Sunday, April 4, 2010

April 4th-April 11th

Preview
Duke in LA Spring 2011 Info Session
An Evening of Good Art
Duke Baseball takes on William and Mary
2010 Black and Latino MBA Organization Conference
Human Rights: ICC Prosecutor Speaks at Duke
Why Are Black People So Funny?: Racial Comedy or Racial Insult (Weds., April 7th, White Lecture Hall, 7 PM)
Registration Begins on April 7th
RENT at Page
Duke Royale- Arabian Nights
First-Year Fridays
Careers in Fashion Discussion

Kronos Quartet
Duke Women's Tennis vs. Clemson


Academic Events
April 5th
Come to the Duke in LA 2011 meeting to learn more about the reconfigured program, which will be re-launched in spring 2011! Prof. Esther Gabarra, one of the academic directors of Duke in LA, will be on hand to give an overview of this exciting program and answer questions. This event will be held in Allen 226 from 5:30 pm- 6:30 pm.

April 7th
Human Rights: ICC Prosecutor Speaks at Duke
A Gambian lawyer who serves as Deputy Prosecutor of the International Criminal
Court (ICC), Bensouda will speak about the office’s goals and priorities for
the future on April 7th. In 2004, she was elected by the ICC’s Assembly of States
Parties to be the Deputy Prosecutor in charge of prosecutions at the ICC. She
acts under Luis Moreno-Ocampo, the Prosecutor of the ICC. As a representative
of The Gambia, Bensouda helped negotiate the Rome Statute of the ICC in 1998. The talk is sponsored by the International Criminal Court Student Network at
Duke University, the Duke Human Rights Center, the Duke Law Center for
International and Comparative Law, the Duke Law Career Center, the Duke Bar
Association and the University of North Carolina School of Law. This event will be held at the Duke Law School, it is a free program and a light lunch will be served. For more information, please contact rights@duke.edu

Fuqua School of Business presents a panel entitled 2010 Black and Lation MBA Organization Conference.
Panel topics will range from social entrepreneurship to leaving a legacy within an organization, and the day will culminate with our keynote speaker, Bill Strickland. Bill is the President and CEO of Manchester Bidwell Corporation, recipient of the MacArthur Genius Award, and author of Make the Impossible Possible. There will also be opportunities to network with students, alumni, and members of the business community. Contact: Akinwole Garrett at blmbaoconference@duke.edu. The program runs from 9 am until 4 pm.

Class Registration begins today! Don't forget to check out ACES starting at 7 am.


Career Opportunities
April 9th
The Duke Career Center is offering a unique chance for Duke First-Year undergrads to get their resumes reviewed, ask a quick question (or two), or to just touch base with a Career Counselor on their "home turf." First-Year Fridays will occur on the following dates during the spring semester: Feb. 26, Mar. 5, Mar. 26, Apr. 2, Apr. 9, Apr. 16 & Apr. 23. We look forward to seeing you on Fridays in the East Union Building (South Balcony, 2nd Flr.). Drop-in hours are available to all students Monday-Thursday 2-5pm and Fridays 2-4pm at the Career Center in Smith Warehouse Building (Bay 5, 2nd Flr.)

April 9th
The Fannie Mitchell Expert-in-Residence program features accomplished professionals who come to Duke to share specialized knowledge and provide individual career advice to students. The program's purpose is to stimulate new ideas and provide advising for students who are searching for career directions. Expert-in-Residence encourages collaboration by providing opportunities for Duke faculty and students to recommend an expert whom they would like to bring to campus. Check back later for more details on this event. This Friday's Expert-in Residence will be featuring Eva Danielle Whittels and an informational on Careers in Fashion. The program will be located in the McClendon 5th Floor Media room from 1 pm- 2 pm.

Cultural Events
April 5th
An Evening of Good Art is a program hosted by the Kenan Institute of Ethics. The student winners of the annual competition are officially unveiled at this exhibit of their talent and knowledge of ethics and aesthetics.
This gala signals the opening of the What is Good Art Exhibition, which will run through May 16. Gala and exhibition in the Fredric Jameson Gallery in the Friedl Building on Duke's East Campus. Free parking reserved for attendees on East Quad (first come, first served). Additional parking (free but not reserved) available around East Campus. Contact Christian Ferney at christian.ferney@duke.edu for more information. Arrive at the Friedl Atrium dressed to impress at 7 pm.

