Column: Summer editor embraces challenge
I ’ve never been the editor of anything before.
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I ’ve never been the editor of anything before.
Andrea Pino is ready to move on from UNC, but she won’t move on from the movement she started.
T here’s a new position in town, and it’s couched comfortably in South Building right between the Chancellor’s office and the rest of the University.
More than a year after the University was accused of mishandling sexual assault, students are still without a revised sexual assault policy.
The man who acted as the voice of the student body for the past year will spend the next year working with administrative insiders.
Chancellor Carol Folt says she doesn’t have much time to herself these days.
As we go on, we remember ... what?
TO THE EDITOR:
When top officials from the Obama administration tour the country to raise awareness of campus sexual assault, North Carolina is the first stop on the list.
Two major safety incidents that happened on campus this semester are still being investigated by the UNC Department of Public Safety.
A critical letter written by retired faculty members will soon have a response from their former co-workers.
TO THE EDITOR:
Controversy continues to swirl more than a week after UNC student Liz Hawryluk was asked to leave Fitzgerald’s Irish Pub after getting in an argument with the disc jockey.
He hears that his athletes don’t have enough time in the day, and Bubba Cunningham wants to help.
Stalking, domestic violence and dating violence are about to see increased attention from the University.
Every time a sexual assault case comes across his desk from UNC, Jim Woodall really has to think about the definition of consent.
UNC freshman Matt Wotus graduated high school without ever having had a formal lesson about consent to sexual activity.
B etween his popular YouTube channel and his appearances around campus, UNC student Dylan Moore, known as “Nicky Show Time,” has garnered a lot of attention from both students and media in the last several weeks . Much of this attention has been in the form of positive feedback. And that’s just the image the student is hoping to achieve. The quick ascent of this stripper’s popularity is a testament to the student’s ability to market his image via his sexual appeal and hyper aggressive personality.
U.S. Department of Education investigators have arrived on campus, looking for student input as part of an inquiry into UNC’s handling sexual assault.
What started with a spat between a UNC student and a disc jockey at a bar Saturday night ended with a boycott and a formal apology from the pub.