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In Brief
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C. Merrill Ambler Jr. '64 has given $1.57 million to improve
Duke's outdoor tennis courts and house them in a new stadium.
Ambler, a tennis enthusiast and former Duke baseball player,
said he wanted to give Duke's nationally ranked men's and women's
tennis teams a "nice place to play." In February,
Ambler, who lives in Abington, Pennsylvania, gave the university
Amico Island, located at the confluence of Rancocas Creek and
the Delaware River. He stipulated that its value, combined with
his additional gifts of cash, be used for the project--which
will include seating for 700, lights, new restrooms, and sound
and electronic systems. The six existing courts will be resurfaced,
lighted, and extended to comply with NCAA tournament specifications.
Work should be completed in time for the 2002 outdoor season.
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Ralph Snyderman, chancellor for health affairs at Duke and
president and CEO of Duke University Health System, was named
chair of the Association of American Medical Colleges. He has
been an executive committee member of its Council of Deans for
two years. He succeeds George F. Sheldon, chair of the department
of surgery at the University of North Carolina's medical school.
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James T. "Jay" Hamilton, Oscar L. Tang Associate
Professor of Public Policy Studies and associate professor of
economics and political science, received the David N. Kershaw
Award and Prize from the Association for Public Policy Analysis
and Management. The Kershaw recognizes individuals under forty
who have made distinguished contributions to the field of public
policy analysis. Hamilton's research focuses on the political
economy of environmental regulation and a pioneering application
of the same conceptual framework to studying media policies,
particularly related to television violence.
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