Students march, speak out against sexual assault
More than 500 students, Durham residents, faculty members and administrators participated in an emotional march across campus Wednesday night.
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More than 500 students, Durham residents, faculty members and administrators participated in an emotional march across campus Wednesday night.
Sophomore Hasnain Zaidi has been going door to door trying to identify concerns among the student body.
For the first time in the history of the Duke Summer Reading program, the book selection committee is seeking feedback to aid in the process of picking the Class of 2010 summer reading book.
NEW ORLEANS - Almost 200 Duke undergraduates joined college students from around the country last week in flocking to Louisiana and Mississippi to lend a hand in the recovery efforts after Hurricane Katrina.
Sporting a slick dark suit and polished dress shoes, Blake Stanfill exuded an air of class and sophistication as the beat of smooth jazz filled the dimly lit Mary Lou Williams Center for Black Culture. He twirled his telltale white and red fraternity cane with one hand while the other gestured in conversation with sophomore Keith Cornelius.
Residents of Kilgo Quadrangle were forced to evacuate their dormitory early Sunday morning after a fire inside a room triggered smoke detectors.
The lights were dimmed in the back room of Café Parizade as dozens of Duke seniors traded in their cans of Busch Light beer and shots of Aristocrat vodka for glasses of chardonnay and hors d'oeuvres and lounge in club chairs late Tuesday night.
Access to files on a popular student-run server was disabled Friday after the Office of Judicial Affairs began a formal investigation of possible violations of University policy.
Juniors hoping to take over Erwin Square apartments from fellow greek community members will have to go through a new process for next school year.
Year after year, students have gathered to tent out in Krzyzewskiville for weeks, if not months, just to be pressed up against their peers while standing within one much-desired square-foot of space in the student section of Cameron Indoor Stadium.
First-years and retired professors alike packed Love Auditorium in the Levine Science Research Center to hear Professor John Haught talk about religious beliefs and evolutionary theory Thursday night.
Computer screens around campus have been glowing with the familiar ACES course registration page and the ubiquitous red boxes of waiting list numbers.
As greek organizations get ready to begin recruiting, on-campus fraternities and their potential members will see some minor changes this year.
A crowd of 300 rocked to the beat of The Breakfast Club, an '80s cover band, at Shooters II last January to join senior Kevin Coleman in celebrating his first legal drink.
The men behind the legends of The Tyler sandwich, The Andrew hot dog and the Baseball Special smoothie can still be found roaming around campus.
An attempt to spark discussion on issues of tragedy, politics and religion suddenly turned sour last week, when derogatory comments were scribbled on a bulletin board in Kilgo Quadrangle.
A trek to the Bryan Center-usually a bustling campus hub that is home to numerous dining facilities, retail shops and a post office-has become a difficult choice between a meandering path adjacent to the Duke Chapel or a hike between the bushes behind Kilgo Quadrangle.
With the kick-off of the new school year, students are recommitting themselves to academic integrity as outlined by the Community Standard-but plagiarism is still alive and thriving on college campuses across the nation thanks to the Internet, as one Duke student knows all too well.
It’s a yearbook, party invitation and club roster for the new millennium.
This time last year, Duke invaded Myrtle Beach after finals week. This year, the once-favorite vacation spot seems to have lost its luster.