'Lofi hip hop beats to study to' Spotify playlist to headline virtual LDOC
Even as a vicious pandemic sweeps across the world, the LDOC concert will go on.
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Even as a vicious pandemic sweeps across the world, the LDOC concert will go on.
Who among us seasoned Duke students doesn’t look fondly back upon their New Devil Days experience? Well, some of us weren’t actually there. But! For the rest of us, few Duke memories are as sweet as that weekend, so filled with anxious smiles shyly budding with the spring blossoms, names exchanged with all the hopeful reticence of new lovers, roommates carefully selected with the rich subtlety and depth of whatever internalized biases you happened to hold.
The Duke Sententious Government Senate passed a resolution condemning the coronavirus at its weekly Zoom meeting.
Just what has men's basketball head coach Mike Kringle been up to during this pandemic?
Just a few weeks ago, Duke let us know that we wouldn’t be allowed to enter our dorms and retrieve our stuff, opting instead to make an aspirational promise: to ship us our “essential items.” To add insult to injury, they decided to consider negative three things “essential items.” So in addition to not being able to finish out our time at Duke this year, all of our underwear is trapped on campus.
No March Madness, no problem.
The best of the best, the most well-connected of the well-connected and the richest of the richest are already locks for the Duke Class of 2024, and most have already booked their tickets to Durham in the fall.
After reports of debauchery, Duke has cracked down on the Board of Trustees.
In a time when diversity in Greek life is coming under fire, one fraternity has taken a stand.
Surprise! It's April Fools' Day, which can only mean one thing: The Chronicle's evil, satirical twin, The Chomicle. This is the best reporting we've done all year!
The wait is over — “Survivor: Central Campus” is coming to Duke this fall.
Less than two years after the construction of the Rubberstein Arts Center was completed, Duke administrators have decided to call it quits.
Duke has unveiled a new admissions policy designed to boost basketball game attendance: capping the number of nerds admitted to the University.
In a mass Snap to the Duke community, University administrators announced their plan to reimburse students for unused dining and housing fees.
After students were told they couldn’t come back to campus, housing staff committed to going through students’ dorms and retrieving their most prized possessions (as long as those most prized possessions had something to do with their classes).
North Carolina finally has a virtual win, which is the best they can hope for from this season’s team.
Maybe playing all that Mario Kart during your self-isolation is going to pay off, after all.
Editor's Note: This story contains information about a student death that readers may find triggering. Reader discretion is advised.
Senior Greyson Spector has unexpectedly died, wrote Mary Pat McMahon, vice provost and vice president for student affairs, in a Thursday email.
The ongoing COVID-19 pandemic has affected all segments of the Duke community, and graduate and professional students are no exception. The Chronicle wants to know how the coronavirus outbreak has touched your life, both personally and professionally.