Didn’t skip a beat
Four Class of ’63 friends stage a Broadway reunion and answer their own question: What makes Wake Forest special?
Read MoreFour Class of ’63 friends stage a Broadway reunion and answer their own question: What makes Wake Forest special?
Read MoreHer legacy of love for nature’s vulnerable sea turtles lives on at the Karen Beasley (’84) Sea Turtle Rescue and Rehabilitation Center.
Read MoreDentist Sara Creighton (’05) hits the streets of San Francisco in a souped-up mobile dental office.
Read MoreMentoring matters to Chad Brown (’01, JD ’06), who is North Carolina’s Big Brother of the Year for Big Brothers Big Sisters Services.
Read MoreFormer soccer player Kate T. Parker (’98) is a mother and photographer whose new project shows young girls’ strength, power and confidence.
Read MoreA writer of world renown claimed Katina Parker (’96) and ‘watered and seeded’ her soul.
Read MoreFood’s Place is a Hot Topic and, at Wake Forest, One with a Pro Humantate Twist.
Read MoreTwo alumni are growing sustainable farm businesses, relying on a Wake Forest education with historic roots in the soil.
Read MoreInspired by her grandmother’s culinary art, Shelley Sizemore seeks to help students examine hunger issues in the community through Campus Kitchen.
Read MoreProfessor Angela G. King serves up answers on how science can make a better cook.
Read MoreThe divinity school’s Fred Bahnson cultivates ‘a whole new way to be a church.’
Read MoreHonoring memories and Aramark employees with scenes on the first day of classes after winter break.
Read MoreFrom birds and bees to research and root vegetables, food is an integral part of academic and student life.
Read MoreA LAWYER WHO STEPPED UP FOR HIS COMMUNITY AFTER A TRAGIC SHOOTING. A TRUSTEE RENOWNED FOR HIS LEGAL ACUMEN AND SERVICE THROUGHOUT NORTH CAROLINA. Norman B. Kellum Jr. (’59, JD ’65, P ’96) and James T. “Jim” Williams (’62, JD ’66, P ’89, ’92) were named the 2014 Wake Forest Distinguished Alumni Award winners. They […]
Read MoreMaya Angelou had little patience for anyone who spoke in front of her class with a ‘small voice’ and challenged students to project with confidence, purpose and poise, writes John R. Hilley (’83).
Read More“As of June 30, Wake Forest will let me go,” writes Candide Jones (’72, MA ’78), who is retiring. “But I’m not sure I can ever let Wake Forest go.”
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