When Archie Bunker was a Deacon
Long before he was Archie Bunker, Carroll O’Connor was a Demon Deacon.
Read MoreLong before he was Archie Bunker, Carroll O’Connor was a Demon Deacon.
Read MoreFirst Native American graduate advocated for family medicine and better health care.
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 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 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 MoreA memorial service for retired French professor Mary Frances Robinson, who died on July 31, will be held on Sunday, Sept. 2, at 3 p.m. in Wait Chapel.
Read MoreJack Shearin (’50), 84-years-young, has helped build more than 600 ramps for the disabled.
Read MoreSusan Brinkley (’62) shares tales of the Old Campus on UNC-TV.
Read MoreThe daughter of distinguished alumnus Laurence Stallings (1916) discovers his fascinating past.
Read MoreChances are your first and lasting memories of Wake Forest are associated with its trees.
Read MoreJames Coggin (’52) remains grateful for the lessons learned from the “characters” on the Old Campus.
Read MoreJenny Puckett (’71) passes on the Wake Forest story; Ed Wilson (’43) shares his best — and worst — Wake Forest memories with students.
Read MoreRetired professor Beulah Raynor, who died Jan. 8, is remembered as a demanding, but caring, teacher.
Read MoreWilliam C. “Bill” Friday’s remarkable lifetime of public service to North Carolina and the nation began at Wake Forest.
Read MoreWake Forest Magazine recently received a letter and family photos from John Randolph “Randy” Cresenzo (JD ’76) who wrote that his father, Dr. Victor Michael Cresenzo, Sr. (BS ’40, MD ’43), is among the last living members of the first graduating class of the Bowman Gray School of Medicine in 1943.
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