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Copy chief and social media manager Maddy Arrowood is the only candidate running to be the 2019-2020 editor-in-chief of The Daily Tar Heel. She is a junior reporting and American history major from Tryon, N.C.
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Copy chief and social media manager Maddy Arrowood is the only candidate running to be the 2019-2020 editor-in-chief of The Daily Tar Heel. She is a junior reporting and American history major from Tryon, N.C.
Updated at 11:58 p.m. Several roads have been closed in Chapel Hill due to debris from Hurricane Michael. Check below for road conditions and closures:
Editor's note: This speech was transcribed by Hilary N. Green, associate professor of history in the Department of Gender and Race Studies and the co-program director of the African American Studies program at the University of Alabama. You can find this transcription on her UA website here.
The first few weeks of the year have definitely be a ~whirlwind~, and now Florence is on the way to make it a literal one. The University has cancelled classes starting at 5 p.m. Tuesday, and is encouraging students to evacuate if possible. But not everyone is able to leave, of course, so here are some tips for everyone who's hunkering down and waiting out the storm.
As we all begin mentally preparing to hit the books once again this semester, you might have a few questions about the books themselves. And for good reason — on average, one college textbook costs about as much as a brand new Honda Accord. So before you go putting a down payment on that anthropology textbook, here are a few things to consider.
Graduate student Maya Little’s protest of Silent Sam late last spring will soon be judged not only in a court of law, but also in a court of her peers.
It can definitely be tricky to buy and pack for a room you’ve never been in before. Like most dorm rooms, the one you’ll be moving into in a couple of weeks won’t be… big. But despite being uniformly dorm-like, there are a few key differences between packing for Hojo and packing for Horton. Here’s the rundown on your future home:
An officer-involved shooting occurred at the New Hope Commons shopping center in Durham just after 8 p.m. on Wednesday.
If you’ve been sitting around this summer with an unstimulated mind, mourning the loss of summer reading assignments to keep your brain busy, we’ve got good news!!
Now that registration is *finally* over, we can all collectively take a nice deep breath.
Move-in dates are quickly approaching, so it's time to start thinking about which Einstein poster will show off both your playful and academic side. Between literally bumping into your new roommates, hauling a mini-fridge up the stairs of your dorm and trying to keep a friendly, welcoming smile on your face, moving in can be a quite the chore. That's why we're here to help you plan ahead so you don't have to brave the masses flooding the aisles of Target on move-in day. Here are some of the things you might be forgetting:
Clemmie Dixon Spangler Jr., who served as the UNC-system president from 1986-1997, died on Monday, July 23. We pulled these clips from the Daily Tar Heel archives looking back on the Charlotte native's time spent in Chapel Hill as the 15th system president.
We all have a registration horror story or two. Mine involves me not knowing how to select the specific classes I wanted to enroll in and therefore hitting enroll on my entire shopping cart. My schedule briefly consisted of five different English classes. I may have had a minor stroke, but at least I am now a seasoned expert in salvaging a decent schedule from an awful registration session.
On August 6, 2014, now-UNC Student Body President Savannah Putnam tweeted, “Like dang all a n**** wanna do is play monopoly with her main thots.”
Last week, we asked you guys to tell us how you were feeling about orientation, and 64 percent said you didn’t know what to expect going into it. We don’t blame you — one look at the schedule, and we’re already exhausted for you.
UNC announced Thursday that Dr. Bill Roper will be stepping down from his position as CEO of UNC Health Care and dean of the UNC School of Medicine in May 2019.
The sea of red-clad protesters in downtown Raleigh attending Wednesday’s March For Students and Rally for Respect may have contained some widely different people from all walks of life, yet they nonetheless all shared one common denominator.
Astonished gasps and excited laughter filled the air of Phillips Hall this Tuesday as local fourth graders experienced physics and astronomy up-close and personally.
Updated at 7:39 p.m. on May 1: Little has been charged with defacement of a public monument and will have her first court date on Monday, May 7.
Students gathered in Polk Place Tuesday afternoon to watch a group of demonstrators urge them to repent.