Black History Month events are for everyone
TO THE EDITOR: Recently, the inclusivity of events put on by the Office of Diversity and Multicultural Affairs, the Black Student Movement and others has been called into question.
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TO THE EDITOR: Recently, the inclusivity of events put on by the Office of Diversity and Multicultural Affairs, the Black Student Movement and others has been called into question.
TO THE EDITOR: It is disturbing to read that Winston Crisp is comfortable with UNC’s yellow light rating from the Foundation for Individual Rights in Education.
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TO THE EDITOR: There are many things we take issue with in the Jan. 26 letter, “A woman’s choice is none of our businesses.” First, Carolina Students for Life is not religiously affiliated. Moreover, abortion is a human rights issue.
TO THE EDITOR: Every year, students pay a portion of their fees to support the Association of Student Governments. In return, the ASG president is supposed to represent our interests at the Board of Governors. But though the BOG plans to raise tuition to historically high levels on Feb. 10, ASG has done little to oppose these hikes.
TO THE EDITOR: The next deadline to apply for the Student Enrichment Fund is on the horizon and we would like to encourage students to capitalize on this opportunity to both explore their passions and enrich the Carolina community.
TO THE EDITOR: CUAB’s hosting of Dan Savage using student fees stands as an affront to the values held by this University.
TO THE EDITOR: This past Saturday morning, the Tar Heel family suffered a dear loss when Brian John O’Mara passed away in a subway accident in Manhattan.
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TO THE EDITOR: Recently proposed/approved tuition hikes unfairly target students coming from North Carolina’s middle class families. Students that make just enough money to qualify for little need-based aid and already struggle to find ways to pay current tuition will be the ones finding UNC less attractive.
TO THE EDITOR: While Pat McCrory has spent the last five years going around our great state campaigning to be governor, it is clear that there has only been one person actually governing North Carolina —Beverly Perdue.
TO THE EDITOR: I am writing to express my growing frustration with how the Town of Chapel Hill has handled the aftermath of its raid of the Yates Motor Company building and its occupants on Nov. 13.
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TO THE EDITOR: Readers of “Will your major get you a job?” on Jan. 19 may have missed an important finding from the survey used as the source for the story: Education majors have the second-lowest rate of unemployment.
TO THE EDITOR: I’m sorry to be the one to break this to you, but you are a horrible waste of trees. You really are. You occupy a relatively unique position as the independent voice of a much-heralded liberal arts university, but you do absolutely nothing with that position. Your best quality is your ability to toe the university line. How does that make you an independent voice? Are there no would-be journalists in your ranks who realize that “investigative” is a necessary precursor to the word “journalism”?
TO THE EDITOR: During my last two years at UNC, I worked with the Martin Luther King planning committee as the MLK Banquet Coordinator, and I saw firsthand how much planning went into organizing the annual MLK week.