This election, who isn’t voting?
Only weeks remain in the election cycle and Democrats and Republicans are scrambling to win the last remaining undecided voters. Besides who citizens ...
Read More »Only weeks remain in the election cycle and Democrats and Republicans are scrambling to win the last remaining undecided voters. Besides who citizens ...
Read More »Since it’s debate season, we should all step back and realize who controls the debates to begin with. It should not be surprising that a debate between ...
Read More »“Sir, got any spare change?” I swiftly walk past the homeless man on Franklin Street, muttering, “Sorry, I don’t.”
Read More »The Paris subway was standing room only, typical for a Friday night. A friend and I were deep in conversation when I felt a hand up my skirt. My head ...
Read More »I’m an Edgar Allan Poe fan. I’ve seen all his movies. But why is everything so repetitive now? “Silent House,” “House on Haunted Hill,” “Last ...
Read More »Black women are dying of breast cancer at a rate higher than any other racial group.
Read More »A week into August, I knew something was different. It was as if I was looking at senior year through sea glass — a deep, blurry blue. I found myself ...
Read More »The 2010 shift to a Republican majority in the N.C. General Assembly is reshaping the relationship between UNC-CH and lawmakers holding the purse strings ...
Read More »If you were a member of Facebook in October 2009, you might recall your female friends posting statuses that simply stated a color (i.e. “Katherine ...
Read More »With blue recycling bins dotting every hallway on campus, UNC has certainly earned its ‘A’ for the second year in a row in the Food and Recycling ...
Read More »On Sept. 10th, 1992, hundreds of students marched to South Building to deliver a letter to then Chancellor Paul Hardin demanding that the University establish ...
Read More »Smoking is cool, or at least that’s what “Mad Men” has taught me. Science, though, has taught me that it’s bad. The recent uproar over a proposed ...
Read More »There are two types of apologies that I have seen used throughout my life: The bad, fake apology and the good, awkward apology.
Read More »Imagine being born in a rural area with limited resources to help you get ahead in life. You only made it to the seventh grade because you had to drop ...
Read More »Last week, a newly discovered 4th century shred of paper quotes Jesus as having a wife, prompting strong skepticism from the Vatican and inciting furious ...
Read More »Reverse racism is a phrase often used to connote discrimination aimed at the dominant racial group in a given area to benefit historically disadvantaged ...
Read More »During my senior year of high school, I applied to nine schools, dreaming vaguely of cinematic ivy-clad private schools. But when I received the acceptance ...
Read More »I recall in 7th grade reading from a pink and green social studies book a passage about what makes America exceptional. The list included benefits such ...
Read More »Sometimes I use this column to explain a new invention or policy, sometimes to encourage everyone to adopt a more eco-friendly way of living. But today ...
Read More »It’s time, I think, for me to write about “Fifty Shades of Grey.” Silly woman, you’re thinking, that book was a summer phenomenon. She is coming ...
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