Six pro-Palestinian protesters were arrested on UNC’s campus this week after failing to remove tents they’d erected on Polk Place in front of South Building, joining dozens of other students who have been arrested on college campuses… read more
In Room 67 of Carroll Hall, students in the Hussman School of Journalism and Media sat in front of a bank of computer screens while scribbling notes as they watched the 2021 Tokyo Olympics. They had hoped to travel to Tokyo to cover the games… read more
An international student from Vietnam depicts diversity and other themes in a piece of artwork she created to celebrate the class of 2024 that will hang in the Student Union for a year. The six-foot canvas by Tam Le, a senior majoring in… read more
Former Chancellor Kevin Guskiewicz encouraged students April 29 to be self-advocates, to make sacrifices now for their future and to surround themselves with good people, during an event that was disrupted by pro-Palestinian… read more
Student centers at UNC will not be affected if the Board of Governors votes next month, as expected, to change its current diversity policy, according to Interim Chancellor Lee Roberts. Speaking during the final UNC Faculty Council meeting of the… read more
Volunteer board service plays a pivotal role in sustaining and advancing the mission of our beloved institution. Whether through fundraising boards, advisory boards or fiduciary boards, alumni engagement in governance ensures that our alma mater… read more
Artists and artisans of all ages applauded the January opening of Koala Craft Art Studio on the ground floor of Greenbridge, downtown Chapel Hill’s first high-rise. Owner Amy Fang and her family have outfitted a place for people of all talent… read more
UNC’s Ackland Art Museum made headlines nationwide this year when it returned a 19th-century oil painting that was taken from a prominent Jewish art collector during World War II. The painting, The Studio of Thomas Couture, had been… read more
Rwenshaun Miller ’09 battled back from mental illness and the brink of suicide. Now he brings his own culture to help others like him — while convincing Black communities it isn’t taboo to seek treatment. by Laurie D. Willis… read more
Autism defines how Eric Garcia ’14 lives, not who he is. He grew up hearing society’s message that, as an autistic person, he had an illness to be cured. Yet Garcia understood autism to be akin to being deaf or gay — an integral part of… read more