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The Chronicle* *
MONDAY, DECEMBER 12, 2005
THE INDEPENDENT DAILY AT DUKE UNIVERSITY
H
DUKE MEDICINE
75 YEARS
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DUKE MED
15T. 1930
Medical students set precedent for school by
Steve Veres
THE CHRONICLE
In early 1929, two men walked through the shell of what would soon become the Duke University School of Medicine. One of the men was Dr. Wilburt Davison, the first dean of Duke Hospital and the School of Medicine. He told the other he had received several letters from prospective students asking whether Duke would be a “Class A” medical school. “It will. Won’t it?” asked the other man, Dr. Ray Wilbur, then chair of the Council on Medical Education and Hospitals of the American Medical Association. Davison affirmed that it would be. “Answer all letters from now on in the affirmative,” Wilbur said, effectively granting the school the premier classification. University lore holds that Duke was the first medical school to be approved by the Council before students were admitted instead of waiting, as is the rule now, until the first class graduates. The story, which is retold
ONE HUNDRED AND FIRST YEAR, ISSUE 72
DUKE 97 66 TEXAS
MESSIN’ WITH TEXAS Redick nails 9 threes as Duke tramples ’
in Davison of Duke: His Reminiscences, marks the beginning of what later became one of the top medical schools in the nation. In Duke University Health System’s 75th anniversary year of medicine, more than $lOO million are invested into construction projects across the campus, and new scientific breakthroughs are being announced regularly. But at the institution’s beginnings, Davison was struggling to secure $3007090 in funding for a four-year medical school. At the time, schools around the area had two-year, purely clinical curricula. Officials from the University and Duke Endowment wanted to follow the wishes of James B. Duke, a benefactor of both, and establish the
by
Sarah Kwak
THE CHRONICLE
EAST RUTHERFORD, NJ. There was no stopping JJ. Redick
Saturday. Scoring a career-high 41 points,
SEE DUKEMED ON PAGE 6
RfIUHuBfEH This story about the foundations of the University's medical community is the third in an occasional series commemorating the 75th anniversary of medicine at Duke. The Chronicle will run the series throughout the year.
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CHRISTIAN HARRIS/THE CHRONICLE
JJ. Redick was all smiles Saturday in No. 1 Duke's 97-66 rout of No. 2 Texas.The senior scored a career-high 41 points and tied a Duke record with nine three-pointers.
the senior cruised past Texas’ guards one by one. Kenton Paulino, PJ. Tucker, Daniel Gibson and J.D. Lewis each tried their hands at guarding the shooter but found lithe success, as No. 1 Duke (9-0) routed No. 2 Texas, 97-66, at Continental Airlines Arena. Six minutes into the game, Redick glanced at the scoreboard to see he had scored a quick 10 points. He said he realized then that he might be in for one of those days—one of those days when more than half of his shots would drop, when he would sink threes on the run or with a hand in his face. If his first few minutes were any indication of what was to come, he knew he’d have a special day. And his teammates knew it too “When he’s shooting like that, just get him the ball and be ready,” freshman Greg Paulus said of Redick, who went 13-for-24 from the field. Redick’s hot shot gave the Blue SEE TEXAS ON PAGE 8
2 new websites set to debut by
Saidi Chen
THE CHRONICLE
SPECIAL TO THE CHRONICLE
Thefirst students to attend the Duke University School of Medicine came to campus Oct 2,1930 to begin studying at what would be a "Class A” medical center.
Visitors to the Duke homepage next month may be in for a shock. The multitude of links to articles and news updates will be gone—replaced by a centered search box and a photo essay that dominates the bottom of the page. Set to launch in late January, the new homepage will be simpler, feature more graphic elements and cater more to prospective students, parents and alumni. “We’re trying to really emphasize three main elements with that design—clear navigation, a SEE WEBSITE ON PAGE 5
The newly redesigned Duke homepage will minimize the clutter on the current page.