Column: Why you should register to vote in Orange County
Many UNC students are first-time voters.
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Many UNC students are first-time voters.
“I have a favor to ask you: will you put your phones away?” Phoebe Bridgers of supergroup Boygenius asked her fans before she sang the ballad “Letter to an Old Poet” this past Sunday. She’s been asking this of fans since the group's summer tour.
Movies have long been seen as vessels for creating both art and capital, integrating scenes of heartbreak, hope, angst and anger with the incentive of profit. From its beginning, film has been recognized as a form of storytelling with potential to be far more immersive than a novel, photograph or any other form of media.
Editor's note: This article is satire.
I like to think I got very lucky with the town I grew up in. Sure, I experienced my fair share of microaggressions. But, because my high school had 68 percent minority enrollment, I never necessarily felt alone, as I was constantly surrounded by people that looked like me.
Editor's note: This article is satire.
Last semester, I took Religious Studies 209: Varieties of Early Christianity. Walking into the first day of class, I immediately heard my professor mention the term “pagan” — a foreign word to me at the time.
School boards have recently become some of the most heated political battlegrounds across the country.
Content warning: This article contains mention of suicide.
How often do you think about the Roman Empire? It’s a question that may have garnered confused looks a couple of weeks ago, but has since found its place in the cultural zeitgeist through a TikTok trend.
My hair wasn’t luscious until he told me it was. I just thought I hadn’t had a haircut in a few months, but the way it sat a little in front of my eyes was actually perfect. I smile, and take extra care in it now. Wiping the steam two or three times to match my baggy eyes as I meticulously form each curl.
I never thought I’d visit the White House for anything other than a public tour.
It should be a no-brainer to be against corruption, but apparently, this is not the case in Washington.
The last vestiges of the sunrise cast a warm glow over the hallway in Hinton James Residence Hall. I’m bleary-eyed and so focused on regretting my decision to register for an 8 a.m. class that I almost miss the uneaten hamburger lying in my path. Smashed french fries span from wall to wall and blood-red ketchup splatters cover the ground. It’s a crime scene worthy of an FBI investigation.
The idea that Chapel Hill, along with most of the United States, is in the midst of a housing crisis has been established time and time again over recent years. But how to resolve this crisis is still up for debate.
Editor's note: This article is satire.
UNC-Chapel Hill and the University of Georgia are adversaries as old as time. Both schools claim to be the nation’s first public university. Both Chapel Hill and Athens have been named as best college towns in the country in years past. And both schools have plenty of national championships under their belt, so the comparison makes sense.
UNC students know the Franklin Street Target all too well. The storefront is hard to miss and hard to avoid, being the only grocery store in the walkable vicinity.
Each academic year, UNC students head to ConnectCarolina to check their upcoming bill from the University.
You're driving down Franklin Street, heading back to your room in Morrison, when all of a sudden you reach an end in the road. There’s a sign; it reads, “Halt! No more dorm life. You must live off campus now!”