North Carolina filmmakers win regional Emmy for documentary on Shaw University
North Carolina filmmakers won a regional Emmy last month for their documentary on the first historically Black university in the South, Shaw University.
Use the fields below to perform an advanced search of The Daily Tar Heel's archives. This will return articles, images, and multimedia relevant to your query. You can also try a Basic search
997 items found for your search. If no results were found please broaden your search.
North Carolina filmmakers won a regional Emmy last month for their documentary on the first historically Black university in the South, Shaw University.
UPDATE March 18 6:52 p.m.: A tornado warning is in effect for east central Orange County and central Durham County until 7:30 p.m, according to the National Weather Service.
Former Board of Governors member Darrell Allison officially assumed his role as Fayetteville State University’s twelfth chancellor on Monday, amid opposition and concern from faculty, students and alumni over his qualifications and the process by which he was appointed.
One year ago, experts, government officials and the public grappled with uncertainty regarding COVID-19, unsure of the proper protocol and precautions.
UPDATE 03/10/2021 at 3:15 p.m.: The story text has been updated to include additional information about the North Carolina Asian Americans Together organization.
It was early into 2020.
Fourteen years ago, amid the steady beeps of a heart monitor in a hospital in Indiana, Amy Snyder spent Christmas Day preparing for a funeral. Snyder’s husband Todd, who has severe heart complications, laid blissfully unaware only a few feet away, in a medically-induced coma after his third emergency surgery in three weeks.
At the inaugural meeting of the Orange County Broadband Task Force on March 3, the group discussed the history of internet access in the county and how they might improve access in the future.
A recent legal settlement will result in 3,500 people incarcerated in North Carolina being released.
An N.C. House of Representatives judiciary committee approved two bills last month that focused on changing local government requirements for publishing public notices in a number of counties. These public notices catalog government activity from budget hearings, land-use changes, property transfers, upcoming traffic construction and more.
N.C. legislators filed a bill on Feb. 10 to make Holocaust and genocide education mandatory for public schools. Durham minister and activist Paul Scott is demanding the bill also include Black history.
On Feb. 12, the North Carolina Commission on Racial and Ethnic Disparities (NC CRED) launched an initiative to have all Confederate monuments removed from courthouse grounds across the state.
After a wave of Black Lives Matter protests and calls for racial equity last summer, many municipalities in North Carolina debated lowering their police budgets. Now, a recently proposed bill in the N.C. Senate would penalize them for doing so.
A week ago, 68-year-old construction worker Rogelio had no idea how he would be able to get his COVID-19 vaccine.
In light of census data concerns in several districts throughout the state, Karen Brinson Bell, the executive director of the North Carolina State Board of Elections, has recommended all fall 2021 municipal elections be delayed until spring 2022.
For the first time since March, bars in North Carolina will be able to open indoors. Cooper announced this and an ease in many other COVID-19 restrictions at a Wednesday news briefing.
A coalition of immigrants’ rights organizations has condemned recently introduced Senate Bill 101 that would increase immigration regulations in North Carolina.
UPDATE March 26, 11:33 a.m.: Gov. Roy Cooper announced Wednesday that the rest of Group 4, including essential workers not in Group 3 and those in congregate housing, will be able to get the vaccine starting March 31. This is a week and a half earlier than expected.
The night before she had her first child in March of 2013, Jacqueline Carr-Martinez went to a hospital in Connecticut because she was cramping and in pain.
“Roll up the windows — there’s a case of polio at that house.”