April 7th
"Why Are Black People So Funny? Racial Comedy or Racial Insult" is a roundtable discussion hosted by the Reginaldo Howard Scholars.
" The panel will focus on the trials and triumphs racial humor with input from student comedians, graduate students and professors. Make sure you go out and support this event on Wednesday at 7 pm in White Lecture Hall.

April 8th

Hoof 'n' Horn presents Jonathan Larson's Pulitzer-prize winning Broadway musical RENT based loosely on Puccini's opera La Bohème. It follows a year in the lives of seven friends living the disappearing Bohemian lifestyle in New York's East Village. AIDS and both its physical and emotional complications pervade the lives of Roger, Mimi, Collins, and Angel; Maureen deals with her chronic infidelity through performance art; her partner, Joanne, wonders if their relationship is worth the trouble; Benny has sold out his Bohemian ideals in exchange for a hefty income and is on the outs with his former friends; and Mark, an aspiring filmmaker, feels like an outsider to life in general, always behind the camera recording the events but never playing a part. Play will be held in Page Auditorium and run from April 8th until April 10th. Ticket admission is $12, but $10 if you're a Duke student.

DUU hosts the annual semi-formal event Duke Royale- Arabian Nights. This event will be held in the Sarah P. Duke Gardens from 9 pm- 12 am. Tickets are sold at the Box Office for $25.

April 10th
In a world premiere made possible by Kronos' ongoing collaboration with Duke Performances, the modern era's most adventurous quartet turns its fierce creativity toward a new, Duke-commissioned work by Grammy-winner Maria Schneider - the first time these two icons of innovation have worked together. Residency runs April 8 - April 10, 2010. "I've always wanted the string quartet to be vital, and energetic, and alive, and cool, and not afraid to kick ass and be absolutely beautiful and ugly if it has to be. But it has to be expressive of life. To tell the whole story with grace and humor and depth. And to tell the whole story, if possible."--David Harrington, Kronos Quartet"She puts together stories that speak with the clarity of Ernest Hemingway and the musical grace of Aaron Copland."--Pittsburgh Tribune, on Maria Schneider. The show runs in Page Auditorium from 8-10 pm and Duke Students only pay $5.

Athletic Events
April 5th
Duke Men's Basketball- NCAA Championship Game (9:21 PM, CBS)

April 6th

Duke Baseball vs. William and Mary (6-10 PM)
Duke Women's Tennis vs. North Carolina

April 7th
Duke Men's Tennis vs. Wake Forest (3-8 PM)

April 8th
Duke Men's Tennis vs. Georgia Tech (3-8 PM)
Duke Baseball vs. Clemson (6- 10 PM)
Duke Men's Lacrosse vs. Presbyterian (7 PM)

April 9th
Duke Women's Lacrosse vs. Boston College (1 PM)
Duke Baseball vs. Clemson (2-6 PM)






Sunday, March 28, 2010

March 29th - April 4th

Preview

1. Internship Spotlight Series: Arts, Communication, and Media

2. Resistance Behind Bars: The Struggles of Incarcerated Women

3. 2nd Annual NC Triangle Health Career Expo

4. Fulbright Scholars Info Session

5. Duke-Spelman and Duke-Howard Exchange Program Deadline

6. Ready, Set, Intern

7. First Year Fridays

8. Black Theater Workshop Performance

9. Duke Men’s Lacrosse vs. Brown

10. Duke Baseball vs. Highpoint

11. Duke Men’s Tennis vs. Virginia Tech

12. Duke Women’s Lacrosse vs. Northwestern

13. Duke Men’s Tennis vs. Virginia

14. Duke Men’s Lacrosse vs. Jacksonville

15. Women’s Lacrosse vs. Davidson

16. Blood Drive

17. Emotion in Motion


Academic Events

Monday, March 29

Interested in finding a summer internship but don't know where to start? Come to the Career Center's new Internship Spotlight Series to hear students speak about their past summer experiences and learn about exciting internship possibilities! Each week a new industry will be highlighted - from technology to human rights and everything in between. This week the series is on Arts, Communication, and Media. The series will be an informal opportunity to talk personally to students who have recently done internships in various fields, working for IBM and ABC, non-profit organizations and top universities. The event will be held from 5:00-6:00pm and is open to all undergraduates, and there is no need to sign-up beforehand. Please contact the Career Center at 919-660-1050 for the location.


