News

UNC’s ‘free tuition’ announcement causes confusion, spurs questions from board members

Members of the UNC System’s Board of Governors and UNC-Chapel Hill’s Board of Trustees are asking questions and offering pushback to university administrators following a “surprise” announcement last week in which the college offered certain eligible students “free tuition.”

Grant Lefelar
Opinion

Racial preferences are gone — now what?

As widely predicted, the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill has lost its admissions case before the U.S. Supreme Court. Six of nine justices decreed that neither UNC nor any other university that receives government funds may discriminate on the basis of race when choosing its students. That’s what UNC has been doing for...

John Hood
News

UNC-Chapel Hill chancellor disappointed in SCOTUS admissions decision, but ‘will comply’

On Thursday, North Carolina officials, politicians, and analysts offered mixed reactions to the U.S. Supreme Court’s decision rejecting the use of race in admissions policies at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and Harvard.

Grant Lefelar
Opinion

Who are you calling an extremist?

If you’ve engaged in political activity or debate for longer than, say, a week, chances are someone thinks you’re an extremist. If your activity occurs or draws attention on social media, chances are someone has called you an extremist.

John Hood

Help Support Non-profit Journalism & Donate Today

Video

Locke’s Mitch Kokai discusses UNC admissions case at U.S. Supreme Court

Mitch Kokai, John Locke Foundation senior political analyst, discusses the UNC-Chapel Hill admissions lawsuit at the U.S. Supreme Court. Kokai offered these comments during the Nov. 4, 2022, edition of PBS North Carolina’s “Front Row with Marc Rotterman.”

Mitch Kokai
Opinion

Cooper defends racial discrimination

Because I am an inveterate optimist who likes to think the best of other folks, I’m going to assume for the sake of the following argument that North Carolina Gov. Roy Cooper and former governors Jim Hunt, Mike Easley, and Bev Perdue sometimes sign documents they’ve not closely read. I make that assumption because they...

John Hood
News

UNC-Chapel Hill affirmative action case heads to U.S. Supreme Court

The U.S. Supreme Court is poised to make what could be a landmark ruling on the constitutionality of affirmative action after justices decided Monday, Jan. 24, to take up cases arising from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and Harvard University. The cases originated in 2014 when the nonprofit Students for Fair Admissions...

David N. Bass