UNC Professors inducted into honorary society
Two UNC professors were elected Wednesday to join the ranks of artists, musicians and world leaders in the American Academy of Arts and Sciences.
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Two UNC professors were elected Wednesday to join the ranks of artists, musicians and world leaders in the American Academy of Arts and Sciences.
This year's summer reading selection promises to create discussions by questioning the medicalization of end of life decisions.
Chancellor Carol Folt said she and her team didn’t know the exact legal implications of House Bill 2 when it was passed.
After a unanimous decision by the 13-member Request for Proposal Advisory Committee, Barnes & Noble College will begin operating the UNC Student Stores on July 1.
On Jan. 20, a fire in the electrical vault of Dey Hall caused power outages in buildings across central campus.
Spring semester might be coming to a close, but don’t worry — just around the corner are a thousand things to look forward to this summer in Chapel Hill.
Depictions of aborted fetuses and genocide victims filled Polk Place Wednesday. Protest signs and passionate debates soon followed.
History professor Jim Leloudis came of age at the tail end of the civil rights and women’s rights movements. Listening to people who might otherwise go unheard has informed how he’s studied history ever since.
After announcing his retirement in November, former UNC Student Stores Director John Gorsuch has found a new job 10 miles down the road. More than three decades after he started working at UNC, Gorsuch is now the associate general manager of retail operations at Duke University Stores.
As it nears its eighth decade, the Bowman Gray Memorial Pool’s future is uncertain.
In fall 2015, as many as 88,000 pieces of paper were printed per day from the 60 printers across campus. The average student printed 132 pages during the semester.
Senior Alma Islas and her family pay taxes — taxes that are then funneled into federal student financial aid funds. But because Islas is not a documented citizen, she will never see that money.
For 24 hours, the voices of slaves rang out from the base of Silent Sam.
“Save our store” rang in the air as students marched to South Building in opposition to the privatization of Student Stores.
CORRECTION: Due to a reporting error, the original version of this story misrepresented the name of the textbook wholesaler. The company's name is now MBS Textbook Exchange.
Employees of Student Stores are celebrating the store’s 100th anniversary while the possibility of privatization looms.
For Keith Whitfield, the father of four children with nine degrees among them, education has always been a priority.
The murder of nine African-American churchgoers in Charleston, S.C. opened a national debate about the place of Confederate monuments in American historical and physical landscapes. On July 10, a Confederate flag was removed from the grounds of the South Carolina State House.
Police were responding to a complaint when they removed Hurston Hall signs from the controversially named Carolina Hall on the last day of spring semester.
Stories of rape, murder and discrimination against black women were told at the #SayHerName vigil in front of Wilson Library Monday night.