Fuqua class increases by 60
Even with a 17 percent jump in daytime MBA students it's been business as usual at the Fuqua School of Business, which started classes Monday.
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Even with a 17 percent jump in daytime MBA students it's been business as usual at the Fuqua School of Business, which started classes Monday.
Forty years after Martin Luther King, Jr.'s "I Have a Dream" speech, the dream continues to elude the reality. America has made remarkable progress, for sure, but there is still a long way to go.
After being elected to a rare second term as president of the Graduate and Professional Student Council, Rob Saunders said he's trying hard this year to put the "success" in "succession."
Having fallen out of the top 10 rankings last year for the first time in recent memory, the School of Law hopes to return to the upper echelon next Friday, when U.S. News and World Report releases its graduate and professional school rankings.
Lurking in the shadows of the nation's top law school admissions departments, an elephant has entered the room.
With four television cameras, three spotlights and several microphones located throughout the room, a two-month media frenzy came to a surprisingly subdued end when political activist and convicted felon Laura Whitehorn spoke to a group of about 80 people in the John Hope Franklin Center Monday.
Armed with video clips of talking pigs and the bobbing heads of President George W. Bush and Vice President Dick Cheney, political pundit Arianna Huffington huffed at corporate scandals, government corruption and SUVs in a satire-driven speech Wednesday night, sponsored by the Duke University Union's Major Speakers Committee.
This is the fourth story in a five-part series profiling this year's candidates for Duke Student Government president.
A less-congested link between Raleigh, Durham and the Research Triangle Park moved one stop closer to reality as federal officials approved the first phase of the Triangle Transit Authority's regional rail system.
When two males go to a movie, there's always a seat between them. Chris Kilmartin presented this maxim and 10 other monologues in Tuesday's Crimes Against Nature.
Hampered by a plummet in Trent Drive Hall's student population from nearly 300 to 67, Grace's Cafe may soon desert the increasingly vacant dorm to share space with Uncle Harry's.
I write this letter primarily as a warning to other unsuspecting freshmen and the Duke community at large: Avoid, at all costs, falling ill on a weekend. Thanks to a baffling system for student health emergencies and a sore throat, last Saturday, I learned that lesson the hard way.