Panel discusses the lasting effects of September 11
As the Duke community commemorated the events of 9/11, University luminaries gathered to discuss the myriad questions the attack has sparked in the last decade.
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As the Duke community commemorated the events of 9/11, University luminaries gathered to discuss the myriad questions the attack has sparked in the last decade.
As the 10th anniversary of 9/11 approaches, the largest threat to the nation may be a sense of otherness, not a threat of terrorist attacks.
When junior Talia Glodjo watched government policies unfold after the events of Sept. 11, 2001, she said it was easy to criticize the Bush Administration for some of its decisions.
The way the public views a presidency is shaped not only by an administration’s policies, but also by the people who stand on the sidelines of history and document it. Peter Baker, The New York Times’ White House correspondent, relayed his experiences as the interface between government and citizens Thursday evening.
WikiLeaks has broad and potentially negative implications for the future of the United States—particularly with respect to foreign policy initiatives and the sharing of information with the public, a panel argued Tuesday afternoon.
It has become a cliche: The truth will set you free.
Bob Woodward, the legendary journalist whose reporting on the Watergate scandal won him a Pulitzer Prize and ended a presidency, will speak at Duke next week.
After discussing the state of America’s all-volunteer military force, U.S. Secretary of Defense Robert Gates implored Duke students to “earn their freedom” Wednesday night.
U.S. Secretary of Defense Robert Gates will speak at Reynolds Theater Sept. 29.
British Ambassador to the United States Sir Nigel Sheinwald spoke to students and faculty on the topic of British foreign policy in the Middle East at the Sanford School of Public Policy Tuesday evening.
The Duke Student Government Judiciary ruled Tuesday morning there was no substantial evidence to convict the Duke College Republicans of discriminating against junior Justin Robinette on the basis of his sexual orientation.
Former White House Adviser Elliott Abrams discussed issues facing U.S. foreign policy as it tries to democratize other nations, especially in the Middle East, in his speech Tuesday.
Former U.S. Assistant Secretary of Defense Joseph Nye will speak at the Sanford School of Public Policy Tuesday, March 23.
Abrams to speak on Middle Eastern agenda
The Arts and Sciences Council eliminated the pass/fail grading option for undergraduates during its meeting Thursday, replacing it with a satisfactory/unsatisfactory option.
Despite a busy career that has taken him from Moscow to Amman to Baghdad, William Burns found time to travel four hours south of his office in Washington, D.C. to talk with Duke students Monday.
At its meeting Thursday, The Arts & Sciences Council tentatively approved a new pass/fail policy and discussed faculty reaction to the CourseRank Web site.
Some of the hardest battles of Operation Iraqi Freedom were fought in Washington, D.C., Meghan O’Sullivan noted in her speech at the Sanford School of Public Policy Thursday night.
Students may soon have a tougher time passing courses they choose to take pass/fail.
On a day when the war in Afghanistan was top news, Duke hosted a high-ranking general in the United States army to speak on “Counterinsurgency and the War in Afghanistan.”