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The independent news organization at Duke University FRIDAY, AUGUST 22, 2025
By Lucas Lin
ONLINE DAILY AT DUKECHRONICLE.COM
ONE HUNDRED AND TWENTY-FIRST YEAR, ISSUE 2
Welcome back to campus! Here's what you missed:
August 20, 2025
With the start of the fall semester just around the corner, The Chronicle has recapped the key stories you might have missed over the summer. Duke, a university that has largely avoided confrontation with the White House, now finds itself in the federal government’s crosshairs. As tensions with the Trump administration escalated in recent months, Duke’s strategy of silence has prompted calls by campus community members that the institution stay true to its mission and not yield to pressure. The University’s first standoff with the Trump administration this summer took place when the chairmen of two U.S. House of Representatives committees called on Duke to close Duke Kunshan University, a partnership with Wuhan University, over alleged “safety concerns.” The letter was met with discontent from the DKU community, who stressed the importance of the campus in building understanding between the U.S. and China. Duke also saw the loss of millions in
federal money due to funding freezes, grant terminations and reductions in research budgets. On May 30, the Trump administration terminated funding to the Center for HIV/AIDS Vaccine Development, which was valued at $129 million. The administration had canceled 28 grants by July with funding from the National Institutes of Health, targeting research that focused on “equity-related” areas. However, many of the grants were either incorrectly singled out for containing keywords like “expression,” “disability,” “trans” and “systemic” that were not used in the context of DEI or only had a DEIrelated training program. Two months later, Duke was reportedly subject to a freeze of $108 million in NIH funding after federal agencies launched investigations into the University and Duke Health for alleged “systemic racial discrimination” and violations of the Civil Rights Act. The financial strain has forced the University to adopt a “strategic realignment and cost-reduction process.” The University has set a target of
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reducing $350 million — roughly 10% of the University’s total expense base. The School of Medicine announced plans to slash $125 million by next year due to NIH cuts. In addition to reducing discretionary spending, the institution has downsized personnel through voluntary separation incentive programs, faculty retirement incentives and involuntary layoffs. Part of the School of Medicine’s costcutting measures also include a faculty productivity guideline that would tie tenured professors’ salaries to external research funding. The guideline, set to go in effect in 2026, has prompted concerns over a lack of faculty governance. The institution has also shifted its diversity, equity and inclusion strategy following the Trump administration’s DEI crackdown. On May 7, the University announced a new approach to “inclusive excellence,” aimed at making University programming available to all community members. A month later, the University presented a set of 10 inclusive excellence principles that include prohibitions on restricting access to groups based on See RECAP on Page 9
Ninth Street's Nearly 600 to depart under voluntary staples program, layoffs to follow in August family-owned and newcomers
By Ana Despa
July 25, 2025
Nearly 600 staff members are leaving Duke through the University’s voluntary separation incentive program, with involuntary layoffs scheduled to begin in August. The announcement came in a Friday morning email to faculty and staff from Executive Vice President Daniel Ennis, Provost Alec Gallimore and Mary Klotman, executive vice president for health affairs. The sweeping personnel cuts are expected to significantly reshape University operations, with some departments more heavily affected than others. Duke administration has not responded to The Chronicle’s requests for comment on the breakdown of departures by department. However, The Chronicle has received multiple reports of broad cuts across the libraries, student affairs, Office of Information Technology and communications. The VSIP targeted staff across a range of seniority levels and tenures, The Chronicle confirmed. Several of those departing have publicly announced departures on LinkedIn, including long-
serving and well-known members of the Duke community. “We are sad to see these valued colleagues and members of our community leave Duke, and we thank them for their many contributions and dedicated service,” the administrators wrote. The program was first announced April 30, with offers extended in early May. Staff receiving the offers had 45 days to accept or decline, during which they were largely prohibited from discussing the terms or their decisions with anyone outside their family or legal counsel. Legal support could be sought but was not provided by Duke and much of the severance package was covered by a non-disclosure agreement, multiple sources told The Chronicle. A total of 599 staff accepted a VSIP offer, and many are leaving the University this week. Under the VSIP, positions eliminated through the program cannot be reinstated by their departments or units for up to three years. This restriction is compounded by a staff hiring freeze, limiting the ability of departments to replace lost labor. The Chronicle See VSIP on Page 9
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By Bhavika Verma
August 20, 2025
Bordering East Campus to the west, Broad Street and Ninth Street greet tourists with small restaurants nestled among Harris Teeter and Whole Foods. To longtime Durham residents and Duke alumni, however, these streets hold enduring staples alongside a revolving door of newcomers. Monuts has been a Ninth Street staple for years, after its humble beginnings in 2011 as a donut stand operating “off a tricycle” near the Durham Farmer’s Market. The now successful counterservice restaurant and bakery was founded by chefs and owners Lindsay Moriarty and Rob Gillespie. From unique donut flavors, like Earl Grey chocolate and PB & J, to fresh breakfast sandwiches, Monuts is the place to go for weekend brunch. Along with bakery items, Monuts serves a variety of beverages and seasonal drinks that range from honey lavender lattes to coconut Vietnamese iced coffee. In the same breakfast lane, Elmo’s Diner has been serving the Durham community for more than 20 years. The See NINTH ST on Page 13
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Ryan Kilgallen To view more move-in pictures, visit our website at dukechronicle.com
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