The LSAT will go fully digital starting this month
Starting this September, tens of thousands of hopeful law students will take the Law School Admission Test (LSAT) in a completely new format.
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Starting this September, tens of thousands of hopeful law students will take the Law School Admission Test (LSAT) in a completely new format.
Students streamed into the Union Art Gallery on Thursday for an evening centered around sustainability and environmental consciousness.
CORRECTION: An earlier version of this article used incorrect pronouns for a source. The article has been updated to reflect the source's preferred pronouns. The Daily Tar Heel apologizes for the error.
Many incoming students start their college careers at UNC already fairly accomplished. First-year Amirsaman Zahabioun — already a published author — is no exception.
Earlier this month, one long-time volunteer made his last visit to UNC Hospitals: 12-year-old golden retriever Shep.
This month marks the third anniversary of UNC’s participation in the largest genetic autism research study in the United States.
The 28-member UNC Board of Governors met Friday morning at Appalachian State University for their regular session following a series of committee meetings earlier in the week.
This January, another group of UNC students left campus to participate in one of the University’s many spring semester study abroad programs. One cohort, however, traveled domestically to the nation’s capital to participate in UNC’s Honors Seminar on Public Policy and Global Affairs.
UNC’s Asian American Students Association (AASA) is standing in support of the University’s race-conscious admissions process.
One of the 12 astronauts to ever walk the moon, Charlie Duke, spoke at the Sonja Haynes Stone Center for Black Culture and History Friday, commemorating the 50th anniversary of the 1969 Apollo 11 mission.
The Sonja Haynes Stone Center for Black Culture and History is set to begin its 2019 Writer’s Discussion Series this month.
The UNC-system Board of Governors gathered in the Center for School Leadership Development on Friday morning for their regular January meeting. At the meeting, several board members presented updates regarding the work of various committees and community members continued to discuss Silent Sam during the public comments session.
Update, 7:55 p.m.: By Thursday, UNC system Interim President Bill Roper hopes to appoint an interim chancellor — emphasis on interim.
Dancers, poets, faculty, students and community members will gather in the Sonja Haynes Stone Center for Black Culture and History on Tuesday to celebrate the life and legacy of Martin Luther King Jr. through the center’s annual event, "He Was a Poem, He Was a Song."
The University announced the expansion of its Carolina Student Transfer Excellence Program, or C-STEP, funded by a $1.13 million grant — the largest donation in the program’s history — from the North Carolina GlaxoSmithKline Foundation at the Carolina Inn on Friday.
While speakers gave their opening remarks at a Friday conference on student safety, students and community members stood at the entrance of the William and Ida Friday Center, signs in hand, protesting the summit’s inclusion of Chancellor Carol Folt and Chapel Hill Chief of Police Chris Blue.
In the spring of 2017, Marshele Carter applied for an APPLES service-learning course development grant in the hopes of creating a class focused solely on public relations and communications in the nonprofit sector. This semester, Carter, an adjunct faculty member in UNC’s School of Media and Journalism, taught her first class of MEJO 490, or Cause Communications: Public Relations Strategies for Nonprofit Organizations.
Blue Cross and Blue Shield of North Carolina announced last week the company will invest $800,000 in a new program within UNC’s School of Medicine aimed at improving access to primary care in Rockingham County.
A sea of white and Carolina Blue covered Stadium Drive before Saturday’s Homecoming football game, but several individuals wearing all black stood out among the crowd.
Students, academics, community members and political practitioners gathered in Wilson Library’s Pleasants Family Assembly Room Saturday to discuss the current state and the future of education policy in North Carolina.