Chapel Hill’s limit on residents unfair and unrealistic
This editorial board has said it over and over again. It is time Chapel Hill repeals the ordinance banning more than four unrelated people from residing in the same house.
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This editorial board has said it over and over again. It is time Chapel Hill repeals the ordinance banning more than four unrelated people from residing in the same house.
As the campus dialogue about the University’s role in forming sexual assault policy develops, students and administrators alike should consider what the job of the University is in preventing sexual assault.
Just cut it off.
A proposed bill that aims to repeal the requirement for safety inspections for North Carolina drivers is potentially dangerous and should not be passed.
Randomizing the entrance lines for Sunday’s basketball game against Florida State was one way to try to encourage students to stop cutting in line.
Last month, the N.C. Supreme Court heard arguments in a case regarding the release of public records from private universities in the state.
The Historic Rogers Road Task Force should work with the town’s recommended potential strategic partners when it resumes its meetings this spring.
The N.C. Division of Motor Vehicles will begin issuing special driver’s licenses by the end of the month that unnecessarily single out and stigmatize N.C. immigrants who came to this country as children.
On Saturday, Chapel Hill Transit unveiled 15 new diesel-electric hybrid buses. Chapel Hill’s fleet now has 29 hybrid buses, which make up about one-fourth of the fleet.
The Obama Administration’s directive requiring federal agencies with more than $100 million in research and development expenditures make available results of federally funded research to the public within one year of publication is a salutary move for the scientific community.
Pat W. McCrory
An individual’s right to voice his or her grievances in the public sphere must be steadfastly protected and defended. The issue of the Honor Court charge facing sophomore Landen Gambill is, at its core, an issue of free speech.
The local YMCA Board of Directors is looking to renovate its facilities and layout — specifically, by removing the racquetball courts. The Chapel Hill-Carrboro YMCA should work to better collect the input of its some of its most passionate members.
The University needs to cooperate fully with its accrediting agency to prevent possible sanctions ranging from loss of accreditation to forcing graduates who took “aberrant” courses to return to campus to retake their classes.
God made a copyright
There’s nothing sweet about getting screwed out of a super suite.
The new Frank Porter Graham Dual Language Magnet School is a welcome and needed addition to Chapel Hill-Carrboro City Schools.
Carrboro’s insistence on filling the vacancy on its Board of Aldermen through a special election has long been confusing.
The forthcoming installation of condom dispensers throughout campus shows that the University has a commitment to promoting public health.
During his State of the State address Monday night, Gov. Pat McCrory named education as one of his three areas of key focus.