Former editors reminisce
Nick Hennessee—assistant managing editor 1950
Use the fields below to perform an advanced search of The Chronicle's archives. This will return articles, images, and multimedia relevant to your query. You can also try a Basic search
7 items found for your search. If no results were found please broaden your search.
Nick Hennessee—assistant managing editor 1950
The Graduate and Professional Student Council took the first official step in its selection of the next Young Trustee representative for graduate and professional students at its general body meeting last night. Members elected a six-person Young Trustee Screening Committee, chaired by Julia Bowsher, a graduate student in biology.
Duke Emergency Medical Services wants to prove that it is more than the average student-run organization. With a brand-new 2004 Chevrolet Trailblazer “quick response vehicle” equipped and certified by the North Carolina Office of EMS and the prospect of advancing to Emergency Medical Technician-Intermediate level certification, Duke EMS aims to establish itself this year as more than just a “Band-Aid service.”
At the first Graduate and Professional Student Council meeting of the semester, GPSC President Heather Dean presented her objectives for the council in three major areas: communication, community building and continuing projects from the previous year.
More undergraduates will study abroad this fall than ever before, but to housing officials' dismay, the number going abroad in the spring will remain relatively low. The unbalanced demand means Duke will see at least one more year of the housing crunch that became apparent last year, when the University first enforced its three-year on-campus housing requirement for all undergraduates.
You know that guy with red hair who sits two rows behind you in bio lecture? Or what about the cute girl who always arrives late to your Monday English class? He or she could be your perfect match.
As stories of wild West Campus parties continue to become the exclusive domain of yarn-spinning alumni, administrators have considered a move that could effect a final death knell for the raucous ribaldry that once ruled the Gothic Wonderland: enforcing quiet hours.