The Chronicle’s guide to casting your ballot in the 2024 primary elections
The 2024 primary elections are fast approaching. Here’s what you need to know to make your voice heard this election season.
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The 2024 primary elections are fast approaching. Here’s what you need to know to make your voice heard this election season.
New York Times journalist and MSNBC political commentator Peter Beinart addressed a filled Sanford lecture hall during a moderated discussion on the ongoing Israel-Hamas war and the history of Israel.
Following three months of deliberation, U.S. District Judge Catherine Eagles granted an injunction Saturday to temporarily block two provisions of North Carolina’s newly-enacted 12-week abortion ban from taking effect.
In celebration of a landslide victory for the Duke Graduate Students Union, approximately 40 graduate students and affiliates convened at the steps of the Duke Chapel Tuesday afternoon.
As unprecedented artificial intelligence enters industries from scientific research and medicine to consulting and finance, many sectors are beginning to evolve with AI.
After North Carolina Gov. Roy Cooper signed an executive order protecting women’s access to reproductive healthcare in response to the overturning of Roe v. Wade, Democrat state legislators breathed a temporary sigh of relief.
Duke Law School received a gift of $5.46 million from alumnus Rick Horvitz, Law School ’78, to permanently sustain the endowment of its nationally-acclaimed Program in Public Law in May.
As Duke observes its first Juneteenth as a designated holiday, some students and faculty still feel more substantial action is needed to address the inequality that people of color face within the University and Durham.
To combat the high rates of infection-related hearing loss in rural, underserved communities in the United States, a cohort of Duke biomedical engineering students, led by Mark Palmeri, professor of the practice in biomedical engineering and anesthesiology, in collaboration with surgery and audiological faculty now at the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences have developed mobile health screening technology to detect middle ear disease that frequently leads to hearing loss.
After Justice Samuel Alito’s draft Supreme Court opinion leaked on May 2, the potential overturning of Roe v. Wade, the landmark decision upholding the constitutional right to abortion, puts the availability of secure access to abortion services in legal limbo.
Duke Law School’s Wilson Center of Science and Justice has formed a partnership to study uncharted territory: collecting data on plea bargaining negotiations.
A stately red brick residence across from East Campus will soon be transformed into an enclave for Jewish undergraduate students at Duke and renamed the Fleishman House.
After North Carolina expanded its COVID-19 vaccination eligibility to include college students on March 31, Duke Health began administering one-shot doses to Duke students at warp speed.
While the March 13 email subject line, “Stay-in-place for Duke Undergraduate students” was a jolt to every student, it was particularly disconcerting for some who are conducting lab research under pressing deadlines.
While many members of the Duke community are beginning to receive their COVID-19 vaccinations, the distribution timelines of Duke’s peer institutions are widely varied.
While the pandemic has emotionally affected many in the Duke community, it has taken a particularly grave toll on those who are struggling with eating disorders, and in some cases, it has even spurred disordered-eating behaviors.
As the Senate impeachment trial began last week, some professors at the Sanford School of Public Policy aired their views on the historic event.