The Daily Tar Heel
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The Daily Tar Heel



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Column: Meet 2020's scariest Halloween costume

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"Once Halloween passes and Election Day comes and goes, don’t have a dumbfounded look on your face if your preferred candidate doesn’t win when you could — and should — have voted. You, sadly, will have to sulk around in that gut-wrenching costume for the next four years."








The Daily Tar Heel

Op-ed: COVID-19's grasp on small businesses

"If you are still living in Chapel Hill, it is important to shop locally and help your favorite local businesses stay afloat. Another solution that would make a drastic impact would be for lawmakers to pass a bill that would help small business owners. We have a state legislature that claims to support entrepreneurism, but little has been done to support small businesses."



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Column: Can you trust a COVID-19 vaccine?

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"Vaccines, in general, are usually safe, and as long as the data and results of the clinical trials are released to the public in a transparent and consistent fashion, there should be no reason to be wary of a COVID-19 vaccine that has undergone extensive testing."


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Column: Grab some juice (Ocean Spray?) and vibe to Fleetwood Mac

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Times are stressful, but hearing "Dreams" circulating recently has brightened a few of my days. It also fits in with the season; something about Stevie Nicks’ ethereal presence screams Autumn to me, and I find myself listening to Fleetwood Mac on repeat as the leaves start change colors and we make our way through October. 



Ryan Smoot

Column: Take a gap semester

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"Life’s long enough to take a semester off. But it’s too short to be stuck chasing contentment while perpetually suffocating in work."



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Column: UNC needs better mental health infrastructure

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"A culture that is conscious of mental health is one which creates an environment where students are fully supported, where they don't need to rely solely on University-recommended "pauses" in order to make it through each semester."




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Op-ed: Keep students centered in spring planning

"Many students have and will continue to demand that we remain in remote-only instruction through the spring semester or until a vaccine is widely available. Others argue that a return to campus is critical for their academic success and mental health. We express no opinion on that threshold question here, but we agree on this much: any attempt to return to in-person instruction must be accompanied by a robust, mandatory testing program."