Brian Hogan wins Carolina Chiron Award
References to a broken scooter and a bag of shattered light bulbs were key parts of the lecture that Brian Hogan gave to a mix of students and faculty in Gerrard Hall on Wednesday.
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References to a broken scooter and a bag of shattered light bulbs were key parts of the lecture that Brian Hogan gave to a mix of students and faculty in Gerrard Hall on Wednesday.
Housemates Zach Rachuba and Jerome Allen were taken by surprise when a Chapel Hill police officer and the director of the Office of Fraternity & Sorority Life and Community Involvement showed up at their door one Friday, seemingly out of the blue.
university@dailytarheel.comAn unexpected uptick in a particular kind of crime has campus police searching for a suspect and prompted a campus-wide alert to be sent out.
Proposed changes to the Student Constitution led one of the longest-serving students in Student Congress to resign Monday.
Lance Barnes, a baker for Carolina Dining Services, has dreams that expand outside of Chapel Hill and the ovens on the third floor of Rams Head Dining Hall, but he worries about having enough money to get there.
Without the Center for Faculty Excellence, biology professor Kelly Hogan would have waited a lot longer to see the achievement gap in her Biology 101 class almost disappear.
Collaboration will be key in deciding whether the University will provide makeup classes for students who took fraudulent classes offered between 1993 and 2011 that were exposed by the Wainstein report in October.
After Duke canceled its scheduled call to prayer Friday, discussions of University resources for UNC Muslims students were brought to the surface.
It’s not uncommon for one class meeting to be called off at the last minute, but this semester, a few students were surprised to see classes vanish altogether.
When faculty and administrators announced the delay of contextualized transcripts, they gained time to perfect the format of the transcript — and make sure students understood the changes.
Like millions of Americans, Juanita Morris watched as the chaos erupted in Ferguson, Mo., after Monday’s grand jury decision not to indict Darren Wilson, the white police officer who killed Michael Brown, a black teenager.
After serving since 2009 as the dean of the College of Arts and Sciences, Karen Gil has decided it’s time to step down and give someone else a chance to lead UNC’s largest academic branch through its next phase.
A bill to redistrict congressional seats and reduce vacancies failed to pass in a close vote at a full meeting of Student Congress Tuesday.
For 81 former students, the fake classes cooked up by an administrator and his secretary in the former African and Afro-American studies department were just what they needed to graduate.
Senior biomedical engineering major Jeff Powell gave a young boy a hand this summer in more ways than one.
Long before he started racing a Mazda MX-5, freshman Ben Albano had an interest in cars.
In a discussion on the 9/11 attacks Thursday, a former Reagan administration official warned that such an attack could happen again.
Despite the national uproar surrounding recent events in Ferguson, Mo., a dialogue on the topic Tuesday struck a reflective tone.
With the start of a new school year and the start of his term as faculty chair, Bruce Cairns stressed that collaboration is key.
Nearly four years, nine reports and countless national headlines have passed since UNC’s scandals began, revealing academic fraud and tensions between academics and athletics on campus.