Website Search Results

    Page 7 of 177 website results

    1. Lobby the White House! - Scholarly Communications @ Duke

      Startups and midsize business need access to federally funded technology research. It is a health care issue, patients and community (...)

    2. Preservation Underground - Page 34 of 58 - Duke University Libraries Preservation

      I would also like to foster even more conversations. What would you like to see more of in the next year?

    3. On the Road with the Frank C. Brown Collection - Duke University Libraries Blogs

      Craig, the Rubenstein Library’s Audiovisual Archivist, serves as the Project Manager for this grant. We’ve taken special care in (...)

    4. Happy International Women's Day! - The Devil's Tale

      Activists have used this holiday to celebrate the achievements of notable women in history as well as to advocate for women’s equality, (...)

    5. About Us | Duke University Medical Center Library Online

      Empower the Duke Health community with skills and knowledge that will further their ability to navigate scholarly communication and to use (...)

    6. Happy Archives Week! - The Devil's Tale

      Archivists are trained professionals who select, maintain, describe, and assist the public in locating archival records in their (...)

    7. Why Do We Trust Doctors? - The Devil's Tale

      When most medical history books praise the progressive teaching methods of Northern schools, these notes show that the medical schools of the US (...)

    8. Fiction - Native North American Voices - LibGuides at Duke University

      When the Japanese tourist dies of exposure in Tommy Jack's care, a media storm erupts and sets off a series of journeys into Tommy (...)

    9. Announcing our 2019-2020 Travel Grant Recipients - The Devil's Tale

      Ryberg Kelly O’Donnell , Faculty, Thomas Jefferson University, College of Humanities and Sciences: Study of the role doctors’ wives played in (...)

    10. Annual Report 2011 - 2012

      People look to us to foster discussion, facilitate collaboration, and honor scholarly achievement—and rightly so.

    More Search Options