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The Fair Labor Association released its first-ever public report June 4, revealing findings from independent audits of seven major footwear and apparel companies. Nike, which the University has licensed to make apparel bearing the Duke logo, was noted for its efforts to establish fair labor practices under the FLA's formal monitoring program from Aug. 2001 through July 2002.
Alicia Korenman, a graduate student in religion, has spent countless hours browsing through comic books and role-playing games this summer. No, she's not unemployed.
The University has hired Raleigh architect Clymer Cease to help with preliminary planning for the West Campus student village.
Katherine Sheriff, Trinity '01, died early Sunday morning when a porch collapsed at a Chicago party, killing 12 people. She was 23.
Under a new University policy, graduate and professional students who are not U.S. citizens must provide documented proof of their legal status in the United States in order to enroll or continue enrollment at Duke.
To some Duke students, the thought of Durham as a city rife with arts and culture is as credible as the thought of a Blue Devils appearance in a BCS bowl. Outside the University's borders, however, such skepticism is far less prevalent, if this past Tuesday's community planning meeting is at all indicative of Durham residents' visions for the city's cultural future.
Like many students, Towerview Road is in the midst of its summer makeover.
The University has enlisted two nationally renowned firms to help with preliminary Central Campus plans. David M. Schwarz Architectural Services, Inc., and developers Cousins Properties, Inc., will advise on the site's master plan and financing, respectively, and will both complete six-month concept studies with the University.
As the University looks to develop its campus, it also seeks to eliminate some of the steps that have delayed such construction endeavors in years past.
After years of struggling financially, the Freeman Center for Jewish Life is undergoing drastic changes in infrastructure as it seeks to reach out to more national donors while simultaneously developing closer relationships with Jewish students on campus.
Loyal patrons of local late-night restaurants can rest assured that their favorite late-night dives will continue to serve their favorite late-night eats, despite the popularity of Rick's Diner in the West-Edens Link.
The SARS epidemic in China and southeast Asia has forced yet another change of plans for a Duke summer program. This time, though, no one seems to mind.
After a one-year stint away from the top of the payroll, men's basketball coach Mike Krzyzewski reclaimed the fattest University paycheck in the 2001-02 fiscal year.
Despite 16 years experience as director of the University's art museum and the development of a $23 million home for the University's art collections to his credit, Michael Mezzatesta will not be in charge when the new Nasher Museum of Art opens its doors in 2004.
It's summer in Durham, but some things have changed since last year. Students and visitors don sweatshirts over their summer tees. Drought has given way to ever-present rain puddles. And something is different about Campus Drive.
Three Duke students charged with assaulting a North Carolina Central University student March 30 were acquitted May 6 in Durham County District Court.
____simple_html_dom__voku__html_wrapper____>Duke Hospital announced May 8 that it will establish a $4 million perpetual fund honoring the memory of Jésica Santillán. The fund, endorsed by Santillán's mother, will provide additional support services for Latino pediatric patients at the Hospital.
It was a humid, overcast Mother's Day, but that did not stop an estimated 18,000 people from watching as the University conferred 3,558 undergraduate, graduate and professional degrees Sunday.
Concerns about the SARS outbreak in China have led University administrators to relocate the summer study abroad program from Beijing to North Carolina.