Events to celebrate Pride Month in the Research Triangle
By Michelle Brown | June 5, 2024If you’re staying on campus or are in the Triangle for the summer, here are some events you can attend to celebrate Pride.
Michelle Brown is a Trinity junior and an editor-at-large of The Chronicle's 120th volume.
If you’re staying on campus or are in the Triangle for the summer, here are some events you can attend to celebrate Pride.
The Lady Devils, founded in spring 2024 by sophomore Chris-Ann Bennett, is the first women’s flag football club team in the school’s history.
Silver joined the Board in 2015 and currently holds the position of vice chair and member of the Executive Committee.
Durham County primary elections for board of commissioners, board of education and register of deeds will be held on March 5, ahead of the general elections on Nov. 5.
Dahlia Scheindlin, author of “The Crooked Timber of Democracy in Israel: Promise Unfulfilled,” spoke at a Wednesday event hosted by the Duke Program in American Grand Strategy and the Duke Center for Jewish Studies.
The service initially went offline on Aug. 31, when students were faced with a blank screen on the service’s mobile application and a description citing “technical issues” with the app.
Some Duke students, including the dual-campus Robertson Scholars, also take classes at UNC and regularly travel between campuses.
If approved by the North Carolina Utilities Commission, electricity rates for residents will increase about 10.5% in 2024, 3.8% in 2025 and 3.6% in 2026, amounting to respective monthly increases of $12.54, $3.90 and $3.18 for the typical residential customer.
Called the Master of Engineering in Climate and Sustainability Engineering, the program is one of several post-graduate engineering tracks offered by Duke and is designed to be completed in three semesters. The program is set to formally begin in fall 2024, though classes will be piloted this coming academic year.
The Court’s ruling reaffirms the ability of state courts to check state legislatures by intervening in federal election rules, including those involving redistricting. The case sets a precedent that state legislatures do not have unlimited power regarding federal elections.