of the Molecular Pharmacology Laboratories and Perioperative
Genomics, and she chairs the third-year medical student (research
year) curriculum. Her research focuses on better understanding
how stress and genetic differences between people relate to disease
outcomes.
- James A. Nunley, an orthopedic surgeon on the faculty at Duke
Medical Center, was named chief of the division of orthopedic surgery.
He succeeds James Urbaniak, Virginia Flowers Baker Professor of
orthopedic surgery, who stepped down after seventeen years as division
chief but who will continue in his role as vice chair of surgery.
Nunley specializes in surgery of the hand and foot, as well as
total joint replacements and the use of microsurgical techniques.
He joined the faculty in 1980.
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