Hazing: The Chomicle suspended pending investigation
By Staff Reports | April 1, 2019The Chomicle was suspended Friday night pending the results of a hazing investigation.
The Chomicle was suspended Friday night pending the results of a hazing investigation.
“There’s only room for one animal named after food on this campus,” Nugget barked.
Duke People’s State of the University held a rally Friday to protest Duke's decision to not sign the light rail cooperation agreement.
At the age of 18, Eladio Bobadilla was on the verge of failing out of high school. Last week, 15 years later, he defended his Ph.D. dissertation at Duke.
Women's income is rarely sufficient to propel a household into the the top one percent of the U.S. income distribution, a recent Duke study suggested.
Duke Regional Hospital just started the largest construction project since its opening in 1976.
A recent oceanography study sponsored by Duke, along with other institutions, discovered new insight into how the ocean circulates.
The University accepted 2,101 high school seniors in the regular decision round this year, according to a news release Thursday.
Arnold Schwarzenegger, former governor of California and star of the "Terminator" franchise, spoke in front of the Supreme Court Tuesday before oral arguments for the North Carolina gerrymandering case Rucho v. Common Cause.
Sophomore Aly Diaz, senator of Durham and regional affairs, will serve as the next Duke Student Government president pro tempore after a split vote in the DSG Senate.
Duke will award honorary degrees to four individuals—a Nobel prize winner, a Pulitzer prize finalist, a National Humanities Medal winner and a Royal Society fellow—at commencement in May.
Three trucks will participate in the Duke University Student Dining Advisory Committee's food truck rodeo in April.
After a unanimous vote, GoTriangle will stop pursuing the Durham-Orange Light Rail Transit Project.
From designer babies to genetically modified food, gene editing has brought many ethical questions to the forefront.
Duke will fork over more than a dozen times the salary of men’s basketball head coach Mike Krzyzewski to the federal government in a research fraud settlement—a cool $112.5 million.
WASHINGTON, D.C.—Two Duke students got to see their research take center stage in the United States Supreme Court Tuesday.
Three years ago, the Supreme Court upheld a ruling that forced North Carolina to redraw congressional districts to eliminate racial gerrymandering. Now, gerrymandering in North Carolina has made its way back to the Supreme Court.
“We must become the unwelcome guests at the dinner party,” Lipstadt said. “When we hear someone saying something, whether it is antisemitic, racist, Islamophobic, sexist, homophobic, we can't sit silently by and do nothing. Not to change the mind of the person who’s making the comments because that might be a useless task, but to telegraph the message that this is something we will not tolerate.”
Duke will pay $112.5 million to the U.S. government to settle a lawsuit in which a research assistant allegedly falsified and fabricated data that helped get them federal grants.
To the left of the entrance to the Mary Duke Biddle room in the Rubenstein Library, there is a case of old print advertisements.