Maggie Bill faces off against the University of Florida during the NCAA Women's Lacrosse Tournament Sunday.
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
123 items found for your search. If no results were found please broaden your search.
Maggie Bill faces off against the University of Florida during the NCAA Women's Lacrosse Tournament Sunday.
Jack Murray, Robert Kelly and Brayden Schnur each prepare to serve against William and Mary
An N.C. General Assembly bill that would have required most of the state’s universities to pay student-athletes failed to pass a House of Representatives committee on Tuesday.
The proposals, headed by committee member Erianne Weight and professor Rudi Colloredo-Mansfeld, include an onboarding course to be taken in an athlete’s first semester on campus and an elite or applied performance minor for athletes.
After the Wainstein report was released in October, the University introduced several initiatives to address the wrongdoings it revealed.
The NCAA and the University filed a motion Monday to dismiss the lawsuit filed against them in January by two former UNC athletes.
To Richard Southall, the academic scandal at UNC is a reflection of what happens when student-athletes are not compensated.
The Faculty Athletics Committee spent half of its Tuesday meeting in closed session, as the members discussed specific student-athletes’ cases.
Accusations of academic fraud have reached a graduate program.
All three student body president candidates this year — Houston Summers, Kathryn Walker and David Marsh — said they want to see more connection between different sectors of UNC’s community, but they have different strategies for obtaining that goal.
New NCAA legislation that allows universities to pay athletes for the full cost of college attendance was met with positive reactions from the Student-Athlete Academic Initiative Working Group on Tuesday.
Nearly 100 days have passed since the release of the Wainstein report, and UNC still appears far from reaching the closure that it seeks.
UNC was one of 65 schools that voted to pass legislation on Saturday to better financially support student-athletes across the country with an increased value of athletic scholarships.
Since the release of the Wainstein report, professor Tim McMillan’s students have said they’re disappointed with the findings and that he had to leave because of his involvement.
UNC retained the New York City-based law firm Skadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher & Flom for help with the University’s “numerous pressing legal challenges.”
Former athletic learning specialist Mary Willingham has always said she filed her lawsuit against UNC for one reason — to get her job back.
In a 223-page response on Monday, the University defended its integrity to its accrediting agency.
After naming most of its objectives, the Student-Athlete Academic Initiative Working Group is considering handing over its responsibilities to the Faculty Athletics Committee and other committees.
Since the release of the Wainstein report in October, Student Body President Andrew Powell has watched student-athletes and the athletic department squirm under the national microscope.