A COVID-19 treatment may be developed in N.C., but the therapy's cost remains uncertain
A medical facility in Clayton, North Carolina, could be crucial to the development of a treatment for COVID-19.
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A medical facility in Clayton, North Carolina, could be crucial to the development of a treatment for COVID-19.
The UNC System won’t be getting fully repaid on a $2.5 million trust it provided a controversial Confederate group last year in a backdoor deal that has since crumbled under public scrutiny and a judge’s re-examination.
After UNC’s preventive efforts against the spread of COVID-19 expanded to online classes last month, students and faculty alike bade farewell to many traditional parts of campus life: the busyness of the Pit at lunchtime, mass gatherings in the quad and quiet library study grinds.
In the past, Faydene Alston had only been a floor monitor in Davis Library. She took out the trash and cleaned floors.
“The last couple days, I haven’t really slept.”
A court order last month retroactively killed the UNC System’s backdoor dealing of Silent Sam to a Confederate group after months of nationwide criticism, legal challenges and undisclosed leaks detailing a courtroom collusion effort.
Despite a late entry into the Democratic Party's 2020 primary, billionaire and former New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg is raking in support for his presidential campaign from several significant North Carolina officials.
More than a month after Richard Harrill’s abrupt dismissal from the role of Campus Y executive director, questions remain about where the institution is headed.
Two drastically different events combined to stir political controversy in Chatham County over Valentine’s Day weekend.
Content warning: This article discusses sensitive topics such as sexual assault, harassment and stalking.
With a $15 lingerie set, over 1,000 Snapchat viewers and a temporary email address, Vanessa can make $1,000 in a day.
Just weeks after New Year’s Day a few years ago, farmer Ken Dawson studied his blooming blueberry bushes with concern.
Last August, the University announced that Brad Ives, chief sustainability officer, would be leaving his role to “pursue other opportunities.” New documents obtained by The Daily Tar Heel show that he was fired.
A small circle of UNC System leaders gave $74,999 to the North Carolina Division Sons of Confederate Veterans Inc. two months ago, advancing a larger goal that both groups have concealed from public knowledge.
Approximately three miles from UNC’s campus, nearly 100 enslaved people are buried in largely unmarked graves at a historic family cemetery.
A decorated government watchdog is attributing years of illegal political activity to the North Carolina Division Sons of Confederate Veterans Inc. in a new complaint to the State Board of Elections, recommending major penalties against the pro-Confederate nonprofit that received a $2.5 million trust and $74,999 payment through backdoor dealings with the UNC System last November.
Every February for the past 15 years, UNC's African American History Month Lecture has showcased a Black scholar to discuss their research. As of a couple weeks ago, however, none of the University bodies traditionally involved in planning the event could speak to concrete plans for its 2020 iteration.
UPDATE: As a result of this reporting by The Daily Tar Heel and independent follow-up research, veteran campaign finance watchdog Bob Hall filed a complaint with North Carolina's State Board of Elections on Jan. 22. He recommended major penalties against the North Carolina Division Sons of Confederate Veterans Inc. that include the disgorgement of $28,500 that the NC Heritage PAC has contributed to Republican officials statewide since 2016.
Internal conflict has intensified within the North Carolina Division Sons of Confederate Veterans Inc. since its questionable settlement with the UNC System weeks ago.
The past decade has seen UNC's handling of sexual assault scrutinized by federal investigators, fed up students and a rising wave of survivor activism.