Inaugural ceremonies draw little attention on campus
By Sarah Ball | January 21, 2005Pomp and circumstance permeated the alphanumeric streets of downtown Washington, D.C.
Pomp and circumstance permeated the alphanumeric streets of downtown Washington, D.C.
After years of waiting and wishing, Duke has finally snagged its first Nobel laureate.
Candles, balloons and gifts. This weekend, Duke can expect much birthday cheer as the campus celebrates distinguished John Hope Franklin’s 90th birthday.
Greg Wolf, Trinity ’04, who fought off leukemia through the second half of his Duke career with a resolve his family likened to that of “a noble warrior,” died early Wednesday...
An early goal was all the men’s soccer team needed to beat Ohio State Sunday and earn a trip to the Elite Eight for the first time since 1995.
Transition and planning marked the first year of the new Faculty Diversity Initiative, Provost Peter Lange reported at the Academic Council meeting Thursday.
Sick students should be relieved.
After three years of housing all sophomores on West Campus, the future of linked housing is up for review.
Summer registration will take place two weeks earlier this spring than it has in the past, while students registering for the fall semester will have a little longer wait.
In a move administrators, faculty and students alike first described as unprecedented and uncalled for, the Executive Committee of the Graduate Faculty decided last week to discontinue Hispanic and...
A spree of Honda break-ins has plagued Duke students, visitors and employees parking in Duke-owned lots for months, and about a half-dozen of these crimes occurred in the last week alone.
Move out of the way, eBay—DukeBid.com is sauntering into Duke’s e-commerce scene.
Duke’s financial aid endowment got a $20 million boost from alumnus William Gross, Trinity ’66, and his wife Sue, President Richard Brodhead announced Wednesday.
It would take nearly the first 16 years of her life for Jhyrve Sears to receive the kind of medical assistance she needed for a disease that restricted her to crutches for the past two years.
If it hadn’t been for a snowy January morning like Wednesday, William Gross might never have become a successful businessman.
Naomi Chazan knows about high-pressure speaking gigs.
Eight campus leaders with résumés that bulge with prestigious University positions, academic accolades and distinguishing internships progressed to the next round in the undergraduate Young Trustee...
Would you eat a dinosaur? “No, I wouldn’t.
Searching far and wide revealed that the best person to head Duke’s libraries was already here. Administrators announced Dec.
A car crashed into a tree Tuesday afternoon on Flowers Drive, the Duke University Police Department reported.