Familiar faces fill Bavarian bunker
“Rathskeller” was traditionally the basement of the town hall in every town in Germany and Austria, and in 1948, Franklin Street received its own version in the form of a dark, cavernous eatery.
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“Rathskeller” was traditionally the basement of the town hall in every town in Germany and Austria, and in 1948, Franklin Street received its own version in the form of a dark, cavernous eatery.
The class of 2005 had just entered the University when the destruction of the World Trade Center on Sept. 11, 2001, shocked the campus and the nation.
With more than 2,000 members, UNC Habitat for Humanity is one of the largest student organizations on campus — but it couldn’t have been done without Matt Williamson.
Fifty years ago, The Daily Tar Heel was a curious hybrid of political firecracker and socialite tabloid. Former editor Charles Kuralt’s explosive editorials advocating integration of the University were juxtaposed with dance announcements, faux-glamorous cigarette ads and portraits of debutantes.
UNC students will have a chance to receive salon services from their peers when the newest branch of the Aveda Institute, a cosmetics and beauty company, opens at 200 W. Franklin St. in March.
UNC has a long history of producing foreign ambassadors.
When Wes Joines couldn't get a bid to the Marines Corps Marathon in Washington, D.C., he decided to run in a different direction.
In 1977, Danny Cameron opened a craft gallery in Chapel Hill, even though by his own admission he knows nothing about art.