Festival rings in autumn
The sweet aromas of Polish sausage and jambalaya are sure to overload the senses of West Franklin Street revelers Sunday afternoon.
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The sweet aromas of Polish sausage and jambalaya are sure to overload the senses of West Franklin Street revelers Sunday afternoon.
With major construction set to wrap up in a few weeks, drivers traveling to and from campus through the intersection of N.C. 54 and Country Club Road will have one less obstacle during their hectic commutes.
Men won't have to bend over backwards to find free access to prostate exams.
Two years after a campus task force convened to study ways to provide more benefits to University employees, most of its recommendations have come to fruition.
You won’t find Spiderman, Batman and the Hulk dancing to bhangra-infused techno in a Marvel or DC comic book.
Riling up alumni and inspiring a new generation of Tar Heels lies at the heart of plans for Homecoming events next fall.
When next year’s basketball season rolls around, students could be printing tickets to the big game from their laptops.
Minutes after online housing recontracting began at 7 a.m. Tuesday, phone calls and e-mails from confused graduate students and upperclassmen were piling up in the housing office.
Companies that manufacture apparel bearing the UNC trademark would face additional scrutiny if a campus committee approves a new policy to enforce the University’s labor code.
The 150 undergraduates who toured the Odum Village residential apartments last November were given the first shot Tuesday to reserve spaces for fall semester.
Chris Dyer said it feels like someone always seems to be planning his future — whether it’s his parents’ friends saying he should follow in his father’s footsteps and become a doctor or his venture capitalist uncle pointing him toward a business degree.
The operation of the University’s newest parking deck topped the agenda of UNC’s Advisory Committee on Transportation when it met Wednesday afternoon.
Digital information filled the air Saturday morning in Murphey Hall as participants gathered for the 2005 Triangle Bloggers Conference.
Many students were awe-struck Wednesday after no candidate received a majority of votes in the two-ticket race for senior class president and vice president.