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Historic Renaming of Campus Building, Fair Elections, Science Policy Under Biden

Duke scholars daily share their expertise with the media on stories of major global, state and local importance

Duke scholars daily share their expertise with the media on stories of major global, state and local importance, including the COVID-19 pandemic and racial injustice issues. Scholars this week appeared in news outlets including The New York Times, The Wall Street Journal, CNN and Spectrum.

Visit the university鈥檚  to view daily media coverage featuring Duke鈥檚 people and research.

Here are highlights from the past week:

The New York Times

President Trump during Tuesday鈥檚 debate urged his supporters to 鈥済o into the polls and watch very carefully.鈥 That鈥檚 the type of comment 鈥渢hat international observers typically would latch onto as an attempt at foul play,鈥 said the dean of the Sanford School of Public Policy, who has studied international election monitoring. 鈥淎s far as the rest of the world, this is the kind of comment we would expect in a more authoritarian environment. Certainly not in a country that purports to be a beacon of democracy.鈥

CNN

Wilhelmina Reuben-Cooke has now made history at least twice on Duke's campus. She was one of the "" undergraduate Black students to enroll at the university in 1963. Now she is the first Black woman to have a campus building named for her. Also covered by .

Scientific American

The Biden team will need to change the public-health messaging so that it supports the science without driving sceptics even further away, says Marta Wosi艅ska, the deputy director of the Margolis Center for Health Policy. 鈥淲e need to figure out a bipartisan push and identify who are the right messengers.鈥

The Wall Street Journal

鈥淪hifting the copayment back to patients now presents a risk that patients will cancel telehealth appointments or seek in-person visits that heighten the threat of infections,鈥 said Thomas Owens, senior vice president of 老牛影视 Health System.