'Long history of stepping up': Administrators urge Duke community to aid in hurricane relief
In the aftermath of Hurricane Florence, there are several ways the Duke community can aid in providing relief for the storm's victims.
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In the aftermath of Hurricane Florence, there are several ways the Duke community can aid in providing relief for the storm's victims.
Former Trump campaign chairman Paul Manafort pleaded guilty Friday to two conspiracy charges, in addition to previous convictions against him. As a part of the plea, Manafort agreed to cooperate with Special Counsel Robert Mueller’s investigation of Russian interference in the 2016 presidential election.
Reparations for African Americans are crucial to fight white supremacy and compensate for slavery's consequences, scholars said at a town hall forum Monday, but they aren't enough.
A recent environmental engineering study at Duke challenged the long-held belief that gold is a biologically stable material.
In a rural region of Kenya, where only about 7 percent of all girls finish high school, 32 girls graduated in June as the fifth graduating class of a secondary school.
You're at the door of your dorm building when you find out you don’t have your DukeCard with you. Not again! But it’s no trouble this time, as long as you have your Apple Watch on your wrist or your iPhone in your pocket.
President Donald Trump’s trade war with China would generate a negative impact on the U.S. economy—especially on economies that largely depend on agriculture—according to Duke scholars and local agricultural workers.
Jewish individuals living under the Nazi regime during the Holocaust didn't just passively suffer—some resisted, a prominent Holocaust historian said during a talk Thursday.
Program II—an individualized degree program at Duke—is celebrating its 50th anniversary this year.
When Jillian Johnson studied at Duke about 20 years ago, she never explored Durham beyond two blocks away from campus. Now as Durham’s mayor pro tempore and at-large city council member, Johnson strives to make Durham a better place to live.
Successful diplomacy requires a sufficient understanding of the past and one’s opponents, a historian and former foreign policy consultant said during a talk Thursday.
As long as the role and nature of the Internet remain ambiguous, the federal government will have a hard time launching regulations on net neutrality, two public policy professors said at a panel Friday.
Despite recent shifts in both international affairs and its own domestic politics, Germany has never relented its pursuit of stability and unity on both a regional and global scale, the German Ambassador to the United States said at an event Tuesday.
For the Class of 2021, the first semester at Duke may feel too fast. Some new faculty members also appear to echo that sentiment.
New wisdom and new strategies are in need to mitigate the North Korea nuclear threat, experts said at a panel Thursday
Duke students are not the only ones that are sleep deprived. Researchers at Duke found that spinner dolphins in Hawaiian waters are unable to rest due to manmade noise.
The executive director for China at the International Monetary Fund discussed the importance of governmental mitigation and marketization in China's efforts to internationalize its financial sector at a seminar Tuesday.
Reflecting on the development of Duke’s online education in the past five years, staff and faculty members predicted that online education will continue to connect Duke to a broader and more diverse international community in the coming years.
Students who seek dental services no longer have to go off campus.
International laws aim to restrict states’ behavior and protect civilians. But Israel’s 50 years of control over the West Bank and Gaza demonstrates that a state can reinterpret international law to serve its own interests, too.