DSG adds officials to begin academic year
Voting was the name of the game when Duke Student Government convened for the first time of the academic year Wednesday night.
Use the fields below to perform an advanced search of The Chronicle's archives. This will return articles, images, and multimedia relevant to your query. You can also try a Basic search
72 items found for your search. If no results were found please broaden your search.
Voting was the name of the game when Duke Student Government convened for the first time of the academic year Wednesday night.
In 1959, scientist and novelist C.P. Snow presented the academic community with what he deemed a serious situation: the increasing divide between intellectuals in the sciences and intellectuals in the humanities.
Tailgating for football games is a rite of fall on campus, but when Duke faces Virginia Tech in its home opener Saturday, students will have to play by a new set of rules.
Following the recent announcement that it would change policies governing Krzyzewskiville this year, Duke Student Government and Head Line Monitor Lauren Troyer, a senior, called an open forum Tuesday night to discuss possible improvements to tenting.
Perhaps the only thing Duke students like more than food is complaining about food.
Returning sophomores reminiscing about life on East Campus may remember the good old days of last year, when they could turn their missed breakfasts into Marketplace lunches. At least for now, however, bleary-eyed freshmen will have no such luck.
When he came to campus five years ago, zoology and ecology graduate student Mario Vallejo-Marin remembers sharing his lab bench with nine other students.
A year and a half ago, an anonymous Duke student wrote an editorial asking victims of sexual assault to step forward with their stories. Women responded, as did a surprising number of men.
It is 12:30 a.m. on a Thursday night, and freshman Dan Fox returns to his dorm room as the laughs of jubilant—if slightly intoxicated—college students echo through the backyard quadrangle of East Campus. For Fox, however, it has been one of many long nights of script reading and film editing for his writing class.
Those who stop by the Marketplace to grab a quick lunch might have some difficulty finding seats these days, thanks in large part to the new meal “equivalency” program launched March 21.
After reaching a record low in 2002, North Carolina workplace fatalities rose from 169 to 182 in 2003. Officials said an explosion at a plant in Kinston, which killed six people, and a Charlotte airplane crash, which killed 21, accounted, in large part, for the increase.
Matt always carried two books, former high school teacher and debate coach Eric DiMichele remembered. Just in case he finished one book, there was another one at hand.