First-year students launch nonprofit aimed at fighting hunger
When first-year student Tommy Mierzwa arrived on UNC’s campus from New Jersey in the fall, he was caught off guard by Chapel Hill's large population of unhoused individuals.
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
31 items found for your search. If no results were found please broaden your search.
When first-year student Tommy Mierzwa arrived on UNC’s campus from New Jersey in the fall, he was caught off guard by Chapel Hill's large population of unhoused individuals.
A quote by Paul Farmer greets viewers on the website landing page of Middle East Refugee Aid, a nonprofit and UNC student-run organization:
Every UNC sports game ends with the same familiar tune: “Hark the Sound of Tar Heel voices, ringing clear and true."
Before his retirement in 2013, Bruce Egan hung a sign at the ITS Service Desk in the Robert B. House Undergraduate Library that read, “It’s not about the technology, it’s about the customer."
UNC senior Braeden Harper said his first experience at Camp Kesem felt like magic.
First-year students at UNC have options when choosing a place to live on-campus with a total of 37 residence halls to pick from.
“Do what you like, what’s important and what’s right.”
Almost 200 UNC faculty members signed a letter calling on Chancellor Kevin Guskiewicz and Provost Chris Clemens to create a mental health task force for graduate students in the aftermath of last month’s campus shooting.
The Equal Opportunity and Compliance Office exists to promote a feeling of safety at the University by monitoring identity-based discrimination and harassment, Elizabeth Hall, the office's associate vice chancellor and Title IX coordinator, said.
In the wake of the June 29 U.S. Supreme Court decision overturning affirmative action – the consideration of race in college admissions – some groups at UNC are gearing up for change.
July 26 marked the 33rd anniversary of the Americans with Disabilities Act, a landmark civil rights law that prevents discrimination on the basis of disability. Observance of this legislation's anniversary comes at the end of Disability Pride Month.
When Hannah Spitzer was a child struggling with undiagnosed autism, she was told she would never be able to graduate college or live on her own.
As the days tick down until UNC commencement on May 14, seniors are making their final preparations for this highly-anticipated day.
Collaboration, community engagement and graduate student stipend increases.
About three times as many Black women die while giving birth than white women, regardless of education level or socioeconomic status, according to the Center for Disease Control.
A lone table stood under a white tent on the quad Wednesday morning and afternoon.
What makes a house a home?
Increasing property values in and around Chapel Hill are nothing new.
Members of the UNC faculty are tired.
Dozens of shoes haphazardly strewn outside the Great Hall were the first clue that something exciting was happening on the evening of Wednesday, Oct. 12.