Duke Hospital receives safety grade of A, climbs from C grade last year
By Shannon Fang | May 28, 2019If Duke Hospital can bounce back from a bad grade, then so can you.
If Duke Hospital can bounce back from a bad grade, then so can you.
Nearly half of Trinity and Pratt faculty are registered Democrats in North Carolina, but not even 4% are registered Republicans or Libertarians.
My article—“For each Republican professor in Pratt and Trinity, there are nearly 13 Democrats. Is this a 'crisis'?”—examines the North Carolina voter registration records of professors in the Trinity College of Arts and Sciences and the Pratt School of Engineering.
Duke and the Duke Health System have agreed to pay $54.5 million to settle a case in which they and the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill were accused of antitrust collusion.
The Chronicle revisits the three incidents that triggered this year’s crime-related DukeALERTS.
This summer marks a decade and a half since Nannerl Overholser Keohane finished her tenure as the eighth president of Duke, making history as the first and only woman to hold the University’s highest office and second to lead a major American research university.
The National Institutes of Health suspended seven Duke research grants in early 2018 in response to research misconduct allegations and patient safety concerns, adding to Duke's list of recent issues with research practices.
The Chronicle’s Stefanie Pousoulides spoke with Monroe, also a 2019 Chron15 Leader, about his plans as president and the issues affecting graduate and professional students.
The Asian American Studies Program officially arrived on campus last spring, and for program director Nayoung Aimee Kwon, its creation was the culmination of over a decade of student work on campus.
How does President Price feel after another, carnival-less year on the job?
When Arlie Petters learned that there are only about a dozen black tenured faculty across the nation’s top 50 math departments, he was not surprised.
As Central Campus housing shuts its doors and stops housing undergraduates, West Campus is set to welcome some of the displaced students as the residential construction projects wind down.
The Chronicle’s Ben Leonard talked to Moneta about his time at Duke, from his best decisions to his regrets.
This story is part four of a four-part oral history of the 1969 Allen Building Takeover, discussing the aftermath of the Takeover and the 50th anniversary.
As Duke strives to become a more inclusive institution, sophomore Emma Cairns will ensure that LGBTQ+ students have a seat at the table.
After the Allen Building occupants departed, law enforcement officers found the building empty and soon exited onto the main quad, where more than 1,000 students had gathered.
Beginning Sept. 1, 2019, Duke fraternities that are part of the North American Interfraternity Conference (NIC) will be required to have all rush events be substance free.
This story is part two of a four-part oral history of the 1969 Allen Building Takeover.
Kristen Brown, Duke's associate vice president of news, communications and media, was in Page Auditorium on West Campus when she received an emergency alert of an explosion in downtown Durham.
Approximately 60 Duke students occupied the first floor of the Allen Building February 13, 1969. No two protestors experienced that day—or the months and years that followed—the same way.