Rhine Center hosts paranormal conference
Ever known who was calling before picking up the phone? Dreamt of an event only to have it happen the next day?
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
51 items found for your search. If no results were found please broaden your search.
Ever known who was calling before picking up the phone? Dreamt of an event only to have it happen the next day?
The long-overdue Marguerite Kent Repass Ocean Conservation Center at the Duke University Marine Lab in Beaufort, N.C.--which has been in the planning stages since the early 1990s--opened its doors to students Monday.
After nearly a year and a half of construction, the new 59,000-sq. ft. School of Nursing opened its doors this week.
Along with a new waiting room, improved lighting and a fresh coat of paint, Duke's Counseling and Psychological Services has gained a new face in the past few months.
Like many students enjoying the last few days of summer, members of the Duke Robotics Club spent a lot of time at the pool.
For most, traveling the 631 miles between New Haven, Conn., and Chapel Hill, N.C., means an iPod-enhanced nap on a peaceful direct flight.
If the large hydraulic crane that loomed over Erwin Road this past week is any indication, Duke University Hospital is undergoing some big changes.
Students staying in Durham during the summer seem to agree--it's time to live up to the second half of the "work hard, play hard" Duke ethic.
Researchers from all over the world gathered at Duke this week to share research and celebrate final developments on a state-of-the-art particle accelerator in Geneva, Switzerland.
A number of researchers, including a Duke professor, mapped the final chromosome in the Human Genome Project last week, bringing scientists a giant step closer to curing thousands of diseases.
Duke University Health System is adding one more member to its senior staff.
Students often complain about their experiences with campus health care, and Counseling and Psychological Services has been the subject of particular scrutiny in recent months.
Three keynote speakers-a Nobel Prize winner, the former president of the International AIDS society and the subject of the class of 2008 summer reading, spoke Tuesday to an overflowing crowd in Schiciano Auditorium. The discussion celebrated the launch of Duke's Global Health Institute.
Last week, the DNA test results for an alleged rape involving the Duke men's lacrosse team came back as negative matches to evidence obtained from the victim.
For the launch of the Duke Global Health Institute, the Nasher Museum will host more than art today. The Duke Global Health Symposium will bring together faculty, administration and international global heath leaders for two days of speeches and discussions.
With the release of negative DNA results Monday, many members of the Duke community are wondering what comes next-for the case, for the lacrosse players and for the alleged victim.
The ubiquitous white earbuds of the iPod have long been criticized by some as detrimental to the everyday casual interactions that shape college life.
You emerge from a cave into a dark, wooded area around dusk. Twigs snap and leaves crunch beneath your feet as you walk forward amid the haunting whispers of dead souls lamenting their fate.
Sixteen Duke seniors will appear today before the U.S. Senate Committee on Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions to advocate the reauthorization and revision of the Ryan White Comprehensive AIDS Resources Emergency Act.
For sophomore Alicia Zelek, Sudafed from Duke's Student Health Center just didn't cut it.