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Duke Chronicle

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Student newspaper of Duke University
This articleappears to beslanted towards recent events. Please try to keep recent events in historical perspective andadd more content related to non-recent events.(August 2022)

The Chronicle
The front page from September 7, 2020
TypeStudent newspaper
OwnerDuke Student Publishing Company
Editor-in-chiefAna Despa
Managing editorLucas Lin
News editorClaire Cranford
Opinion editorShambhavi Sinha
Sports editorAbby DiSalvo
Photo editorAmy Zhang and Anabel Howery
FoundedDecember 19, 1905; 119 years ago (1905-12-19)
LanguageEnglish
HeadquartersDurham, North Carolina
Websitedukechronicle.com

The Chronicle is a daily student newspaper atDuke University inDurham,North Carolina. It was first published asThe Trinity Chronicle on December 19, 1905. In 1924 Trinity College was renamed Duke University following a donation byJames Buchanan Duke, and in 1925 the paper becameThe Chronicle.[1] Thenameplate was changed toThe Duke Chronicle in 1933.[1][2] During 1970, the nameplate was changed toThe Chronicle (stylized inlowercase) with the subtitle "Duke's Daily Newspaper" (stylized inuppercase anditalics)[3][4] In 1974 it briefly becameThe Duke Chronicle again[5] before switching toThe Chronicle (with no stylization or subtitle).[6]

History

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The Chronicle has a staff of 120, mostly volunteers, including undergraduates atDuke Kunshan University.[7] Its coverage gained national significance in light of the2006 Duke lacrosse team scandal. The paper is independent of the university and as such is governed by a board composed largely of former staff members.

In June 2013,The Chronicle announced it was cutting one day of print heading into the 2013–14 academic year, the paper's 109th volume. The paper's editors and board members emphasized the change was part of a commitment to a digital-first strategy, not the product of financial pressures. The paper gradually cut print production and now only uses print for special sections, focusing instead on online content.

At the 2009 Associated Collegiate Press National College Media Convention inAustin, Texas, the paper won the Best in Show category for four-year daily tabloids.[8] In 2007,The Chronicle took home four awards from the ACP, including Online Story of the Year for its ongoing coverage of the Duke lacrosse scandal. In 2006, the paper took second place in the Best in Show category inSt. Louis, Missouri.Towerview, a monthly newsmagazine distributed with the paper, won Best in Show in the Magazine Feature-Special Audience Category, while its editor, Alex Fanaroff, won first place in the "features story" category.The Chronicle's former editor, Ryan McCartney, placed third in the four-year reporter of the year category.[9] The paper also won Best in Show in the tabloid division in 2005 inKansas City, Missouri and finished in second place in Editorials that year. In addition,Towerview took home fifth-place honors in the magazine division.[10] In October 2015,The Chronicle was again honored by the Associated College Press, taking home its first Online Pacemaker Award, sharing honors withThe Daily Orange andThe Stanford Daily.[11] DegreeChoices awardedThe Duke Chronicle 8th place in the U.S. for Most Organic Traffic. The newspaper had 87,097 website visits during the 2021–2022 academic year. That same year, it was recorded as having 236,090 total social media shares, making it the 7th highest in the U.S.[12]

Journalist andNew York magazine founderClay Felker was an editor ofThe Chronicle while a student at Duke in the 1950s.The Washington Post sports reporterJohn Feinstein was a sports writer forThe Chronicle and was its sports editor for two years.The Wall Street Journal travel editor Scott McCartney was editor ofThe Chronicle in the 1980s.[13] Recent formerChronicle writers have gone on to work forThe Wall Street Journal,Bloomberg News,The Atlantic,PolitiFact,USA Today,TheRaleigh News and Observer andThe Providence Journal, among other publications.[11]

The paper has an annual award in honor of Matt Sclafani, the newspaper's editor for the 1990–91 school year, who was diagnosed with leukemia during his term and died in 1992.[14]

Coverage during the pandemic

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Volume 116 ofThe Chronicle covered Duke, students and faculty during theCOVID-19 pandemic. Despite several staff members working remotely, they moved to one day of print per week, and expanded the digital presence while still publishing roughly 20 stories per week throughout the semester. Editor-in-chief Matthew Griffin, Managing Editor Maria Morrison, Sports Editor Evan Kolin, News Editors Mona Tong and Carter Forinash, Editorial Editor Mihir Bellamkonda, and Senior Editor Rose Wong formed the upper mast team for the volume. This volume was awarded aNational Pacemaker Award by theNational Scholastic Press Association for its coverage.[15]

Notes

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  1. ^abhttps://dukechronicle.com/article/duke-university-duke-chronicle-120th-birthday-look-back-on-coverage-trinity-chronicle-independent-newspaper-student-journalism-we-were-there-centennial-20241219
  2. ^https://repository.duke.edu/dc/dukechronicle?collection=dukechronicle&range%5Byear_facet_iim%5D%5Bbegin%5D%3D1933%26range%5Byear_facet_iim%5D%5Bend%5D%3D1933
  3. ^https://repository.duke.edu/dc/dukechronicle?f%5Bseries_ssim%5D%5B%5D%3DThe+Chronicle
  4. ^https://repository.duke.edu/dc/dukechronicle?f%5Bseries_ssim%5D%5B%5D=The+Duke+Chronicle&page=4&range%5Byear_facet_iim%5D%5Bbegin%5D=1970&range%5Byear_facet_iim%5D%5Bend%5D=2000 see The Duke Chronicle, vol. 66, no. 1 (Tuesday, September 15, 1970)
  5. ^https://repository.duke.edu/dc/dukechronicle?f%5Bseries_ssim%5D%5B%5D=The+Duke+Chronicle&page=4&range%5Byear_facet_iim%5D%5Bbegin%5D=1974&range%5Byear_facet_iim%5D%5Bend%5D=2000
  6. ^https://repository.duke.edu/dc/dukechronicle?f%5Bseries_ssim%5D%5B%5D=The+Duke+Chronicle&page=5&range%5Byear_facet_iim%5D%5Bbegin%5D=1974&range%5Byear_facet_iim%5D%5Bend%5D=2000
  7. ^"Feature | The Kunshan Report".The Chronicle. RetrievedSeptember 16, 2020.
  8. ^Dukechronicle.com
  9. ^Chronicle nabs top awards at national media convention[permanent dead link].The Chronicle. 31 Oct 2006.
  10. ^The Chronicle heralded at conference.The Chronicle. 31 Oct 2005.
  11. ^ab"Newsaboutpapers.weebly.com".
  12. ^Levy, David (October 4, 2022)."We ranked the best college newspapers in 2022 by traffic and engagement".Degreechoices.com. RetrievedAugust 9, 2023.
  13. ^The Wall Street Journal
  14. ^McCartney, Ryan (October 1, 2004)."Legacy of former editor remains alive".The Chronicle. RetrievedOctober 3, 2019.
  15. ^Boyd, Leah (October 15, 2021)."The Chronicle's Vol. 116 wins premier award for online college journalism".The Chronicle. RetrievedJanuary 21, 2022.

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