Dave Johnson (’90): Poetry for probation
Playwright and teacher Dave Johnson (’90) holds an unlikely appointment as Poet-in-Residence for the New York City Probation Office.
Read MorePlaywright and teacher Dave Johnson (’90) holds an unlikely appointment as Poet-in-Residence for the New York City Probation Office.
Read MoreBobby Higdon (’85, JD ’89) and Frank Bradsher (’82) are helping rebuild Kosovo’s judicial system.
Read MoreAmy Bannister White (’90) delivers turkeys on Thanksgiving and hope throughout the year.
Read MoreSusan Brinkley (’62), an alumna of the new campus, is honored for preserving the history of the Old Campus.
Read MoreRetired professor Thomas M. Elmore (’56), who founded Wake Forest’s counseling program, has died.
Read MoreBroadcaster Billy Packer ('62) says Coach Bones McKinney's personality was larger than life.
Read MoreWeston P. Hatfield (’41), a past trustee who was one of Wake Forest’s most influential leaders, has died.
Read MoreFormer UNC President William C. “Bill” Friday, who died Oct. 12, got his start on the Old Campus.
Read MoreProbably no one’s journey to Wake Forest was longer than Somali native Yasin Ali’s, but he had Jordan Adam (’04) pointing the way.
Read MoreWake Forest faculty and staff share how they find inspiration to 'Be Inventive!'
Read MoreLori Piccolo (’87) will be watching from afar as hundreds of students race around Hearn Plaza for the 10th annual Hit the Bricks fundraiser Sept. 27.
Read MoreThe newly renamed Alumni Hall was dedicated Sept. 20 with a hope that it will become as hallowed as its namesake on the Old Campus.
Read MoreThe dancing, head-spinning Deacon was a crowd favorite in the 1970s.
Read MoreSeventeen years after four-year-old Mary Scott Haynie was the Homecoming poster child, she’s entering her senior year at Wake Forest.
Read MoreWalter J. Harrelson, who laid the foundation for Wake Forest’s divinity school in the mid-1990s, has died.
Read MoreTwo weeks before the Class of 2016 moved onto campus, the “Girls on the Hall” from the Class of ’64 took over Johnson Hall.
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