Steamy in the 'Stock? So passe.
Yawned your way through scaling Baldwin, driving around the circle backward and "tunneling?" Try discerning TV editor Molly McGarrett's list of souped-up stunts-guaranteed to make memories (and maybe the crime log.)
Use the fields below to perform an advanced search of The Chronicle's archives. This will return articles, images, and multimedia relevant to your query. You can also try a Basic search
27 items found for your search. If no results were found please broaden your search.
Yawned your way through scaling Baldwin, driving around the circle backward and "tunneling?" Try discerning TV editor Molly McGarrett's list of souped-up stunts-guaranteed to make memories (and maybe the crime log.)
We know you're constrained by that Y chromosome-your mom picked out and wrapped "your" gifts to your high school girlfriend, didn't she? Welcome to your twenties: Lest your date take the Shooter's party bus home with someone else Feb. 14, it's time to shop. Molly McGarrett rates the conventional picks.
What would you expect one of the most famous Duke Med School alumni to be doing right now? Surgery, pathology, and oncology might be among the things that spring to mind.
You've got your summer haircut and your summer clothes, your summer job and your summer home, what are you missing?
The Fulbright Scholarship is one of the most prestigious awards undergraduates across the country can attain. But fewer and fewer Duke students seem to want it.
Students walking down the West Campus Plaza these days can't help but notice the new glowing statue, but they might have missed a smaller addition-the Plaza webcam.
A mini-fridge that tosses you cold beer at the push of a button-the idea may seem like a sci-fi pipe-dream to college-aged couch potatoes.
Ever since Duke's 2003 Women's Initiative report coined the term "effortless perfection" to describe pressures faced by female students at the University, body image has been a hot topic on campus.
Following a month of activities including open houses, section parties and interviews, Duke's 10 selective housing groups extended bids to 170 hopeful rushees earlier this month.
Every semester, students compete to see who can fill their gray ACES schedule with the fewest red class blocks possible.
As the competition heats up in this year's Young Trustee selection process, nominees for one of the University's most prestigious positions will be whittled down tonight from a field of eight to three finalists.
Every spring, Duke students are audience to the very public rush processes of organizations within the Interfraternity Council, National Pan-Hellenic Council and Panhellenic Association.
Not just anyone can balance atop a surfboard while cruising across a sea of Duke University Marching Band members or hold his own in a swarm of Duke cheerleaders. These are the jobs of the most recognizable of all the Cameron Crazies-the Duke Blue Devil himself.
As the sun set on another quiet Sunday on Duke's campus, Field Training Officer Jefferson Frisbie of the Duke University Police Department begins his evening patrol.
The three candidates running for Duke Student Government's executive vice president position all agree on one thing-the organization needs to change.
Many students would think there is nothing exceptional about a weekend at Duke that includes a few games of Beirut in section or a Long Island iced tea at Shooters.
TV's Molly McGarrett caught up with the latest blogger to chronicle the Duke scene, the so-called "Duke observer." From his perch at www.dukeobsrvr.livejournal.com, the anonymous student responded via e-mail about his popular postings.
Just a few weeks after the end of fraternity and sorority rush season, greek life at Duke has come back into the spotlight, being examined by a harsh critic whose anonymous online blog has incited controversy.
While many undergraduates struggle in their introductory courses, a few ambitious students seek knowledge beyond what the usual 90- and 100-level courses of study offer them.
Although many college kids still associate "poker" with plastic chips and pizza in the commons room, a growing number of students are thinking more along the lines of computer screens and bank accounts.