Relations with our black students with respect to African and Afro-American studies / from Douglas M. Knight, President, Barnes Woodhall, Chancellor. 1969.

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Relations with our black students with respect to African and Afro-American studies / from Douglas M. Knight, President, Barnes Woodhall, Chancellor. 1969.

3 leaves ; 28 cm.

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Knight, Douglas Maitland, Jr., 1921-2005

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Born June 8, 1921, in Cambridge, MA, Douglas M. Knight was educated at Yale University and received an A.B. in 1942, an M.A. in 1944, and a Ph.D. in 1946. He served as an instructor and assistant professor of English from 1947 to 1953 at Yale University. Knight then became president of Lawrence University, in Appleton, Wisconsin in 1953. In 1963, Knight was persuaded to come to Duke University. New beginnings and unique building projects characterized his tenure. The con...

Duke University. President.

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Robert Lee Flowers was born at York Collegiate Institute, Alexander County, North Carolina, on November 6, 1870, the son of George Washington and Sarah Haynes Flowers. A graduate of the U. S. Naval Academy in 1891, Flowers was first employed as an instructor in mathematics and electrical engineering when Trinity was still in Randolph County. He moved with the college to Durham in 1892. As an engineer, one of his first responsibilities was to wire the new buildings in Durham for elec...

Duke University. Chancellor.

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Duke University

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Woodhall, Barnes, 1905-1985

http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w6wh2nz7 (person)

Professor (1937-1960) and chief (1946-1960) of the Division of Neurological Surgery at Duke University. In the 1950s, Woodhall was one of the first to use chemotherapy for brain tumors. Woodhall became the dean of the School of Medicine in 1960 and also associate provost of Duke University. From the description of Barnes Woodhall papers, 1930-1978. (Duke University). WorldCat record id: 57134824 ...