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The Duke Energy Building in Uptown Charlotte North Carolina reflects the Carolina blue sky on the morning of the Carolina Panthers-Tampa Bay Buccaneers NFL game, December 1, 2013
My Misty Blueberry bush hasn't produced any berries since I planted it 4 years ago so I decided it was time to replace it. I went to Flower World and picked up a Duke blueberry bush.
TSS Duke of Lancaster - a passenger ship that operated from 1956 to 1979. It is currently beached at Mostyn Docks, north Wales and now 'decorated' from end to end with graffiti or art depending on your point of view.
At Duke Farms, you’ll find over 1000 acres of land devoted to an ongoing exploration—of native species, preservation and sustainability efforts, and of the area’s natural beauty.
A visit to Duke Farms is an opportunity to experience New Jersey’s native landscape at its finest, and to engage with it however you’d like. Duke Farms is located in Hillsborough on a 2,740-acre property, where over 1,000 acres are open to the public for self-discovery, outdoor activities, and education and research related to ecological sustainability.
The people of Blackburn were fantastic today, singing "You're the Pride of Lancashire" to the Duke of Lancaster Regiment who had had their homecoming march through the town on Dec 1st 2010.
Waikiki Beach, Honolulu, Hawaii. Duke Kahanamoku statue, with leis given in remembrance by visitors.
Attached is a photo for the Blue Devil Halloween photo content.
The pumpkins were submitted by Dr. Nancy Andrews' lab for Department of Pharmacology & Cancer Biology's Halloween Pumpkin Contest. The department awards prizes in several categories, and our pumpkin won the "Best Duke Pumpkin."
Dr. Andrews' lab studies how iron ("Fe" in the periodic table of elements) is used by the body, and so our pumpkins represent "Iron Duke."
Blake Stagg, a Research Technician II in the Andrews lab, was the master carver.
Thanks,
Karin Finberg
The people of Blackburn were fantastic today, singing "You're the Pride of Lancashire" to the Duke of Lancaster Regiment who had had their homecoming march through the town on Dec 1st 2010.
Now, I will show you some photos taken at the campus of Duke University.
Today 15,000 students go to this university and each of them pay at least $35,000 p.a. if they have no scholarship. That's maybe one reason why they have a very lovely campus.
Plenty of their buildings were built in Neo-Gothic-style or in Georgian-style. This building is the Hudson Hall (built in 1948) and is used for the Edmund T. Pratt Jr. School of Engineering.
First-year medical students visit the galleries as part of a program co-sponsored by Duke’s School of Medicine and the Nasher Museum. The museum visit is part of a required course called “the practice course,” focusing on doctor-patient relationships. The goal is for students to build their visual and communication skills and learn how to better understand their patients and themselves. Photos by Dr. J Caldwell.
One highlight of the Duke campus is Duke Chapel. With 210 ft / 64 m is the chapel the highest building in Durham County. Typically for the campus is the Gothic-style although it was bulit in the 1930s.
Inside are 1,800 seats for students and staff. Sometimes you can hear the carillon with 50 bells or the organ with 5,033 pipes.
There was a closed service on the day I took the photos, so I was not allowed to visit the chapel inside.