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 Mandela Exhibit Featured in  Duke Publication 
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                  An art  exhibit surrounded famed South African President Nelson Mandela currently on  display at American Tobacco has people in Durham  talking.                    Ryan Brown, staff writer,  recently wrote a piece about the exhibit for The Chronicle, the Independent Daily at Duke University.
 “Mandela art captures struggle for South Africa”  ran in the Recess section of the February 14, 2008, edition of the paper.  Brown writes about the American Tobacco  exhibit, “Nelson Mandela:  A Light So  Powerful,” a collection of lithographs of Mandela’s days in Robben Island  prison and election posters from the historic 1994 election.
“Sandwiched  between an information desk and a cluster of offices, A Light So Powerful is  structurally little more than a length of wire fencing,” wrote Brown.  “But displayed within it is a rare collection  of artifacts from the apartheid era.”
“Nelson  Mandela:  A Light So Powerful” will be on  display in the lobby of the Strickland  Building on the American Tobacco Campus  in downtown Durham  until April 30th.  The exhibit is free  and open to the public.  The exhibit  space is open from 9:00am to 6:00pm, seven days a week.
Article  used by permission of The Chronicle, Copyright © 2008