Learning from life
By Lauren Groskaufmanis | January 13, 2017The patients I met during my clinical year helped me become a more proficient clinician and helped prepare me for a graduation date that draws ever closer.
The patients I met during my clinical year helped me become a more proficient clinician and helped prepare me for a graduation date that draws ever closer.
Be someone who takes responsibility for their actions and knows that their success or failure is in their hands.
As Duke students trudge into the first days of a new semester and people across the United States begin the 2017 work year, a certain lugubrious aura of dissatisfaction seems to permeate the national mood.
There are times when choosing a moderate position causes more problems than it solves.
Forcing the political system of America to rely on the wealthiest individuals defies the very foundation of our Constitution.
In my opinion, the pain of one’s own is manageable, but watching your loved ones in pain as a result of your actions is absolutely unbearable.
As snow melts away, taking winter break with it, Duke’s campus and students ready themselves for a fresh spring semester.
You can’t become an expert on everything, but you can learn something.
What a sad fate for a cause Americans once championed.
Living in Ireland for the past four months, I’ve realized that not everything is always going to go your way.
NPR and others suggest it is a conflict of interest for Trump to make appointments to the NLRB.
I was a poor college upperclassman at Duke but with one big secret: I was undocumented.
Momentum and Habit stand together, shields locked, in any battle formation. Habit reinforces Momentum when he seems about to fail, and Momentum charges forward to slay the enemy.
[Myron] Ebell’s and [Scott] Pruitt’s current positions could have the same backfiring effect on climate deniers.
SEIU’s failure to condemn such acts of aggression and rush to push a vote before all members of the bargaining party are informed suggests that it does not share the ideals students hold dearest, and consequently, is unfit to represent our interests.
When we make our cities and communities inclusive and happy, we get a double dividend. They’re more sustainable, too.
What might have seemed politically goofy before is now simply grating and the scene is set for conflict.
By donating to effective and efficient charities that put up malaria nets, deworm people in developing countries, or even give money directly to those who need it, you can literally save people’s lives.
Even a casual observer of history will know that geopolitical competition drives technological innovation.
If there is conflict between student and advisor or if abuse occurs in that relationship, there are limited avenues of recourse available to the student.