The Women’s Center and the Sallie Bingham Center for Women’s History and Culture is sponsoring Resistance Behind Bars: The Struggles of Incarcerated Women, at 6:00pm in the Women’s Center. How does gender impact incarceration? With over 114,000 women in prison, why do we still think about men when we think about prison issues? What can we do to both act in solidarity with those struggling inside while working towards a world outside where prisons are no longer necessary? Victoria Law, author of Resistance Behind Bars and Tenacious (a zine of women prisoners' writings) will examine the particular challenges facing incarcerated women and discuss their past and present strategies of resistance. Alexis Pauline Gumbs, educator, scholar and member of the Durham Harm Free Zone Organizing Committee will talk about the connection between the Harm Free Zone Process happening here in Durham and will encourage attendees to think about solidarity.


Tuesday, March 30

The Office of Health Professions Advising is pleased to announce Duke's participation in the 2nd Annual NC Triangle Health Career Expo. The Duke portion of this event will take place from 6:00-9:00 pm in Von Canon rooms B & C. Students will have an opportunity to visit with admissions representatives from a variety of allopathic and osteopathic medical schools, as well as physician assistant, physical therapy, nursing and other health professions programs. Visit the event website for more details.

Wednesday, March 31

Dr. Karin Shapiro and Babs Wise will lead a discussion on the process of applying for a Fulbright Scholarship. This event will be held from 7:00-8:00pm in the classroom in Bay 6, North, 1st floor, B177.


Thursday, April 1

The deadline for the Duke-Spelman and Duke-Howard Exchange program is Thursday, April 1. Rising juniors may participate in the Duke-Spelman Exchange Program. Spelman College is a woman's college located in Atlanta, Georgia. The domestic exchange program allows students from Spelman to study at Duke and allow Duke students to study at Spelman for generally one semester. Rising juniors may also participate in the Duke-Howard Exchange Program. Howard University is located in Washington, D.C. The domestic exchange program allows students from Howard to study at Duke and allow Duke students to study at Howard for generally one semester. Approved courses can be transferred back to Duke. For more details, see the section "Agreements with Other Universities" in the Bulletin of Undergraduate Instruction. Contact Dean Sabrina Thomas with questions.


Career Opportunities

Thursday, April 1

Prepare for a rewarding and successful internship experience! Join the Career Center from 5:00-6:30pm in Social Sciences 136 for a lively panel discussion with students who made their mark as interns in a variety of industries including: business, technology, government, research, and NGO/nonprofit. Learn from career experts about how to make an outstanding impression in any professional setting with essential etiquette tips. Participants will: gain greater understanding about how to set yourself up for the outcomes you expect, gain insight into developing and sustaining relationships with supervisors and fellow interns to advance your long-term career goals, gain new perspectives on engaging the internship as a site of learning, learn about professional etiquette, "best practices" and costly mistakes to avoid and leave with the knowledge to develop and articulate goals for your summer experience. Light refreshments will be provided. Pre-registration on eRecruiting (http://duke.experience.com) is recommended!

Friday, April 2

The Duke Career Center is offering a unique chance for Duke First-Year undergrads to get their resumes reviewed, ask a quick question (or two), or to just touch base with a Career Counselor on their "home turf." First-Year Fridays will occur on the following dates during the spring semester: Feb. 26, Mar. 5, Mar. 26, Apr. 2, Apr. 9, Apr. 16 & Apr. 23. The event will be held in the East Union Building (South Balcony, 2nd Floor). Drop-in hours are available to all students Monday-Thursday 2:00-5:00pm and Fridays 2:00-4:00pm at the Career Center in Smith Warehouse Building (Bay 5, 2nd Floor)

Cultural Events

Thursday, April 1

Students from the Black Theater Workshop course will perform at 5:00pm in Brody Theater.


Athletic Events

Tuesday, March 30

Duke Men’s Lacrosse plays Brown at 3:00pm at home.


Duke Baseball plays Highpoint at 6:00pm at home.


Friday, April 2

Duke Men’s Tennis plays Virginia Tech at 1:00pm at home.


Saturday, April 3

Duke Women’s Lacrosse plays Northwestern at 12:00pm at home.


Sunday, April 4

Duke Men’s Tennis plays Virginia at 1:00pm at home.


Duke Men’s Lacrosse plays Jacksonville at 3:00pm at home.


Duke Women’s Lacrosse plays Davidson at 12:00pm at home.


