Looking back on legislation
Food trucks Nearly a year after Chapel Hill began accepting applications for food truck permits, the town still only has one food truck.
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
64 items found for your search. If no results were found please broaden your search.
Food trucks Nearly a year after Chapel Hill began accepting applications for food truck permits, the town still only has one food truck.
Chapel Hill police are still looking for the man who fired a gun on Franklin Street early Wednesday morning.
One year ago today, Sonia Katchian and seven other members of Occupy Chapel Hill were staring down the ends of assault weapons.
Rev. Mark Davidson never expected a handful of spray-painted swastikas as a response to a bus ad his church took out in August.
Barks of joy, splashing and thumping paws could be heard at the A.D. Clark Pool on Sunday.
Nearly eleven months after the Yates Motor Company building raid, David Maliken is still angry about the way police handled the situation.
After closing its doors nearly five years ago, a Chapel Hill landmark might finally get its second wind.
Fresh asphalt and hot, sunny days don’t normally mix — but for road construction projects around Chapel Hill, they often become the best option.
The beginning of UNC’s fall semester might still be a month away, but town and University officials are already preparing for students to move back into town.
The Chapel Hill-Carrboro City Schools Board of Education will have their first meeting of the 2012-13 school year on Thursday, but the dual-language program is not on the agenda.
When Joseph Edney first started jumping rope with the Triangle’s Bouncing Bulldogs jump rope team, he didn’t expect to end up at the Olympics. He was only 8 years old at the time.
Rathskeller will not re-open again
Summer vacation is nearly halfway over for most K-12 students, but there’s still time for kids to expand their horizons.
The first half of the final Chapel Hill Town Council meeting Monday brought heavily debated projects to a close.
Chapel Hill Transit wants more people to ride the buses — and they hope an event happening today will encourage people to do so.
When Karen Halsey and Kent Hodges made plans to open a new Mellow Mushroom in Chapel Hill, they hoped to have it up and running in time for the new school year.
Bryce McCulloch remembers John Snipes as a loyal Tar Heel, a great friend and as the man who saved his family.
Man cannot survive on Pokey Stix alone, and neither could Gumby’s.
With a vote of 7-0, the Chapel Hill Town Council unanimously passed the Inter-Faith Council’s Good Neighbor Plan, after months of discussion among residents.
The passage of the Good Neighbor Plan Monday makes the Inter-Faith Council for Social Service one step closer toward their goal of a new transitional homeless shelter.