Applying for things
By Carol Apollonio | February 17, 2020Sometimes you get a glimpse into an alien world. Admittedly, just about anything is going to seem fresh after decades arguing with Russian writers.
Sometimes you get a glimpse into an alien world. Admittedly, just about anything is going to seem fresh after decades arguing with Russian writers.
By now, we're all aware that Duke's response to campus sexual assault is inadequate.
A swastika is not more powerful than a thriving, collaborative university community.
This is not the first time we’ve seen the conflation of diseased bodies with political bodies—HIV/AIDS and Ebola were also racialized diseases that resulted in calls for travel bans.
It’s a captivating study—how gregarious women with life under their belts occupy space—and I’m learning, I hope, how to become one of them.
There are many children in the world that literally dream of attending college someday, but many never even get past middle school before they have to start working to help maintain their families.
But the world is more complicated than that, and the only reliable way I’ve found to learn about that world is to be more immersed in that world.
Bringing a white supremacist to campus as a part of a program that professes to “prepare the next generation of strategists” is, conservatively speaking, a pretty bold statement to make.
How does a video of a candidate chomping down on vegan hot wings or dancing along to 2010 bangers aid my decision to elect a member of the Board of Trustees?
John Bolton does not deserve this platform. We have no business legitimizing the blood on Bolton’s hands—and his mustache.
Think of “what are we” conversations not like tattoos, but like nail polish.
The even scarier fact of the matter is just how out of touch older people are, particularly when it comes to handling the crisis. I think kids might have trouble taking their demands about health seriously when their generation is confident that fruit medley is a bigger concern to safety than AR-15’s, but I digress.
What kind of workplace do you want for you and your colleagues? What changes do you want to see?
Oftentimes it is not just thoughts and diagnoses that affect our mental health. It is also our circumstances.
Today, America faces immense challenges. It is time to choose from sufficiently radical options.
Chance, context, and happenstance determined the eventually permanent daily features of our campuses.
This semester, seven English originated or cross-listed courses focus exclusively on, or feature multiple, authors of color.
Ultimately, the checks and balances of this industry as well as the direction of impact investing will be decided by our generation of students—students who are exploring the meaning of impact investing at DIIG and similar organizations at schools across the nation.
At first, I thought the response was perhaps a little biased, but it wasn’t until I saw 16 male faces staring back at me that I realized just how representative my experience was of Silicon Valley.
One of my favorite parts about Duke Dining is the abundance of carbohydrate options. So many choices!