Health and Wellness Events

Thursday, April 1
Tau Beta Pi & American Red Cross are sponsoring a blood drive from 9:30am-2:00pm in Fitzpatrick Center Schiciano Auditorium. Pre-register at http://givesblood.org/go.php?bdc=432274! Feel free to email jason.chen@duke.edu for any questions regarding eligibility, etc.


CAPS presents Emotions In Motion. As your end-of-semester stressors intensify, how do you: Deal with the daily emotional ups and downs of life? Manage your emotions differently when under stress? This 3-session CAPS Workshop offers useful information to help you understand your emotions, their functions, and how to use them to improve your satisfaction across different facets of your life. The workshop begins on April 1 and continues the following two Thursdays on April 8 and April 15 from 5:00pm-6:30pm. It will be held in Social Sciences 124. For more information and to register, visit the CAPS website and click on Emotions In Motion.

Sunday, March 21, 2010

March 22nd - March 28th

Preview

1. BSAI

2. Internship Spotlight Series: Advertising, Marketing, and Business

3. Career Center Open House for Juniors

4. Just for Juniors Resume Review

5. You’re Hired! How to Gain Employment in Any Field with Jim Citrin

6. Duke 2010 Global Health Case Competition- Earthquake in Haiti

7. Information Session- Lab on Poverty, Ethics, and Policy

8. All of the Above

9. Duke Men’s Lacrosse vs. Dartmouth

10. Duke Women’s Tennis plays Northwestern at home.

11. Charlotte Bobcats Career Fair

12. Duke Women’s Tennis vs. Maryland

13. Duke Women’s Tennis vs. Boston College

14. Spring Blood Drive

15. Procrastination and Perfectionism: How to make them both work FOR you


BSA Events

BSAI is THIS COMING weekend, March 25-28, 2010! The official schedule for the weekend is posted on our website: dukegroups.duke.edu/bsa. If you still have lingering questions about the weekend please contact Edna Chukwurah, BSAI Chair (enc4@duke.edu). 15-20 ushers are needed for the fashion show on Friday, March 26 at 8:00pm in Page Auditorium. Ushers do not have to pay for entrance into the show. If you are interested, please contact Megan Tuck at dukebsai@gmail.com, and you will be emailed back with details on what you need to do to be an usher. Everyone else can purchase tickets for the 2010 BSAI Fashion Show: Four Seasons of Chic from a member of BSA exec on the Plaza or in the Marketplace for $1 (cash) up until Wednesday, March 24. All proceeds from the show are going to the Haiti and Chile Earthquake Relief Efforts.

Academic Events

Monday, March 22

Interested in finding a summer internship but don't know where to start? Come to the Career Center's new Internship Spotlight Series from 5:00-6:00pm in the Center for LGBT Life to hear students speak about their past summer experiences and learn about exciting internship possibilities! Each week a new industry will be highlighted - from technology to human rights and everything in between. The series will be an informal opportunity to talk personally to students who have recently done internships in various fields, working for IBM and ABC, non-profit organizations and top universities. Events are open to all undergraduates, and there is no need to sign-up beforehand.


Career Opportunities

Monday, March 22

JUNIORS: Have you been to the new Career Center yet! If not, let the Career Center staff give you a tour! Stop by the offices at the Smith Warehouse, Bay 5, 2nd Floor beginning at 6:00pm and meet with the Career Center staff.


Tuesday, March 23

JUNIORS...have your resume reviewed right on the Plaza. Career Counselors will be on hand from 1:00-5:00pm to help students create, revise and perfect their resume.


Wednesday, March 24

Back by popular demand, James Citrin returns to Duke to headline a major event offering job and career advice. The program, which is held in Fuqua School of Business Geneen Auditorium from 8:00-9:30pm, is very interactive and includes an opportunity to get answers to questions from a noted expert on leadership and professional success. All students, faculty and administrators are encouraged to attend; undergraduates, graduate and professional school students; anyone who is or will at some point be trying to get hired. James M. Citrin is a member of Spencer Stuart's worldwide board of directors and co-leads the Board and CEO Succession Practice for North America. Throughout his 16 years at Spencer Stuart, Citrin has completed more than 400 CEO, board director, CFO and other top management searches. A noted expert on leadership, governance and professional success, Citrin is the author of five books, including bestsellers The Dynamic Path, Lessons from the Top, The 5 Patterns of Extraordinary Careers and You're in Charge - Now What?


