Threats targeting UNC students take new meaning with connection to actual violence
Content Warning: This story includes slurs referring to individuals' race, sexual orientation, religion and other sensitive material.
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Content Warning: This story includes slurs referring to individuals' race, sexual orientation, religion and other sensitive material.
Due process — it’s a term that comes up again and again in campus sexual assault debates.
Students from South Africa and Kenya are visiting UNC this week as part of the African University Leadership Exchange Program.
UNC art classes today, which often include at least half women, would probably be unrecognizable to famous Renaissance or Modernist artists — who were historically mostly male.
Content warning: This column discusses incidents of sexual assault and rape.
Maya Little, the grad student who infamously defaced Silent Sam with red paint back in April, finally received sanctions from the Honor Court on Friday.
TO THE EDITOR:
The North Carolina Supreme Court agreed to hear a public records case involving The Daily Tar Heel demanding UNC release the names, offenses and disciplinary actions taken by the University against faculty or students who committed instances of sexual misconduct during their affiliation with UNC.
The Trump administration is working to overhaul current Title IX regulations, including how schools handle allegations of sexual harassment and assault. This would be one of several changes the U.S. Department of Education has made to Title IX enforcement.
With Silent Sam down and midterm elections coming up, The Center for the Study of the American South at UNC decided it was crucial to have a discussion about white supremacy as more than just a white, masculine topic.
CORRECTION: An earlier version of this article did not include other groups that organized the Believe Survivors Rally. Campus Y and the Workers' Union were co-organizers with the Carolina Feminist Coalition. The article has been updated to include all of the organizers. The Daily Tar Heel apologizes for this error.
Hannah Inman, co-chair of Feminist Students United, leads demonstrators to fraternity court chanting against rape culture in fraternities. Demonstrators gathered at South Building on Friday, Oct. 12, 2018 for the Believe Survivors Rally to hear testimonies and march to fraternity court in support of survivors of sexual harrassment and assault.
(From left to right) Riley Curtis, Reiley Baker, and Amy Estrada stand in the front of the crowd at South Building during the Believe Surivors Rally Friday, Oct. 12, 2018. Demonstrators gathered at South Building to hear testimonies and proceed to march to fraternity court in support of survivors of sexual harrassment and assault.
Members of Pi Kappa Alpha joined demonstrators during the Believe Survivors Rally in fraternity court on Friday, Oct. 12, 2018. Demonstrators gathered at South Building to hear testimonies and march to fraternity court in support of survivors of sexual harrassment and assault.
Emily Bullins, co-chair of Preventing Violence with Sexual Health, speaks in fraternity court during the Believe Survivors Rally Friday, Oct. 12, 2018. Demonstrators gathered at South Building to hear testimonies and march to fraternity court in support of survivors of sexual harrassment and assault.
UNC has seen its fair share of feminist rallies, but this one is different.
Hundreds of people were arrested during protests against Brett Kavanaugh’s confirmation to the Supreme Court. This issue is clearly an emotional one, especially for the millions of sexual assault survivors nationwide. According to the National Sexual Violence Resource Center, one in five women will experience sexual assault in their lifetime. However only about 40 percent of those assaults will be reported to law enforcement.
Two weeks ago, Charles Ludington was best-known for being a history professor at North Carolina State University. But since Sept. 30, he's become well-known for something else: publicly sharing details about his friendship and drinking with Justice Brett Kavanaugh when they were both students at Yale University.
A mysterious light board popped up along the American Tobacco Trail Bridge over Interstate 40. It read, "Outraged? Nov 6."
Christine Blasey Ford, a 1988 UNC graduate who testified before the Senate that then-Supreme Court nominee Brett Kavanaugh sexually assaulted her in high school, has been nominated for a 2019 Distinguished Alumna and Alumnus Award.