Duke researchers consider ethical dilemma in genome scanning
The ability to map the human genome promises medicinal benefits while posing ethical questions.
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The ability to map the human genome promises medicinal benefits while posing ethical questions.
Steve Nowicki, dean and vice provost of undergraduate education, outlined the University’s vision for nontraditional learning to members of the Duke Student Government Wednesday.
When Wendy Jacobs left her native New Jersey in 1979 to attend Duke, she did not realize she would find a lifelong home in Durham.
Dr. Ralph Savarese is spending the academic year at Duke as a fellow in the Humanities Writ Large program. An associate professor of English from Grinnell College, he is working with the Institute for Brain Sciences and the Neurohumanities Research Group on a project, “A Dispute with Nouns: Autism, Poetry and the Sensing Body,” that investigates the relationship classically autistic individuals have with poetry. The Chronicle’s Emma Baccillieri spoke with him about his research.
Ellen Moran, former communications director for the Obama administration, addressed students and faculty on the significance of women in the upcoming presidential election Wednesday evening.
A graduate student’s donation will expand Duke’s zine collection.
A new photography exhibit documents the harrowing plight of Afghan refugees in Greece.