Students vote to eliminate VP for ICC
Despite concerns that low voter turnout would render the results of Monday’s Duke Student Government election invalid, all four of the referendums on the ballot were affirmed.
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Despite concerns that low voter turnout would render the results of Monday’s Duke Student Government election invalid, all four of the referendums on the ballot were affirmed.
The eighth anniversary of the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks began in contemplative silence and ended with a celebratory concert to honor the victims and observe the country’s first National Day of Service and Remembrance.
Environmentalist Robert Gottlieb hopes President-elect Barack Obama will live up to his promise of changing President George W. Bush's lackluster environmental policies, he said during his lecture, "The New Environmentalism: After the 2008 Election," Tuesday in Richard White Lecture Hall.
With most Americans focused on the upcoming presidential election, a small audience concerned themselves with free speech and human rights Thursday.
David Sanger, chief Washington D.C. correspondent for The New York Times, spoke Thursday on "Bush Foreign Policy Legacy," discussing President George W. Bush's foreign policy for the past eight years and what the next president will inherit.
The Office of Judicial Affairs saw a 25 percent increase in the number of students reported through the disciplinary system during the 2007-2008 academic year.
Duke University Union's final meeting of the academic year was brief and focused on plans for Fall 2008.
Two years since his last visit to Duke, conservative activist David Horowitz was met with little fanfare Thursday night.
Despite recent national and on-campus tension, the four panelists who spoke at Wednesday night's "A Conversation on Tibet," sponsored by the Asian/Pacific Studies Institute, stressed overcoming divisive issues and looking for a practical solution to an issue of global significance.