Bringing in a large store would benefit Chapel Hill
Chapel Hill needs to stray away from its disdain of big-box developments and begin to see the benefits.
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
1000 items found for your search. If no results were found please broaden your search.
Chapel Hill needs to stray away from its disdain of big-box developments and begin to see the benefits.
Massive online open courses, while benefiting many that would not receive the education otherwise, should be a complement, not a replacement, to traditional lecture hall classes.
As part of a Republican intraparty movement, North Carolina’s General Assembly has successfully overridden two vetoes signed by Gov. Pat McCrory this summer.
UNC has indicated through the Carolina Digital Humanities Initiative that it is fully committed to creating programs that strive to meet and solve the complex problems presented in a constantly changing world.
Throughout the past year, UNC’s Honor Court has become notorious, making headlines for all the wrong reasons. Their handling of sexual assault cases — which is now out of their jurisdiction — shed a bad light on the University, and the group itself.
Arecent petition calling for the U.S. Department of Education to levy full sanctions against institutions violating Title IX and Clery Act responsibilities is misguided in its goal to skip conflict resolution and jump to slashing federal funding.
Innovation and creativity among professors is essential to high level learning in large lecture courses, and should be a focus of UNC faculty in order to keep students engaged at the foundational levels of their majors.
This summer’s historic N.C. General Assembly session may have finally come to a close, but the NAACP rally held on Franklin Street last Wednesday is an encouraging reminder that civic action surrounding legislation should not end until policymakers acknowledge and consider their constituents’ demands.
As the economy has started to recover from its 2008 collapse, universities have begun heavily investing in faculty recruitment and retention. With budget cuts seeming to be the norm in Chapel Hill, UNC must come up with creative ways to keep faculty at the University.
Information Technology Services and UNC Housing and Residential Education have recently decided on a plan to extend high-speed Wi-Fi to all students on South Campus.
Sometimes, South Campus can feel like an isolated island full of freshmen, all wondering if they’re truly getting everything out of their UNC experience. The new program from the Residence Hall Association is what’s needed to tackle that problem.
The executive committee tasked with selecting a replacement for resigning Sen. Ellie Kinnaird, D-Orange, should take Kinnaird’s thoughts on her successor into consideration.
There may finally be a way to show how much time and effort you put into your classes, without coming off as a braggart to your interviewers.
President Barack Obama’s proposed plan to rate colleges based on affordability is admirable.
House Bill 843 is a well-intentioned, albeit misguided, bill with potential ramifications that could destroy the UNC honor system.
Culling of the Folt
The Chapel Hill Police Department released its first quarterly report of the year recently and should be commended for its attempts to improve transparency.
Students need a small, intimate performance area, but the ground floor of the Student Union is not the right space.
It takes a village to raise a child, but it takes a Triangle to build a light rail.
When Chancellor Holden Thorp announced his resignation last September, he did so as the University dealt with academic and athletic scandals unprecedented in both their number and seriousness.