Duke physician uses near-death experience to encourage patient self-advocacy
After a harrowing near-death experience, Duke physician Neil Spector is using his story to help patients become better advocates for their health.
Use the fields below to perform an advanced search of The Chronicle's archives. This will return articles, images, and multimedia relevant to your query. You can also try a Basic search
128 items found for your search. If no results were found please broaden your search.
After a harrowing near-death experience, Duke physician Neil Spector is using his story to help patients become better advocates for their health.
New environmentally friendly buildings might be responsible for a growing number of bird deaths on Duke’s campus, research suggests.
A Fuqua professor is working to improve Duke’s international reputation in an increasingly global market.
This Fall, Duke will start construction of a new Arts Center that will provide a home for Duke’s Dance and Arts of the Moving Image programs as well as numerous student activities.
Duke's popularity in Massive Open Online Courses is booming, but the University remains divided on whether or not to offer course credit.
Recent incidents of racism at universities across the nation have brought the verdicts of student disciplinary action into the spotlight, with some questioning due process and the role of freedom of speech on campuses.
"Policing" the police may be getting a whole lot easier for North Carolina's residents.
New research shows that the well-known Southern drawl is slowly disappearing in North Carolina.
Paying your friends back has never been so easy—or entertaining.
Drawing parallels between Presidents Abraham Lincoln and Barack Obama, "Lincoln" screenwriter Tony Kushner tackled the modern state of politics with an eye on the past.
Changes in federal funding have forced Duke and universities around the country to reevaluate how biomedical research is conducted at the university level.
After struggling to balance academic and athletic workloads as a student, alum Zach Maurides—a former Duke football player—has created a mobile application designed to help student-athletes around the country.
Next Tuesday, the student body will elect a new Duke Student Government president, executive vice president and Student Organization and Funding Committee chair. The Chronicle's Neelesh Moorthy sat down with executive vice president candidate John Guarco, a sophomore, to discuss his goals for DSG Senate and his personal experience.
The murders of three Muslim students in Chapel Hill, NC earlier this month has brought national attention once again to how hate crimes are prosecuted in America.
As Uber has become increasingly popular in Durham, some local cab companies have struggled to keep up.
Town-gown relations in some Durham neighborhoods have been put on shaky ground as residents raise complaints against the behavior of Duke’s fraternities.
Following Tuesday's tragic triple-homicide and subsequent media attention, community members mourned the loss of three local college students.
Two years after N.C. Governor Pat McCrory publicly questioned the employability of those who major in the humanities, many in academia continue to debate the merits of liberal arts.
A 2013 law that eliminates tenure for North Carolina’s teachers is under fire in the Court of Appeals.
A month after two Durham Police Department officers were targeted in shootings, the department's relationship with the community has been called into question.