514 days later, no use for records
A year and a half is a long time to wait for most things, but especially something that the state of North Carolina requires be given to you quickly.
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A year and a half is a long time to wait for most things, but especially something that the state of North Carolina requires be given to you quickly.
When unified criticism of Tuesday’s article “Durham crime crosses over” began flowing in, I felt blindsided. And that, I think, is the problem.
I expect to wake up to big news on some days.
In the office of The Daily Tar Heel, newspapers are everywhere.
A fire broke out Monday morning at the University Gardens apartment complex on Pritchard Avenue Extension.
Friday’s front page story detailing a complaint filed against the University — regarding its handling of sexual assault cases — has rightly shocked and upset many readers.
In 2011, the University Counsel’s office pressured Melinda Manning, then UNC’s assistant dean of students, to underreport cases of sexual assault, according to a complaint against UNC filed to the U.S. Department of Education by Manning and four others.
The University released thousands of pages of documents related to the 2010 NCAA football investigation on Monday following a legal settlement with eight media groups, including The Daily Tar Heel, that had sought the records for two years.
After not hearing from him all day, friends of freshman David Shannon went looking for him Saturday night, tracking the location of his cellphone.
It is fitting that, on the eve of Chapel Hill’s autumnal extravaganza, the Mariinsky Orchestra visited Memorial Hall to deliver one of its own.
As hundreds of students gathered Monday night to mourn the death of freshman David Shannon, Carrboro police continued to piece together the details of his final hours.
“A lawsuit is a last resort.”
After a two-year legal battle, the University has agreed to a settlement with The Daily Tar Heel and seven other media outlets, pledging to produce, among other records, unredacted interview transcripts with UNC football players.
After a two-year legal battle, the University has settled its lawsuit with The Daily Tar Heel and seven other media outlets over records relating to the 2010 NCAA football investigation.
Former UNC-system President Bill Friday died this morning. He was 92.
Imagine you’re in a class, the sole purpose of which is to have The Daily Tar Heel read to you by a professor.
The last meeting of the University’s tuition and fee advisory task force ended with student protesters chanting “shame” at Provost Bruce Carney until he retreated into his office.
The work-related cellphone records of former head football coach Butch Davis were released today in conjunction with the long-running lawsuit filed by a media coalition that includes The Daily Tar Heel.
The University’s fraternities system is investigating nine recent reports of hazing among multiple chapters, an unusually large number that has UNC officials concerned.
The judicial arm of the University’s Interfraternity Council is investigating nine reports of hazing among multiple chapters.