Referendum approval would improve Durham streets
Drivers throughout the Bull City may notice much smoother rides if a street bond referendum is passed by voters Nov. 2.
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Drivers throughout the Bull City may notice much smoother rides if a street bond referendum is passed by voters Nov. 2.
The military’s ban on openly gay service members received a significant challenge yesterday in California.
Junior Paul Salem is an average Duke student—he buys meals from the Great Hall and does homework in Perkins Library. But unlike most of his peers, Salem is a 24-year-old trained sniper who has instructed urban sniping while serving as a Marine in Iraq and the Horn of Africa.
Some Duke students have been working to raise support for an act aimed to help undocumented students acquire American citizenship that was blocked by the U.S. Senate Tuesday.
A crowd of over 325 law students rose yesterday, at the dean’s command, to welcome Samuel Alito, associate justice of the Supreme Court, to the School of Law.
OnlyBurger is cookin’.
Despite forecasts of severe weather conditions, the Duke University Marine Lab was unscathed this weekend after a brief encounter with Hurricane Earl.
After a summer marred by budget hardships, the Durham Public Schools Board of Education is hoping Eric Becoats will be the leader who turns the city’s school system around.
Duke students, employees and faculty members have joined Durham residents in taking advantage of the new, brightly-colored buses that connect the University to the Bull City.
As students welcomed in the new school year, Duke Police officials spent their orientation week working to ensure student safety during one of the most high-risk periods of the academic year.
After this summer’s oil spill in the Gulf Coast, some environmentalists were concerned that other coastal states could see damaged beaches if the oil drifted north.
Although two of Duke’s graduate schools slightly lost their footing on the national playing field in the annual rankings, the schools, overall, remained among the country’s leaders.
Economic growth does not have to come at the expense of the environment, said José María Figueres, the former president of Costa Rica, in a speech at Duke Thursday.
“While we’ve come a long way, we’ve still got a ways to go.”
Duke graduate student Julia Gaffield made history when she uncovered the only known printed copy of Haiti’s Declaration of Independence.
High-growth industries, innovation and talent were the featured buzzwords at the State of Durham’s Economy Breakfast Tuesday morning.
The city of Durham hopes to be a guinea pig for Google’s upcoming “Fiber for Communities” Internet experiment.
A suspicious person was reported soliciting money on Central Campus and in the Trinity Heights area near East Campus over the past several weeks.
Let the pledging begin.
The water outage on Central Campus Wednesday evening was a result of construction taking place in the Medical Center.