The smaller picture
By David Kelban | November 10, 2005Duke's multimillion-dollar development campaign, which has given rise to Bostock Library and a new, Mad Hatterized Perk, can only be described as sick-nasty.
Duke's multimillion-dollar development campaign, which has given rise to Bostock Library and a new, Mad Hatterized Perk, can only be described as sick-nasty.
Graduate school isn't much use to those who cannot reach the campus on a daily basis for classes, research or teaching.
While I'm sometimes peeved that the shortest distance between two points on this campus is always under construction, I know I benefit from every new facility once the construction is done.
A woman is raped in the United States every six minutes. Almost 20 percent of all women will be the victim of a rape or an attempted rape during the course of their lives.
I bet that every man reading this column has had those words hurled at him at some point in his life. I remember getting annoyed by them in elementary school.
Duke has a serious problem. Some professors deem it acceptable to force their ideology upon students.
I am in rarified company as a Chronicle columnist. Before I started writing a column, I generally avoided even reading Chronicle columns, because the fact is, most of them suck.
There are no harder rivers to navigate than those waters with which one is unfamiliar.
I am extremely disturbed by a recent event in the Durham community.
Other than family, President George W. Bush may have been the only person to like Harriet Miers. Of course interest groups obsessed with overthrowing Roe v.
It's anyone's guess why the federal government wants easy-access surveillance to all Internet traffic.
Poor blind baby," I thought to myself one day last January. The company that managed my apartment building had placed a notice on my apartment door.
Been here in Europe a while now with a big group of nice, well-adjusted youth who complain about school work and try to save money.
On Friday, an event of extraordinary and undeniable significance will take place at Duke.
Early in October, a CBS news poll found that President George W. Bush's approval ratings have reached new lows. A majority of Americans now disapprove of how he is handling the job.
It is a time of reflection, a time of excitement and most of all a time of panic-. It is the time to schedule and select classes for next semester.
Amid all the good news of Duke 24 and the new Krzyzewskiville policy, you might have missed it. I almost did.