Skip to content
Search AI Powered

Latest Stories

UNC Student Paper's Gut-Wrenching Cover Goes Viral After Shooting

Students on campus after shooting in Chapel Hill, North Carolina
Peter Zay/Anadolu Agency via Getty Images

'The Daily Tar Heel' featured text messages sent and received by students rather than sharing photos on the front of their newspaper after the fatal shooting of a professor on the University of North Carolina campus in Chapel Hill.

The fatal shooting of a professor on the University of North Carolina campus in Chapel Hill has stoked the fires of an already tense debate around the nation's lax gun laws—and a student paper's powerful cover has gone viral for its response to the shooting.

Student journalists led by Caitlyn Yaede, the managing editor of the paper’s print edition, created a cover featuring text messages sent and received by students rather than sharing photos from the scene.


Yaede shared the cover on Twitter, writing:

"I shed many tears while typing up these heart-wrenching text messages sent and received by UNC students yesterday. Our campus was on lockdown for more than three hours."
"Beyond proud of this cover and the team behind it."

You can see the cover below.

As you can see below, the paper's front page was dedicated to text messages sent and received by students after they got warning that the university was on lockdown due to an active shooter on campus.

It includes such messages as "Guys, I'm so f**king scared," "Hey - come on sweetheart - I need to hear from you," "Are you safe?" and "Someone is already shot."

Twitter screenshot of the cover of "The Daily Tar Heel" @caitlyn_yaede/Twitter

People were immediately struck by the cover as well as its bold and unmistakably raw nature that captured the consequences of nationwide gun violence.


Authorities have confirmed that a 34-year-old graduate student shot and killed associate professor Zijie Yan, who worked for the school's department of applied physical sciences.

CNN has confirmed that the two knew each other because the shooter was in the same department; Yan was his faculty adviser, according to the shooter's since-deleted UNC biographical page, which is accessible via the Internet Archive.

The shooter has been charged with first-degree murder and carrying a gun on educational property. If convicted, he faces a minimum of life in prison without parole for the murder charge and up to two years for the weapons charge.

More from Trending

Donald Trump
Win McNamee/Getty Images

Website Listing Pro-MAGA Businesses Epically Backfires As Critics Use It For Boycotts Instead

PublicSquare, a website which bills itself as “the anti-woke online marketplace" and offers a list of MAGA-friendly businesses, found its mission completely upended after critics instead used the site to fuel boycotts around the country.

The platform connects tens of thousands of businesses across the country that publicly align with MAGA views and oppose “progressive priorities” such as women’s reproductive rights and diversity initiatives. To list a business on the site, owners must first affirm that they will “respect the core values of PublicSquare” and agree not to “support causes that are in direct conflict with our core values.”

Keep Reading Show less
Screenshots of Whoopi Goldberg and Alyssa Farah Griffin
ABC

'The View' Audience Horrified After Cohost Defends Trump's $5k 'Baby Bonus' To Boost Birth Rates

Things took a turn on The View during a chat about President Donald Trump's proposed "baby bonus" of $5,000 for women to boost birth rates after co-host Alyssa Farah Griffin—a former Trump administration appointee who bowed out in 2020 and condemned his supporters' attack on the U.S. Capitol—defended the move.

Earlier, The New York Times reported that the Trump administration "has been hearing out a chorus of ideas in recent weeks for persuading Americans to get married and have more children" and that one proposal shared with aides "would give a $5,000 cash 'baby bonus' to every American mother after delivery."

Keep Reading Show less
Donald Trump
Kevin Dietsch/Getty Images

Fox News Just Aired A Disastrous Poll About President Trump—And It's A Big Yikes

President Donald Trump's approval ratings are in big trouble according to the latest Fox News poll, which shows that even a network known for being largely deferential to his administration can't spin Trump's falling popularity.

Trump’s approval rating has dipped below levels seen during his first term, with the poll showing growing voter dissatisfaction across most major issues. The poll, conducted April 18–21, found that just 44% of registered voters approve of his performance, while 55% disapprove—a 5-point drop since March and a point lower than his rating at the same stage in his first term.

Keep Reading Show less
Child holding up hard boiled eggs to cover their eyes
Photo by Hannah Tasker on Unsplash

People Explain How 'The Weird Kid' In School Earned Their Reputation

When we look back at our middle school and high school years, we can all remember that one weird kid or group of weird kids.

But while some kids just seemed "weird" on the outside, there were some who really earned their reputation.

Keep Reading Show less
A woman holding a stethescope
a woman in a white shirt holding a stethoscope

Doctors Share The Scariest Thing A Patient Has Ever Said To Them

Being a doctor isn't for the faint of heart.

It requires an infinite amount of skill and intelligence, as well as a high tolerance for blood.

Keep Reading Show less