Role of RGAC scores remains up in the air
The Residential Group Assessment Committee will submit its evaluations of selective living groups today to the body that will determine whether groups will be placed on probation.
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The Residential Group Assessment Committee will submit its evaluations of selective living groups today to the body that will determine whether groups will be placed on probation.
With open common spaces and walls of window paneling, the design of K4 is an experiment in how an architectural space might best foster community between students.
Rising juniors planning to go abroad will soon know whether they can live off campus on their return to Duke.
Junior Isaac Mizrahi’s high school principal told him he would know a meeting went well if everyone in attendance left equally unhappy. This is an adage Mizrahi hopes to follow as Duke Student Government president.
More of students' residential programming fee could go directly to their quads beginning next year.
Duke is making efforts to stay technologically savvy, one pixel at a time.
Tonight, some students will choose to take advantage of the new option to live with members of the opposite sex on campus.
Ludacris is no longer the only name on the lineup for this year’s Last Day of Classes festivities.
Sanjay Kishore, Duke Partnership for Service president-elect, will soon take up the charge of promoting civic engagement and student initiative on campus.
In light of Valentine’s Day, poet Mayda del Valle told the large audience gathered in Reynolds Industries Theater Monday evening that although she thinks love is great, it is also the most gut-wrenching thing on earth.
Despite upheaval in Egypt, DukeEngage leadership is hopeful that its immersive summer program will proceed as planned.
In his time at the University, Ali Saaem has seen many sides of Duke and Durham. As he plans to graduate in the Spring, the fifth-year graduate student in biomedical engineering would like to “give back to the Duke family” as a graduate Young Trustee.
The way the public views a presidency is shaped not only by an administration’s policies, but also by the people who stand on the sidelines of history and document it. Peter Baker, The New York Times’ White House correspondent, relayed his experiences as the interface between government and citizens Thursday evening.
The pairing of several Democrats and Republicans at Tuesday’s State of the Union address provided a visual representation of President Barack Obama’s high hopes for bipartisanship.
The Duke Chapel bells had guest accompaniment on Sunday—the gleeful chanting of women accepting membership into their respective “Best Damn Pledge Class.”
Duke will open a permanent office in the nation’s capital, which is home to the University’s third largest alumni base and hosts more than 100 Duke student interns each year.
Brian Hare, an assistant professor of evolutionary anthropology, is the director of the Duke Canine Cognition Center, which tests dogs brought in voluntarily by their owners in order to understand more about the cognitive abilities of dogs. The Chronicle’s Maggie Spini spoke with Hare about the center, which has been open since last Fall and hopes to come up with ways to train dogs to become even better at helping people.
Duke Student Government decided it is time for undergraduates to make a plan.
When Felipe Matos applied to Duke, he was a top-ranked student in Florida’s community school system.
The scope of “social action” is widening, according to Jonathan Tisch, who discussed the need for engagement and corporate responsibility Tuesday afternoon.