Show Navigation

Search Results

Refine Search
Match all words
Match any word
Prints
Personal Use
Royalty-Free
Rights-Managed
(leave unchecked to
search all images)
{ 25 images found }

Loading ()...

  • Dr. Sherilynn Black, middle, a neuroscientist who created and runs the Office of Biomedical Diversity, speaks with program participants Ife Ayeni, left, and Nandan Gokhale, right, on the campus of Duke University in Durham, North Carolina, Friday, June 24, 2016. Few college students from underrepresented groups seek doctorates, particularly in STEM fields. Duke University’s medical school created the Office For Biomedical Diversity six years ago to see if they could change that equation. Now, not only are more minority students are entering Duke's biomedical PhD programs, but they are performing better once there. <br />
<br />
D.L. Anderson for The Chronicle of Higher Education
    40Duke0624_Duke_Biomedical_Diversity...jpg
  • Dr. Sherilynn Black, middle, a neuroscientist who created and runs the Office of Biomedical Diversity, speaks with program participants Ife Ayeni, left, and Nandan Gokhale, right, on the campus of Duke University in Durham, North Carolina, Friday, June 24, 2016. Few college students from underrepresented groups seek doctorates, particularly in STEM fields. Duke University’s medical school created the Office For Biomedical Diversity six years ago to see if they could change that equation. Now, not only are more minority students are entering Duke's biomedical PhD programs, but they are performing better once there. <br />
<br />
D.L. Anderson for The Chronicle of Higher Education
    40Duke0520_Duke_Biomedical_Diversity...jpg
  • Dr. Sherilynn Black, middle, a neuroscientist who created and runs the Office of Biomedical Diversity, speaks with program participants Ife Ayeni, left, and Nandan Gokhale, right, on the campus of Duke University in Durham, North Carolina, Friday, June 24, 2016. Few college students from underrepresented groups seek doctorates, particularly in STEM fields. Duke University’s medical school created the Office For Biomedical Diversity six years ago to see if they could change that equation. Now, not only are more minority students are entering Duke's biomedical PhD programs, but they are performing better once there. <br />
<br />
D.L. Anderson for The Chronicle of Higher Education
    40Duke_0613_Duke_Biomedical_Diversit...jpg
  • Dr. Sherilynn Black, middle, a neuroscientist who created and runs the Office of Biomedical Diversity, speaks with program participants Ife Ayeni, left, and Nandan Gokhale, right, on the campus of Duke University in Durham, North Carolina, Friday, June 24, 2016. Few college students from underrepresented groups seek doctorates, particularly in STEM fields. Duke University’s medical school created the Office For Biomedical Diversity six years ago to see if they could change that equation. Now, not only are more minority students are entering Duke's biomedical PhD programs, but they are performing better once there. <br />
<br />
D.L. Anderson for The Chronicle of Higher Education
    40Duke_0589_Duke_Biomedical_Diversit...jpg
  • Dr. Sherilynn Black, middle, a neuroscientist who created and runs the Office of Biomedical Diversity, speaks with program participants Ife Ayeni, left, and Nandan Gokhale, right, on the campus of Duke University in Durham, North Carolina, Friday, June 24, 2016. Few college students from underrepresented groups seek doctorates, particularly in STEM fields. Duke University’s medical school created the Office For Biomedical Diversity six years ago to see if they could change that equation. Now, not only are more minority students are entering Duke's biomedical PhD programs, but they are performing better once there. <br />
<br />
D.L. Anderson for The Chronicle of Higher Education
    40Duke_0586_Duke_Biomedical_Diversit...jpg
