North Carolina early voters beat 2008 election turnout
By Tiffany Lieu | October 30, 2012With five days to go, North Carolina voters are heading to early voting sites in unprecedented numbers.
With five days to go, North Carolina voters are heading to early voting sites in unprecedented numbers.
Duke, which has a vested interest in considering race as a factor in admissions, filed a legal statement in support of affirmative action.
Duke is a nationally ranked host to online piracy, according to a recent report.
People in downtown Durham Friday evening should prepare for an unfamiliar sight.
The Bridge Bus, a locally owned bus company, will begin running this weekend.
North Carolina is now able to offer pre-kindergarten education to thousands of additional four-year-olds
A recent restriction has put limits on Duke students’ ability to party late off campus.
Last month, the University filed a subpoena in federal court against Johnson.
As he did in 2008, Durham Mayor Bill Bell will endorse Barack Obama for president.
Teller is the executive director of the Republican Study Committee, a conservative caucus in U.S. House.
Sharmeen Obaid-Chinoy won Pakistan’s first Oscar for her 2012 documentary Saving Face.
Robert Morse has led the magazine’s signature education rankings soon after their inception in 1983.
Student volunteers serve as the vanguard for the presidential campaigns.
The North Carolina early voting period begins today, and Durham County residents are able to vote on campus.
Women’s rights will be a major factor in this year’s presidential election, second lady Jill Biden said.
Obama argued that America can only move forward if her husband is re-elected.
Romney promoted his proposed economic and education reform plan to a crowd of locals.
When Wendy Jacobs left her native New Jersey in 1979 to attend Duke, she did not realize she would find a lifelong home in Durham.
The Arizona senator addressed the role of foreign policy and the military in the upcoming elections.
Prospective Duke applicants should not expect to be scrutinized.