Blue team keeps winning in UNC baseball's Fall World Series
Some things change. Some stay the same.
Use the fields below to perform an advanced search of The Daily Tar Heel's archives. This will return articles, images, and multimedia relevant to your query. You can also try a Basic search
236 items found for your search. If no results were found please broaden your search.
Some things change. Some stay the same.
Preston Hudak said it. Brett Daniels said it. Even Jackson Bellenkes said it.
Jamie Loeb had her fair share of success during the 2013-14 season as a freshman on the North Carolina women’s tennis team.
With the return of injured forwards Rob Lovejoy and Andy Craven, many expect the No. 13 North Carolina men’s soccer team to score in bunches.
It wasn’t a bad question.
Locked in a 7-7 tie at No. 3 doubles on Sunday, freshman Ronnie Schneider and Jack Murray entered the tiebreak looking to clinch the doubles point for the No. 8 North Carolina men’s tennis team against No. 20 Clemson.
Before this weekend, the Miami women's tennis team hadn't lost a doubles point all season. The No. 6 North Carolina team had only lost three.
It was a tale of two streaks that highlighted Friday’s action between the No. 6 North Carolina men’s tennis team and the No.7 Virginia Cavaliers.
Last week, the tennis courts outside of the Cone-Kenfield Tennis Center were coated with a sheet of fresh snow.
Brayden Schnur spends the moments before a match alone with his thoughts.
This year’s North Carolina women’s tennis team is different from the one that won the 2013 ITA National Team Indoor Championship and advanced to the quarterfinals of the NCAA Tournament last year.
Orange County traffic has claimed the lives of five cyclists and pedestrians in the last three months and Michael Christian has made it his mission to make roads safer for pedestrians.
A lawsuit against a Chapel Hill landlord accused of defrauding several student renters might hit a snag after the man filed for bankruptcy in Colorado last week.
At Frank Porter Graham Bilingue School on Thursday nights, parents gather in child-sized chairs to study the subjects their children tackle during the day.
One day a year, the Hargraves Community Center is transformed into a place where people facing homelessness can access basic services.
Steve Dear knew something wasn’t right when he arrived at Peace & Justice Plaza on Aug. 28.