Old-fashioned soda shop to open on Ninth Street
Milkshakes to rival Cook Out are on their way to Ninth Street.
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Milkshakes to rival Cook Out are on their way to Ninth Street.
Duke football won a game-750 days ago.
When Durham resident Adam Lang first smoked a fire-safe cigarette, he hated it.
Three government ethics reform bills are paving the way for more openness in state government in the wake of several political scandals this past year.
Local seventh graders in Kelly Stevens' social studies class at Rogers-Herr Middle School recently went on a treasure hunt armed with GPS devices and clues from a swashbuckling pirate.
There's nothing like a little sake bombing to raise money for a good cause and bring together the Class of 2007.
Rumor has it, Coach K gets his hair cut at an old Wesleyan church just off East Campus. "He goes there after hours," said John Schelp, who pointed out historical markers and facts Saturday morning on the third annual four-mile Urban Hike he leads around Durham. "I don't know if that's true or not, but it's the local lore."
Are we a nation of immigrants? When Peter Laufer grabbed a bite to eat at Duke's McDonald's Tuesday, the woman who took his order in Spanish answered the question for him.
Sophomores Matt Brandt and Jay Schulhof know how to make money playing blackjack.
Speaking on West Campus Tuesday, former Durham Mayor Wense Grabarek encouraged students to work to achieve change and to explore history from different perspectives.
Last July, attorney Brent Adams said a Duke University Health System mishap that his client claimed had caused him infection and debilitating medical problems was "anything but over."
As the saying goes, the squeaky wheel often gets the grease.
Concerned residents of Durham's East End and the Duke Park Neighborhood discussed a proposed interstate connector at the City Council meeting Monday, following Durham Mayor Bill Bell's State of the City Address.
In line with one of the six themes of Duke's new strategic plan, "Making a Difference," the Kenan Institute for Ethics hosted a symposium Friday to examine topics regarding "knowledge in the service of society."
At its first general assembly meeting of the new year Tuesday night, the Graduate and Professional Student Council discussed a wide range of topics, from Career Week to getting to know groups that work closely with GPSC.
Durham City Council member Howard Clement witnessed history in the making as he watched his friend and hero Martin Luther King, Jr. deliver the words that inspired a generation.
Community members spilled into the aisles and lined up along the walls at Monday's Durham City Council meeting, waiting for a chance to speak.
Science results for the 2005 Trial Urban District Assessment, a branch of the National Assessment of Education Progress, were released Nov. 15, assessing performance of fourth- and eighth-graders in 10 districts nationwide in mathematics, reading, writing and science.
Durham City Council breezed through its agenda Monday night, discussing everything from providing jobs for local citizens to the naming rights of the Durham Performing Arts Center.
It might not be called Thanksgiving, but even in the Caribbean people gather together and cook lots of food in a spirit of thankfulness.