|
In Brief
- Durham Technical Community College President
Phail Wynn Jr. and Duke trustee emerita Susan Bennett King '62 were
honored for their contributions to the Durham and campus communities
at the fifth annual Samuel DuBois Cook Society awards banquet. The
Cook Society, named for the first black scholar appointed to the
faculty of a predominately white university in the South, was formed
in 1997 to provide a forum to discuss issues that affect the lives
of blacks at Duke. A political scientist and civil-rights activist,
Cook became president of Dillard University and a Duke trustee.
Other Cook Society awards were presented to Brenda E. Armstrong
'70, dean of admissions at Duke's medical school and a pediatric
cardiologist; James E. Coleman, senior associate dean for academic
affairs at Duke's law school; Deanna Janea Atchley '02; Adam David
Grossman '02; Bianca Christel Williams '02; Christina Chia, doctoral
candidate in English; Wilda Gafney, doctoral candidate in religion;
and Charles McKinney, doctoral candidate in history.
- April S. Brown, a professor of electrical and computer engineering
at Georgia Institute of Technology, is the new chair of the department
of electrical and computer engineering at Duke's Pratt School of
Engineering. She earned her B.S.E.E. degree at North Carolina State
University, and a master's and Ph.D. in electrical engineering at
Cornell University. After joining the Georgia Tech faculty in l994,
and being named full professor in 1999, she was associate dean of
its College of Engineering until 2001, when she was appointed Joseph
M. Pettit professor of electrical and computer engineering and executive
assistant to the president. Her research focuses on semiconductor
materials and devices for a range of applications--from devices
for wireless communications to optoelectronics. She is exploring
new nanoscale materials (substances on the order of a billionth
of a meter in size) and the integration of a range of technologies
for future electronic microsystems.
- John F. Ferguson M.B.A. '92 was appointed associate dean for
finance and administration at Duke's Pratt School of Engineering.
He earned his B.S.E. degree at the U.S. Military Academy at West
Point in 1984 and served as an officer in the Army and Reserve for
six years. President and chief operating officer of Mediacentrix
in Los Angeles in 2000 and 2001, he had worked as senior consultant,
manager, and then senior manager for KPMG, a leading professional-services
firm, in Los Angeles from 1995 to 2000. He was a senior analyst
for Twentieth Century Fox in 1994-1995 and an analyst for Paramount
Pictures in 1993.
- Former vice president for student affairs William J. Griffith
'50 has been honored as a "Pillar of the Profession" by
the NASPA Foundation, a subsidiary of NASPA, the premier student-affairs
professional association. Griffith, whose forty-one-year career
at Duke included service as field secretary for undergraduate admissions,
director of the student union and director of student activities,
assistant to the provost in the area of student affairs, dean of
student affairs, and assistant provost, retired in 1991. He is the
recipient of the University Medal of Distinction, the Charles Huestis
Award for outstanding service to retirees, and the C. Eric Lincoln
Award for service to the minority community.
- William H. Schlesinger, dean of the Nicholas School of the Environment
and Earth Sciences, was elected president for 2003-04 of the Ecological
Society of America (ESA). The ESA is the primary national professional
organization of ecologists, representing more than 7,600 scientists
in the United States and around the world. Norman L. Christensen
Jr., Nicholas School professor of ecology, was elected vice president
for finance, replacing Schlesinger. Another Nicholas School professor,
James S. Clark, Hugo Blomquist Professor of Biology and Earth and
Ocean Sciences, is ESA's vice president for science.
|