October 5, 2006

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Recess 100Ijts at photography from Maoi st China, INSIDE

THI RSDAY, OCTOBER 5. 2006

Two-A-Days

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Alabama's starting QB is me 2nd-most famous one in his family, PAGE 9

THE INDEPENDENT DAILY AT DUKE

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NIH grants Duke institute SS3M

Back on the field

New institute to speed up medicinal research, fight health inequalities byJasten McGowan THE chronicle

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Sophomore Christie McDonald has played in ail 12 of the women's soccer team's games—less than five months after doctors removed a tumor from her brain. See stor ■y PAGE 9.

With Board approval. Central plans progress Adam Eaglin THE CHRONICLE

by

Administrators introduced a revised proposal for the new Central Campus at the Board of Trustees meeting Saturday, and the trustees gave the University support to begin the next stage of planning. “The conversation was quite good,” Executive Vice President Tallman Trask wrote in an e-mail. During Saturday’s meeting, administrators and trustees discussed the “general approach” the University will pursue with the reconstruction of Central, Provost Peter Lange said. “There was no formal approval asked for or given, but the trustees were generally quite positive,” Trask said. The plan was very similarto the one presented to the Board in May, but some changes—such as the size of programming space and the design for parking garages were made in the meetings’ interim.

“The footprint has grown somewhat south and east, but it’s otherwise essentially as [it was in recent months],” Trask said. Lange added that with last weekend’s informal approval, the University will now move forward to formulate the more specific details of the buildings’ design. Currently, only a site plan for Central has been generated. Lange said the next stage of planning will focus more on the “nitty gritty work,” which includes architecture, infrastructure design and adjacencies. Due to the complex nature of the Central Campus project, the University must finalize a number of other facthe tors—from the paths of roads to before of buildings electrical wiring any construction can begin. SEE

CENTRAL ON PAGE 6

that will receive a combined total of $699.5 million in funding from the NIH over five years to advance translational medicine, said Robert Califf, DUMC vice-chancellor for clinical research and the center’s new

Duke University Medical Center received $52.7 million from the National Institutes of Health this week to establish the Duke Translational Medicine Institute. The virtual institute will work director, to accelerate the adaptation of “When you clinical discoveries into applica- look at healthble medicine and to explore and care discovercombat health inequalities. ies and the To complete these goals, sci- translation of enlists will form interdisciplinary discoveries teams that encompass a broad from the spectrum of research, including bench to the genomics, biomedical engineer- .bedside, ing and clinical medicine, to ere- there’s a lag that denies imporate an environment where data is tant resources from those in processed and applied in a more need,” Califf said. “This applies fluid fashion. not only to patients at large, but “Investigators and physicians also to the underprivileged and [working under the grant] will those with rare diseases.” have the support to bring innovaThe concept of translational live therapies to our patients in a medicine does not merely apply timely and efficient way,” said Vic- to traditional laboratory discover Dzau, chancellor for health erics, but also includes “translaaffairs and president and CEO of tion of discoveries regarding inthe Duke University Health Sys- equality in healthcare into tern, in a statement Tuesday. Duke is one of 12 institutes SEE NIH GRANT ON PAGE 6

Senior served as page for controversial Rep. Gross says he was ‘shocked’by Foley revelations by

Saidi Chen

THE CHRONICLE

Senior Jason Gross had no idea that a summer job as a Congressional page often a foot in the door to the insular world of Washington politics—would lead to a scandal-ridden appearance on “Larry King Live” four years later. Gross was sponsored as a Congressional page in the summer of 2002 by Republican Mark Foley, a former representative from Florida who was known for championing the cause of missing and exploited children and supporting legislation against sexual predators. Foley resigned Friday after sexually explicit text and instant messages he had sent to teenage male pages were made public. —

KELLY OWEN/ZUMA PRESS

Rep. Mark Foley resigned thisweekamid scandalabout SEE FOLEY ON PAGE 8 sexually explicit messages he sent to teenage boys.


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