Duke delves into AIDS education
By Alex Garinger | November 8, 2002This is the fifth story in a five-part series on Duke's 20 years of research and social work against AIDS..
This is the fifth story in a five-part series on Duke's 20 years of research and social work against AIDS..
When the University created gargoyles resembling donors Aubrey and Kathleen McClendon, it hoped to surprise the couple that had given so much to residential life.
In an inaugural series of lecture events for the sophomore class, professors from various departments expressed widely divergent opinions on the route that President George W.
The Curriculum Committee of the Arts and Sciences Council has proposed a new requirement for all certificate programs, a senior capstone course.
Duke Student Government legislators voted unanimously to keep the current version of the Student Accessible Course Evaluation System at its general body meeting Wednesday night.
Students express their pro-war sentiments in the traditional Duke way by covering the East Campus bridge in paint.
Medical school dean Dr. Sandy Williams has offered the chair of the surgery department to Dr. Danny Jacobs, who holds the same position at Creighton University in Omaha, Neb.
This is the fourth story in a five-part series on Duke's 20 years of research and social work against AIDS.
For the first time in three years, the Interfraternity Council is expanding its membership to a group once wary of the greek scene at Duke.
This is the third story in a five-part series on Duke's 20 years of research and social work against AIDS.
To see to the core of the human biology and behavior, one effective method is to study our closest living relatives.
In an election that saw Republicans sweeping many key national and state offices, Democrats continued their strong hold in Durham Tuesday.
Despite a low turnout Tuesday night, the Graduate and Professional Student Council General Assembly discussed the progress members have made so far this year in each of the seven committees.
When two males go to a movie, there's always a seat between them. Chris Kilmartin presented this maxim and 10 other monologues in Tuesday's Crimes Against Nature.
Cold and rainy weather Tuesday did not deter Durham voters from coming out to the polls and earning "I voted" stickers.
RALEIGH and SALISBURY, N.C. -- At a renovated train station in Salisbury, N.C., U.S.
An unlikely foe has recently barred students and faculty members from entering sections of the Vesic Library for Engineering, Mathematics and Physics--mold.
Last Friday's senior registration was the most efficient registration on the books, according to data collected by University technology officials.