After the storm
By Joline Doedens | June 24, 2015The clouds looked purplish green and ominous for a while, but the threat of war with Syria seems to have dissipated without a single drop of rain.
The clouds looked purplish green and ominous for a while, but the threat of war with Syria seems to have dissipated without a single drop of rain.
Immigration law is controversial, complicated and contested.
As a student-athlete at a Division I school, one is often faced with the question of which part of his or her hyphenated descriptor actually describes her occupation better.
Duke is expensive. There is no doubt about it. A good education in the hallowed halls of Gothic architecture costs big bucks.
The parade of horribles is almost inevitable.
Over the past year or so, North Korea has appeared in U.S. headlines for everything from the idiosyncrasies of its leader, Kim Jung Un, to Dennis Rodman’s entertaining infatuation with the isolated...
Last week, the House of Representatives did something pretty special—it passed a bill.
On New Year’s Eve, shortly before dropping the ball in Times Square, Supreme Court Justice Sonia Sotomayor dropped the ball on women’s reproductive health.
An independent judiciary is the hallmark of a functioning democracy.
In the paradoxically blistering and dripping afternoon heat of August, as you proudly tack a whiteboard to the door of your newly arranged dorm room, you bid adieu to your parents.