This app made by two UNC alumnae allows teens to discuss sensitive topics
After years of preparation and development, two UNC alumna’s teenage education app now has over 15,000 downloads.
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After years of preparation and development, two UNC alumna’s teenage education app now has over 15,000 downloads.
Editor's note: This editorial discusses sensitive topics such as sexual assault.
Editor's note: This column discusses sensitive topics such as sexual assault.
Every full-time undergraduate and graduate student at UNC pays a mandatory $200.08 Campus Health fee each term as a part of our tuition and fees. Point being, you already pay for these services — utilize them! Here’s what all students have coverage for under this fee:
DTH Photo Illustration. DFSAs, or drug-facilitated sexual assaults, reportedly make up about 75% of all occurrences of sexual assault.
DTH Photo Illustration. DFSAs, or drug facilitated sexual assaults, reportedly make up about 75 percent of all occurrences of sexual assault.
Content warning: This article contains graphic depictions of drug-facilitated sexual assault.
Imagine living in a country where you could be fired for joining a softball league or wearing women’s clothing. That country could very well be the United States in a few months.
Content Warning: This piece contains discussion about sexual assault and domestic violence.
Editor's note: this article discusses sensitive topics such as sexual assault.
CORRECTION: A previous version of this article misstated Maya Weinstein's year at UNC. She is a third-year law student. Also, Weinstein's statements about a listening session on Yom Kippur were misconstrued. She was scheduled to lead a listening session for graduate and professional students on Yom Kippur, which she would not be able to attend due to the holiday. She raised the issue to highlight problems with Jewish inclusivity in light of increasingly more openly anti-semitic rhetoric in the United States.
Updated 4:34 p.m.: Vernon Lamont Reed, who was arrested on Monday, asked the judge for a public defender at his first court appearance Tuesday. He remains in Orange County Jail under a $500,000 secured bond and cannot go onto UNC campus or Shortbread Lofts property.
Editor's note: This editorial discusses sensitive topics such as sexual assault.
Editor's note: Safety tips and advice never guarantee safety, nor is it ever the survivor’s or any potential survivor’s fault in any way if they did not or do not act on them.
Due to recent events on campus, the editorial board has assembled this short list of resources for anyone who may be at-risk of interpersonal, sexual or gender-based violence. This list also includes two proactive trainings that anyone can complete to help create a safer environment on campus for us all.
Editor's note: This column discusses sensitive topics such as sexual assault.
On the heels of a week in which a series of incidents around Chapel Hill caused fear and unrest for students, interim Chancellor Kevin Guskiewicz turned to a panel of faculty advisors for suggestions on how to optimize UNC’s Alert Carolina System.
Editor's note: This column discusses sensitive topics, such as sexual assault and harrasment.
UNC Police responded to an incident of verbal harassment on Tuesday night outside of Davis Library, according to UNC Police spokesperson Randy Young. Police searched for the suspect, but did not find him.
David L. Perry has served as the new assistant vice chancellor and chief of UNC Police since Sept. 3, following the resignation of former UNC Police Chief Jeff McCracken. Perry comes to the University after having served as police chief at Florida State University for 14 years.