Website Search Results

    Page 3 of 29 website results

    1. Eight New Digital Collections on Civil Rights - The Devil's Tale

      Related posts: Rubenstein Library Test Kitchen: Sweet Potato Custard (1870) Blue Devils’ Blue Light Devil Décor: Duke Men's Basketball (...)

    2. https://sites.fuqua.duke.edu/fordlibrary/page/64/

      The mass market is dead, according to author Rob Walker. So is the couch potato consumer, who used to care what four out of five (...)

    3. How Duke Faculty Kept Teaching - Duke Learning Innovation & Lifetime Education

      I missed the buzz of quiet conversation as I entered the classroom, the crinkle of students opening their potato chip bags, and my (...)

    4. Frankfurter Kranz: A Frankly Extravagant Cake (1969) - Rubenstein Library Test Kitchen - The Devil's

      Instead, I improvised by putting the praline into a plastic freezer bag and beating it on my kitchen counter with a potato masher. (...)

    5. April 2015 | Issue 358 | Duke University Medical Center Library Online

      On top of that, I have three dogs that keep me from becoming a couch potato! For relaxation, I take photographs, or tinker with cars.

    6. The Devil's Tale - Page 62 of 130 - Dispatches from the David M. Rubenstein Rare Book and Manuscript

      The color in autochromes lumières is uniquely produced with a color filter layer comprised of fine potato starch grains that are dyed (...)

    7. The Devil's Tale - Page 58 of 131 - Dispatches from the David M. Rubenstein Rare Book and Manuscript

      Post by Rachel Ingold, Curator for the History of Medicine Collections in the Rubenstein Library. history of medicine medical artifacts Events , (...)

    8. Bitstreams: The Digital Collections Blog - Page 25 of 36 - Notes from the Duke University Libraries

      Self-Portrait with a Straw Hat (obverse: The Potato Peeler). Vincent van Gogh, 1887. Chronicling America: Historic American Newspapers (...)

    9. The Devil's Tale - Page 47 of 131 - Dispatches from the David M. Rubenstein Rare Book and Manuscript

      In the United Kingdom, the origin of the potato chip is attributed to Kitchiner, with The Cook’s Oracle including the earliest known recipe.

    More Search Options