  • Dr. Sherilynn Black, middle, a neuroscientist who created and runs the Office of Biomedical Diversity, speaks with program participants Ife Ayeni, left, and Nandan Gokhale, right, on the campus of Duke University in Durham, North Carolina, Friday, June 24, 2016. Few college students from underrepresented groups seek doctorates, particularly in STEM fields. Duke University’s medical school created the Office For Biomedical Diversity six years ago to see if they could change that equation. Now, not only are more minority students are entering Duke's biomedical PhD programs, but they are performing better once there. <br />
<br />
D.L. Anderson for The Chronicle of Higher Education
    40Duke_0580_Duke_Biomedical_Diversit...jpg
  • Dr. Sherilynn Black, a neuroscientist who created and runs the Office of Biomedical Diversity, speaks with program participants Ife Ayeni, left, and Nandan Gokhale, right, on the campus of Duke University in Durham, North Carolina, Friday, June 24, 2016. Few college students from underrepresented groups seek doctorates, particularly in STEM fields. Duke University’s medical school created the Office For Biomedical Diversity six years ago to see if they could change that equation. Now, not only are more minority students are entering Duke's biomedical PhD programs, but they are performing better once there. <br />
<br />
D.L. Anderson for The Chronicle of Higher Education
    40Duke0485_Duke_Biomedical_Diversity...jpg
  • Dr. Sherilynn Black is a neuroscientist who created and runs the Office of Biomedical Diversity at Duke University in Durham, North Carolina, Friday, June 24, 2016. Few college students from underrepresented groups seek doctorates, particularly in STEM fields. Duke University’s medical school created the Office For Biomedical Diversity six years ago to see if they could change that equation. Now, not only are more minority students are entering Duke's biomedical PhD programs, but they are performing better once there. <br />
<br />
D.L. Anderson for The Chronicle of Higher Education
    40Duke_0657_Duke_Biomedical_Diversit...jpg
  • Dr. Sherilynn Black is a neuroscientist who created and runs the Office of Biomedical Diversity at Duke University in Durham, North Carolina, Friday, June 24, 2016. Few college students from underrepresented groups seek doctorates, particularly in STEM fields. Duke University’s medical school created the Office For Biomedical Diversity six years ago to see if they could change that equation. Now, not only are more minority students are entering Duke's biomedical PhD programs, but they are performing better once there. <br />
<br />
D.L. Anderson for The Chronicle of Higher Education
    40Duke_0636_Duke_Biomedical_Diversit...jpg
  • Dr. Sherilynn Black, middle, a neuroscientist who created and runs the Office of Biomedical Diversity, speaks with program participants Ife Ayeni, left, and Nandan Gokhale, right, on the campus of Duke University in Durham, North Carolina, Friday, June 24, 2016. Few college students from underrepresented groups seek doctorates, particularly in STEM fields. Duke University’s medical school created the Office For Biomedical Diversity six years ago to see if they could change that equation. Now, not only are more minority students are entering Duke's biomedical PhD programs, but they are performing better once there. <br />
<br />
D.L. Anderson for The Chronicle of Higher Education
    40Duke_0557_Duke_Biomedical_Diversit...jpg
  • The Unsung Founders Memorial at UNC Chapel Hill is located nearby Silent Sam, a Confederate monument erected on campus in 1913. The memorial is a black granite tabletop supported by 300 bronze figurines and an inscription around the edge of the table that says “The Class Of 2002 Honors The University's Unsung Founders - The People Of Color Bound And Free - Who Helped Build The Carolina That We Cherish Today.”<br />
Photo by D.L. Anderson for The Chronicle of Higher Education.
    0138_Silent_Sam_20171028.jpg
  • The Unsung Founders Memorial at UNC Chapel Hill is located nearby Silent Sam, a Confederate monument erected on campus in 1913. The memorial is a black granite tabletop supported by 300 bronze figurines and an inscription around the edge of the table that says “The Class Of 2002 Honors The University's Unsung Founders - The People Of Color Bound And Free - Who Helped Build The Carolina That We Cherish Today.”<br />
Photo by D.L. Anderson for The Chronicle of Higher Education.
