Workers' rights need recognition
By Staff Reports | March 28, 2005Duke Students Against Sweatshops members are doing our part.
Duke Students Against Sweatshops members are doing our part.
I attended the March 22 event in Griffith, which had been advertised as an intimate chat where President Richard Brodhead would reveal his ideas on present and future undergraduate life.
Yesterday, President Brodhead was insightful, witty, engaging and a delight.
Monday I learned that The Chronicle has taken the ultimate step to remedy what many perceive to have been a lapse in journalistic standards: the editorial board fired the authors of Monday, Monday.
As a member of ESTEEM, the group responsible for the “Do You Contribute to Another’s Eating Disorder?” fliers, I am constantly frustrated by responses that are completely...
After trying to make some sort of sense out of the ridiculousness of David Kleban’s column “Have You Lost Weight?”, I am left with nothing else to do but wonder if we go to the...
This Thursday’s match-up against Miami will be the final home game of the men’s regular season, and I want to pack Cameron to the rafters! This game is designated the Senior Game, but...
There were so many reasons to admire Sasha. Beautiful, outgoing, intelligent and ambitious, she had it all and a million-dollar smile too.
With the recent articles pertaining to the African-American role in higher education, Phillip Kurian’s column, “Shades of Black,” and then the Feb.
Duke's announcement that it will raise the base pay for full- and part-time University employees to $10 an hour indeed sounds positive.
In her column “In Defense of Ward Churchill,” Bridget Newman states that she “should have known better when she read the headline claiming that Ward Churchill had compared Sept.
Students, women’s basketball needs your support!.
Tradition—one definition is “a time-honored practice.”.
How ironic it was to see Ashwin Bhirud’s lighthearted attack on stereotypes next to John Miller’s column justifying Harvard President Summers’ unsupported remarks about the...
It amazes me that in the laundry list of women’s issues that Nathan Carleton approved in his Feb. 17 column as “fine” to work on (eating disorders, mutilation and sexual assault.
Many Duke students pride themselves on being open-minded and less prejudiced than our peers.
Starting at 9 p.m. tonight, personal checks for the Wake Forest game will begin.
Nathan Carleton’s depiction of the Vagina Monologues as merely a series of sexually explicit, pointless and denigrating skits Feb. 17 column is trivializing and inaccurate.
As a member of the Vagina Monologues cast and a newly self-proclaimed feminist, and as someone who used to giggle every time the word “vagina” was spoken, I want to rebut the...
“Thank you,” I hear a girl dressed in sweats and a T-shirt say to the bus driver as we hurry off, almost late for class this morning.