Class of 2023 survey: All our coverage
This is The Chronicle's third year of surveying the first-year class.
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This is The Chronicle's third year of surveying the first-year class.
This week, The Chronicle will release survey data about the Class of 2023.
Stephen Miller, White House senior advisor and Trinity ‘07, drew a firestorm of media attention this week after hundreds of his emails with a former Breitbart editor were reported by the Southern Poverty Law Center.
From Kyra Lambert's buzzer-beating return for the women's basketball team, to the men's basketball team taking down Kansas in a surprise win at the Champions Classic, it was a busy week for Duke basketball.
There’s smoke billowing out of the Central Campus apartment building. A fireman pulls a ladder from an engine truck, and others file into the smoky black hole of what once was a Duke undergraduate’s front door.
Duke's Advisory Committee on Investment Responsibility holds it annual open forum in the Holst-Anderson Room in the library.
Duke’s Sanford School of Public Policy drew some ire when it decided not to renew Professor Evan Charney’s contract and he had to stop teaching at the end of the Spring 2019 semester.
Can't decide whether to take a Bird or Spin scooter to class? The Chronicle tested out both to see which was fastest.
Have you tried riding one of the new electric scooters that popped up on Duke's campus this year? Managing Editor Nathan Luzum tried one out for the first time... and things didn't exactly go as planned.
Marcia Abbott graduated from Duke in 1981, and she and her husband went to illicit ends in an attempt to help their daughter follow in her footsteps.
Dan McCready, Trinity ‘05, is shaking hands with elected officials and taking selfies with supporters in between bites of a cheeseburger and potato chips. McCready, who is running for Congress to represent the 9th District of North Carolina, has never held elected office.
Abbas Benmamoun grew up in a small Moroccan town in the Rif Mountains, dotted by olive groves and abutting the ruins of a Roman colonial town. He was one in a family of eight who enjoyed playing soccer with his friends.
Ever since it became clear that the wheels on the Robertson Express Bus would no longer be going ‘round and ‘round, the Robertson program has been looking for an alternative way to get scholars all through the town.
Duke has launched a new university-wide Office of Research, and Lawrence Carin, James L. Meriam professor of electrical and computer engineering, will take the helm as the new vice president of research.
After the Triangle’s decades-long courtship with the Durham-Orange Light Rail Transit project came to a crashing halt earlier this year, the region appears to be looking for a mass transit rebound.
A controversial conference on Gaza held by the Duke-University of North Carolina Consortium for Middle East Studies drew backlash earlier this year, with some calling aspects of it anti-Semitic.
Chelsea Decaminada, Trinity ‘15, died May 4 due to injuries she sustained during terrorist attacks on Sri Lankan churches and hotels on Easter Sunday.
When Evan Charney’s contract came up for renewal last spring, he did not expect that it would be shot down.
“Get lost. Get lost in your classes, get lost in your extracurriculars. Just get lost, and sooner or later all the dots will connect.”
As the national college admissions dumpster fire sees a wave of plea deals, Duke is looking inward to make sure that no such problems exist here.