'A sisterhood': LEAD helps foster a new generation of Black doulas
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.
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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.
From performances in Carnegie Hall and the Kennedy Center, Grammy nominations and its members' collective ability to play over 80 traditional instruments, the Sones de México Ensemble is no amateur musical group. And soon, they will be bringing their talent to Chapel Hill.
Since graduating from UNC in 2009, Oscar-nominated filmmaker and Morehead-Cain alumnus Ed Perkins has crafted an extensive resume.
When UNC sophomore Victoria Wlosok was just fourteen years old, she began participating in a tradition that changed her life.
Dozens of UNC community members gathered in front of the South Building, holding posters with slogans reading “Accessibility is not an extra step, it’s a step you missed,” and “Disabled and proud.”
Alex M. Sanchez’s life has lead her all over the world.
On Thursday morning, Hussman School of Journalism and Media Senior Associate Dean for Undergraduate Studies Charlie Tuggle walked beside the floor-to-ceiling windows and a giant broadcasting screen.
On Friday night, a small table adorned with black lanterns stood alone in the middle of the Pit.
As the Muslim Students Association made final preparations for the Muslims Excelling Today event on March 25, the Great Hall in the Student Union buzzed with activity.
The beat of drums and the chimes of Native American jingle skirts created an atmosphere of anticipation on Hooker Fields last Saturday. Brightly patterned clothing passed by in flashes as Carolina Indian Circle members raced to finish registering dancers, and vendors of Native American jewelry, art and clothing laid out their inventory.
On Wednesday afternoon, a crowd of UNC community members formed in the Murray-Venable Courtyard.
When Leticia Tuset was a sophomore, she had no idea that the short story draft she wrote for an intermediate fiction class at UNC would become a piece recognized by the North Carolina Writers’ Network.