Museum won't open until 2005
By Whitney Beckett | August 27, 2002Although the Nasher Museum of Art is almost two years behind schedule, the plans for the upcoming West Campus attraction are nearing their final stage with an even larger budget.
Although the Nasher Museum of Art is almost two years behind schedule, the plans for the upcoming West Campus attraction are nearing their final stage with an even larger budget.
Although the opening paragraph of Ethan Canin's "The Palace Thief," reads "This is a story without surprises," the short story provided enough material for over an hour of discussion during...
Student organization leaders and freshmen congregated on East Campus Saturday afternoon for the annual Student Activities Fair.
Large, colorful benches decorated with Greek letters are among the most visible signs of fraternity and social life at Duke, but they are no longer visible to students and visitors walking down the...
As signs pointing to a rapid economic recovery remain ambiguous, students at the Fuqua School of Business are facing the daunting task that they may not get their first-choice job.
Although the administration had hoped to make this year's freshman orientation more academic than in years past, its efforts seemed to be lost on many students.
Members of the female a capella group Lady Blue perform at Sunday night's Acappellooza in Page Auditorium.
Freshmen attended a speech by novelist Maya Angelou Sunday in the Chapel. Angelou, the Reynolds professor of American studies at Wake Forest University, speaks annually to freshmen..
Unexpectedly good business and a lack of resources forced Rick's Diner to stop serving food late Sunday night just three days after opening.
All underclassmen will likely be able to park in the Blue Zone this year, administrators said, tentatively banishing earlier fears that commuters would have to park in the remote lots on Duke...
This is the first story in a five-part series profiling various student leaders this year.
They were the ones overseeing each quad's check-in tables in the Intramural Building last week and the ones speaking at the first quad-wide meetings Sunday night.
Students looking to rub shoulders with the likes of Spike Lee, Carl Bernstein and Dr.
Sounds of hammering, piles of sawdust and heaps of rejected bed frames greeted students entering dormitories this week.
Students at E. K. Powe Elementary School bubbled with excitement Thursday as Martin Luther King, III, son of late civil rights leader Martin Luther King, Jr.
I know that the sentiments of the students and the parents are somewhat divergent at this point. As students, you are eager to get on with your life at Duke.
Even seniors will feel the freshman rush of excitement this year as they return to campus. Why? Many of them will be finding their way in a new world too.
Although the scene outside freshman convocation Thursday much resembled those of past years, the Class of 2006's signing of the Honor Code on the Chapel Quadrangle had a hint of irony this year.