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The Chronicle is starting its coverage of 2024 commencement, and we can’t do it without our graduates. The year has flown by, and we’re looking forward to celebrating the time you seniors have spent at Duke.
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The Chronicle is starting its coverage of 2024 commencement, and we can’t do it without our graduates. The year has flown by, and we’re looking forward to celebrating the time you seniors have spent at Duke.
It is said that good things come in threes.
The Office of Student Conduct and Community Standards is investigating reports of an alteration to a Ramadan mural on the Free Expression Bridge off of East Campus that “was understood by many in [the Duke] community to explicitly target Muslims and the Islamic faith,” according to a Sunday email from Duke Student Affairs.
The Blue Devils were back on home turf this weekend as they co-hosted the Lake Wheeler Invitational with North Carolina. Amidst a competitive field of 17 other teams, Duke rowers raced six boats in 18 races and clinched second place in the regatta overall.
Last week, Philadelphia news channels told their readers to “Expect traffic delays and shutdowns.”
Icarus fell from the skies because he flew too close to the sun.
The past few weeks have seen Duke men’s basketball lose the majority of its roster from last season, some due to lost eligibility and some to the NBA draft. But many players have also entered the transfer portal, looking to find a new home with increased playing time and the potential to make more NIL money. But will this development hurt or benefit the Blue Devils? The Blue Zone is here to break down both sides of the situation:
As Duke baseball gears up for the end of the season, Blue Devil alumni are hard at work in the professional leagues. The Blue Zone examines some previous Duke players performing at the highest levels of the pro game:
For only the second time in 28 years, Duke football has three players selected in the NFL draft.
Mr. Duke is off to Buffalo.
Around 150 students, Duke community members and Durham residents gathered on Abele Quad Friday morning for a pro-Palestinian rally for one of the largest demonstrations on the University’s campus since the initial Oct. 7 Hamas-led attacks on southern Israel.
No. 6-seed Duke faced No. 3-seed Boston College Wednesday night in the quarterfinals of the ACC tournament, seeking to avenge its 18-3 loss one month prior. The Eagles, however, took command early and kept their feet on the gas, spoiling Duke’s revenge tour and sending the Blue Devils packing out of Charlotte with a 19-5 loss.
Saturday, the Blue Devils will take a bus to Chapel Hill for their final — and most tense — regular-season game. To commence the rivalry showdown against North Carolina, an official will place the ball dead center of the field; a player from each team will crouch down, stick on his side of the dot, waiting for the whistle. At the referee’s chime, the players will dig their cleats into the dirt and their shoulders into one another to attempt to gain possession of the ball. This is the faceoff. It starts each quarter and follows every goal.
Hundreds of students have been arrested at college campuses across the country amidst a flare-up of pro-Palestinian encampments and demonstrations in response to the Israel-Hamas war.
Graham Barton is headed to Tampa Bay.
Tonight, commissioner Roger Goodell will take the stage in Detroit to kick off the first round of the NFL draft. Countless college players will see their dreams of reaching the league realized during the weekend, with 32 names on the opening night bringing in a monster payday.
Duke’s last day of classes was a cause for celebration.
Duke received a Congressional Resolution commemorating its Centennial Tuesday, recognizing the University’s accomplishments throughout the past 100 years, according to an announcement from Duke Today.
It’s “Bienvenidos a Miami” (welcome to Miami) and not “bienvenidos a Fort Lauderdale,” in Will Smith’s 1997 hit, for a reason. The two cities might as well be two different countries.
BUIES CREEK, N.C.—Sometimes you just don’t have it.