SkyCloud started in a bathroom, now an EP
It all started two years ago in the corner bathroom of the 10th floor of Morrison Residence Hall in rooms 1055-1058.
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It all started two years ago in the corner bathroom of the 10th floor of Morrison Residence Hall in rooms 1055-1058.
UNC Pauper Players’ “Avenue Q” combined two opposing elements — innocent-looking puppets and vulgar, crude humor — to teach audience members that the internet is only for porn.
Parachutes and box fans were suspended from the ceilings. Laser cutouts of animals were hanging from a fan and spinning around continuously, and the artist described them as “collaged cybernetic mythological creatures.”
Barbara Claypole White is turning dark moments light with her second and newest novel, “The In-Between Hour.”
Mike Daisey’s “The Story of the Gun” presented a new and interesting way to approach gun control in the U.S.: It doesn’t exist. The way the U.S. treats guns right now is not control, Daisey said. So, when discussing gun control, we are always talking about the future and what we can change.
Senior Molly Laux was sitting in a UNC hospital room with her most recent CPAL, a young person with cancer who she was partnered with to support and befriend throughout his treatment, when “Wagon Wheel” came on the music TV channel. He danced around while lying in bed and sang along to the song, and she sang with him.
Come, take a seat in his chair and have a relaxing shave with a vengeful blade that cuts a little too close.
The Brewster family is insane. The aunts kill old men with poisoned wine, the uncles perform plastic surgery on ex-criminals and only one person in the family realizes that all of it is wrong.
Cat Warren, an English professor at N.C. State University, will be reading from her book, “What the Dog Knows: The Science and Wonder of Working Dogs,” today at Flyleaf Books. Warren has been working with her German Shepherd, Solo, for 8 years as a cadaver dog, whose job is to find people who have been reported missing and are often dead.
Wale and Ace Hood will perform at the Nov. 2 Homecoming concert for a comparatively lower price than last year’s headliner, J. Cole.
Cancer is a wake-up call.
Ipas, a Chapel Hill-based global nonprofit dedicated to preventing unsafe abortions, held a Retro Rock for Reproductive Rights benefit Saturday as part of a year-long celebration of its 40th anniversary and its success since it was founded.
PlayMakers Repertory Company recently received three grants, one for $250,000 from the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation and two from the National Endowment for the Arts for $45,000 and $25,000, to support its upcoming and future seasons.
Audience laughter wasn’t the only thing that was hard and extended in Wagon Wheel Arts’ Thursday night production of “Triassic Parq: The Musical.”
The Carolina Union Activities Board officially announced Sunday that rap artist Wale will be performing at the fall 2013 Homecoming Concert with Ace Hood opening.
This year the Ackland Art Museum has major plans to get the community more involved in its work. Emily Kass, director of the Ackland, spoke to Josephine Yurcaba about the fall exhibition, some sneak peeks into spring and the different ways students can get involved in the museum.
Alex McKeithen will read from his memoir, “The Seventh Angel,” today at Bull’s Head Bookshop.
One UNC senior is putting a face to the national health care debate by bringing it to the stage for his honors thesis.
Tonight Carolina Performing Arts celebrates a different rite of spring — with a greater multitude of colors.
UNC all-female a cappella group the Loreleis perfected its pitch Saturday during the International Championships of Collegiate A Cappella South region quarterfinals.