Political advertisements sweep through the state
By Tiffany Lieu | February 3, 2012As campaign advertisements crop up in the state, the battle for North Carolina voters is in full swing.
As campaign advertisements crop up in the state, the battle for North Carolina voters is in full swing.
A community health program launched by DUMC is connecting Duke students with the Durham community in order to enrich both.
The Duke Lemur Center lost one of its most beloved—and unique—members last week.
Students are now taking full advantage of Duke’s new bus tracking system and most are loving every second of it.
Students proposed gender-neutral options for the new housing model at the Duke Student Government meeting Wednesday.
Durham and surrounding counties have the highest paid workers in North Carolina, according to the latest federal data.
Funding for engineering research at Duke is rising, thanks to an increasingly productive faculty.
Some discrepancies in the rise and fall of application rates at top institutions follow a distinct geographical divide.
Students can still expect karaoke and quarter cent beers at He’s Not Here despite upcoming change in ownership.
Three students are vying for one spot to represent the University’s graduate and professional students on the Board of Trustees.
Mitt Romney’s Tuesday victory in the Florida Republican primary has likely cemented his position as the GOP frontrunner.
Robert Harrington, director of the Duke Clinical Research Institute since 2006, will become chair of the department of medicine at Stanford University beginning July 1.
Duke’s biomedical engineering department—and its faculty—has added another award to a growing list of accolades.
Many attendees bid farewell to Mary Duke Biddle Trent Semans Monday.
Texas Rep. Ron Paul’s alma mater is not the only thing he has in common with some Duke students.
Mary Duke Biddle Trent Semans shouldered Duke’s founding family's legacy.