Sacred Worth exhibit shows LGBTQ saints
By Grace Wang | October 30, 2013Through an ongoing art exhibit, a Duke Divinity School group seeks to show that members of the LGBTQ community have always been an important part of the church.
Through an ongoing art exhibit, a Duke Divinity School group seeks to show that members of the LGBTQ community have always been an important part of the church.
Students staged a walkout in protest of a talk by libertarian political scientist Charles Murray at the Sanford School of Public Policy Monday night.
In honor of Drew Everson’s death four years ago, Everson's fraternity Pi Kappa Phi will hold a start-up contest on campus safety Nov. 22.
INJAZ, an assimilation program that connects Arabic students to local refugees, celebrated its initiation into the University community as an official student organization.
Starting in Spring 2014, new fraternity and sorority members from all four greek councils will receive PACT training through the Women’s Center.
Senior Tito Bohrt has announced that he is making a significant donation to the Duke Forward campaign.
Students from the Jewish Student Union and the Hindu Students Association talked religion over latkes and raita Sunday.
Student emergency medical technicians in Duke Emergency Medical Services handle serious cases of binge drinking while balancing their social and professional lives.
To observe Eid Al-Adha, the Muslim Student Association made 100 sandwiches for Urban Ministries Saturday afternoon.
Members of the Duke community came together to provide free depression screenings for students on National Depression Screening Day.
Divest Duke rallied on the Allen Building lawn calling for Duke University to divest itself of investments in the top-200 fossil fuel companies.
Rainbow balloons brightened up grey skies above the Bryan Center Plaza for Duke’s seventh-annual coming out day celebration Tuesday.
Recently, the reduction in parking space at Duke has led to an equal reduction in patience among students.
Students channeled the spirit of the Arab Spring Friday by rapping music from recent democratic uprisings in the Arab world.
Student group DukeOpen continued to protest for endowment transparency Wednesday, hanging a banner reading “Transparency Now” in front of the Allen Building.
Students participating in an annual biomedical engineering project were required to limit their spending to $14 per week.
The two-fold approach began shortly after 11:00 a.m. Tuesday morning and simultaneously covered the statues of James B. Duke and Benjamin Duke.
The Center for Multicultural Affairs held a discussion on the cultural gap between Latino and Latin American students Monday.
The Chronicle’s Annie Straneva spoke with visiting alumni, students and others about their thoughts on the annual Homecoming festivities this weekend.
After several years on hiatus, United Students Against Sweatshops has returned to Duke with a new mission.