Loss of linking leaves some freshmen wary of housing
This year, rising sophomores will choose their future living arrangements without linking-the process of funneling freshman dormitory residents into designated West Campus quadrangles.
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This year, rising sophomores will choose their future living arrangements without linking-the process of funneling freshman dormitory residents into designated West Campus quadrangles.
Members of Campus Council learned Thursday night that Residence Life and Housing Services will not approve a resolution extending DukeCard access hours to 4 a.m.
A new construction plan may help Central Campus residents feel safer as they cross Anderson Street this spring.
Student safety was at the forefront of discussion when Campus Council convened for a general body meeting Thursday night.
When undergraduate Young Trustee finalist Brandon Goodwin, a senior, arrived on campus as a freshman, he had no idea that his interest in Southern women would direct his educational path at Duke.
As final exams approach, time constraints are putting students under more pressure than usual.
While most students are spending the last days of the semester finishing term papers or cramming for exams, a few students are completing atypical final projects.
While many students flocked out of their dorms to enjoy the unseasonably warm weather in late October, unwelcome guests were sneaking inside.
When sophomore Jessica Nasser arrived at Duke last fall, she dreamed of one day having a career in medicine that would combine the best of two worlds.
The band of prospective students and their parents express amazement as they approach West Campus. They follow their tour guide up Chapel Drive, as Duke's major landmark emerges in the sky.
For the students lined up outside the Brightleaf Ballroom of the Millennium Hotel Wednesday morning, the lure of discounted designer jeans was sufficient incentive to sacrifice those precious extra hours of sleep.
Every year, more than 70,000 costumed revelers roister on Chapel Hill's Franklin Street for the biggest Halloween party in North Carolina, and Duke students have always been part of the celebration.
From outside their grand stone walls, the buildings of the West Campus Gothic Wonderland appear unshakable.
Most Duke students probably don't know that President Richard Brodhead-also known as El Prez-is capable of telepathy or that Isaac Cruz, counter manager of The Loop, is highly skilled in the art of salad tossing.
When describing their travels to Durham, few members of the Duke community can include a nearly two-week journey throughout the Southeast or an encounter with the most severe storm in recent national history.