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(11/15/04 5:00am)
A group of student organizers seeking to raise awareness about the ongoing ethnic strife in Sudan erected a mock refugee village on the Main West Quadrangle Friday. The village, which consists of ad-hoc tents built with plywood, plastic and buckets, will remain on the quad throughout the week.
(11/03/04 5:00am)
Students across campus gather together to watch the election results Tuesday night.
(10/18/04 4:00am)
A panel of three experts gathered Saturday morning to speak about the history and future of the Palestinian movement. Starting 45 minutes later than scheduled due to security delays, the event was one part of the weekend’s Palestine Solidarity Movement conference.
(10/18/04 4:00am)
A Saturday afternoon panel at the Freeman Center for Jewish Life brought together four diverse viewpoints about current U.S. policy toward Israel.
(10/13/04 4:00am)
Shlomo Griner stood on the bus-length platform above a photograph of Anat Darom Tuesday afternoon. Instead of reading from the printed mini-biography in his hand, he looked at a small gathering of students, faculty and press, and told them about the girl on the poster.
(10/01/04 4:00am)
Focusing on the ACLU’s efforts to protect civil liberties since the Sept. 11 attacks, American Civil Liberties Union President Nadine Strossen spoke to a diverse crowd of students and Durham residents Thursday.
(10/01/04 4:00am)
Imagine: you are a top Chronicle editor. You’ve designed your schedule to accommodate 60-plus hours a week spent in a dirty, poorly-ventilated newspaper office. You take two classes a semester and spend more time in 301 Flowers Building than in your dorm room, more time with other staffers than with your friends, more time on the phone with Larry Moneta than with your parents.
(09/23/04 4:00am)
While debate about the principles of the upcoming Palestine Solidarity Movement conference has swept the campus into a storm of rhetoric and competing claims, one voice has been uncharacteristically quiet-- that of the faculty.
(09/09/04 4:00am)
The campus was a flurry of ink and protest Wednesday as the Joint Israel Initiative and President Richard Brodhead released statements regarding the Palestine Solidarity Movement conference, scheduled for Oct. 15 to 17 at Duke.
(09/09/04 4:00am)
President Richard Brodhead’s introduction to the Duke Jewish community may be remembered as less of a welcoming “shalom y’all” than a free-for-all.
(09/07/04 4:00am)
While thousands of Americans took advantage of Labor Day as a last gasp of summer, several alumni braved the gloomy morning on their day off to take a stand against classes on federal holidays at their alma mater.
(08/27/04 4:00am)
Black Student Alliance President Pascale Thomas loves calendars.
(08/23/04 4:00am)
On Central campus, silence is golden—or at least written in black and white.
(07/21/04 4:00am)
There's a building on East Campus that has a one-way mirror in place of a door. Most students don't notice it, only staring blankly ahead as they walk past. Some, who are quick enough to catch glimpses of their own reflections in the mirror, absently tug at their shirts and smooth unruly hair. I watched from the other side of the glass in the lobby where few passersby have entered--the Duke University Museum of Art.
(04/14/04 4:00am)
And you thought AIM "stalking" was time-consuming
(02/23/04 5:00am)
In most settings, it would have been a politically-incorrect joke.
(02/05/04 5:00am)
Guests greeted each other with "Asalaam aleikum" and "aleikum salaam" as they filed into Griffith Theater Wednesday, for Imam Warith Deen Mohammed's speech on educating faith-based leaders.
(11/19/03 5:00am)
Pennsylvania State University does not want its students to get arrested.
(11/05/03 5:00am)
Her voice on the phone was like sweet tea and sandpaper, but the story that Joan Moton shared from her experience as a volunteer at the Unite textile union office carries more grit than sugar.
(11/04/03 5:00am)
Palestinian Ghazi Brigieth and Israeli Yitzhak Frankenthal spoke Monday about their experiences with the Palestinian-Israeli conflict to an audience of students, faculty and community members. Although both Brigieth and Frankenthal have suffered family losses from the violence, the men remained optimistic that peace could be achieved.