Community Service Events

Wednesday, March 24

Do you want to find a way to contribute to the discussion about the earthquake aftermath in Haiti? Use your experience to generate innovative ideas that can translate into action on the ground through participating in the first annual Duke Global Health Case Competition. This competition is a unique opportunity for Duke graduate and undergraduate students from multiple schools and disciplines to come together to promote awareness of and develop innovative solutions for 21st century global health issues. Common across U.S. business schools, a case competition features teams of four to six students working through a real-life case scenario with the goal of providing helpful strategic recommendations to move the case subject forward efficiently and effectively. The competition is centered on team presentations to judges, who then score student recommendations and award prizes. For more details on the event including registration, click on More Info.


Do you care about poverty? Do you think about where it comes from, why it exists, and what we can do about it? Are you concerned about the moral and ethical implications of living in a world full of poverty and inequality? Have you been looking for a way to engage deeply in a topic, work collaboratively with your peers, and forge closer relationships with faculty? Do you wish you could do something meaningful with your neighbors in Durham and Chapel Hill? Something that could have an impact on the whole state of North Carolina? If you answered YES to any of the above, consider applying to be a member of the new Kenan Institute for Ethics Laboratory on Poverty, Ethics, & Policy. To learn more about this unique opportunity, please attend the info session from 7:00-8:00pm in West Duke 101. If you're unable to join us next week, contact Rachel Seidman at rfs6@duke.edu for more info.


Cultural Events

Urgent Theatre is sponsoring All of the Above at 8:00pm March 25th-27th, and at 2:00pm March 28th, in East Duke Room 209. All of the Above is Duke’s all women’s monologue production. The show is written, produced, and performed by Duke women, for the Duke Community.


Athletic Events

Tuesday, March 23

Duke Men’s Lacrosse plays Dartmouth at 7:00pm at home.


Wednesday, March 24

Duke Women’s Tennis plays Northwestern at home.


Friday, March 26

On March 26th, the Time Warner Cable Center in Charlotte, NC - home of the Charlotte Bobcats - will host the Charlotte Bobcats Career Fair from 1:30-4:30pm. Meet with representatives from Charlotte Bobcats, Charlotte Checkers, Atlanta Hawks/Thrashers, Atlanta Braves, Phoenix University, Time Warner Cable, Levy Restaurants, Coca-Cola, and many more! You can also get discounted tickets to see a Bobcats game that night. To register, click on "More Info and enter the code: bobcats.


Saturday, March 27

Duke Women’s Tennis plays Maryland at home.


Sunday, March 28

Duke Women’s Tennis plays Boston College at home.


Health and Wellness Events

Monday, March 22

There will be a Spring Blood Drive held in the Law Schol Blue Lounge from 11:00am-3:00pm. Sign up for a time slot at www.duke.givesblood.org or stop by the Blue Lounge the day of the drive. For more information, contact Rebecca Gedalius at rebecca.gedalius@duke.edu.


Tuesday, March 23

Procrastination and Perfectionism: How to make them both work FOR you, is a 3 week workshop offered on Tuesdays, starting March 23 at 6:00pm in Page 217. It will help you understand how procrastination and perfectionism are often 2 sides of the same coin. The workshop will include helping you develop a personalized plan to use them BOTH to help you flourish. For additional information, visit the CAPS website at http://studentaffairs.duke.edu/caps or click on the MORE INFO link, above.

Sunday, March 14, 2010

March 15th - March 21st

Preview
1. Internship Spotlight Series
2. Nathan Daschle- Connect 2 Politics
3. Sampling Soul Class Open to Public via Live Webcast
4. Program II Info Session
5. Apple Store Leader Program Info Session
6. Reel Women- Midday Movie Marathon
7. Mary Lou Williams Center Work Study and Internship Opportunities
8. Duke Men’s vs. USC
9. Duke Baseball vs. Liberty
10. Duke Baseball vs. Miami
11. Duke Men’s Lacrosse vs. Penn State
12. Duke Baseball vs. Miami
13. Duke Women’s Lacrosse vs. Navy
14. Duke Baseball vs. Miami
15. Love, Sex, and Hot Chocolate

Academic Events
Monday, March 15
Interested in finding a summer internship but don't know where to start? Come to the Career Center's new Internship Spotlight Series from 5:00-6:00pm in the Center for LGBT Life to hear students speak about their past summer experiences and learn about exciting internship possibilities! Each week a new industry will be highlighted - from technology to human rights and everything in between. The series will be an informal opportunity to talk personally to students who have recently done internships in various fields, working for IBM and ABC, non-profit organizations and top universities. Events are open to all undergraduates, and there is no need to sign-up beforehand.

