Does anyone get in Duke

Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:At the buzzer!


Christian Laettner's shot was pretty great. And our fans don't punch people from opposing teams.


Three decades ago, grandpa.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:At the buzzer!


Christian Laettner's shot was pretty great. And our fans don't punch people from opposing teams.


But your fans do smugly chant "stu-pid! stu-pid!" at players of less-prestigious schools. Absolutely zero class. Can't imagine fans of any other top 20 school behaving this way.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:At the buzzer!


Christian Laettner's shot was pretty great. And our fans don't punch people from opposing teams.


It’s been almost 20 hours since the game ended. There were multitude of videos and camera footage of the game and ending. Zero evidence has been presented of anyone getting punched. NONE. There are no victims coming forward saying they were punched. No photos or other evidence of any injuries. Literally nothing.

Cam Boozer was standing under the basket waiting and didn’t know what to do. You know who protected him, the UNC athletic director Cunningham. He stayed next to him, telling him to not move and stick with him until this all got sorted out.

Scheyer lied and knew that he was lying and should at a minimum be fined. To make statements like this, of multiple victims being assaulted, are defamatory, unprofessional and just wrong. Take the L like a mature and professional coach. He did something similar against Wake Forest 2 years ago, claiming Filapowski was severally hurt and had to go to the hospital for treatment and would need to be out for several games. Well, guess what…..

You know who stomps on the chest of players when they’re laying on the ground? Duke. You know who breaks players noses? Duke. You know who trips players? Duke (3 different ones).

Anonymous
Anonymous wrote: My nephew who had all the expected stats, was valedictorian, had amazing ECs and was a legacy was rejected a few years ago ED. He went to an Ivy but Duke was his first choice. I don’t know anybody who gets in but obviously someone does since they fill their freshman class each year.


DD’s hs takes about 6 per year: legacy, sports, regular smart
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:At the buzzer!


Christian Laettner's shot was pretty great. And our fans don't punch people from opposing teams.


It’s been almost 20 hours since the game ended. There were multitude of videos and camera footage of the game and ending. Zero evidence has been presented of anyone getting punched. NONE. There are no victims coming forward saying they were punched. No photos or other evidence of any injuries. Literally nothing.

Cam Boozer was standing under the basket waiting and didn’t know what to do. You know who protected him, the UNC athletic director Cunningham. He stayed next to him, telling him to not move and stick with him until this all got sorted out.

Scheyer lied and knew that he was lying and should at a minimum be fined. To make statements like this, of multiple victims being assaulted, are defamatory, unprofessional and just wrong. Take the L like a mature and professional coach. He did something similar against Wake Forest 2 years ago, claiming Filapowski was severally hurt and had to go to the hospital for treatment and would need to be out for several games. Well, guess what…..

You know who stomps on the chest of players when they’re laying on the ground? Duke. You know who breaks players noses? Duke. You know who trips players? Duke (3 different ones).



What motivation does Scheyer have to lie? You Tar Heels are truly getting desperate. So sad. And so many of the rest of your facts are so off. And the league has rules about court storming so get ready for some fines. That will reduce the budget for crayons.

At least our players take real classes. You have a well documented, ongoing case of your school being an academic joke.
Anonymous
Duke, like birds, is not real.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:At the buzzer!


Christian Laettner's shot was pretty great. And our fans don't punch people from opposing teams.


It’s been almost 20 hours since the game ended. There were multitude of videos and camera footage of the game and ending. Zero evidence has been presented of anyone getting punched. NONE. There are no victims coming forward saying they were punched. No photos or other evidence of any injuries. Literally nothing.

Cam Boozer was standing under the basket waiting and didn’t know what to do. You know who protected him, the UNC athletic director Cunningham. He stayed next to him, telling him to not move and stick with him until this all got sorted out.

Scheyer lied and knew that he was lying and should at a minimum be fined. To make statements like this, of multiple victims being assaulted, are defamatory, unprofessional and just wrong. Take the L like a mature and professional coach. He did something similar against Wake Forest 2 years ago, claiming Filapowski was severally hurt and had to go to the hospital for treatment and would need to be out for several games. Well, guess what…..

You know who stomps on the chest of players when they’re laying on the ground? Duke. You know who breaks players noses? Duke. You know who trips players? Duke (3 different ones).



What motivation does Scheyer have to lie? You Tar Heels are truly getting desperate. So sad. And so many of the rest of your facts are so off. And the league has rules about court storming so get ready for some fines. That will reduce the budget for crayons.

At least our players take real classes. You have a well documented, ongoing case of your school being an academic joke.


Scheyer absolutely lied. There is no footage at all of any staff or player being punched in the face. Post it here if there is any. There is none.

