Local kids, Dukies team up for robotics contest
The chicken dance is not just for uniting humans of all ages in the spirit of synchronized hand-clamping: It's for robots, too.
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The chicken dance is not just for uniting humans of all ages in the spirit of synchronized hand-clamping: It's for robots, too.
Guzzling orange juice helps fight nasty winter colds-right?
Turns out that microwaves on campus can do more than make Easy Mac-and the National Cancer Institute agrees.
As Dean of the College of Arts at Mustansiriyah University in Baghdad, he had a library of 6,000 books.
Members of the Graduate and Professional Student Council discussed health insurance plans for graduate students among other issues at a GPSC general body meeting Monday night.
Cable 13 is making a comeback.
Researchers at Duke University Medical Center have taken another step toward curing cancer.
Students studying in the library are going to have to wait a few days longer to be able to get that late-night cup of joe.
If the Old West Durham Neighborhood Association gets its way, students may soon have more options for food on points and eventually be able to use their DukeCards at local shops and restaurants.
When tenters attempted to argue with line monitor Aaron Dinin about the tenting policy last year, he wouldn't have been kidding if he told them he wrote the book on Krzyzewskiville.
Four years of planning and construction culminated Tuesday evening at the dedication of the Goodson Chapel and Westbrook Building, which make up the recently completed addition to the Divinity School.
Churchgoers weren't the only ones milling around the Chapel Quadrangle Sunday-it was filled with animals from dogs to hedgehogs for the annual Blessing of the Animals.
Students and faculty may not have known it, but as he stood gallantly in front of the Duke Chapel last spring, James B. Duke was in grave danger.
The Chapel is an impostor.
When rowdy students filled the Blue Zone Saturday morning in preparation for the football team's home opener, more was on the line than just the outcome of the game.
An audience of more than 50 members of the Duke community met in the Terry Sanford Institute of Public Policy Thursday night to discuss what were deemed the failings and future direction of public policy related to the Hurricane Katrina tragedy.