Lord of the Loop
Every other Thursday, a few employees and managers of The Loop Pizza Grill and a few of its regular college customers get together to have a little tournament and play Mario Super Smash Brothers.
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Every other Thursday, a few employees and managers of The Loop Pizza Grill and a few of its regular college customers get together to have a little tournament and play Mario Super Smash Brothers.
Every other Thursday, a few employees and managers of The Loop Pizza Grill, as well as several loyal college customers, get together to have a little tournament and play Mario Super Smash Brothers.
From FDOC to LDOC: a dictionary of Duke terms
This is one entry of the "Ten People to Watch" list in July's Towerview.
Transportation from Sam Veraldi, who assumed the position of visiting associate professor in the Markets and Managements Studies program. But the change made a small staff even smaller—with Harden still fulfilling the duties of her former position as Assistant Director for Strategies and multiple assistant director positions vacant, she said the staff has pitched in to overcome the staff shortage. The Chronicle's Hailey Cunningham spoke with Harden about the transition.
Silently unscrew a grate behind an East Campus residence hall in the dead of night, crawl through a painfully small window, strategically feel for footholds below, shimmy down a pipe and hope the floor is close when you let go.
Meet senior Eric Stach—the Crazy fan in the front row of every men’s basketball game for the last four years and one of the residents of the first tent for the Duke-UNC game his entire Duke career. This year, to earn their spot, Stach and his tentmates began Black Tenting Jan. 19 and placed first in a competition among black tents that used data on attendance at games and scores in a trivia contest. The Chronicle's Hailey Cunningham sat down with Stach to talk about basketball, tenting tips and the half time Harris Teeter gift card challenge.
A new multi-campus initiative is working to connect and empower active feminist leaders from Duke and The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.
A brightly colored flag adorned with music notes now marks the expanded location of High Strung Violins and Guitars on the corner of West Markham and Broad Streets in Durham.
Three new athletic practice and recreation fields–two artificial turfs and one grass–will open to all students and faculty Dec. 13.
The family gathers around the table, decorated with a cornucopia of gelt, and donned yarmulkes adorned with Pilgrim-inspired buckles. The starters include potato latkes with cranberry applesauce, while the main meal consists of Maneschewitz-brined roast turkey, sweet potato noodle kugel, challah-apple stuffing and horseradish-chive mashed potatoes. Pecan pie rugelach and rye pumpkin pie are featured as the desserts.
Health officials are getting a jump on administering flu shots to prevent an influx of illness during the peak of flu season.
Despite five people getting injured while riding "the Vortex," families and groups of teenagers still poured into the fairgrounds of the North Carolina State Fair this year.
Unwilling test subjects and mad scientists will roam the halls of Epworth Dormitory this Halloween from 6 to 9 p.m. when students convert the East Campus dorm into a research center gone wrong for its annual haunted house.
On Lilly Library’s second floor, students sit at long benches completing calculus assignments, while some type Writing 20 papers at desks facing East Campus’ Main Quad. Some teeter organic chemistry textbooks on their laps in oversized armchairs and others nap on striped couches. It’s a peaceful and quiet space, in a conveniently located, air-conditioned library, with gorgeous Asian decorations.
Drinkers in downtown Raleigh will soon face a greater chance of enforcement if they drive while intoxicated.
A flock of medical and public policy students and professors descended on Duke South Clinic Amphitheater to discuss health care reform in Canada and the United States.
Sophomore Connor Hann is double majoring in math and physics. But one of his classes last year stood out among the others on his schedule—Grief Work: End of Life Care in Russia and America—a course Hann took because he, like all Trinity freshmen, are required to enroll in a seminar.
“No way. Can we watch?”