Laettner stomped on Kentucky’s Timberlake’s chest. Where do you think “I hate Laettner” comes from. Henderson broke Hansbrough’s nose and was ejected. Plenty of gross, bloody photos and videos of that too. Allen and Filapowski both repeatedly tripped players. Again, all on video.

So photos or videos of Carolina students punching Duke players and staff in the face or it didn’t happen. I don’t care what Scheyer’s motivation is. But he owes the school an apology.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:I find it funny how much this forum reveres Duke because of how few they take from the DMV. Perceptions of schools on here are just driven by perceived exclusivity, and it's gross.


It's not just perceived exclusivity. Duke has become known as a well rounded college experience where kids can have fun, attend sports games and also get a top notch education, while places like Princeton and Yale are known for being competitive and grindy with kids competing with another to get into clubs. A lot of students (and their parents) want their kids to be in a more well rounded college environment and the weather helps too. Also, with the protests, lots of Jewish parents have been souring on schools like Columbia and Harvard. My Asian American, STEM-loving DD with very high stats applied ED to Duke and was deferred.


Proud Duke alum here. Unfortunately, I hate to say it but though likely still more relaxed than HYP, Duke has gotten a lot more intense and grindy than it used to be. Kids are more competitive. It has its share of obnoxious pre-Wall Street club and the like. I am not very happy with what is happening with my beloved alma mater and I'm debating whether I want my child to go there. My current take is that they can still have a great time and won't feel obligated to fall in with that crowd, but I will be doing my homework. And I'm trying to figure out what a better option is that is academically rigorous but not super cut-throat.


Curious. What's the downside of "that crowd"? Not snark. I have no background in finance or WS.


See the striver thread that was around a month or two ago. The clubs started with the really good intention of helping kids who don't know a lot about finance prepare, which is admirable. They have now become cultish gatekeepers. I graduated from Duke and went to Wall Street. At the time it was a pretty chill process and most of it happened senior year - internships were helpful but not critical and were much more organic. Now it is all-consuming, starts ridiculously early, and the stress is worse than getting into college. It permeates the campus. Again, I think Duke is less bad than a lot of the other top 10 schools, but it is still just a less happy place to go to school than it used to be. Not everyone gets caught up in it but too many do.


How do Duke kids actually get hired for these WS and consulting internships?

Does everything actually run through the clubs? Are they now the intermediaries between the firms and the applicants? Or is there a path where Duke kids get interviews and offers without being part of that club process?


This is what I've heard - I think others who are closer to it can help. I think that banks like kids from these clubs because it makes it easier for them - these clubs theoretically screen (not sure what the criteria is) and also do some training, so their applicants to banks are basically pre-screened. The days of the banks being willing to hire a really bright English or biology major with minimal relevant background but who can easily be trained are long gone, which is really a shame.

Also, there are a lot of kids from these clubs at the banks and they get involved in recruiting and like to hire other kids from the club. So it is not that different from kids from a frat or team hiring others from their frat or team. I'm sure plenty of other kids get jobs, either based on merit/potential (what a novel idea!) and/or through other personal connections.

The problem is compounded by how accelerated the recruiting cycle is. It is critical to get an internship for summer after junior year, and recruiting for that starts early (I think early sophomore year?). So now you need to arrive at college knowing exactly what you want to do. Rather than using the time to grow, explore different things, take some risks, etc.


The three paragraphs that follow after your first sentence are interesting, and I can see how they might be true. I can also see how they can be a bunch of conjecture strung together to tell a story about how it's a shame these selective/exclusive clubs have so much influence in the recruiting process.

I'd really love to hear from people whose kids actually ARE at Duke and interning in IB or consulting or are recent Duke grads in those fields.

For your kids, was membership in the related Duke consulting/IB clubs required or even useful for getting those internships or jobs?

I'm asking because I'm genuinely curious and wondering wether this all a bit of a FOMO story. Like kids are worried they need to join these gatekept clubs because this is "what [they've] "heard" they have to do - even if it's not actually true.
Anonymous
I am an investment banker. We interview kids from all over. No one is getting an initial interview because they are in one of those clubs, at least for us. I could see its membership making for an easy starter list for banks interviewing at lesser target (or even nontarget) schools. Where it does help (at a Duke or anywhere else) is in providing students a bit of content to discuss and understanding about the job and what is needed to succeed in it. That's it. No one is impressed by the club's work or rigor. The little bits of training you receive don't accelerate your development. It just shows you have an interest and gives you a low baseline understanding of the gig.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:I find it funny how much this forum reveres Duke because of how few they take from the DMV. Perceptions of schools on here are just driven by perceived exclusivity, and it's gross.


It's not just perceived exclusivity. Duke has become known as a well rounded college experience where kids can have fun, attend sports games and also get a top notch education, while places like Princeton and Yale are known for being competitive and grindy with kids competing with another to get into clubs. A lot of students (and their parents) want their kids to be in a more well rounded college environment and the weather helps too. Also, with the protests, lots of Jewish parents have been souring on schools like Columbia and Harvard. My Asian American, STEM-loving DD with very high stats applied ED to Duke and was deferred.


