Play explores sexism in DNA discovery
By Austin Powers | October 26, 2011More than 50 years ago, Rosalind Franklin made the invisible visible, but what happened next continues to trouble scientists and fuel artists.
More than 50 years ago, Rosalind Franklin made the invisible visible, but what happened next continues to trouble scientists and fuel artists.
After more than a century since the founding of Zionism, the Jewish political movement continues to wrestle with the future of Israel, a leading scholar said.
Duke should be a place where a student veteran feels safe to talk their about their wartime experiences, Duke student and Iraq war veteran Logan Mehl-Laituri said.
One of Duke’s newest on-campus eateries may not be around much longer.
Ten years after the War on Terror was declared, experts continue to dispute its future as it relates to U.S. foreign policy.
Although the United States previously enacted strict rules about environmental protection, health and safety, the European Union is leading the game of precautionary regulations, Vogel said.
In July 1959, Duke’s Board of Trustees closed the Panhellenic meeting space on East Campus.
Historical and literary reflection on the past is necessary for a prosperous future, several prominent scholars said at the annual Caldwell Lecture Friday.
The United States’ immigration system must undergo serious reform in the next few years, Secretary of Homeland Security Janet Napolitano said.
Not just anyone can convince corporate sponsors to pay someone to satirize them.
Students will now be able to receive a new Duke degree in Dubai.
Sanford is preparing to usher in a change in leadership, as it conducts its search for a new dean this year.