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    1. Women at the Center - Issue 5, Summer 2003

      Morgan was a special guest in Professor Jean O’Barr’s course on so- cial movements in the United States, where she offered her (...)

    2. Who we are | Duke University Libraries

      Who we are | Duke University Libraries Skip to main content My Accounts Ask a Librarian Library Hours Search our Site ☰ Menu Menu Search & (...)

    3. https://library.duke.edu/sites/default/files/rubenstein/pdf/womenatthecenter/wc-33.pdf

      Donna Drucker, professor, Language Re- search Center, Technische Universitat Darmstadt, for a book chapter in Beyond the Pill: Non-Hormonal (...)

    4. https://library.duke.edu/sites/default/files/rubenstein/users/john.gartrell/Travel%20Grant%20A (...)

      Nicholas Syrett, University of Northern Colorado, Topic: “American Child Bride: A History of Minors and Marriage in the United (...)

    5. Collections Overview | Duke University Libraries

      History and Culture The Rubenstein Library has exceptionally strong holdings relating to the history and culture of the United (...)

    6. Women at the Center - Issue 29, Spring 2016

      While the cervical cap never became popular among American women, the cap trials nonetheless show that women’s desires for safe, inexpensive, (...)

    7. Slave Letters | Duke University Libraries

      For a list of slave narrative and autobiographies, search the on-line catalog using the subject heading: Slaves--United (...)

    8. Women at the Center - Issue 20, Fall 2011

      Hoffman’s autobiography, Intimate Wars: The Life and Times of the Woman Who Brought Abortion from the Back Alley to the Board Room, will be (...)

    9. Trent Associates Report - Spring/Summer 2008, Vol 16, No 1

      Copies of some twentieth century examples from the United States, Europe, Africa, and Asia fill one of the display cases.

    10. https://library.duke.edu/sites/default/files/2022-06/Exhibition%20Language%20EDI%20Guidelines.pdf

      Some groups that are considered white in the United States today were considered nonwhite in previous eras, in U.S.

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