New dean of student development to arrive Aug. 21
The University's new dean of student development is making a change in color: from an Orangewoman to a Blue Devil.
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The University's new dean of student development is making a change in color: from an Orangewoman to a Blue Devil.
Photos by Tom Hogarty
After less than a month of discussion, members of the Alcohol Policy Rules and Regulations Committee have discovered that implementing the University's new alcohol policy is not going to be as easy as it might have seemed.
Some University professors are saying that the Senate's recent rejection of Dr. Henry Foster as Surgeon General had more to do with politics than morality.
In the wake of its worst year for accepted scholarship offers, the Angier B. Duke Memorial scholarship program may have to deal with a lack of secure funding.
Some of the nation's brightest students have chosen Harvard over a full-tuition scholarship to Duke.
With the advent of the National Panhellenic Council last spring, historically black greek letter organizations now have their own independent national representation.
A cornerstone program of the University's new residential plan has just found a leader.
Recent changes to the FAC program have called into question how much authority members of the FAC Board really have.
Central Campus may be sporting a new look by the time students return to school in the fall.
Dean Sue is back.
The Interfraternity Council has just made a move toward diversity.
It only took attendance at a University seder for Californian Francis Fischer to know that she wanted Michael Landy's job.
David Gergen knows something that most graduation speakers of the past did not--the students he will address.
Duke Student Government legislators approved appointments to the University's most powerful committees and elected the student who will allocate more than $300,000 in activities fees next year during the last meeting of the 1994-95 academic year.
This is the fourth installment in a five-part series looking at race dynamics among undergraduates. Tomorrow's story will examine administrative leadership in undergraduate minority affairs.
The president and international director of Hillel, Richard Joel, met with leaders of Duke's Hillel chapter and President Nan Keohane Wednesday to discuss the current state and future goals of the University's Jewish community.
The president and international director of Hillel, Richard Joel, met with leaders of Duke's Hillel chapter and President Nan Keohane Wednesday to discuss the current state and future goals of the University's Jewish community.
Christoph Guttentag holds in his hands the fate, the future and the aspirations of 14,000 of the nation's brightest, most diligent students each year.
Eight years after initial planning for a Center for Jewish Life at the University began, the project is still $1.8 million short of its fund-raising goal and no one is sure when construction will begin.