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¼ª²ÊÍøÍøÕ¾'s Dave DeWitt speaks with Kyle Villemain, the editor in chief of The Assembly, about UNC System President Peter Hans.
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"This left us speechless," said Catawba College's President David Nelson. "It left us wondering if we were reading numbers correctly."
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Students for Fair Admissions, Incorporated sued UNC-Chapel Hill. The advocacy group argued that UNC's admissions policies were racially discriminatory against Asian American and white students.
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Judge Loretta Biggs ruled that the University of North Carolina showed it has a compelling reason to pursue a diverse student body and measurable benefits that result. The group's president, Edward Blum, told The Associated Press he'll file his appeal on Tuesday and hopes the Supreme Court will consider this case together with its suit against Harvard.
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UNC-Chapel Hill is cutting its libraries' budget by $5 million over the next two years in a larger effort to balance its budget. That's making some question UNC's strength as a research institution.
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Black students organized to call for the university's trustees to vote on tenure to the award-winning journalist. They're also speaking up about how it feels to be a student of color at their predominantly white institution.
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Investigative journalist Nikole Hannah-Jones has told the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill in a letter that she will not join the faculty at its journalism school without tenure.
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Female faculty of color and Indigenous faculty who have recently left UNC Chapel Hill say that the racial and political climate at the university fortified their decision to accept better job offers outside North Carolina.
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The decision highlights the divisions between her view of the mission of journalism and Arkansas newspaper publisher whose name adorns the school.
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Walter Hussman Jr. says he discussed concerns about bringing Hannah-Jones to the journalism school with the dean, but Susan King told him she though having her in the school would be a plus for the university and would bring prestige to the school.