The leaders featured on this year’s Chron15 list are coaches, student leaders and faculty who used their power for good as they shaped the University’s future, encouraged student success and worked tirelessly to improve the Duke experience.
Remembering Our Friend, Sara Seten Berghausen - Duke University Libraries Blogs duke.edu - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from duke.edu Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
In 1933, the Chicago Symphony premiered composer Florence Price’s award-winning Symphony No. 1. It was a milestone in performance history, making Price the first African-American woman to have a large-scale work presented by a major U.S. orchestra. Although she continued to compose until her death in 1953, many of Price’s subsequent pieces were performed by “women’s symphonies,” all-female ensembles that filled a niche separate from the male space of top professional orchestras.