What it really means to give to Duke
By Ethan Ahuna | March 18, 2019As a Duke student, getting flooded with emails is something I’m familiar with.
As a Duke student, getting flooded with emails is something I’m familiar with.
As a second-semester senior, it is hard not to be reflective about my time at Duke. With graduation a few months away, I have been looking back at what I have done here and trying to discern what I still want to do.
On Saturday, I was one of the many people who crowded into Cameron Indoor for a Duke vs. Virginia matchup that did not disappoint.
There are several topics of conversation that accompany the start of spring semester (tell me more about abroad, juniors), but perhaps the biggest is the recruitment processes for the Interfraternity Council, Panhellenic Association, and Selective Living Groups that take place every January.
In one of my classes this semester, my professor handed us an advertisement and told us to “problematize” it—to point out any ethical flaws we might notice.
The “last” of anything has a certain romantic quality to it.
This Thursday, Nov. 1, is the early decision deadline for high school seniors applying to join the Duke Class of 2023.
It’s not a secret that Duke can suck. In my three years as a student, there have been multiple incidents of bias and hate targeted at a number of marginalized groups, from graffiti to death threats and back again.
Job fairs have never been my thing. As I walked around Wilson Gym in my suit last Wednesday, I was embarrassingly sweaty and incredibly flustered.
I stumbled upon my first sociology class my freshman spring and was immediately smitten.