Clef Hangers say goodbye to a special senior
Trying to travel anywhere with Carter Gregory takes forever.
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Trying to travel anywhere with Carter Gregory takes forever.
Chapel Hill's Ackland Art Museum and the Nasher Museum of Art at Duke University are Twitter-feuding over tonight's UNC-Duke men's basketball game.
The corned beef sandwich was his favorite. He almost always ordered it to go.
UNC senior Kamaira Philips is lending her voice to a larger stage.
What is it about being behind a screen that makes us feel so safe and protected? Is it that we can hide behind fake profiles or the, “Sorry, that was my friend,” excuse?
Deep End Bar is beginning to grow another group of regulars on Tuesday nights. But these students aren't there for “Country Night.”
Ackland Art Museum
Disc jockeys Trevor Dougherty and Rob Sekay do it for the ladies.
PlayMakers Repertory Company will take audiences from the bright stages of Broadway to the deep confines of the forest and back again with its 2014-15 season.
With an intimate stage setting and hilariously honest characters, PlayMakers Repertory Company’s “Private Lives” transported audience members back to the glamorous 1930s.
Nathaniel Claridad, a UNC graduate student in dramatic arts, appears as various characters in PlayMakers’s rotating repertory “Metamorphoses,” including Silenus and Phaeton, and as an understudy for Trinculo in “The Tempest.” He spoke with staff writer Gabriella Cirelli about the process of the joint productions — both set around a pool of water — which close by Dec. 8.
Forget being taped to the fridge — the art of these young students is on gallery display for all to enjoy.
UNC professor of archaeology Steve Davis worked with colleagues and students from 1983 to 2002 to excavate three Native American villages — including one prehistoric village — outside of Hillsborough on the Eno River.
Surrounding a 15-ton pool on stage, PlayMakers Repertory Company masterfully combined ancient with modern, land with sea and human with spirit in its Friday opening of Mary Zimmerman’s “Metamorphoses.”
Alice Birch’s “Many Moons” is hopping across the pond to Durham’s Common Wealth Endeavors.
Love, redemption, mythology and chlorine take center stage at the Center for Dramatic Art Saturday night.
Flyleaf Books is hosting a discussion on Monday with Baptist minister and author Dana Trent. Her first book, “Saffron Cross: The Unlikely Story of How a Christian Minister Married a Hindu Monk,” is an account of her interfaith marriage.
Musicians from 16 different countries shared powerful melodies and messages this past weekend in Chapel Hill and Durham.
Elephant-print tunics, hand-woven scarves and an inspiring mission are sure to catch attention in the Pit today.
Dean Roughton, who graduated from UNC in 1997, recently released his new book of humorous essays titled “The Most Educated Idiot I Know.”