    0135_Silent_Sam_20171028.jpg
  • Research scientist Greg Gedman, left, works with Dr. Erich Jarvis, Associate Professor of Neurobiology at Duke University in Durham, North Carolina, Thurs., June 23, 2016. Few college students from underrepresented groups seek doctorates, particularly in STEM fields. Duke University’s medical school created the Office For Biomedical Diversity six years ago to see if they could change that equation. Now, not only are more minority students are entering Duke's biomedical PhD programs, but they are performing better once there. Gedman is a first generation student and is part of the program managed by the Office of Biomedical Diversity. Dr. Jarvis is one of just a few black professors in the biomedical sciences PhD programs, so he said that he understands the value that a program like Duke's provides.<br />
<br />
D.L. Anderson for The Chronicle of Higher Education
    40Duke_0176_Duke_Biomedical_Diversit...jpg
  • Research scientist Greg Gedman, left, works with Dr. Erich Jarvis, Associate Professor of Neurobiology at Duke University in Durham, North Carolina, Thurs., June 23, 2016. Few college students from underrepresented groups seek doctorates, particularly in STEM fields. Duke University’s medical school created the Office For Biomedical Diversity six years ago to see if they could change that equation. Now, not only are more minority students are entering Duke's biomedical PhD programs, but they are performing better once there. Gedman is a first generation student and is part of the program managed by the Office of Biomedical Diversity. Dr. Jarvis is one of just a few black professors in the biomedical sciences PhD programs, so he said that he understands the value that a program like Duke's provides.<br />
<br />
D.L. Anderson for The Chronicle of Higher Education
    40Duke_0112_Duke_Biomedical_Diversit...jpg
  • Research scientist Greg Gedman, left, works with Dr. Erich Jarvis, Associate Professor of Neurobiology at Duke University in Durham, North Carolina, Thurs., June 23, 2016. Few college students from underrepresented groups seek doctorates, particularly in STEM fields. Duke University’s medical school created the Office For Biomedical Diversity six years ago to see if they could change that equation. Now, not only are more minority students are entering Duke's biomedical PhD programs, but they are performing better once there. Gedman is a first generation student and is part of the program managed by the Office of Biomedical Diversity. Dr. Jarvis is one of just a few black professors in the biomedical sciences PhD programs, so he said that he understands the value that a program like Duke's provides.<br />
<br />
D.L. Anderson for The Chronicle of Higher Education
    40Duke_0105_Duke_Biomedical_Diversit...jpg
  • Research scientist Greg Gedman, left, works with Dr. Erich Jarvis, Associate Professor of Neurobiology at Duke University in Durham, North Carolina, Thurs., June 23, 2016. Few college students from underrepresented groups seek doctorates, particularly in STEM fields. Duke University’s medical school created the Office For Biomedical Diversity six years ago to see if they could change that equation. Now, not only are more minority students are entering Duke's biomedical PhD programs, but they are performing better once there. Gedman is a first generation student and is part of the program managed by the Office of Biomedical Diversity. Dr. Jarvis is one of just a few black professors in the biomedical sciences PhD programs, so he said that he understands the value that a program like Duke's provides.<br />
<br />
D.L. Anderson for The Chronicle of Higher Education
    40Duke_0044_Duke_Biomedical_Diversit...jpg
  • Research scientist Greg Gedman, left, works with Dr. Erich Jarvis, Associate Professor of Neurobiology at Duke University in Durham, North Carolina, Thurs., June 23, 2016. Few college students from underrepresented groups seek doctorates, particularly in STEM fields. Duke University’s medical school created the Office For Biomedical Diversity six years ago to see if they could change that equation. Now, not only are more minority students are entering Duke's biomedical PhD programs, but they are performing better once there. Gedman is a first generation student and is part of the program managed by the Office of Biomedical Diversity. Dr. Jarvis is one of just a few black professors in the biomedical sciences PhD programs, so he said that he understands the value that a program like Duke's provides.<br />
<br />
D.L. Anderson for The Chronicle of Higher Education
    40Duke_0010_Duke_Biomedical_Diversit...jpg
  • With the stage dry once again, the microphone was made ready for Black Thought and the The Roots, Hopscotch Music Festival, Raleigh, N.C., September 8, 2012
    20120908_hopscotch_863_dla.jpg
  • The Unsung Founders Memorial at UNC Chapel Hill is located nearby Silent Sam, a Confederate monument erected on campus in 1913. The memorial is a black granite tabletop supported by 300 bronze figurines and an inscription around the edge of the table that says “The Class Of 2002 Honors The University's Unsung Founders - The People Of Color Bound And Free - Who Helped Build The Carolina That We Cherish Today.”<br />
Photo by D.L. Anderson for The Chronicle of Higher Education.
