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    1. Women's Health Pioneer Supports Bingham Center - Duke University Libraries Blogs

      The center also has a large body of works that documents four centuries of political activity surrounding women’s reproductive rights, (...)

    2. The Goodson Blogson

      Michael Goodson Law Library at Duke University School of Law . This blog replaced the library's long-running monthly newsletter, D.U.L.L.

    3. Putting the ‘Global’ Back Into Global Pandemic, Part 3 - Duke University Libraries Blogs

      Among the latter are such rare gems as Thomas Doolittle’s 1666 self-help book, הוהיל בישא המ [Heb. = “What shall I return to God”] , or, A (...)

    4. What to Read this Month: July - Duke University Libraries Blogs

      has left its mark on art, literature, (pop) culture, and just about any sphere of human activity–from Beowulf to spam emails, ee (...)

    5. The Devil's Tale - Page 3 of 131 - Dispatches from the David M. Rubenstein Rare Book and Manuscript

      And so, after finishing library school, with a slew of jobs that needed filling in front of her, Borders, decided to work at (...)

    6. 19th Century Collections - Women's History Manuscript Collections at the Rubenstein Library - LibGui

      Family letters, clippings, poetry and diaries, 1829-1870, which reflect Fletcher's childhood in Alexandria, VA.; her education at the (...)

    7. Signal Boost: Tales From Collections Services

      After the internship ended, I was then hired to work in the Library Service Center at Duke.

    8. The Devil's Tale - Page 4 of 131 - Dispatches from the David M. Rubenstein Rare Book and Manuscript

      So instead of entering dental school or Howard Medical school, which I didn’t want to do, into Howard’s Pharmaceutical (...)

    9. Radio Activism and the Politics of Grassroots Change - The Devil's Tale

      Foster papers, 1801-1919., bulk 1840-1890. The Graduate School Newsletter [serial], 1990-1999. Logbook for ships Immortalité and Flying (...)

    10. LIFE Summer Research Grant Reflections: An Approach to Reconciling Western Medicine with Native Hawa

      It is used to purify oneself after encountering physical or spiritual defilement and to remove the resulting kapu (taboo).

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