Viewpoints: What we're looking forward to following the pandemic
With the Centers for Disease Control releasing guidelines that vaccinated individuals can congregate indoors without masks, the end of the pandemic seems closer than ever.
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With the Centers for Disease Control releasing guidelines that vaccinated individuals can congregate indoors without masks, the end of the pandemic seems closer than ever.
Content warning: This article contains mentions of sexual assault.
For some members of the editorial board, this is our first year at UNC — whether as a transfer student or a recent high school graduate — and to say the least, this year has been nothing like it's supposed to be. Here, we reflect on what our experience has been like as we pass the one-year mark of the pandemic's stronghold on the entire world.
“Things will be back to normal in the fall,” we thought.
As the weather gets warmer and the semester trudges on, students are beginning to prepare their summer plans.
The onus of execution usually lies upon the visible head of an organization. The economy not looking good? Must be the president’s fault. Your McChicken not hitting the spot? Call the manager. The team not doing well? Must be the coach’s fault.
As college students, we’re prone to stress, anxiety and depression — especially during a pandemic. We have a lot on our plates, so it's easy to let ourselves succumb to the pressures of daily life.
With the pandemic dragging on longer than anyone expected, the return of UNC sports this academic year gave most of us something to look forward to watching and hearing about.
Since the emergence of COVID-19, Asian Americans, especially those of Chinese descent, have been portrayed in the public eye as the sole cause of the virus.
Last month, the Campus Y elected its first Black female co-presidents: junior Montia Daniels and sophomore Patrice McGloin. The Campus Y, a social justice-centered organization, is one of the largest student organizations at UNC.
This past year has been wracked with uncertainty and disappointment. Ever since we left campus last March — many of us never to return — there has been little good news. We have lost loved ones, been isolated from our friends, had to cancel vacations and study abroad opportunities and been besieged by high stress levels through it all.
Spring is on the horizon, and in typical North Carolina fashion, we’ve been graced with several gorgeous days in February.
One of the few bright spots of quarantine has been the increased opportunity to experiment in the kitchen, and nowhere is that more prominent than on TikTok.
The use of the Oxford comma is a hotly debated topic among journalists and grammar enthusiasts.
Quick and inexpensive, the allure of fast fashion is appealing to college students in need of new clothes. Fast fashion is well known as clothing that is produced at a low cost due to cheap labor and materials, and produced rapidly to keep up with changing fashion trends.
The Editorial Board has outlined the many problems plaguing Greek organizations at UNC and across the nation: classism, racism and sexual assault are among the most severe of these issues.
UNC is no stranger to parking calamities. The combination of a confusing parking system, an unresponsive Transportation and Parking office and a proclivity to technical errors causes difficulties for students when they try to park on campus.
It’s that time again — the part of the semester where we’re all dreading midterms and freaking out over our grades.
Black artists, actors and storytellers are often overlooked in our discussions of pop culture. A study published in September found that two in three Black Americans don't see themselves represented in film and television. Meanwhile, executives in the music industry are overwhelmingly white — yet profit largely off of the work of Black artists.
When Richard Burr, one of the two U.S. Senators from North Carolina, stood to declare “guilty” on the article of impeachment against former President Donald Trump, voters on both sides were stunned. After all, he had publicly expressed before the trial started that he believed it was unconstitutional to impeach a president who was no longer in office.