NCAA, UNC look to toss McCants', Ramsay's case
The NCAA and the University filed a motion Monday to dismiss the lawsuit filed against them in January by two former UNC athletes.
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The NCAA and the University filed a motion Monday to dismiss the lawsuit filed against them in January by two former UNC athletes.
By Sarah Kaylan Butler
The aftermath continues.
The Faculty Athletics Committee spent half of its Tuesday meeting in closed session, as the members discussed specific student-athletes’ cases.
Since the release of the Wainstein report, the idea that the University’s academic improprieties began in 1993 has gone largely unquestioned.
Accusations of academic fraud have reached a graduate program.
Famed whistleblower Mary Willingham won’t be returning to the University.
Since 2008, UNC’s donation arm has enjoyed the best of both worlds.
Bradley Bethel feels so strongly about what he calls the media’s sensationalism of UNC’s athletic-academic scandal that he quit his job to make a documentary about it.
The history of the athletic-academic scandal was well-documented in the Wainstein report, but its effect on the future of independent studies is yet to be determined.
The University is conducting the first external review of its kind into the Department of African, African American and Diaspora Studies.
Students of color are joining together on campus to support each other in ways they feel the University is unable.
Nearly 100 days have passed since the release of the Wainstein report, and UNC still appears far from reaching the closure that it seeks.
After the UNC-system Board of Governors forced President Tom Ross to resign earlier this month in a surprise move, faculty members at UNC worry they won’t have a voice in picking Ross’ successor.
The McCants family has not been shy about voicing its displeasure with UNC.
Since its December rollout, more than 70 percent of faculty and staff members have completed the University’s required sexual assault modules.
With months of bad press breathing down their backs, staff members in the University’s development office say their jobs are harder than ever.
The University defended its integrity and made plans for future improvement in the 223-page response to questions raised by its accrediting body, released to the public Tuesday afternoon.
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.”