On searching and finding
This week feels final. As a graduating senior, I’ve been spending this semester waiting for some kind of clarity—expecting some parting sense of closure or greater purpose to find me in my last few weeks on campus.
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This week feels final. As a graduating senior, I’ve been spending this semester waiting for some kind of clarity—expecting some parting sense of closure or greater purpose to find me in my last few weeks on campus.
I am neither a fraternity brother nor female. So after a couple years of watching women pour their hearts, their wallets and their free time into decorating coolers for fraternity away-formals, I never expected to join.
Perhaps no issue in state policy is as politically consequential or socially vital as public education.
A classmate once remarked, “A Duke student is more likely to create a new organization called ‘Duke Against Food Insecurity’ than to create a campus chapter of the NC Food Bank. And if the organization already exists, they probably won’t ask.”
If the Young Trustee matters to you, then it should matter substantially more which eleven undergraduates secure appointments to the standing committees of the Duke Board of Trustees.
We share a last name, but I haven’t called you since last Christmas. You should know that I love you, but you should also know that I’m pissed.
Pastor Andy Stanley famously said that churches should be the “safest place on the planet” for LGBTQ youth.
The largest protest Duke University has seen in an entire year is scheduled for Saturday.
The pejorative language that has characterized student conversation about Durham for most of Duke’s history has changed—and it has changed in a big way.
Growing up, I remember learning that being gay made me lesser.
Perhaps the most important Senate race in the country is happening in Duke’s backyard. Incumbent Democrat Kay Hagan is locked in a tight battle with former Speaker of the North Carolina General Assembly Thom Tillis for a Senate seat, which could determine which party controls the Senate. The 2014 Midterm Elections will be pivotal in shaping the national political landscape for the rest of President Obama’s term in office. This year, your vote truly matters.