Moving Out and Up
By Erin Collazo | April 20, 2000A t the end of the year with a frenzy of papers and finals, moving out and storing winter clothes, furniture and electronic equipment is often the last thing students want to think about.
A t the end of the year with a frenzy of papers and finals, moving out and storing winter clothes, furniture and electronic equipment is often the last thing students want to think about.
This is the second story in a three-part series on young authors breaking into the writers' market.
M any students can give examples of a time they followed their intuition or experienced something oddly coincidental.
For many, college is a time to forge friendships and discover the joys and hardships of independence from mom and dad.
Any freshmen arriving at Duke are determined to hold onto their high school sweethearts. Most find, however, that absence makes the heart wander more often than it makes it grow fonder.
Each fall a new batch of engineering freshmen enters the University with career plans firmly in mind; each spring many of these same students leave Hudson Hall and the Teer Engineering Library for...
The start of a new school year is marked by fliers in dorms and tables lining the Bryan Center walkway hoping to lure students to particular clubs and organizations.
For many students, crossword puzzles are a way to pass time during class. For a group of students last semester, passing their class hinged on dissecting crossword puzzles.
At Duke Hospital 86-year old Annie Turner and five-month-old Shemaiah Harris are gaining a new lease on life through each other.
Dance, in its ability to move an audience and in its creation of shapes and colors through the movement of a body in space and time, comprises one of the basic notions of art as the world knows it.