Farewell Column: Figuring out how to build a trinket garden
It started with a mini bubble gum machine, a disco ball and a small green stegosaurus.
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It started with a mini bubble gum machine, a disco ball and a small green stegosaurus.
Last Friday, students, creativity and bubbles filled the Pit for an Interactive Art Fair, organized as part of the eighth annual Arts Everywhere Day.
On Friday night, dozens of students traveled through the rain in suits and elegant dresses to the Frank Porter Graham Student Union for the 2024 Black Student Movement Ball.
You hold in your hands The Daily Tar Heel’s inaugural music edition, a celebration of the musicians and music lovers who have filled Chapel Hill and Carrboro with unique melodies and lyrics for decades.
This article is part of the Mental Health Collaborative, a project completed by nine North Carolina college newsrooms to cover mental health issues in their communities. To read more stories about mental health, explore the interactive project developed specifically for this collaborative.
On Sunday, more than 100 pro-Israel community members attended a rally in downtown Chapel Hill to mark 100 days since the Hamas-led Oct. 7 attacks and call for the release of all hostages held in Gaza.
On Tuesday, Christopher Carini, the owner of Linda’s Bar and Grill, announced that the restaurant would be closing after 47 years in Chapel Hill due to a variety of factors including debt and legal troubles.
At the Saturday midnight showing of cult classic “The Rocky Horror Picture Show” in the Varsity Theatre, a crowd of UNC students outfitted in fishnets, lingerie and bold, red lips were full of antici…
An hour before doors opened for Mipso’s last show in North Carolina, the members of the folk-Americana quartet were on the floor of Raleigh’s Lincoln Theatre, surrounded by a small group of fans.
Catherine Oxendine, a resident adviser in Old East Residence Hall, was looking out the window of her room when she first got an Alert Carolina message that there was an armed and dangerous person on campus.
The Daily Tar Heel’s coverage of the arts is a bit like a story – it’s gone through various versions, passed into several hands and has an intricate plot. It's a story that is full of details about our paper and its history in our community.
This summer, a range of leaders have stepped into new roles at UNC.
Construction to improve the accessibility of the Old Well will still be complete by the first day of class of the upcoming fall semester, according to UNC Media Relations. Construction began on May 30.
Chancellor Guskiewicz presented UNC’s effort to provide free tuition and required fees for undergraduates from North Carolina whose families make under $80,000 per year, starting with the 2024 incoming class, at the UNC Board of Governors meeting on Wednesday.
On Thursday, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled universities could no longer use affirmative action — specifically in the consideration of race — in their admissions process.
UNC recently submitted a request for its students to be able to use their University-issued One Cards as their photo ID to vote as part of a North Carolina State Board of Elections initiative.
Nearly half of the students admitted to UNC qualify for and receive financial aid.
When I was a kid, I often fell asleep to my dad quietly singing the Carolina fight song as part of our bedtime routine.
CORRECTION: A previous version of this article incorrectly listed the undergraduate student body president as a non-voting member of the Board of Trustees. The Daily Tar Heel apologizes for this error.
For De'Ivyion Drew, art is a love ballad.