Fuqua, law school see high employment rates
By Lauren Carroll | December 9, 2010As the economy begins to recover, students from the Fuqua School of Business and the School of Law are increasingly finding employment worldwide.
As the economy begins to recover, students from the Fuqua School of Business and the School of Law are increasingly finding employment worldwide.
Despite some support for a first-past-the-post voting system, DSG elections will continue to be determined by instant runoff voting, the Senate decided last night.
The rise of China may not necessarily be at the expense of the United States, three professors noted during a panel Tuesday night.
WikiLeaks has broad and potentially negative implications for the future of the United States—particularly with respect to foreign policy initiatives and the sharing of information with the public,...
The University responded last week to two civil rights complaints filed with the U.S. Department of Education by seniors Justin Robinette and Cliff Satell.
Economics remains the most popular major at Duke, but the number of majors has decreased significantly since 2001-2002.
Members of Duke University Student Dining Advisory Committee presented the remaining end-of-semester evaluations for campus eateries Monday night.
Despite North Korea’s strict policies for foreign travelers, some American students now have the opportunity to study in the isolated country.
The long-time distributor of The Chronicle had her car stolen and house broken into early last Wednesday.
The Board of Trustees approved initial funding this weekend for construction oversight of the first phase of Duke’s campus in Kunshan, China.
The Office of Student Conduct is investigating reports of cheating on the third exam of an introductory chemistry class.
The Board of Trustees will focus discussion this weekend on entrepreneurship, internationalization and risk assessment.
A group of leading investors discussed lessons learned from the financial crisis in the School of Law Thursday.
The completion of “Phase One” of Duke’s new campus in Kunshan, China will require an estimated investment of $11 million, the Academic Council learned Thursday.
After a raunchy PowerPoint detailing the sexual encounters of a Duke alumna went viral, some sympathetic Dukies found themselves asking a rhetorical question: Could it get any worse?