Let's go tailgating
By Kiya Bajpai | September 13, 2002Usually, the last spaces of the Blue Zone parking lot are mentioned only in complaints of having to park far away from campus.
Usually, the last spaces of the Blue Zone parking lot are mentioned only in complaints of having to park far away from campus.
Several students have taken their back-to-school colds to the old student infirmary for treatment, only to find empty rooms and deserted hallways.
Judge refuses to recognize Revels as Miss North Carolina.
Duke jumped four spots in this year's U.S. News & World Report ranking to share fourth place with four other universities.
The first phase of the Central Campus renovations process began last week with meetings among students, administrators and development group Biddison-Hier.
As the federal government demands more information and reveals less, a surprising loser in the war on terrorism may turn out to be the library.
Durham Regional Hospital lost $364,000 more than expected in the fiscal year ending July 1, but it has moved closer to ending its long-standing budget deficit, according to a hospital report...
William Chafe, dean of the faculty of arts and sciences, addressed diversity issues and budgetary concerns at Thursday's Arts and Sciences Council meeting.
Duke University Police Department officers and their guests gathered at police headquarters Wednesday morning to dedicate their new flagpole to the victims of Sept. 11.
The School of Law hosted a forum yesterday where three professors considered the legality of several U.S. policies that have emerged in the aftermath of last year's terrorist attacks.
Members of the Duke community flocked to a series of denominational and interfaith services Wednesday, as part of the University-wide commemoration of Sept. 11.
Despite a University request that professors try to incorporate the Sept.
The Wall Street Journal has ranked the Fuqua School of Business as the 25th best business school in the nation, a significant jump from a 44th ranking last year.
Four political science stars came together Wednesday to discuss how the United States' role in the world has changed since the attacks a year earlier.
One year after faculty and students assembled at the Sanford Institute of Public Policy to react to the events of Sept.
Although the Sept. 11 attacks immediately targeted New York and Washington, D.C.
On a day when people across the nation and around the world commemorated the anniversary of the Sept. 11 attacks, the University observed the tragedy Wednesday with a host of memorial services.
One year after the Sept.
The U.S.
One day before the anniversary of the Sept.