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    1. Moving is a Pain - Duke Collaboratory for Classics Computing (DC3)

      Moving is a Pain - Duke Collaboratory for Classics Computing (DC3) Primary Menu Skip to (...)

    2. Front and Center - Winter 2014, Vol 20, No 2

      But how has this expectation of relief found in a bottle come to dominate our thinking about pain? And why have Americans come to (...)

    3. https://library.duke.edu/sites/default/files/2023-02/Library_Council_Meeting_Minutes_10.20.22_0.pdf

      . • Questions: There was a question regarding DUL hybrid work, asking if there are any pain points. Joe discusses how hybrid work is (...)

    4. Women at the Center - Issue 7, Spring 2005

      All in My Head, Paula’s newest book, is about the epidemic of chronic pain and other invisi- ble illnesses that are emerging now with (...)

    5. Library Council Minutes - 5/14/2014

      She also reiterated the purpose of talking about the Seminar with the Library Council: to engage them early around pain points and (...)

    6. History of Medicine Travel Grant Recipients | Duke University Libraries

      Matthew Soleiman, Ph.D. candidate, Department of History, University of California San Diego, “The Person in Pain: A Genealogy of (...)

    7. Hartman Center Digitized Collections | Duke University Libraries

      Medicine and Madison Avenue A digital collection of over 600 images from 1850 through 1920 illustrating print advertisements for a variety of (...)

    8. https://library.duke.edu/sites/default/files/2024-02/library-council-meeting-minutes-10-9-2023.pdf

      . - Open Access Publishing, AI, have been made so far today - Joe and Kyle have discussed: State of the library budget, pain points (...)

    9. Trent Associates Report - Spring/Summer 2009, Vol 17, No 1

      To many of the old standbys for headache, cough, back pain, and insomnia, some new products have been added to remedy a growing concern (...)

    10. https://library.duke.edu/sites/default/files/2023-04/U%20Xie_NadellPrize.pdf

      His argument hinges on what he believes to be a crucial asym- metry between pleasure and pain: the absence of pain is good (...)

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