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    1. Durham GIS Features | Duke University Libraries

      Durham GIS Features Parcels / Buildings / Taxation  (19 layers) Planning / Land Use / Development / Zoning  (40 (...)

    2. Among Friends - Summer 2012

      Librarians taught students how to search databases and interact with primary source materials, both skills that college students use on (...)

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

      The basic idea in writing without bias is to use the terminology that an individual or community prefers writers to use for them.

    4. Front and Center - Fall 2004, Vol 10, No 2

      Wade challenges in 1989; the international land mine ban and demining efforts; and Refugees International.

    5. https://library.duke.edu/sites/default/files/dul/users/arianne.hartsellgundy/Rosati_Play%20Col (...)

      HOLLY I said, what did you use to drive Mom in? CARL Oh. Ha! My brother’s truck.

    6. https://library.duke.edu/sites/default/files/dul/users/arianne.hartsellgundy/natural_products_ (...)

      ELLA To speak with “niceties”? SHACHAR Ken. We don’t use niceties and Ameena, Sasson--all of us are one big mishpacha.

    7. April 2016 | Issue 364 | Duke University Medical Center Library Online

      Employee Spotlight: Elizabeth Berney Barbara Dietsch, Acquisitions & Cataloging Manager, Collection Services Elizabeth’s Bio Working at Duke (...)

    8. February 2020 | Issue 387 | Duke University Medical Center Library Online

      She received a Bachelor of Arts in Land Use Planning from Unity College in Maine. Elizabeth has seen both her (...)

    9. February 2020 | Issue 387 | Duke University Medical Center Library Online

      She received a Bachelor of Arts in Land Use Planning from Unity College in Maine. Elizabeth has seen both her (...)

    10. PLANNING A UNIVERSITY LANDSCAPE · “A Worthy Place”: Durham, Duke, and the World of the 1920s-1930s ·

      Many property owners and tenants lived on and worked the land in what the Trinity Chronicle on December 2, 1925, described as “virgin (...)

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