Tuesday, March 16
Nathan Daschle (Director of the Democratic Governors Association) will share insights from his experience as a young professional in a position of political leadership. What advantages/barriers exist for young leaders in such positions? Does this differ by political party or organization? What skills and tools can help you succeed as a young political leader? The event will be held from 5:30-6:30pm in Social Sciences 136.

The public will get a chance to experience the popular Duke University course "Sampling Soul" via a live webcast beginning at 6:00 pm at ustream.tv/dukeuniversity. The topic of the class will be the making of the critically acclaimed hip-hop album "Illmatic" by rapper Nasir Jones, aka Nas. Viewers are encouraged to submit questions for the professors either in advance or during the session by sending an e-mail to live@duke.edu, posting a comment on the Duke University Live Ustream page on Facebook, or tweeting with the tag #dukelive. A recording of the event will be available on Duke on Demand: ondemand.duke.edu.

Wednesday, March 17
Thinking about applying to Program II, or just want to find out more about it? Then head out for an informative question and answer session, led by Dean Norman Keul, Director of Program II. The event will be held from 4:00-5:15pm in Allen 103A Dean’s Conference Room.

Career Opportunities
Tuesday, March 16
A representative from Apple will be on campus from 5:00-6:15pm in the Multicultural Center to speak about their Apple Store Leader Program.

Cultural Events
Friday, March 19
Each Friday during the month of February and one week in mid-March, the Mary Lou Williams Center will host Reel Women-Mid-day Movie Marathon, showcase themed groupings of movies about women. The event is held from 12:00-6:00pm in the Mary Lou Williams Center, and FREE popcorn provided.

The Mary Lou Williams Center for Black Culture is seeking five (5) undergraduate Work-Study students (Class of 2013) to work in our office beginning Fall 2010, to complete front desk tasks, answer the phone, and serve as Ambassadors for the Center. These are part-time, paid positions working an average of 5 hours per week. Student status and work-study at Duke are required. Also, The Mary Lou Williams Center’s Internship Program seeks to hire four (4) undergraduate students (Class of 2012 and 2011). The Internship program is a diverse program designed to encourage and apply undergraduate students interested in developing and/or increasing skills in the areas of Africana Studies, Jazz, Programming/Events, and Public Relations in a culture center. These are part-time, paid positions working an average of 10 hours per week. Student status is required; work-study preferred, but not required.
REQUIREMENTS
• Enrolled full-time as a student at Duke University
• Strong organizational skills, demonstrated teamwork and leadership skills
• Computer literacy, office skills
• Must be self-motivated, detail oriented, and a good multi-tasker
HOW TO APPLY
To apply, check the Mary Lou Williams Center website (http://www.studentaffairs.duke.edu/mlw) for a full description of available internships. Send a resume along with a brief cover letter expressing your particular area of interest, what you hope to gain from working at the Mary Lou Williams Center for Black Culture, and any skills or special experience you would bring to the Center, to the attention of Mrs. Khadine McNeill at ksm23@duke.edu. Applications will be accepted through the end of March 2010, with orientation/transition days occurring in April.

Athletic Events
Wednesday, March 17
Duke Men’s Tennis plays USC at 3:00pm at home.

Duke Baseball plays Liberty at 3:00pm at home.

Friday, March 19
Duke Baseball plays Miami at 6:00pm at home.

Saturday, March 20
Duke Men’s Lacrosse plays Penn State at 1:00pm at home.

Duke Baseball plays Miami at 2:00pm at home.

Sunday, March 21
Duke Women’s Lacrosse plays Navy at 1:00pm at home.

Duke Baseball plays Miami at 1:00pm at home.

Health and Wellness Events
Wednesday, March 17
DELISH of Healthy Devils Peer Educators is hosting Love, Sex, and Hot Chocolate at 7:00pm in the Mary Lou Williams Center. The event will be an open dialogue about love and sexual health in the African-American community nationally and at Duke. This program is meant to encourage positive sexual health behaviors on campus among African-American students and to communicate within relationships. There will be some chocolate sweets as the title suggests.

Presented by Duke University's Black Student Alliance

101-31 Bryan Center
P.O. Box 90834
Durham, NC 27705

Phone: 919.684.4154
Fax: 919.684.8395
E-mail: DukeBSA@gmail.com

Please visit our website at http://www.duke.edu/web/bsa