Why a front-page editorial?
Regular readers of The Daily Tar Heel will find a surprise waiting for them in the boxes this morning, in the form of a bold proclamation on the way forward for UNC on sexual assault reform.
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Regular readers of The Daily Tar Heel will find a surprise waiting for them in the boxes this morning, in the form of a bold proclamation on the way forward for UNC on sexual assault reform.
I remember the first time my dad showed me and my brother the Internet.
I’ve always cringed a little at the phrase “student newspaper.” Not for any lack of accuracy, but for the connotations it carries. For instance, whenever other outlets cite a story by The Daily Tar Heel, they inevitably preface the mention with “the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill’s student newspaper…”
Sunday’s Pasadena-like temperatures in Chapel Hill reminded me why we call this semester the spring semester: because North Carolina winters are about as reliable as my landlord’s promises to remove the raccoon who has taken up residence in our ceiling.
I’ve always found most Thanksgiving thankful lists to be remarkably uncreative. The vast majority seem to consist mostly of the items the lister sees around him or her at the dinner table: family, friends, a hungry dog and football (playing on the TV in the other room).
Ever since The Daily Tar Heel stopped receiving student fees in 1993, it’s been completely independent of the University and, by extension, student government. Hence, it bears the responsibility of covering student government. In fact, it’s virtually the only news organization that does.
In two weeks, the votes will be cast, the hanging chads will be unhung and the long-dead voters who have lent their names to the cause of democracy will still be sleeping in their bipartisan graves. Election season will be over and everyone (or most everyone) will be able to get on with their lives. But in the meantime, the DTH is charged with the peculiar task of covering a presidential election in Chapel Hill.
I’ve only made one error in my time reporting for the DTH that required a correction, but it was a doosy. Still a freshman, I referred to a woman I interviewed as a man. “Was it just a pronoun mixup?” you ask. Absolutely not. In my mind, this woman was a man. When I interviewed her over the phone, I had no doubt she was a woman. When I wrote the story, a few hours later, I thought of her as a man. (Check out the correction and story here).
SPOILER: Here’s how it ends.
One of the most freely spewed criticisms of the DTH I’ve heard during my college career is that our content is hopelessly biased to the left. Undoubtedly, those who hold such a view have some extra ammunition this week.
It’s application season at The Daily Tar Heel. For us, this means that in about one week, the DTH office will get a shot in the arm in the form of more than 100 new student staffers. When that time comes, our newsroom will become one of the liveliest in America.
Each Friday, I’m going to pick five stories from the previous week to promote here, coupled with the kind of commentary only an editor-in-chief and former high school marching band enthusiast can provide.
Hello, Internet!
Hundreds of nervous young women braced themselves.