Pork industry set back bny odors study
A recent research study may add fuel to the lawsuits that North Carolina residents have filed against neighboring commercial hog farmers.
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
85 items found for your search. If no results were found please broaden your search.
A recent research study may add fuel to the lawsuits that North Carolina residents have filed against neighboring commercial hog farmers.
For Medical Center researcher Susan Schiffman, swine odors are an obsession.
While Oklahoma City, Oklahoma may seem an unlikely target for terrorist activity, University scholars point to two possible motives behind Wednesday's bombing.
Although some undergraduates have expressed dismay with the new residential plan, a new program hopes to allay some of that concern by involving faculty more heavily in undergraduate life.
Enlightened teaching and educational policies are vital to the University and Durham Public Schools.
Faculty will discuss the future of the undergraduate teaching certificate at today's Arts and Sciences Council meeting.
Should undergraduates be required to own a computer when they enroll at the University? Should graduation be contingent on meeting a curricular computer skills requirement?
The University's revised harassment policy and grievance procedures, endorsed by the Academic Council last week, raise controversy surrounding cases involving complaints against faculty.
Faculty were briefed about the Medical Center's restructuring efforts at Thursday's meeting of the Academic Council.
September 1995 could mark the end of kegs as students know it.
The University's graduate and professional schools continued to rank among the best in the nation in the 1995 U.S. News and World Report "new and improved" annual survey released last week.
When the dust settled Thursday night, one thing was clear: It was time for another election.
Student groups may be able to look forward to more money next year, thanks to the student-fee referendum that passed in Thursday's elections.
Imagine trying to wear the same pants you wore six years ago. You would probably have to suck in a lot of air to button your fly.
With a residential revolution in place, students and administrators said Thursday night that it's time to reform campus social life as well.
Duke Public Safety arrested a convicted felon and parole violator who was one of two men selling magazine subscriptions on campus last week.
With alcohol policy violations hitting a record-high for the past six years, events during fall semester may translate into dramatic restrictions in the alcohol policy, such as the end of open distribution.
Trinity junior Katie Higgins will lead the largest women's organization on campus for the next 12 months.
Thousands of scholars descend on Egypt each year to study its Biblical past. But last month, two Duke students experienced an exodus of their own. And it was no less harrowing.
Engineering sophomore Clayton Sumner Peterson was sentenced Dec. 29 to four years and a month in federal prison for his attempted bombing of the Allen Buliding last spring.