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(09/30/03 4:00am)
Members of Delta Tau Delta, an interest group affiliated with the national fraternity, will make a presentation to the Inter-Fraternity Council tonight in hopes of convincing the body to recognize it as Duke's newest fraternity.
(09/26/03 4:00am)
Over a century ago, railroads connected the country in a way that no one had thought possible, making transportation faster than it had ever been before. Now, a new sort of rail will connect some of the nation's top universities and supercomputing centers, this time revolutionizing communication and research capabilities.
(09/22/03 4:00am)
Shirtless and clad in glittery butterfly wings, Mr. Gay North Carolina waved to spectators along Main Street and in front of East Campus Saturday in the annual N.C. Pride parade.
(09/19/03 4:00am)
Put away your coloring books, or--gasp!--text books. Duke students have come up with some new rainy-day activities.
(09/17/03 4:00am)
As technology improves and the Internet becomes more accessible through wireless networking, the number of students who use laptop computers at Duke is increasing dramatically.
(09/15/03 4:00am)
With more than a dozen eateries, a bookstore, grocery store, laundry facilities and work-study opportunities on campus, students feel they have little need to ever leave Duke's grounds. Forays into Durham beyond Ninth Street are, for most undergraduates, few and far between, and many students feel little connection to the University's hometown.
(09/10/03 4:00am)
Students ordering their late-night study break meals will have to get used to a new roster of vendors this semester, as four establishments are no longer on the list and two new ones have been added.
(09/08/03 4:00am)
On a sunny fall afternoon, when August's heat has receded and it's finally comfortable to step outside again, the Sarah P. Duke Gardens can be the perfect place to relax, play Frisbee, read a book or just enjoy the scenery. But despite its 55 acres and hundreds of species of flora, the Gardens have always lacked one thing--a place to get a sandwich.
(09/05/03 4:00am)
Tonight, students who usually park their cars in the Blue Zone will have to move their cars in preparation for tomorrow's season-opening home football game. But tomorrow, fans attending the game against Western Carolina will find a new parking scheme and a nominal, though unprecedented, parking fee.
(09/01/03 4:00am)
The John Hope Franklin Center for Interdisciplinary and International Studies is off the beaten path--at the corner of Trent Drive and Erwin Road, most students are not entirely sure where it is.
(08/29/03 4:00am)
Everybody's talking about the monorail.
(08/25/03 4:00am)
(08/22/03 4:00am)
After 18 months of construction behind the Bryan Center, Parking Garage IV has opened to the public.
(04/23/03 4:00am)
The University doesn't want you to use KaZaA, or other programs for sharing audio and video files. The trouble is figuring out how to stop you.
(04/04/03 5:00am)
Pajama-clad residents of Jarvis Dormitory waited in front of their building until after 2 a.m. Thursday morning as fire fighters responded to an alarm from the utility tunnel below the building.
(03/20/03 5:00am)
Despite the biting wind and drizzling rain, Duke students and members of the Durham community gathered in front of the Chapel at 8 p.m. Wednesday night in a candlelight vigil to mark the 48-hour deadline set by President George W. Bush for Iraqi leader Saddam Hussein to leave the country.
(03/05/03 5:00am)
It's 11 p.m., and you're just getting started on a research paper due tomorrow. You sit down at the computer and prepare to search the Internet for information and data that you can work into your paper. But wouldn't it be easier to just cut and paste paragraphs from websites or even to download an entire paper?
(02/24/03 5:00am)
This is the first story in a five-part series examining the races for Duke Student Government executive positions.
(10/25/02 4:00am)
Jim Wallis, a pastor and political activist, urged nonviolent alternatives to the war in Iraq and criticized the situation's impact on poverty to a group of Duke and Durham community members Thursday night.
(10/02/02 4:00am)
Right now, to pay a water bill at Durham City Hall, citizens simply walk into the lobby and turn in their checks at a customer service desk. The setup allows for an unrestricted flow of people, but to city leaders the design lacks many of the characteristics of a modern government building, including security cameras, proper lighting and easy access for the disabled.