A-ca-awesome tips for fall a capella auditions
With the fall semester comes the start of football season, Week of Welcome and another decades old tradition that has been celebrated by the Chapel Hill community since its beginnings: a capella.
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With the fall semester comes the start of football season, Week of Welcome and another decades old tradition that has been celebrated by the Chapel Hill community since its beginnings: a capella.
Monsters, books and libraries, oh my! Wilson Library and UNC professor Jeanne Moskal’s English class are teaming up to present, “Reconstructing Frankenstein’s Monster: Mary Shelley’s World in Print,” an exhibition that will bring Mary Shelley’s novel, “Frankenstein,” back to life. Enter if you dare.
From the parking lot to the movie theater, the Swain Lot Film Festival has been showcasing student films for over 15 years. The student-run film festival will screen at the Varsity Theatre on Saturday, April 21, welcoming the UNC community to enjoy food, friends and film.
As UNC students stressfully check their class syllabi, cram for finals and secure summer plans, Southern Cultures Magazine is encouraging the community to take a break from the classroom and enjoy a different kind of lecture.
California-based indie/surf rock band HATE DRUGS will be performing Wednesday night at Local 506. Staff writer Amelia Keesler spoke with the members of HATE DRUGS about their music, life on tour and the importance of a good burger after jamming on stage.
UNC’s Student Hip-Hop Organization, SHHO, held a panel discussion at the Campus Y on Monday to address the art, platform and history of hip-hop and its impacts on social change and social justice.
Global International Worldwide, Intl., a student-run organization on campus, will hold its “Kazoo It! 2” event Saturday in front of Wilson Library from 4 p.m. to 6 p.m. The event will feature 200 free kazoos, some impromptu conducting and a spontaneous parade around the quad.
As couples, friends and singletons alike celebrate Valentine’s Day with chocolates and Nicholas Sparks movies, Hannah Hendren will be celebrating a different kind of V-Day: the celebration of vaginas around the world. Yes, vaginas.
Chapel Hill-Carrboro NAACP held a community event last week honoring the life and legacy of Frederick Douglass in time to celebrate the bicentennial of his birth.
Whether you are an avid movie-goer, a film fanatic or you use the Academy Awards as an excuse to drink champagne and judge the best dressed, the annual showcase attracts us all. This year, critics found plenty of films worthy of praise. But what does the Academy know? We want to hear what you think in time for the award show on March 4.
Students might leave Davis Library to hear a different kind of reading as The Cellar Door offers a fall presentation of work on the last day of classes.
Former UNC professor, writer and editor Christopher Brookhouse recently published his latest novel, “A Pinch of Salt.” He is the founding editor for Hitchcock Annual and an award-winning author of several novels, short stories and poetry collections.
UNC’s Department of Communication presents "The Four Underwear Models of the Apocalypse," a dance cycle that combines the theology of humankind and underpants — a blend destined to create a unique experience for its audience.
The Ackland Art Museum’s exhibition "Flash of Light, Fog of War: Japanese Military Prints, 1894-1905" captures the cultural and historical perspectives of Japanese woodblock prints from the Sino-Japanese War and the Russo-Japanese War at the turn of the 20th century.
Comedians Jay Pharoah and AJ Foster starred in UNC’s annual homecoming comedy show Tuesday night, highlighting controversial topics with humor, celebrity impressions, Justin Bieber lyrics and freestyle rap.
The Southern Fried Queer Pride festival comes to Durham for the first time Thursday, putting on a three-day event filled with art workshops, performances, skill shares and dance parties to celebrate Southern queer culture.
Nearly a decade after MTV’s “Total Request Live” was discontinued, the hit afternoon series returned Monday, hoping to reach a younger generation of music lovers and reclaim its former popularity.
Nightlight Bar and Club will host its monthly 919Noise Showcase on Wednesday, featuring performances from noise artists 80KV, HyMettus Woods, Provisional and Isotroposphere.