‘We want challengers’: How did pickleball become Durham’s new favorite sport?
If you thought pickleball was just a sport for retirees, think again. The sport is attracting people of all ages in Durham and is here to stay.
Use the fields below to perform an advanced search of The Chronicle's archives. This will return articles, images, and multimedia relevant to your query. You can also try a Basic search
46 items found for your search. If no results were found please broaden your search.
If you thought pickleball was just a sport for retirees, think again. The sport is attracting people of all ages in Durham and is here to stay.
Trying to meet those looming Trinity course code requirements? Looking to explore more of the quirky classes that Duke offers? Look no further. Here is The Chronicle’s list of nine interesting classes you should take for the spring 2022 semester.
Google and Apple announced in spring 2021 that they would be launching hubs in The Triangle. Now, the Durham community is preparing to grapple with the impact of these huge investments.
The Chronicle has compiled a list of mental health resources at Duke and in the Durham area for members of the LGBTQ+ community.
From students being asked to move out of their assigned rooms the day before the first day of class to broken promises regarding a house course teaching space, student leaders of the Mitchell-White House are frustrated with Duke Housing and Residence Life.
The announcement of Duke’s new QuadEx system has given students a lot to process in terms of what their next few years of residential life will look like.
Duke’s Asian student groups are pushing for the University to establish an Ethnic Studies department and to expand its faculty and courses to include more representation for Asian American, Latinx and Native American people.
Editor's note: This article is part of a series of mayoral and city council candidate profiles. Check back for more throughout the week.
Miss the Good Egg? You might not be the only one, but Panera is here to stay.
Abele Quad was empty on Monday morning, but within the dorms, thousands of students were waking up and preparing for their first day of class, ready to breathe life into a campus that had been under strict pandemic restrictions for almost two years.
Managing a divorce is difficult, but it’s even more difficult when over $124 billion is on the line and the entire world is watching.
When bookbagging opened for the fall 2021 semester on DukeHub, members of the Class of 2024 discovered a detail underneath their courses that many had never seen before: building names and classroom numbers.
It’s a dreary Saturday morning. Grey clouds fill the sky, and the pavement is covered in a thin layer of water from the previous night’s rainfall. My friend has just dropped me off outside the Durham Farmers’ Market.
Confusion and frustration filled the minds of hungry students this past academic year as they waited long hours for their GoBringIt food orders.
When 2,014 high school seniors opened their admissions decisions on April 5, they found an exciting message of congratulations, signed “Sincerely, Christoph Guttentag, Dean of Undergraduate Admissions.”
It’s not every day that you open your phone in the morning and laugh at a tweet from one of your city’s Twitter accounts. Discover Durham, however, is determined to make you do just that.
With Duke planning for a “close to normal” fall semester, many on-campus groups may have the chance to resume their activities and hold in-person events again, including Duke’s seven living learning communities.
If there were ever a building that embodied the phrase “jack of all trades,” the Karsh Alumni and Visitors Center would be it.
In the midst of many lost opportunities due to the pandemic, Duke’s work-study program has persisted by making adjustments to align with new safety regulations.
As students returned to campus this semester, many were dismayed to discover their favorite spots to eat on campus had been temporarily closed.