2022: A year in photos
This year, Daily Tar Heel photographers captured moments of joy and defeat, of tradition and change.
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This year, Daily Tar Heel photographers captured moments of joy and defeat, of tradition and change.
With few televised sports and more time being spent inside during this pandemic, video games have been a popular outlet for fans and sports writers to see the action we desperately crave.
CORRECTION: A previous version of this story misspelled the name Kain Colter. The article has been updated to reflect the appropriate spelling. The Daily Tar Heel apologizes for this error
This page will be updated with stories and will provide updates about weather plans from the University and Orange County.
The first student homicide since Eve Carson, the shocking death of a freshman and the subsequent investigations have dominated headlines. Loss marked others, too, as UNC lost its pristine academic reputation, system leader Bill Friday, and soon, a chancellor.
It appears that large numbers of Tuesday’s DTH newspapers were removed from their racks just after they were delivered in the wee hours of the morning for reasons other than someone’s personal daily enjoyment of the paper. A similar incident may have also occurred on Monday.
The Daily Tar Heel has concluded its summer publishing schedule. Monday-Friday print publication will resume Aug. 22.
Nicholas Kristof has been no stranger to danger during his career as a New York Times columnist. In Cambodia, he purchased two girls from a brothel and returned them to their families. In Indonesia, he ran into a mob carrying heads on pikes.
The events of a year — the death of a campus leader, a humbling basketball season and legislation with impacts on the UNC campus, to name a few — have inspired our actions, shaped our memories and taught us lessons.
John O’Connor, Edmund Hall and Justin Sapir (clockwise from top) participate in a doughnut eating contest in the Pit on Monday afternoon. Contestants had one minute to eat as many doughnuts as possible. The contest was sponsored by the General Alumni Association as part of Homecoming Week’s “Beat Duke” campaign, which sponsors events in the Pit that promote friendly competition and school spirit. The campaign leads up to the football game on Saturday.
Every Tuesday, a cartoonist will draw an extra cartoon, and we want YOU to give it a humorous caption. Send your one- to two-sentence caption to dthedit@gmail.com, subject line “caption.” We’ll publish the best captions the following week as the lead cartoon, and the person with the best entry will win a 2009 National Championship poster.
Winning caption: “Who doesn’t think I can eat this giant piece of candy corn? Tell me, WHO?!”
____simple_html_dom__voku__html_wrapper____>On Sept. 11, 2001, six UNC alumni lost their lives in the terrorist attacks on New York and Washington. These are profiles of their interests, passions and lives.
RALEIGH AND SALISBURY -- Democrat Erskine Bowles and Republican Elizabeth Dole will face off in one of the nation's most closely watched U.S. Senate races after defeating their opponents in Tuesday's primaries.