Letter: 'He was infinite': Friend honors Raj Mehta
By Javin Schwartzman | March 31, 2020You hardly needed to speak for Raj to understand you, empathy was just innate to his being.
You hardly needed to speak for Raj to understand you, empathy was just innate to his being.
It is pretty hard to have sex with someone who's at least six feet away from you.
The University has not sought our input as it has made decisions affecting our health and livelihood, and many of us are struggling.
I haven’t watched her interview, but I know what she said. I believe Tara Reade.
Raj, I will never forget you. You deserved the world. Thank you for always taking care of me and everyone around you.
Raj, you will remain missed by so many in this community and beyond.
It feels like the coronavirus is something that we ordinary people can’t do much to impact besides washing our hands diligently and staying home. Passing the days by in quarantine can make us feel like passive, if not powerless, observers—or perhaps hostages.
Last week, for the first time in my life, my parents warned me that my identity might put me in danger and urged me to be careful in public.
The Chronicle is accepting letters to the editor remembering Grey and Raj. If you would like to share your thoughts and feelings, please submit letters to chronicleletters@duke.edu.
It is not normal to lose two of our friends in the span of a few days.
Duke was a leader in making pass/fail grading widely available during this crisis. That should just be the start of reevaluating how we grade.
Do not forget each other, do not let the bonds of comradery and familiarity wane, do not allow our campus culture to be shattered by this virus.
So you’ve regressed into a vegetative state watching TikTok in bed as you pretend not to hear your mother calling.
At first I thought I might use this time to get in shape, maybe pick up running. But it is currently 30 degrees in Vermont and there is still snow on the ground, so that might have to wait a couple weeks.
It’s easy for Duke students to believe that our lives are exceptions from the rest of the population and that our time is the most valuable thing on Earth. But maybe it isn’t.
“I just think part-timers should get the same type of benefit(s) as full-timers since we do the same work as them, you know?” Angel said.
Look. You live here. You’re breathing.
Campus is immaculate in a way that is only possible in human places devoid of people.
Although COVID-19 has brought death and exacerbated societal inequities and increased feelings of isolation and loneliness, this virus has united humanity in our shared vulnerability.
Perhaps the hardest part of this pandemic is surviving in quarantine. Toilet Paper is at an all-time low. Please consider using both Tar Heel Shirts and your old midterms to wipe your ass.