Nine questions with women's golf coach Dan Brooks
Top five golf courses.
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
451 items found for your search. If no results were found please broaden your search.
Top five golf courses.
The Duke Student Government judiciary board has ordered a new presidential election for the Class of 2005 after ruling that a previously eliminated candidate should have been censured instead of disqualified.
Doug Breeden sits in his office on a warm April day inside the Fuqua School of Business.
The other day, in a rare free moment, I was driving down an alley between Main Street and Ninth Street.
The key is in the ignition and the engines are running.
At the heart of incoming chair Thomas Nechyba's plans for the Department of Economics is a massive overhaul to the graduate program.
With its undergraduate major restructured, the economics department is turning toward strengthening its graduate program and faculty under the leadership of a new chair and in the wake of a generally favorable external review last fall.
Larry Moneta's calendar still may be full and his days busy as ever, but as the vice president for student affairs settles into his position and completes his own infrastructure, his role is gradually changing.
While the program's website proclaims that the search for Angier B. Duke scholars is an "intense" competition, the University, as it wraps up A.B. Duke recruitment weekend, may be finding that they are the ones competing intensely.
Get your engines ready.
The Graduate School is in the process of wooing applicants pulled from the largest applicant pool in its history.
An expansion of the business school's master's of business administration class is padding a down year for applications to the school's higher-end programs.
The University may be getting even closer to jumping on the monorail.
Behind the scenes of a recent discussion to shorten the tenting period in Krzyzewskiville may be a tacit administrative disapproval of the practice - K-ville and athletics in general have become subtle flashpoints in the gradual, ongoing push to make the undergraduate experience more intellectual.
The happiest man to learn about William Chafe's announcement Sunday that he would be stepping down as dean of the faculty of arts and sciences may have been John Thompson, chair of the history department.
William Chafe, dean of the faculty of arts and sciences and vice provost for undergraduate education, will step down from his positions June 30, 2004, to resume teaching and research, The Chronicle learned Sunday.
While construction workers scurry to build the new Center for Interdisciplinary Engineering, Medicine and Applied Sciences, faculty and administrators are thinking about how to get the most out of the interaction between engineering and medicine in one of the center's three wings.
This interview with President Emeritus Keith Brodie, who served from 1985 to 1993, is the second in a series of Oak Room Interviews designed to shed light on the personalities of noted campus figures. The interview was conducted earlier this spring by Kevin Lees, The Chronicle's managing editor.
Tenting for basketball games in Krzyzewskiville may span less time in the future, under several options that administrators and some student leaders are considering.
Duke's largest department has a new leader.