Proud Duke alum here. Unfortunately, I hate to say it but though likely still more relaxed than HYP, Duke has gotten a lot more intense and grindy than it used to be. Kids are more competitive. It has its share of obnoxious pre-Wall Street club and the like. I am not very happy with what is happening with my beloved alma mater and I'm debating whether I want my child to go there. My current take is that they can still have a great time and won't feel obligated to fall in with that crowd, but I will be doing my homework. And I'm trying to figure out what a better option is that is academically rigorous but not super cut-throat.


Curious. What's the downside of "that crowd"? Not snark. I have no background in finance or WS.


See the striver thread that was around a month or two ago. The clubs started with the really good intention of helping kids who don't know a lot about finance prepare, which is admirable. They have now become cultish gatekeepers. I graduated from Duke and went to Wall Street. At the time it was a pretty chill process and most of it happened senior year - internships were helpful but not critical and were much more organic. Now it is all-consuming, starts ridiculously early, and the stress is worse than getting into college. It permeates the campus. Again, I think Duke is less bad than a lot of the other top 10 schools, but it is still just a less happy place to go to school than it used to be. Not everyone gets caught up in it but too many do.


How do Duke kids actually get hired for these WS and consulting internships?

Does everything actually run through the clubs? Are they now the intermediaries between the firms and the applicants? Or is there a path where Duke kids get interviews and offers without being part of that club process?


This is what I've heard - I think others who are closer to it can help. I think that banks like kids from these clubs because it makes it easier for them - these clubs theoretically screen (not sure what the criteria is) and also do some training, so their applicants to banks are basically pre-screened. The days of the banks being willing to hire a really bright English or biology major with minimal relevant background but who can easily be trained are long gone, which is really a shame.

Also, there are a lot of kids from these clubs at the banks and they get involved in recruiting and like to hire other kids from the club. So it is not that different from kids from a frat or team hiring others from their frat or team. I'm sure plenty of other kids get jobs, either based on merit/potential (what a novel idea!) and/or through other personal connections.

The problem is compounded by how accelerated the recruiting cycle is. It is critical to get an internship for summer after junior year, and recruiting for that starts early (I think early sophomore year?). So now you need to arrive at college knowing exactly what you want to do. Rather than using the time to grow, explore different things, take some risks, etc.


The three paragraphs that follow after your first sentence are interesting, and I can see how they might be true. I can also see how they can be a bunch of conjecture strung together to tell a story about how it's a shame these selective/exclusive clubs have so much influence in the recruiting process.

I'd really love to hear from people whose kids actually ARE at Duke and interning in IB or consulting or are recent Duke grads in those fields.

For your kids, was membership in the related Duke consulting/IB clubs required or even useful for getting those internships or jobs?

I'm asking because I'm genuinely curious and wondering wether this all a bit of a FOMO story. Like kids are worried they need to join these gatekept clubs because this is "what [they've] "heard" they have to do - even if it's not actually true.


Agreed. I am the poster you are responding to. I was very careful to qualify my remark because I am so tired of people posting here acting like experts when they are not. I admittedly am not an expert on the topic, so wanted to make it clear and encourage those who might have more direct experience to opine. As a Duke alum investment banker who knows a lot of kids there now, I am smarter than the average bear on the topic, but still not an expert as I am not involved in on-campus recruiting anymore and don't interact with very junior people out of Duke.

My hypothesis was based on speaking with a few kids who recently graduated who work in finance. I had a conversation with a kid who was a year or two out working in finance who told me about his career path and credited the club with helping him. And another kid told me something similar. But I am smart enough to know not to make broad generalizations based on a few data points. I think the other poster above provided helpful info, but again is also just one data point.

I do think these clubs give good preparation that helps kids to shine in interviews (at firms that place weight on technical acumen - back when I interviewed for my bank, I usually didn't care - I wanted brain power and personality and figured we could teach them the details - I know that has largely changed). And I do think there is some degree of kids who were in the clubs who get involved in hiring favoring those who are now in the clubs. But I don't think this is a huge percentage of roles filled. Their power is likely exaggerated by those in the clubs. But they do have a meaningful impact, and they have made campus life and the investment banking recruiting process a lot more toxic, which is unfortunate.
Anonymous
Nope, nobody gets in. The place is deserted.
Anonymous
Several get in RD from TJ every year. And several get in during ED.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:I only know of legacies - and only the kids of big donors

This.
Anonymous
Duke is the place to go now. Add in Vandy as a Duke safety. Both offer a lot more than the tired old Ivies. Other than HYP, Duke offers so much more.
Anonymous
Apparently no one who can guard the 3 in the last 2 minutes of a rivalry game.
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