Chapel Hill music teacher turns to crowdfunding
Each November, Sarah Davies’ music room at New Hope Elementary School in Chapel Hill is covered with feather fuzz while her students sing about turkeys.
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Each November, Sarah Davies’ music room at New Hope Elementary School in Chapel Hill is covered with feather fuzz while her students sing about turkeys.
Each year, Weaver Street Market takes the interest gained from its endowment, the Cooperative Community Fund, and turns that money into grants for organizations that focus on giving people access to healthy foods.
Serene Majid, a junior, thought moving into her first apartment would be exciting, but instead of walking into a dream, she said she walked into a nightmare.
There’s a moment when Shaw Sturton is talking — he pauses to watch as his employee carries two espressos over to customers.
CORRECTION: Due to a reporting error, the original version of this story misrepresented Susan Maguire, Readers’ Services Coordinator at Chapel Hill Public Library, as Susan Brown, director of the Chapel Hill Public Library. The story has been updated to reflect these changes.
Police officers are widely pegged for their love of coffee and doughnuts, but now that cup of coffee comes with a conversation instead.
Not every kid is going to eat Brussels sprouts or mushrooms, but that’s not stopping the Carrboro Farmers’ Market from trying to encourage its youngest customers to buy healthy.
Having a lush garden isn’t always the best thing for your environment, and Chapel Hill residents will soon have the opportunity to learn why.
Earlier this month, seven startups joined accelerator program Launch Chapel Hill to help get their businesses off the ground.
As panhandling persists on Franklin Street, businesses are worried about the effects the practice will have on customers and sales.
It is common knowledge that Americans love ice cream, but the dessert is losing its status thanks to competition from a lower-calorie substitute: frozen yogurt.
Chapel Hill will soon be home to a new country bar called the Country Fried Duck.
It was only six hours after Chapel Hill Police Department released the names of the victims in Tuesday’s triple homicide, and #ChapelHillShooting had been tweeted an estimated 685,200 times by 9 a.m. Wednesday morning.
Franklin Street. It is as iconic to Chapel Hill as the Old Well, but lately the epicenter of downtown has seen several businesses come and go, leaving many to question if Franklin Street has lost its magic.
Matilde Alvarez and Rafael Rios saw Top This! Roast Beef, Burgers & More as an opportunity to fulfill a dream, but reality caught up with the business owners who closed the restaurant for good in December due to profit loss and business complications.
She hasn’t run her own lab in years, but not even time can keep Alice Gordon from her roots as a researcher.
The Rev. Robert Campbell and David Caldwell, both longtime Rogers Road residents and community activists, remember their childhood playing in woods surrounding their neighborhood, collecting wild fruits to eat or take home and store for the winter.
Six businesses and their owners were enshrined forever in the town of Chapel Hill’s memory when the Chapel Hill-Carrboro Chamber of Commerce held its second annual Hall of Fame inductions on Thursday.
Many people jaywalk in Chapel Hill, but the town is making efforts to curtail that potentially dangerous behavior.
UNC junior Shauna Barnett always tries to fit in her monthly trip to Gigi’s Cupcakes for a frosting-filled break, but now she will have to go elsewhere to get her sugar fix.