Her name is Good Medicine
Categories: Leaders in Action
With the sight of a leader and the heart of a warrior, Dr. Monica Mayer, ’95, brings her healing touch home to serve her people
University of North Dakota’s Official News Source
Categories: Leaders in Action
With the sight of a leader and the heart of a warrior, Dr. Monica Mayer, ’95, brings her healing touch home to serve her people
Categories: Leaders in Action
Former UND head coach, leader of two NCAA championship teams, caps decorated career with one of hockey’s top honors
Each Thursday session for rescheduled conference – which will continue into November – is free and open to public via Zoom
UND, Grand Forks and North Dakota all benefit from a high response rate – but the deadline for responding is approaching fast
Categories: Research
Commander of U.S. Space Command sees research and education capabilities at UND
The UND graduate, a giant of the Tribal College movement, led United Tribes Technical College in Bismarck for 37 years
The UND community is invited to take part in the task-force and hiring processes, both of which are vital, President Armacost declares
Categories: Around UND
As all three videos note, two words hold a vital key to success on campus: Get involved
Categories: Around UND
Of the 75-plus players currently registered for event, 25 compete on a professional level
In Sept. 9 letter to UND community, President Andy Armacost announces listening sessions as prelude to provost search
New UND research-and-development collaboration brings out the best in private and public sector innovation
UND community eligible for good deals on professional wear through week-long sale
Categories: Around UND
Campuswide book study on bestseller by Ibram X. Kendi begins Sept. 14
Categories: Around UND
New Behavioral Health Bridge helps individuals experiencing common behavioral health conditions related to COVID-19
New book from The Digital Press at UND about the North Dakota oil industry is among those picking up where Elwyn Robinson’s classic ‘History of North Dakota’ left off