Tired of running from the police
By Shadee Malaklou | October 8, 2004“I got love for my brother, but we can never go nowhere unless we share with each other. We gotta start makin’ changes…”.
“I got love for my brother, but we can never go nowhere unless we share with each other. We gotta start makin’ changes…”.
It is common knowledge Duke’s academic curriculum has been to provide a strong liberal arts education firmly grounded in well-grounded academia.
Voter registration has been all the rage on this campus and across the country.
What follows is part one of my two-part political series. Since it is election season and every channel is covering politics, I figured that I should do a “political column.
Last weekend’s Homecoming demonstrated the extent of the usefulness of the greek system: greek alumni had a place to get trashed on campus.
In 1997, a French movie called La Haine (Hate) about the lives of three young men in a Parisian housing project was released.
In his inauguration speech, President Richard Brodhead told us why he came to Duke: “I was lured here by the spectacle of a school that has established itself in the top rank of research...
Take a look at the world around you. Your roommate is an amazing athlete and has already written an inspirational autobiography.
In a recent guest column on these pages, Fayyad Sbaihat, the national spokesperson for the Palestine Solidarity Movement, claimed that critics have avoided discussing what he sees as the principal...
It’s war of the bitches.” “Why doesn’t she understand I f---ing hate her?” Ah, the quotes of my best girl friends on a wholesome night out.
The Chronicle’s editorial department continues its Election 2004 coverage today with the fifth in a weekly series of issue coverage.
When the week goes by with perhaps zero percent excitement, SIR ELTON has to start pretending like fun stuff actually happened.
If you’re in college, then you’ve probably heard a disturbing rumor: that President George W. Bush will, if reelected, reinstate the military draft.
Something strange is happening at Duke. A few months into the New Era, and we seem to be mired in a malaise.
When I think of everything that has made me happy in the last three and a half years, several things stand out in my mind. Family Guy on DVD. Reading Catch-22 for the fourth time.
As a result of the American military,” President George W. Bush declared last week, “the Taliban is no longer in existence.”.
Apparently, fall has arrived: The leaves are starting to come down, the days are getting shorter, and seniors are scrambling for jobs like it’s their… uh… job.
As the elections approach and I glumly realize that a woman has still not become president, I’ve begun thinking a lot about gender stereotypes and equality for women.
So I’ve been told I have the habit of beating horses until they are dead, and then even some after that.
“It’s a paradox we call reality/ So keepin’ it real will make you casualty of abnormal normality…”.