Freshmen boys in "midget sombreros"
Well, at least they could back in March 1928.
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Well, at least they could back in March 1928.
“Free the Pegram 24!” reads the headline of an editorial submitted to The Chronicle in March 1972.
Last week nine Duke students opted to “Dive into Durham” instead of your typical spring break spot.
This past Friday marked the annual Duke Library party. The theme was “Mad Men and Mad Women: Party like it’s 1965,” inspired by the AMC drama Mad Men. The show follows men and women working in the competitive world of advertising during the 1960s in New York. Fittingly, the Duke Marketing Club hosted the party and the library was decked out in 1960s era ads.
This year Duke ranks among the Peace Corps list of the Top 25 medium sized colleges and universities producing Peace Corps volunteers. There are currently 21 alumni serving abroad, earning Duke the twenty-fifth spot on the list.
It is 1933 and the nation is in the midst of the Great Depression, but you wouldn’t know it from reading The Chronicle’s archives from that year.
“This Week in Chronicle History” is a weekly feature that dives into the depths of The Chronicle archives to recount what was going on then—now. This semester Caitlin Johnson will be writing this weekly feature.
Generic Script
Students may perform better academically if they are treated as gifted, according to a recent U.S. Department of Education study of a North Carolina program.
Haitian artist Edouard Duval-Carrie understands the challenge of summing up a breadth of knowledge into one visual whole.
As the nation works to motivate young voters to go to the polls Nov. 2, North Carolina looks to engage an even younger subset of the population. Through a new law that allows 16- and 17-year-olds to pre-register to vote, the state hopes to get youths interested in democracy and voting at an early age.
A week after the grand opening of Mill Village on Central Campus, Duke kicked off another project designed to improve residential life.
The city of Durham’s 2010-2011 fiscal year’s budget will likely shift gears from focusing on cutting costs to increasing revenue.
The Duke community celebrated Black History Month with a sprinkling of events across campus.
Members of the Duke community affected by the Toyota recall have been forced to choose between altering their daily routines or just hoping their vehicles continue to function normally.
Not only is Chelsea Goldstein the only female Young Trustee finalist, she is also the only independent.