    0132_Silent_Sam_20171028.jpg
  • Research scientist Greg Gedman, left, works with Dr. Erich Jarvis, Associate Professor of Neurobiology at Duke University in Durham, North Carolina, Thurs., June 23, 2016. Few college students from underrepresented groups seek doctorates, particularly in STEM fields. Duke University’s medical school created the Office For Biomedical Diversity six years ago to see if they could change that equation. Now, not only are more minority students are entering Duke's biomedical PhD programs, but they are performing better once there. Gedman is a first generation student and is part of the program managed by the Office of Biomedical Diversity. Dr. Jarvis is one of just a few black professors in the biomedical sciences PhD programs, so he said that he understands the value that a program like Duke's provides.<br />
<br />
D.L. Anderson for The Chronicle of Higher Education
    40Duke_0150_Duke_Biomedical_Diversit...jpg
  • Research scientist Greg Gedman, left, works with Dr. Erich Jarvis, Associate Professor of Neurobiology at Duke University in Durham, North Carolina, Thurs., June 23, 2016. Few college students from underrepresented groups seek doctorates, particularly in STEM fields. Duke University’s medical school created the Office For Biomedical Diversity six years ago to see if they could change that equation. Now, not only are more minority students are entering Duke's biomedical PhD programs, but they are performing better once there. Gedman is a first generation student and is part of the program managed by the Office of Biomedical Diversity. Dr. Jarvis is one of just a few black professors in the biomedical sciences PhD programs, so he said that he understands the value that a program like Duke's provides.<br />
<br />
D.L. Anderson for The Chronicle of Higher Education
    40Duke_0130_Duke_Biomedical_Diversit...jpg
  • Research scientist Greg Gedman, left, works with Dr. Erich Jarvis, Associate Professor of Neurobiology at Duke University in Durham, North Carolina, Thurs., June 23, 2016. Few college students from underrepresented groups seek doctorates, particularly in STEM fields. Duke University’s medical school created the Office For Biomedical Diversity six years ago to see if they could change that equation. Now, not only are more minority students are entering Duke's biomedical PhD programs, but they are performing better once there. Gedman is a first generation student and is part of the program managed by the Office of Biomedical Diversity. Dr. Jarvis is one of just a few black professors in the biomedical sciences PhD programs, so he said that he understands the value that a program like Duke's provides.<br />
<br />
D.L. Anderson for The Chronicle of Higher Education
    40Duke_0105_Duke_Biomedical_Diversit...jpg
  • Research scientist Greg Gedman, left, works with Dr. Erich Jarvis, Associate Professor of Neurobiology at Duke University in Durham, North Carolina, Thurs., June 23, 2016. Few college students from underrepresented groups seek doctorates, particularly in STEM fields. Duke University’s medical school created the Office For Biomedical Diversity six years ago to see if they could change that equation. Now, not only are more minority students are entering Duke's biomedical PhD programs, but they are performing better once there. Gedman is a first generation student and is part of the program managed by the Office of Biomedical Diversity. Dr. Jarvis is one of just a few black professors in the biomedical sciences PhD programs, so he said that he understands the value that a program like Duke's provides.<br />
<br />
D.L. Anderson for The Chronicle of Higher Education
    40Duke_0016_Duke_Biomedical_Diversit...jpg
  • Tariq "Black Thought" Trotter wires a headset into place before taking the stage for a performance during the Hopscotch Music Festival, Raleigh, N.C., September 8, 2012
    20120908_hopscotch_867_dla.jpg
  • Pan-seared Triggerfish, with salsify root, spinach black-eyed peas, pomegranate and country ham at Mandolin, Raleigh, NC, Tuesday, January 21, 2012.
    2012.01.31_MANDOLIN_INDY_101_DLA.JPG
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
x

D.L. Anderson Pictures

  • PORTFOLIO
  • ARCHIVE
    • All Galleries
    • Search
    • Cart
    • Lightbox
    • Client Area
  • CONTACT
  • ABOUT
  • HOME