The first Excellency, analyzed
By Jen Wei | November 18, 2004In his latest book, His Excellency:George Washington, historian Joseph Ellis paints a vivid and exciting story of arguably the most aloof president in American history.
In his latest book, His Excellency:George Washington, historian Joseph Ellis paints a vivid and exciting story of arguably the most aloof president in American history.
This year marks an important transition for Duke and its students as Richard Brodhead, the former beloved Dean of Yale College, fills Nan’s shoes as our new president.
Nowadays, slapping the golden word "diet" on the cover of a book is practically a guarantee that the volume will be a best-seller.
Sample sales are as hot in New York City as mesh hair ties were in the 80s.
You know you're pretty influential when people are calling you a "disingenuous danger" to America, a threat to patriotism, a menace to the peace.
They are spunky, sassy single career women living in overpriced urban flats navigating their way through imperfect boyfriends, meddling mothers, overbearing bosses and deceivingly glitzy jobs.
For anyone who ever questioned why Ludacris chose to play at Duke... this is for you. Recess reveals the craziest, most contradictory occurrences. Did anyone else notice:.
A sexy, modern spin on the already seductive 1963 classic Charade, The Truth about Charlie--with quirky camera angles and a heart-poundingly fast pace--surprisingly manages to live up to the original.