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Ben
Franklin, considered the founding figure of American magazines,
was concerned not just with words and ideas but also with visual
impact in print. |
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A
smoking issue on campus, a critical concern with clergy |
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Questioning
a theological first, attacking an interpreter of empire, comforting
a community |
Presidential
thoughts: not-so-easy decisions on early decision |
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Iciss
Tillis |
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An
engineering addition, a
nursing acceleration, an
ESPN evaluation |
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Accounting
for Enron |
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A
look back at basketball, including the womens Final Four foray |
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Faith
and the worlds most animated family, plus
Book Notes |
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Baseball, basketball, alumni clubs, schooling for admissions |
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Stairwellness |
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Duke Magazine,
614 Chapel Drive, Box 90572, Durham, North Carolina, 27708-0572
Fax (919) 681-1659 |
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"We agree with you that it is inappropriate for us to hold contractors responsible for this compliance in far-flung regions of the world and not hold a firm in our own state to the same standard."
President Nannerl O. Keohane,
in a letter to Duke Students Against Sweatshops on the university's decision to continue its four-year-old boycott of the Mt. Olive Pickle Co., based on charges against its contractors and suppliers of unfair labor practices, unsafe and unsanitary living and working conditions, and ill treatment of employees who complain
"What captures attention nowadays is not the
same old thing done better. It's the notion of playing the game taken
to extremes that gets people's attention."
J. Walker Smith, president of Yankelovich Partners, in a March speech celebrating the tenth anniversary of the Duke Libraries' Hartman Center for Sales, Advertising, and Marketing History
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