Sexual assault task force talks sanctions
As members of the Sexual Assault Task Force begin their discussion of sanctioning — the latest phase of policy reconstruction — they’ve amped up their meeting frequency.
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As members of the Sexual Assault Task Force begin their discussion of sanctioning — the latest phase of policy reconstruction — they’ve amped up their meeting frequency.
The stories range from books like “The New Plantation” to articles such as “How Colleges Fail Black Football Players.”
Morass.
When she first proposed researching the literacy rates of UNC’s student-athletes, Mary Willingham was one of about 3,000 applications that the Institutional Review Board receives each year.
Her first heartbreak happened when she was in second grade.
Chancellor Carol Folt wasn’t here for UNC’s academic improprieties, but she accepted responsibility Thursday — and now, she also might face the legal consequences.
The relationship between athletics and academics, sexual assault on campus and the recent data breach that exposed more than 6,500 employees and students might seem like issues that have nothing in common.
There have been eight reports released on the relationship between academics and athletics at UNC in the past three years — and more related investigations are likely on their way.
Jim Dean and Mary Willingham are not on the same page.
Former athletic tutor Mary Willingham said she turned her data on athletes’ literacy levels over to UNC for what she says was the fourth time Monday night.
Everyone on campus seems to be looking to Executive Vice Chancellor and Provost Jim Dean to guide UNC through the latest athletic debacle — even the gym attendant he says offered him a towel and some advice Monday morning.
Since three federal investigations were launched into the University’s handling of sexual assault last year, UNC’s full-time Title IX office has gone from nonexistent to five positions.
Under UNC’s current sexual assault policy, “consent” is defined in four sentences.
Athletes might have to make more trips to Steele Building next year.
The class was titled Blacks in North Carolina. AFAM 280 was supposed to be a face-to-face lecture course during the summer of 2011. And Julius Nyang’oro was supposed to be the professor. But the class never met.
A member of a student government committee that handles tens of thousands of student fee dollars says that the group has broken open meeting laws and lacks transparency.
When North Carolina stole the head of Duke’s mascot last year, for many it was considered the ultimate rivalry gutpunch.
CORRECTION: A previous version of this article stated graduate school fees will increase by $350. Graduate school tuition will increase by $350, not fees. It also stated that N.C. State was exempted from increased hikes by the Board of Governors — the legislators actually made that mandate. The Daily Tar Heel apologizes for the errors.
Though questions still swirl around the reasons for an increase in parking costs for students, the Board of Trustees’ Finance and Infrastructure Committee opted to approve a contentious nighttime parking fee.
In its last meeting of the year, UNC’s Sexual Assault Task Force made recommendations on adjudication — a subject it has worked on for the better part of the semester.