Need a study break? Here’s a guide to reading period rest and relaxation at Duke
By Sevana Wenn | December 5, 2022If you’re in need of a quick study break, here are some ideas to practice self-care and stay afloat during these last weeks on campus.
Sevana Wenn is a Trinity sophomore and features managing editor of The Chronicle's 118th volume.
If you’re in need of a quick study break, here are some ideas to practice self-care and stay afloat during these last weeks on campus.
Housed on the first floor of the Flowers building, the Mary Lou Williams Center for Black Culture — known to many simply as “the Lou” — has been a cornerstone of the Black community at Duke since its founding in 1983.
If you spend far too much time browsing DukeHub and scouring Rate My Professor, The Chronicle has you covered. Here are six interesting classes that are sure to spice up your schedule next semester.
It’s a sleepy morning at the Duke Puppy Kindergarten in early October. Inside a cozy room within the Duke Canine Cognition Center, Congo and Nancy are perfectly content. The two dogs — an adult and a puppy Labrador-golden mix — sniff, cuddle and pad around the space without a care in the world.
Junior Sonali Sanjay believes her app could be the future of sparking connections on campus: first at Duke, and potentially at other colleges across the country.
In the first and only scheduled debate of the campaign season, Beasley and Budd discussed their competing visions for North Carolina, exchanging takes on critical issues such as inflation, abortion rights and immigration.
From this January to Sept. 22, they’ve already processed 108,000 packages, with no signs of slowing down.
Budd, a Republican, is running for U.S. Senate against North Carolina Democratic candidate Cheri Beasley.
They assessed the implications of the case and rallied for a voting coalition for the upcoming 2022 midterm elections. The refrain of the evening: “We the people put people over politics.”
“It's like what you see in the movies [about college] came true.”