Column: Students should surround themselves with challenging ideas
When I started this job one year ago, I made a promise to myself — I wouldn’t hire “yes people.”
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When I started this job one year ago, I made a promise to myself — I wouldn’t hire “yes people.”
If the wall separating South Road from Hooker Fields was any indication, Rae Sremmurd’s on-campus performance Saturday was a success.
Over the course of five years, UNC professor Feng Liu found four lost dogs on nightly walks with his wife and successfully returned them to their owners.
Earlier this month, Student Body Vice President Kyle Villemain asked for The Daily Tar Heel’s feedback on student government’s responsiveness.
It’s appalling that the University spends $600,000 staffing its public records office each year, yet Jonathan Jones, director of the N.C. Open Government Coalition, named it one of the worst entities to request public records from.
Jan Boxill, the former faculty chairwoman and ethics professor, resigned from the University after the Wainstein report showed that Boxill used her role as the academic counselor for the women’s basketball team to perpetuate the paper classes scandal.
Earlier this month, we were a mostly white newspaper creating a race issue. Today, we’re a mostly non-Greek newspaper creating a Greek issue.
Famed whistleblower Mary Willingham won’t be returning to the University.
The job of student journalists is an odd one. We have minds that are made for social media but pens that are held to the rules of traditional media.
The first recorded time the Chapel Hill Police Department interacted with Craig Hicks was in December 2013.
Sometimes, I wish our readers could be in the office when we’re making our decisions.
Resident advisers are little understood and largely mocked on this campus.
When my team and I first started looking into news coverage of the 1995 shooting on Henderson Street, we wondered if there was anything that today’s students could learn from coverage of a 20-year-old tragedy.
The good thing about being in the news business is that you know about most things before your friends do.
St. Louis County Prosecutor Robert McCullough announced the decision at 9 p.m. Monday — there was no probable cause to indict officer Darren Wilson for the murder of Michael Brown, a black teenager who was fatally shot in Ferguson, Mo. in August.
In November 2004, Chelsea Barnes wrote a chilling poem.
You want LaMonte Armstrong to be angry. You want him to scream and rail against the North Carolina justice system for days. You want him to hate.
One of the things they task you with when you become Editor-in-Chief is consistency.
When Dick Spangler walks toward you, you can see his genius from yards away.
W hen we first broke the news of nine people who will face disciplinary action from the University for their involvement in the fake paper class scheme, my first thought wasn’t, “Let’s get this story up.”