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    1. The Chanticleer, Duke's Student Yearbook | Duke University Libraries

      There are various theories as to why the name, The Chanticleer , was chosen: During the early twentieth century a rooster was a popular (...)

    2. Trent Associates Report - Fall/Winter 2001, Vol 9, No 2

      LandmarkJ ournalsJTransferred... 4 The ivy is significant as a symbol of the link between Osler's humanistic views on medical education (...)

    3. Front and Center - Fall/Winter 1996, Vol 3, No 2

      Either way, Remington is credited with creating the slogan "The Prudential Has the Strength of Gibraltar" and the symbol that still (...)

    4. https://library.duke.edu/sites/default/files/dul/about/DUL-AR2016.pdf

      The open book and quill is a traditional symbol of knowledge and scholarship. $59,289,445 (131%) Progress to Goal Libraries (...)

    5. summer2007.pmd

      Please check our Website at http://www.mclibrary.duke.edu/hom/events/speakerseries/ for speakers and their topics as the Fall draws (...)

    6. We are Birds from Different Nests

      Huilin only knew about plastic flamingos, but apparently, someone was interested in making replicas of the symbol of death and bad (...)

    7. Frequently Asked Questions | Duke University Libraries

      While we don’t know exactly why the name was chosen, when used as a verb, "to chanticleer" means "to crow" and the rooster was a symbol (...)

    8. How to Survive an Atomic Bomb, Civil Defense Groups image · Duke University Library Exhibits

      The chart reads that women's jobs are Medical Teams (with an American Red Cross symbol next to the words), Car-Driving (a car), (...)

    9. How to Survive an Atomic Bomb, Civil Defense Groups image · Duke University Library Exhibits

      The chart reads that women's jobs are Medical Teams (with an American Red Cross symbol next to the words), Car-Driving (a car), (...)

    10. Glorious Deeds of Women! · Duke University Library Exhibits

      Fitzherbert, his mistress. Caroline became a symbol of the oppression of women, a figure popular with her subjects who largely (...)

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