Seasoned professor Paul O'Connor retires after 42 years in journalism
After a 42-year-long career in journalism as a reporter and professor, Paul O’Connor announced his retirement.
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
15 items found for your search. If no results were found please broaden your search.
After a 42-year-long career in journalism as a reporter and professor, Paul O’Connor announced his retirement.
Love Your Body is an annual night of a celebration of all bodies, sizes and shapes meant to combat the beauty standards set by society and the media.
For music fans who enjoy the catchy nature of pop, yet long for songs with additional dimensions that leave them immersed in the sound long after a performance, Local 506 will be hosting a night with three emerging acts in the music scene on Saturday, Feb. 3.
The 2018 University Awards recognizes 25 faculty and staff members each year for their teaching abilities and their contributions to their respective intellectual communities. Staff writer Marine Elia interviewed a few of the winners.
Keith Payne, a professor in the Department of Psychology and Neuroscience, spoke to staff writer Marine Elia about his research on the psychology of inequality featured in a recent The New Yorker article. Since his childhood, he has been observant of wealth gaps between himself and others around him.
At UNC, students are inspired to join and create organizations that they feel best represent them. In the case of the Carolina Caribbean Student Association, students not only created, but established a tradition of their own.
Whether it was sleeping in late, thawing inside Chase Dining Hall with hot chocolate or racing your friends down Skipper Bowles Drive in an Olympic-level sledding competition, staff writer Marine Elia got the scoop on how students spent their snow day.
With the recent opening of study abroad applications, Tar Heels are preparing to pack their suitcases and expand their world views. But what exactly should they know before saying “ciao” to Chapel Hill? Anna Wilson, a UNC graduate who works as a study abroad adviser, offered her expertise on study abroad to The Daily Tar Heel.
For Doug Yorty, transitioning from a seven-year military career to student life offered its fair share of difficulties. After being stationed in Fort Bragg, Yorty now pursues a double major in peace, war and defense and political science, while holding a position as the event coordinator for the Carolina Veterans Organization.
Around 200 students, faculty and community members filled the Nelson Mandela Auditorium to watch K-pop soloists, duets and dance groups battle for first place in the Department of Asian Studies' K-pop contest.
Colors, music and a vibrant atmosphere were all present at Diwali Night, hosted by Hindu YUVA- Youth for Unity, Virtues and Action and Carolina Asia Center in the FedEx Global Education Center.
As the bright Harvest moon fills the Carolina sky, the Forest Theatre reveals an impeccably earthy setting surrounded by stone and greens, inviting UNC to take a break from the day to reflect on the thing that keeps us moving — food.
Three years ago, the Chapel Hill community lost the young lives of husband and wife Deah Shaddy Barakat and Yusor Mohammad Abu-Salha, along with Yusor’s sister, Razan Mohammad Abu-Salha, in a shooting.
With football in full season, UNC students wait in anticipation for the game this Saturday against our historic enemy — Duke. Staff writer Marine Elia asked students: what is going to happen and what will the score be at the UNC versus Duke football game on Saturday.
Before Pride Place, junior Brennan Lewis was unsure if they would have a "normal" first-year experience in their dorm room. As a non-binary student, they wondered if their physical safety and mental health would be in jeopardy.