Dispatcher who helped deliver baby recognized
For Tommy Holmes, talking a woman through delivering a baby at a Chapel Hill bus stop is just part of the job.
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For Tommy Holmes, talking a woman through delivering a baby at a Chapel Hill bus stop is just part of the job.
For more than 200 local residents, pumpkin curry and spicy fish paste were on the menu Sunday night.
Carrboro Mayor Mark Chilton has published a book on transit in Orange County, just in time for Tuesday’s transit vote.
For the first time, the winning brews from the inaugural North Carolina Brewers’ Cup will be on display at the N.C. State Fair.
After five and a half years, The Carrboro Citizen published its last issue on Thursday.
It’s an unseasonably warm Sunday afternoon in Carrboro, and dozens of children are sitting in ambulances at the South Orange Rescue Squad station.
Franklin Street has been looking a little bit more beautiful recently thanks to the Chapel Hill Garden Club.
Seven-year-old Annabel Barbour said she had never made butter before Saturday.
With the 2012 Democratic National Convention only days away, four Orange County residents are getting especially excited.
Shannon McSwiney says that every day feels like Earth Day at Briar Chapel.
Deardra Green-Campbell never guessed that she was descended from a white slave owner until she came across the will of Thomas Lloyd Hogan on the Chapel Hill Preservation Society website two weeks ago.
As couples stroll among aisles filled with ripe tomatoes and bright purple chard, Flo Hawley hands out samples of cheese to eager customers.
Moreton Neal can’t remember a time when she didn’t cook.
After an hour and a half of heated discussion, Chapel Hill Town Council voted Monday to enact an interim ordinance on the use of Peace and Justice Plaza.
Ernest Dollar is not your average community preservation director.
Local preservation groups want to make sure black Chapel Hill residents from long ago receive in death the honor they were denied in life.
Brandy McDonald, the co-owner of East End Oyster and Martini Bar, says finding feces near her business was the last straw.
Esther McCauley remembers walking past a cornerstone at the entrance of the principal’s office each day while attending Lincoln High School from 1949 to 1952.
UNC graduate student Geoffrey Green moved to Meadowmont because he thought a light rail line would someday be located in his neighborhood.
Northside residents are excited to hear the laughter of school children echoing through the neighborhood once again.