WFU in the news: Nov. 14-20


In Charlotte, health care for women only?
By Charlotte Ledger | North Carolina Health News
Offering a suite of sex-specific specialties in one location is important for capturing female patients who are often pressed for time, said economics professor Tina Marsh Dalton, who studies health policy. “You can just refer a patient down the hall.” – 11/14/2022

Leading with a loving heart
By Ryan Erbe, Maj. Benjamin Elliott | Association of the United States Army
Business professor Patrick Sweeney, director of the Allegacy Center for Leadership and Character, surveyed soldiers and found that for subordinates to trust their leaders, three characteristics were important: competence, character and caring. – 11/15/2022

Promoting sustainable U.S. economic growth and mitigating climate change
By Michael Madowitz, Shaun Harrison | Equitable Growth
The estimated hundreds of thousands of green jobs created by both the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act and the Inflation Reduction Act are crucial for creating more equitable economic growth. In a recent paper, E. Mark Curtis of Wake Forest and Ioana Marinescu of the University of Pennsylvania develop a measure of green jobs—specifically, occupations in the solar and wind energy fields—and find these jobs benefit workers. – 11/22/2022

Wake Forest law clinic helps correct veteran’s military record after nearly 70 years of injustice
By Scott Sexton | Winston-Salem Journal
Eighteen steps is all it took to alter James Brown’s life. He’d just returned to the front lines in Korea with the U.S. Army’s 45th Infantry Division – one of the Army’s few fully integrated units – after spending 57 days in a military hospital recovering from shrapnel wounds. Brown had noticed what he considered to be a tactical safety issue. As he’d been trained, he followed the chain of command by first approaching his platoon leader to raise his concern. – 11/13/2022

Wake Forest University student selected for Rhodes Scholarship
By Paul Garber | WFDD-FM (Winston-Salem, NC)
A Wake Forest philosophy major is one of three college students with North Carolina ties to earn Rhodes scholarships to study at England’s Oxford University. Alice Hauser’s passion for refugee rights has led to her selection as one of 32 U.S. students to be named winners of the prestigious honor. – 11/14/2022

Advice from experts on how to get Taylor Swift tickets
By Clare Reverri | WFMY-TV (Greensboro, NC)
“The high fees are just a reflection of larger market issues,” said finance professor Kenneth Ford. “Ticketmaster-Live Nation is a monopoly. That allows them to both impose high fees to manipulate the ticketing market to make it so that artists can’t earn money. You need to address the core business model issue that this is a monopoly that has to be broken up in order to bring more competition to the market.” – 11/17/2022

Holiday spending forecast: ‘Good, but not great’
By Richard Craver | Winston-Salem Journal
“Consumers remember well the restraint they had to endure through COVID and subsequent supply-chain shortages. As a result, they are now showing a desire to exercise newly gained shopping freedom. This momentum should be sufficient to carry through the upcoming holiday shopping season,” said Roger Beahm, executive director of Wake Forest’s Center for Retail Innovation. – 11/20/2022

Indigenous artists showcase works and process at Wake Forest University
By Autumn Karen | Triad City Beat
Sitting at a long white table across from two women inside the Lam Museum of Anthropology on the campus of Wake Forest, Tamra Hunt reaches across lines of watercolor paints and containers of markers to gesture in wide circles at the blank paper between them. Born and raised in Greensboro, Hunt is a member of the Lumbee tribe and a longtime arts educator in the Triad. – 12/30/2021

Transgender Day of Remembrance 2022
By Emily Mikkelsen | WGHP-TV (High Point, NC)
Every year on Nov. 20, the LGBTQ community comes together in order to remember lives lost over the previous year. The LGBTQ+ Center at Wake Forest hosted several programs related to Trans Awareness Week and Trans Day of Remembrance over the course of the week.– 11/18/2022

Wake Forest Baptist Church endows scholarship for future School of Divinity students
By Chanel Davis | Yes! Weekly
Wake Forest Baptist Church has established the Wake Forest Baptist Church Scholarship at Wake Forest University School of Divinity. The endowed scholarship is made possible by a $100,000 gift presented to the School of Divinity at the church’s Celebration of Life service. – 11/14/2022

WFU plans to donate 600 meals to those in need
By Veronica Leasure | WXII-TV (Winston Salem, NC)
Wake Forest University is cooking up a yearly tradition that gives back to the community. Turkeypalooza is in its 16th year. Students and staff are working at the Harvest Table Catering Kitchen to put together Thanksgiving meals with all the fixin’s for people facing food insecurity. – 11/17/2022

The story was also covered by WFMY and Spectrum News.

What’s ahead for Gen Z? ‘Creative destruction on steroids’
By Kim McGrath | Wake Forest News
What is creative destruction on steroids?“Old will be replaced with new faster than ever,” predicted author, reporter and columnist Thomas Friedman at a special student event held in Wait Chapel as part of Wake Forest’s Face to Face Speaker Forum on Nov.15. – 11/17/2022

A dramatic comeback for study abroad
By Kim McGrath | Wake Forest News
Reflecting this resurgence, more than 650 Wake Forest students are expected to study abroad in 27 different countries for the fall semester of 2022 and the spring semester of 2023 combined. The University’s rebound began in 2021. From fall 2021 through summer 2022, more than 900 students traveled abroad. – 11/14/2022



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