Live coverage of 2020 election results
As election news pours in, stay tuned to The Chronicle's live blog for up-to-date news on the key local, N.C. and national races.
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As election news pours in, stay tuned to The Chronicle's live blog for up-to-date news on the key local, N.C. and national races.
Nov. 3 is tomorrow.
The 2020 election is almost here—in fact, many have already participated. More than 91.6 million Americans had cast ballots by Sunday, with mail-in and in-person early voting surging as a result of the pandemic that has been the backdrop of this year's race.
It has been a long offseason full of uncertainty in college football, yet the 2020 Duke football season will finally commence as head coach David Cutcliffe and the Blue Devils tackle the new landscape of college athletics.
Going into Duke's season opener on Saturday afternoon, the Blue Zone has previewed all teams the Blue Devils are slated to play in 2020.
The beginning of a Thursday virtual town hall was interrupted by unidentified people who played lewd videos while spamming messages that included a racial slur.
It's been nearly six months since a Duke team took the field for official competition. But college sports are finally back, and with that return comes another fall campaign for Blue Devil men's and women's cross country, field hockey, volleyball and men's and women's soccer.
The words “F*** Rona” were found written at the top of a mural in the Levine Science Research Center last Thursday, an act of vandalism that Toddi Steelman, Stanback dean of the Nicholas School of the Environment, said appears to target the Asian community at Duke.
At the end of every academic year, the Chronicle invites graduating staff to write a senior column examining their time at 301 Flowers.
Commencement might be postponed, but some seniors got the chance to take graduation photos before saying goodbye to campus—and some who couldn't get to campus mocked something up anyway. The Chronicle asked for submissions and put this gallery together to help capture the spirit of graduation.
In the end, senior year may be remembered for the last two months. Still, before the pandemic—before Zoom classes and empty quads and a postponed commencement—the year saw student activism, construction and basketball games for the ages.
The end of the Class of 2020's time at Duke has been anything but typical. With this year's graduation coverage, however, The Chronicle is celebrating their accomplishment in much the same way we always have.
Junior year saw the renaming of an infamous building, an array of controversies and a star-studded basketball season.
Sophomore year witnessed new aspects of campus life—from the welcoming of a new University president to the softball team playing its inaugural season—and a number of high-profile guests visiting campus.
The Class of 2020's first year at Duke featured participation in local and national elections, the announcement of a new University president and an ACC tournament championship for the men’s basketball team.
The wealth gap series is a collection of articles examining how wealth disparities impact students on campus. Released over four days, the articles cover topics from spending habits to resources for low-income students.
To bring some lighthearted news in heavy times, The Chronicle wants to hear about you!
Upon initial news of the changes to Duke class structure, student responses were overwhelmingly distraught.
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.