Jumping the Gun Debate
By Ciaran OConnor and Sonia Havele | February 27, 2013A trip to a rural shooting school sheds new light on the polarized gun control debate
A trip to a rural shooting school sheds new light on the polarized gun control debate
When I first found out I’d be working on the Obama campaign, I was purposefully playing a fourth or fifth round of FIFA to avoid thinking about my future.
On May 8, registered North Carolina voters—including Duke students who hail from outside the state—can vote on Amendment One.
I feel empty this September 11th, out of the country and away from my home and family in New York City. I passed the morning in silence, alone in my small Parisian apartment watching YouTube.
In control of the North Carolina General Assembly for the first time in more than a century, Republican lawmakers are moving forward on a host of legislation that would greatly expand gun rights.
Governor Bev Perdue unveiled a budget proposal Thursday that would cleave $3.2 billion from state spending over the next two years, slashing 10,000 state jobs but protecting education funding.
After a significant loss of outside funding, Duke has less money and fewer people dedicated to engaging the Durham community.
Don’t read too much into this fall’s midterm elections results. That was the consensus among the distinguished panel gathered Saturday at the Sanford School of Public Policy to discuss the midterms...
In a sharp rebuke of President Barack Obama and the Democratic Party, citizens across the country voted Tuesday to shift the balance of power in Washington, handing Republicans control of the House...