Column: Your voice, not ours
Print space is prized amongst my staff now. Giving up a whole paper to mostly non-staff made content isn't something we would normally do.
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Print space is prized amongst my staff now. Giving up a whole paper to mostly non-staff made content isn't something we would normally do.
Richard Spencer, president of the National Policy Institute and a white nationalist organizer, was denied a request to rent space on campus, according to an email from Chancellor Carol Folt.
Chancellor Carol Folt sent an email to the Carolina Community around 11 a.m. announcing that Jim Dean, executive vice chancellor and provost, is stepping down after 4 years in his position.
Orange County Schools and Chapel Hill-Carrboro Schools have adjusted policies on the Confederate flag and other threatening symbols just weeks before the first day of classes.
Chapel Hill mayor Pam Hemminger sent a letter to Chancellor Carol Folt asking UNC to take down Silent Sam — a monument to Confederate soldiers on UNC's campus.
Update(8:16 p.m.): Hate-Free Schools Coalition member, Stacey Sewall, said the new dress code policy is a step in the right direction for Orange County School's and is interested if Chapel Hill-Carrboro City Schools' Board will follow suit.
You may not know this, but you can get Bojangles on campus during the Spring semester at UNC.
The first column I ever wrote for this paper was about comic books. To me, graphic novels, comics and visual storytelling are some of the most interesting ways to convey a message.
I always had a feeling I would end up in journalism. Growing up, newspapers were always strangely a part of my life even though I didn’t personally know any journalists.
Opinion Editor Tyler Fleming is the only candidate running to be the 2017-18 editor-in-chief of The Daily Tar Heel. He is a junior political science and history major from Randleman, and this is a short version of his platform.
This last week was my junior year Spring Break. Planning what you want to do for break is hard. Everyone seems to be doing something interesting or life-changing. My Spring Break was neither of those things.
Deciding who you want to vote for is entirely different from telling someone else how to vote. The Daily Tar Heel editorial board has a long-standing tradition of endorsing a student body president every year — endorsing is helpful for the community and something the editorial board enjoys doing.
THE ISSUE: Following last month's Moral March demonstration in Raleigh, the North Carolina NAACP and Forward Together Moral Movement released a list of six key demands to federal lawmakers. These viewpoints examine how effective the demands would be in making a societal difference. You can read the other side here.
Being in the newspaper business makes the word “advertising” one of the most commonly used words in my vocabulary. For anyone reading this, you’ve probably become conditioned to expect advertisements before YouTube videos, news articles and almost anywhere else your eyes gaze. Maybe the only time we are free of advertisements is when we are asleep or dead.
Baseball is back. Football is dead.
We have all seen the Facebook posts urging us to email or call our Congressional representatives, which is great. Civil engagement helps democracy thrive. Hopefully our representatives have some sort of decency and are willing to listen to their constituents regardless of party identification, but I have to think that is being overly optimistic.
TO THE EDITOR:
UNC students work hard enough to merit an independent coffee shop easily accessible from campus. We have plenty of food places, we have bars, we have convenience stores, but if you want a high quality cup of coffee, you have to walk a good distance.
This is a special Swerve playlist written by Tyler Fleming, opinion editor, and David Farrow, editorial board member. The opinions reflected in this column may not necessarily represent Swerve.
The North Carolina Republican Party is filled with sore losers who have a stifling disrespect for the values of this state. The use of special sessions to hide from dissenting opinions and from constituents should be seen as an insult to every citizen of this state.