Climbing the beanstalk and the sleeping giant I wish I’d slain
There are few stranger feelings than being underwhelmed by a lifelong dream.
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There are few stranger feelings than being underwhelmed by a lifelong dream.
My life at Duke, in many ways, didn’t start until I walked into The Chronicle’s office. My first time in 301 Flowers was also my first time in a campus building that wasn’t a dorm, classroom or dining hall amid a national lockdown, my first Cookout strawberry milkshake, my first glimpse into 119 years of Duke’s history documented in yellowing print headlines pinned to the walls.
The Chronicle has been a safe haven for me to explore my interests in student journalism and a window for me to learn more about the work of students and people who are a part of the Duke and Durham community.
Once again, head coach Kara Lawson is using the portal to strengthen her team.
After battling through tough conditions in its last regatta, the 14th-ranked Duke rowing team finally saw some sunshine at the Big 10 Invitational in Sarasota, Fla. The Blue Devils raced five boats in 15 races across the two-day meet, walking away with several notable successes.
With the stakes high, the Blue Devils came into game three of a weekend series against Virginia Tech feeling the pressure to triumph against a strong team. The Hokies, looking for a big-time home upset, certainly looked confident in the middle of the game. In the end however, No. 6 Duke rode two late home runs to come out on top 13-10, winning a nail-biting series that saw its first two games each come down to extra innings and the third tied heading into the ninth.
Nearly 40 attendees gathered to walk from the West Campus bus loop to East Campus on Friday as part of Duke Sexual Harassment & Assault Prevention & Education’s Reclaim the Night event, the culmination of a weeklong series honoring Sexual Assault Awareness Month.
"Oh, I know you! I recognize you from ___."
Duke spent all day Friday organizing its tool box. With less than a month to go before the outdoor track and field ACC Championships, the Blue Devils are putting the pieces into place to defend a title for the women and elevate the men to a top-five finish.
Following the Supreme Court's decision to end race-based affirmative action in college admissions, colleges across the nation, including Duke, have begun to sunset race-based scholarship programs under additional pressure from state governments and advocacy organizations.
Sportswrap is your one-stop shop for everything Duke athletics, where we’ll recap how each of Duke’s sports currently in competition performed over the last week and give a brief look ahead. Here’s our recap for the week of April 15-21:
Since I started writing for The Chronicle my sophomore year, one of my friends has insisted I write a column about columns. The closest I’ve gotten is an OP-Ed about the QuadEx arches, but with my final piece for The Chron now here, I figured it was time to finally write my column column. While I know he means the doric and ionic variety, I must, as always, write what I know, which is the type of column you’re reading right now.
If Manny Diaz’s coaching philosophy could be summed up in one word, it would be “excellence.”
CARY, N.C.—Onto NCAAs.
With Duke baseball in the midst of its ACC slate, past Blue Devils are hard at work in the professional ranks. The Blue Zone examines some previous Duke stars playing at the highest levels of the pro game:
It was a day of many firsts for the Blue Devils. New head coach Manny Diaz’s first time in front of Duke football fans in Wallace Wade Stadium. Transfer quarterback Maalik Murphy’s first appearance. In the Blue Devils’ annual Blue & White Game, this time with a revamped format, it was ultimately the defense that prevailed 21-16. While the final score was important for fans, it was the development that mattered for Diaz and the program.
CARY, N.C.—Chants of “Tar–Heels” roared throughout Cary Tennis Park as No. 1-seed North Carolina had taken the doubles point in relatively easy fashion and was out to a 1-0 lead against No.8-seed Duke in Friday’s ACC tournament quarterfinal. Then, after about 20 minutes of doubles play, the rain came.
As the collegiate sports spring season comes to an end, the Blue Zone is here to shine a spot light on the Duke women's tennis team:
After the transfer portal took away seven Duke players, head coach Jon Scheyer brings one in.
The Blue Devils have added a player with experience on the biggest stage.