Students protest blood donor restrictions for gay men
Wrapped in caution tape and red scarves, students gathered Wednesday afternoon as part of a performance art piece protesting rules that prohibit gay men from donating blood.
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
41 items found for your search. If no results were found please broaden your search.
Wrapped in caution tape and red scarves, students gathered Wednesday afternoon as part of a performance art piece protesting rules that prohibit gay men from donating blood.
Graduation in Kenan Memorial Stadium is on.
A lot has happened since Andrea Pino and Annie Clark were last in Chapel Hill.
The University’s public relations team is putting out more positive stories, but the development office still hasn’t seen a return on that investment.
For sophomore Scott Ellington, fishing is a family affair.
The Interfraternity Council saw no violations during its recruitment period this semester for the first time since it was made alcohol-free one year ago.
With athletic director Dick Baddour’s departure on the horizon, members of the faculty athletics committee know what they want in his replacement.
University officials are set to spend $500,000 from a reserve fund to improve campus sustainability and save money at the same time.
Sakai might kick Blackboard off campus faster than expected.
Starting this fall, students will begin seeing more printing stations both on and off campus.
The threat of moving Greek recruitment exclusively to the spring might have passed, but fraternities and sororities will continue to abide by last year’s policy of an alcohol-free rush.
The Carrboro Board of Aldermen endorsed the building of a new 39-unit solar-powered housing development.
As part of its continued reforms of the Student Code, the finance committee of Student Congress passed a bill Tuesday providing members more control over student fees.
Dakota Williams, former student body treasurer, accepted an offer to become chairman of the Board of Elections on Tuesday night.
With a sigh and a “hallelujah,” McKay Coble celebrated the advent of a third lecturer position on Friday.
Rosalinda Sollecito, a 24-year-old UNC graduate, was diagnosed with cancer in 1995.
Braving the skeptical looks of janitors, sophomores Lawson Kuehnert and Zach Ward got a 14-hour head start Sunday evening into Monday morning.
Even after a 9-5 win over Clemson, the crowd Saturday at Boshamer Stadium was treated to one last hair-raising spectacle.
Workers are preparing a sit-out in response to upcoming schedule changes, and students are coming together to aid the protest.
At the Wednesday meeting of the Employee Forum, members addressed a change to a University policy that added intimidation and bullying as grounds for submitting a complaint.