City Council agrees to increase employee benefits 5 percent
A large audience of city employees applauded the City Council at their meeting Tuesday night upon hearing the news that a 2 percent rate increase would be added to their 401(k) plans.
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A large audience of city employees applauded the City Council at their meeting Tuesday night upon hearing the news that a 2 percent rate increase would be added to their 401(k) plans.
Who knew that learning about the birds and the bees could cause so much commotion?
Cold and rainy weather Tuesday did not deter Durham voters from coming out to the polls and earning "I voted" stickers.
Elizabeth Dole, who grew up in North Carolina and went to Duke before spending her professional life in Washington, has come full circle.
In a time of economic uncertainty, the volatile sciences of investment banking and money management may be all the more difficult to teach. In a program at the Kenan-Flagler Business School of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, however, students learn the ups and downs of the market for themselves, investing real money in the stock market.
While most politicians are busy preparing for the November 2002 elections, speculation continues that North Carolina Senator John Edwards may have another election in mind.
Although the Sept. 11 attacks immediately targeted New York and Washington, D.C., their effects were felt profoundly in Durham, and a year after the tragedy the Durham community honored local servicemen and women Wednesday morning.
With the U.S. Senate primaries looming ahead on Sept. 10, six underdog North Carolina Republican candidates are pressing onward in their efforts to counteract the political powerhouse that is Elizabeth Dole.
Fourteen people arrested last spring during an unauthorized celebration on Ninth Street may have a new cause to celebrate.
As school systems across the country struggle to close the gap between minorities and whites in education, North Carolina wages its own battle at home, where statistics indicate significant disparities in achievement among students at the pre-college level.
A recent surge in applications at the Nicholas School of the Environment and Earth Sciences has administrators looking to the future with optimism.
A new study from the Medical Center indicates that a balanced amount of light--rather than round-the-clock darkness--may benefit premature infants. Healthcare officials have long considered continuous bright light harmful to the babies' health, leading them to use the near-darkness treatment.