Chapel Hill Town Council unanimously approves food truck ordinance
Food trucks can roll onto Franklin Street March 1 after the Chapel Hill Town Council unanimously passed new rules Monday to let them into town.
Use the fields below to perform an advanced search of The Daily Tar Heel's archives. This will return articles, images, and multimedia relevant to your query. You can also try a Basic search
22 items found for your search. If no results were found please broaden your search.
Food trucks can roll onto Franklin Street March 1 after the Chapel Hill Town Council unanimously passed new rules Monday to let them into town.
James Barrett became the only new member elected to the board of education Tuesday night, but he said he is not completely satisfied with the seat he won.
Despite a cold rain, more than 50 UNC students went door-to-door in Meadowmont and Southern Village to collect food for local children Monday afternoon.
The half-renovated 1976 Airstream trailer that sits in Steve and Nancy Williams’ driveway in Carrboro represents their plan to make some extra money in tough economic times.
At age 26, Qi Mo, a computer science doctoral student at UNC, was diagnosed with breast cancer in June 2010.
Food trucks might soon be allowed in town after the Chapel Hill Planning Board drafted recommendations to relax the proposed food truck ordinance Tuesday night.
Eleven-year-old Paulina Garcia Hernandez of Carrboro had never baked anything by herself before this week.
J.J. Kim and his family put their life in South Korea on pause to spend a year more than 7,000 miles from home.
Select undergraduate students forego a summer at the beach to pursue one of UNC’s multiple research opportunities.
The kids of Abbey Court look forward to Thursday afternoons.
After exhausting a 2009 grant for faculty wellness programs, Chatham County Schools is getting creative with its fitness programs.
More than three months after losing his job, Kerry Bigelow has yet to find out if his termination is final.
Three library special interest groups hinted to the town that Chapel Hill’s only library should not be in a mall at a meeting Thursday night.
A plan to allow inter-county water transfer was sent back for further review at Thursday night’s Orange County Board of Commissioners meeting.
This story appeared as part of the 2010 Year In Review issue. The Daily Tar Heel resumes publication Jan. 10.
The Chapel Hill Public Library may have a found a new — and permanent — home at an address once thought of as only an interim location.
A team jump rope routine brought tears to Amanda Brazelton’s eyes.
Teresa Chapman woke up one morning with Halloween on her mind — specifically pumpkins, and how they could benefit the environment during that time of year.
Thirteen-year-old Chapel Hill native Zoe Smith has been selling her homemade jewelry for four years.
More than two years ago, Pam Theobold’s doctor told her she was about ready to break a hip.