Oh, the places we'll go! Fourth in a five part series: Europe and Middle East
By Interviews by Katie Xiao | September 4, 2003Mollie Lurey, sophomore.
The independent news organization of Duke University
Mollie Lurey, sophomore.
Effective this fall, the Office of Undergraduate Admissions has designated a liaison between its office and the Center for Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and Transgender Life.
"Hello. Won't you be my neighbor?".
Chapel Hill is far more than a stone's throw away from Durham, as many Duke students are frustratingly aware.
Officials of Duke University Health System announced Wednesday David McQuaid as the next chief executive officer of Durham Regional Hospital, one of two community hospitals under DUHS.
Nitin Desai did not come to Duke to enjoy a round of golf at the Washington Duke during the first week of his retirement from the position of United Nations Under-Secretary-General for Economic and...
Camel cheese, a delicacy that commands high prices in European markets, will not help the economies of developing nations.
Ling Yang, junior.
It has been a tough few months for John Edwards in his quest to win the Democratic presidential nomination for the 2004 election.
Chalk up another recruiting victory for Coach Krzyzewski.
For Mike, making ends meet is a challenge every day.
Budgets and introductions dominated the Graduate and Professional Student Council's first meeting of the year Tuesday night, as the council reached out to its constituents by sharply increasing...
Annual review, the process by which fraternities and other selective living groups are evaluated on programming and citizenship, will be overhauled this September and October by a committee headed...
Duke students and Durham residents may continue to see panhandlers at major intersections up and down U.S.
After undergoing a complete physical and organizational overhaul this summer, the newly revamped Office of Student Activities and Facilities is preparing to hire a full-time director.
Even with a 17 percent jump in daytime MBA students it's been business as usual at the Fuqua School of Business, which started classes Monday.
Zaid Al-Husseini is frustrated.