Easley releases budget proposal
Gov. Mike Easley announced his plan for next year's state budget Tuesday, and in doing so anticipated a state lottery for school funding.
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Gov. Mike Easley announced his plan for next year's state budget Tuesday, and in doing so anticipated a state lottery for school funding.
Without five of the team's 13 starting pitchers in the rotation, the baseball team did not go into last weekend's baseball series with North Carolina overly optimistic.
One of the most interdisciplinary branches of Duke's genomics initiative found its leader earlier this month, with the selection of Dr. Robert Cook-Deegan as director of the Center for Genome Ethics, Law and Policy.
Master storyteller that he is, Tom Wolfe isn't giving away a single detail of his commencement address for this weekend.
Dr. Russel Kaufman, vice dean for education and academic affairs at the School of Medicine, is leaving to become the next director and CEO of the Wistar Institute, an independent nonprofit biomedical research center in Philadelphia.
If you turn on ABC Monday morning, you just might see Good Morning Round Table.
Ever heard of the Center for Manufacturing and Technology Management? How about the Design Automation Center? The Center for Rational Choice?
The Department of Biological Anthropology and Anatomy is set to undergo consolidation and possibly major restructuring, following conversations about a 2000 external review.
Although Duke Hospital CEO Mike Israel will leave in June, his legacy will remain--in his eight-and-a-half years, Israel has watched the Duke University Health System rise to national prominence and overseen two major restructurings in the face of growing budgetary pressures.
Following the sudden resignation of Duke Hospital CEO Mike Israel, the University has pegged current chief medical officer Dr. William Fulkerson to take over, administrators announced Thursday.
The Duke Student Government Election Commission ruled against a complaint filed by three candidates in the Class of 2003 elections Wednesday night.
The Fuqua School of Business, in a reversal of its international strategy, is scaling back its European campus while adding two new partnerships in Asia.
Despite previous concerns about its long-term viability, the kosher kitchen on campus will remain open, under the new management of Duke and ARAMARK Corp.
Nicholas School of the Environment and Earth Sciences administrators are in the process of finalizing the school's long-term plan that will be presented it to the Board of Trustees in May.
Several candidates in the Class of 2003 elections filed a complaint in three of the four races Tuesday night, citing unauthorized e-mail tactics.
A new study led by Dr. Sandy Williams, dean of the School of Medicine, could lead to a drug that mimics the benefits of exercise. But coach potatoes may not want to celebrate just yet, as the research has only begun to identify targets for the development of new drugs.
A fire that broke out in Wannamaker Dormitory early Sunday morning left the ceiling, furniture and other parts of the Pi Kappa Alpha fraternity commons room damaged.
Selected last week to serve as co-chairs of the Community Service Center, juniors Beth Brantley and Loree Lipstein are already outlining their goals for next year.
East Campus has long been known as a home for freshmen. But it in the future, it may also become a hub for the humanities.
Duke Corporate Education, the for-profit corporate development wing of the Fuqua School of Business, will not make a profit this year, executives said, but the business will grow by 50 percent and in recent months has established a positive cash flow.