Fourth fraternity chapter disciplined: New member activities suspended at Kappa Alpha
By Ben Leonard | February 7, 2019Duke’s chapter of Kappa Alpha Order's new member activities have been suspended.
Duke’s chapter of Kappa Alpha Order's new member activities have been suspended.
In its search to find new food trucks for campus next year, the Duke University Dining Advisory Committee tried food hailing from Buffalo, N.Y.
Stelfanie Williams, Trinity '98 and Duke’s vice president for Durham affairs, told the Duke Student Government Senate Wednesday night that she hopes to strengthen the connection between Duke and the local community.
Several buildings at Duke are decorated with the crests of other schools, such as the University of Oxford, the University of Cambridge, Harvard University, Yale University and Princeton University. Although the exact reason for the crests is unknown, documents from the University Archives provide some clues to their past.
After a number of racist incidents struck campus in the past year, there is a renewed drive on campus to develop Duke's ability to respond to hate and bias.
Three finalists for the graduate young trustee position have been announced by the Graduate Young Trustee Selection Committee.
Icona Pop is coming to Krzyzewskiville.
Interfraternity Council issued a statement Monday regarding hazing allegations that resulted in the interim suspension of three fraternity chapters at Duke.
Friday evening, President Vincent Price and 35 other members of the University’s leadership sent an email to all students, faculty and staff, in response to a controversy that erupted last weekend after a director of graduate studies sent an email telling students to not speak Chinese in the building.
Sophomore Jake Satisky will serve as the editor-in-chief of The Chronicle’s 115th volume.
About 21 percent of students in the Class of 2018 pursued a double major, but some overlaps were much more common than others.
Lawsuits allege that Duke covered up child sexual abuse that came “as a result of their negligence” at the now-shuttered Camp Kaleidoscope.
The four candidates for Young Trustee gave speeches to Duke Student Government’s Senate meeting Wednesday night.
The Duke University Student Dining Advisory Committee is gearing up for its annual food truck rodeo.
At The Regulator Bookshop Tuesday night, a Duke professor talked to the mayor about the federal government’s role in empowering women.
When Bulgarian soldiers ransacked an Eastern Orthodox monastery in Greece on March 27, 1917, they allegedly took the ancient manuscripts housed in its library, three of which are currently stored at Duke's Rubenstein Library. The Eastern Orthodox Church wants them back.
When the Paradise Papers made headlines in 2017, the confidential documents revealed Duke’s investments in Ferrous Resources—a company whose plans to build a controversial pipeline sparked years of protests in Brazil.
"The woods are lovely, dark and deep / But I have promises to keep / And miles to go before I sleep / And miles to go before I sleep." Aside from being an exhausted refrain for caffeinated, cramming college students, this is the closing passage of the 1923 poem "Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening" by Robert Frost. The poem, and all other U.S. works published in 1923 or before, just joined the public domain—20 years late.
In the first marquee men’s basketball game at Cameron Indoor Stadium since the Carolina walk-up line devolved into a drunk mob, security in Krzyzewskiville looked quite different than what undergraduate fans were used to.
After stepping down from her role as director of graduate studies, Megan Neely apologized for her email that told students not to speak Chinese.