Students met with open ears
Student leaders were not the only ones striking up conversation during the Office of Student Affairs open office hours Tuesday afternoon.
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
14 items found for your search. If no results were found please broaden your search.
Student leaders were not the only ones striking up conversation during the Office of Student Affairs open office hours Tuesday afternoon.
Catching up with University administrators can be difficult for a student without being penciled into their busy schedules.
After years of encouraging drivers on campus to yield to pedestrians, University police will begin to crack down on jaywalking this year.
Summer will be all work and no play for student government officials.
Two resident assistants in Grimes Residence Hall have been kicked out of their rooms and forced to seek housing elsewhere even as the end of the semester looms.
New spring clothes and beautiful weather to model them in aren’t the only reason why campus fashion gurus are so excited this week.
Four football players have been arrested and charged in marijuana-related incidents this year, spurring a wave of attention toward the drug policy for UNC athletes.
As some candidates prepare for a rigorous 2005 student election, two hopefuls are focusing on their platforms instead of worrying about competition.
Matt Calabria promised to reach out to campus groups when he campaigned for the position of student body president last spring.
It has been 13 years since the Center for Black Culture and History was renamed for Sonja Haynes Stone and 11 more since the first annual Sonja Haynes Stone memorial lecture.
In the past month, two high-profile student leaders on campus have stepped down from their positions, highlighting the demands of serving as a representative of the student body.
"No service" is never a desired screen saver on any student's cell phone.
Towering over South Campus on Mason Farm Road, the state-of-the-art Carolina Center for Genome Sciences houses scientists who are unraveling the genetic traits of the human body and making life-altering discoveries.
Rather than walking home alone late at night or dealing with parking on campus, students who live in eastern Chapel Hill now can take advantage of another route home.